Title: The Star Beast
Author: Robert A Heinlein
Published: 1954
e-text: v1.0, 13/7/2001
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The
Star Beast
by
Robert
A. Heinlein
FOR
DIANE AND CLARK
Copyright (c) 1954 by Robert
A. Heinlein
First published by Charles
Scribner's Sons, 1954.
Some excerpts from this book
were first published in The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction under the
title, "Star Lummox."
ISBN 0-345-30046-7 (USA - Ballantine Books)
ISBN 0-450-03856-4 (UK - New English Library)
CONTENTS
I L-Day
II The Department of Spatial Affairs
III "-An Improper Question"
IV The Prisoner at the Bars
V A Matter of Viewpoint
VI "Space Is Deep, Excellency"
VII "Mother Knows Best"
VIII The Sensible Thing To Do
IX Customs and an Ugly Duckling
X The Cygnus Decision
XI "It's Too Late, Johnnie"
XII Concerning Pidgie-Widgie
XIII "No, Mr. Secretary"
XIV "Destiny? Fiddlesticks!"
XV Undiplomatic Relations
XVI "Sorry We Messed Things Up"
XVII Ninety-Seven Pickle Dishes
I
L-Day
Lummox was bored
and hungry. The latter was a normal state; creatures of Lummox's breed were
always ready for a little snack, even after a full meal. Being bored was less
usual and derived directly from the fact that Lummox's chum and closest
associate, John Thomas Stuart, had not been around all day, having chosen to go
off somewhere with his friend Betty.
One afternoon was a
mere nothing; Lummox could hold his breath that long. But he knew the signs and
understood the situation; John Thomas had reached the size and age when he
would spend more and more time with Betty, or others like her, and less and
less time with Lummox. Then there would come a fairly long period during which
John Thomas would spend practically no time with Lummox but at the end of which
there would arrive a new John Thomas which would presently grow large enough to
make an interesting playmate.
From experience
Lummox recognized this cycle as necessary and inevitable; nevertheless the
immediate prospect was excruciatingly boring. He lumbered listlessly around the
back yard of the Stuart home, looking for anything-a grasshopper, a robin,
anything at all that might be worth looking at. He watched a hill of ants for a
while. They seemed to be moving house; an endless chain was dragging little
white grubs in one direction while a countermarching line returned for more
grubs. This killed a half hour.
Growing tired of
ants, he moved away toward his own house. His number-seven foot came down on
the ant hill and crushed it, but the fact did not come to his attention. His
own house was just big enough for him to back into it and was the end building
of a row of decreasing size; the one at the far end would have made a suitable
doghouse for a chihuahua.
Piled outside his
shed were six bales of hay. Lummox pulled a small amount off one bale and
chewed it lazily. He did not take a second bite because he had taken as much as
he thought he could steal and not have it noticed. There was nothing to stop
him from eating the entire pile-except the knowledge that John Thomas would
bawl him out bitterly and might even refuse for a week or more to scratch him
with the garden rake. The household rules required Lummox not to touch food
other than natural forage until it was placed in his manager; Lummox usually obeyed
as he hated dissension and was humiliated by disapproval.
Besides, he did not
want hay. He had had hay for supper last night, he would have it again tonight,
and again tomorrow night. Lummox wanted something with more body and a more
interesting flavor. He ambled over to the low fence which separated the several
acres of back yard from Mrs. Stuart's formal garden, stuck his head over and
looked longingly at Mrs. Stuart's roses. The fence was merely a symbol marking
the line he must not cross. Lummox had crossed it once, a few years earlier,
and had sampled the rose bushes. . . just a sample, a mere appetizer, but Mrs.
Stuart had made such a fuss that he hated to think about it even now.
Shuddering at the recollection, he backed hastily away from the fence.
But he recalled
some rose bushes that did not belong to Mrs. Stuart, and therefore in Lummox's
opinion, did not belong to anybody. They were in the garden of the Donahues,
next door west. There was a possible way, which Lummox had been thinking about
lately, to reach these "ownerless" rose bushes.
The Stuart place
was surrounded by a ten-foot concrete wall. Lummox had never tried to climb
over it, although he had nibbled the top of it in places. In the rear there was
one break in it, where the gully draining the land crossed the property line.
The gap in the wall was filled by a massive grating of eight-by-eight timbers,
bolted together with extremely heavy bolts. The vertical timbers were set in
the stream bed and the contractor who had erected it had assured Mrs. Stuart
that it would stop Lummox, or a herd of elephants, or anything else too
big-hipped to crawl between the timbers.
Lummox knew that
the contractor was mistaken, but his opinion had not been asked and he had not
offered it. John Thomas had not expressed an opinion either, but he had seemed
to suspect the truth; he had emphatically ordered Lummox not to tear the
grating down.
Lummox had obeyed.
He had sampled it for flavor, but the wooden timbers had been soaked in
something which gave them a really unbearable taste; he let them be.
But Lummox felt no
responsibility for natural forces. He had noticed, about three months back,
that spring rains had eroded the gully so that two of the vertical timbers were
no longer imbedded but were merely resting on the dry stream bed. Lummox had
been thinking about this for several weeks and had found that a gentle nudge
tended to spread the timbers at the bottom. A slightly heavier nudge might open
up a space wide enough without actually tearing down the grating. . .
Lummox lumbered
down to check up. Still more of the stream bed had washed away in the last
rain; one of the vertical timbers hung a few inches free of the sand. The one
next to it was barely resting on the ground. Lummox smiled like a simple-minded
golliwog and carefully, delicately insinuated his head between the two big
posts. He pushed gently.
Above his head came
a sound of rending wood and the pressure suddenly relieved. Startled, Lummox
pulled his head out and looked up. The upper end of one eight-by-eight had torn
free of its bolts; it pivoted now on a lower horizontal girder. Lummox clucked to
himself. Too bad. . . but it couldn't be helped. Lummox was not one to weep
over past events; what has been, must be. No doubt John Thomas would be vexed
but in the meantime here was an opening through the grating. He lowered his
head like a football linesman, set himself in low gear, and pushed on through.
There followed several sounds of protesting and rending wood and sharper ones
of broken bolts, but Lummox ignored it all; he was on the far side now, a free
agent.
He paused and
raised up like a caterpillar, lifting legs one and three, two and four, off the
ground, and looked around. It was certainly nice to be outside; he wondered why
he had not done it sooner. It had been a long time since John Thomas had taken
him out, even for a short walk.
He was still
looking around, sniffing free air, when an unfriendly character charged at him,
yapping and barking furiously. Lummox recognized him, an oversized and heavily
muscled mastiff that .ran ownerless and free in the neighborhood; they had
often exchanged insults through the grating. Lummox had nothing against dogs;
in the course of his long career with the Stuart family he had known several
socially and had found them pretty fair company in the absence of John Thomas.
But this mastiff was another matter. He fancied himself boss of the
neighborhood, bullied other dogs, terrorized cats, and repeatedly challenged
Lummox to come out and fight like a dog.
Nevertheless Lummox
smiled at him, opened his mouth wide and, in a lisping, baby-girl voice from
somewhere far back inside him, called the mastiff a very bad name. The dog
gasped. it is likely that he did not comprehend what Lummox had said, but he
did know that he had been insulted. He recovered himself and renewed the
attack, barking louder than ever and raising an unholy ruckus while dashing
around Lummox and making swift sorties at his flanks to nip at Lummox's legs.
Lummox remained
reared up, watching the dog but making no move. He did add to his earlier
remark a truthful statement about the dog's ancestry and an untruthful one
about his habits; they helped to keep the mastiff berserk. But on the dog's
seventh round trip he cut fairly close to where Lummox's first pair of legs
would have been had Lummox had all eight feet on the ground; Lummox ducked his
head the way a frog strikes at a fly. His mouth opened like a wardrobe trunk
and gobbled the mastiff.
Not bad, Lummox
decided as he chewed and swallowed. Not bad at all. . . and the collar made a
crunchy tidbit. He considered whether or not to go back through the grating,
now that he had had a little snack, and pretend that he had never been outside
at all. However, there were still those ownerless rose bushes and no doubt John
Thomas would make it inconvenient for him to get out again soon. He ambled away
parallel to the Stuart's rear wall, then swung around the end onto the Donahue
land.
John Thomas Stuart
XI got home shortly before dinner time, having already dropped Betty Sorensen
at her home. He noticed, as he landed, that Lummox was not in sight, but he assumed
that his pet was in his shed. His mind was not on Lummox, but on the age-old
fact that females do not operate by logic, at least as logic is understood by
males.
He was planning to enter Western Tech; Betty
wanted them both to attend the state university. He had pointed out that he
could not get the courses he wanted at State U.; Betty had insisted that he
could and had looked up references to prove her point. He had rebutted by
saying that it was not the name of a course that mattered, but who taught it.
The discussion had fallen to pieces when she had refused to concede that he was
an authority.
He had
absent-mindedly unstrapped his harness copter, while dwelling on the illogic of
the feminine mind, and was racking it in the hallway, when his mother burst
into his presence. "John Thomas! Where have you been?"
He tried to think
what he could have slipped on now. It was a bad sign when she called him
"John Thomas". . . "John" or "Johnnie" was okay,
or even "Johnnie Boy." But "John Thomas" usually meant that
he had been accused, tried, and convicted in absentia.
"Huh? Why, I
told you at lunch, Mum. Out hopping with Betty. We flew over to. . ."
"Never mind
that! Do you know what that beast has done?"
Now he had it.
Lummox. He hoped it wasn't Mum's garden. Maybe Lum had just knocked over his
own house again. If so, Mum would level off presently. Maybe he had better
build a new one, bigger. "What's the trouble?" he asked cautiously.
"'What's the
trouble?' What isn't the trouble? John Thomas, this time you simply will have
to get rid of it. This is the last straw."
"Take it easy,
Mum," he said hastily. "We can't get rid of Lum. You promised
Dad."
She made no direct
answer. "With the police calling every ten minutes and that great
dangerous beast rampaging around and. . ."
"Huh?
Wait a minute, Mum, Lum isn't dangerous; he's gentle as a kitten. What
happened?"
"Everything!"
He gradually drew
out of her some of the details. Lummox had gone for a stroll; that much was
clear. John Thomas hoped without conviction that Lummox had not got any iron or
steel while he was out; iron had such an explosive effect on his metabolism.
There was the time Lummox had eaten that second-hand Buick . . .
His thoughts were
interrupted by his mother's words. and Mrs. Donahue is simply furious! And well
she might be. . . her prize roses."
Oh oh, that was
bad. He tried to recall the exact amount in his savings account. He would have
to apologize, too, and think of ways to butter up the old biddy. In the
meantime he would beat Lummox's ears with an ax; Lummox knew about roses, there
was no excuse.
"Look, Mum,
I'm awfully sorry. I'll go right out and pound some sense into his thick head.
When I get through with him, he won't dare sneeze without permission."
John Thomas started edging around her.
"Where are you
going?" she demanded.
"Huh? Out to
talk with Lum, of course. When I get through with him. . ."
"Don't be silly.
He isn't here."
"Huh? Where is
he?" John Thomas swiftly rearranged his prayers to hope that Lummox hadn't
found very much iron. The Buick hadn't really been Lummox's fault and anyhow it
had belonged to John Thomas, but. . .
"No telling
where he is now. Chief Dreiser said. . ."
"The police
are after Lummox?"
"You can just
bet they are, young man! The entire safety patrol is after him. Mr. Dreiser
wanted me to come downtown and take him home, but I told him we would have to
get you to handle that beast."
"But Mother,
Lummox would have obeyed you. He always does. Why did Mr. Dreiser take him
downtown? He knows Lum belongs here. Being taken downtown would frighten Lum.
The poor baby is timid; he wouldn't like. . ."
"Poor baby
indeed! He wasn't taken downtown."
"But you said
he was."
"I said no
such thing. If you'll be quiet, I'll tell you what happened."
It appeared that
Mrs. Donahue had surprised Lummox when he had eaten only four or five of her
rose bushes. With much courage and little sense she had run at him with a
broom, to scream and belabor him about the head. She had not followed the
mastiff, though he could have managed her with one gulp; Lummox had a sense of
property as nice as that of any house cat. People were not food; in fact,
people were almost invariably friendly.
So his feelings
were hurt. He had lumbered away from there, pouting.
The next action
report on Lummox was for a point two miles away and about thirty minutes later.
The Stuarts lived in a suburban area of Westville; open country separated it
from the main part of town. Mr. Ito had a small farm in this interval, where he
handraised vegetables for the tables of gourmets. Mr. Ito apparently had not
known what it was that he had found pulling up his cabbages and gulping them
down. Lummox's long residence in the vicinity was certainly no secret, but Mr.
Ito had no interest in other people's business and had never seen Lummox
before.
But he showed no
more hesitation than had Mrs. Donahue. He dashed into his house and came out
with a gun that had been handed down to him from his grandfather-a relic of the
Fourth World War of the sort known affectionately as a "tank killer."
Mr. Ito steadied
the gun on a potting bench and let Lummox have it where he would have sat down
had Lummox been constructed for such. The noise scared Mr. Ito (he had never
heard the weapon fired) and the flash momentarily blinded him. When he blinked
his eyes and recovered, the thing had gone.
But it was easy to
tell the direction in which it had gone. This encounter had not humiliated
Lummox as had the brush with Mrs. Donahue; this frightened him almost out of
his wits. While busy with his fresh green salad he had been faced toward a
triplet of Mr. Ito's greenhouses. When the explosion ticked him and the blast
assailed his hearing, Lummox shifted into high gear and got underway in the
direction he was heading. Ordinarily he used a leg firing order of
1,4,5,8,2,3,6,7 and repeat, good for speeds from a slow crawl to fast as a
trotting horse; he now broke from a standing start into a double-ended gallop,
moving legs 1, 2, 5, 6 together, alternated with 3, 4, 7, 8.
Lummox was through
the three greenhouses before he had time to notice them, leaving a tunnel
suitable for a medium truck. Straight ahead, three miles away, lay downtown
Westville. It might have been better if he had been headed in the opposite
direction toward the mountains.
John Thomas Stuart
listened to his mother's confused account with growing apprehension. When he
heard about Mr. Ito's greenhouses, he stopped thinking about his savings
account and started wondering what assets he could convert into cash. His jump
harness was almost new. . . but shucks! it wouldn't pay the damage. He wondered
if there was any kind of a dicker he could work with the bank? One sure thing:
Mum wouldn't help him out, not the state she was in.
Later reports were
spotty. Lummox seemed to have gone across country until he hit the highway
leading into town. A transcontinental trucker had complained to a traffic
officer, over a cup of coffee, that he had just seen a robot pedatruck with no
license plates and that the durned thing had been paying no attention to
traffic lanes. But the trucker had used it as an excuse to launch a diatribe
about the danger of robot drivers and how there was no substitute for a human
driver, sitting in the cab and keeping his eyes open for emergencies. The
traffic patrolman had not seen Lummox, being already at his coffee when Lummox
passed, and had not been impressed since the trucker was obviously prejudiced.
Nevertheless he had phoned in.
Traffic control
center in Westville paid no attention to the report; control was fully occupied
with a reign of terror.
John Thomas
interrupted his mother. "Has anybody been hurt?"
"Hurt? I don't
know. Probably. John Thomas, you've got to get rid of that beast at once."
He ignored that statement;
it seemed the wrong time to argue it. "What else happened?"
Mrs. Stuart did not
know in detail. Near the middle of town Lummox came down a local chute from the
overhead freeway. He was moving slowly now and with hesitation; traffic and
large numbers of people confused him. He stepped off the street onto a
slidewalk. The walk ground to a stop, not being designed for six tons of
concentrated load; fuses had blown, circuit breakers had opened, and pedestrian
traffic at the busiest time of day was thrown into confusion for twenty blocks
of the shopping district.
Women had screamed,
children and dogs had added to the excitement, safety officers had tried to
restore order, and poor Lummox, who had not meant any harm and had not intended
to visit the shopping district anyway, made a perfectly natural mistake. . .
the big display windows of the Bon Marché looked like a refuge where he could
get away from it all. The duraglass of the windows was supposed to be
unbreakable, but the architect had not counted on Lummox mistaking it for empty
air. Lummox went in and tried to hide in a model bedroom display. He was not
very successful.
John Thomas's next
question was cut short by a thump on the roof; someone had landed. He looked
up. "You expecting anyone, Mum?"
"It's probably
the police. They said they would. . ."
"The police?
Oh, my!"
"Don't go
away. . . you've got to see them."
"I wasn't
going anywhere," he answered miserably and punched a button to unlock the
roof entrance.
Moments later the
lazy lift from the roof creaked to a stop and the door opened; a safety
sergeant and a patrolman stepped out. "Mrs. Stuart?" the sergeant
began formally. " 'In your service, ma'am.' We. . ." He caught sight
of John Thomas, who was trying not to be noticed. "Are you John T.
Stuart?"
John gulped.
"Yessir."
"Then come
along, right away. 'Scuse us, ma'am. Or do you want to come too?"
"Me? Oh, no,
I'd just be in the way."
The sergeant nodded
relieved agreement. "Yes, ma'am. Come along, youngster. Minutes count."
He took John by the arm.
John tried to shrug
away. "Hey, what is this? You got a warrant or something?"
The police officer
stopped, seemed to count ten, then said slowly, "Son, I do not have a
warrant. But if you are the John T. Stuart I'm looking for. . . and I know you
are. . . then unless you want something drastic and final to happen to that
deep-space what-isit you've been harboring, you'd better snap to and come with
us."
"Oh, I'll
come," John said hastily.
"Okay. Don't
give me any more trouble."
John Thomas Stuart
kept quiet and went with him.
In the three
minutes it took the patrol car to fly downtown John Thomas tried to find out
the worst. "Uh, Mister Patrol Officer? There hasn't been anybody hurt? Has
there?"
"Sergeant
Mendoza," the sergeant answered. "I hope not. I don't know."
John considered
this bleak answer. "Well. . . Lummox is still in the Bon Marché?"
"Is that what
you call it?-Lummox? It doesn't seem strong enough. No, we got it out of there.
It's under the West Arroyo viaduct.. . I hope."
The answer sounded
ominous. "What do you mean: 'you hope'?"
"Well, first
we blocked off Main and Hamilton, then we chivvied it out of the store with
fire extinguishers. Nothing else seemed to bother it; solid slugs just bounced
off. Say, what's that beast's hide made of? Ten-point steel?"
"Uh, not
exactly." Sergeant Mendoza's satire was closer to fact than John Thomas
cared to discuss; he still was wondering if Lummox had eaten any iron. After
the mishap of the digested Buick Lummox's growth had taken an enormous spurt;
in two weeks he had jumped from the size of a misshapen hippopotamus to his
present unlikely dimensions, more growth than he had shown in the preceding
generation. It had made him extremely gaunt, like a canvas tarpaulin draped
over a scaffolding, his quite unearthly skeleton pushing through his skin; it
had taken three years of a high-caloric diet to make him chubby again. Since
that time John Thomas had tried to keep metal away from Lummox, most especially
iron, even though his father and his grandfather had always fed him tidbits of
scrap metal.
"Um. Anyhow the fire extinguishers dug
him out-only he sneezed and knocked two men down. After that we used more fire
extinguishers to turn him down Hamilton, meaning to herd him into open country
where he couldn't do so much damage. . . seeing as how we couldn't find you. We
were making out pretty well, with only an occasional lamp post knocked down, or
ground car stepped on, or such, when we came to where we meant to turn him off
on Hillcrest and head him back to your place. But he got away from us and
headed out onto the viaduct, ran into the guard rail and went off, and. . .
well, you'll see, right now. Here we are."
Half a dozen police
cars were hovering over the end of the viaduct Surrounding the area were many
private air cars and an air bus or two; the patrol cars were keeping them back
from the scene. There were several hundred harness flyers as well, darting like
bats in and out among the vehicles and making the police problem more difficult
On the ground a few regular police, supplemented by emergency safety officers
wearing arm bands, were trying to hold the crowd back and were diverting
traffic away from the viaduct and from the freight road that ran under it down
the arroyo. Sergeant Mendoza's driver threaded his way through the cars in the
air, while speaking into a hushophone on his chest. Chief Dreiser's bright red
command car detached itself from the knot over the end of the viaduct and
approached them.
Both cars stopped,
a few yards apart and a hundred feet above the viaduct. John Thomas could see
the big gap in the railing where Lummox had gone over, but could not see Lummox
himself; the viaduct blocked his view. The door of the command car opened and
Chief Dreiser leaned out; he looked harassed and his bald head was covered with
sweat. "Tell the Stuart boy to stick his head out."
John Thomas ran a
window down and did so. "Here, sir."
"Lad, can you
control that monster?"
"Certainly,
sir."
"I hope you're
right. Mendoza! Land him. Let him try it."
"Yes,
Chief." Mendoza spoke to the driver, who moved the car past the viaduct
and started letting down beyond it. Lummox could be seen then; he had taken
refuge under the end of the bridge, making himself small. . . for him. John
Thomas leaned out and called to him,
"Lum! Lummie
boy! Come to papa."
The creature
stirred and the end of the viaduct stirred with him. About twelve feet of his
front end emerged from under the structure and he looked around wildly.
"Here, Lum! Up
here!"
Lummox caught sight
of his friend and split his head in an idiot grin. Sergeant Mendoza snapped,
"Put her down, Slats. Let's get this over."
The driver lowered
a bit, then said anxiously, "That's enough, Sergeant. I saw that critter
rear up earlier."
"All right,
all right." Mendoza opened the door and kicked out a rope ladder used in
rescue work. "Can you go down that, son?"
"Sure."
With Mendoza to give him a hand John Thomas shinnied out of the door and got a
grip on the ladder. He felt his way down and came to the point where there was
no more ladder; he was still six feet above Lummox's head. He looked down.
"Heads up, baby. Take me down."
Lummox lifted
another pair of legs from the ground and carefully placed his broad skull under
John Thomas, who stepped onto it, staggering a little and grabbing for a hand
hold. Lummox lowered him gently to the ground.
John Thomas jumped
off and turned to face him. Well, the fall apparently had not hurt Lum any;
that was a relief. He would get him home first and then go over him inch by
inch.
In the meantime
Lummox was nuzzling his legs and making a sound remarkably like a purr. John
looked stern. "Bad Lummie! Bad, bad Lummie. . . you're a mess,
aren't you?"
Lummox looked
embarrassed. He lowered his head to the ground, looked up at his friend, and
opened his mouth wide. "I didn't mean to," he protested in his
baby-girl voice.
"You didn't
mean to. You didn't mean to! Oh, no, you never do. I'm going to take
your front feet and stuff them down your throat. You know that, don't you? I'm
going to beat you to a pulp and then use you for a rug. No supper for you. You
didn't mean to, indeed!"
The bright red car
came close and hovered. "Okay?" demanded Chief Dreiser.
"Sure."
"All right.
Here's the plan. I'm going to move that barrier up ahead. You get him back up
on Hillcrest, going out the upper end of the draw. There will be an escort
waiting; you fall in behind and stay with it all the way home. Get me?"
"Okay."
John Thomas saw that in both directions the arroyo road had been blocked with
riot shields, tractors with heavy armor mounted on their fronts, so that a
temporary barrier could be thrown across a street or square. Such equipment was
standard for any city safety force since the Riots of '91, but he could not
recall that Westville had ever used them; he began to realize that the day that
Lummox went to town would not soon be forgotten.
But he was happy
that Lummox had been too timid to munch on those steel shields. He was
beginning to hope that his pet had been too busy all afternoon to eat any
ferrous metal. He turned back to him. "All right, get your ugly carcass
out of that hole. We're going home."
Lummox complied
eagerly; the viaduct again trembled as he brushed against it. "Make me a
saddle."
Lummox's midsection
slumped down a couple of feet. He thought about it very hard and his upper
surface shaped itself into contours resembling a chair. "Hold still,"
John Thomas ordered. "I don't want any mashed fingers." Lummox did
so, quivering a little, and the young man scrambled up, grabbing at slip folds
in Lummox's durable hide. He sat himself like a rajah ready for a tiger hunt.
"All right.
Slow march now, up the road. No, no! Gee around, you numskull. Uphill, not
down."
Docilely, Lummox
turned and ambled away.
Two patrol ground cars
led the way, two others brought up the rear. Chief Dreiser's tomato-red
runabout hung over them at a safe distance. John Thomas lounged back and spent
the time composing first, what he was going to say to Lummox, and second, what
he was going to say to his mother. The first speech was much easier; he kept
going back and embellishing it with fresh adjectives whenever he found himself
running into snags on the second.
They were halfway
home when a single flier, hopping free in a copter harness, approached the
little parade. The flier ignored the red warning light stabbing out from the
police chiefs car and slanted straight down at the huge star beast. John Thomas
thought that he recognized Betty's slapdash style even before he could make out
features; he was not mistaken. He caught her as she cut power.
Chief Dreiser
slammed a window open and stuck his head out. He was in full flow when Betty
interrupted him. "Why, Chief Dreiser! What a terrible way to talk!"
He stopped and took
another look. "Is that Betty Sorenson?"
"Of course it
is. And I must say, Chief, that after all the years you've taught Sunday School
I never thought I would live to hear you use such language. If that is setting
a good example, I think I'll. . ."
"Young lady,
hold your tongue."
"Me? But you
were the one who was using. . ."
"Quiet! I've
had all I can take today. You get that suit to buzzing and hop out of here.
This is official business. Now get out."
She glanced at John
Thomas and winked, then set her face in cherubic innocence. 'But, Chief, I
can't."
"Huh? Why
not?"
"I'm out of
juice. This was an emergency landing."
'Betty, you quit
fibbing to me."
"Me? Fibbing?
Why, Deacon Dreiser!"
"I'll deacon
you. If your tanks are dry, get down off that beast and walk home. He's
dangerous."
"Lummie
dangerous? Lummie wouldn't hurt a fly. And besides, do you want me to walk home
alone? On a country road? When it's almost dark? I'm surprised at you."
Dreiser sputtered
and closed the window. Betty wiggled out of her harness and settled back in the
wider seat that Lummox had provided without being told. John Thomas looked at
her. "Hi, Slugger."
"Hi,
Knothead."
"I didn't know
you knew the Chief."
"I know
everybody. Now shut up. I've gotten here, with all speed and much inconvenience,
as soon as I heard the newscast. You and Lummox between you could not manage to
think your way out of this, even with Lummox doing most of the work-so I
rallied around. Now give me the grisly details. Don't hold anything back from
mama."
"Smart
Alec."
"Don't waste
time on compliments. This will probably be our only chance for a private word
before they start worrying you, so you had better talk fast."
"Huh? What do
you think you are? A lawyer?"
"I'm better
than a lawyer, my mind is not cluttered with stale precedents. I can be
creative about it."
"Well. .
." Actually he felt better now that Betty was present It was no longer
just Lummox and himself against an unfriendly world. He poured out the story
while she listened soberly.
"Anybody
hurt?" she asked at last.
"I don't think
so. At least they didn't mention it."
"They would
have." She sat up straight. "Then we've got nothing to worry
about."
"What? With
hundreds, maybe thousands, in damage? I'd like to know what you call
trouble?"
"People getting
hurt," she answered. "Anything else can be managed. Maybe we'll have
Lummox go through bankruptcy."
"Huh? That's
silly!"
"If you think
that is silly, you've never been in a law court."
"Have
you?"
"Don't change
the subject. After all, Lummox was attacked with a deadly weapon."
"It didn't
hurt him; it just singed him a little."
"Beside the
point. It undoubtedly caused him great mental anguish. I'm not sure he was
responsible for anything that happened afterwards. Be quiet and let me
think."
"Do you mind
if I think, too?"
"Not as long
as I don't hear the gears grind. Pipe down."
The parade
continued to the Stuart home in silence. Betty gave him one piece of advice as
they stopped. "Admit nothing. Nothing. And don't sign anything. Holler if
you need me."
Mrs. Stuart did not
come out to meet them. Chief Dreiser inspected the gap in the grating with John
Thomas, with Lummox hanging over their shoulders. The Chief watched in silence
as John Thomas took a string and tied it across the opening.
"There! Now he
can't get out again."
Dreiser pulled at
his lip. "Son, are you all right in the head?"
"You don't
understand, sir. The grating wouldn't stop him even if we did repair it. . .
not if he wanted to get out. I don't know anything that would. But that string
will. Lummox!"
"Yes,
Johnnie?"
"See that
string?"
"Yes,
Johnnie."
"You bust that
string and I'll bust your silly head. Understand me?"
"Yes,
Johnnie."
"You won't go
out of the yard again, not ever, unless I take you."
"All right,
Johnnie."
"Promise?
Cross your heart?"
"Cross my
heart."
"He hasn't
really got a heart," Johnnie went on. "He has an uncentralized
circulatory system. It's like. . ."
"I don't care
if he has rotary pumps, as long as he stays home."
"He will. He's
never broken 'Cross my heart,' even if he hasn't got one."
Dreiser chewed his
thumb. "All right. I'll leave a man out here with a portophone tonight.
And tomorrow we'll put some steel I-beams in there in place of that wood."
John started to
say, "Oh, not steel," but he thought better of it. Dreiser said,
"What's the matter?"
"Uh,
nothing."
"You keep an
eye on him, too."
"He won't get
out"
"He had better
not. You realize that you are both under arrest, don't you? But I've got no way
to lock that monstrosity up."
John Thomas did not
answer. He had not realized it; now he saw that it was inevitable. Dreiser went
on in a kindly voice, "Try not to worry about it. You seem like a good boy
and everybody thought well of your father. Now I've got to go in and have a
word with your mother. You had better stay here until my man arrives. . . and
then maybe sort of introduce him to, uh, this thing." He passed a doubtful
eye over Lummox.
John Thomas stayed
while the police chief went back to the house. Now was the time to give Lummox
what for, but he did not have the heart for it. Not just then.
II
The
Department of Spatial Affairs
To John Thomas
Stuart XI the troubles of himself and Lummox seemed unique and unbearable, yet
he was not alone, even around Westville. Little Mr. Ito was suffering from an
always fatal disease-old age. It would kill him soon. Behind uncounted closed
doors in Westville other persons suffered silently the countless forms of quiet
desperation which can close in on a man, or woman, for reasons of money,
family, health, or face.
Farther away, in
the state capital, the Governor stared hopelessly at a stack of papers-evidence
that would certainly send to prison his oldest and most trusted friend. Much
farther away, on Mars, a prospector abandoned his wrecked sandmobile and got
ready to attempt the long trek back to Outpost. He would never make it.
Incredibly farther away, twenty-seven light
years, the Starship Bolivar was entering-an interspatial transition. A
flaw in a tiny relay would cause that relay to operate a tenth of a second
later than it should. The S.S. Bolivar would wander between the stars
for many years. . . but she would never find her way home.
Inconceivably farther from Earth, half way
across the local star cloud, a race of arboreal crustaceans was slowly losing
to a younger, more aggressive race of amphibians. It would be several thousands
Earth years before the crustaceans were extinct, but the issue was not in
doubt. This was regrettable (by human standards) for the crustacean race had
mental and spiritual abilities which complemented human traits in a fashion
which could have permitted a wealth of civilized cooperation with them. But
when the first Earth-humans landed there, some eleven thousand years in the
future, the crustaceans would be long dead.
Back on Earth at
Federation Capital His Excellency the Right Honorable Henry Gladstone Kiku,
M.A. (Oxon,) Litt.D. honoris causa (Capetown), O.B.E., Permanent Under
Secretary for Spatial Affairs, was not worried about the doomed crustaceans
because he would never know of them. He was not yet worried about S.S. Bolivar
but he would be. Aside from the ship, the loss of one passenger in that ship
would cause a chain reaction of headaches for Mr. Kiku and all his associates
for years to come.
Anything and
everything outside Earth's ionosphere was Mr. Kiku's responsibility and worry.
Anything which concerned the relationships between Earth and any part of the
explored universe was also his responsibility. Even affairs which were
superficially strictly Earthside were also his concern, if they affected or
were in any way affected by anything which was extra-terrestrial,
interplanetary, or interstellar in nature-a very wide range indeed.
His problems
included such things as the importation of Martian sand grass, suitably
mutated, for the Tibetan plateau. Mr. Kiku's office had not approved that until
after a careful mathematical examination of the possible effect on the
Australian sheep industry-and a dozen other factors. Such things were done
cautiously, with the gruesome example of Madagascar and the Martian berryroot
always before them. Economic decisions did not upset Mr. Kiku, no matter how
many toes he stepped on; other sorts kept him awake nights-such as his decision
not to give police escorts to Goddard exchange students from Procyon VII
despite the very real danger to them from provincial Earthmen with prejudices
against beings having unearthly arrangements of limbs or eyes or such-the
cephalopods of that planet were a touchy people and something very like a
police escort was their own usual punishment for criminals.
Mr. Kiku had an
extremely large staff to help him, of course, and, also of course, the help of
the Secretary himself. The Secretary made speeches, greeted Very Important
Visitors, gave out interviews, and in many other ways eased for Mr. Kiku an
otherwise unbearable load-Mr. Kiku would be first to admit this. As long as the
current Secretary behaved himself, minded his business, took care of public
appearances, and let the Under Secretary get on with the department's work, he
had Mr. Kiku's approval. Of course, if he failed to pull his load or threw his
weight around, Mr. Kiku was capable of finding ways to get rid of him. But it
had been fifteen years since he had found it necessary to be so drastic; even
the rawest political appointee could usually be broken to harness.
Mr. Kiku had not made up his mind about the
current Secretary, but was not now thinking about him. Instead he was looking
over the top-sheet synopsis for Project Cerberus, a power proposal for the
research station on Pluto. A reminder light on his desk flashed and he looked
up to see the door between his office and that of the Secretary dilate. The
Secretary walked in, whistling Take Me Out to the Ball Game; Mr. Kiku
did not recognize the tune.
He broke off.
"Greetings, Henry. No, don't get up."
Mr. Kiku had not
started to get up. "How do you do, Mr. Secretary? What can I do for
your"
"Nothing much,
nothing much." He paused by Mr. Kiku's desk and picked up the project
folder. "What are you swotting now? Cerberus, eh? Henry, that's an
engineering matter. Why should we worry about it?"
"There are
aspects," Mr. Kiku answered carefully, "that concern us."
"I suppose so.
Budget and so forth." His eye sought the bold-faced line reading: ESTIMATED
COST: 3.5 megabucks and 7.4 lives. "What's this? I can't go before the
Council and ask them to approve this. It's fantastic."
"The first
estimate," Mr. Kiku said evenly, "was over eight megabucks and more
than a hundred lives."
"I don't mind
the money, but this other. . . You are in effect asking the Council to sign
death warrants for seven and four-tenths men: You can't do that, it isn't human.
Say, what the deuce is four-tenths of a man anyway? How can you kill a fraction
of a man?"
"Mr.
Secretary," his subordinate answered patiently, "any project bigger
than a schoolyard swing involves probable loss of life. But that hazard factor
is low; it means that working on Project Cerberus will be safer, on the
average, than staying Earthside. That's my rule of thumb."
"Eh?" The
Secretary looked again at the synopsis. "Then why not say so? Put the
thing in the best light and so forth?"
"This report
is for my eyes. . . for our eyes, only. The report to the Council will
emphasize safety precautions and will not include an estimate of deaths-which,
after all, is a guess."
"Mmm, 'a
guess.' Yes, of course." The Secretary put the report down, seemed to lose
interest.
"Anything
else, sir?"
"Oh, yes!
Henry, old man, you know that Rargyllian dignitary I am supposed to receive
today? Dr. What's-his-name?"
"Dr.
Ftaeml." Mr. Kiku glanced at his desk control panel. "Your
appointment is, uh, an hour and seven minutes from now."
"That's just
it. I'm afraid I'll have to ask you to substitute. Apologies to him and so
forth. Tell him I'm tied up with affairs of state."
"Sir? I
wouldn't advise that. He will expect to be received by an official of your
rank. . . and the Rargyllians are extremely meticulous about protocol."
"Oh, come now,
this native won't know the difference."
"But he will,
sir."
"Well, let him
think that you're me. . . I don't care. But I won't be here and that's that The
Secretary General has invited me to go to the ball game with him-and an
invitation from the S. C. is a 'must,' y'know."
Mr. Kiku knew that
it was nothing of the sort, had the commitment been explained. But he shut up.
"Very well, sir."
'Thanks, old
chap." The Secretary left, again whistling.
When the door
closed, Mr. Kiku with an angry gesture slapped a row of switches on the desk panel
He was locked in now and could not be reached by phone, video, tube, autowriter,
or any other means, save by an alarm button which his own secretary had used
only once in twelve years. He leaned elbows on his desk, covered his head with
his hands and rubbed his fingers through his woolly pate.
This trouble, that
trouble, the other trouble. . . and always some moron to jiggle his elbow Why
had he ever left Africa? Where came this itch for public service? An itch that
had long, since turned into mere habit. . .
He sat up and
opened his middle drawer. It was bulging with real estate prospectuses from
Kenya; he took out a handful and soon was comparing relative merits of farms.
Now here was a little honey, if a man had the price-better than eight hundred
acres, half of it in cultivation, and seven proved wells on the property. He looked
at map and photographs and presently felt better. After a while he put them
away and closed the drawer.
He was forced to
admit that, while what he had told the chief was true, his own nervous reaction
came mostly from his life-long fear of snakes. If Dr. Ftaeml were anything but
a Rargyllian. . . or if the Rargyllians had not been medusa humanoids, he
wouldn't have minded. Of course, he knew that those tentacles growing out of a
Rargyllian's head were not snakes-but his stomach didn't know it. He would have
to find time for a hypnotic treatment before-no, there wasn't time; he'd have
to take a pill instead.
Sighing, he flipped
the switches back on. His incoming basket started to fill up at once and all
the communication instruments showed lights. But the lights were amber rather
than blinking red; he ignored them and glanced through the stuff falling into
his basket. Most of the items were for his information only: under doctrine his
subordinates or their subordinates had taken action. Occasionally he would
check a name and a suggested action and drop the sheet in the gaping mouth of
the outgoing basket.
A radiotype came in
that was not routine, in that it concerned a creature alleged to be
extra-terrestrial but unclassified as to type and origin. The incident involved
seemed unimportant-some nonsense in one of the native villages in the western
part of the continent. But the factor of an extra-terrestrial creature
automatically required the local police to report it to Spatial Affairs, and
the lack of classification of the e.-t. prevented action under doctrine and
resulted in the report being kicked upstairs.
Mr. Kiku had never
seen Lummox and would have had no special interest if he had. But Mr. Kiku knew
that each contact with "Out There" was unique. The universe was
limitless in its variety. To assume without knowledge, to reason by analogy, to
take the unknown for granted, all meant to invite disaster.
Mr. Kiku looked over his list to see whom he
could send. Any of his career officers could act as a court of original and
superior jurisdiction in any case involving extra-terrestrials, but who was on
Earth and free? Hmm. . .
Sergei Greenberg, that was the man. System
Trade Intelligence could get along without a chief for a day or two. He flipped
a switch. "Sergei?"
"Yes,
boss?"
"Busy?"
"Well, yes and
no. I'm paring my nails and trying to figure a reason why the taxpayers should
pay me more money."
"Should they,
now? I'm sending a bluesheet down." Mr. Kiku checked Greenberg's name on
the radiotype, dropped it in his outgoing basket, waited a few seconds until he
saw Greenberg pick it out of his own incoming basket. "Read it."
Greenberg did so,
then looked up. "Well, boss?"
"Phone the
local justice that we are assuming tentative jurisdiction, then buzz out and
look into it."
"Thy wish is
my command, O King. Even money the critter is terrestrial after all, two to one
I can identify if it isn't."
"No wager, not
at those odds. You're probably right. But it might be a 'special situation'; we
can't take chances."
"I'll keep the
local yokels in line, boss. Where is this hamlet? Westville? Or whatever it
is?"
"How would I
know? You have the sheet in front of you.
Greenberg glanced
at it. "Hey! What do you know? It's in the mountains. . . this may take
two or three weeks, boss. Hot enough for you?"
"Take more
than three days and I'll charge it off your annual leave." Mr. Kiku
switched off and turned to other matters. He disposed of a dozen calls, found
the bottom of his incoming basket and lost it again, then noticed that it was
time for the Rargyllian. Goose flesh crawled over him and he dug hastily into
his desk for one of the special pills his doctor had warned him not to take too
frequently. He had just gulped it when his secretary's light started blinking.
"Sir? Dr.
Ftaeml is here."
"Show him
in." Mr. Kiku muttered in a language his ancestors had used in making
magic-against snakes, for example. As the door dilated he hung on his face the
expression suitable for receiving visitors.
III
"-An
Improper Question"
The intervention by
the Department of Spatial Affairs in the case of Lummox did not postpone the
hearing; it speeded it up. Mr. Greenberg phoned the district judge, asked for
the use of his courtroom, and asked him to have all parties and witnesses in court
at ten o'clock the next morning-including, of course, the extra-terrestrial
that was the center of the fuss. Judge O'Farrell questioned the last point.
"This
creature. . . you need him, too?"
Greenberg said that
he most decidedly wanted the e.t. present, since his connection with the case
was the reason for intervention. "Judge, we people in DepSpace don't like
to butt into your local affairs. After I've had a look at the creature and have
asked half a dozen questions, I can probably bow out. . . which will suit us
both. This alleged e.t. is my only reason for coming out. So have the beastie
present, will you?"
"Eh, he's
rather too large to bring into the courtroom. I haven't seen him for several
years and I understand he has grown a bit. . . but he would have been too large
to bring indoors even then. Couldn't you look at him where he is?"
"Possibly,
though I admit to a prejudice for having everything pertinent to a hearing in
one spot. Where is he?"
"Penned up
where he lives, with his owner. They have a suburban place a few miles
out"
Greenberg thought
about it. Although a modest man, one who cared not where he ate or slept, when
it came to DepSpace business he operated on the rule of making the other fellow
do the running around; otherwise the department's tremendous load of business
would never get done. "I would like to avoid that trip out into the
country, as I intend to hold my ship and get back to Capital tomorrow
afternoon, if possible. It's rather urgent. . . a matter of the Martian treaty."
This last was Greenberg's standard fib when he wanted to hurry someone not in
the department.
Judge O'Farrell
said that he would arrange it. "We'll rig a temporary pen on the lawn
outside the court house."
"Swell! See
you tomorrow, Judge. Thanks for everything.
Judge O'Farrell had
been on a fishing trip two days earlier when Lummox had gone for his walk. The
damage had been cleaned up by his return and, as a fixed principle, he avoided
hearing or reading news reports or chitchat concerning cases he might have to
try. When he phoned Chief-of-Safety Dreiser he expected no difficulty about
moving Lummox.
Chief Dreiser went
through the roof. "Judge, are you out of your head?"
"Eh? What's
ailing you, Deacon?"
Dreiser tried to
explain; the judge shrugged off his objections. Whereupon they both phoned the
mayor. But the mayor had been on the same fishing trip; he threw his weight on
O'Farrell's side. His words were: "Chief, I'm surprised at you. We can't have
an important Federation official thinking that our little city is so backwoods
that we can't handle a small thing like that." Dreiser groaned and called
the Mountain States Steel & Welding Works.
Chief Dreiser
decided to move Lummox before daylight, as he wished to get him penned up
before the streets were crowded. But nobody had thought to notify John Thomas;
he was awakened at four in the morning with a sickening shock; the wakening had
interrupted a nightmare, he believed at first that something dreadful had
happened to Lummox.
Once the situation
was clear he was non-cooperative; he was a "slow starter," one of
those individuals with a low morning blood-sugar count who is worth nothing
until after a hearty breakfast-which he now insisted on.
Chief Dreiser looked
angry. Mrs. Stuart looked mother-knows-best and said, "Now, dear, don't
you think you had better. . ."
"I'm going to
have my breakfast. And Lummox, too."
Dreiser said,
"Young man, you don't have the right attitude. First thing you know you'll
be in eyen worse trouble; Come along. You can get breakfast downtown."
John Thomas looked stubborn. His mother said
sharply, "John Thomas! I won't have it, do you hear? You're being
difficult, just like your father was."
The reference to
his father rubbed him even more the wrong way. He said bitterly, "Why
don't you stand up for me, Mum? They taught me in school that a citizen can't
be snatched out of his home any time a policeman gets a notion. But you seem
anxious to help him instead of me. Whose side are you on?"
She stared at him,
astounded, as he had a long record of docile obedience. "John Thomas! You
can't speak to your mother that way!"
"Yes,"
agreed Dreiser. "Be polite to your mother, or I'll give you the back of my
hand-unofficially, of course. If there is one thing I can't abide it's a boy
who is rude to his elders." He unbuttoned his tunic, pulled out a folded
paper. "Sergeant Mendoza told me about the quibble you pulled the other
day. . . so I came prepared. There's my warrant. Now, will you come? Or will I
drag you?"
He stood there,
slapping the paper against his palm, but did not offer it to John Thomas. But
when John Thomas reached for it, he let him have it and waited while he read
it. At last Dreiser said, "Well? Are you satisfied?"
"This is a court
order," John Thomas said, "telling me to appear and requiring me to
bring Lummox."
"It certainly
is."
"But it says
ten o'clock. It doesn't say I can't eat breakfast first.., as long as I'm there
by ten."
The Chief took a
deep breath, expanding visibly. His face, already pink, got red, but he did not
answer.
John Thomas said,
"Mum? I'm going to fix my breakfast. Shall I fix some for you, too?"
She glanced at
Dreiser, then back at her son and bit her lip. "Never mind," she said
grudgingly. "I'll get breakfast. Mr. Dreiser, will you have coffee with
us?"
"Eh? That's
kind of you, ma'am. I don't mind if I do. I've been up all night."
John Thomas looked
at them. "I'll run out and take a quick look at Lummox." He
hesitated, then added, "I'm sorry I was rude, Mum."
"We'll say no
more about it, then," she answered coldly.
He had been
intending to say several things, in self-justification, but he thought better
of it and left. Lummox was snoring gently, stretched half in and half out of
his house. His sentry eye was raised above his neck, as it always was when he
was asleep; it swivelled around at John Thomas's approach and looked him over,
but that portion of Lummox that stood guard for the rest recognized the youth;
the star creature did not wake. Satisfied, John Thomas went back inside.
The atmosphere
mellowed during breakfast; by the time John Thomas had two dishes of oatmeal,
scrambled eggs and toast, and a pint of cocoa inside him, he was ready to
concede that Chief Dreiser had been doing his duty and probably didn't kick
dogs for pleasure. In turn, the Chief, under the influence of food, had decided
that there was nothing wrong with the boy that a firm hand and an occasional
thrashing would not cure. . . too bad his mother had to raise him alone; she
seemed like a fine woman. He pursued a bit of egg with toast, captured it, and
said, "I feel better, Mrs. Stuart, I really do. It's a treat to a widower
to taste home cooking. . . but I won't dare tell my men."
Mrs. Stuart put a
hand to her mouth. "Oh, I forgot about them!" She added, "I can
have more coffee in a moment. How many are there?"
"Five. But
don't bother, ma'am; they'll get breakfast when they go off duty." He
turned to John Thomas. "Ready to go, young fellow?"
"Uh. . ."
He turned to his mother. "Why not fix breakfast for them, Mum? I've still
got to wake Lummox and feed him."
By the time Lummox
had been wakened and fed and had had matters explained to him, by the time five
patrolmen had each enjoyed a second cup of coffee after a hot meal, the feeling
was more that of a social event than an arrest. It was long past seven before
the procession was on the road.
It was nine o'clock
before they got Lummox backed into the temporary cage outside the courthouse.
Lummox had been delighted by the smell of steel and had wanted to stop and
nibble it; John Thomas was forced to be firm. He went inside with Lummox and
petted him and talked to him while the door was welded shut, He had been
worried when he saw the massive steel cage, for he had never got around to
telling Chief Dreiser that steel was less than useless against Lummox.
Now it seemed too
late, especially as the Chief was proud of the pen. There had been no time to
pour a foundation, so the Chief had ordered an open-work box of steel girders,
top, bottom, and sides, with one end left open until Lummox could be shut in.
Well, thought John
Thomas, they all knew so much and they didn't bother to ask me. He decided
simply to warn Lummox not to eat a bite of the cage, under dire threats of
punishment. . . and hope for the best.
Lummox was inclined
to argue; from his point of view it was as silly as attempting to pen a hungry
boy by stacking pies around him. One of the workmen paused, lowered his welding
torch and said, "You know, it sounded just like that critter was
talking."
"He was,"
John Thomas answered briefly.
"Oh." The
man looked at Lummox, then went back to work. Human speech on the part of
extra-terrestrials was no novelty, especially on stereo programs; the man
seemed satisfied. But shortly he paused again. "I don't hold with animals
talking," he announced. John Thomas did not answer; it did not seem to be
a remark to which an answer could be made.
Now that he had
time John Thomas was anxious to examine something on Lummox which had been
worrying him. He had first noticed the symptoms on the morning following
Lummox's disastrous stroll-two swellings located where Lummox's shoulders would
have been had he been so equipped. Yesterday they had seemed larger, which
disturbed him, for he had hoped that they were just bruises. . . not that
Lummox bruised easily.
But they fretted
him. It seemed possible that Lummox had hurt himself during the accidental
gymkhana he had taken part in. The shot that Mr. Ito had taken at him had not
damaged him; there had been a slight powder burn where the explosive charge had
struck him but that was all; a charge that would destroy a tank was to Lummox
about like a hearty kick to a mule-startling, but not harmful.
Lummox might have bruised himself in
plunging through the greenhouses, but that seemed unlikely. More probably he
had been hurt in falling off the viaduct. John Thomas knew that such a fall
would kill any Earth animal big enough to have an unfavorable cube-square
ratio, such as an elephant. Of course Lummox, with his unearthly body
chemistry, was not nearly as fragile as an elephant. . . still, he might have
bruised himself badly.
Dog take it! the
swellings were bigger than ever, real tumors now, and the hide over them seemed
softer and thinner, not quite the armor that encased Lummox elsewhere. John
Thomas wondered if a person like Lummox could get cancer, say from a bruise? He
did not know and he did not know anyone who would. Lummox had never been ill as
far back as John Thomas could remember, nor had his father ever mentioned
Lummox having anything wrong with him. Lummox was the same today, yesterday,
and always-except that he kept getting bigger.
He would have to
look over his grandfather's diary tonight and his great grandfather's notes.
Maybe he had missed something. . .
He pressed one of
the swellings, trying to dig his fingers in; Lummox stirred restlessly. John
Thomas stopped and said anxiously, "Does that hurt?"
"No," the
childish voice answered, "it tickles."
The answer did not
reassure him. He knew that Lummox was ticklish, but it usually took something
like a pickaxe to accomplish it. The
swellings must be very sensitive. He was about to investigate farther when he
was hailed from behind.
"John!
Johnnie!"
He turned. Betty
Sorenson was outside the cage. "Hi, Slugger," he called to her.
"You got my message?"
"Yes, but not
until after eight o'clock. You know the dorm rules. Hi, Lummox. How's my
baby?"
"Fine,"
said Lummox.
"That's why I
recorded," John Thomas answered. The idiots rousted me out of bed before
daylight. Silly."
"Do you good
to see a sunrise. But what is all this rush? I thought the hearing was next
week?"
"It was
supposed to be. But some heavyweight from the Department of Space is coming out
from Capital. He's going to try it,"
"What?"
"What's the
matter?"
"The matter?
Why, everything! I don't know this man from Capital. I thought I was going to
deal with Judge O'Farrell. . . I know what makes him tick. This new judge. . .
well, I don't know. In the second place, I've got ideas I haven't had time to
work out yet." She frowned. "We'll have to get a postponement."
"What
for?" asked John Thomas. "Why don't we just go into court and tell
the truth?"
"Johnnie,
you're hopeless. If that was all there was to it, there wouldn't be any
courts."
"Maybe that
would be an improvement."
"But. . .
Look, Knothead, don't stand there making silly noises. If we have to appear in
less than an hour. . ." She glanced up at the clock tower on the ancient
courthouse. 'A good deal less. We've got to move fast. At the very least, we've
got to get that homestead claim recorded."
"That's silly.
They won't take it, I tell you. We can't homestead Lummox. He's not a piece of
land."
"A man can
homestead a cow, two horses, a dozen pigs. A carpenter can homestead his tools.
An actress can homestead her wardrobe."
"But that's
not 'homesteading.' I took the same course in commercial law that you did.
They'll laugh at you."
"Don't
quibble. It's section II-of the same law. If you were exhibiting Lummie in a
carnival, he'd be the 'tools of your trade,' wouldn't he? It's up to them to
prove he isn't. The thing is to register Lummox as exempt from lien before
somebody gets a judgment against you."
"If they can't
collect from me, they'll collect from my mother."
"No, they
won't. I checked that. Since your father put the money in a trust, legally she
hasn't got a dime."
"Is that the
law?" he asked doubtfully.
"Oh, hurry up!
The law is whatever you can convince a court it is."
"Betty, you've
got a twisted mind." He slid out between the bars, turned and said,
"Lummie, I'll only be gone a minute. You stay right here."
"Why?"
asked Lummox.
"Never mind
'why.' You wait for me here."
"All
right."
There was a crowd
on the courthouse lawn, people gawking at Lummox in his new notoriety. Chief
Dreiser had ordered rope barriers erected and a couple of his men were present
to see that they were respected, The two young people ducked under the ropes
and pushed through the crowd to the courthouse steps. The county clerk's office
was on the second floor; there they found his chief deputy, an elderly maiden
lady.
Miss Schreiber took
the same view of registering Lummox as free from judgment that John Thomas did.
But Betty pointed out that it was not up to the county clerk to decide what was
an eligible chattel under the law, and cited an entirely fictitious case about
a man who homesteaded a multiple echo. Miss Schreiber reluctantly filled out
forms, accepted the modest fee, and gave them a certified copy.
It was almost ten
o'clock. John Thomas hurried out and started downstairs. He stopped when he saw
that Betty had paused at a penny weighing machine. "Come on, Betty,"
he demanded. "This is no time for that."
"I'm not
weighing myself," she answered while staring into the mirror attached to
it. "I'm checking my makeup. I've got to look my best."
"You look all
right."
"Why, Johnnie,
a compliment!"
"It wasn't a
compliment. Hurry up. I've got to tell Lummox something."
"Throttle back
and hold at ten thousand. I'll bring you in." She wiped off her eyebrows,
painted them back in the smart Madame Satan pattern, and decided that it made
her look older. She considered adding a rolling-dice design on her right cheek,
but skipped it as Johnnie was about to boil over. They hurried down and
outdoors.
More moments were
wasted convincing a policeman that they belonged inside the barrier. Johnnie
saw that two men were standing by Lummox's cage. He broke into a run.
"Hey! You two! Get away from there!"
Judge O'Farrell
turned around and blinked. "What is your interest, young man?" The
other man turned but said nothing.
"Me? Why, I'm
his owner. He's not used to strangers. So go back of the rope, will you?"
He turned to Lummox. "It's all right, baby. Johnnie's here."
"Howdy,
Judge."
"Oh. Hello,
Betty." The judge looked at her as if trying to decide why she was present,
then turned to John Thomas. 'You must be the Stuart boy. I'm Judge
O'Farrell."
"Oh. Excuse
me, Judge," John Thomas answered, his ears turning pink. "I thought
you were a sightseer."
"A natural
error. Mr. Greenberg, this is the Stuart boy. . . John Thomas Stuart. Young
man, this is the Honorable Sergei Greenberg, Special Commissioner for the
Department of Spatial Affairs." He looked around. "Oh yes. . . this
is Miss Betty Sorenson, Mr. Commissioner. Betty, why have you done those silly
things to your face?"
She ignored him
with dignity. "Honored to meet you, Mr. Commissioner."
"Just 'Mr.
Greenberg,' please, Miss Sorenson." Greenberg turned to Johnnie. "Any
relation to the John Thomas Stuart?"
"I'm John
Thomas Stuart the Eleventh," Johnnie answered simply. "I suppose you
mean my great-great-great grandfather."
"I guess that
would be it. I was born on Mars, almost within sight of his statue. I had no
idea your family was mixed up in this. Perhaps we can have a gab about Martian
history later."
"I've never
been to Mars," Johnnie admitted.
"No? That's
surprising. But you're young yet."
Betty listened,
ears almost twitching, and decided that this judge, if that was what he was,
would be an even softer mark than Judge O'Farrell. It was hard to remember that
Johnnie's name meant anything special. . . especially since it didn't. Not
around Westville.
Greenberg went on,
"You've made me lose two bets, Mr. Stuart."
"Sir?"
"I thought
this creature would prove not to be from 'Out There.' I was wrong; that big
fellow is certainly not native to Earth. But I was equally sure that, if he was
e.-t., I could attribute him, I'm not an exotic zoologist, but in my business
one has to keep skimming such things. . . look at the pictures at least. But
I'm stumped. What is be and where did he come from?"
"Uh, why, he's
just Lummox. That's what we call him. My great grandfather brought him back in
the Trail Blazer. . . her second trip."
"That, long
ago, eh? Well, that clears up some of the mystery; that was before DepSpace
kept records. . . in fact before there was such a department. But I still don't
see how this fellow could have missed making a splash in the history books.
I've read about the Trail Blazer and I remember she brought back many
exotica. But I don't remember this fellow. . . and, after all,
extra-terrestrials were news in those days."
"Oh, that. . .
Well, sir, the captain didn't know Lummox was aboard. Great-granddad brought
him aboard in his jump bag and sneaked him off the ship the same way."
"In his lump
bag?" Greenberg stared at Lummox's out-sized figure.
"Yes, sir. Of
course Lummie was smaller then."
"So I am
forced to believe."
"I've got
pictures of him. He was about the size of a collie pup. More legs of
course."
"Mmmm, yes.
More legs. And he puts me, more in mind of a triceratops than a collie. Isn't
he expensive to feed?"
"Oh, no,
Lummie eats anything. Well, almost anything," John Thomas amended hastily,
glancing self-consciously at the steel bars. "Or he can go without eating
for a long time. Can't you, Lummie?"
Lummox had been
lying with his legs retracted, exhibiting the timeless patience which he could
muster when necessary. He was listening to his chum and Mr. Greenberg while
keeping an eye on Betty and the judge. He now opened his enormous mouth.
"Yes, but I don't like it."
Mr. Greenberg
raised his eyebrows and said, "I hadn't realized that he was a
speech-center type."
"A what? Oh,
sure. Lummie's been talking since my father was a boy; he just sort of picked
it up. I meant to introduce you. Here, Lummie. . .I want you to meet Mr.
Commissioner Greenberg."
Lummox looked at
Greenberg without interest and said, "How do you do, Mr. Commissioner
Greenberg," saying the formula phrase clearly but not doing so well on the
name and title.
"Uh, how do
you do, Lummox." He was staring at Lummox when the courthouse clock
sounded the hour. Judge O'Farrell turned and spoke to him.
"Ten o'clock,
Mr. Commissioner. I suppose we had better get started."
"No
hurry," Greenberg answered absent-mindedly, "since the party can't
start until we get there. I'm interested in this line of investigation. Mr.
Stuart, what is Lummox's R.I.Q. on the human scale?"
"Huh? Oh, his
relative intelligence quotient. I don't know, sir."
"Good
gracious, hasn't anyone ever tried to find out?"
"Well, no,
sir. . . I mean 'yes, sir.' Somebody did run some tests on him back in my
grandfather's time, but granddad got so sore over the way they were treating
Lummie that he chucked them out. Since then we’ve kept strangers away from
Lummie, mostly. But he's real bright. Try him."
Judge O'Farrell
whispered to Greenberg, "The brute isn't as bright as a good bird dog,
even if he can parrot human speech a little. I know."
John Thomas said
indignantly, "I heard that, Judge. You're just prejudiced!"
The judge started
to answer but Betty cut across him. "Johnnie! You know what I told you. .
. I'll do the talking."
Greenberg ignored
the interruption. "Has any attempt been made to learn his language?"
"Sir?"
"Mmm,
apparently not. And he may have been brought here before he was old enough to
talk. . . his own language I mean. But he must have had one; it's a truism
among xenists that speech centers are found only in nervous systems that use
them. That is to say, he could not have learned human speech as speech even
poorly, unless his own breed used oral communication. Can he write?"
"How could he,
sir? He doesn't have hands."
"Mmm, yes.
Well, taking a running jump with the aid of theory, I'll bet on a relative
score of less than 40, then. Xenologists have found that high types, equivalent
to humans, always have three characteristics: speech centers, manipulation, and
from these two, record keeping. So we can assume that Lummox's breed was left
at the post. Studied any xenology?"
"Not much,
sir," John Thomas admitted shyly, "except books I could find in the
library. But I mean to major in xenology and exotic biology in college."
"Good for you.
It's a wide open field. You'd be surprised how difficult it is to hire enough
xenists just for DepSpace. But my reason for asking was this: as you know, the
department has intervened in this case. Because of him." Greenberg
gestured at Lummox. "There was a chance that your pet might be of a race
having treaty rights with us. Once or twice, strange as it may seem, a foreigner visiting this planet has
been mistaken for a wild animal, with. . . shall we say 'unfortunate'
results?" Greenberg frowned, recalling the terrible hushed-up occasion
when a member of the official family of the Ambassador from Llador had been
found, dead and stuffed-in a curiosity shop in the Virgin Islands. "But no
such hazard exists here."
"Oh. I guess
not, sir. Lummox is. . . well, he's just a member of our family."
"Precisely."
The Commissioner spoke to Judge O'Farrell. "May I consult you a moment,
Judge? Privately?"
"Certainly,
sir."
The men moved,
away; Betty joined John Thomas. "It's a cinch," she whispered,
"if you can keep from making more breaks."
"What did I
do?" he protested. "And what makes you think it's going to be
easy?"
"It's obvious.
He likes you, he likes Lummox."
"I don't see
how that pays for the ground floor of the Bon Marché. Or all those lamp
posts."
"Just keep
your blood pressure down and follow my lead. Before we are through, they'll be
paying us. You'll see."
A short distance
away Mr. Greenberg was saying to Judge O'Farrell, "Judge, from what I have
learned it seems to me that the Department of Spatial Affairs should withdraw
from this case."
"Eh? I don't
follow you, sir."
"Let me
explain. What I would like to do is to postpone the hearing twenty-four hours
while I have my conclusions checked by the department. Then I can withdraw and
let the local authorities handle it. Meaning you, of course."
Judge O'Farrell
pursed his lips. "I don't like last-minute postponements, Mr.
Commissioner. It has always seemed unfair to me to order busy people to gather
together, to their expense and personal inconvenience, then tell them to come
back another day. It doesn't have the flavor of justice."
Greenberg frowned.
"True. Let me see if we can arrive at it another way. From what young
Stuart tells me I am certain that this ease is not one calling for intervention
under the Federation's xenic policies, even though the center of interest is
extra-terrestrial and therefore a legal cause for intervention if needed.
Although the department has the power, that power is exercised only when
necessary to avoid trouble with governments of other planets. Earth has
hundreds of' thousands of e.-t. animals; it has better than thirty thousand
non-human xenians, either residents or-visitors, having legal status under
treaties as 'human' even though they are obviously non-human. Xenophobia being
what it is, particularly in our cultural backwaters. . . no, I wasn't referring
to Westville! Human nature-being what it is, each of those foreigners is a
potential source of trouble in our foreign relations.
"Forgive me
for saying what you already know; it is a necessary foundation. The department
can't go around wiping the noses of all our xenic visitors - even those that
have noses. We haven't the personnel and certainly not the inclination. If one
of them gets into trouble, it is usually sufficient to advise the local
magistrate of our treaty obligations to the xenian's home planet. In rare cases
the department intervenes. This, in my opinion, is not such a case. In the
first place it seems that our friend Lummox here is an 'animal under the law
and. . ."
"Was there
doubt?" the judge asked in astonishment. "'There might have been.
That's why I am here. But, despite his limited ability to talk, his other
limitations would keep such a breed from rising to a level where we could
accept it as civilized; therefore he is an animal. Therefore he has only the
usual rights of animals under our humane laws. Therefore the department need
not concern itself."
"I see. Well,
no one is going to be cruel to him, not in my court."
"Certainly.
But for another quite sufficient reason the department is not interested. Let
us suppose that this creature is 'human' in the sense that law and custom and
treaty have attached to that word since we first made contact with the Great
Race of Mars. He is not, but suppose it."
"Stipulated."
agreed Judge O'Farrell.
"We stipulate
it. Nevertheless he cannot be a concern of the department because. . . Judge,
do you know the history of the Trail Blazer?"
"Vaguely, from
grammar school days. I'm not a student of spatial exploration. Our own Earth is
confusing enough."
"Isn't it,
though? Well, the Trail Blazer made three of the first interspatial transition
flights, when such flights were as reckless as the voyage Columbus attempted.
They did not know where they were going and they had only hazy notions about
how to get back in fact the Trail Blazer never came back from her third
trip."
"Yes, yes. I
remember."
"The point is,
young Stuart-I can't call him by his full name; it doesn't seem right-Stuart tells
me that this loutish creature with the silly smile is a souvenir of the Trail
Blazer's second cruise. That's all I need to know. We have no treaties with any
of the planets she visited, no trade, no intercourse of any sort. Legally they
don't exist. Therefore the only laws that apply to Lummox are our own domestic
laws; therefore the department should not intervene-and even if it did, a
special master such as myself would be obliged to rule entirely by domestic
law. Which you are better qualified to do than I."
Judge O'Farrell
nodded. "Well, I have no objection to resuming jurisdiction. Shall we go
in?"
"Just a
moment. I suggested a delay because this case has curious features. I wanted to
refer back to the department to make sure that my theory is correct and that I
have not missed some important precedent or law. But I am willing to withdraw
at once if you can assure me of one thing. This creature. . . I understand
that, despite its mild appearance, it turned out to be destructive, even
dangerous?"
O'Farrell nodded.
"So I understand. . . unofficially of course."
"Well, has
there been any demand that it be destroyed?"
"Well,"
the judge answered slowly, "again unofficially, I know that such a demand
will be made. It has come to my attention privately that our chief of police
intends to ask the court to order the animal's destruction as a public safety
measure. I anticipate prayers from private sources as well."
Mr. Greenberg
looked worried. "As bad as that? Well, Judge, what is your attitude? If
you try the case, are you going to let the animal be destroyed?"
Judge O'Farrell
retorted, "Sir, that is an improper question."
Greenberg turned
red. "I beg your pardon. But I must get at it in some fashion. You realize
that this specimen is unique? Regardless of what it has done, or how dangerous
it may be (though I'm switched if I'm convinced of that), nevertheless
its interest to science is such that it should be preserved. Can't you assure
me that you will not order it destroyed?"
"Young man,
you are urging me to prejudge a case, or a portion of a case. Your attitude is
most improper!"
Chief Dreiser chose
this bad time to come hurrying up. "Judge, rye been looking all over for
you. Is this hearing going to take place? I've got seven men who. . ."
O'Farrell interrupted
him. "Chief, this is Mr. Commissioner Greenberg. Mr. Commissioner, our
Chief of Safety."
"Honored,
Chief."
"Howdy, Mr.
Commissioner. Gentlemen, about this hearing. I'd like to know. . ."
"Chief,"
the judge interrupted brusquely, "just tell my bailiff to hold things in
readiness. Now leave us in private, if you please."
"But. .
." The chief shut up and backed away, while muttering something excusable
in a harassed policeman. O'Farrell turned back to Greenberg.
The Commissioner
had had time during the interruption to recall that he was supposed to be
without personal emotions. He said smoothly, "I withdraw the question,
Judge. I had no intention of committing an impropriety." He grinned.
"Under other circumstances I might have found myself slapped for contempt,
eh?"
O'Farrell grudged a
smile. "It is possible."
"Do you have a
nice jail? I have over seven months leave saved up and no chance to take
it."
"You shouldn't
overwork, young man. I always find time to fish, no matter how full the docket.
'Allah does not subtract from man's allotted time those hours spent in
fishing.'"
"That's a good
sentiment. But I still have a problem. You know that I could insist on
postponement while I consult the department?"
"Certainly. Perhaps
you should. Your decision should not be affected by my opinions."
"No. But I
agree with you; last-minute postponements are vexations." He was thinking
that to refer to the department, in this odd case, meant to consult Mr. Kiku
and he could hear the Under Secretary making disgusted remarks about
"initiative" and 'responsibility" and "for heaven's sake,
couldn't anyone else around this madhouse make a simple decision?"
Greenberg made up his mind. "I think it is best for the department to
continue intervention. I'll take it, at least through a preliminary
hearing."
O'Farrell smiled
broadly. "I had hoped that you would. I'm looking forward to hearing you.
I understand that you gentlemen from the Department of Spatial Affairs
sometimes hand out an unusual brand of law."
"Really? I
hope not. I mean to be a credit to Harvard Law."
"Harvard? Why,
so am I! Do they still shout for Reinhardt?"
"They did when
I was there."
"Well, well,
it's a small world! I hate to wish this case on a schoolmate; I'm afraid it is
going to be a hot potato."
"Aren't they
all? Well, let's start the fireworks. Why don't we sit en banc? You'll
probably have to finish."
They started back
to the courthouse. Chief Dreiser, who had been fuming some distance away, saw
that Judge O'Farrell had forgotten him. He started to follow, then noted that
the Stuart boy and Betty Sorenson were still on the other side of Lummox's
cage. They had their heads together and did not notice that the two magistrates
were leaving. Dreiser strode over to them.
"Hey! Inside
with you, Johnnie Stuart! You were supposed to be in court twenty minutes
ago."
John Thomas looked
startled. "But I thought. . . he began, then noticed that the judge and
Mr. Greenberg had gone. "Oh! Just a minute, Mr. Dreiser. . . I've got something
to say to Lummox."
"You've got
nothing to say to that beast now. Come along."
"But, Chief. .
."
Mr. Dreiser grabbed
his arm and started to move away. Since he outweighed John Thomas by nearly one
hundred pounds Johnnie moved with him. Betty interrupted with, "Deacon
Dreiser! What a nasty way to behave!"
"That'll be
enough out of you, young lady," Dreiser answered. He continued toward the
courthouse with John Thomas in tow. Betty shut up and followed. She considered
tripping the police chief, but decided not to.
John Thomas gave in
to the inevitable. He had intended to impress on Lummox, at the very last
minute, the necessity of remaining quiet, staying put, and not eating the steel
bars. But Mr. Dreiser would not listen. It seemed to John that most of the
older people in the world spent much of their time not listening.
Lummox had not
missed their exit. He stood up, filling the enclosed space, and stared after
John Thomas, while wondering what to do. The bars creaked as he brushed against
them. Betty looked back and said, "Lummox! You wait there! We'll be
back."
Lummox remained
standing, staring after them and thinking about it. An order from Betty wasn't
really an order. Or was it? There were precedents in the past to think over.
Presently he lay
down again.
IV
The
Prisoner at the Bars
As O'Farrell and
Greenberg entered the room the bailiff shouted, "Order in the court!"
The babble died down and spectators tried to find seats. A young man wearing a
hat and hung about with paraphernalia stepped into the path of the two officials.
"Hold it!" he said and photographed them. "One more. . . and
give us a smile, Judge, like the Commissioner had just said something
funny."
"One is
enough. And take off that hat." O'Farrell brushed past him. The man
shrugged but did not take off his hat.
The clerk of the
court looked up as they approached. His face was red and sweaty, and he had his
tools spread out on the justice's bench. "Sorry, Judge," he said.
"Half a moment." He bent over a microphone and intoned,
"Testing. . . one, two, three, four. . . Cincinnati. . . sixty-six."
He looked up. "I've had more grief with this recording system today."
"You should
have checked it earlier."
"So help me,
Judge, if you can find anybody. . . Never mind. I did check it, it was running
sweet. Then when I switched it on at ten minutes to ten, a transistor quit and
it's been an endless job to locate the trouble."
"All
right," O'Farrell answered testily, annoyed that it should happen in the
presence of a distinguished visitor. "Get my bench clear of your
implements, will you?"
Greenberg said
hastily, "If it's all the same to you, I won't use the bench. We'll gather
around a big table, court-martial style. I find it speeds things up."
O'Farrell looked
unhappy. "I have always maintained the ancient formalities in this court.
I find it worthwhile."
"Very likely.
I suppose that those of us who have to try cases anywhere and everywhere get
into sloppy habits. But we can't help it. Take Minatare for example; suppose
you attempted, out of politeness, to conform to their customs in trying a case.
They don't think a judge is worth a hoot unless he undergoes a cleansing fast
before he mounts the judge's sphere. . . then he has to stay up there without
food or drink until he reaches a decision. Frankly, I couldn't take it. Could
you?"
Judge O'Farrell
felt annoyed that this glib young man should imply that there could be a
parallel between the seemly rituals of his court and such heathen practices. He
recalled uneasily the three stacks of wheat cakes, adorned with sausage and
eggs, with which he had started the day. "Well. . . 'other times, other
customs,'" he said grudgingly."
"Exactly. And
thanks for indulging me." Greenberg motioned to the bailiff; the two
started shoving attorneys' tables together to make one big one before O'Farrell
could make clear that he had quoted the old saw for the purpose of rebutting
it. Shortly, about fifteen people were seated around the composite table and
Greenberg had sent the bailiff out to find ash trays. He turned to the clerk,
who was now at his control desk, wearing earphones and crouching over his
instruments in the awkward pose of all electronics technicians. "Is your
equipment working now?"
The clerk pressed a
thumb and forefinger together. "Rolling."
"Very well.
Court's in session."
The clerk spoke into
his mike, announcing time, date, place, nature and jurisdiction of the court,
and the name and title of the special master presiding, reading the last and
mispronouncing Sergei Greenberg's first name; Greenberg did not correct him.
The bailiff came in, his hands full of ash trays, and said hastily, "Oyez!
Oyez! Let all who have business before this court gather nigh and. . ."
'Never mind,"
Greenberg interrupted. "Thanks anyhow. This court will now hold a
preliminary hearing on any and all issues relating to the actions last Monday
of an extra-terrestrial creature locally resident and known as 'Lummox? I refer
to that big brute in a cage outside this building. Bailiff, go get a picture of
him, please, and insert it in the record."
"Right away,
your honor."
"The court
wishes to announce that this hearing may be converted to a final determination
on any or all issues at any time, if the court so announces and subject to
objection and ruling at the time. In other words, don't hold your fire; this
may be your only day in court. Oh yes. . . the court will receive petitions
relating to this extra-terrestrial as well as hear issues."
"Question,
your honor."
"Yes?"
"May it please
the court: my client and I have no objection if all that we are engaged in is a
preliminary inquiry. But will we return to accepted procedures if we go on to
terminer?"
"This court,
being convened by the Federation and acting in accordance with the body of law
called 'Customs of Civilizations' in brief and consisting of agreements,
treaties, precedents, et cetera, between two or more planets of the Federation,
or with other civilizations with which member planets of the Federation have
diplomatic relations, is not bound by local procedures. It is the purpose of
this court to arrive at the truth and, from there, to reach equity. . . equity
under the Law. The court will not trample on local law and custom except where
they are hopelessly opposed to superior law. But where local custom is merely
ritualistic, this court will ignore formality and get on with its business.
Understand me?"
"Er, I believe
so, sir. I may take exception later." The small, middle-aged man who spoke
seemed embarrassed.
"Any one may
object at any time for any reason atid be heard. Also you may appeal from my
decisions. However. . ." Greenberg grinned warmly.". . . I doubt if
it will do you much good. So far I have been pretty lucky in having my
decisions upheld."
"I did not
intend to imply,"' the man answered stiffly, "that the court was not
properly. . ."
"Sure, sure!
Let's get on with it." Greenberg picked up a stack of papers. "Here
is a civil action. 'Bon Marché Merchandising Corporation versus 'Lummox,' John
Thomas Stuart XI. . ." ("That name still bothers me," he
said in an aside to Judge O'Farrell.) ". . . Marie Brandley Stuart. et
al., and another one like it for the Western Mutual Assurance Company, insurers
of Bon Marché. Here is another, same defendants, brought by K. Ito and his
insurance company, um, New World Casualty, Ltd., and one from the City of
Westville, same defendants again . . . and still another brought by Mrs.
Isabelle Donahue. Also some criminal matters one is for harboring a dangerous
animal, one for felonious harboring of same, another for negligence and another
for maintaining a public nuisance."
John Thomas had
been steadily turning white. Greenberg glanced at him and said, "They
haven't skipped much, have they, son? Cheer up. . . the condemned man always
eats a hearty breakfast." John Thomas managed a sickly grin. Betty found
his knee under the table and patted it.
There was another
paper in the stack; Greenberg shuffled it in with the others without reading it
into the record. It was a petition signed by the Chief-of-Safety on behalf of
the City of Westville praying the court to order the destruction of a dangerous
animal known as "Lummox" and further identified as, etc. Instead
Greenberg looked up and said, "Now who's who? You, sir?"
The man addressed
was the lawyer who had questioned the court's methods; he identified himself as
Alfred Schneider and stated that he was acting both for Western Mutual and for
the Bon Marché. "This gentleman beside me is Mr. deGrasse, manager of the
store."
"Good. Now the
next man, please." Greenberg established that all principals were present,
with their attorneys; the roster included, besides himself, Judge O'Farrell,
John Thomas, Betty, and Chief Dreiser, the following: Mrs. Donahue and her
lawyer Mr. Beanfield, Messrs. Schneider and deGrasse for Bon Marché, Mr.
Lombard, city attorney of Westville, the attorney for Mr. Ito's insurance
company and Mr. Ito's son (acting for his father), Officers Karnes and Mendoza
(witnesses), and John Thomas's mother with the Stuart family lawyer, Mr.
Postle.
Greenberg said to
Postle, "I take it you are also acting for Mr. Stuart."
Betty interrupted
with, "Heavens, no! I'm representing Johnnie."
Greenberg raised
his eyebrows. "I was about to ask what you were doing here. Uh, you are an
attorney?"
"Well. . . I'm
his counsel."
O'Farrell leaned
over and whispered, "This is preposterous, Mr. Commissioner. Of course she
is not a lawyer. I know the child. I'm rather fond of her. . . but frankly, I
don't think she is quite bright." He added severely, "Betty, you have
no business here. Get out and quit making a fool of yourself."
"Now, see
here, Judge. . ."
"One moment,
young lady," Greenberg put in. "Do you have any qualifications to act
as counsel for Mr. Stuart?"
"I certainly
do. I'm the counsel he wants."
"Mmm, a very
strong point. Though perhaps not sufficient." He spoke to John Thomas.
"Is that correct?"
"Uh, yes.
sir."
Judge O'Farrell
whispered, "Don't do it, son! You'll be reversed."
Greenberg whispered
back, "That's what I "am afraid of." He frowned, then spoke to
Mr. Postle. "Are you prepared to act for both mother and son?"
"Yes."
"No!"
Betty contradicted.
"Eh? Wouldn't
Mr. Stuart's interests be better protected in the hands of an attorney than in
yours? No, don't answer; I want Mr. Stuart to answer."
John Thomas turned
pink and managed to mutter, "I don't want him."
"Why?"
John Thomas looked
stubborn. Betty said scornfully, "Because his mother doesn't like Lummox,
that's why. And. . ."
'That's not
true!" Mrs. Stuart cut in sharply.
"It is true. .
. and that old fossil Postle is stringing along with her. They want to get rid
of Lummie, both of them!"
O'Farrell coughed
in his handkerchief. Postle turned red. Greenberg said gravely, "Young
lady, you will stand and apologize to Mr. Postle."
Betty looked at the
Commissioner, dropped her eyes and stood up. She said humbly, "Mr. Postle,
I'm sorry you're a fossil. I mean I'm sorry I said you were a fossil."
"Sit
down," Greenberg said soberly. "Mind your manners hereafter. Mr.
Stuart, no one is required to accept counsel not of his choice. But you place
me in a dilemma. Legally you are a minor child; you have chosen as counsel
another minor child. It won't look well in the record." He pulled at his
chin. "Could it be that you. . . or your counsel. . . or both of you. . .
are trying to cause a mistrial?"
"Uh, no,
sir." Betty looked smugly virtuous; it was a possibility she had counted
on but had not mentioned to Johnnie.
"Hmm. .
."
"Your honor. .
."
"Yes, Mr.
Lombard?"
"This strikes
me as ridiculous. This girl has no standing. She is not a member of the bar;
obviously she can't function as an attorney. I dislike finding myself in the
position of instructing the court but the obvious thing to do is to put her
outside the bar and appoint counsel. May I suggest that the Public Defender is
present and prepared?"
"You may so
suggest. Is that all, Mr. City Attorney?"
"Uh, yes, your
honor."
"May I say
that the court also finds it distasteful for you to instruct the court; you
will not do so again."
"Er. . . yes,
your honor."
"This court
will, make its own mistakes in its own way. Under the customs by which this
court is convened it is not necessary that a counsel be qualified formally. . .
in your idiom, be a 'member of the bar,' a licensed lawyer. If you find that
rule unusual, let me assure you that the hereditary lawyer-priests of Deflai
find it much more astonishing. But it is the only rule which can be applied everywhere. Nevertheless I thank you for your
suggestion. Will the Public Defender stand up?"
"Here, your
honor. Cyrus Andrews."
"Thank you.
Are you prepared to act?"
"Yes. I'll
need a recess to consult with my principal." "Naturally. Well, Mr.
Stuart? Shall the court appoint Mr. Andrews as your counsel? Or associate
counsel?"
"No!"
Again Betty answered.
"I was
addressing Mr. Stuart, Miss Sorenson. Well?" John Thomas glanced at Betty.
"No, your honor."
"Why
not?"
"I'll answer
that," Betty put in. "I talk faster than he does; that's why I'm
counsel. We won't take Mr. Andrews because the City Attorney is against us on
one of these silly things they've got about Lummox. . . and the City Attorney
and Mr. Andrews are law partners when they are not fighting sham battles in
court!"
Greenberg turned to
Andrews. "Is that correct, sir?"
"Why, yes,
we're law partners, your honor. You will understand that, in a town this size.
. ."
"I quite
understand. I also understand Miss Sorenson's objection. Thank you, Mr.
Andrews. Stand down."
"Mr.
Greenberg?"
"What is it
now, young lady?"
"I can get you
part way off the spot. You see, I had a dirty hunch that some busybody would
try to keep me out of it. So we fixed it up ahead of time. I'm half
owner."
"Half
owner?"
"Of Lummox.
See?" She took a paper from her bag and offered it. "A bill of sale,
all legal and proper. At least it ought to be, I coped it out of the
book."
Greenberg studied
it. "The form appears correct. The date is yesterday. . . which would make
you voluntarily liable to the extent of your interest, from a civil standpoint.
It would not affect criminal matters of earlier date."
"Oh, pooh!
There aren't any criminal matters."
"That remains
to be determined. And don't say 'pooh'; it is not a legal term The question
here is whether or not the signer can vend this interest. Who owns
Lummox?"
'Why, Johnnie does!
It was in his father's will."
"So? Is that
stipulated, Mr. Postle?"
Mr. Postle
whispered with Mrs. Stuart, then answered, "So stipulated, your honor.
This creature called 'Lummox' is a chattel of John Thomas Stuart, a minor
child. Mrs. Stuart's interest is through her son."
"Very
well." Greenberg handed the bill of sale to the clerk. "Read it into
the record."
Betty settled back.
"All right, your honor. . . appoint anybody you want to. Just as long as I
can have my say."
Greenberg sighed.
"Would it make any difference if I did?"
"Not much, I
guess."
"Let the
record show that you two, having been duly warned and advised, persist in
acting as your own counsel. The court regretfully assumes the burden of
protecting your rights and advising you as to the law."
"Oh, don't
feel bad, Mr. Greenberg. We trust you."
"I'd rather
you didn't," he said dryly. "But let's move on. That gentleman down
at the end. . . who are you?"
"Me, Judge?
I'm the Galactic Press stringer around here. Name of Hovey."
"So? The clerk
will supply a transcript for the press. I'll be available for the usual
interview later, if anyone wants it. No pictures of me with this creature
Lummox, however. Are there any more gentlemen of the press?"
Two others stood
up. "The bailiff will place chairs for you just beyond the rail."
"Yes, Judge.
But first. . ."
"Outside the
rail, please." Greenberg looked around. "I think that's all. . . no,
that gentleman down there. Your name, sir?"
The man addressed
stood up. He was dressed in formal jacket and striped gray shorts and held
himself with self-conscious dignity. "May it please the court, my name,
sir, is T. Omar Esklund, Doctor of Philosophy."
"It neither
pleases nor displeases the court, Doctor. Are you a party to any of these
issues?"
"I am, sir. I
appear here as amicus curiae, a friend of the court."
Greenberg frowned.
"This court insists on choosing its own friends. State your business,
Doctor."
"Sir, if you
will permit me. I am state executive secretary of the Keep Earth Human
League." Greenberg suppressed a groan but Esklund did not notice as he had
looked down to pick up a large manuscript. "As is well known, ever since
the inception of the ungodly practice of space travel, our native Earth, given
to us by Divine law, has been increasingly overrun by creatures. . . 'beasts'
rather let us say. . . of dubious origin. The pestilential consequences of this
unholy traffic are seen on every. . ."
"Doctor
Esklund!"
"Sir?"
"What is your
business with this court? Are you a principal to any of the issues before
it?"
"Well, not in
so many words, your honor. In a broader sense, I am advocate for all mankind.
The society of which I have the honor. . ."
"Do you have any
business? A petition, perhaps?"
"Yes,"
Esklund answered sullenly, "I have a petition."
"Produce
it."
Esklund fumbled
among his papers, drew out one; it was passed to Greenberg, who did not look at
it. "Now state briefly, for the record, the nature of your petition. Speak
clearly and toward the nearest microphone."
"Well. . . may
it please the court: the society of which I have the honor of being an officer.
. . a league, if I may so say, embracing all mankind, prays. . . nay, demands
that this unearthly beast which has already ravaged this fair community be
destroyed. Such destruction is sanctioned and, yes, commanded by those
sacred-"
"Is that your
petition? You want this court to order the destruction of the e.t. known as
Lummox?"
"Yes, but more
than that, I have here a careful documentation of the arguments. . .
unanswerable arguments I may say, to. . ."
"Just a
moment. That word 'demands' which you used; does it appear in the
petition?"
"No, your
honor, that came from my heart, from the fullness of. . ."
"Your heart
has just led you into contempt. Do you wish to rephrase it?"
Esklund stared,
then said grudgingly, "I withdraw the word. No contempt was intended."
"Very well.
The petition is received; the clerk will record it. Decision later. Now as to
that speech you wished to make: from the size of your manuscript I surmise that
you will require about two hours?"
"I believe
that will be ample, your honor," Eskiund answered, somewhat mollified.
"Good.
Bailiff!"
"Your
honor?"
"Can you dig
up a soap box?"
"Why, I
believe so, sir."
"Excellent.
Place it on the lawn outside. Doctor Esklund, everyone of us enjoys free speech
. . . so enjoy yourself. That soap box is yours for the next two hours."
Dr. Esklund turned
the color of eggplant. "You'll hear from us!"
"No
doubt."
"We know your
sort! Traitors to mankind. Renegades! Trifling with. . ."
"Remove
him."
The bailiff did so,
grinning. One of the reporters followed them out. Greenberg said gently,
"We seem to have trimmed it down to inclispensables now. We have several
issues before us, but they have in common the same sheaf of facts. Unless there
is objection, we will hear testimony for all issues together, then pass on the
issues one at a time. Objection?"
The lawyers looked
at each other. Finally Mr. Ito's attorney said, "Your honor, it would seem
to me to be fairer to try them one at a time."
"Possibly. But
if we do, we'll be here until Christmas. I dislike to make so many busy people
go over the same ground repeatedly. But a separate trial of the facts to a jury
is your privilege. . . bearing in mind, if you lose, your principal will have
to bear the added costs alone."
Mr. Ito's son
tugged at the sleeve of the lawyer and whispered to him. The lawyer nodded and
said, "We'll go along with a joint hearing. . . as to facts."
"Very well.
Further objection?" There was none. Greenberg turned to O'Farrell.
"Judge, is this room equipped with truth meters?"
"Eh? Why, yes.
I hardly ever use them."
"I like
them." He turned to the others. "Truth meters will be hooked up. No
one is required to use one, but anyone choosing not to will be sworn. This
court, as is its privilege, will take judicial notice of and will comment on
the fact if anyone refuses the use of a truth meter."
John Thomas
whispered to Betty, "Watch your step, Slugger."
She whispered back,
"I will, smarty! You watch yours." Judge O'Farrell said to Greenberg,
"It will take some time to rig them. Hadn't we better break for
lunch?"
"Oh yes,
lunch. Attention, everyone. . . this court does not recess for lunch. I'll ask
the bailiff to take orders for coffee and sandwiches, or whatever you like
while the clerk is rigging the meters. We will eat here at the table. In the
meantime. . ." Greenberg fumbled for cigarettes, fumbled again. ". .
. has anybody got a match?"
Out on the lawn,
Lummox, having considered the difficult question of Betty's right to give
orders, had come to the conclusion that she possibly had a special status. Each
of the John Thomases had introduced into his life a person equivalent to Betty;
each had insisted that the person in question must be humored in every whim.
This John Thomas had already begun the process with Betty; therefore, it was
best to go along with what she wanted as long as it was not too much trouble.
He lay down and went to sleep, leaving his watchman eye on guard.
He slept
restlessly, disturbed by the tantalizing odor of steel. After a time he woke up
and stretched, causing the cage to bulge. It seemed to him that John Thomas had
been gone an unnecessarily long time. On second thought, he had not liked the
way that man had taken John Thomas away. . . no, he hadn't liked it a bit. He
wondered what he should do, if anything? What would John Thomas say, if he were
here?
The problem was too
complex. He lay down and tasted the bars of his cage. He refrained from eating
them; he merely tried them for flavor. A bit grucky, he decided, but good.
Inside, Chief
Dreiser had completed his testimony and had been followed by Karnes and
Mendoza. No argument had developed and the truth meters had stayed steady; Mr.
deGrasse had insisted on amplifying parts of the testimony. Mr. Ito's lawyer
stipulated that Mr. Ito had fired at Lummox; Mr. Ito's son was allowed to
describe and show photographs of the consequences. Only Mrs. Donahue's
testimony was needed to complete the story of L-day.
Greenberg turned to
her lawyer. "Mr. Beanfield, will you examine your client, or shall the
court continue?"
"Go ahead,
your honor. I may add a question or two."
"Your privilege.
Mrs. Donahue, tell us what happened."
"I certainly
shall. Your honor, friends, distinguished visitors, unaccustomed as I am to
public speaking, nevertheless, in my modest way, I believe I am. . ."
"Never mind
that, Mrs. Donahue. Just the facts. Last Monday afternoon."
"But I
was!"
"Very well, go
ahead. Keep it simple."
She sniffed.
"Well! I was lying down, trying to snatch a few minutes rest. . . I have
so many responsibilities, clubs and charitable committees and things. . ."
Greenberg was
watching the truth meter over her head. The needle wobbled restlessly, but did
not kick over into the red enough to set off the warning buzzer. He decided
that it was not worth while to caution her.
". . . when
suddenly I was overcome with a nameless dread."
The needle swung
far into the red, a ruby light flashed and the buzzer gave out a loud rude
noise. Somebody started to giggle; Greenberg said hastily, "Order in the
court. The bailiff is instructed to remove any spectator making a
disturbance."
Mrs. Donahue broke
off suddenly when the buzzer sounded. Mr. Beanfield, looking grim, touched her
sleeve and said, "Never mind that, dear lady. Just tell the court about
the noise you heard and what you saw and what you did."
"He's leading
the witness," objected Betty.
"Never
mind," said Greenberg. "Somebody has to."
"But. .
."
"Objection
overruled. Witness will continue."
"Well! Uh. . .
well, I heard this noise and I wondered what in the world it was. I peeked out
and there was this great ravening beast charging back and forth and. . ."
The buzzer sounded
again; a dozen spectators laughed. Mrs. Donahue said angrily, 'Will somebody
shut that silly thing off? How anyone can be expected to testify with that
going on is more than I can see."
"Order!"
called Greenberg. "If there is more demonstration, the court will find it
necessary to hold someone in contempt." He went on to Mrs. Donahue:
"Once a witness has accepted the use of the truth meter the decision
cannot be changed. But the data supplied by it is instructive merely; the court
is not bound by it. Continue."
"Well, I
should hope so. I never told a lie in my life?"
The buzzer remained
silent; Greenberg reflected that she must believe it. "I mean," he
added, "that the court makes up its own mind. It does not allow a machine
to do so for it."
"My father
always said that gadgets like that were spawn of the devil. He said that an
honest business man should not. . ."
"Please, Mrs.
Donahue"
Mr. Beanfield
whispered to her. Mrs. Donahue went on more quietly, "Well, there was that
thing, that enormous beast kept by that boy next door. It was eating my
rose bushes."
"And what did
you do?"
"I didn't know
what to do. I grabbed the first thing at hand. . . a broom, it was. . . and
rushed out doors. The beast came charging at me and. . ."
Buzzzzzzz!
"Shall we go
over that again, Mrs. Donahue?"
"Well. . .
anyhow, I rushed at it and began to beat it on the head. It snapped at me.
Those great teeth. . ."
Buzzzzz!
"Then what
happened, Mrs. Donahue?"
"Well, it
turned away, the cowardly thing, and ran out of my yard. I don't know where it
went. But there was my lovely garden, just ruined." The needle
quivered but the buzzer did not sound.
Greenberg turned to
the lawyer. "Mr. Beanfield, have you examined the damage to Mrs. Donahue's
garden?"
"Yes, your
honor."
"Will you tell
us the extent of the damage?"
Mr. Beanfield
decided that he would rather lose a client than be buzzed in open court by that
confounded toy. "Five bushes were eaten, your honor, in whole or in part.
There was minor damage to the lawn and a hole made in an ornamental
fence."
"Financial
damage?"
Mr. Beanfield said
carefully, "The amount we are suing for is before you, your honor."
"That is not
responsive, Mr. Beanfield."
Mr. Beanfield
shrugged mentally and struck Mrs. Donahue off his list of paying properties.
"Oh, around a couple of hundred, your honor, in property damage. But the
court should allow for inconvenience and mental anguish."
Mrs. Donahue
yelped. "That's preposterous! My prize roses."
The needle jumped
and fell back too quickly to work the buzzer. Greenberg said wearily,
"What prizes, Mrs. Donahue?"
Her lawyer cut in,
"They were right next to Mrs. Donahue's well-known champion plants. Her
courageous action saved the more valuable bushes, I am happy to say."
"Is there more
to add?"
"I think not.
I have photographs, marked and identified, to offer."
"Very
well."
Mrs. Donahue glared
at her lawyer. "Well! I have something to add. There is one thing I insist
on, absolutely insist on, and that is that that dangerous, blood-thirsty
beast be destroyed!"
Greenberg turned to
Beanfield. "Is that a formal prayer, counsellor? Or may we regard it as
rhetoric?" Beanfield looked uncomfortable. "We have such a petition,
your honor."
"The court
will receive it."
Betty butted in
with, "Hey, wait a minute! All Lummie did was eat a few of her measly old.
. ."
"Later, Miss
Sorenson."
"But. .
."
"Later,
please. You will have your chance. The court is now of the opinion that it has
all the pertinent facts. Does anyone have any new facts to bring out, or does
anyone wish to question further any witness? Or bring forward another
witness?"
"We do,"
Betty said at once.
"You do
what?"
"We want to
call a new witness."
"Very well. Do
you have him here?"
"Yes, your
honor. Just outside. Lummox."
Greenberg looked
thoughtful. "Do I understand that you are proposing to put, uh, Lummox on
the stand in his own defense?"
"Why not? He
can talk."
A reporter turned
suddenly to a colleague and whispered. to him, then hurried out of the room.
Greenberg chewed his lip. "I know that," he admitted. "I
exchanged a few words with him myself. But the ability to talk does not alone
make a competent witness. A child may learn to talk, after a fashion, before it
is a year old, but only rarely is a child of tender years. . . less than five,
let us say. . . found competent to give testimony. The court takes judicial notice
that members of nonhuman races. . . non-human in the biological sense. . . may
give evidence. But nothing has been presented to show that this particular
extra-terrestrial is competent."
John Thomas
whispered worriedly to Betty, "Have you slipped your cams? There's no
telling what Lummie would say."
"Hush!"
She went on to Greenberg. "Look, Mr. Commissioner, you've said a fancy lot
of words, but what do they mean? You are about to pass judgment on Lummox. . .
and you won't even bother to ask him a question. You say he can't give
competent evidence. Well, I've seen others around here who didn't do so well.
I'll bet if you hook a truth meter to Lummie, it won't buzz. Sure, he did
things he shouldn't have done. He ate some scrawny old rose bushes and he ate Mr.
Ito's cabbages. What's horrible about that? When you were a kid, did you ever
swipe a cookie when you thought nobody was looking?"
She took a deep
breath. "Suppose when you swiped that cookie, somebody hit you in the face
with a broom? Or fired a gun at you? Wouldn't you be scared? Wouldn't you run?
Lummie is friendly. Everybody around here knows that. . . or at least if they
don't they are stupider and more irresponsible than he is. But did anybody try
to reason with him? Oh, no! They bullied him and fired off guns at him and
scared him to death and chased him off bridges. You say Lummie is incompetent.
Who is incompetent? All these people who were mean to him? Or Lummie? Now they
want to kill him. If a little boy swiped a cookie, I suppose they'd chop his
head off, just to be sure he wouldn't do it again. Is somebody crazy? What kind
of a farce is this?"
She stopped, tears
running down her cheeks. It was a talent which had been useful in school
dramatics; to her own surprise she found that these tears were real.
"Are you
through?" asked Greenberg.
"I guess so.
For now, anyway?'
"I must say
that you put it very movingly. But a court should not be swayed by emotion. Is
it your theory that the major portion of the damage. . . let us say everything
but the rose bushes and the cabbages. . . arose from improper acts of human
beings and therefore cannot be charged to Lummox or his owner?"
"Figure it
yourself, your honor. The tail generally follows the dog. Why not ask Lummie
how it looked to him?"
"We'll get to
that. On another issue: I cannot grant that your analogy is valid. We are
dealing here, not with a little boy, but with an animal. If this court should
order the destruction of this animal, it would not be in spirit of vengeance
nor of punishment, for an animal is presumed not to understand such values. The
purpose would be preventive, in order that a potential danger might not be
allowed to develop into damage to life or limb or property. Your little boy can
be restrained by the arms of his nurse. . . but we are dealing with a creature
weighing several tons, capable of crushing a man with a careless step. There is
no parallel in your cookie-stealing small boy."
"There isn't,
huh? That little boy can grow up and wipe out a whole city by pushing one teeny
little button. So off with his head before he grows up. Don't ask him why he
took the cookie, don't ask him anything! He's a bad boy-chop his head off and
save trouble."
Greenberg found
himself again biting his lip. He said, "It is your wish that we examine
Lummox?"
"I said so,
didn't I?"
"I'm not sure
what you said. The court will consider it."
Mr. Lombard said
quickly, "Objection, your honor. If this extraordinary. . ."
"Hold your
objection, please. Court will recess for ten minutes. All will remain."
Greenberg got up and walked away. He took out a cigarette, found again that he
had no light, stuck the pack back in his pocket.
Blast the girl! He
had had it figured how to dispose of this case smoothly, with credit to the
department and everybody satisfied. . . except the Stuart boy, but that could
not be helped. . . the boy and this precocious preposterous young mammal who
had him under her wing. And under her thumb, too, he added.
He could not allow
this unique specimen to be destroyed. But he had meant to do it suavely. . .
deny the petition of that old battle-axe, since it was obviously from malice,
and tell the police chief privately to forget the other one. The Save-the-World-for-the-Neanderthals
petition didn't matter. But this cocky girl; by talking when she should have
listened, was going to make it appear that a departmental court could be pushed
into risking public welfare over a lot of sentimental, anthropomorphic bosh!
Confound her pretty
blue eyes!
They would accuse
him of being influenced by those pretty blue eyes, too. Too bad the child
wasn't homely.
The animal's owner
was responsible for the damage; there were a thousand "strayed
animal" cases to justify a ruling-since this was not the planet Tencora.
That stuff about it being the fault of the persons who frightened him off was a
lot of prattle. But the e.-t., as a specimen for science, was worth far more
than the damage; the decision would not hurt the boy financially.
He realized that he
had allowed himself to fall into a most unjudicial frame of mind. The
defendant's ability to pay was not his business.
"Excuse me,
your honor. Please don't monkey with those things."
He looked up, ready
to snap somebody's head off, to find himself looking at the clerk of the court.
He then saw that he had been fiddling with the switches and controls of the
clerk's console. He snatched his hands away. "Sorry."
"A person who
doesn't understand these things," the clerk said apologetically, "can
cause an awful lot of trouble."
"True.
Unfortunately true." He turned away sharply. "The court will come to
order."
He sat down and
turned at once to Miss Sorenson. "The court rules that Lummox is not a
competent witness."
Betty gasped.
"Your honor, you are being most unfair!" -
"Possibly."
She thought for a
moment. "We want a change of venue."
"Where did you
learn that word? Never mind, you had one when the department intervened. That
ends it. Now keep quiet for a change."
She turned red.
"You ought to disqualify yourself!"
Greenberg had intended to be calm, positively
Olympian, in his manner. He now found it necessary to take three slow breaths.
"Young lady," he said carefully, "you have been trying to
confuse the issue all day. There is no need for you to speak now; you have said
too much already. Understand me?"
"I have not, I
will too, and I didn't either!"
"What? Repeat
that, please?"
She looked at him.
"No, I had better take it back. . . or you will be talking about
'contempt'."
"No, no. I
wanted to memorize it. I don't think I have ever heard quite so sweeping a
statement. Never mind. Just hold your tongue. If you know how. You'll be
allowed to talk later."
"Yes,
sir."
He turned to the
others. "The court announced earlier that there would be due notice if we
were to continue to terminer. The court sees no reason not to. Objection?"
The attorneys
shifted uncomfortably and looked at each other. Greenberg turned to Betty.
"How about you?"
"Me? I thought
I wasn't allowed to vote."
"Shall we
conclude these issues today?"
She glanced at John
Thomas, then said dully, "No objection," then leaned to him and
whispered, "Oh, Johnnie, I tried!"
He patted her hand
under the table. "I know you did, Slugger."
Greenberg pretended
not to hear. He went on in a cold, official voice. "This court has before
it a petition asking for the destruction of the extra-terrestrial Lummox on the
grounds that it is dangerous and uncontrollable. The facts have not sustained
that view; the petition is denied.?"
Betty gasped and
squealed. John Thomas looked startled, then grinned for the first time.
"Order, please," Greenberg said mildly. "We have here another
petition to the same end, but for different reasons." He held up the one
submitted. by the Keep Earth Human League. "This court finds itself unable
to follow the alleged reasoning. Petition denied."
"We have four
criminal charges, I am dismissing all four. The law requires. . ."
The city attorney
looked startled. "But, your honor-"
"If you have a
point, will you save it? No criminal intent can be found here, which therefore
would make it appear that there could be no crime. However, constructive intent
may appear where the law requires a man to exercise due prudence to protect
others and it is on this ground that these issues must be judged. Prudence is
based on experience, personal or vicarious, not on impossible prescience. In
the judgment of this court, the precautions taken were prudent in the light of
experience. . . experience up to last Monday afternoon, that is to say."
He turned and addressed John Thomas. "What I mean, young man, is this:
your precautions were 'prudent' so far as you knew. Now you know better. If
that beast gets loose again, it will go hard with you."
Johnnie swallowed.
"Yessir."
"We have
remaining the civil matters of damage, Here the criteria are different. The
guardian of a minor, or the owner of an animal, is responsible for damage
committed by that child or that animal, the law holding that it is better that
the owner or guardian suffer than the innocent third party. Except for one
point, which I will reserve for the moment, these civil actions fall under that
rule. First, let me note that one or more of these issues ask for real,
punitive, and exemplary damages. Punitive and exemplary damages are denied;
there are no grounds. I believe that we have arrived at real damages in each
case and counsels have so stipulated. As to costs, the Department of Spatial
Affairs has intervened in the public interest; costs will be borne by the
department."
Betty whispered,
"A good thing we homesteaded him. Look at those insurance vultures
grin."
Greenberg went on,
"I reserved one point. The question has been raised indirectly that this
Lummox may not be an animal. . . and therefore not a chattel but may be a
sentient being within the meaning of 'the Customs of Civilizations'. . . and
therefore his own master." Greenberg hesitated. He was about to add his
bit to the "Customs of Civilizations"; he was anxious not to be
overruled. "We have long disavowed slavery; no sentient being may be
owned. But if Lummox is sentient, what have we? May Lummox be held personally
responsible? It would not appear that he has sufficient knowledge of our customs,
nor does it appear that he is among us by his own choice. Are the putative
owners in fact his guardians and in that way responsible? All these questions
turn on this: is Lummox a chattel, or a free being?
"This court
expressed its opinion when it ruled that Lummox might not testify. . . at this
time. But this court is not equipped to render a final decision, no matter how
strongly it may believe that Lummox is an animal."
"The court
will therefore start proceedings on its own motion to determine the status of Lummox.
In the meantime the local authorities will take charge of Lummox and will be
held responsible both for his safety and for public safety with respect to
him." Greenberg shut up and sat back.
A fly would have
had his choice of open mouths. First to recover was the attorney for Western
Mutual, Mr. Schneider. "Your honor? Where does that leave us?"
"I don't
know."
"But. . . see
here, your honor, let's face the facts. Mrs. Stuart hasn't any property or
funds that can be attached; she's the beneficiary of a trust. Same for the boy.
We expected to levy against the beast itself; he will bring a good price in the
proper market. Now you have, if you will permit me, upset the apple cart. If
one of those scientific. . . hrrumph! . . . persons starts a long series
of tests, years long perhaps, or throws doubt on the beast's status as a
chattel. . . well, where should we look for relief? Should we sue the
city?"
Lombard was on his
feet instantly. "Now, look here, you can't sue the city! The city is one
of the damaged parties. On that theory. . ."
"Order,"
Greenberg said sternly. "None of those questions can be answered now. All
civil actions will be continued until the status of Lummox is clarified."
He looked at the ceiling. "There is another possibility. It would seem
that this creature came to Earth in the Trail Blazer. If my memory of
history serves, all specimens brought back by that ship were government
property. If Lummox is a chattel, he may nevertheless not be private property.
In that event, the source of relief may be a matter of more involved
litigation."
Mr. Schneider
looked stunned, Mr. Lombard looked angry, John Thomas looked confused and
whispered to Betty, "What's he trying to say? Lummox belongs to me.
"Ssh. .
." Betty whispered. "I told you we would get out of it. Oh,
Mr. Greenberg is a honey lamb!"
"But. .
."
"Hush up!
We're ahead."
Mr. Ito's son had
kept quiet except when testifying. Now he stood up. "Your honor?"
"Yes, Mr.
Ito?"
"I don't
understand any of this. I'm just a farmer. But I do want to know one thing. Who's
going to pay for my father's greenhouses?"
John Thomas got to
his feet. "I am," he said simply.
Betty tugged at his
sleeve. "Sit down, you idiot!"
"You hush up,
Betty. You've talked enough." Betty hushed up. "Mr. Greenberg,
everybody else has been talking. Can I say something?"
"Go
ahead."
"I've listened
to a lot of stuff all day. People trying to make out that Lummox is dangerous,
when he's not People trying to have him killed, just for spite, yes, I mean
you, Mrs. Donahue!"
"Address the
court, please," Greenberg said quietly.
"I've heard
you say a lot of things, too. I didn't follow all of them but, if you will
pardon me, sir, some of them struck me as pretty silly. Excuse me."
"No contempt
intended, I'm sure."
"Well. . .
take this about whether Lummox is or isn't a chattel. Or whether he's bright
enough to vote. Lummox is pretty bright, I guess nobody but me knows just how
bright. But he's never had any education and he's never been anywhere. But that
hasn't anything to do with who he belongs to. He belongs to me. Just the
way I belong to him. . . we grew up together. Now I know I'm responsible for
that damage last Monday. . . will you keep quiet, Betty! I can't pay for it
now, but I'll pay for it. I. . ."
"Just a
moment, young man. The court will not permit you to admit liability without
counsel. If that is your intention, court will appoint counsel."
"You said I
could have my say."
"Continue.
Noted for the record that this is not binding."
"Sure, it's binding, because I'm going
to do it. Pretty soon my education trust comes due and it would about cover it.
I guess I can. . ."
"John
Thomas!" his mother called out sharply. "You'll do no such
thing!"
"Mother, you
had better keep out of this, too. I was just going to say. . ."
"You're not to
say anything. Your honor, he is. . ."
"Order!"
Greenberg interrupted. "None of this is binding. Let the lad speak."
"Thank you,
sir. I was through, anyway. But I've got something to say to you, sir,
too. Lummie is timid. I can handle him because he trusts me-but if you think
I'm going to let a lot of strangers poke him and prod him and ask him silly
questions and put him through mazes and things, you'd just better think
again-because I won't stand for it! Lummie is sick right now. He's had more
excitement than is good for him. The poor thing. . ."
Lummox had waited
for John Thomas longer than he liked because he was not sure where John Thomas
had gone. He had seen him disappear in the crowd without being sure whether or
not Johnnie had gone into the big house nearby. He had tried to sleep after he
woke up the first time, but people had come poking around, and he had had to
wake himself up repeatedly because his watchman circuit did not have much
judgment. Not that he thought of it that way; he was merely aware that he had
come to with his alarms jangling time after time.
At last he decided
that it was time he located John Thomas and went home. Figuratively, he tore up
Betty's orders; after all, Betty was not Johnnie.
So he stepped up
his hearing to "search" and tried to locate Johnnie. He listened for
a long time, heard Betty's voice several times-but he was not interested in
Betty. He continued to listen.
There was Johnnie
now! He tuned out everything else and listened. He was in the big house all
right. Hey! Johnnie sounded just the way he did when he had arguments with his
mother. Lummox spread his hearing a little and tried to find out what was going
on.
They were talking
about things he knew nothing about. But one thing was clear: somebody was being
mean to Johnnie. His mother? Yes, be heard her once and he knew that she had
the privilege of being mean to Johnnie, just as Johnnie could talk mean to him
and it didn't really matter. But there was somebody else. . . several others,
and not a one of them had any such privilege.
Lummox decided that
it was time to act. He heaved to his feet.
John Thomas got no
farther in his peroration than "The poor thing. . ." There were
screams and shouts from outside; everybody in court turned to look. The noises
got rapidly closer and Mr. Greenberg was just going to send the bailiff to find
out about it when suddenly it became unnecessary. The door to the courtroom
bulged, then burst off its hinges. The front end of Lummox came in, tearing
away part of the wall, and ending with him wearing the door frame as a collar.
He opened his mouth. "Johnnie!" he piped.
"Lummox!"
cried his friend. "Stand still. Stay right where you are. Don't move an
inch!"
Of all the faces in
the room, that of Special Commissioner Greenberg presented the most interesting
mixed expression.
V
A
Matter of Viewpoint
The Right Honorable
Mr. Kiku, Under Secretary for Spatial Affairs, opened a desk drawer and looked
over his collection of pills. There was no longer any doubt; his stomach ulcer
was acting up again. He selected one and turned wearily back to his tasks.
He read an order
from the departmental Bureau of Engineering grounding all Pelican-class
interplanetary ships until certain modifications were accomplished. Mr. Kiku
did not bother to study the attached engineering report, but signed approval,
checked "EFFECTIVE IMMEDIATELY" and dropped the papers in the
outgoing basket. Engineering safety in space was the responsibility of BuEng;
Kiku himself knew nothing of engineering and did not wish to; he would back up
the decisions of his chief engineer, or fire him and get another one.
But he realized
glumly that the financial lords who owned the Pelican-class ships would
soon be knocking the ear of the Secretary. . . and, shortly thereafter, the
Secretary, out of his depth and embarrassed by the political power wielded by
those fine gentlemen, would dump them in his lap.
He was beginning to
have his doubts about this new Secretary; he was not shaping up.
The next item was
for his information only and had been routed to him because of standing orders
that anything concerning the Secretary must reach his desk, no matter how
routine. This item appeared routine and unimportant: according to the synopsis
an organization calling itself "The Friends of Lummox" and headed by
a Mrs. Beulah Murgatroyd was demanding an audience with the Secretary of
Spatial Affairs; they were being shunted to the Special Assistant Secretary (Public
Relations).
Mr. Kiku read no
farther. Wes Robbins would kiss them to death and neither he nor the Secretary
would be disturbed. He amused himself with the idea of punishing the Secretary
by inflicting Mrs. Murgatroyd on him, but it was merely a passing fantasy; the
Secretary's time must be reserved for really important cornerstone-layings, not
wasted on crackpot societies. Any organization calling itself "The Friends
of This or That" always consisted of someone with an axe to grind, plus
the usual assortment of prominent custard heads and professional stuffed
shirts. But such groups could be a nuisance. . . therefore never grant them the
Danegeld they demanded.
He sent it to files
and picked up a memorandum from BuEcon: a virus had got into the great yeast
plant at St. Louis; the projection showed a possibility of protein shortage and
more drastic rationing. Even starvation on Earth was no direct interest to Mr.
Kiku. But he stared thoughtfully while the slide rule in his head worked a few
figures, then he called as assistant. "Wong, have you seen BuEcon
Ay0428?"
"Uh, I believe
so, boss. The St. Louis yeast thing?"
"Yes. What
have you don't about it?"
"Er, nothing.
Not my pidgin, I believe."
"You believe,
eh? Our out-stations are your business, aren't they? Look over your shipping
schedules for the next eighteen months, correlate with Ay0428, and project. You
may have to buy Australian sheep. . . and actually get them into our
possession. We can't have our people going hungry because some moron in St
Louis dropped his socks in a yeast vat."
"Yes,
sir."
Mr. Kiku turned
back to work. He realized unhappily that he had been too brusque with Wong. His
present frame of mind, he knew, was not Wong's fault, but that of Dr. Ftaeml.
No, not Ftaeml's
fault. . . his own! He knew that he should not harbor race prejudice, not in
this job. He was aware intellectually that he himself was relatively safe from
persecution that could arise from differences of skin and hair and facial
contour for the one reason that weird creatures such as Dr. Ftaeml had made the
differences between breeds of men seem less important.
Still, there it
was. . . he hated Ftaeml's very shadow. He could not help it.
If the so-and-so
would wear a turban, it would help. . . instead of walking around with those dirty
snakes on his head wiggling like a can of worms. But oh no! the Rargyllians
were proud of them. There was a suggestion in their manner that anyone without
them was not quite human.
Come now! . . .
Ftaeml was a decent chap. He made a note to invite Ftaeml to dinner, not put it
off any longer. After all, he would make certain of deep-hypnotic preparation;
the dinner need not be difficult. But his ulcer gave a fresh twinge at the thought.
Kiku did not hold it against the Rargyllian
that he had dropped an impossible problem in the department's tired lap;
impossible problems were routine. It was just. . . well, why didn't the monster
get a haircut?
The vision of the
Chesterfieldian Dr. Ftaeml with a shingle cut, his scalp all lumps and bumps,
enabled Mr. Kiku to smile; he resumed work feeling better. The next item was a
brief of a field report. . . oh yes! Sergei Greenberg. Good boy, Sergei. He was
reaching for his pen to approve the recommendation even before he had finished
reading it.
Instead of signing,
he stared for almost half a second, then punched a button. "Files! Send up
the full report of Mr. Greenberg's field job, the one he got back from a few
days ago."
"Do you have
the reference number, sir?"
"That
intervention matter. . . you find it. Wait it's, uh, Rt0411, dated Saturday. I
want it right now."
He had only time to
dispose of half a dozen items when, seconds later, the delivery tube went thwong!
and a tiny cylinder popped out on his desk. He stuck it into his reading
machine and relaxed, with his right thumb resting on a pressure plate to
control the speed with which the print fled across the screen.
In less than seven
minutes he had zipped through not only a full transcript of the trial but also
Greenberg's report of all else that had happened. Mr. Kiku could read at least
two thousand words a minute with the aid of a machine; oral recordings and
personal interviews he regarded as time wasters. But when the machine clicked
off he decided on an oral report, He leaned to his interoffice communicator and
flipped a switch. "Greenberg."
Greenberg looked up
from his desk. "Howdy, boss."
"Come here,
please." He switched off without politenesses.
Greenberg decided
that the bossman's stomach must be bothering him again. But it was too late to
find some urgent business outside the departmental building; he hurried
upstairs and reported with his usual cheery grin. "Howdy, Chief."
"Morning. I've
been reading your intervention report."
"So?"
"How old are
you, Greenberg?"
"Eh?
Thirty-seven."
"Hmm. What is
your present rank?"
"Sir?
Diplomatic officer second class. . . acting first."
What the deuce?
Uncle Henry knew the answers. . . he probably knew what size shoes he wore.
"Old enough to
have sense," Kiku mused. "Rank enough to be assigned as ambassador. .
. or executive deputy to a politically-appointed ambassador. Sergei, how come
you are so confounded stupid?"
Greenberg's jaw
muscles clamped but he said nothing.
"Well?"
"Sir,"
Greenberg answered icily, "you are older and more experienced than I am.
May I ask why you are so confounded rude?"
Mr. Kiku's mouth
twitched but he did not smile. "A fair question. My psychiatrist tells me
that it is because I am an anarchist in the wrong job. Now sit down and we'll
discuss why you are so thick-headed. Cigarettes in the chair arm."
Greenberg sat down, discovered that he did not have a light, and asked for one.
"I don't
smoke," answered Kiku. "I thought those were the self-striking kind.
Aren't they?"
"Oh. So they
are." Greenberg lit up.
"See? You
don't use your eyes and ears. Sergei, once that beast talked, you should have
postponed the hearing until we knew all about him."
"Mmmm. . . I
suppose so."
"You suppose
so! Son, your subconscious alarms should have been clanging like a bed alarm on
Monday morning. As it is, you let the implications be sprung on you when you
thought the trial was over. And by a girl, a mere child. I'm glad I don't read
the papers; I'll bet they had fun."
Greenberg blushed.
He did read the papers.
"Then when she
had you tangled up like a rangtangtoo trying to find its own feet, instead of
facing her challenge and meeting it. . . Meeting it how? By adjourning, of
course, and ordering the investigation you should have ordered to start with,
you. . ."
"But I did
order it."
"Don't
interrupt me; I want you browned on both sides. Then you proceeded to hand down
a decision the like of which has not been seen since Solomon ordered the baby
sawed in half. What mail-order law school did you attend?"
"Harvard,"
Greenberg answered sullenly.
"Hmm. . .
Well, I shouldn't be too harsh on you; you're handicapped. But by the
seventy-seven seven sided gods of the Sarvanchil, what did you do next? First
you deny a petition from the local government itself to destroy this brute in
the interest of public-safety. . . then you reverse yourself, grant the prayer
and tell them to kill him. . . subject only to routine approval of this
department. All in ten minutes. Exeunt omnes, laughing. Son, I don't mind you
making a fool of yourself, but must you include the department?"
"Boss,"
Greenberg said humbly, "I made a mistake. When I saw the mistake, I did
the only thing I could do; I reversed myself. The beast really is dangerous and
there are no proper facilities for confining it in Westville. If it had not
been beyond my power, I would have
ordered it destroyed at once, without referring back for the department's
approval.. . for your approval."
"Hummph!"
"You weren't
sitting where I was, sir. You didn't see that solid wall bulge in. You didn't
see the destruction."
"I'm not
impressed. Did you ever see a city that had been flattened by a fusion bomb?
What does one courthouse wall matter? . . . probably some thieving contractor
didn't beef it up."
"But, boss,
you should have seen the cage he broke out of first. Steel I-beams, welded. He
tore them like straw."
"I recall that
you inspected him in that cage. Why didn't you see to it that he was confined
so that he couldn't get out?"
"Huh? Why,
it's no business of the department to provide jails."
"Son, a factor
concerning in any way anything from 'Out There' is the very personal business
of this department. You know that. Once you know it awake and asleep, clear
down to your toes, you'll begin to trot through a perfunctory routine, like an
honorary chairman sampling soup in a charity hospital. You were supposed to be
there with your nose twitching and your ears quivering, on the lookout for
'special situations.' You flubbed. Now tell me about this beast. I read the
report, I saw his picture. But I don't feel him."
"Well, it's a
non-balancing multipedal type, eight legs and about seven feet high at the
dorsal, ridge. It's. . ."
Kiku sat up
straight. "Eight legs? Hands?"
"Hands?
No."
"Manipulative
organs of any sort? A modified foot?"
"None, chief.
. . if there had been, I would have ordered a full-scale investigation at once.
The feet are about the size of nail kegs, and as dainty. Why?"
"Never mind.
Another matter. Go on."
"The
impression is something like a rhinoceros, something like a triceratops, though
the articulation is unlike anything native to this planet. 'Lummox' his young
master calls him and the name fits. It's a rather engaging beast, but stupid.
That's the danger; it's so big and powerful that it is likely to hurt people
through clumsiness and stupidity. It does talk, but about as well as a
four-year-old child. . . in fact it sounds as if it had swallowed a baby
girl."
"Why stupid? I
note that its master with the history book name claims that it is bright."
Greenberg smiled.
"He is prejudiced. I talked with it, boss. It's stupid."
"I can't see
that you have established that. Assuming that an e.-t. is stupid because he
can't speak our language well is like assuming that an Italian is illiterate
because he speaks broken English. A non-sequitur."
"But look,
boss, no hands. Maximum intelligence lower than monkeys. Maybe as high
as a dog. Though not likely."
"Well, I'll
concede that you are orthodox in xenological theory, but that is all. Some day
that assumption is going to rise up and slap the classic xenist in the face.
We'll find a civilization that doesn't need to pick at things with patty-paws,
evolved beyond it."
"Want to
bet?"
"No. Where is
this 'Lummox' now?"
Greenberg looked
flustered. "Boss, this report I am about to make is now in the microfilm
lab. It should be on your desk any minute."
"Okay, so you
were on the ball-this time. Let's have it."
"I got chummy
with the local judge and asked him to keep me advised. Of course they couldn't
throw this critter into the local Bastille; in fact they did not have anything
strong enough to hold him. . . so they had learned, the hard way. And nothing
could be built in a hurry that would be strong enough. . . believe me, that
cage he crushed out of was strong. But the local police chief got a
brain storm; they had an empty reservoir with sides about thirty feet high,
reinforced concrete. . . part of the fire system. So they built a ramp and
herded him down into it, then removed the ramp. It looked like a good dodge;
the creature isn't built for jumping."
"Sounds
okay."
"Yes, but that
isn't all. Judge O'Farrell told me that the chief of police was so jittery that
he decided not to wait for departmental okay; he went ahead with the execution.
"What?"
"Let me
finish. He did not tell anybody but-accidentally-on-purpose the intake valve
was opened-that night and the reservoir filled up. In the morning there was
Lummox, on the bottom. So Chief Dreiser assumed that his 'accident' had been
successful and that he had drowned the beast."
"So?"
"It did not
bother Lummox at all. He had been under water several hours, but when the water
drained off, he woke up, stood up, and said, 'Good morning.'"
"Amphibious,
probably. What steps have you taken to put a stop to this
high-handedness?"
"Just a
second, sir. Dreiser knew that firearms and explosives were useless. . . you
saw the transcript. . . at least of power safe enough to use inside a town. So
he tried poison. Knowing nothing about the creature, he used half a dozen sorts
in quantities sufficient for a regiment and concealed in several kinds of
food."
"Well?"
"Lummox
gobbled them all. They didn't even make him sleepy; in fact it seemed to
stimulate his appetite, for the next thing he did was to eat the intake valve
and the reservoir started to fill up again. They had to shut it off from the
pumping station."
Kiku snickered.
"I'm beginning to like this Lummox. Did you say he ate the valve?
What was it made of?"
"I don't know.
The usual alloy, I suppose."
"Hmm.. . seems
to like a bit of roughage in its diet. Perhaps it has a craw like a bird."
"I wouldn't be
surprised."
"What did the
Chief do next?"
"Nothing as
yet. I asked O'Farrell to impress on Dreiser that he was likely to end up in a
penal colony thirty light-years from Westville if he persisted in bucking the
department. So he is waiting and trying to figure out his problem. His latest
notion is to cast Lummox in concrete and let him die at his own convenience.
But O'Farrell put the nix on that one-inhumane."
"So Lummox is
still in the reservoir, waiting for us to act, eh?"
"I believe so,
sir. He was yesterday."
"Well, be can
wait there, I suppose, until other action can be taken." Mr. Kiku picked
up Greenberg's shortform report and recommendation.
Greenberg said,
"I take it that you are overruling me, sir?"
"No. What gave
you that idea?" He signed the order permitting the destruction of Lummox
and let it be swallowed by the outgoing basket. "I don't reverse a man's
decision without firing him. . . and I have another job for you."
"Oh."
Greenberg felt a twinge of compassion; he had been expecting, with relief, that
the chief would reprieve Lummox's death sentence. Well. . . too bad. . . but
the beast was dangerous.
Mr. Kiku went on,
"Are you afraid of snakes?"
"No. I rather
like them."
"Excellent!
Though it's a feeling I can't imagine. I've always been deathly afraid of them.
Once when I was a boy in Africa. . . never mind. Have you ever worked closely
with Rargyllians? I don't recall."
Greenberg suddenly
understood. "I used a Rargyllian interpreter in the Vega-VI affair. I get
along all right with Rargyllians."
"I wish I did.
Sergei, I have some business which involves a Rargyllian interpreter, a Dr.
Ftaeml. You may have heard of him."
"Yes, of
course, sir."
"I'll admit
that, as Rargyllians go. . ." He made the noun sound like a swear word.
". . . Ftaeml is all right. But this involvement has the odor of trouble.
. . and I find my own nose for trouble blanked out by this phobia of mine. So
I'm putting you on as my assistant to sniff for me."
"I thought you
didn't trust my nose, boss?"
"We'll let the
blind lead the blind, if you'll forgive a switch in metaphor. Perhaps between
us we'll sniff it out."
"Yes, sir. May
I ask the nature of the assignment?"
"Well. .
." Before Mr. Kiku could answer, his secretary's light flashed and her
voice stated, "Your hypnotherapist is here, sir."
The Under Secretary
glanced at his clock and said, "Where does the time go?". . . then to
the communicator: "Put him in my dressing room. I'll be in." He
continued to Greenberg, "Ftaeml will be here in thirty minutes. I can't
stop to talk, I've got to get braced for it. You'll
find what there is. . . little enough!. . . in my 'pending-urgent' file."
Mr. Kiku glanced at his incoming basket, which had filled to overflowing while
they talked. "It won't take five minutes. Spend the rest of the time
clearing up that stack of waste paper. Sign my name and hold anything that you
think I must see but it had better be no more than half a dozen items, or I'll
send you back to Harvard!"
He got up
hurriedly, while making a mental note to tell his secretary, from his dressing
room, to note everything that went through in the next half hour and let him
see it later. . . he wanted to see how the lad worked. Mr. Kiku was aware that
he would die someday and he intended to see to it that Greenberg replaced him.
In the meantime life should be as tough for the boy as possible.
The Under Secretary
headed for his dressing room, the door ducked aside, contracted behind him;
Greenberg was left alone. He was reaching for the pending urgent file when a
paper dropped into the incoming basket just as the light on it blinked red and
a buzzer sounded.
He picked up the
paper, ran his eye down the middle and had just realized that it really was
urgent when a similar light-and-buzzer combination showed at the interoffice
communicator and its screen came to life;
Greenberg
recognized the chief of the bureau of system liaison. "Boss?" the
image said excitedly.
Greenberg touched
the two-way switch. "Greenberg here," he answered. "I'm keeping
the chief's chair warm for him. Your memo just came in, Stan. I'm reading it?
Ibañez looked
annoyed. "Never mind that. Get me the boss."
Greenberg hesitated.
Ibañez's problem was simple, but sticky. Ships from Venus were regularly
granted pratique without delay, each ship's doctor being a public health
deputy. But the Ariel, already due at Port Libya, had suddenly been
placed under quarantine by her doctor and was now waiting in a parking orbit.
The Venerian foreign minister was aboard. . . most unfortunately, as Venus was
expected to support Terra's position against Mars in the impending triangular
conference.
Greenberg could
stall the touchy problem until the boss was free; he could break in on the
boss; he could go over the boss's head to the Secretary himself (which meant
picking an answer and presenting it so as to get that answer approved); or. . .
he could act, using Mr. Kiku's authority.
Mr. Kiku could not
have predicted the emergency. . . but the boss had a pesky habit of pushing
people off the deep end.
Greenberg's summing
up had been quick. He answered, "Sorry, Stan, you can't talk to the boss.
I am acting for him."
"Eh? Since
when?"
"Just temporarily,
but I am."
Ibañez frowned.
"Look, chum, you had better find the boss. Maybe you are signing his name
on routine matters. . . but this is not routine. We've got to bring that ship
down in a hurry. Your neck would be out a yard if you took it upon yourself to
authorize me to overlook a basic rule like quarantine. Use your head."
Break quarantine?
Greenberg recalled the Great Plague of '51, back in the days when the biologist
serenely believed that each planetary life group was immune to the ills of other
planets. "We won't break quarantine."
Ibañez looked
pained. "Sergei, we can jeopardize this conference. . . 'jeopardize?' What
am I saying? We can't toss away ten years' work because some crewman has a
slight fever. The quarantine must be broken. But I don't expect you to
do it."
Greenberg
hesitated. "He's under hypnosis, for a tough job coming up. It may be a
couple of hours before you can see him."
Ibañez looked
blank. "I'll have to tackle the Secretary. I don't dare wait two hours.
That sacred cow from Venus is like as not to order his skipper to head home. .
. we can't risk that."
"And we can't
risk bringing in an epidemic, either. Here's what you do. Call him and tell him
you are coming to get him in person. Use a fast scout. Get him aboard and leave
the Ariel in quarantine orbit. Once you get him aboard the scout. . .
and not before. . . tell him that both you and he will attend the conference in
isolation suits." The isolation suit was a sealed pressure suit; its
primary use was to visit planets whose disease hazards had not yet been
learned. "The scout ship and crew will have to go into quarantine, too, of
course."
"Isolation
suit! Oh, he'll love that. Sergei, it would be less damaging to call off the
conference. An indignity like that would put him against us for certain. The
jerk is poisonously proud."
"Sure he'll
love it," Greenberg explained, "once you suggest how to play it.
'Great personal self-sacrifice'. . . 'unwilling to risk the welfare of our
beloved sister planet'. . . 'the call of duty takes precedence over any et
cetera.' If you don't feel sure of it, take one of the public relations boys
along. And look, all through the conference he must be attended by a physician.
. . in a white suit. . . and a couple of nurses. The conference must stop every
now and then while he rests. . . put a cot and hospital screens in the Hall of
Heroes near the conference table. The idea is that he's come down with it
himself but is carrying on as his dying act. Get it? Tell him before you land
the scout ship. . . indirectly, of course."
Ibañez looked perturbed. "Do you think
that will work?"
"It's up to you to make it work. I'm
sending down your memo, ordering quarantine to continue but telling you to use
your initiative to insure his presence at the conference."
"Well. . . all
right." Ibañez suddenly grinned. "Never mind the memo. I'm on my
way." He switched off.
Greenberg turned
back to the desk, feeling exhilarated by the sensation of playing God. He
wondered what the boss would have done?. . . but did not care. There might be
many correct solutions, but this was one; it felt right. He reached again for
the pending urgent file.
He stopped.
Something was gnawing at the back of his mind. The boss had not wanted to
approve that death sentence; he had felt it. Shucks, the boss had told
him that he was wrong; the proper action was a full investigation. But the
boss, as a matter of loyalty to his subordinates, had not reversed him.
But he himself was
sitting in the boss's chair at the moment. Well?
Was that why the
boss had placed him there? To let him correct his own mistake? No, the boss was
subtle but not omniscient; he could not have predicted that Greenberg would
consider reopening the matter.
Still. . . He
called the boss's private secretary. "Mildred?"
"Yes, Mr.
Greenberg?"
"That
brief-and-rec on that intervention I carried out Rt0411, it was. It went out
fifteen minutes ago.
I want it
back."
"It may have
been dispatched," she said doubtfully.
"The
communications desk has been running only about seven minutes behind demand
today."
"There is such
a thing as too much efficiency. If the order has left the building, send a
cancellation and a more-to-follow, will you? And get the original document back
to me."
Finally he got to
the pending-urgent file. As Mr. Kiku had said, the jacket marked
"Ftaeml" was not large. He found it subtitled: "Beauty & the
Beast" and wondered why. The boss had a sense of humor. . . but it veered
so much that other people had a hard time following it.
Presently his
eyebrows lifted. Those tireless interpreters, brokers, go-betweens, and
expounders, the Rargyllians, were always popping up in negotiations between
diverse races; the presence of Dr. Ftaeml on Earth had tipped Greenberg that
something was up with a nonhumanoid people. . . non-human in mentality,
creatures so different psychologically that communication was difficult. But he
had not expected the learned doctor was representing a race that he had never
heard of. . . something termed "the Hroshii."
It was possible
that Greenberg had simply forgotten these people with a name like a sneeze;
they might be some unimportant breed, at a low cultural level, or economically
inconsequential, or not possessing space travel. Or they might have been
brought into the Community of Civilizations while Greenberg had been up to his
ears in Solar System affairs. Once the human race had made contact with other
races having interstellar travel the additions to the family of legal
"humans" had come so fast that a man could hardly keep up; the more
mankind widened its horizons the harder those horizons were to see.
Or perhaps he knew
of the Hroshii under another name? Greenberg turned to Mr. Kiku's universal
dictionary and keyed in the name.
The machine
considered it, then the reading plate flashed: NO INFORMATION.
Greenberg tried dropping the aspirate on the
assumption that the word might have degenerated in the mouths of non-Hroshii. .
. still the same negative.
He dropped the
matter. The. universal dictionary in the British Museum was not more
knowledgeable than the one in the Under Secretary's office; its working parts
occupied an entire building in another part of Capital, and a staff of
cyberneticists, semanticians and encyclopedists endlessly fed its hunger for
facts. He could be sure that, whatever the "Hroshii" were, the
Federation had never heard of them before.
Which was
astounding.
Having let
astonishment persist a full second Greenberg went on reading. He learned that
the Hroshii were already here, not landed on Earth but within waving distance.
. . in a parking orbit fifty thousand miles out. He let himself be astonished
for two whole seconds before going on to discover that the reason he had not
heard of their advent was that Dr. Ftaeml had urgently advised Mr. Kiku to keep
patrol ships and such from challenging and attempting to board the stranger.
He was interrupted by the return of his
report of the Lummox matter, bearing on it Mr. Kiku's confirmation of the
sentence. He thought for a moment, then added to the endorsement so that it
read: "Recommendation approved. . . but this action is not to be carried
out until after a complete scientific analysis of this creature has been made.
Local authorities will surrender custody when required to the Bureau of Xenic
Science, which will arrange transportation and select the agency to pursue the
evaluation."
Greenberg signed
Kiku's name to the change and put it back into the. system. He admitted
sheepishly that the order was now weasel-worded. . . for it was a sure thing
that once the xenobiologists got their hands on Lummox they would never let him
go. Nevertheless his heart felt suddenly lighter. The other action was wrong;
this one was right.
He turned his
attention back to the Hroshii. . . and again his eyebrows went up. The Hroshii
were not here to establish relations with Earth; they were here to rescue one
of their own. According to Dr. Ftaeml, they were convinced that Terra was
holding this Hroshia and were demanding that she be surrendered.
Greenberg felt as
if he had blundered into a bad melodrama. These people with the asthmatic name
had picked the wrong planet for cops-and-robbers nonsense. A non-human on Earth
without a passport, without a dossier in the hands of the department, without
an approved reason for visiting Earth, would be as helpless as a bride without
a ration book. She would be picked up in no time. . . idiot's delight! she
could not even get through quarantine.
Why didn't the boss
simply tell them to take their wagon and go home?
Besides, how did
they figure she had reached the surface of Earth? Walked? Or taken a swan dive?
Star ships did not land; they were served by shuttles. He could just see her
tackling the purser of one of those shuttles: "Excuse me, sir, but I am
fleeing from my husband hi a distant part of the Galaxy. Do you mind if I hide
under this seat and sneak down to your planet?"
"No tickee, no
washee". . . that's what the purser would say. Those shuttle companies
hated deadheads; Greenberg could feel it every time he presented his own
diplomatic pass.
Something was
niggling at him. . . then he remembered the boss's inquiry; did Lummox have
hands? He realized that the boss must have been wondering whether Lummox could
be the missing Hroshia, since Hroshii, according to Ftaeml, had eight legs.
Greenberg chuckled. Lummox was not the boy to build and operate star ships, not
he nor any of his cousins. Of course the boss had not seen Lummox and did not
know how preposterous it was.
And besides that,
Lummox had been here more than a hundred years. That would make him very late
for supper.
The real question
was what to do with the Hroshii now that we were in contact with them. Anything
from "Out There" was interesting, educational, and profitable to
mankind, once it was analyzed. . . and a race that had its own interstellar
drive was sure to be all of that, squared and cubed. No doubt the boss was kidding
them along while developing permanent relations.
Very well, it was
up to Greenberg to foster that angle and help the boss get past his emotional
handicap in dealing through a Rargyllian.
He skimmed the rest
of the report. What he had learned so far he had gotten from the synopsis; the
rest was a transcript of Ftaeml's flowery circumlocutions. Then he handed the
jacket back to the file and tackled the boss's work.
Mr. Kiku announced
himself by looking over his shoulder and saying, "That basket is as full
as ever."
"Oh. Howdy,
boss. Yes, but think of the shape it would have been in if I hadn't torn up
every second item without reading it." Greenberg moved from the chair.
Mr. Kiku nodded.
"I know. Sometimes I just check 'disapproved' on all the odd-numbered
ones."
"Feeling
better?"
"Ready to spit
in his face. What's a snake got that I haven't got more of?"
"That's the
spirit."
"Dr. Morgan is
very adept. Try him sometime if your nerves ever act up."
Greenberg grinned.
"Boss, the only thing that bothers me is insomnia during working hours. I
can't sleep at my desk the way I used to."
"That's the
earliest symptom. The mind mechanics will get you yet." Mr. Kiku glanced
at the clock. "No word from our friend with the animated hair?"
"Not
yet." Greenberg told about the quarantine for the Ariel and what he
had done. Mr. Kiku nodded, which was equivalent to a citation in front of the
regiment in some circles; Greenberg felt a warm glow and went on to tell about
the revision in the order for Lummox. He sidled up to it self-consciously.
"Boss, sitting
in that chair puts a different slant on things."
"So I
discovered, years ago."
"Um, yes.
While I was there I got to thinking about that intervention matter."
"Why? We
settled it."
"So I thought.
Nevertheless. . . well, anyhow. . ." He blurted out his change in the
order and waited.
Mr. Kiku nodded
again. He considered telling Greenberg that it had saved him thinking up a
face-saving way of accomplishing the same end, but decided not to. Instead he
leaned to his desk, "Mildred? Heard anything from Dr. Ftaeml?"
"Just arrived,
sir."
"Good. East
conference room, please." He switched off and turned to Greenberg.
"Well, son, now for some snake charming. Got your flute with you?"
VI
"Space
Is Deep, Excellency"
"Dr. Ftaeml,
this is my associate, Mr. Greenberg."
The Rargyllian
bowed low, his double knees and unhuman articulation making it an impressive
rite. "I know the distinguished Mr. Greenberg by reputation, through a
compatriot who was privileged to work with him. I am honored, sir."
Greenberg answered
with the same sort of polite amphigory the cosmic linguist had selected.
"I have long wished for the boon of experiencing in person the scholarly
aura of Dr. Ftaeml, but I had never dared let the wish blossom into hope. Your
servant and pupil, sir."
"Hrrump!"
Mr. Kiku interrupted. "Doctor, this delicate affair you are negotiating is
of such importance that I, with my constant housekeeping chores, have not been
able to give it the close attention it demands. Mr. Greenberg is ambassador
extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary of the Federation, commanded for
this purpose."
Greenberg's eyes
flicked toward his boss, but showed no surprise. He had noticed that the boss
had earlier said "associate" rather than "assistant" and
had spotted it as the elementary maneuver of enhancing the prestige of one's
own negotiators for advantage in protocol-but he had not expected this sudden
brevet. He was reasonably sure that Mr. Kiku had not bothered to have the rank
approved by the Council; nevertheless the boss could make it stick and his
credentials would probably show up on his desk. He wondered if his pay check
would show it?
He decided that the
boss must have a hunch that this silly business had importance not evident. Or
was he simply getting the medusoid off his back?
Dr. Ftaeml bowed
again. "Most gratifying to work with his excellency." Greenberg
suspected that the Rargyllian was not fooled; nevertheless it probably was
really gratifying to him, since it implied that the medusoid was himself of
ambassadorial rank.
A female aide
brought in refreshments; they stopped for ritual. Ftaeml selected a French
wine, while Greenberg and Kiku chose, by Hobson's choice, the only Rargyllian
item available-some stuff called "wine" through failure of language
but which looked like bread mushed into milk and tasted as if sulphuric acid
had been added. Greenberg went through the motions of enjoying it while not
letting it pass his lips.
He noticed with
respect that the boss actually consumed the stuff.
The rite common to
seven out of ten civilizations gave Greenberg time to size up Ftaeml. The
medusoid was dressed in an expensive parody of terrestrial formal clothes. . .
cutaway jacket, lacy jabot, and striped shorts. It helped to hide the fact
that, while he was a bifurcate humanoid with two legs, two arms, and head at
the top of an elongated trunk, he was not remotely human in any but the legal
sense.
But Greenberg had
grown up in the presence of the Great Martians and had dealt with many other
peoples since; he did not expect "men" to look like men and had no
prejudice in favor of human form. Ftaeml was, to his eye, handsome and
certainly graceful. His dry chitinous skin, purple with green highlights, was
as neat as a leopard's pelt and as decorative. The absence of a nose was no
matter and was made up for by the mobile, sensitive mouth.
Greenberg decided
that Ftaeml must have his tail wrapped around him under his clothes in order to
carry out the pretense that he looked like a terrestrial as well as being
dressed like one-Rargyllians would go to any trouble to conform to the ancient,
urbane rule that when in Rome, one should shoot Roman candles. The other
Rargyllian Greenberg had worked with had worn no clothes at all (since the
people of Vega-VI wore none) and had carried his tail aloft, like a proud cat.
Thinking of Vega-VI made Greenberg shiver, be had found it necessary to bundle
up to his ears.
He glanced at the
medusoid's tendrils. Pshaw! they weren't snakelike. The boss must have a
neurosis as big as a house. Sure, they were about a foot long and as thick as
his thumb, but they didn't have eyes, they didn't have mouths or teeth-they
were just tendrils. Most races had tendrils of some sort. What were fingers but
short tendrils?
Mr. Kiku put down
his cup when Dr. Ftaeml set down his glass. "Doctor, you have consulted
with your principals?"
"Sir, I have
had that honor. And may I take this opportunity to thank you for the scout ship
you so graciously placed at my disposal for the unavoidable trips back and
forth from the surface of your lovely planet to the vessel of the people I have
the privilege of assisting? It is, I may say without casting any reflections on
the great people I now serve, more suited to the purpose and more comfortable
to one of my build than are the auxiliary craft of their vessel."
"Not at all,
Glad to do a favor to a friend."
"You are
gracious, Mr. Under Secretary."
"Well, what
did they say?"
Dr. Ftaeml shrugged
his whole body. "It pains me to inform you that they are unmoved. They
insist that their she child be returned to them without delay."
Mr. Kiku frowned.
"No doubt you explained that we don't have their missing child, have never
heard of it, have no reason to think that she has ever been on this planet and
strong reason to believe that she never could have been?"
"I did. You
will pardon my inurbanity if I translate their answer in terms crude but
unmistakable." He shrugged apologetically. "They say you are
lying."
Mr. Kiku took no
offense, being aware that a Rargyllian when acting as go-between was as
impersonal as a telephone. "It would be better if I were lying. Then
I could hand over their brat and the matter would be finished."
"I believe
you," Dr. Ftaeml said suddenly.
"Thank you.
Why?"
"You used the
subjunctive."
"Oh. Did you
tell them that there were over seven thousand varieties of non-terrestrial
creatures on Earth, represented by some hundreds of thousands of individuals?
That of these individuals some thirty thousand are sentient beings? But of
these sentient beings only a very few have anything like the physical
characteristics of your Hroshii? And that all those few we can account for as
to race and planet of origin?"
"I am
Rargyllian, sir. I told them all that and more, in their own language, putting
it more clearly than you could explain it to another Earthmen. I made it
live."
"I believe
you." Mr. Kiku tapped the table top. "Do you have a suggestion?"
"Just a
moment," put in Greenberg. "Don't you have a picture of a typical
Hroshii? It might help."
" 'Hroshiu,'
" corrected Ftaeml. "Or, in this ease, 'Hroshia? I am sorry. They do
not use symbology of the picture type. Unfortunately I am not equipped to take
one of your pictures."
"An eyeless
race?"
"No,
Excellency. Their sight is quite good, quite subtle. But their eyes and nervous
systems abstract somewhat differently from yours. Their analog of 'pieture'
would be meaningless to you. Even I find it difficult and my race is admitted
to be the most subtle of all in the interpretation of symbolic abstraction. If
a Rargyllian. . ." He stopped and preened himself.
"Well. . . describe one to us. Use your
justly famed semantic talents."
"A pleasure.
The Hroshii manning this vessel are all about of a size, being of the military
class. . ."
Mr. Kiku
interrupted. "Military class? Doctor, is this a war vessel? You did not
tell me this."
Dr. Ftaeml looked
pained. "I considered the fact both obvious and distasteful."
"I suppose
so." Mr. Kiku wondered if he should alert the Federation General Staff.
Not now, he decided. Mr. Kiku was strongly prejudiced against the introduction
of military might into negotiations, since he believed that a show of force not
only was an admission of failure on the part of diplomats but also poisoned the
chances of accomplishing anything more by negotiation. He could rationalize
this opinion but he held it as an emotion. "Go on, please."
"The military
class are of three sexes, the differences in the types being not readily
apparent and need not concern us. My shipmates and hosts are perhaps six inches
higher than this table and half again your height in length. Each has four
pairs of legs and two arms. Their hands are small and supple and extremely
dexterous. In my opinion the Hroshii are unusually beautiful, form serving
function with rare grace. They are remarkably adroit with machines,
instruments, and delicate manipulations of every sort."
Greenberg relaxed a
little as Ftaeml talked. Despite everything, the vagrant notion had still been
bothering him that this creature "Lummox" might be of the Hroshii. .
. but he saw now that the thought came from nothing more than accidental similarity
in leg number. . . as if an ostrich were a man because of two legs! His mind
wanted to file Lummox into a category and no doubt would keep on trying, but
this category did not fit.
Dr. Ftaeml was
continuing: '. . . but the outstanding characteristic of the Hroshii, not
covered by these mere facts of size, shape, body structure, and mechanical
function, is an overwhelming impression of great mental power. So overwhelming,
in fact . ." The medusoid chuckled in embarrassment". . . that I was
almost persuaded to waive my professional fee and serve them as a
privilege."
Greenberg was
impressed. These Hroshti really must have something; the Rargyllians, honest
brokers though they were, would let a man die of thirst rather than tell him
the local word for water, unless cash was in band. Their mercenary attitude had
the quality of devoutness.
"The only
thing," Ftaeml added, "that saved me from this excess was the
knowledge that in one thing I excelled them. They are not linguists. Rich and
powerful as their own speech is, it is the only language they ever learn well.
They are even less talented linguistically than is your own race." Ftaeml
spread his grotesque hands in a gesture that was purely Gallic (or a perfect,
studied imitation) and added, "So I repaired my self esteem and charged
twice my usual fee."
He ceased talking.
Mr. Kiku stared glumly at the table and Greenberg merely waited. Finally Kiku
said, "What do you suggest?"
"My esteemed
friend, there is only one course that is of any use. The Hroshia they seek must
be delivered up."
"But we do not
have this Hroshia."
Ftaeml simulated a
human sigh. "That is regrettable." Greenberg looked at him sharply;
the sigh did not carry conviction. He felt that Ftaeml regarded the impasse as
somehow tremendously exciting. . . which was ridiculous; a Rargyllian, having
accepted the role of go-between, was invariably anxious that the negotiation be
successful; anything less than success caused. them to lose face in their own
eyes.
So he spoke up.
"Dr. Ftaeml, when you undertook this commission for the Hroshii, did you
expect that we would be able to produce this, uh, Hroshia?"
The creature's
tendrils suddenly slumped; Greenberg cocked an eyebrow and said dryly,
"No, I see that you did not. May I ask why, then, you accepted this
cornmission?"
Ftaeml answered
slowly and without his usual confidence: "Sir, one does not refuse a
commission of the Hroshii. Believe me, one does not."
"Hmm. . .
these Hroshii. Doctor, will you pardon me if I say that you have not yet
conveyed to me a full understanding of these people? You tell us that they are
mentally very powerful, so much so that a leading mind of a highly-advanced
race. . . yourself is almost 'overwhelmed' by them. You imply that they are
powerful in other ways. . . that you, a member of a proud, free race, must obey
their wishes. Now here they are in a single ship, facing an entire planet, a
planet so powerful that it has been able to create hegemony more extensive than
any before in this portion of space. . . yet you say that it would be
'regrettable' if we were not to satisfy their impossible demand."
"All that is
true," Ftaeml answered carefully.
"When a
Rargyllian speaks professionally I cannot disbelieve him. Yet this I have
trouble believing. These super-beings. . . why have we never heard of
them?"
"Space is
deep, Excellency."
"Yes, yes. No
doubt there are thousands of great races that we of Earth have never met, will
never meet. Am I to infer that this is also the first contact of your race with
the Hroshii?"
"No. We have
long known of them. . . longer than we have known of you,"
"Eh?"
Greenberg glanced sharply at Mr, Kiku. He went on, "What are the relations
of Rargyll with the Hroshii? And why has not this been reported to the
Federation?"
"Excellency,
is that last question a rebuke? If so, I must answer that I am not acting for
my government."
"No,"
Greenberg assured him, "it was a simple inquiry. The Federation always
seeks to extend its diplomatic linkage as far as possible. I was surprised to
learn that your race, which claims friendship with ours, could know of a mighty
civilization and not make that fact known to the Federation."
"May I say,
Excellency, that I am surprised at your surprise? Space is deep. . . and my
race have long been great travelers. Perhaps the Federation has not asked the
right questions? As for the other, my people have no diplomatic relations, no
relations of any sort, with the mighty Hroshii. They are a people who, as you
say, mind their own business, and we are very happy to (as you would phrase
it). . . to stay out of their yard. It has been years, more than five of your
centuries, since the last time a Hroshii ship appeared in our skies and
demanded service from us. It is better so."
Greenberg said,
"I seem to be getting more confused the more I know. They stopped at
Rargyll to pick up an interpreter instead of coming straight here?"
"Not
precisely. They appeared in our skies and asked if we had ever heard of you
people. We answered that we knew you. . . for when the Hroshii ask, they are
answered! We identified your star and I had the unsought honor to be chosen to
represent them." He shrugged. "Here I am. Let me add that it was not
until we were deep in space that I learned the object of their search."
Greenberg had made
note earlier of a loose end. "Just a moment. They retained you, they
started for Earth, then told you that they were searching for a missing
Hroshia. It must have been then that you decided that this mission would fail.
Why?"
"Is it not
evident? We Rargyllians, in your lovely and precise idiom, are the greatest
gossips in space. Perhaps you would say 'historians' but I mean something more
lively than that. Gossips. We go everywhere, we know everyone, we speak all
languages. I did not need to 'check the files' to know that men of Earth had
never been to the capital planet of the Hroshii. Had you made such contact you
would have forced your attentions on them and started a war. It would have been
a 'scandal to the jaybirds'. . . a lovely phrase, that; I must see a jaybird
while I am here. It would have been discussed with many a fine anecdote
wherever two Rargyllians got together. So I knew that they must be mistaken;
they would not find what they sought."
"In other
words," Greenberg answered, "you people identified the wrong planet.
. . and wished this problem on us."
"Please,"
protested Dr. Ftaeml. "Our identification was perfect, I assure you-not of
your planet, for the Hroshii did not know where you came from-but of you
yourself. The creatures-they wished to locate were men of Earth, in every
possible detail-down to your fingernails, your internal organs."
"Yet you knew
they were mistaken. Doctor, I am not the semantician you are. I seem to see a
contradiction. . . or a paradox."
"Permit me to
explain. We who deal professionally in words know how cheap words are. A
paradox can exist only in words, never in the facts behind the words. Since the
Hroshii described exactly the men of Earth and since I knew that the men of
Earth knew not the Hroshii, I concluded what I must conclude-that there is
another race in this galaxy as like to your race as twin Sornia in their shell-as
two peas in the pod. Peas? You like beans better?"
"'Peas' is the
correct idiom," Mr. Kiku answered soberly.
"Thank you.
Your language is rich; I must refresh myself of it while I am here. Would you
believe it? The man from whom I first learned it intentionally taught me idioms
unacceptable in your polite society. For example 'as cold as. . .'"
"Yes,
yes," Mr. Kiku said hastily. "I can believe it. Some of our
compatriots have an odd sense of humor. You concluded that there is somewhere
in this star cloud a race so like ours as to be our twin brothers? I find that
notion statistically unlikely to the point of impossibility."
"The entire
universe, Mr. Under Secretary, is wildly unlikely to the point of
ridiculousness. Therefore, we of Rargyll know that God is a humorist." The
medusoid made a gesture peculiar to his breed, then politely repeated it in
idiom by making one of the most common Earthly gestures of reverence.
"You explained
this conclusion to your clients?"
"I did. . .
and I repeated it most carefully in my lastest consultation. The result was
foreseeable."
"Yes?"
"Each race has
its talent, each its weakness. The Hroshii, once having with mighty intellect
arrived at an opinion, are not easily swayed. 'Pig-headed' is your precise
term."
"Pig-headedness
breeds pig-headedness, Dr. Ftaeml."
"Please, my
dear sir! I hope that you will not be so tempted. Let me report, if I must,
that you have been unable to find their treasured one, but that you are
instituting new and more thorough searches. I am your friend. . . do not admit
that this negotiation has failed."
"I never broke
off a negotiation in my life," Mr. Kiku answered sourly. "If you
can't out-argue the other fellow, sometimes you can outlive him. But I do not
see what more we have to offer them. Except for that one possibility we spoke
of last time. . . did you bring the coordinates of their planet? Or did they
refuse?"
"I have them.
I told you that they would not refuse; the Hroshii are not in the least afraid
of having other races know where to find them. . . they are merely
indifferent" Dr. Ftaeml opened a brief case which was either an imitation
of a terrestrial one, or might have been purchased on Earth. "Nevertheless
it was not easy. The where-and-when had to be translated from their concepts to
those using Rargyll as the true center of the universe, for which purpose it
required that I first convince them of the necessity, then explain to them
spacetime units as used on Rargyll. Now, since I must shame myself by admitting
that I am not skilled in your methods of reckoning the shape of the universe,
it is necessary that I have help in translating our figures into yours."
"No need to
feel shamefaced," Mr. Kiku answered, "for I don't know anything about
our astrogation methods myself. We use specialists for that sort of thing. Just
a moment." He touched an ornamental knob on the conference table. "Get
me BuAstro."
"They've all
gone home for the day," a disembodied female voice answered, "except
the astrogation duty officer.
"Then that's
who I want. Hurry it up."
Very shortly a male
voice said, "Dr. Warner, night duty officer."
"Kiku here.
Doctor, you solve space-time correlations?"
Of course,
sir."
"Can you do it
from Rargyllian data?"
"Rargyllian?"
The duty officer whistled softly. "That's a tough one, sir. Dr. Singh is
the man for that"
"Get him up
here, right away."
"Uh, why, he's
gone home, sir. He'll be here in the morning."
"I didn't ask
where he was; I said, 'Get him up here. . . right away.' Use police alarm and
general call, if necessary. I want him now."
"Er. . . yes,
sir."
Mr. Kiku turned
back to Dr. Ftaeml. "I expect to be able to show that no terrestrial
starship ever visited the Hroshii. Fortunately we do have astrogation records
for every interstellar trip. My thought is this: it is time that the principals
met face to face in this negotiation. With your skillful interpretation we can
show them that we have nothing to hide, that the facilities of our civilization
are at their disposal, and that we would like to help them find their missing
sibling. . . but that she is not here. Then, if they have any thing to suggest,
we will. . ." Mr. Kiku broke off as a door at the end of the room opened.
He said tonelessly, "How do you do, Mr. Secretary?"
The Most Honorable
Mr. Roy MacClure, Secretary for Spatial Affairs for the Federated Community of
Civilizations, was entering. His eye seemed to light only on Mr. Kiku.
"There you are, Henry! Been looking all over. That stupid girl didn't know
where you had gone, but I found that you had not left the building. You must. .
."
Mr. Kiku took him
firmly by the elbow and said loudly, "Mr. Secretary, allow me to present
Dr. Ftaeml, Ambassador de facto of the mighty Hroshii."
Mr. MacClure met
the occasion. "How do you do, Doctor? Or should I say 'Excellency'?"
He had the grace not to stare.
'Doctor' will do
nicely, Mr. Secretary. I am well, thank you. May I enquire as to your
health?"
"Oh, good
enough, good enough. . . if everything didn't pop at once. Which reminds me. .
. can you spare me my chief assistant? I'm awfully sorry but something urgent
has come up.
"Certainly,
Mr. Secretary. Your pleasure is my greatest wish."
Mr. MacClure looked
sharply at the medusoid but found himself unable to read his expression. . . if
the thing had expressions, he amended. "Uh, I trust you are being well taken
care of, Doctor?"
"Yes, thank
you."
"Good. I
really am sorry, but.. . Henry, if you please?"
Mr. Kiku bowed to
the Rargyllian, then left the table while wearing an expression so mask-like
that Greenberg shivered. Kiku spoke in a whisper to MacClure as soon as they
were away from the table.
MacClure glanced
back at the other two, then answered in a whisper that Greenberg could catch.
"Yes, yes! But this is crucially important, I tell you. Henry, what in the
world possessed you to ground those ships without consulting me first?"
Mr. Kiku's reply
was inaudible. MacClure went on, "Nonsense! Well, you will just have to
come out and face them. You can't. . ."
Mr. Kiku turned
back abruptly. "Dr. Ftaeml, was it your intention to return to the Hroshii
ship tonight?"
"There is no
hurry. I am at your service, sir."
"You are most
gracious. May I leave you in Mr. Greenberg's care? We speak as one."
The Rargyllian
bowed. "I shall count it an honor."
"I look
forward to the pleasure of your company tomorrow."
Dr. Ftaeml bowed
again. "Until tomorrow. Mr. Secretary, Mr. Under Secretary. . . your
servant."
The two left. Greenberg did not know whether
to laugh or cry; he felt embarrassed for his whole race. The medusoid was
watching him silently.
Greenberg grinned
with half his mouth and said, "Doctor, does the Rargyllian tongue include
swear words?"
"Sir, I can
use profanity in more than a thousand tongues. . . some having curses that will
addle an egg at a thousand paces. May I teach you some of them?"
Greenberg sat back
and laughed heartily. "Doctor, I like you. I really like you. . . quite
aside from our mutual professional duty to be civil."
Ftaeml shaped his
lips in a good imitation of a human smile. "Thank you, sir. The feeling is
mutual. . . and gratifying. May I say without offense that the reception given
my sort on your great planet is sometimes something that one must be
philosophical about?"
"I know. I'm
sorry. My own people, most of them, are honestly convinced that the prejudices
of their native village were ordained by the Almighty. I wish it were
different."
"You need not
be ashamed. Believe me, sir, that is the one conviction which is shared by all
races everywhere. . . the only thing we all have in common. I do not except my
own race. If you knew languages. . . All languages carry in them a portrait of
their users and the idioms of every language say over and over again, 'He is a
stranger and therefore a barbarian.'"
Greenberg grinned
wryly. "Discouraging, isn't it?"
"Discouraging? Why, sir? It is
sidesplitting. It is the only joke that God ever repeats, because its humor
never grows stale." The medusoid added, "What is your wish, sir? Are
we to continue to explore this matter? Or is your purpose merely to stetch the
palaver until the return of your. . . associate?"
Greenberg knew that
the Rargyllian was saying as politely as possible that Greenberg could not act
without Kiku. Greenberg decided that there was no sense in pretending
otherwise. . . and besides, he was hungry. "Haven't we worked enough
today, Doctor? Would you do me the honor of having dinner with me?"
"I would be
delighted! But. . . you know our peculiarities of diet?"
"Certainly.
Remember, I spent some weeks with one of your compatriots. We can go to the
Hotel Universal."
"Yes, of
course." Dr. Ftaeml seemed unenthusiastic.
"Unless there
is something you would like better?"
"I have heard
of your restaurants with entertainment. . . would it be possible? Or is it. .
.?"
"A night
club?" Greenberg thought. "Yes! The Club Cosmic. Their kitchen can do
anything the Universal can.
They were about to
leave when a door dilated and a slender, swarthy man stuck his head in.
"Oh. Excuse me. I thought Mr. Kiku was here."
Greenberg remembered suddenly that the boss
had summoned a relativity mathematician. "Just a moment You must be Dr.
Singh."
"Yes."
"Sorry. Mr.
Kiku had to leave, I am here for him."
He introduced the
two and explained the problem. Dr. Singh looked over the Rargyllian's scroll
and nodded. "This will take a while."
"May I help
you, Doctor?" asked Ftaeml.
"It won't be
necessary. Your notes are quite complete." Thus assured, Greenberg and
Ftaeml went out on the town.
The floor show at
the Club Cosmic included a juggler, which delighted Ftaeml, and girls, which
delighted Greenberg. It was late by the time Greenberg left Ftaeml in one of
the special suites reserved for non-human guests of DepSpace at Hotel
Universal. Greenberg was yawning as he came down the lift, but decided that the
evening had been worth while in the interest of good foreign relations.
Tired though he
was, he stopped by the department. Dr. Ftaeml had spilled one item during the
evening that he thought the boss should know. . . tonight if he could reach
him, or leave it on his desk if not. The Rargyllian, in an excess of pleasure
over the juggler, had expressed regret that such things must so soon cease to
be.
"What do you
mean?" Greenberg had asked.
"When mighty Earth is volatilized. .
." the medusoid had begun, then stopped.
Greenberg had
pressed him about it. But the Rargylhan insisted that he had been joking.
Greenberg doubted
if it meant anything. But Rargylhan humor was usually much more subtle; he
decided to tell the boss about it as quickly as possible. Maybe that strange
ship needed a shot of paralysis frequencies, a "nutcracker" bomb, and
a dose of vacuum.
The night guard at
the door stopped him. "Mr. Greenberg. . . the Under Secretary has been
looking for you for the past half hour."
He thanked the
guard and hurried upstairs. Mr. ICiku he found bent over his desk; the incoming
basket was clogged as always but the Under Secretary was paying no attention.
He glanced up and said quietly, "Good evening, Sergei. Look at this."
He passed over a report.
It was Dr. Singh's rework of Dr. Ftaeml's
notes. Greenberg picked out at the bottom the geocentric coordinates and did a
quick sum. "Over nine hundred light-years!" he commented. "And
out in that direction, too. No wonder we've never encountered them. Not
exactly next door neighbors, eh?"
"Never mind that," Mr. Kiku
admonished. "Not the date. This computation is the Hroshii's claim as to
when and where they were visited by one of our ships."
Greenberg looked
and felt his eyebrows crawl up toward his scalp. He turned to the answer
machine and started to code an inquiry. "Don't bother," Kiku told
him. "Your recollection is correct. The Trail Blazer. Second
trip." •
"The Trail
Blazer," Greenberg repeated foolishly.
"Yes. We never
knew where she went, so we couldn't have guessed. But we know exactly when
she went. It matches. Much simpler hypothesis than Dr. Ftaeml's twin
races."
"Of
course." He looked at his boss. "Then it is-Lummox."
"Yes, it's
Lummox."
"But it can't
be Lummox. No hands. Stupid as a rabbit."
"No, it can't
be. But it is."
VII
"Mother
Knows Best"
Lummox was not in
the reservoir. He had got tired and had gone home. It had been necessary to
tear a notch in the reservoir to get out comfortably, but he had damaged it no
more than was needful. He did not care to have any arguments with John Thomas
over such silly matters-not any more arguments, that is.
Several people made
a fuss over his leaving, but he ignored them. He was careful not to step on
anybody and their actions he treated with dignified reserve. Even when they
turned loose hated spray things on him he did not let them herd him thereby,
the way they had herded him out of that big building the day he had gone for a
walk; he simply closed his eyes and his rows of nostrils, put his head down and
slogged for home.
John Thomas met him
on the way, having been fetched by the somewhat hysterical chief of safety.
Lummox stopped and
made a saddle for John Thomas, after mutual greetings and reassurances, then
resumed his steady march homeward.
Chief Dreiserwas
almost incoherent. "Turn that brute around and head him back!" he
screamed.
"You do
it," Johnnie advised grimly.
"I'll have
your hide for this! I'll-I'll-"
"What have I
done?"
"You-It's what you haven't done. That
beast broke out and-"
"I wasn't even
there," John Thomas pointed out while Lummox continued plodding.
"Yes, but. . .
That's got nothing to do with it! He's out now; it's up to you to assist the
law and get him penned up again. John Stuart, you're getting in serious
trouble."
"I don't see
how you figure. You took him away from me. You got him condemned and you say he
doesn't belong to me any longer. You tried to kill him. . . you know you did,
without waiting to see if the government would okay it. If he belongs to me, I
ought to sue you. If he doesn't belong to me, it's no skin off my nose if Lummox
climbs out of that silly tank." John Thomas leaned over and looked down.
"Why don't you climb into your car, Chief, instead of running along beside
us and getting yourself winded?"
Chief Dreiser
ungraciously accepted the advice and let his driver pick him up. By the time
this was done he had somewhat recovered his balance. He leaned out and said,
"John Stuart, I won't bandy words with you. What I have or have not done
hasn't anything to do with the case. Citizens are required to assist peace officers
when necessary. I am demanding officially-and I've got this car's recorder
going while I ask it-that you assist me in returning that beast to the
reservoir."
John Thomas looked
innocent. "Then can I go home?"
"Huh? Of
course."
"Thanks,
Chief. Uh, how long do you figure he will stay in the reservoir after I put him
in it and go home? Or were you planning on hiring me in as a permanent member
of your police force?"
Chief Dreiser gave
up; Lummox went home.
Nevertheless
Dreiser regarded it as only a temporary setback; the stubbornness that made him
a good police officer did not desert him. He admitted to himself that the
public was probably safer with the beast penned up at home while he figured out
a surefire way to kill him. The order from the Under Secretary for Spatial
Affairs, permitting him to destroy Lummox arrived and that made Dreiser feel
better.. . old Judge O'Farrell had been pretty sarcastic about his jumping the
gun.
The cancellation of
that order and the amended order postponing Lummox's death indefinitely never
reached him. A new clerk in the communications office of DepSpace made a slight
error, simply a transposition of two symbols; the cancellation went to Pluto. .
. and the amended order, being keyed to the cancellation, followed it.
So Dreiser sat in
his office with the death order clutched in his hand and thought about ways to
kill the beast Electrocution? Maybe. . . but he could not even guess at how
much of a jolt it would take to do it. Cut his throat like butchering a hog?
The Chief had serious doubts about what sort of knife to use and what the brute
would be doing in the meantime.
Firearms and
explosives were no good. Wait a minute! Get the monster to open its mouth,
wide, then shoot straight down its throat, using an explosive charge that would
blow his innards to bits. Kill him instantly-yes, sir! Lots of animals had
armor-turtles, rhinos, armadillos, and things-but always outside, not inside.
This brute was no exception; Chief Dreiser had had several looks down inside
that big mouth the time he had tried poison. The beast might be armor plate
outside; inside he was pink and moist and soft like everybody else.
Now let's see; he'd
have the Stuart boy tell the brute to hold its mouth open and. . . no, that
wouldn't do. The boy would see what was up and like as not would order the
beast to charge. . . and then some cops' widows would draw pensions. That boy
was going bad, no doubt of it. . . funny how a good boy could take a wrong turn
and wind up in prison.
No, the thing to do
was to get the kid downtown on some excuse and carry out the order while he
wasn't around. They could entice the brute into saying "ah!" by
offering him food. . . "tossing it to him," Dreiser amended.
He glanced at his
clock. Today? No, he wanted to choose the weapon and then rehearse everybody so
that it would go like clockwork. Tomorrow early. . . better have the boy picked
up right after breakfast.
Lummox seemed
contented to be home, ready to let bygones be bygones. He never said a word
about Chief Dreiser and, if he realized that anyone had tried to harm him, he
did not mention it. His naturally sunny disposition displayed itself by wanting
to put his head in Johnnie's lap for cuddling. It had been a long time since
his head was small enough for this; he merely placed the end of his muzzle on
the boy's thigh, carrying the weight himself, while Johnnie stroked his nose
with a brickbat.
Johnnie was happy
only on one side. With the return of Lummox he felt much better, but he knew
that nothing had been settled; presently Chief Dreiser would again try to kill
Lummox. What to do about it was an endless ache in his middle.
His mother had
added to his unhappiness by raising a loud squawk when she saw "that
beast!" returned to the Stuart home. John Thomas had ignored her demands,
threats, and orders and had gone ahead stabling his friend and feeding and
watering him; after a while she had stormed back into the house, saying that
she was going to phone Chief Dreiser. Johnnie bad expected that and was fairly
sure that nothing would come of it . . . and nothing did; his mother remained
in the house. But Johnnie brooded about it; he had a life-long habit of getting
along with his mother, deferring to her, obeying her. Bucking her was even more
distressing to him than it was to her. Every time his father had left
(including the time his ship had not come back) he had told Johnnie, "Take
care of your mother, son. Don't cause her any trouble."
Well, he had tried
. . . he really had! But it was sure that Dad had never expected Mum to try to
get rid of Lummox. Mum ought to know better; she had married Dad. knowing that
Lummox was part of the package. Well, hadn't she?
Betty would never
switch sides like that. Or would she?
'Women were very
strange creatures. Maybe he and Lum ought to bach it together and not take
chances. He continued to brood until evening, spending his time with the star
beast and petting him. Lummie's tumors were another worry. One of them seemed
very tender and about to burst; John Thomas wondered if it ought to be lanced?
But no one knew any more about it than he did and he did not know.
On top of
everything else, here Lummie was ill. . . it was just too much!
He did not go in to
dinner. Presently his mother came out with a tray. "I thought you might
like to picnic out here with Lummox," she said blandly.
Johnnie looked at
her sharply. "Why, thanks, Mum uh, thanks."
"How is
Lummie?"
"Uh, he's all
right, I guess."
"That's
good."
He stared after her
as she went in. Mum angry was bad enough, but Mum with that secret, catlike
look, all sweetness and light, he was even more wary of. Nevertheless he
polished off the excellent dinner, not having eaten since breakfast. She came
out again a half hour later and said, "Finished, dear?"
"Uh, yes. . .
thanks, it was good."
"Thank you,
dear. Will you bring the tray in? And come in yourself; there is a Mr. Perkins
coming to see you at eight."
"Mr. Perkins?
Who's he?" But the door was closing behind her.
He found his mother
downstairs, resting and knitting socks. She smiled and said, "Well? How
are we now?"
"All right.
Say, Mum, who is this Perkins? Why does he want to see me?'
"He phoned
this afternoon for an appointment. I told him to come at eight."
"But didn't he
say what he wanted?"
"Well. . .
perhaps he did, but mother thinks it is better for Mr. Perkins to explain his
errand himself."
"Is it about
Lummox?"
"Don't
cross-examine Mum. You'll know quickly enough."
"But, look
here, I. . ."
"We'll say no
more about it, do you mind? Take off your shoe, dear. I want to measure for the
foot."
Baffled, he started
to remove his shoe. Suddenly he stopped. "Mum, I wish you wouldn't knit
socks for me.
"What, dear?
But mother enjoys doing it for you."
"Yes, but.. .
Look, I don't like hand-knit socks. They make creases on the soles of my
feet . . . I've showed you often enough!"
"Don't be silly! How could soft wool do
your feet any harm? And think what you would have to pay for real wool, real
handwork, if you bought it. Most boys would be grateful."
"But I don't like
it, I tell you!"
She sighed.
"Sometimes, dear, I don't know what to do with you, I really don't."
She rolled up her knitting and put it aside. "Go wash your hands. . . yes,
and your face, too. . . and comb your hair. Mr. Perkins will be here any
moment."
"Say, about
this Mr. Perkins. . ."
"Hurry, dear.
Don't make things difficult for mother." Mr. Perkins turned out to be
pleasant; John Thomas liked him despite his supiscions. After a few polite
inanities, with coffee served for ritual hospitality, he came to the point.
He repesented the
Exotic Life Laboratory of the Museum of Natural History. As a result of the
news picture of Lummox in connection with the story of the trial the beast had
come to the attention of the Museum. . . which now wanted to buy him.
'To my
surprise," he added, "in searching the files I discovered that on
another occasion the Museum attempted to buy this specimen. . . from your
grandfather, I believe. The name was the same as yours and the date fitted. Are
you any relation to. . ."
"My great
great great grandfather. . . sure," John Thomas interrupted. "And it
was probably my grandfather they tried to buy Lummox from. But he was not for
sale then-and he's not for sale now!"
His mother looked
up from knitting and said, "Be reasonable, dear. You are in no position to
take that attitude."
John Thomas looked
stubborn. Mr. Perkins went on with a warm smile, "I sympathize with your
feelings, Mr. Stuart. But our legal department looked into the matter before I
came out here and I am familiar with your present problems. Believe me, I'm not
here to make them worse; we have a solution that will protect your pet and
clear up your troubles."
"I'm not going
to sell Lummox," John Thomas persisted.
"Why not? If
it turns out to be the only solution?"
"Well. . .
because I can't. Even if I wanted to. He wasn't left to me to sell, he was left
to me to keep and take care of. He was in this family before I was. . . before
my mother was, for that matter." He looked sternly at his mother.
"Mum, I don't know what's gotten into you."
She answered
quietly, "That will be enough of that, dear. Mother does what is best for
you."
Mr. Perkins changed
the subject smoothly as John Thomas began to cloud up. "In any case, now
that I've come all this way, may I see the creature? I'm terribly
interested."
"Uh, I suppose
so." Johnnie got up slowly and led the stranger outside.
Mr. Perkins looked
up at Lummox, took a deep breath and let it out. "Marvelous!" He
walked around him, admiring. "Absolutely marvelous! Unique. . . and the
biggest e.-t. specimen I've ever seen. How in the world was he shipped?"
"Why, he's
grown some," John Thomas admitted.
"I understand
he parrots human speech a bit. Can you coax him to do it?"
"Huh? He
doesn't 'parrot'. . . he talks."
"Really?"
"Of course.
Hey, Lummie, how are you, boy?"
"I'm all
right," Lummox piped. "What does he want?"
"Oh, nothing,
nothing. He just wanted to see you." Mr. Perkins stared. "He talks!
Mr. Stuart, the laboratory must have this specimen."
"That's out, I
told you."
"I'm prepared
to go much higher, now that I've seen him. . . and heard him."
John Thomas started
to say something rude, checked himself and said instead, "Look, Mr.
Perkins, are you married?"
"Why, yes.
Why?"
"Any
kids?"
"One, a little
girl. She's just five." His face softened.
"I'll make you
a deal. We'll swap even. No questions asked and each of us does as he likes
with his 'specimen.'"
Perkins started to
flare up, then suddenly grinned. "Touché! I'll shut up. But," he went
on, "you were taking a chance. One or two of my colleagues would have
taken you up. You can't understand what a temptation a specimen like this is to
a man of science. Really." He looked longingly at Lummox and added,
"Shall we go in?"
Mrs. Stuart looked
up as they came in; Mr. Perkins shook his head briefly. They sat down and Mr.
Perkins fitted his finger tips together. "Mr. Stuart, you have forbidden
me to discuss a possible sale, but if I tell the director of the Lab that I didn't
even put the proposition, I will look foolish. Would you let me state what the
museum has in mind. . . just for the record?"
"Well. .
." John Thomas frowned. "I guess there's no harm in that."
"Thanks. I
must do something to justify my travel expenses. Let me analyze the situation.
That creature your friend Lummox. . . or let's say 'our friend Lummox' for I
liked him as soon as I saw him. Our friend Lummox is under sentence of death,
isn't he? A court order."
"Yes,"
John Thomas admitted. "But it hasn't been confirmed by the Space
Department yet."
"I know. But
the police have already made attempts to kill him, without waiting for final
approval. Right?"
John started to use
bad language, then glanced at his mother and refrained. "The stupid
idiots! Anyhow, they can't kill Lummox; they're too dumb."
"I agree with
your sentiments. . . privately. That buffoon chief of. police ought to have his
commission taken away. Why, he might have destroyed an absolutely unique
specimen. Imagine!"
Mrs. Stuart said
crisply, "Chief Dreiser is a fine gentleman."
Mr. Perkins turned
to her and said, "Mrs. Stuart, I did not mean to cast slurs on a friend of
yours. But I stick by my guns; the Chief had no right to take things into his
own hands. Such behavior is worse on the part of a public official than it is
when done by a lay citizen."
"He had public
safety to think about,". she insisted.
"True. Perhaps
that is an extenuating circumstance. I take back my remarks. They are off the
subject and I did not intend to start an argument."
"I'm glad to
hear you did not, Mr. Perkins. Shall we get back to the subject?"
John Thomas felt
himself warming a little to the scientist-Mum had slapped Perkins down just the
way she did him-and, besides, he liked Lummox. Mr. Perkins continued, "Any
time now, tomorrow, or even today, the Department of Spatial Affairs will
approve the destruction of Lummox and. . ."
"Maybe they'll
turn it down."
"Can you risk
Lummox's life on that unjustified hope? The Chief of Police will show up
again-and this time he'll kill Lummox."
"No, he won't!
He doesn't know how. We'll laugh at him!"
Mr. Perkins shook
his head slowly. "That's not your head talking, that's your heart. The
Chief will make sure this time. He's been made to look silly; he won't let it
happen again. If he can't figure out a sure way himself, he'll get expert
advice. Mr. Stuart, any biologist could run a rough analysis on Lummox and tell
almost offhand two or three certain ways to kill him. . . kill him quickly and
safely. I've already thought of one, just from seeing him."
John Thomas looked
at him in alarm. "You won't tell Chief Dreiser?"
"Of course
not! I'd be strung up by the thumbs first But there are thousands of others who
can advise him. Or he may hit on a method himself. Be sure of this: if you wait
until that death sentence is approved, it will be too late. They'll kill
Lummox. And that would be a great pity."
John Thomas did not
answer. Mr. Perkins added quietly, "You can't oppose the forces of society
singlehanded. If you are stubborn you yourself will make certain that Lummox
will be killed."
John Thomas pushed
his fist hard against his mouth. Then he said almost inaudibly, "What can
I do?"
"Much, if you
let me help you. First, let me make this clear. If you entrust your pet to us,
he will never be harmed in any way. You hear talk about vivisection and such. .
. well, forget it. Our object is to put specimens into environments as much like
their home planets as possible, then study them. We want them to be healthy and
happy, and we go to a lot of trouble to accomplish those ends. Eventually
Lummox will die a natural death. . . then we'll mount the hide and skeleton, as
a permanent exhibit."
"How would you
like to be stuffed and exhibited?" Johnnie asked bitterly.
"Eh?"
Perkins looked surprised, then laughed. "It wouldn't bother me at all; I'm
leaving my carcass to the medical school of my alma mater. And it won't bother
Lummox. The point is to get him out of the clutches of the police. . . so that
he can live to a ripe old age."
"Wait a minute. If you buy him, that
doesn't get him~ off. They'll still kill him. Won't they?"
"Yes and no. Mostly no. Selling him to
the Museum doesn't cancel the order to destroy him, but, believe me, it will
never be carried out. I've been coached by our legal department as to what to
do. First, we agree on terms and you give me a bill of sale; that gives the
Museum legal standing. At once, tonight, I get hold of your local judge and get
a temporary order postponing ~he execution for a few days; it is definitely
within his discretion to postpone it while this new factor of a change in
ownership is considered. That's all we need. We can get straight to the Secretary
for Spatial Affairs if we need to. . . and I promise you that, once the Museum
holds title, Lummox will never be destroyed."
"You're sure?"
"Sure enough to risk the Museum's
money. If I'm wrong, I might be out of a job." Perkins grinned. "But
I'm not wrong. Once I have the temporary order and have phoned the Museum to
get busy on a permanent order my next step is to settle all the damage. I'll
carry cash, enough to do it. . . cash has a convincing effect. That done, we'll
have only the Chief of Safety against us. . . and, while he may seem an
obstacle to you, he will never be able to stand up against the weight that the
Museum can bring to bear, when needed. And everybody lives happily ever
after!" Perkins smiled. "Anything wrong with it?"
John Thomas traced
out a pattern on the rug with his toe, then looked up. "Look, Mr. Perkins,
I know I have to do something to save Lummox. But up to now I haven't seen any
way. . . and I guess I haven't had the courage to look the facts in the
face."
"Then you'll
do it?"
"Just a
minute, please! This isn't any good either. Lummie would be miserable with
loneliness. He'd never get used to it. It would just be swapping death for life
imprisonment. I'm not sure but what he'd rather be dead. . . than to be all
alone, with a lot of strangers and them poking him and bothering him and making
tests of him. But I can't even ask him what he wants because I'm not sure
Lummie understands about death. But he does understand about strangers."
Mr. Perkins chewed
his lip and reflected that it was very hard to do this young man a favor.
"Mr. Stuart? If you were to go with Lummox, would it make a
difference?"
"Huh?
How?"
"I think I can
promise you a job as an animal handler. . . In fact I have a vacancy in my own
department; I could hire you tonight and we could sort the red tape later.
After all, there is a real advantage in having an exotic animal cared for by
someone who knows his ways."
Before Johnnie
could answer his mother said, "No!"
"Eh? What,
Mrs. Stuart?"
"Out of the
question. Mr. Perkins, I had hoped that you would provide a rational way out of
this silly unpleasantness. But I cannot agree to that last suggestion. My son
is to go to college. I will not have him waste his life sweeping out that
beast's cage. . . like a roustabout! No indeed!"
"Now look
here, Mother. . ."
"John Thomas!
If you please! The subject is closed."
Mr. Perkins looked
from the boy's smoldering face to his mother's set expression. "After
all," he said, "that is no business of the Museum. Let me put it this
way, Mrs. Stuart. I'll keep that job open for, oh, say six months. . . no,
please, Mrs. Stuart! Whether or not your son takes it is your problem. . . and
I am sure you don't need my advice. I just want to assure your son that the
Museum won't keep him away from his pet. Is that fair?"
Her needles were
clicking like machinery. "I suppose so," she admitted.
"Mr.
Stuart?"
"Wait a
minute. Mother, you don't think I'd. . ."
"Please, Mr.
Stuart! The Museum of Natural History has no place in a family discussion. You
know our offer. Will you accept?"
Mrs. Stuart
interrupted. "I don't believe you mentioned the price, Mr. Perkins."
"Why, so I
didn't! Shall we say twenty thousand?"
Net?"
"Net? Oh, no.
. . subject to the claims we'll have to settle, of course."
"'Net,' Mr.
Perkins," she said firmly.
He shrugged.
"Net."
"We
accept."
"Good."
"Hey, wait a
minute!" protested John Thomas. "We don't either. Not if this other
thing isn't settled. I'm not going to turn Lummox over to. . ."
"Quiet! Dear,
I've been patient but we'll have no more of this nonsense. Mr. Perkins, he
accepts. Do you have the papers with you?"
"We don't
either accept!"
"Just a
moment," Mr. Perkins appealed. "Ma'am, am I correct in thinking that
I must have your son's signature for a valid bill of sale?"
"You'll get
it."
"Hmm. Mr.
Stuart?"
"I'm not going
to sign unless it's settled that Lummox and I stay together."
"Mrs.
Stuart?"
"This is
ridiculous."
"I think so,
too. But there is nothing I can do." Perkins stood up. "Good night,
Mr. Stuart. Thanks for letting me speak my piece-and for letting me see Lummox.
No, don't get up; I can find the door."
He started to
leave, while the Stuarts were busy not looking at each other. He paused at the
door. "Mr. Stuart?"
"Huh? Yes, Mr.
Perkins?"
"Would you do
me a favor? Get as many pictures of Lummox as possible?
Color-stereo-motion-sound if you can: I would have a professional crew flown
here but there may not be time. You know. It would be a shame indeed if there
were not some scientific record left of him. So do what you can." He
turned away again.
John Thomas gulped
and was up out of his chair. "Mr. Perkins! Hey! Come back."
A few minutes later
he found himself, signing a bill of sale. His signature was shaky but legible.
"Now Mrs. Stuart," Mr. Perkins said smoothly, "if you will sign
underneath, where it says 'Guardian'. . . thanks! Oh yes! I must scratch out
that part about 'subject to settlement of claim.' I don't have the cash with
me; I got here after the banks had closed, so I'll pass over a nominal sum to
bind it and we'll settle the rest before we move the specimen."
"No,"
said John Thomas.
"Eh?"
"I forgot to
tell you. The Museum can settle the claims, since I can't and after all Lummox
did it. But I'm not going to take any money. I'd feel like Judas."
His mother said
sharply, "John Thomas! I won't let you. . ."
"Better not
say it, Mum," he said dangerously. "You know what Dad would have
thought."
"Hrrumph!"
Mr. Perkins cleared his throat loudly. "I'm going to fill in the usual
legal fiction of a nominal sum. I won't stay longer; Judge O'Farrell told me
that he goes to bed at ten. Mrs. Stuart, I consider the Museum bound by my
offer. Mr. Stuart, I'll leave you to settle with your mother in your own way.
Good night all!" He shoved the bill of sale in his pocket and left
quickly.
An hour later they
were still facing each other wearily and angrily across the living room. John
Thomas had let himself be bullied into conceding that his mother could take the
money, as long as he was not required to touch it. He had given this in
exchange, he thought, for permission to accept the job with Lummox.
But she shook her
head. "Quite out of the question. After all, you are about to go to
college. You couldn't take that beast along. So you had no reason to expect to
keep him with you anyhow."
"Huh? But I
thought you had meant to take care of him. . . the way you promised Dad. . .and
I would have seen him on week ends."
"Keep your
father out of this! I might as well tell you right now that I made up my mind
long ago that the day you went away to school this household would cease to be
a zoo. This present mix-up has simply moved up the date a few days."
He stared at her,
unable to answer.
Presently she came
over and put a hand on his shoulder. "Johnnie? Johnnie dear. . ."
"Huh?"
"Look at me,
darling. We've had some bitter words and I'm sorry they were ever spoken. . .
I'm sure you did not mean them. But Mum has only been thinking of your welfare,
you know that? Don't you?"
"Uh, I suppose
so."
"That's all
Mum ever thinks about. . . what's best for her big boy. You're young, and when
a person is young, things seem important that aren't. But as you grow older,
you will find that Mum knew best. Don't you see that?"
"Well. . .
Mum, about that job. If I could only. . ."
"Please, dear.
Mother has a splitting headache. We'll say no more about it now. Get a good
night's sleep and tomorrow you'll see things differently." She patted his
cheek, bent down and kissed him. "Good night, dear."
"G'night."
He sat there long
after she had gone up, trying to figure things out. He knew that he should feel
good. . . he'd saved Lummie; hadn't he?
But he did not feel
good; he felt like an animal that has chewed a leg off to escape a trap. . .
shock and misery, not relief.
At last he got up
and went outside to see Lummox.
VIII
The
Sensible Thing To Do
John Thomas stayed
with Lummox a short time only, as he could not bear to tell him the truth and
there was nothing else to talk about. Lummox sensed his distress and asked
questions; at last John Thomas pulled himself together and said, "There's
nothing wrong I tell you! Shut up and go to sleep. And be darn sure you stay in
the yard, or I'll beat you bow-legged."
"Yes, Johnnie.
I don't like it outside anyway. People did funny things."
"Just remember
that and don't do it again."
"I won't
Johnnie. Cross my heart."
John Thomas went in
and up to bed. But he did not go to sleep. After a while he got up, dressed in
part, and went up to the attic. The house was very old and. had a real garret,
reached by a ladder and scuttle hole in an upper hallway closet. Once there had
been a proper staircase but it had been squeezed out when the landing flat was
built on the roof, as the space had been needed for the lazy lift.
But the attic was
still there and it was John Thomas's only private place. His room his mother
"tidied" sometimes, even though it was has duty (and wish) to do it
himself. Anything might happen when Mum tidied. Papers might be lost,
destroyed, or even read, for Mum believed that there should be no secrets
between parents and children.
So anything he
wanted to keep to himself he kept in the attic; Mum never went there-ladders
made her dizzy. He had a small, almost airless and very dirty room there which
he was supposed to use only for "storage." Its actual uses were
varied: he had raised snakes there some years before; there he kept the small
collection of books which every boy comes by but does not discuss with parents;
he even had a telephone there, an audio extension run from the usual sound
& sight instrument in his bedroom. This last was a practical result of his
high-school course in physics and it had been real work to wire it, as it not
only had to be rigged when Mum was out of the house and in such a way that she
would not notice it but also it had to be done so as not to advertise its
presence to the phone company's technicians.
But it worked,
jury-rigged though it was, and he had added a "servant" circuit which
flashed a warning light if anyone was listening from any other instrument in
the house.
Tonight he had no
wish to call anyone and it was past the hour when direct messages were
permitted at the dormitory where Betty lived. He simply wanted to be alone . .
. and to look over some papers he had not looked at in a long time. He fumbled
under his work table, flipped a toggle; a panel opened in what appeared to be
blank wall. In the cupboard thus exposed were books and papers. He took them
out.
One item was a
thin-paper notebook, his great grandfather's diary of the Trail Blazer's
second voyage of exploration. It was more than a hundred years old and showed
the wear of many hands. John Thomas had read it a dozen times; he supposed that
his father and his grandfather had done the same. All the pages were fragile,
many had been repaired.
He thumbed through
it, turned the pages carefully, but browsing rather than reading. His eye lit
on one remembered item:
". . . some of the lads are panicky,
especially the married men. But they should of thought of it before they signed
up. Everybody knows the score now; we burst through and came out somewhere not
close to home. Who cares? We meant to travel, didn't we?"
John Thomas turned
a few more pages. He had always known the story of the Trail Blazer; it
produced in him neither awe nor wonder. One of the first interstellar ships,
her crew had plied the profession of discovery with the same acceptance of the
unknown that bad marked the golden days of the fifteenth century, when men had
braved uncharted seas in wooden vessels. The Trail Blazer and her
sisters had gone out the same way, burst through. the Einstein barrier, taken
their chances on getting back. John Thomas Stuart VIII had been aboard her that
second voyage, had come home in one piece, married, begat a male child, and
settled down. . . it was he who had built the landing flat on the roof.
Then one night he
had heard the call of the wild goose, signed up again. He had not come back.
John Thomas located
the first mention of Lummox:
"This planet
is a fair imitation of good old Terra, which is a relief after the last three,
since we can hit dirt without suiting up. But evolution must have been playing
double-or-nothing here, instead of the four-limbed arrangement considered
stylish at home practically everything here has at least eight legs. . . 'mice'
that look like centipedes, rabbitlike creatures with six short legs and one
pair of tremendous jumping legs, all sorts up to things as big as giraffes. I
caught one little fellow (if you can call it that. . . fact is, he came up and
crawled into my lap) and I was so taken with him that I am going to try to keep
him as a mascot. He puts me in mind of a dachshund puppy, only better
engineered. Cristy had the airlock watch, so I was able to get him aboard
without turning him over to Biology."
The next day's
entry did not mention Lummox, being concerned with a more serious matter:
"We hit the
jackpot this time . . . Civilization. The officers are, so excited they are
almost off their heads. I've seen one of the dominant race at a distance. The
same multi-legged pattern, but otherwise making you wonder what would have
happened to Earth if the dinosaurs had made good."
Still further on. . .
"I've been
wondering what to feed Cuddle pup. I needn't have worried. He likes everything
I've sneaked out of the mess for him. . . but he will eat anything that is not
riveted down. Today he ate my Everlasting stylus and it has me worried. I don't
suppose the ink cartridge will poison him but how about the metal and plastic?
He's just like a baby; everything he can reach goes in his mouth.
"Cuddlepuppy
gets cuter every day. The little tyke seems to be trying to talk; he whines at
me and I whine back at him. Then he crawls into my lap and tells me that he
loves me, plain as anything. I'll be switched if I'll let Biology have him,
even if they catch me. Those birds would likely as not cut him up just to see
what makes him tick. He trusts me and i'm not going to let him down."
The diary skipped a couple of days; the Trail
Blazer had made an emergency raise-ship and Assistant Power man J. T.
Stuart had been too busy to write. John Thomas knew why . . . the negotiations
opened so hopefully with the dominant race had failed. . . no one knew why.
The captain fled to save his ship and his
crew. They had blasted away and had again broken through the Einstein barrier
without obtaining from the sentient race the astronomical data they had hoped
to get.
There were only a few more entries
concerning Lummox-Cuddlepup; John Thomas put the diary aside, finding that
reading about Lummox was more than he could stand. He started to put everything
back into his hideaway; his hand fell on a small, privately-printed book titled
A FEW NOTES ABOUT MY FAMILY. It
had been written by his grandfather. John Thomas Stuart IX, and Johnnie's
father had brought it up to date before he had gone on his last patrol. It
belonged in the family library, beside the massive official biography of John
Thomas Stuart VI, but Johnnie had sneaked it upstairs and his mother had never
missed it. He knew it as well as he knew the diary, but he started thumbing
through it to get his mind off Lummox.
The record started in 1880, with John
Thomas Stuart. Who his people had been nobody knew, as he had come from a
little Illinois town that kept no birth records in that remote day. He himself
had confused the record beyond recovery by running away to sea at fourteen. He
had sailed the China trade, lived through beatings and bad food, and eventually
had 'swallowed the anchor,' a retired sea captain of the dying age of sail. He
had built the old house John Thomas was in.
John Thomas,
Junior, had not gone to sea. Instead he had killed himself flying a boxkite
affair termed an "aeroplane." That had been before the first of the
World Wars; for several years thereafter the house had. received "paying
guests."
J. T. Stuart III
had died to greater purpose; the submarine of which he was gunnery officer had
penetrated Tsushima Straits to the Sea of Japan, but had failed to return.
John Thomas Stuart
IV was killed on the first trip to the Moon.
John Thomas V had
emigrated to Mars; his son, the famous name in the family, Johnnie skipped over
quickly; he had long since grown tired of being reminded that he bore the same
name as General Stuart, first governor of the Martian Commonwealth after the
revolution. Johnnie wondered what would have happened to his great great great grandfather
if the revolution had failed? Would they have hanged him?. . . instead of
putting up statues of him?
Much of the book
was devoted to an attempt by Johnnie's grandfather to clear the name of his own
grandfather-for the son of General Stuart was no public hero; instead he had
sweated out his last fifteen years of life in the Triton penal colony. His wife
had returned to her family on Earth and taken back her maiden name, for herself
and her son.
But her son had
gone proudly into court the day he was of age and had had his name changed from
"Carlton Gimmidge" to "John Thomas Stuart VIII" It was he
who had fetched Lummox back and he had used his bonus money from the second
trip of the Trail Blazer to buy back the old homestead. He had
apparently impressed on his own son that his son's grandfather had gotten a
dirty deal; the son had made a great point of it in this record.
Johnnie's
grandfather could himself have used an advocate to defend his name. The record
stated simply that John Thomas Stuart IX had resigned from the service and had
never gone into space again, but Johnnie knew that it had been a choice of that
or a court martial; his own father had told him . . . but he had told him also
that his grandfather could have got off scotfree had he been willing to
testify. His father had added, "Johnnie, I'd rather see you loyal to your
friends than with your chest decked out in medals."
The old man had
still been living at the time Johnnie's father told him this. On a later
occasion, while Johnnie's father was out on patrol, Johnnie had tried to let
him know that he knew.
Granddad had been
furious. "Poppycock!" he had shouted. "They had me dead to
rights."
"But Dad said
your skipper was actually the one who. . ."
"Your Dad
wasn't there. Captain Dominic was the finest skipper that ever trod steel. . .
may his soul rest in peace. Set up the checkers, son. I'm going to beat
you."
Johnnie had tried
to get the straight of it after his grandfather died, but his father's answer
was not direct. "Your grandfather was a romantic sentimentalist, Johnnie.
It's the flaw in our make-up. Hardly sense enough in the whole line to balance
a check book." He had puffed his pipe and added, "But we do have
fun."
Johnnie put the
books and papers away, feeling dully that it had not done him much good to read
about his forebears; Lummox was still on his mind. He guessed he ought to go
down and try to get some sleep.
He was turning away
as the phone flashed; he grabbed it before the light could change to sound
signal; he did not want his mother to wake. "Yes?"
"That you,
Johnnie?"
"Yeah. I can't
see you, Betty; I'm up in the attic."
"That isn't
the only reason you can't. I haven't got my face on, so I've got the video
switched off. Besides it's pitch dark in this hallway, since I'm not allowed to
phone this time o' night. Uh, the Duchess isn't listening, is she?"
Johnnie glanced at
his warning signal. "No."
"I'll make
this brief. My spies report that Deacon Dreiser got the okay to go ahead."
"No!"
"Yes. Point
is, what do we do about it? We can't sit still and let him."
"Uh, I've done
something."
"What? Nothing
silly, I hope. I shouldn't have been away today."
"Well, a Mr.
Perkins. . ."
"Perkins? The
chap who went to see Judge O'Farrell tonight?"
"Yes. How did
you know?"
"Look, don't
waste time. I always know. Tell me your end."
"Well . .
." John Thomas gave a confused report. Betty listened without comment,
which made him defensive; he found himself expounding the viewpoints of his
mother and of Mr. Perkins, rather than his own. "So that's how it
was," he finished lamely.
"So you told
them to go climb-a tree? Good, Now here is our next move. If the Museum. can do
it, we can do it. It's just a case of getting Grandpa O'Farrell to. . ."
"Betty, you
don't understand. I sold Lummox."
"What? You sold
Lummox?"
"Yes. I had
to. If I didn't. . ."
"You
sold Lummox."
"Betty, I
couldn't help my. . ."
But she had
switched off on him.
He tried to call
back, got a recorded voice that said, "This instrument is out of direct
service until tomorrow morning at eight. If you wish to record a message stand
by for. . ." He switched off.
He sat holding his
head and wishing he were dead. The worst of it was, Betty was right. He had let
himself be badgered into doing something he knew was wrong, just because
it had seemed that there was nothing else he could do.
Betty had not been
fooled. Maybe what she wanted to try wasn't any good either. . . but she had
known a wrong answer when she heard it.
He sat there,
flailing himself but not knowing what to do. The more he thought, the angrier
he got. He had let himself be talked into something that wasn't right. .
. just because it was reasonable. . . just because it was logical. . . just
because it was common sense.
The deuce with
common sense! His ancestors hadn't used common sense, any of 'em! 'Who was he
to start such a practice?
None of them had
ever done the sensible thing. Why, take his great great great grandfather . . .
he'd found a situation he hadn't liked and he had turned a whole planet upside
down through seven bloody years. Sure, they called him a hero. . . but does
starting a revolution come under the head of common sense?
Or take. . . Oh,
shucks, take any of 'em! There hadn't been a "good" boy in the bunch.
Would granddad have sold Lummox? Why, granddad would have torn down the
courthouse with his bare hands. If granddad was here, he'd be standing guard
over Lummox with a gun and daring the world to touch one spine.
He certainly wasn't
going to take any of Perkins' dirty money; he knew that.
But what could he do?
He could go to
Mars. Under the Lafayette Law he was a citizen and could claim land. But how
could he get there? Worse, how could he get Lummox there?
The trouble with
that, he told himself savagely, is that it almost makes sense. And sense is no
use to me.
At last he hit on a
plan. It had the one virtue of having no sense to it at all; it was compounded
of equal parts of folly and of risk. He felt that granddad would have liked it.
IX
Customs
and an Ugly Duckling
He went down to the
upper hallway and listened at his mother's door. He did not expect to hear
anything as her bedroom was sound-proofed; the action was instinctive. Then he
returned to his own room and made rapid preparations, starting by dressing in
camping clothes and mountain boots. His sleeping bag he kept in a drawer of his
desk; he got it out, tucked it in a side pocket of his coat and shoved its
power pack in a breast pocket. Other items of hiking and camping gear he
distributed among other pockets and he was almost ready to go.
He counted his cash
and swore softly; his other assets were in a savings account and now he would
have no chance to draw from it. Well, it couldn't be helped. . . he started
downstairs, then remembered an important matter. He went back to his desk.
"Dear
Mum," he wrote. "Please tell Mr. Perkins that the deal is off. You
can use my college money to pay back the insurance people. Lummie and I are
going away and it won't do any good to try to find us. I'm sorry but we have
to." He looked at the note, decided that there was no more to be said, added
"Love," and signed it.
He started a note
to Betty, tore it up, tried again, and finally told himself that he would send
her a letter when he had more to say. He went downstairs, left the note on the
dining table, then went to the pantry and picked out supplies. A few minutes
later, carrying a large sack crammed with tins and packages, he went out to
Lummox's house.
His friend was
asleep. The watchman eye accepted him; Lummox did not stir. John Thomas hauled
back and kicked him as hard as possible. "Hey, Lum! Wake up."
The beast opened
his other eyes, yawned daintily, and piped, "Hello, Johnnie."
"Pull yourself
together. We're going for a hike."
Lummox extended his
legs and stood up, letting a ripple run from head to stern. "All
right."
"Make me a
seat-and leave room for this." Johnnie held up the bag of groceries.
Lummox complied without comment; John Thomas chucked the sack up on the beast,
then scrambled up himself. Soon they were on the road in front of the Stuart
home.
Almost irrational
as he was, John Thomas nevertheless knew that running away and hiding Lummox
was a project almost impossible; Lummox anywhere would be about as conspicuous
as a bass drum in a bathtub. However there was a modicum of method in his
madness; concealing Lummox near Westville was not quite the impossibility it
would have been some places.
Westville lay in an
open mountain valley; immediately west the backbone of the continent shoved its
gaunt ridges into the sky. A few miles beyond the city commenced one of the
great primitive areas, thousands of square miles of up-and-down country almost
the same as it had been when the Indians greeted Columbus. During a short
season each year it swarmed with redcoated sportsmen, blazing away at deer and
elk and each other; most of the year it was deserted.
If he could get
Lummox there without being seen, it was barely possible that they could avoid
being caught-until his food supplies ran out. When that time came-well, he
might live off the country just as Lummox would. . . eat venison, maybe. Or
maybe go back to town without Lummox and argue it out again from the strong
position of being able to refuse to tell where Lummox was until they listened
to reason. The possibilities were not thought out; he simply intended to get
Lummox under cover and then think about it. . . get him somewhere where that
old scoundrel Dreiser couldn't try out ways to hurt him!
John Thomas could
have turned Lummox to the west and set off across country toward the mountains,
Lummox being no more dependent on pavement than is a tank. . . but Lummox left
a track in soft earth as conspicuous as that of a tank. It was necessary to.
stay on paved road.
Johnnie had a
solution in mind. In an earlier century a transcontinental highway had crossed
the mountains here, passing south of Westville and winding ever higher toward
the Great Divide. It had long since been replaced by a modern powered road
which tunneled through the wall of rock instead of climbing it. But the old
road remained, abandoned, overgrown in many places, its concrete slabs heaved
and tilted from frost and summer heat. . . but still a paved road that would
show little sign of Lummox's ponderous progress,
He led Lummox by
back ways, avoiding houses and working toward a spot three miles west where the
expressway entered the first of its tunnels and the old highway started to
climb. Ht did not go quite to the fork, but stopped a hundred yards short,
parked Lummox in front of a vacant lot, warned him not to move, and scouted the
lay of the land. He did not dare take Lummox onto the expressway to reach the
old road; not only might they be seen but also it would be dangerous to Lummox.
But John Thomas
found what he thought he remembered: a construction road looping around the
junction. It was not paved but was hard-packed granite gravel and he judged
that even Lummox's heavy steps would not leave prints. He went back and found
Lummox placidly eating a "For Sale" sign. He scolded him and took it
away, then decided that he might as well get rid of the evidence and gave it
back. They continued while Lummox munched the sign.
Once on the old
highway John Thomas relaxed. For the first few miles it was in good repair, for
it served homes farther up the canyon. But there was no through traffic, it
being a dead end, and no local traffic at this hour. Once or twice an air car
passed overhead, party or theater goers returning home, but if the passengers
noticed the great beast plodding on the road below they gave no sign.
The road meandered
up the canyon and came out on a tableland; here was a barrier across the
pavement: ROAD CLOSED. . . VEHICULAR PASSAGE FORBIDDEN BEYOND THIS POINT.
Johnnie got down and looked it over. It was a single heavy timber supported at
the chest height. "Lummie, can you walk over that without touching
it?"
"Sure,
Johnnie."
"All right
Take it slowly. You mustn't knock it down. Don't even brush against it."
"I won't,
Johnnie." Nor did he. Instead of stepping over it as a horse might step
over a lower barrier Lummox retracted pairs of legs in succession and flowed
over it.
Johnnie crawled
under the barrier and joined him. "I didn't know you could do that."
"Neither did
I."
The road was rough
ahead. Johnnie stopped to lash down the groceries with a line under Lummox's
keel, then added a bight across his own thighs. "All right, Lummie. Let's
have some speed. But don't gallop; I don't want to fall off."
"Hang on,
Johnnie!" Lummox picked up speed, retaining. his normal foot pattern. He
rumbled along at a. fast trot, his gait smoothed out by his many legs. Johnnie
found that he was very tired, both in body and spirit. He felt safe, now that
they were away from houses and traveled roads, and fatigue hit him. He leaned
back and Lummox adjusted his contours to him. The swaying motion and steady
pounding of massive feet had soothing effect. Presently he slept.
Lummox went on sure-footedly
over the broken slabs, He was using his night sight and there was no danger of
stumbling in the dark. He knew that Johnnie was asleep and kept his gait as
smooth as possible. But in time he got bored and decided on a nap, too. He had
not slept well the nights he had spent away from home. . . always some
silliness going on and it had fretted him not to know where Johnnie was. So now
he rigged out his guardian eye, closed his others and shifted control over to
the secondary brain back in his rump. Lummox proper went to sleep, leaving that
minor fraction that never slept to perform the simple tasks of watching for road
hazards and of supervising the tireless pounding of his eight great legs.
John Thomas woke as
the stars were fading in the morning sky. He stretched his sore muscles and
shivered, There were high mountains all around and the road crawled along the
side of one, with a sheer drop to a stream far below. He sat up. "Hey,
Lummie!"
No answer. He
shouted again. This time Lummox answered sleepily, "What's the matter,
Johnnie?'
"You've been
asleep," he accused.
"You didn't
say not to, Johnnie."
"Well.. . all
right. Are we on the same road?"
Lummox consulted
his alter ego and answered. "Sure. Did you want another road?"
"No. But we've
got to get off this one. It's getting light."
"Why?"
John Thomas did not
know how to answer that question; trying to explain to Lummox that he was under
sentence of death and must hide did not appeal to him. "We have to, that's
why. But just keep going now. I'll let you know."
The stream climbed
up to meet them; in a mile or so the road lay only a few feet above it. They
came to a place where the stream bed widened out into a boulder field, with
water only in a central channel. "Whoa!" called out Johnnie.
"Breakfast?"
inquired Lummox.
"Not yet. See
those rocks down there?"
"I want you to
step wide onto those rocks. Don't put your big feet on that soft shoulder dirt.
Step from the pavement to the rocks. Get me?
"Don't leave
tracks?" Lummox asked doubtfully.
"That's right.
If anybody comes along and sees tracks, you'll have to go back downtown
again-because they'll follow the tracks and find us. See?" .
"I won't leave
any tracks, Johnnie."
Lummox went down
onto the dry stream bed like a gargantuan inchworm. The maneuver caused John
Thomas to grab for his safety line with one hand and for his supplies with the
other. He yelped.
Lummox stopped and
said, "You all right, Johnnie?"
"Yes. You just
surprised me. Upstream now and stay on the rocks." They followed the stream,
found a place to cross, then followed it on the other side. It swung away from
the road and soon they were several hundred yards from it. It was now almost
broad daylight and John Thomas was beginning to worry about air reconnaissance,
even though it was unlikely that the alarm would be out so soon.
Up ahead a grove of
lodgepole pines came down to the bank. It seemed dense enough; even if Lummox
were not invisible in it, nevertheless holding still he would look like a big,
mountain-country boulder. It would have to do; there was no time to pick a
better place. "Up the bank and into those trees, Luni, and don't, break
the bank down. Step easy."
They entered the
grove and stopped; Johnnie dismounted. Lummox tore down a branch of pine and
started to eat. It reminded John Thomas that he himself had ,not eaten lately
but he was so dead tired that he was not hungry. He wanted to sleep, really
sleep not half awake and clutching a safety line.
But he was afraid
that if he let Lummox graze while he slept the big stupid lunk would wander
into the open and be spotted. "Lummie? Let's take a nap before we have
breakfast."
"Why?"
"Well,
Johnnie's awful tired. You just lie down here and I'll put my sleeping bag
beside you. Then when we wake up, we'll eat."
"Not eat until
you wake up?"
"That's
it."
"Well. .. all
right," Lummox said regretfully.
John Thomas took
his sleeping bag out of his picket, flipped the light membrane open, and
plugged in the power pack. He set the thermostat and switched it on, then while
it heated he inflated the mattress side. The thin mountain air made it heavy
work; he stopped with it only partly blown up and peeled off all his clothes.
Shivering in the frosty air he slid inside, closed it to a nose hole.
"G'night, Lummie."
"G'night, Johnnie."
Mr. Kiku slept
badly and was up early. He breakfasted without disturbing his wife and went to
the Spatial Affairs hall, arriving while the great building was quiet except
for the handful on night duty. Seated at his desk, he tried to think.
His subconscious
had been nagging him all night, telling him that he had missed something
important. Mr. Kiku had high respect for his subconscious, holding a theory
that real thinking was never done at the top of the mind, which he regarded
merely as a display window for results arrived at elsewhere, like the
"answer" windows in a calculator.
Something young
Greenberg had said. . . something about the Rargyllian believing that the
Hroshii, with only one ship, were a serious menace to Earth. Mr. Kiku had
discounted it as a clumsy attempt by the snake boy to bluff from weakness. Not
that it mattered; the negotiation was about over. . . the one remaining detail
being to set up permanent relations with the Hroshii.
His subconscious
had not thought so.
He leaned to his
desk and spoke to the night communications supervisor. "Kiku. Call the
Hotel Universal. There's a Dr. Ftaeml there, a Rargyllian. As soon as he orders
breakfast I want to talk a him. No, don't wake him, a man is entitled to his
rest."
Having done what
could be done, he turned to the mind-soothing routine of clearing up
accumulated work.
His incoming basket
was empty for the first time in some days and the building was beginning to
stir when his desk communicator showed a blinking red light.
"Kiku
here."
"Sir,"
the face said anxiously, "on that call to Hotel Universal. Dr. Ftaeml did
not order breakfast"
"Sleeping late
perhaps. His privilege."
"No, sir. I
mean he skipped breakfast. He's on his way to space port."
"How long
ago?"
"Five to ten
minutes. I just found out."
"Very
well." Call space port, tell them not to clear his ship. Make certain that
they understand that it has diplomatic clearance and that they must actually do
something. . . not just scratch its clearance on the board and go back to
sleep. Then reach Dr. Ftaeml himself-my compliments to the Doctor and will he
do me the honor of waiting a few minutes to see me? I am on my way to the
port"
"Yes,
sir!"
"That done,
there is a matter of a special efficiency report for you. . . uh, Znedov, is
it? Make out the form and grade yourself; I want to see your opinion of
yourself."
"Yes,
sir."
Mr. Kiku switched
off and called Transportation. "Kiku. I am leaving for the space port as
quickly as I can reach the roof. Provide a dart and a police escort."
"Yes,
sir!"
Mr. Kiku stopped
only to tell his secretary where he was going, then stepped into his private
lift to the roof.
At the space port
Dr. Ftaeml was waiting out on the passengers' promenade, watching the ships and
pretending to smoke a cigar. Mr. Kiku came up and bowed. "Good morning,
Doctor. It was most gentle of you to wait for me."
The Rargyllian
tossed the cigar aside. "The honor is mine, sir. To be attended at the
port by a person of your rank and pressing duties. . ." He finished with a
shrug which expressed both surprise and pleasure.
"I will not
keep you long. But I had promised myself the pleasure of seeing you today and I
had not known that you intended to leave."
"My fault, Mr.
Under Secretary I had intended to pop up and pop back and then to wait your
pleasure this afternoon."
"Good. Well,
perhaps by tomorrow I shall be able to present an acceptable solution of this
problem."
Ftaeml was plainly
surprised. "Successful?"
"I hope so.
The data you provided yesterday has given us a new clue."
"Do I
understand that you have found the missing Hroshia?"
"Possibly. Do
you know the fable of the Ugly Duckling?"
"'Ugly
Duckling'?" The Rargyllian seemed to be searching his files. "Yes, I
know the idiom."
"Mr.
Greenberg, following the clue you provided, has gone to fetch the Ugly
Duckling. If by wild chance it turns out to be the swan that we are seeking,
then. . ." Mr. Kiku gave a shrug-unconsciously like that of Ftaeml.
The Rargyllian
seemed to have trouble believing it. "And is it the. . . 'swan,' Mr. Under
Secretary?"
"We will see.
Logic says that it must be; probability says that it cannot be."
"Mmmm . .. and
may I report this to my clients?"'
"Suppose we
wait until I hear from Mr. Greenberg. He has left Capital, to investigate. Can
I reach you through the scout ship?"
"Certainly,
sir."
"Uh, Doctor..
. there was one more thing."
"Yes,
sir?"
"You made an
odd remark to. Mr. Greenberg last night supposedly a joke. . . or perhaps an
accident. You said something about Earth being 'volatilized'."
For a moment the
Rargyllian said nothing. When he did speak he changed the subject "Tell
me, sir, in what way does logic state that your 'Ugly Duckling' is a
swan?"
Mr. Kiku spoke
carefully. "A Terran ship visited a strange planet at the time defined by
your data. The dominant race could have been Hroshii; the identification is not
exact except as to time. A life form was removed and brought here. This being
is still alive after more than one hundred twenty years; Mr. Greenberg has gone
to fetch it for identification by your principals."
Dr. Ftaeml said
softly, "It must be. I did not believe. it but it must be." He went
on, louder and quite cheerfully, "Sir, you have made me happy."
"Indeed?"
"Very. You
have also made it possible for me to speak freely."
"You have
always been free to speak, Doctor, so far as we were concerned. I do not know
what instructions you have from your clients."
"They have
placed no check on my tongue. But. . . You are aware, sir, that the customs of
a race are implicit in its speech?"
"I have
sometimes had cause to suspect so," Mr. Kiku answered dryly.
"To be sure.
If you visited a friend in a hospital, knowing him to be dying, knowing that
you could not help him, would you speak to him of his doom?"
"No. Not
unless he brought up the subject."
"Precisely!
Speaking to you and to Mr. Greenberg I was perforce bound by your
customs."
"Dr. Ftaeml,"
Mr. Kiku said slowly, "let us be blunt. Am I to believe that you are
convinced that this single foreign ship could do a serious damage to this
planet, with its not inconsiderable defenses?"
"I will be
blunt, sir. Should the Hroshui eventually conclude that, through the actions of
this planet or some member of its culture, their Hroshia had died or was
forever lost, Earth would not be damaged; Earth would be destroyed."
"By this one
ship?"
"Unassisted."
Mr. Kiku shook his
head. "Doctor, I am sure that you are convinced of what you say. I am not.
The extent and thoroughness of the defenses of this, the leading planet of the
Federation, cannot possibly be known to you. But should they be so foolish they
will learn that we have teeth."
Ftaeml looked sorrowful.
"In all the many tongues of civilization I find no words to convince you.
But believe me. . . anything that you could do against them would be as futile
as throwing stones at one of your modern warships."
"We shall see.
Or, fortunately, we shall not see. I do not like weapons, Doctor; they are the
last resort of faulty diplomacy. Have you spoken to them of the willingness of
the Federation to accept them into the Community of Civilizations?"
"I have had
grave difficulty in explaining to them the nature of your offer."
"Are they,
then, so hopelessly warlike?"
"They are not
warlike at all. How can I put it? Are you warlike when you smash. . . strike. .
. swat. . . yes, swat a fly? The Hroshii are practically immortal by your
standards, and even by mine. They are so nearly invulnerable to all ordinary
hazards that they tend to look down. . . how is your idiom? . . . 'Olympian'.
they look down on us from Olympian heights. They cannot see any purpose in
relations with lesser races; therefore your proposal was not taken seriously,
though, believe me, I put it."
"They sound
stupid," Kiku answered sourly.
"Not true,
sir. They evaluate your race and mine most exactly. They know that any culture
possessing star travel has at least some minor skill in the physical arts. They
know therefore that you will regard yourselves as powerful. For that reason
they are even now contemplating a display of force, to convince you that you
must forthwith deliver up their Hroshia. . . they think of this as being like a
goad to a draft animal, a sign which he will be able to understand."
"Hmm. . . You
know the nature of this demonstration?"
"I do. My trip
this morning to their ship is to persuade them to wait They intend to touch
lightly the face of your satellite, leave on it an incandescent mark perhaps a
thousand miles long, to convince you that they uh. . . 'ain't foolin'."
"I am not
impressed. We could order a force of ships and make such a sign ourselves. Not
that we would."
"Could you do
it with one ship, in a matter of seconds, without fuss, from a distance of a
quarter million miles?"
"You think
they could?"
"I am sure of
it, A minor demonstration. Mr. Under Secretary, there are novae in their part
of the sky which were not accidents of nature."
Mr. Kiku hesitated.
If it all were true, then such a demonstration might serve his own needs by
causing the Hroshul to show their hand. The loss of a few worthless lunar
mountains would not matter. . . but it would be difficult to evacuate such an
area of even the few who might be in it. "Have you told them that our Moon
is inhabited?"
It is not inhabited
by their Hroshia, which is all that matters to them."
"Hmm. . . I
suppose so. Doctor, could you suggest to them, first, that you may be about to
find their Hroshia, and second, that their Hroshia may be somewhere on our
satellite, which is why the search has taken so long?"
The Rargyllian
simulated a wide human grin. "Sir, I salute you. I shall be happy to
convey such a suggestion. I am sure there will be no demonstration of
force."
"Good health,
Doctor. I'll be in touch with you."
"Your good
health, sir."
On his way back Mr.
Kiku realized that he had felt not a single twinge in the presence of the
medusoid why, the blighter was rather likable, in a horrid way. Dr. Morgan was
certainly an adroit hypnotherapist.
His work basket was
choked as usual; he put the Hroshii out of mind and worked happily. Late that
afternoon communications informed him that they were holding a circuit for Mr.
Greenberg. "Put him on," Mr. Kiku said, feeling that at last the
pieces were falling into place.
"Boss?"
Greenberg began.
"Eh? Yes,
Sergei. What the deuce are you, looking upset about?"
"Because I'm
wondering how I'm going to like it as a private in the Outer Legion."
"Quit trying
to break it gently. What happened?"
"The bird has
flown."
"Flown?
Where?"
"I wish I
knew. The most likely place is a forest preserve west of here."
"Then why are
you wasting time telling me? Get in there and find it."
Greenberg sighed.
"I knew you would say that. Look, boss, this haystack has over ten million
acres in it, tall trees, tall mountains, and no roads. And the local police
chief is there ahead of me, with all his own men and half the sheriffs deputies
in the state. He's ordered them to kill on sight and has posted a reward for
the ship making the kill."
"What?"
"Just what I
said. Your authorization to carry out the judgment of the court came through;
the cancellation of it got lost. . . how, I don't know. But the acting chief is
an old relic with the soul of a file clerk; he points to the order and won't
budge. . . he won't even let me call them on police frequency. With our
intervention withdrawn I haven't an ounce of authority to force him."
"You are
accepting that, I suppose?" Mr. Kiku said bitterly. "Just waiting for
it to blow up in your face?"
"Just about.
I've got a call in for the mayor-he's out of town. Another for the
governor-he's in a closed grand jury session. And another for the chief forest
ranger-I think he's out after the reward. As soon as I, switch off I'm going to
twist the arm of the acting chief until he sees the light and. . ."
"You should be
doing that now."
"I won't
dally. I called to suggest that you turn on heat from back there. I need
help."
"You'll get
it"
"Not just to
reach the governor, not just to start a fresh intervention. Even after we reach
this wild police chief and persuade him to call off his dogs I'll still need
help. Ten million acres of mountains, boss. . . it means men and ships, lots of
men, lots of ships. It's no job for one man with a brief case. Besides, I'm
going to join the Outer Legion."
"We'll both
join," Kiku said glumly. "All right, get on it. Move."
"It's been
nice knowing you."
Mr. Kiku switched
off, then moved very fast, initiating a fresh departmental intervention,
sending an emergency-priority message to the state governor, another to the
mayor of Westville, another to the Westville district court. Formal action
completed, he sat for a few seconds, bracing himself for what he must do next.
. . then went in to tell the Secretary that they must ask for help from the
military authorities of the Federation.
X
The
Cygnus Decision
When John Thomas
woke up he had trouble remembering where he was. The sleeping bag was toasty
warm, he felt good, rested but lazy. Gradually the picture of where he was and
why he was there built up and he poked his head out. The sun was high and it
was pleasantly warm. Lummox was nearby. "Hi, Lummie.
"Hi, Johnnie.
You slept a long time. You were noisy, too."
"Was I?"
He crawled out and pulled his clothes on, switched off the sleeping bag. He
folded it and turned to Lummox-and started. "What's that?"
Near Lummox's head,
lying squashed out as if it had been stepped on, was a very dead grizzly bear.
. . about a six-hundred-pound male. Blood had gushed from mouth and nostrils,
then dried. Lummox glanced at it. "Breakfast," he explained.
John Thomas looked
at it with distaste. "Not for me, it's not. Where did you get it?"
"I catched
it," Lummox answered and simpered.
"Not 'catched
it'. . . 'caught it.'"
"But I did
catch it. It tried to get in with you and I catched it."
"Well, all
right. Thanks." John Thomas looked at the bear again, turned away and
opened his food bag. He selected a can of ham and eggs, twisted off the top,
and waited for it to heat.
Lummox took this as a signal that it was now
all right for him to breakfast, too, which he did-first the bear, then a couple
of small pine trees, a peck or so of gravel for crunchiness, and the empty
container of John Thomas's breakfast. They went down to the stream afterwards,
with Johnnie going first to search the sky; Lummox washed down his meal with a
few hogsheads of clear mountain water. Johnnie knelt and drank, then washed his
face and hands and wiped them on his shirt. Lummox asked, "What do we do
now, Johnnie? Go for a walk? Catch things, maybe?"
"No,"
Johnnie denied. "We go back up in those trees and lie low until dark.
You've got to pretend you're a rock." He went up the bank, Lummox
followed. "Settle down," John Thomas ordered. "I want to look at
those bumps."
Lummox did so; it
brought the tumors down where his master could inspect them without stretching.
Johnnie looked them over with increasing worry. They were larger and seemed to
have lumps and bumps inside; Johnnie tried to remember whether such a
development was a sign of malignancy. The skin over them had stretched and
thinned until it was hardly more than thick leather, not in the least like the
rest of Lummox's armor. It was dry and hot to his touch. Johnnie kneaded the
left one gently; Lummox pulled away.
"Is it that
tender?" Johnnie asked anxiously.
"I can't stand
it," Lummox protested. He extended his legs and walked over to a large
pine tree, started rubbing the tumor against it.
"Hey!"
said Johnnie. "Don't do that! You'll hurt yourself."
"But it itches."
Lummox went on scratching.
John Thomas ran to
him, intending to be firm. But just as he reached him the tumor split open. He
watched in horror.
Something dark and
wet and writhing emerged, caught on the ruptured skin, held there inchoate,
then burst free to dangle and flop like a jungle snake from a branch. For an
agonized moment all that Johnnie could think was that it was indeed something
like that some giant, parasitic worm eating its way out of its unlucky host. He
thought with dumb self-blame that he had forced Lummie to climb over the
mountains when he was sick to death with that.
Lummox sighed and
wiggled. "Gee!" he said with satisfaction. "That feels
better!"
"Lummox! Are
you all right?"
"Huh? Why
shouldn't I be, Johnnie?"
"Why? Why, that!"
"What?"
Lummox looked around; the strange growth bent forward and he glanced at it.
"Oh, that. . ." he answered, dismissing the matter.
The end of the
thing opened out like a blossoming flower. . . and Johnnie realized at last
what it was.
Lummox had grown an
arm.
The arm dried
rapidly, lightened in color and seemed to firm. Lummox did not have much
control over it yet, but John Thomas could begin to see its final form. It had
two elbows, a distinct hand with thumbs on each side. There were five fingers,
seven digits in all, and the middle finger was longer and fully flexible, like
an elephant's trunk. The hand did not resemble a human hand much but there was
no doubt that it was at least as useful-or would become so; at the moment the
digits wiggled aimlessly.
Lummox let him
examine it, but did not himself seem especially interested in the development;
Lummox acted as if it were something he always did right after breakfast.
Johnnie said,
"Let me have a look at the other bump," and walked around Lummox. The
rightside tumor was still more bloated. When John Thomas touched it Lummox
shrugged away and turned as if to rub it against the tree. "Hold it!'
Johnnie called out. "Stand still."
"I've got
to scratch."
"You might
lame yourself for life. Hold still, I want to try something." Lummox
sulkily complied; Johnnie took out his belt knife and gently nicked the center
of the swelling.
The nick spread and
Lummox's right arm came out almost in Johnnie's face. He jumped back.
"Thanks,
Johnnie!"
"Any time, any
time." He sheathed the knife and stared at the newborn arms, his face
thoughtful.
He could not figure
all the implications of Lummox's unexpected acquisition of hands. But he did
realize that it was going to change things a lot. In what way, he did not know.
Perhaps Lummie would not need so much care after this. On the other hand he
might have to be watched or he would be forever getting into things he
shouldn't. He remembered uneasily someone saying what a blessing it was cats
did not have hands well, Lummie had more curiosity than any cat.
But he felt without
knowing why that such things were side issues; this was important.
In any case, he
decided fiercely, this doesn't change one thing: Chief Dreiser isn't going to
get another crack at him!
He searched the sky
through the branches and wondered if they could be spotted. "Lum. .
."
"Yes,
Johnnie?"
"Haul in your
legs. It's time to play like a rock."
"Aw, let's go
for a walk, Johnnie."
"We'll go for
a walk tonight. But until it gets dark I want you to stay put and hold
still."
"Aw,
Johnnie!"
"Look, you
don't want to go downtown again, do you? All right, then, quit arguing."
"Well, if you
feel that way about it." Lummox settled to the ground. John Thomas sat
down, leaned against him, and thought.
Maybe there was a
way in this for Lummie and him to make a living. . . in a carnival or
something. E.-t.s were big stuff in carnivals; they couldn't run without
them-even though half of them were fakes-and Lummie wasn't a fake. Probably he
could learn to do tricks with his hands, play something or something. Maybe a
circus was still better.
No, that wasn't the
thing for Lummie; crowds made him nervous. Uh, what could the two of them do to
make a living?. . . after this, mess with the authorities was straightened out,
of course. A farm, maybe? Lummie would be better than a tractor and with hands
he would be a farm hand, too. Maybe that was the ticket, even though he had
never thought about farming.
In his mind's eye
he saw himself and Lummox growing great fields of grain. . . and hay. . . and
vegetables and. . . unaware that he had fallen asleep.
He was awakened by
a cracking noise and knew vaguely that he had heard several of them. He opened
his eyes, looked around and found that he was lying beside Lummox. The creature
had not left the spot. . . but he was moving his arms. One arm flailed past
Lummox's head, there was a blur and another crack. . . and a small aspen some
distance away suddenly came down. Several others were down near it.
John Thomas
scrambled to his feet. "Hey, stop that!"
Lummox stopped.
"What's the matter, Johnnie?" he asked in a hurt voice. There was a
pile of rocks in front of him; he was just reaching for one.
"Don't throw
rocks at trees."
"But you do,
Johnnie."
"Yes, but I
don't ruin them. It's all right to eat trees, but don't just spoil them."
"I'll eat
them. I was going to."
"All
right." Johnnie looked around. It was dusk, they could start again in a
few minutes. "Go ahead and have them for supper. Here, wait a
minute." He examined Lummox's arms. They were the same color as the rest
of him, and beginning to get armor hard. But the most striking change was that
they were twice as thick as they had been at first-as big around as Johnnie's
thighs. Most of the loose hide had sloughed off; Johnnie found that he could
tear off the rest. "Okay. Chow time."
Lummox finished the
aspens in the time it took John Thomas to prepare and eat his simple meal, and
was ready to eat the empty container as a sweet. It was dark by then; they took
to the road.
The second night
was even less eventful than the first. It grew steadily colder as they wound
even higher; presently Johnnie plugged the power pack of his sleeping bag into
his suit. Shortly he was warm and drowsy. "Lum-if I go to sleep, call me
when it starts to get light."
"Okay,
Johnnie." Lummox stored the order in his after brain, just in case. Cold
did not bother him, he was not conscious of it, as his body thermostat was more
efficient than was Johnnie's-even more efficient than the one controlling the
power pack.
John Thomas dozed
and woke up and dozed. He was dozing when Lummox called him, just as the first
rays brushed distant peaks. Johnnie sat up and began watching for a place to
pull out and hide. Luck was against him; it was straight up on one side and the
other side swung over a deep, dismal drop. As minutes wore away and it turned
broad daylight he began to get panicky.
But there was
nothing to do but plod ahead.
A stratoship passed
in the distance. He could hear the thunderclap, but he could not see it; he
could only hope that it was not scanning for him. A few minutes later, while
searching all around, he spotted behind them a dot that he hoped was an eagle.
Very soon he was
forced to admit that it was a single human in a flight harness. "Stop,
Lummox! Pull over to the wall. You're a landslide."
"A landslide,
Johnnie?"
"Shut up and
do it!" Lummox shut up and did it. John Thomas slid down and hid behind
Lummox's head, making himself small. He waited for the flier to pass over.
The flier did not
pass, but swooped in a familiar shoot-the-works style and came in for a
landing. Johnnie sighed with relief as Betty Sorenson landed on the spot he had
just vacated. She called out, "Howdy, Lummie," then turned to
Johnnie, put her hands on her hips and said, "Well! Aren't you a pretty sight!
Running off without telling me!"
"Uh, I meant
to, Slugger, I really did. But I didn't have a chance to. . . I'm sorry."
She dropped her
fierce expression and smiled. "Never mind. I think better of you than I
have in some time. At least you did something. Johnnie, I was afraid you were
just a big lummox yourself-pushed around by anybody."
John Thomas decided
not to argue, being too pleased to see her to take offense. "Uh. . . well,
anyway, how did you manage to spot us?"
"Huh?
Knothead, you've been gone two nights and you are still only a short flight
from town. . . how could you expect not to be spotted?"
"Yes, but how
did you know where to look?"
She shrugged.
"The old rule: I thought like a mule and went where the mule would. I knew
you would be along this road, so I started out at barely 'can-see' and swooped
along it. And if you don't want to be caught in the next few minutes we had
better boost out of here and get under cover. Come on! Lummie old boy, start
your engines."
She put down a hand
and Johnnie swung aboard; the procession started up. "I've been trying to
get off the road," Johnnie explained nervously, "but we haven't come
to a spot."
"I see. Well,
hold your breath, 'cause around this bend is Adam-and-Eve Falls and we can get
off the road just above them."
"Oh, is that
where we are?"
"Yes."
Betty leaned forward in a futile attempt to see around a rock shoulder ahead.
So doing, she caught her first glimpse of Lummox's arms. She grabbed John
Thomas. "Johnnie! There's a boa constrictor on Lummie!"
"What? Don't
be silly. That's just his right arm."
"His what?
Johnnie, you're ill."
"Level off and
quit grabbing me. I said 'arms'-those tumor things were arms."
"The tumors. . . were arms?" She
sighed. "I got up too early and I haven't had breakfast. I can't take
shocks like that. All right, tell him to stop. I got to see this."
"How about
getting under cover?"
"Oh. Yes,
you're right You're usually right, Johnnie-two or three weeks late."
"Don't strain
yourself. There are the falls." They passed the falls; the floor of the
canyon thereby came up to meet them. John Thomas took the first chance to get
off the road, a spot like their bivouac of the day before. He felt much better
to have Lummox back under thick trees again. While he prepared breakfast, Betty
examined Lummox's brand-new arms.
"Lummox,"
she said reprovingly, "you didn't tell mama about this."
"You didn't
ask me," he objected.
"Excuses,
always excuses. Well, what can you do with them?"
"I can throw
rocks. Johnnie, is it all right?"
"No!"
John Thomas said hastily. "Betty, how do you want your coffee?"
"Just
bare-footed," she answered absently and went on inspecting the limbs.
There was a notion hovering in her mind about them, but it would not light .
which annoyed her, as she expected her mind to work for her with the humming
precision of a calculator and no nonsense, please! Oh, well. . . breakfast
first.
After they had fed
the dirty dishes to Lummox, Betty lounged back and said to John Thomas,
"Problem child, have you any idea what a storm you have stirred up?"
"Uh, I guess
I've got Chief Dreiser's goat."
"No doubt and
correct. But you might as well turn it loose; there won't be room in the
pen."
"Mr.
Perkins?"
"Right. Keep
trying."
"Mum, of
course."
"Of course.
She alternates between weeping for her lost baby and announcing that you are no
son of hers?'
"Yeah. I know
Mum," he admitted uneasily. "Well, I don't care. . . I knew they'd
all be sore at me. But I had to."
"Of course you
had to, Knothead darling, even though you did it with the eager grace of a
hippopotamus. But I don't mean them."
"Huh?"
"Johnnie,
there is a little town in Georgia named Adrian. It's too small to have a
regular safety force, just a constable. Do you happen to know that constable's
name?"
"Huh? Of
course not."
"Too bad. For
as near as I was able to find out, that constable is the only cop who isn't
looking for you, which is why I rallied around-even though you, you dirty name,
ran off without bothering to alert me."
"I told you I
was sorry!"
"And I forgave
you. I'll let you forget it in ten years or so."
"What's this
nonsense about this constable? And why should everybody be out after me? Aside
from Chief Dreiser, I mean?"
"Because he
has put out a general alarm and offered a reward for Lummie, alive or dead. . .
preferably dead. They are serious about it, Johnnie. . . terribly serious. So
whatever plan you had we now junk and shift to a good one. What did you have in
mind? Or did you?"
John Thomas turned
pale and answered slowly, "Well. . . I meant to keep on like this for a
night or two, until we reached a place to hide."
She shook her head.
"No good. In their stumbling official way they will have concluded by now
that this is where you would head. . . since it is the only place near
Westville where a creature the size of Lummox could possibly hide. And. .
."
"Oh, we'd get
off the road!"
"Of course.
And they will search this forest tree by tree. They really mean it, chum."
"You didn't
let me finish. You know that old uranium mine? The Power and Glory? You go over
Dead Wolf Pass and then take off north on a gravel road. That's where we're
heading. I can put Lummox completely out of sight there; the main tunnel is big
enough."
"Flashes of
sense in that. But not good enough for what you are up against"
She was silent.
Johnnie stirred uneasily and said, "Well? If that's no good, what do we
do?"
"Pipe down.
I'm thinking." She lay still, staring up at the deep blue mountain sky. At
last she said, "You didn't solve anything by running away."
"No. . . but I
sure mixed it up."
"Yes, and so
far so good. Everything ought to be turned upside down occasionally; it lets in
air and light. But now we've got to see that the pieces fall back where we want
them. To do that we've got to gain time. Your notion of the Power and Glory
Mine isn't too bad; it will do until I can make better arrangements."
"I don't see
why they would ever find him there. It's about as lonely as you can get."
"Which is why
it is sure to be searched. Oh, it might fool Deacon Dreiser; I doubt he could
find his own hat without a search warrant. But he's dug up an air posse the
size of a small army; they are certain to find you. You took your sleeping bag
and food; therefore you are camping out. I found you, they will find you. I did
it by knowing what makes you tick, whereas they have to work by logic, which is
slower. But just as certain. They'll find you. . . and that's the end of
Lummox. They won't take chances. . . bomb him, probably."
John Thomas
considered the dismal prospect. "Then what's the sense of hiding him in
the mine?"
"Just to gain
a day or so, because I'm not ready to take him out yet."
"Huh?"
"Of course.
We'll hide him in town."
"What?
Slugger, the altitude has got you."
"In town and
under cover. . . because it is the only place in the wide, wide world they
won't look for him." She added, "Maybe in Mr. Ito's
greenhouses."
"Huh? Now I
know you're crazy."
"Can you think
of a safer place? Mr. Ito's son is not hard to reason with; I had a nice talk
with him just yesterday. I stood short and looked up at him and let him explain
things. One of his greenhouses would be perfect. . . snug, maybe, but this is
an emergency. You can't see through that milky glass they are built out of and
nobody would dream that Lummie might be inside."
"I don't see
how you can do it."
"You let me
handle it. If I don't get the greenhouse. . . but I will! . . . then I'll get
an empty warehouse or something. We'll put Lummie in the mine tonight, then
I'll fly back and arrange things. Tomorrow night Lummie and I will go back to
town and. . ."
"Huh? It took
us two nights to get this far-and it will take us most of tonight to get to the
mine. You can't ride him back in one night."
"How fast can
he go when he tries?"
"But nobody
can ride him when he gallops. Not even me."
"I won't ride
him; I'll fly over him, pacing him and making him slow down for curves. Three
hours, maybe?. . . and another hour to sneak him into the greenhouse."
"Well. . .
maybe it would work."
"It will
because it's got to. Then you get caught"
"Huh? Why
don't I just go home?"
"No, that
would be a giveaway. They catch you, you've been doing amateur uranium
prospecting. I'll fetch out a radiation counter. You don't know where Lummox
is; you kissed him goodbye and turned him loose, then came up here to forget
your sorrows. You'll have to be convincing. . . and don't let them use a truth
meter."
"Yes, but. . .
Look, Slugger, what's the good? Lummie can't stay in a greenhouse
forever."
"We're simply
buying time. They are ready to kill him on sight. . . and they will. So we keep
him out of sight until we can change that."
"I suppose I
should have gone through with the sale to the Museum," John Thomas
answered miserably.
"No! Your
instincts are sound, Johnnie, even though you've got less brains than a door
knob. Look. . . do you remember the Cygnus Decision?"
The Cygnus
Decision? We had it in elementary Customs of Civilization?"
"Yes. Quote
it."
"What is this?
A mid-semester quiz?" John Thomas frowned and dug into his memory. "
'Beings possessed of speech and manipulation must be presumed to be sentient
and therefore to have innate human rights, unless conclusively proved
otherwise.' " He sat up. "Hey! They can't kill Lummox-he's got hands!"
XI
"It's
Too Late, Johnnie"
"Mind your air
speed," she cautioned. "Do you know the old one about the man whose
lawyer assured him that they could not put him in jail for that?"
"What was
'that'?"
"Never mind.
His client answered, 'But, counsellor, I'm speaking from the jail.'
Point is, the Cygnus Decision is just theory; we've got to keep Lummox out of
sight until we can get the court to change its mind."
"Unh, I see. I
guess you're right."
"I'm always
right," Betty admitted with dignity. "Johnnie, I'm dying of thirst;
thinking is dry work. Did you bring any water up from the creek?"
"No, I
didn't."
"Got a
bucket?"
"Yeah,
somewhere." He felt in his pockets, found it and pulled it out. He stopped
to blow it up to semi-rigidity, then said, "I'll fetch it."
"No, give it
to me. I want to stretch my legs."
"'Ware
fliers!"
"Don't teach
your grandmother." She took it and went down hill, keeping to the trees
until she reached the bank. Johnnie watched her slim figure catching shafts of
cathedral light among the pines and thought how pretty she was. . . very nearly
as good a head on her as a man and pretty to boot. Aside from being bossy the
way females always were, Slugger was all right.
She came back
carrying the plastic bucket carefully.
"Help
yourself," she offered.
"Go
ahead."
"I drank from
the creek."
"All
right" He drank deeply. "You know, Betty, if you weren't knock-kneed,
you'd be pretty good-looking."
"Who's
knock-kneed?"
"And there's
always your face, of course," he went on pleasantly. "Aside from
those two shortcomings you're not-"
He did not
finish-she dived and hit him low. The water went all down his front and partly
on her. The scuffle continued until he got her right arm locked up behind her,
holding her helpless. "Say 'Pretty please'," he advised.
"Darn you,
Johnnie Stuart! 'Pretty please.'"
"With sugar on
it?"
"With sugar on
it-and spit, too. Let me up."
"All
right."
He got to his feet.
She rolled to a sitting position, looked up at him and laughed. They were both
dirty, scratched, and somewhat bruised and they both felt very fine indeed.
Lummox had watched the mock fight with interest but-no alarm, since Johnnie and
Betty could never really be mad at each other. He commented, "Johnnie's
all wet."
"He certainly is, Lummie-more ways than
one." She looked him over. "If I had two clothes pins, I'd hang you
on a tree. By your ears, of course."
We'll be dry in
five minutes, a day like this."
"I'm not wet,
not through a flying suit. But you look like a dunked cat."
"I don't
mind." He lay down, found a pine needle and bit it. "Slugger, this is
a swell place. I wish I didn't have to go on up to the mine."
"Tell you
what-after we get this mess straightened out and before we start school, we'll
come back up here and camp a few days. We'll bring Lummox, too-won't we,
Lummie?"
"Sure,"
agreed Lummox. "Catch things. Throw rocks. Fun."
John Thomas looked
at her reprovingly. "And get me talked about all over town? No,
thanks."
"Don't be
prissy. We're here now, aren't we?"
"This is an
emergency."
"You and your
nice-nice reputation!"
"Well,
somebody ought to watch such things. Mum says that boys had to start worrying
when girls quit. She says things used to be different"
"Of course
they were-and they will be again. They run the whole program over and over
again." She looked thoughtful. "But, Johnnie, you pay too much
attention to what your mother says."
"I suppose
so," he admitted.
"You had
better break yourself of it. Otherwise no girl is going to take a chance on
marrying you."
He grinned.
"That's my insurance policy."
She dropped her
eyes and blushed. "I wasn't speaking for myself! I don't want you-I'm just
taking care of you for practice."
He decided not to
pursue that angle. "Honestly," he said, "a person gets in the
habit of behaving a certain way and it's hard to stop. For instance, I've got
an aunt-my Aunt Tessie, remember her? -who believes in astrology."
"No! She doesn't!"
"Surest thing.
She doesn't look nutty, does she? But she is and it's embarrassing because she
will talk about it and mother insists that I have to be polite. If I could just
tell her she has holes in her head, it wouldn't matter. But oh no! I have to
listen to her rave and pretend that she's a sane, responsible adult-when she
can't count above ten without an abacus."
"An
'abacus'?"
"You know-a
slipstick with beads. I said 'abacus' because there isn't a prayer that she
could ever learn to read a slipstick. She likes being a lame brain-and I
have to cater to it."
"Don't do
it," Betty said suddenly. "Pay no attention to what your mother
says."
"Slugger, you
are a subversive influence."
"Sorry,
Johnnie," she answered mildly. She added, "Did I ever tell you why I
divorced my parents?"
"No, you never
did. That's your business."
"So it is. But
I think I'll tell you, you might understand me better. Bend down." She
grabbed him by an ear, whispered into it.
As John Thomas
listened he took on an expression of extreme surprise. "Not really?"
"Fact. They
didn't contest it so I never had to tell anyone. But that's why."
"I don't see
how you put up with it."
"I didn't I
stood up in court and divorced them and got a professional guardian who doesn't
have nutty ideas. But look, Johnnie, I didn't bare my soul just to make your
chin drop. Heredity isn't everything; I'm myself, an individual. You aren't
your parents. You're not your father, you are not your mother. But you are a
little late realizing it." She sat up straight. "So be yourself,
Knothead, and have the courage to make your own mess of your life. Don't
imitate somebody else's mess."
"Slugger, when
you talk that stuff, you make it sound rational."
"That's because
I'm always rational. How well fixed are you for groceries? I'm hungry."
"You're as bad
as Lummox. The grub sack is over there."
"Lunch?"
inquired Lummox, hearing his name.
"Umm. . .
Betty, I don't want him tearing down trees, not in daylight. How long will it
take them to track me down?"
"I wouldn't
count on over three days, big as this place is."
"Well. . .
I'll hold back food for five, just in case." He selected a dozen canned
rations and gave them to Lummox. He did not open them as Lummox rather liked
having the packages suddenly become hot when he bit into them. He finished them
off before Betty had their own lunches opened.
After they ate
Johnnie started to bring up the subject again. "Betty, do you really think
that-" He broke off suddenly. "Hear anything?"
She listened, then
nodded solemnly.
"How
fast?"
"Not over two
hundred."
He nodded.
"Then they are scanning. Lummox! Don't move a muscle!"
"I won't,
Johnnie. Why not move a muscle?"
"Do it!"
"Don't get
excited," Betty advised. "They are probably just laying out their
search pattern. Chances are they couldn't identify us either in the scope or
visually with these trees to break up the image." But she looked worried.
"I wish Lummie were already in the mine tunnel, though. If anyone is smart
enough to run a selective scan straight down that road while we're on it
tonight. . . well, we've had it."
John Thomas was not
really listening. He was leaning forward, cupping his ears with both hands.
"Hush!" he whispered, "Betty-they're coming back!"
"Don't panic.
It's probably the other leg of the search pattern."
But even as she
said it she knew that she was wrong. The sound came over them, hovered and
dropped in pitch. They looked up, but the denseness of the forest and the
altitude of the craft kept them from seeing it.
Suddenly there was
a light so bright that it made the sharp sunlight seem dusky when it passed.
Betty gulped. "What was that?"
"Ultraflash
photo," he answered soberly. "They're checking what they picked up on
the scope."
The sound above
them squealed higher, then dropped; the eyeburning flash occurred again.
"Stereoed it," Johnnie announced solemnly. "They'll really see
us now, if they only suspected before."
"Johnnie,
we've got to get Lummox out of here!"
"How? Take him
up on the road and let them pinpoint him with bomb? No, kid, our only hope now
is that they decide he is a big boulder-I'm glad I made him stay tucked
in." He added, "We mustn't move, either. They may go away."
Even that outside
hope passed. One after another, four more ships were heard. Johnnie ticked them
off. "That one has taken station to the south. The third one was north, I
think. Now they'll cover to the west. . . a pinwheel guard. They've got us
boxed, Slugger." She looked at him, her face dead white. "What do we
do, Johnnie?"
"Huh? Why, noth-No, Betty look. You
duck down through the trees to the creek. Take your flight harness with you.
Then follow the stream a good distance and take to the air. Keep low until you
get out from under their umbrella. They'll let you go-they don't want
you."
"And what will
you be doing?"
"Me? I stay
here."
"And so do
I."
Johnnie said
fretfully, "Don't make me any trouble, Slugger. You'd just be in the
way."
"What do you
think you can do? You don't even have a gun."
"I have
this," John Thomas answered grimly, touching his sheath knife, "-and
Lummox can throw rocks."
She stared at him,
then laughed wildly. "What? Rocks indeed! Oh, Johnnie-"
"They're not
going to take us without a fight. Now will you get out of here-fast!-and quit
being a nuisance?"
"No!"
"Look,
Slugger, there isn't time to argue. You get clear and fast. I stay with Lummox;
that's my privilege. He's mine."
She burst into
tears. "And you're mine, you big stupid oaf."
He tried to answer
her and could not. His face began to break in the spasmodic movements of a man
trying to control tears. Lummox stirred uneasily. "What's the matter,
Johnnie?" he piped.
"Huh?"
John Thomas replied in a choked voice. "Nothing." He reached up and
patted his friend. "Nothing at all, old fellow. Johnnie's here. It's all
right."
"All right,
Johnnie."
"Yes,"
agreed Betty faintly. "It's all right, Lummie." She added in a low
voice to John Thomas. "It'll be quick, won't it, Johnnie? We won't feel
it?"
"Uh, I guess
so! Hey! None of that-in just one half second I'm going to punch you right on
the button and then dump you off the bank. That ought to protect you from the
blast."
She shook her head
slowly, without anger nor fear. "It's too late, Johnnie. You know it is.
Don't scold me-just hold my hand."
"But-" He
stopped. "Hear that?"
"More of
them."
"Yeah. They're
probably building an octagon. . . to make sure we don't get out."
A sudden
thunderclap spared her the need to answer. It was followed by the squeal of a
hovering ship; this time they could see it, less than a thousand feet over
their heads. Then an iron voice rumbled out of the sky. "Stuart! John
Stuart! Come out in the open!"
Jobnnie took out
his sheath knife, threw back his head and shouted, "Come and get me!"
Betty looked up at
him, her face shining, and patted his sleeve. "Tell 'em, Johnnie!"
she whispered. "That's my Johnnie."
The man behind the
giant voice seemed to have a directional mike trained on him; he was answered:
"We don't want you and we don't want to hurt anybody. Give up and come
out."
He threw back a
one-word defiance and added, "We aren't coming out!"
The thundering
voice went on, "Final warning, John Stuart. Come out with your hands
empty. We'll send a ship down for you."
John Thomas shouted
back, "Send it down and we'll wreck it!" He added hoarsely to Lummox,
"Got some rocks, Lummie?"
"Huh? Sure!
Now, Johnnie?"
"Not yet. I'll
tell you."
The voice remained
silent; no ship came down to them. Instead a ship other than the command ship
dropped swiftly, squatted a hundred feet above the pines and about the same
distance from them laterally. It started a slow circle around them, almost a
crawl.
Immediately there
was a rending sound, then a crash as a forest giant toppled to the ground.
Another followed at once. Like a great invisible hand a drag field from the
ship knocked over trees and swept them aside. Slowly it cut a wide firebreak
around them. "Why are they doing that?" Betty whispered.
"It's a
forestry service ship. They're cutting us off."
"But why? Why
don't they just do it and get it over with?" She began to shake, he put an
arm around her.
"I don't know,
Slugger. They're driving."
The ship closed the
circle, then faced them and seemed to settle back on its haunches. With the
delicate care of a dentist pulling a tooth the operator reached in, selected
one tree, plucked it out of the ground, and tossed it aside. He picked another
and still another. Gradually a wide path was being cut through the timber to
the spot where they waited.
And there was
nothing to do but wait. The ranger's ship removed the last tree that shielded
them; the tractor field brushed them as he claimed it, making them stagger and
causing Lummox to squeal with terror. John Thomas recovered himself and slapped
the beast's side. "Steady, boy. Johnnie is here."
He thought about
having them retreat back from the clearing now in front of them, but there
seemed no use in it.
The logging ship
lay off; an attack ship moved in. It dropped suddenly and touched ground at the
end of the corridor. Johnnie gulped and said, "Now, Lummox. Anything that
comes out of that ship-see if you can hit it."
"You bet,
Johnnie!" Lummox reached with both hands for ammunition.
But he never picked
up the rocks. John Thomas felt as if he had been dumped into wet concrete up to
his chest; Betty gasped and Lummox squealed. Then he piped, "Johnnie! The
rocks are stuck!"
John Thomas labored
to speak. "It's all right, boy, Don't struggle. Just hold still. Betty,
you all right?"
"Can't
breathe!" she gasped.
"Don't fight
it. They've got us."
Eight figures
poured out of the door of the ship. They looked not human, being covered head
to foot with heavy metal mesh. Each wore a helmet resembling a fencer's mask
and carried as a back pack a field antigenerator. They trotted confidently in
open double file toward the passage through the trees; as they struck the field
they slowed slightly, sparks flew, and a violet nimbus formed around each. But
on they came.
The second four
were carrying a large metal-net cylinder, high as a man and of equal width.
They balanced it easily up in the air. The man in the lead called out,
"Swing wide of the beast. We'll get the kids out first, then dispose of
him." He sounded quite cheerful.
The squad came up
to the odd group of three, cutting around without passing close to Lummox.
"Easy! Catch them both," the leader called out. The barrellike cage
was lowered over Betty and John Thomas, setting slowly until the man giving
orders reached inside and flipped a switch-whereupon it struck sparks and
dropped to the ground.
He gave them a
red-faced grin. "Feels good to get the molasses off you, doesn't it?"
Johnnie glared at
him with his chin quivering, and replied insultingly while he tried to rub
cramps out of his leg muscles. "Now, now!" the officer answered
mildly. "No good to feel that way. You made us do it." He glanced up
at Lummox. "Good grief! He is a big beast, isn't he? I'd hate to meet him
in a dark alley, without weapons."
Johnnie found that
tears were streaming down his face and that he could not stop them. "Go
ahead!" he cried, his voice misbehaving. "Get it over with!"
"He never
meant any harm! So kill him quickly . . . don't play cat-and-mouse with
him." He broke down and sobbed, covering his face with his hands. Betty
put her hands on his shoulders and sobbed with him.
The officer looked
distressed. "What are you talking about, son? We aren't here to hurt him.
We have orders to bring him in without a scratch on him-even if we lost men in
the process. Craziest orders I ever had to carry out.
XII
Concerning
Pidgie-Widgie
Mr. Kiku was
feeling good. Breakfast was not a burning lump in his middle; he felt no need
to shop in his pill drawer, nor even a temptation to get out his real estate
folders. The Triangular Conference was going well and the Martian delegates
were beginning to talk sense. Ignoring the various amber lights on his desk he
began singing: "Frankie and Johnnie were lovers. . . and oh boy how
they could love. . . swore to be true to each other. . ."
He had a fair
baritone voice and no sense of pitch.
Best of all that
silly, confused Hroshian affair was almost over. . . and no bones broken. Good
old Doc Ftaeml seemed to think that there was an outside chance of establishing
diplomatic relations, so delighted the Hroshii had been at recovering their
missing Hroshia.
With a race as
powerful as the Hroshii diplomatic relations were essential. . . they must be
allies, though that might take a while. Perhaps not too long, he decided; they
certainly did nip-ups at the sight of Lummox. . . almost idolatrous.
Looking back, the
things that had confused them were obvious. Who would have guessed that a
creature half as big as a house and over a century old was a baby? Or that this
race attained hands only when old enough to use them? For that matter, why was
this Hroshia so much bigger than its co-racials? Its size had misled Greenberg
and himself as much as anything. Interesting point. . . he'd have the
xenologists look into it.
No matter. By now
Lummox was on his. . . her way to the Hroshian ship. No fuss, no ceremony, no
publicity, and the danger was over. Could they actually have volatilized Terra?
Just as well not to have found out. All's well that ends well. He went back to
singing.
He was still
singing when the "urgent" light began jittering and he delivered the
last few bars into Greenberg's face: ". . . just as true as the stars
above!" He added. "Sergei, can you sing tenor?"
"Why should
you care, boss? That wasn't a tune."
"You're
jealous. What do you want, son? See them off okay?"
"Unh, boss,
there's a slight hitch. I've got Dr. Ftaeml with me. Can we see you?"
"What is
it?"
"Let's wait
until we are alone. One of the conference rooms?"
"Come into the
office," Mr. Kiku said grimly. He switched off, opened a drawer, selected
a pill and took it.
Greenberg and the
medusoid came in at once: Greenberg flopped down in a chair as if exhausted,
pulled out a cigarette, felt in his pockets, then put it away. Mr. Kiku greeted
Dr. Ftaeml formally, then said to Greenberg, "Well?"
"Lummox didn't
leave."
"Lummox
refused to leave. The other Hroshii are boiling like ants. I've kept the
barricades up and that part of the space port around their landing craft
blocked off. We've got to do something."
"Why? This
development is startling, but I fail to see that it's our responsibility. Why
the refusal to embark?"
"Well. .
." Greenberg looked helplessly at Ftaeml.
The Rargyllian said
smoothly, "Permit me to explain, sir. The Hroshia refuses to go aboard
without her pet."
"Pet?"
"The kid,
boss. John Thomas Stuart."
"Exactly,"
agreed Ftaeml. "The Hroshia states that she has been raising 'John
Thomases' for a long time; she refuses to go home unless she can take her John
Thomas with her. She was quite imperious about it."
"I see,"
agreed Kiku. "To put it in more usual language the boy and the Hroshia are
attached to each other. That's not surprising; they grew up together. But Lummox
will have to put up with the separation, just as John Thomas Stuart had to. As
I recall, he made a bit of fuss; we told him to shut up and shipped him home.
That's what the Hroshia must do: tell her to shut up, force her, if necessary,
into their landing craft and take her along. That's what they came here
for,"
The Rargyllian
answered, "Permit me to say, sir, that by putting it into 'more usual
language' you have missed the meaning. I have been discussing it with her in
her own tongue."
"Eh? Has she
learned so quickly?"
"She has long
known it. The Hroshii, Mr. Under Secretary, know their own language almost from
the shell. One may speculate that this use of language almost on the
instinctive level is one reason, perhaps the reason, why they find other
languages difficult and never learn to use them well. The Hroshia speaks your
language hardly as well as one of your four-year-old children, though I
understand that she began acquiring it one of your generations ago. But in her
own language she is scathingly fluent. . . so I learned, much to my
sorrow."
"So? Well, let
her talk. Words can't hurt us."
"She has
talked. . . she has given orders to the commander of the expedition to recover
her pet at once. Otherwise, she states, she will remain here and continue
raising 'John Thomases.'"
"And,"
Greenberg added, "the commander has handed us an ultimatum to produce John
Thomas Stuart at once. . . or else."
"'Or else'
meaning what I think it means?" Kiku answered slowly.
"The
works," Greenberg said simply. "Now that I've seen their ground craft
I'm not sure but what they can."
"You must
understand, sir," Ftaeml added earnestly, "that the commander is as
distressed as you are. But he must attempt to carry out the wishes of the
Hroshia. This mating was planned more than two thousand of your years ago; they
will not give it up lightly. He cannot allow her to remain. . . nor can he
force her to leave. He is very much upset."
"Aren't we
all?" Mr. Kiku took out two more pills. "Dr. Ftaeml, I have a message
for your principals. Please convey it exactly."
"I shall,
sir."
"Please tell
them that their ultimatum is rejected with contempt. Please. . ."
"Sir! I beg of
you!"
"Attend me.
Tell them that and do not soften it. Tell them that we tried in every way to
help them, that we succeeded, and that they have answered kindness with
threats. Tell them that their behavior is unworthy of civilized people and that
the invitation to join the Community of Civilizations is withdrawn. Tell them
that we spit in their faces. . . find an idiom of equal strength.. Tell them
that free men may die, but they are never bullied."
Greenberg was
grinning widely and clasping both hands in the ancient sign of approval. Dr.
Ftaeml seemed to grow pale under his outer chitin.
"Sir," he
said, "I greatly regret being required to deliver this message."
Kiku smiled icily.
"Deliver it as given. But before you do, find opportunity to speak to the
Hroshia Lummox. You can do so?"
"Most
assuredly, sir."
"Tell her that
the commander of the expedition, in his zeal, seems bent on killing the human,
John Thomas Stuart. See that she understands what is threatened."
The Rargyllian
arranged his mouth in a broad smile. "Forgive me, sir; I underestimated
you. Both messages will be delivered, in the proper order."
"That is
all."
"Your good
health, sir." The Rargyllian turned to Greenberg, put a loose-jointed arm
around his shoulders. "My brother Sergei, we have already found our way
together out of one tight maze. Now, with the help of your spiritual father, we
shall find our way out of another. Eh?"
"Right,
Doc."
Ftaeml left. Kiku
turned to Greenberg and said, "Get the Stuart boy here. Get him at once,
yourself, personally. Umm. . . bring his mother, too. He's under age, isn't
he?"
"Yes. Boss,
what's the plan? You aren't going to turn him over to them?. . . after that
wonderful kick in the teeth you handed them?"
"Of course I
am. But on my own terms. I don't intend to let those animated pool tables think
they can push us around, We'll use this to get what we want. Now get
going!"
"I'm
gone."
Mr. Kiku stayed at
his desk, checking papers with part of his mind while letting his subconscious
feel out the problem of Lummox. He had a strong hunch that tide was at flood. .
. for humans. It was necessary to judge how to ride it. He was in this revery
when the door opened and the Most Honorable Mr. Roy MacClure walked in.
"There you are, Henry! Pull yourself together, man. . . Beulah Murgatroyd
is coming to call."
"Beulah
who?"
"Beaulah
Murgatroyd. The Beulah Murgatroyd."
"Should I
know?"
"What? Man,
don't you ever watch stereovision?"
"Not if I can
possibly avoid it."
MacClure shook his
head indulgently. "Henry, you don't get around enough. You bury yourself
in here and push your little buttons and don't even know what is going on in
the world."
"Possibly."
"Positively. You're out of touch, man.
. . it's a good thing you don't have to deal with people."
Mr. Kiku permitted
himself a wintry smile, "I suppose so."
"I'll bet you
three to one you don't know who is ahead in the World Series."
"The World
Series? That's baseball, isn't it? I'm sorry but I haven't even had time to
follow the cricket matches of late years."
"See what I
mean? Though how you can mention cricket in the same breath with baseball. . .
Never mind. Since you don't know who the famous Beulah Murgatroyd is, I'll tell
you. She's Pidgie-Widgie's mother, so to speak."
"'Pidgie-Widgie'?"
Mr. Kiku echoed.
"You're
pulling my leg. The creator of the PidgieWidgie stories for children. You know-Pidgie-Widgie
on the Moon, Pidgie-Widgie Goes to Mars, Pidgie-Widgie and the Space Pirates."
"I'm afraid I
don't."
"That's hard
to believe. But you don't have any kids, do you?"
"Three."
But Mr. MacClure
was still talking. "Now she's taken Pidgie-Widgie on the air and it's
really something. For the kids of course but so comical that the grown-ups
follow it, too. You see, Pidgie-Widgie is a puppet about a foot high. He goes
zooming through space, rescuing people and blasting pirates and having a grand
ole time. . . the kids love him. And at the end of each installment Mrs.
Murgatroyd comes on and they have a bowl of Hunkies together and talk. You like
Hunkies?"
Mr. Kiku shuddered.
"No."
"Well, you can
just pretend to eat them, I suppose. But it is the biggest breakfast-food show
on the air, reaches everybody."
"And this is
important?"
"Important?
Man, do you know how many people eat breakfast every morning?"
"No. Not too
many, I hope. I wish I had not."
Mr. MacClure
glanced at his watch. "We'll have to hurry. The technicians are setting up
the gear now. She'll be here any moment."
"Technicians?"
"Didn't I say?
Mrs. Murgatroyd will interview us, with Pidgie-Widgie in her lap and taking
part. Then they'll patch it into the show. A wonderful boost for the
department."
"No!"
"Eh? Mr. Kiku,
did I understand you correctly?"
"Mr.
Secretary," Mr. Kiku said tensely, "I couldn't possibly do that. I. .
. I'm subject to stage fright."
"What? Why,
that's absurd! You helped me open the Triangular Conference. You spoke without
notes for thirty minutes."
"That's
different. That's shop talk, with other professionals."
The Secretary
frowned. "I hate to insist, if it really makes you nervous. But Mrs.
Murgatroyd asked for you especially. You see. . ." MacClure looked mildly
embarrassed. '. . . Pidgie-Widgie preaches racial tolerance and so forth.
Brothers under the skin. . . the sort of thing we all want to encourage.
So?"
Mr. Kiku said
fimly, "I'm sorry."
"Come now!
Surely you're not going to force me to insist?"
"Mr.
Secretary," Kiku answered quietly, "you will find that my job
description does not require me to be a stereovision actor. If you will give me
a written order, I will submit it to our legal bureau for opinion, then answer
you officially."
Mr. MacClure
frowned. "Henry, you can be a stubborn little beast, can't you? I wonder
how you got so high in the heap?"
Mr. Kiku did not
answer; MacClure went on, "I won't let you pull the rule book on me; I'm
too old a fox. Though I must say I didn't think you would do that tome."
"Sorry, sir. I
really am."
"So am I. I'll
try to. convince you that it is important to the department, whether a civil
servant can be ordered to do it or not. You see, Beulah Murgatroyd is the power
behind 'The Friends of Lummox.' So. . ."
"'The Friends
of Lummox'?"
"I knew you
would see it differently. After all, you've been handling that whoop-te-do.
Therefore. . ."
"What in
heaven's name are 'The Friends of Lummox'?"
"Why, you set
up the original interview with them yourself. But if I hadn't happened to lunch
with Wes Robbins, we might have missed the boat on it."
"I seem to
recall a memorandum. A routine matter."
"Mrs.
Murgatroyd is not routine, I've been trying to tell you. You
precedent-and-protocol boys lose touch with the people. If you don't mind my
saying so, that's why you never quite get to the top."
"I don't mind
in the least," Mr. Kiku said gently.
"Eh?" The
Secretary looked slightly embarrassed. "I mean, there's a place for a
grass-roots politician, like me, with his finger on the pulse.. . though I
admit I don't have your special training. You see?"
"There is work
for both our talents, sir. But go on. Perhaps I did 'miss the boat' in this
instance. The 'Friends of Lummox' memorandum must have come through before the
name meant anything to me."
"Probably. I
wasn't criticizing your attention to duty, Henry. Fact is, you work too hard. .
. the universe won't run down if you don't wind it. But about this F. of L.
deal-we intervened in some silly case out west; you know about it, you sent one
of our people-the case turned out to be about his Hoorussian Lummox, The
court's verdict. . . our verdict, you might say, was to destroy the
beast. By the way, Henry, have you disciplined the man responsible?"
"No,
sir."
"Why the
delay?"
"He won't be
disciplined, sir. He was perfectly right, on the evidence."
"I don't see
it that way. Better send his file jacket to my office. I want to consider it
myself."
"Sir,"
Mr. Kiku said softly, "were you thinking of reversing me on a matter of
administrative discipline?"
"Eh? I intend
to review the matter."
"Because if
you are, sir, you can have my resignation now. My usefulness will be at an
end."
"What? Henry,
don't be nasty." The Secretary drummed on Mr. Kiku's desk. "Confound
it, man, let's be frank with each other. I know that you career men can make it
hard for an appointee if you try. . . I didn't get into politics yesterday. But
as long as I am holding the sack, I intend to have discipline around here. My
privilege?"
"Yes. . . your
privilege."
"And my
responsibility. Probably you are right about this man, whoever he is. . .
you're usually right, or we couldn't keep things going. But it is my
responsibility to review things whenever I think it necessary. However, there
is no call for you to talk about resigning until I actually do reverse you.
Since you have forced the issue, if I do find it necessary to reverse you on
this, I'll ask for your resignation. But until I do, keep your shirt on. Fair
enough?"
"Fair enough.
I was hasty, Mr. Secretary. The file jacket will be on your desk."
"On second
thought, don't bother. If you are carrying one of your favorites. . ."
"I have no
favorites, Mr. MacClure. I dislike them all, impersonally."
"Sometimes I
think you hate yourself. Now where were we? Oh yes! Well, when we made that
terrible bust about the Hoorussian, Mrs. Murgatroyd saw a chance to do a good
deed. Oh, I suppose she was out to pep up her program, but that's beside the
point. Right away, Pidgie-Widgie started telling all his little friends about
this. terrible thing and asked them all to write in and join the Friends of Lummox.
She got over three million replies in the first twenty-four hours. By now half
the kids on this continent and nobody knows how many elsewhere are 'Friends of
Lummox,' pledged to protect him from persecution."
"Her,"
corrected Mr. Kiku.
"Eh?"
"I beg your
pardon. I suppose neither term is correct. The Hroshii come in six assorted
sexes. You can call Lummox either 'him' or 'her'. . . we really need new,
words. But it doesn't matter."
"Well, it
certainly doesn't to me," agreed MacClure. "But if we had actually
put the quietus on this Lummox, I believe the kids would have started a
revolution. I really do. Not to mention the adults who are Pidgie-Widgie fans.
Even so, the department got a black eye out of it. But Beulah Murgatroyd is
willing to go along with a deal to help us out. She interviews us and I answer
the general questions and you back me on the details-all about how the
department is careful to protect the rights of our non-human friends and how
everybody ought to be tolerant-the usual line. Then Pidgie-Widgie asks what
happened to Lummox and you tell the kiddies how Lummox was really sort of a
fairy prince in disguise. . . or princess. . . and how Lummox has gone away to
his home in the sky. It will be terrific."
MacClure added,
"That's all you have to do. They patch in a shot of Lummox getting into
the Hoorussian ship and waving goodbye. Then we all eat a bowl of Hunkies-don't
worry, I'll see that your bowl is empty!-and Pidgie-Widgie sings his
'Skylarker' song. End. It won't take twenty minutes and it will be a big thing
for the department. Okay?"
"No."
"Now, Henry. .
. All right, you won't even have to pretend to eat Hunkies."
"No."
"Henry, you're
impossible. Don't you agree that it is our business to help train up the kids
to understand their responsibilities and have right attitudes in this modern
age-the age of the Community of Civilizations?"
"No, sir, I do
not. That is the business of parents and educators, not of government. This
department has more than it can do just to try to hold things together in the
face of ever-increasing xenic problems." Mr. Kiku added to himself: even
if I did agree, I wouldn't do it by eating Hunkies!
"Hmm. . . A
narrow attitude, Henry. A bureaucratic one, if I may say so. You know perfectly
well that we are in hot water about this Hoorussian thing from other
directions, too, with The Society for the Preservation of the Status Quo
screaming for isolation and the Keep Earth Human League jumping on us. It gets
the Council uneasy. Along comes a chance to build up public opinion against
such crackpots and you won't even help. You don't have the Status Quo people
and the Human-Earth jokers bothering you-because I keep them off your
neck."
"I'm sorry,
sir. But you shouldn't waste time on them either. No doubt you know that there
is a money motive back of every one of those apparently crackpot organizations.
Let the people with opposing economic interests fight them-the shipping lines and
the importers and the scientists. Our business is foreign relations. When we
are bothered by pressure groups, we should let our public relations people
handle them; that is what they are for."
"What am I but
a glorified public relations man?" MacClure answered angrily. "I
haven't any illusions about this confounded job."
"Not true,
sir. You have the prime policy responsibility. I carry out policy-within the
limits of my job."
"Hummph! You
set policy. You drive me like a horse. I'm beginning to realize it."
"Sorry, sir. I
suppose everyone makes policy. . . even the doorman. . . to some extent It's
unavoidable. But I try to do my job."
Mr. Kiku's private
secretary called in by voice. "Mr. Kiku, is the Secretary with you? Mrs.
Beulah Murgatroyd is waiting."
"Be right
in," called out MacClure.
Kiku added quietly,
"Mildred, see that she is entertained. There will be a slight delay."
"Yes, sir. The
Secretary's aide is taking care of her."
"Good."
"There will be
no delay," MacClure said to Mr. Kiku. "If you won't, you won't. . .
though I'm disappointed in you. But I can't keep her waiting."
"Sit down, Mr.
Secretary."
"Eh?"
"Sit down,
sir. Even the mighty Mrs. Murgatroyd must wait on some things. A major
emergency has come up; you will certainly have to face the Council about it. .
. possibly a special session this evening."
"What? Why
didn't you say so?"
"I was
organizing my thoughts preparatory to briefing you, sir, when you came in. For
the past several minutes I have been trying to tell you that this department
has really important things to do-besides selling Hunkies."
The Secretary
stared at him, then reached across Kiku's desk. "Uh, Mildred? This is the
Secretary. Tell Commodore Murthi that I am unavoidably detained and that he is
to do his best to keep Mrs. Murgatroyd happy."
"Yes. Mr.
Secretary."
MacClure turned
back. "Now, Henry, quit lecturing me and spill it."
Mr. Kiku began a
full report of the new Hroshii crisis. Mr. MacClure listened without comment.
Just as Mr. Kiku concluded his account of the rejection of the ultimatum the
sound communicator again came to life. "Chief? Murthi here. Mrs.
Murgatroyd has another appointment."
Mr. MacClure turned
toward the voice. "Hush circuit?"
"Of course,
sir."
"Listen, Jack,
I'll be a few minutes yet. Keep her happy."
But-"
"Make love to
her, if necessary. Now switch off. I'm busy!" He turned back to Mr. Kiku
and scowled. "Henry, you've shoved me out on a limb again. You've left me
nothing to do but back your play."
"May I ask
what the Secretary would have done?"
"Huh?"
MacClure frowned. "Why, I would have said exactly what you said, I
suppose. . . but in nastier language. I admit that I probably wouldn't have
thought of cutting inside them through this Lummox creature. That was
cute."
"I see, sir.
It being a rejection of a formal ultimatum, what precautionary action would the
Secretary have taken? I should add that I wanted to avoid having the department
advise the Council to order battle stations for the entire planet."
"What are you saying? Nothing like that
would have been necessary. I would have ordered the Inner Guard to close and
blast them out of the sky, on my own responsibility. After all, they are at our
inner defense zone and breathing threats. . . a simple emergency police action."
Mr. Kiku thought, that is what I guessed you
would do. . . but what he said was, "Suppose it turned out that their ship
failed to blast out of the sky. . . and blasted back?"
"What?
Preposterous!"
"Mr.
Secretary, the only thing I have learned in forty years at this trade is that
when you are dealing with 'Out There' nothing is preposterous."
"Well, I'll
be. . . Henry, you actually believed they could hurt us. You were
frightened." He searched Mr. Kiku's face. "Are you holding something
back? Do you have evidence that they might be able to carry out this
preposterous threat?"
"No,
sir."
"Well?"
"Mr. MacClure,
in my country hardly more than three hundred years ago there lived a very
valiant tribe. A small force of Europeans made certain demands on them. . .
taxes, they called it. The chief was a brave man and his warriors were numerous
and well trained. They knew the strangers had guns, but they even had some guns
of their own. But mostly they relied on numbers and courage. They planned
cleverly and caught the enemy in a box canyon. So they thought."
"Yes?"
"They had
never heard of machine guns. They learned about them in a very final way-for
they were very brave and kept coming on. That tribe is no more, no
survivors."
"If you are
trying to scare me, well. . . never mind. But you still haven't given me
evidence. After all, we are not an ignorant tribe of savages. No
parallel."
"Perhaps. Yet,
after all, the machine gun of that era was only a minor improvement over the
ordinary gun of the time. We have weapons which make a machine gun seem like a
boy's knife. And yet. . ."
"You are
suggesting that these Hoorussians have weapons that would make our latest
developments as useless as clubs. Frankly, I don't want to believe it and I
don't. The power in the nucleus of the atom is the ultimate possible power in
the universe. You know that, I know that. We've got it. No doubt they've got
it, too, but we outnumber them millions to one and we are on our home
grounds."
"So the tribal
chief reasoned."
"Eh? Not the
same thing."
"Nothing ever
is," Mr. Kiku answered wearily. "I was not speculating about magic
weapons beyond the concepts of our physicists; I was merely wondering what some
refinement might do to a known weapon. . . some piece of tinkering already implicit
in the theories. I don't know, of course. I know nothing of such things."
"Well, neither
do I but I've been assured that. . . See here, Henry; I'm going to order that
police action, right away."
"Yes,
sir."
"Well? Don't
sit there frozen-faced saying 'Yes, sir. You don't know, do you? So why
shouldn't I do it?"
"I did not
object, sir. Do you want a sealed circuit? Or do you want the base commander to
report here?"
"Henry, you
are without question the most irritating man in seventeen planets. I asked you
why I should not do it?"
"I know of no
reason, sir. I can only tell you why I did not recommend it to you."
"Well?"
"Because I did
not know. Because I had only the fears of a non-human who might be even
more timid than myself, or badly misled by what appears to be almost
superstitious awe. Since I did not know, I did not choose to play Russian
roulette with our planet at stake. I chose to fight with words as long as
possible. Do you want to give the order, sir? Or shall I take care of the
details?"
"Quit badgering
me." He glared at his Under Secretary, his face red. "I suppose your
next move is to threaten to resign."
Mr. Kiku grudged a
small smile. "Mr. MacClure, I never offer to resign twice in the same
day." He added, "No, I will wait until after the police action. Then,
if we are both alive, I will have been proved wrong on a major matter; my
resignation will be necessary. May I add, sir, that I hope you are right? I
would much rather enjoy a quiet old age than to have my judgment vindicated
posthumously."
MacClure worked his
mouth but did not speak. Mr. Kiku went on quietly, "May I offer a
suggestion to the Secretary in my official capacity?"
"What? Of
course. You are required to by law. Speak up."
"May I urge
that the attack commence in the next few minutes? We may achieve by haste what
might fail by delay. BuAstro can supply us with the orbit elements of the enemy
ship." Kiku leaned toward his communicator.
It came to life
before he could touch it. "Chief? Murthi here. I've done my best, but she
. . ."
"Tell her I
can't see her!"
"Sir?"
"Uh. . .
butter it on. You know how. Now shut up and don't call me again."
"Aye aye,
sir."
Mr. Kiku called
BuAstro. "The chief ballistician, please at once. Ah, Carrier. . . seal
your end; this end is sealed. And put a hush on it. All right, I want the
tactical elements of the. . ."
MacClure reached out and broke the
connection. "All right," he said savagely, "you've out-bluffed
me."
"I was not
bluffing, sir."
"All right,
all right, you've convinced me that you have a wise head on you. I. can't take
a blind chance with the lives of five billion people any more than you can.
Want me to crawl?"
"No, sir. But
I am much relieved. Thank you."
"You're
relieved? How about me? Now tell me how you intend to play this. I'm
still in the dark."
"Very well,
Mr. Secretary. In the first place I have sent for the Stuart boy'.."
"The Stuart
boy? Why?"
"To persuade
him to go. I want his consent."
The Secretary
looked as if he could not believe his ears. "Do I understand, Mr. Kiku,
that after rejecting their ultimatum your only plan is to capitulate?"
"That is not
how I would describe it."
"I don't care
what diplomatese you phrase it in. We will not surrender the boy. I was not
willing to take a risk blindly, but this is another matter. I will not surrender
one human being no matter what the pressure is. . . and I can assure you that
the Council will agree. There is such a thing as human dignity. I must add that
I am astonished. . . and disgusted."
"May I
continue, sir?"
"Well. . . go
ahead. Speak your piece."
"No thought of
surrendering the boy was ever in my mind. In the science of diplomacy
appeasement has long been an exploded theory. Had I even considered sacrificing
the boy, I would applaud your disgust. As it is, it missed me."
"But you said.
. ."
"Please, sir.
I know what I said. I sent for the boy to explore his own wishes. From what I
know of him it is possible that he will be willing, even eager."
MacClure shook his
head. "It's not something we could permit, even if the lad were crazy
enough to do it. Nine hundred light-years from other human beings? I would as
soon offer poison to a baby."
"That's not
the picture at all, sir. . . If I have his consent, I can keep the fact to
myself during negotiations play from a concealed ace. There is much to
negotiate."
"Such
as?"
"Their
science. Their trade. A whole new volume of space. The possibilities can be
only dimly seen."
MacClure stirred
restlessly. "I'm not sure but what that attack is still the thing to do.
If men are men, some risks must be taken. Snuggling up to vermin who threaten
us. . . I. don't like it."
"Mr.
Secretary, if my plans do not work. . . or fail to meet your approval, then I
will join you in shouting defiance at the sky. We should bargain. . . but
bargain as men."
"Well. . . go
on. Tell me the rest."
XIII
"No,
Mr. Secretary"
Mr. Kiku's wife let
him sleep late the next morning. She did this occasionally, reasoning that no
crisis was important enough to wake him when he needed rest. When he got to his
office he found Wesley Robbins, Special Assistant Secretary for public
relations, asleep in his chair. Robbins was not a diplomat, did not want to be
one, and made a point of showing it.
"Good morning,
Wes," Mr. Kiku said mildly.
"What's good
about it?" Robbins chucked a copy of the CAPITAL TIMES at the Under
Secretary. "Seen this?"
"No." Mr.
Kiku unfolded it.
"Twenty-three
years in the newspaper business . . to be scooped on my own beat."
Mr. Kiku read:
ALIEN
INVADERS
THREATEN
WAR! ! !
Demand
Hostages
Capital Enclave, Sep. 12 (GP).
. . Space Secretary MacClure revealed today that the xenic visitors dubbed
"Hroshii" now landed at Capital port have demanded, under threats of
war, that the Federation. . .
Kiku scanned down,
saw that a distortion of his answer to the Hroshii had been credited to
Secretary MacClure, with no mention of the possibility of peaceful settlement.
A trailer story reported the Chief of the General Staff as assuring Earth and
all the federated planets that there was nothing to fear from the insolent
aliens. A South Asian senator demanded to know what steps were being taken. . .
Kiku glanced at it all but discarded the meaningless 90%, including a blast
from the Keep Earth Human League and a "We Stand at the Crossroads"
editorial. There was an interview with Mrs. Murgatroyd but he did not take time
to find out which side Pidgie-Widgie was on.
"Ain't that a
mess?" Robbins demanded. "Where do you hide your cigarettes?"
"It does seem
a rather lavish waste of paper," Kiku agreed. "In the arm of the
visitor's chair."
"Well, how do
we handle it? I was caught flat-footed. Why doesn't somebody tell me these
things?"
"Just a
moment." Mr. Kiku leaned to his desk. "Security? Ah, O'Neill. . .
place more special police around the Hroshii landing craft. . ."
"You've got
'em, boss. But why doesn't somebody tell us these things?"
"A fair
question. Whatever guard you are using, use more. There must not only be no
riot; there must be no incidents. Station as many trained tension-dispersal
technicians in the crowd as you can scrape up, then borrow more from other
agencies. Then give special attention to lunatic-fringe organizations. . .
xenophobic ones, I mean. Any trouble yet?"
"Nothing we
couldn't snuff out. But I'm making no promises. I still think somebody ought to
tell. . ."
"No doubt.
Keep in touch with me." Kiku turned to Robbins. "Do you know how the
interview happened to be granted?"
"Do I act like
it? He was going to the 'Tri Con' citation dinner, safe as houses. I got his
approval on his speech, gave him his copy and passed the others around to the
boys, with suggestions on how to play it. Everybody happy. I get up this
morning feeling ninety and before I've had my coffee I feel a hundred and
fifty. Know anybody wants my job? I'm going to study how to be a
beachcomber."
"A reasonable
thought. Wes, let me bring you up to date. Nothing was to be released about
this matter until it was concluded, but now. . ." He quickly outlined the
latest Hroshii crisis.
Robbins nodded,
"I see. And Number One jerked the rug out from under you. A fine
playmate."
"Well, we had
better see him. Is he here?"
"Yes. I was
waiting for you, pal. Will you hold him while I hit him? Or the other way
around?"
"Whichever you
wish. Shall we get it over with?"
The Secretary was
in; they were admitted and MacClure got up to seat them. After which they just
sat. Robbins waited for Mr. Kiku to speak, but Kiku held still, face
expressionless, a statue carved of ebony.
MacClure began to
fidget. "Well, Henry? This is a busy morning. . . I've already been tied
up with the S.G."
"I had thought
that you would want to instruct us, Mr. Secretary."
"What
for?"
"Have you seen
the morning papers, sir?"
"Well. . .
yes."
"There has
been a change in policy. Assistant Secretary Robbins and I would like to be
briefed on the new policy."
"What new
policy?"
"Your new
policy concening the Hroshii, Mr. Secretary. Or are the newspapers in
error?"
"Eh? Well, no,
not precisely. Exaggerated of course. But no change in policy. I simply told
the people what they were entitled to know."
"The people
are entitled to know." Mr. Kiku fitted his fingers together. "Ah,
yes. In a government based on free consent of free men the people are always
entitled to know. An old bureaucrat, such as myself, sometimes loses track of
that fundamental. Thank you for reminding me." He seemed lost in cosmic
thought for a moment, then added, "I suppose the thing now is to repair my
failure and tell the people everything."
"Eh? What do
you mean?" .
"Why, the
whole story, Mr. Secretary. How through our own ignorance and disregard for the
rights of others, both now and in the past, we kidnapped a member of a
civilized race. How blind luck alone kept that xenian alive. How as a result of
this we now find our own planet threatened with destruction-and how a highly
intelligent citizen of a friendly power (I refer to Dr. Ftaeml) assures us that
these Hroshii can indeed destroy us. It would be necessary to tell them also
that yesterday we were within minutes of ordering an attack on these
xenians-but that we lost our nerve and decided to negotiate, since we had no
knowledge of our strength relative to theirs, but only the very sobering opinion
of Dr. Ftaeml to guide us. Yes, we must tell them that"
Secretary
MacClure's mouth was as wide as his eyes. "Heavenly days, Henry! Are you
trying to set off riots?"
"Sir? I have
taken countermeasures to prevent riots. . . xenophobia is always ready to flare
up and that. . ." He gestured at the newspaper. ". . . will
have an inflammatory effect on some. But you must not be deterred. We
bureaucrats become paternalistic; it is so much simpler to do what seems best
and let the people know it afterwards. . . negotiate, or blast a ship out of
the sky, or whatever. Mr. Secretary, you have kept in mind, of course, that
this Secretariat of which you are a member is responsible not to the North
American Union, nor even to the peoples of Earth, but to all sovereignties of
the Federation, both on Terra and elsewhere?"
"What's that
got to do with it? We're the leading power."
"Whom do you
mean by 'we'? Not my little country certainly. No, I was thinking that this
will now be settled by vote of the Council and I was wondering whether the
Council might possibly vote to surrender one unimportant citizen of North
America rather than risk an interstellar war? I wonder how Mars will
vote?"
The Secretary got
up and strode up and down his office. It was a large room, much larger than Mr.
Kiku's. He stopped at the far end and stared out at the Tower of Three Planets
and the Hall of Civilizations, while Kiku sat quietly. Wes Robbins slumped in a
chair, his bony legs stretched in front of him. He was trimming his nails with
a. pocket knife; they were long and black and needed the attention.
MacClure turned
suddenly to Kiku. "See here, Henry, you confounded word splitter, I won't
be bullied."
"Bullied, Mr.
Secretary?"
"Yes, bullied.
Oh, you dressed it up in your usual double-talk, but I wasn't born yesterday.
You know perfectly well that if we give the press these unnecessary details. .
. that nonsense this Dr. Fatima or whatever his name is, this Rargyllian
monster, filled you with. . . yes, and you threatening to tell the press that I
got cold feet about an attack. . . that's a threat if I ever heard one!. . .
you give 'em all that junk and we'd have a row in the Council that would be
heard from here to Pluto! With the home governments sending special
instructions to their delegates and maybe the Terran bloc getting outvoted.
Right on top of this ticklish Triangular Conference it could be disastrous.
Yes, that's the word. . . disastrous." MacClure stopped and struggled for
breath. "Well, you won't get away with it. You're fired!. . . understand
me? Fired! I'll take care of having you removed for cause, or
transferring you to the retired list, or whatever the red tape calls for, but
you are done, right now. I'm relieving you. You can go home."
"Very well,
Mr. Secretary," Mr. Kiku said evenly and started for the door to his
office.
In the silence Wes
Robbins knife clicked shut loudly. He stood up. "Hold it, Henry! Mac. .
."
Mr. MacClure looked
around. "Huh? What's the matter with you? And don't call me 'Mac'; this is
official business. I'm still Secretary around here, as I just told Kiku."
"Yes, you are
still Secretary-for about two hours, maybe."
"What? Don't
be ridiculous! Wes, you will force me to fire you too if you talk that way. Mr.
Kiku, you are excused."
"Don't go
away, Henry. And quit shoving that stuff, Mac. You can't fire me, I quit ten
minutes ago. Mac, are you a complete stuffed shirt? Remember, I knew you when
you were a shorthorned Senator, anxious to get a two-inch squib in a gossip
column. I liked you then. You seemed to have horse sense, which is scarce in
this business. Now you are ready to dump me and I don't like you either. But
tell me, for old times' sake: why are you anxious to cut your own throat?"
"What? Not my
throat. I'm not the Charlie to let a subordinate cut my throat. I've seen it
done. . . but Kiku picked the wrong man."
Robbins shook his
head slowly. "Mac, you are dead set on scuttling yourself. Hadn't you
better cut Henry's tongue out before the newsboys reach him? Here, you can
borrow my knife."
"What?" MacClure
looked stunned. He swung around and snapped, "Mr. Kiku! You are not to
speak to the press. That's an order."
Robbins bit off
some cuticle, spat it out, and said, "Mac, for Pete's sake! You can't both
fire him and keep him from talking."
"Departmental
secrets. . ."
"
'Departmental secrets' my bald spot! Maybe you could fine him severance pay
under the official-secrets rule but do you think that will stop him? Henry is a
man with no fears, no hopes, and no illusions; you can't scare him. What he can
tell the reporters will do you more harm if you classify it 'secret' than it
would if you didn't try to gag him."
"May I say
something?" asked the center of the storm.
"Eh? Go ahead,
Mr. Kiku."
"Thank you,
Mr. Secretary. I had no intention of telling the press about the messier
aspects of this affair. I was simply trying to show, by reductio ad absurdum,
that the rule of keeping the public informed can. . . like any rule. . . lead
to disaster if applied blindly. I felt that you had been indiscreet, sir. I hoped
to keep you from further indiscretions while we sought means to repair the
damage."
MacClure studied
him. "You mean that, Henry?"
"I always mean
what I say, sir. It saves time."
MacClure turned to
Robbins. "You see, Wes? You were barking up the wrong tree. Henry is an
honorable man, even if we do have our differences. See here, Henry, I was too
hasty. I honestly thought you were threatening me. Let's forget what I said
about asking for your resignation and get on with our jobs. Eh?"
"No,
sir."
"What? Come,
man, don't be small. I was angry, I was hurt, I made a mistake. I apologize.
After all, we have public welfare to consider."
Robbins made a rude
noise; Mr. Kiku answered gently, "No, Mr. Secretary, it wouldn't work.
Once having been fired by you, I would not again be able to act with confidence
under your delegated authority. A diplomat must always act with confidence; it
is often his only weapon."
"Um. . . Well,
all I can say is I'm sorry. I really am."
"I believe
you, sir. May I make a last and quite unofficial suggestion?"
"Why,
certainly, Henry."
"Kampf would
be a good man to keep routine moving until you work out your new team."
"Why, surely.
If you say he is the man for it, I'm sure he must be. But Henry. . . we'll keep
him there on a temporary basis and you think it over. We'll call it sick leave
or something."
"No," Mr.
Kiku answered coldly and turned again toward his own office.
Before he could
reach it Robbins spoke up loudly. "Take it easy, you two. We aren't
through." He spoke to MacClure: "You said that Henry was an honorable
man. But you forgot something."
"Eh?
What?"
"I
ain't."
Robbins went on,
"Henry wouldn't do anything that wasn't cricket. Me, I was raised in a
river ward. and I'm not bothered by niceties. I'm going to gather the boys
together and give 'em the word. I'm going to tell them where the body is
buried, how the apple cart was upset, and who put the overalls in the
chowder."
MacClure said
angrily, "You hand out an unauthorized interview and you'll never hold
another job with the administration!"
"Don't
threaten me, you over-ripe melon. I'm not a career man; I'm an appointee. After
I sing my song I'll get a job on the Capital Upside Down column and let
the public in on the facts about life among the supermen."
MacClure stared at
him. "You don't have any sense of loyalty at all."
"From you,
Mac, that sounds real sweet. What are you loyal to? Aside from your political
skin?"
Mr. Kiku interposed
mildly, "That's not exactly fair, Wes. The Secretary has been quite firm
that the Stuart boy must not be sacrificed to expediency."
Robbins nodded.
"Okay, Mac, we'll give you that. But you were willing to sacrifice Henry's
forty years of service to save your own ugly face. Not to mention shooting off
that face without checking with me, just to grab a front-page story.
Mac, there is nothing a newspaper man despises more than headline hunger. There
is something lascivious and disgusting about a man overanxious to see his name
in headlines. I can't reform you and don't want to, but be sure that you are
going to see your name in headlines, big ones. . . but for the last time.
Unless. . ."
"What do you
mean?. . . 'unless'?"
"Unless we put
Humpty-Dumpty together again."
"Uh, how? Now
look, Wes, I'll do anything within reason."
"You sure
will." Robbins frowned. "There's the obvious way. We can serve
Henry's head up on a platter. Blame that interview yesterday on him. He gave
you bad advice. He's been fired and all is sweetness and light."
Mr. Kiku nodded.
"That's how I had envisioned it. I'd be happy to cooperate. . . provided
my advice is taken on how to conclude the Hroshii affair."
"Don't look
relieved, Mac!" Robbins growled. "That's the obvious solution and it
would work. . . because Henry is loyal to something bigger than he is. But that
is not what we are going to do."
"But, if Henry
is willing, then in the best interests-"
"Stow it. It
won't be Henry's head on the platter; it will be yours."
Their eyes locked.
At last MacClure said, "If that is your scheme, Robbins, forget it and get
out. If you are looking for a fight, you'll get one. The first story to break
will be about how I had to fire you two for disloyalty and incompetence."
Robbins grinned
savagely. "I hope you play it that way. I'll have fun. But do you want to
hear how it could be worked?"
"Well. . . go
ahead."
"You can make
it easy or hard. Either way, you are through. Now. . . keep quiet and let me
tell it! You're done, Mac. I don't claim to be a scholar of xenic affairs, but
even I can see that civilization can't afford your county-courthouse approach
to delicate relations with non-human races. . So you're through. The question
is: do you do it the hard way? Or do you go easy on yourself and get a nice
puff in the history books?"
MacClure glowered
but did not interrupt. "Force me to spill what I know, and one of two
things happens. Either the Secretary General throws you to the wolves, or he
decides to back you up and risk a vote of 'no confidence' from the Council.
Which is what he would get. The Martian Commonwealth would gleefully lead the
stampede, Venus would follow, the outer colonies and the associated xenic
cultures would join in. At the end you would have most of the Terran nations
demanding that the North American Union surrender this one individual to avert
a bust-up of the Federation.
"All you have
to do is to shove the first domino; all the others would fall. . . and you
would be buried under the pile. You couldn't be elected dogcatcher. But the
easy way runs like this. You resign. . . but we don't publish the fact, not for
a couple of weeks. . . Henry, do you think two weeks will be long enough?"
"It should be
ample," Mr. Kiku agreed gravely.
"During that
time you don't wipe your nose without Henry's permission. You don't say a word
unless I okay it. Then you resign in a blaze of glory, with the conclusion of
the Hroshian Affair to crown your career. Possibly some way can be found to
kick you upstairs to a gaudier job. . . if you are a good boy. Eh, Henry?"
Mr. Kiku nodded.
MacClure looked
around from Kiku's expressionless face to Robbins' contemptuous one. "You
two have it neatly plotted," he said bitterly. 'Suppose I told you both to
go to the devil?"
Robbins yawned. 'It
won't matter in the long run, believe me. After the administration falls, the
new Secretary General will call Henry out of retirement, a safe man will be
stuck in your place, and Henry will get on with outmaneuvering the Hroshii.
Probably lose three days maybe less. Whitewashing you is harder, but we meant
to give you a break. Right, Henry?"
"It would be
better so. Dirty linen is best kept in a cupboard."
MacClure chewed his
lip. "I'll think it over."
"Good! And
I'll wait while you do. Henry, why don't you get back to work? I'll bet that
trick desk is lighted up like a Christmas tree."
"Very
well." Mr. Kiku left the room.
His desk did look
like a fireworks celebration, with three blinking red lights and a dozen amber
ones. He disposed of urgent matters, brushed off lesser ones, and began to
reduce the stack in his basket, signing without bothering to consider whether
his signature continued to carry authority.
He was just
sustaining a veto on a passport for a very prominent lecturer-the last time the
idiot had been off Earth, he had broken into a temple and taken pictures-when
Robbins walked in and chucked a paper on his desk. "Here's his
resignation. Better see the Secretary General at once."
Mr. Kiku took it.
"I shall."
"I didn't want
you there when I twisted his arm. It's harder for a man to say 'Uncle' with a
witness. You understood?"
"Yes."
"I had to
bring up the time we covered up for him about the convention with Kondor."
"Regrettable."
"Don't waste
tears. Enough is enough. Now I am going to write the speech he will make before
the Council. After that I'll look up the boys he talked to last night and beg
them, for the sake of their dear old home planet, to take the proper line on
the follow-up story. They won't like it."
"I suppose
not."
"But they'll
go along. Us humans have got to stick together; we are badly outnumbered."
"So I have
always felt. Thanks, Wes."
"A pleasure.
Just one thing I didn't mention to him. . ."
"So?"
"I didn't
remind him that the boy's name was John Thomas Stuart. I'm not sure the Martian
Commonwealth would have bolted, in view of that one fact, The Council might
have sustained Mac, after all and we might have found out whether the Hroshian
laddies can do what they say they can."
Kiku nodded. 'I
thought of that, too. It didn't seem time to mention it."
"No. There are
so many swell places for a man to keep his mouth shut. What are you smiling
at?"
"I was
thinking," Mr. Kiku explained, "that it is a good thing that the
Hroshii do not read our newspapers."
XIV
"Destiny?
Fiddlesticks!"
Mrs. Stuart did
read newspapers. Greenberg had had great trouble persuading her to come to
Capital and to bring her son, because he was not free to tell her why. But he
did persuade her and she had agreed to go the following morning.
When Greenberg
arrived the next morning to pick them up he found himself persona non grata.
She was in a white fury and simply shoved the newspaper into his hand. He
glanced at it. "Yes? I saw a copy at the hotel. Nonsense, of course."
"That's what
I've been trying to tell mother," John Thomas said sullenly, "but she
won't listen,"
"John Thomas,
you keep quiet. Well, Mr. Greenberg? What have you to say for yourself?"
Greenberg did not
have a good answer. He had tried to call Mr. Kiku as soon as he saw the news
story and had been told by Mildred that the boss and Mr. Robbins were with, the
Secretary and could not be disturbed. He told her that he would call later,
realizing uneasily that trouble was not all at his end.
"Mrs. Stuart,
surely you know that news reports are often distorted. There has been no talk
of hostages and. . ."
"How can you
say that when it says so right there! That's an interview with the Secretary of
Space. Who knows more about it? You? Or the Secretary?"
Greenberg had his
own opinion but did not dare express it. "Please, Mrs. Stuart. Newspaper
stories should not be accepted at face value. This wild report has nothing to
do with the case. I am simply asking you to come to Capital for a quiet talk
with the Under Secretary."
"Not likely!
If the Under Secretary wants to see me, let him come here."
"Madam, he
will, if necessary. Mr. Kiku is an old fashioned gentleman who would not ask a
lady to come to him were it not for the press of public affairs. You know that
there is an interplanetary conference in progress?"
She answered
smugly, "I make it a rule never to pay attention to politics."
He sighed.
"Some of us must. Mr. Kiku is unable to come here today because of that
conference. We had hoped that you, as a private citizen, would come to
him."
"Mr.
Greenberg, I reluctantly consented. Now I find that you have deceived me. How
do I know but what this is a trick? A plot to turn my-son over to those monsters?"
"Ma'am, on my
honor as an officer of the Federation I assure you. . ."
"Spare
yourself, Mr. Greenberg. Now, if you will excuse me.. ."
"Mrs. Stuart,
I beg you. If you will only. . ."
"Mr.
Greenberg, do not force me to be rude to a guest. But I have nothing more to
say."
Greenberg left. He
looked around, intending to bring the boy into the argument, but John Thomas
had quietly left. Greenberg went back to his hotel, with no intention of
returning to Capital with mission incomplete but judging it useless to argue
until she had time to simmer down.
He had his taxi
driver drop him on the hotel roof in order to avoid reporters, but a man was
waiting there, armed with an interview phone. "Half a mo', Mr.
Commissioner. My name's Hovey. How about a few words on Secretary MacClure's
announcement?"
"No
comment."
"In other
words you agree with it?"
"No comment."
"Then you
disagree?"
"No comment.
I'm in a hurry." This was true; he was anxious to call in and find out
what in the name of blue blazing galaxies had happened.
"Just a
second, please. Westville has a big local angle. I'd like to get a story before
the main office sends heavyweights here to push me aside."
Greenberg relaxed a
little. . . no sense in antagonizing the press and the fellow had a point; he
knew how it felt to have someone senior sent to cope with a problem that had
started as his. "Okay. But keep it brief; I really am in a hurry." He
took out cigarettes. Got a light on you?"
"Sure."
They lighted up, Hovey continued, "People are saying that this blast of
the Secretary's is just a smoke screen and that you have come here to get the
Stuart boy and turn him over to the Hroshii people. How about it?"
"No com. . .
No, don't say that; say this and quote me. No citizen of the Federation ever
has been or ever will be surrendered as a hostage to any power
whatsoever."
"That's
official?"
"That's official,"
Greenberg said firmly.
"Then what are
you doing here? I understand you are trying to take the Stuart kid and his
mother back to Capital. Capital Enclave isn't legally part of the North
American Union, is it? If you got him there, our local and national officials
couldn't protect him."
Greenberg shook his
head angrily. "Any citizen of the Federation is on his home grounds in the
Enclave. He has all rights there that he has at home."
"Why do you
want him there?"
Greenberg lied fast
and fluently. "John Thomas Stuart has knowledge of the psychology of the
Hroshii held by no other human being. We want his help in dealing with
them."
"That's more
like it. 'Westville Boy Recruited as Diplomatic Aide.' How's that for a
lead?"
"Sounds
good," Greenberg agreed. "Got enough? I'm in a rush."
"Sure,"
agreed Hovey. 'I can pad this to a couple of thousand words. Thanks,
Commissioner. See you later."
Greenberg went down
and locked himself in, then turned to the phone, intending to call the
department, but it came to life first. Chief Dreiser looked out at him. 'Mr.
Commissioner Greenberg.
"How do you
do, Chief?"
'Well enough, thank
you. But Mr. Greenberg-I've just had a call from Mrs. Stuart."
"Yes?"
Greenberg had a sudden wish for one of those pills the boss ate.
"Mr.
Greenberg, we always try to cooperate with you gentlemen."
Greenberg attempted
a stop thrust. "So? Were you cooperating when you attempted to kill the
Hroshia without waiting for authority?"
Dreiser turned red.
'That was a mistake. It has nothing to do with what I must say now."
"Which
is?"
"Mrs. Stuart's
son is missing. She thinks he might be with you."
"So? She's
mistaken. I don't know where he is."
"Is that true,
Mr. Commissioner?"
"Chief, I do
not tolerate being called a liar."
Dreiser went
doggedly ahead. "Sorry. But I must add this. Mrs. Stuart does not want her
son to leave town. The police department backs her up a hundred per cent."
"Naturally."
"Don't mistake
me, Mr. Commissioner. You are a very important. official-but you are just
another citizen if you get out of line. I read that news story and I didn't
like it."
"Chief, if you
find that I am doing anything illegal, I urge you to do your duty."
"I shall, sir.
I certainly shall."
Greenberg switched
off, started again to call in, and thought better of it. If the boss had new
instructions, he would send them. . . and Kiku despied field agents who chased
back to mama whenever there was a slight shift in the wind. He must change Mrs.
Stuart's mind-or hole up here for the winter.
While he was
thinking the phone again signaled; be answered and found himself looking at
Betty Sorenson. She smiled and said, "This is Miss Smith speaking."
"Umm.. . how
do you do, Miss Smith."
"Well, thank
you. But busy. I have a client, a Mr. Brown. He is being urged to take a trip.
What he wants to know is this: he has a friend at the city of his destination;
if he makes this trip, will he be allowed to see his friend?"
Greenberg thought
rapidly. The other Hroshii would be around Lummox as thick as flies; it might
be dangerous to let the boy go where they were and he was sure Mr. Kiku had not
so intended.
Oh, the police
could throw a tanglefoot field over the whole space port if necessary! The
Hroshii weren't superhuman. "Tell Mr. Brown that he will see his
friend."
"Thank you.
Uh, Mr. Jones, where could your pilot pick us up?"
Greenberg
hesitated. "It would be better for Mr. Brown to make the trip by the commercial
lines. Just a moment." He found the flight schedule folder provided in
most hotel rooms. "There is a ship leaving Stateport in about an hour.
Could he catch it?"
"Oh, yes. But.
. . well, there is a matter of money."
"Oh. Suppose I
make you a personal loan? You, not Mr. Brown."
She broke into a
grin. "That would be lovely!"
"Have you any
suggestion as to how to get it to you?" Betty did have-a snack shop called
The Chocolate Bar across from Central High School. A few minutes later
he was waiting in it, sipping a chocolate-and-milk mess. Betty showed up, he
passed her an envelope and she left. He stayed there until he could no longer
face the contents of his glass, then went back to the hotel.
He waited two
hours, then called Mrs. Stuart. "I have just heard that your son left for
Capital on his own."
He waited for her
to quiet down, then added, "Mrs. Stuart, I'm still in Westville but am
about to fly back to Capital. Would you care to come with me? My ship is faster
than the commercial liners."
Half an hour later
they left for Capital.
Mr. Kiku saw John
Thomas Stuart first. Old enough to be John Thomas's grandfather, he treated
John Thomas as an equal, thanking him for coming, offering refreshment. He
explained briefly that Lummox was unwilling to return home unless John Thomas
went along. "It is extremely important to the Hroshii that Lummox return.
To us it is important for other reasons."
"You
mean," John Thomas said bluntly, "that they are going to fight us if
I don't? That's what the papers say."
Mr. Kiku hesitated briefly. "They may.
But that is not the reason I have consulted you. I doubt if the Hroshii would
attempt anything if your friend Lummox opposed it-which I think Lummox would if
it was something dangerous to you, such as an attack on this planet."
"Oh, I'm sure
of that, if Lummie has anything to say about it. But why should they listen to
him? Uh, is he royal, or something?"
"Perhaps
'royal' will do, since we don't understand their customs. But Lummox's wishes
are important."
John Thomas shook
his head in wonder. "Seems funny. The way I used to boss him around."
"In any case I
am not asking you to save us from a possible war. I am thinking of positive
benefits, not negative ones; we want to establish friendly relations with these
people. I asked you here to find out your own wishes. If I make it possible for
you to go with Lummox to their planet-Hroshijud it is called-what would your
answer be? Think it over, you need not answer now."
John Thomas gulped.
"I don't need to think it over. I'd go, of course."
"Don't be
hasty."
"I'm not being
hasty. Lummie will need me. He's never happy with strangers. Anyhow, he wants
me to. You don't think I'd let him down, do you?"
"No. But this
is a serious decision. You'll be going almost a thousand light-years from
home."
John Thomas
shrugged. "My great grandfather went there. Why shouldn't I?"
"Mmm. . . yes.
I keep forgetting your ancestry. But aren't you interested in knowing what
other human beings are going with you? Or even if there are to be any?"
"Huh?"
John Thomas thought about it. "Oh, those details will work themselves out.
It's not my business."
'They will be
worked out," Mr. Kiku answered. He stood up. "Thank you for
coming."
'Not at all, sir.
Uh. . . when do I get to see Lummox?"
Mr. Kiku pursed his
lips. "Not right away; I have matters to settle first. In the meantime,
enjoy yourself. I'm assigning a man to guide you around and pay your expenses.
He will act as bodyguard, too."
"A bodyguard?
What for? I'm grown up."
"So you are.
But, if for no other reason, I don't want you talking to reporters. Do you
mind? I have no authority to tell you not to."
"Oh no, Mr.
Kiku. . . if it will help."
"It will
help."
Mr. Kiku had
received John Thomas at his desk, Mrs. Stuart he received in a lavish room, one
without a conference table and which had been designed by subtle psychologists
to impress visitors. Mr. Kiku knew that he was in for a bad time.
He fended her off
with tea and formality, forced the talk to trivia. "So good of you to
come, madame. Sugar? Lemon?"
"Uh, neither,
thank you. Mr. Kiku, I must make clear firstoff that. . ."
"Try these
little puffs. Did Mr. Greenberg make you comfortable?"
"What? Oh, yes,
a nice suite, overlooking the Gardens of Heaven. But Mr. Kiku. . ."
"I was sorry
to ask you to come to me. But I am the prisoner of my job. You
understand?" He spread his hands helplessly. "I can't leave Capital
at certain times."
"That's
understandable, I suppose. Now. . ."
"Your kindness
is appreciated. You must remain, as an official guest, as long as you see fit.
Capital is worth seeing, even if one has seen it often. . . which no doubt you
have. I understand that the shopping is excellent, too."
"Well, as a
matter of fact I haven't seen it before. Some of the shops do look
intriguing."
"Then enjoy
it, dear lady. No reason not to mix pleasure with business. Which brings us to
business, I suppose. I have been talking with your son."
"Mr. Kiku. .
."
"Indulge me, I
will be brief. We are sending an extensive cultural and scientific mission to
the home planet of the Hroshii. I want to send your son as a special aide. He
has agreed to go." He waited for the explosion.
"Utterly
unthinkable! Out of the question!"
"Why, Mrs.
Stuart?"
"Mr. Kiku,
what sort of inhuman beast are you? I know what you mean. . . you plan to turn
my son, my only son, over to those monstrosities as a hostage.
Unspeakable!"
He shook his head.
"Ma'am, you have been misled by a wild newspaper story. Have you seen the
later story? The Secretary's speech before the Council?"
"No, but. .
."
"I will supply
a copy. It explains how that nonsense got into print. It also affirms the
ancient policy of the Federation, 'All for One'. . . against the Galaxy if
necessary. In this case your son is that 'one'; he has many planets behind him.
But no such issues arises; your son will join a peaceful mission to a friendly
people. He will help build a cultural bridge between two civilized but very
different races."
"Hmmph! The
paper said that these Hroshii demanded that you turn my son over to them.
Explain that if you can!"
"Difficulties
of translation. They asked for your son by name, but on behalf of that Hroshia
which was for years part of your own household, Lummox. Because Lummox is
deeply attached to your son. This friendship between these two, transcending
form and kind and source and mind, is one of the greatest fortunes which has
happened to our race since our people first discovered that we were not sole
heirs of the Almighty. This unlikely circumstance will let us bridge in one
leap a chasm of misunderstanding ordinarily spanned by years of trial and
tragic error." He paused. "One is tempted to think of them as
children of destiny."
Mrs. Stuart snorted.
"'Destiny'! Fiddlesticks!"
"Can you be
sure, ma'am?"
"I can be sure
of this: my son is not going to the other side of nowhere. In another
week he is entering college, which is where he belongs."
"Is it his
education which worries you, ma'am?"
"What? Why, of
course. I want him to get a good education. His father set up a trust fund for
it; I intend to carry out his wishes."
"I can put
your mind at rest. In addition to an embassy, we will send a cultural mission,
a scientific mission, an economics and trade mission, and many specialists, all
topflight minds. No single college could hire such an aggregation of talent;
even the largest institutions of learning would be hard put to match it. Your
son will be taught, not casually but systematically. If he earns a degree, it
will be awarded by, uh. . . by the Institute of Outer Sciences." He
smiled. "Does that suit you?"
"Why, I never
heard of such a silly arrangement. Anyway, the Institute isn't a college."
"It can bestow
a degree. Or, if not, we will have its charter amended. But degrees are
unimportant, ma'am, the point his that your son will have an unparalleled
higher education. I understand that he wishes to study xenic science. Well, not
only will his teachers be the finest possible, but also he will live in a new
field laboratory of xenology and take part in the research. We know little of
the Hroshii; he will labor on the frontiers of science."
"He's not
going to study xenology."
"Eh? He told
Mr. Greenberg that he meant to."
"Oh, he has
that silly idea but I have no intention of indulging him. He will study some
sound profession-the law, probably."
Mr. Kiku's brows
went up. "Please, Mrs. Stuart," he said plaintively. "Not that.
I am a lawyer-he might wind up where I am."
She looked at him
sharply. He went on, "Will you tell me why you plan to thwart him?"
"But I won't
be. . . No, I see no reason why I should. Mr. Kiku, this discussion is
useless."
"I hope not,
ma'am. May I tell a story?" He assumed consent and went on, "These Hroshii
are most unlike us. What is commonplace to us is strange to them, and vice
versa. All we seem to have in common is that both races are intelligent
"To us they
seem unfriendly, so remote that I would despair, were it not for one thing. Can
you guess what that is?"
"What? No, I
can't"
"Your son and
Lummox. They prove that the potential is there if we will only dig for it. But
I digress. More than a hundred years ago a young Hroshia encountered a friendly
stranger, went off with him. You know our-half of that story. Let me tell you
their side, as I have learned it with the help of an interpreter and our
xenologists. This little Hroshia was important to them; they wanted her back
very badly. Their patterns are not ours; they interweave six distinct sorts of
a genetic scheme we will be a long time understanding.
"This little
Hroshia had a role to play, a part planned more than two thousand years ago,
around the time of Christ. And her part was a necessary link in a larger
planning, a shaping of the race that has been going on, I am told, for
thirty-eight thousand of our years. Can you grasp that, Mrs. Stuart? I find it
difficult. A plan running back to when Cro-Magnon man was disputing with
Neanderthals for the prize of a planet. . . but perhaps my trouble lies in the
fact that we are ourselves the shortest-lived intelligent race we have yet
found.
"What would we
do if a child was missing for more than a century? No need to discuss it; it in
no way resembles what the Hroshii did. They were not too worried about her
welfare; they did not think of her as dead. . . but merely misplaced. They do
not die easily. They do not even starve to death. Uh, perhaps you have heard of
flatworrns? Euplanaria?"
"I have never
taken any interest in xenobiology, Mr. Kiku."
"I made the
same error, ma'am; I asked, 'What planet is it from?' Euplanaria are relatives
of ours; there are many more flatworms on Earth than there are men. But they
have a characteristic in common with Hroshii; both breeds grow when fed, shrink
when starved and seem to be immortal, barring accidents. I had wondered why
Lummox was so much larger than the other Hroshii. No mystery. . . you fed
Lummox too much."
"I told
John Thomas that repeatedly!"
"No harm done.
They are already shrinking her down. The Hroshii were not angry, it seems, over
the theft or kidnapping or luring away of their youngster. They knew her-a
lively, adventuresome disposition was part of what had been bred into her. But
they did want her back and they searched for her year after year, following the
single clue that she must have gone off with a certain group of visitors from
space; they knew what those visitors looked like but not from what part of the
sky they came.
"It would have
discouraged us. . . but not them. I have a misty impression that the century
they spent chasing rumors, asking questions, and checking strange planets
was-to them-about what a few months would be to us. In time they found her.
Again, they were neither grateful nor angry; we simply did not count.
"That might
have been our only contact with the noble Hroshii had not a hitch developed;
the Hroshia, now grown big but still young, refused to leave without her
monstrous friend-I speak from the Hroshian viewpoint This was terrible to them,
but they had no way to force her. How bitter a disappointment it was I ask you
to imagine. . . a mating planned when Caesar fought the Gauls all now in
readiness, with the other strains matured and ready. . . and Lummox refuses to
go home. She shows no interest in her destiny. . . remember, she is very young;
our own children do not develop social responsibility very early. In any case
she won't budge without John Thomas Stuart." He spread his hands.
"You see the predicament they are in?"
Mrs. Stuart set her
mouth. "I'm sorry but it is no business of mine."
"True. I
suppose that the simplest thing to do is to let Lummox go home . . . to your
home, I mean. . . and. . ."
"What? Oh,
no!"
"Ma'am?"
"You can't
send that beast back! I won't stand for it."
Mr. Kiku stroked
his chin. "I don't understand you, ma'am. It's Lummox's home; it has been
the Hroshia's home much longer than it has been yours, about five times as long
I believe. If I remember correctly, it isn't your property, but your son's. Am
I right?"
"That has
nothing to do with sit! You can't load me down with that beast."
"A court might
decide that it was up to your son. But why cross that bridge? I am trying to
find out why you oppose something so clearly to your son's advantage."
She sat silent,
breathing hard, and Mr. Kiku let her sit. At last she said, "Mr. Kiku, I
lost my husband to space; I won't let my son go the same way. I intend to see
to it that he stays and lives on Earth."
He shook his head
sadly. "Mrs. Stuart, sons are lost from the beginning."
She took out a
handkerchief and dabbed at her eyes. "I can't let him go off into the sky.
. . he's only a little boy!"
"He's a man,
Mrs. Stuart. Younger men have died in battle."
"Is that what
you think makes a man?"
"I know of no
better gauge."
He went on, "I
call my assistants 'boys' because I am an old man. You think of your son as a
boy because you are, by comparison, an old woman. Forgive me. But the notion
that a boy becomes a man only on a certain birthday is a mere legal fiction.
Your son is a man; you have no moral right to keep him an infant."
"What a wicked
thing to say! It's not true; I am merely trying to help him and guide
him."
Mr. Kiku smiled
grimly. "Madam, the commonest weakness of our race is our ability to
rationalize our most selfish purposes. I repeat, you have no right to force him
into your mold."
"I have more
right than you have! I'm his mother."
"Is 'parent'
the same as 'owner'? No matter, we are poles apart; you are trying to thwart
him, I am helping him to do what he wants to do."
"From the
basest motives!"
"My motives
are not an issue and neither are yours." He stood up. "As you have
already said, it seems pointless to continue. I am sorry."
"I won't let
him! He's still a minor. . . I have rights."
"Limited
rights, ma'am. He could divorce you."
She gasped. 'He
wouldn't do that to me! His own mother!"
"Perhaps. Our
children's courts have long taken a dim view of the arbitrary use of parental
authority; coercion in choice of career is usually open-and-shut. Mrs. Stuart,
it is best to give into the inevitable gracefully.
Don't oppose him
too far, or you will lose him completely. He is going."
XV
Undiplomatic
Relations
Mr. Kiku returned to his office with his
stomach jumping but he did not stop to cater to it. Instead he leaned across
his desk and said, "Sergei. Come in now."
Greenberg entered
and laid down two spools of sound tape. "I'm glad to get rid of these.
Whoo!"
"Wipe them,
please. Then forget you ever heard them."
"Delighted."
Greenberg dipped them in a cavity. "Cripes, boss, couldn't you have given
him an anesthetic?"
'Unfortunately,
no."
"Wes Robbins
was pretty rough on him. I felt like a window peeper. Why did you want me to
hear them? I don't have to deal with the mess. Or do I?"
"No. But
someday you will need to know how it is done."
"Mmmm. . .
Boss. . . did you have any intention of letting it stick when he fired
you?"
"Don't ask
silly questions."
"Sorry. How
did you make out with the hard case?"
"She won't let
him go."
"So?"
"So he is
going."
"She'll scream
her head off to the papers."
"So she
will." Mr. Kiku leaned toward his desk. "Wes?"
"Mr. Robbins
is at the funeral of the Venerian foreign minister," a female voice
answered, "with the Secretary."
"Oh, yes. Ask
him to see me when he returns, please."
"Yes, Mr.
Kiku."
"Thank you,
Shizuko." The Under Secretary turned to Greenberg. "Sergei, your
acting appointment as diplomatic officer first class was made permanent when
you were assigned to this affair."
"Was it?"
"Yes. The
papers will no doubt reach you. You are now being promoted to chief diplomatic
officer, acting. I will hold up the permanent appointment for ninety days to
let some noses get back in joint."
Greenberg's face
showed no expression. "Nice," he said. "But why? Because I brush
my teeth regularly? Or the way I keep my brief case polished?"
"You are going
to Hroshijud as deputy and chief of mission. Mr. MacClure will be ambassador,
but I doubt that he will learn the tongue. . . which will of course place the
burden of dealing with them on you. So you must acquire a working knowledge of
their language at once. Follow me?"
Greenberg
translated it to read: MacClure will have to talk to them through you, which
keeps him in line.
"Yes," he
answered thoughtfully, "but how about Dr. Ftaeml? The Ambassador will
probably use him as interpreter rather than myself." To himself he added:
boss, you can't do this to me. MacClure can short me out through Ftaeml. . .
and there I am, nine hundred light-years from help.
"Sorry,"
Kiku answered, "but I can't spare Ftaeml. I shall retain him to interpret
for the Hroshij mission they will leave behind. He accepted the job."
Greenberg frowned.
"I'll start picking his brain in earnest, then, I've soaked up some
Hroshija already. . . makes your throat raw. But when did they agree to all
this? Have I slept through something? While I was in Westville?"
"They haven't
agreed. They will."
"I admire your
confidence, boss. They strike me as being as stubborn as Mrs. Stuart. Speaking
of such, Ftaeml spoke to me while you were bickering with her. He says they are
getting insistent about the Stuart kid. Now that you know he's going shouldn't
we quiet them down? Ftaeml is jittery. He says the only thing that restrains
them from giving us the worlth is that it would displease our old pal
Lummox."
"No,"
answered Kiku, "we do not tell them. Nor do we tell Ftaeml. I want him to
remain apprehensive."
Greenberg chewed a
knuckle. "Boss," he said slowly, "isn't that asking for trouble?
Or do you have a hunch that they aren't the heavyweights they claim to be? If
it comes to a slugging match, can we outslug them?"
"I doubt it
extremely. But the Stuart boy is my hole card."
"I suppose so.
Far be it from me to quote you-know-who. . . but if the risk is that great,
aren't the people entitled to know?"
"Yes. But we
can't tell them."
"How's that
again?"
Mr. Kiku frowned.
"Sergei," he said slowly, "this society has been in crisis ever
since the first rocket reached our Moon. For three centuries scientists and
engineers and explorers have repeatedly broken through to new areas, new
dangers, new situations; each time the political managers have had to scramble
to hold things together, like a juggler with too much in the air. It's
unavoidable.
"But we have
managed to keep a jury-rigged republican form of government and to maintain
democratic customs. We can be proud of that. But it is not now a real democracy
and it can't be. I conceive it to be our duty to hold this society together
while it adjusts to a strange and terrifying world. It would be pleasant to
discuss each problem, take a vote, then repeal it later if the collective
judgment proved faulty. But it's rarely that easy. We find ourselves oftener
like pilots of a ship in a life-and-death emergency. Is it the pilot's duty to
hold powwows with passengers? Or is it his job to use his skill and experience
to by to bring them home safely?"
"You make it
sound convincing, boss. I wonder if you are right?"
"I wonder
also." Mr. Kiku went on, "I intended to hold the conference with the
Hroshii tomorrow morning."
"Okay. I'll
tell Ftaeml. They ought to stay quiet overnight."
"But, since
they are anxious, we will postpone until the following day and let them grow
still more anxious." Kiku thought. "Have Ftaeml tell them this. Our
customs require that a party wishing to negotiate send presents ahead;
therefore they must send us presents. Tell them that the lavishness of the
gifts gauge the seriousness of the matter to be discussed; too poor a gift will
prejudice their petition."
Greenberg frowned.
"You have some swindle in mind, but I miss the point. Ftaeml knows that
our customs don't call for it."
"Can you
convince him that this is a custom which he has not encountered? Or can you
take him into your confidence? I see conflict in him; his loyalty is to his
clients but his sympathies appear to be with us."
"I had better
not try to kid him. But getting a Rargyllian to lie when he is interpreting
professionally. . . I doubt if he can."
"Then phrase
it so that it is not a lie. Tell him that it is a very old custom. . . which is
true. . . and that we resort to it only on sufficiently important occasions. .
. which this is. Give him an out, let him see your purpose, gain a sympathetic
translation."
"Can do. But
why, boss? Just for bulge?"
"Precisely. We
are negotiating from weakness; it Is imperative that we start with the upper
hand. I have hopes that the symbolism of the petitioner bearing presents is as
universal as we have found it to be up to now."
"Suppose they
won't kick through with the loot?"
"Then we sit
tight until they change their minds." Kiku added, "Start selecting
your team. Let me see a list tomorrow."
Greenberg groaned.
"I was going to turn in early."
"Never count
on it in this business. Oh yes. . . as soon as the conference is over, send a
good man. . . Peters, perhaps. . . up to their ship to see what changes are
needed for human passengers. Then we'll tell the Hroshii what we require."
"Wait a
minute, boss. I prefer one of our own ships. How do you know they've got room
for us?"
"Our ships
will follow. But the Hroshia Lummox goes with them and young Stuart goes with
Lummox, therefore our mission goes in their ship in order that the boy will be
accompanied by humans."
"I see.
Sorry."
"There will be
room. They will leave their own mission behind at this same time. . . or no one
will go. One hundred Hroshii, to pluck a figure, will certainly vacate living
space for one hundred of our sort."
"In other
words, boss," Greenberg said softly, "you are insisting on
hostages."
'' 'Hostage'," Mr. Kiku said primly,
"is a word that no diplomat should ever use." He turned back to his
desk.
The ground floor
auditorium of the Spatial Affairs building was selected for the conference
because its doors were large enough and its floors strong enough. It might have
been safer to hold it at the space port, as Dr. Ftaeml urged, but Mr. Kiku
insisted on the Hroshii coming to him for reasons of protocol.
Their presents
preceded them.
The gifts were
stacked on both sides of the great hall and were lavish in quantity; their
values and qualities were still unknown. The departmental xenologists were as
eager as a child faced with birthday presents, but Mr. Kiku had ordered them to
hold off until the conference was over.
Sergei Greenberg
joined Mr. Kiku in the retiring room behind the rostrum as the Hroshii
delegation entered the hall. He looked worried. "I don't like this,
boss."
Kiku looked up.
"Why not?"
Greenberg glanced
at the others present-Mr. MacClure and a double for the Secretary General. The
double, a skilled actor, nodded and went back to studying the speech he was
about to deliver, but MacClure said sharply, "What's the trouble,
Greenberg? Those devils up to something?"
"I hope
not." Greenberg addressed Kiku, "I checked arrangements from the air
and they look good.. We've got the Boulevard of the Suns barricaded from here
to the port and enough reserves on each side for a small war. Then I picked up
the head of their column as it left the port and flew above it. They dropped
off reserves of their own about every quarter of a mile and set up gear of some
sort at each strong point. It might just be communication links back to their
ship. I doubt it. I think it must be weapons."
"So do
I," agreed Kiku.
The Secretary said
worriedly, "Now look here, Mr. Kiku. . ."
"If you
please, Mr. MacClure. Sergei, the Chief of Staff reported this earlier. I
advised the Secretary General that we should make no move unless they try to
pass our barricades."
"We could lose
a lot of men."
"So we could.
But what will you do, Sergei, when you are required to enter a stranger's camp
to palaver? Trust him completely? Or try to cover your retreat?"
"Mmm.. .
yes."
"I consider
this the most hopeful sign we have had yet. If those are weapons, as I hope
they are, it means that they do not regard us as negligible opponents. One does
not set up artillery against mice." He looked around. "Shall we go? I
think we have let them stew long enough. Ready, Arthur?"
"Sure."
The Secretary-General's double chucked his script aside. "That boy Robbins
knows how to write a speech. He doesn't load up a sentence with sibilants and
make me spray the first five rows."
"Good."
They went in, the actor first, then the Secretary, then the Permanent Under
Secretary followed by his assistant.
Of the long
procession of Hroshii that had left the space port only a dozen had entered the
auditorium, but even that number made the hail seem filled. Mr. Kiku looked
down at them with interest, it being the first time that he had laid eyes on a
Hroshiu. It was true, he saw, that these people did not present the golliwog
friendliness shown in the pictures of the Hroshia Lummox. These were adults,
even though smaller than Lummox. The one just in front of the platform and
flanked by two others was staring back at him. The stare was cold and
confident. Mr. Kiku found that the creature's gaze made him uneasy; he wanted
to shift his eyes. Instead he stared back and reminded himself that his own
hypnotherapist could do it as well or better than the Hroshiu.
Greenberg touched
his elbow. "They've set up weapons in here, too," he whispered.
"See that? In the back?"
Mr. ICiku answered,
"We are not supposed to know that it is a weapon. Assume that it is
apparatus for their own record of the conference." Dr. Ftaeml was standing
beside the foremost Hroshiu; the Under Secretary said to him, "Tell them
what our Secretary General is. Describe him as chief of seventeen powerful
planets."
'The Rargyllian
hesitated. "What about the President of your Council?"
"The Secretary
General embodies both of them for this occasion."
"Very well, my
friend." The Rargyillan spoke in highpitched speech which reminded Kiku of
puppies whining. The Hroshiu answered him briefly in the same tongue, and
suddenly Mr. Kiku no longer felt the dread that had been inspired by the
creature's stare. It was not possible to feel awe for a person who sounded like
a lonesome puppy. But he reminded himself that deadly orders could be given in
any speech.
Ftaeml was
speaking. "Here beside me is . ." He broke into a multiple squeal of
the strange tongue. ". . . who is commander of the ship and the
expedition. She. . . no, perhaps 'he' would be better. . . he is hereditary
marshal and. . ." The Rargyllian broke off and fretted. "You have no
equivalent rank. Perhaps I should say 'mayor of the palace.'"
Greenberg suddenly
said, "How about 'boss,' Doc?"
"A happy
suggestion! Yes, this is the Boss. Her. . . his social position is not highest
but his practical authority is almost without limit."
Kiku asked,
"Is his authority such that he may conduct plenipotentiary
bargaining?"
"Ah, yes,
certainly!"
'Then we will get
on with it." He turned to the actor and nodded. Then he spoke to the desk
in front of him, using a hush circuit: "Getting all this?"
A voice answered
his ears alone. "Yes, sir. The picture pick-up faded once but it's all
right now."
"Are the
Secretary General and the Chief of Staff listening?"
"I believe so,
sir. Their offices are monitoring."
"Very
well" Mr. Kiku listened to the Secretary General's speech. It was short
but delivered with great dignity and the actor paced it so that Ftaeml might
translate. The Secretary General welcomed the Hroshii to Earth, assured them
that the peoples of the Federation were happy that the Hroshii had at long last
found their lost sibling, and added that this happy accident should be the
occasion for the Hroshii to take their rightful place in the Community of
Civilizations.
He sat down and
promptly went to sleep for all practical purposes, eyes open and face fixed in
kindly dignity. The double could hold this Roman-Emperor pose for hours without
really noticing the review, or ceremony, or whatever he might be chaperoning.
Mr. Macclure spoke
briefly, seconding the Secretary General and adding that the Federation was now
prepared to discuss any matters of business between the Federation and the
noble Hroshii.
Greenberg leaned to
Kiku and whispered, "Should we clap, boss? Somebody ought to and I don't
think they know how."
"Shut
up," Kiku said amiably. "Dr. Ftaeml, does the commander have a speech
of formality to deliver?"
"I think
not." Ftaeml spoke to the leading Hroshiu, then answered, "The reply
is a serious comment on the two speeches made, rather than an answer of
formality. He states that the Hrosliii have no need of other lesser. . . breeds
and says we should not get to business without further, ah. . . trivia."
"If it is true
that they have no need for other peoples, please ask him why they have come to
us and why they have offered us presents?"
"But you
insisted on it, my friend," Ftaeml answered in surprise.
"Thank you,
Doctor, but I do not want your comment. Require him to answer. Please do not
coach him."
"I will
try." Ftaeml exchanged several sentences of the high whining with the
Hroshij commander, then turned back to Kiku. "Forgive me. He says that he
acceded to your childishness as the simplest means of accomplishing his
purpose. He wishes to discuss now the surrender of John Thomas Stuart."
"Please tell
him that the matter is not open to discussion. The agenda requires that we
first settle the question of diplomatic relations."
"Pardon me,
sir. 'Diplomatic relations' is a concept difficult to translate. I have been
working on it for days."
"Tell him that
what he sees now is an example of diplomatic relations. Free peoples,
negotiating as equals, with peaceful intentions, to their mutual benefit."
The Ragyllian
simulated a sigh. "Each of those concepts is almost equally difficult. I
will try."
Presently he
answered, "The hereditary marshal says that if what we are doing
constitutes diplomatic relations you have them now. Where is the Stuart
boy?"
"Not so fast.
The agenda must be taken up point by point. They must accept an embassy and a
mixed mission for cultural, scientific, and trade purposes. They must leave
with us a similar embassy and mission. Regular travel between our two
sovereignties must be planned. Not until these are disposed of can there be any
mention of the Stuart boy."
"I will try
again." Ftaeml spoke to the 'Boss' Hroshiu at length; the reply was short.
"He tells me to tell you that all those points are rejected as not worthy
of consideration. Where is the Stuart boy?"
"In that
case," Mr. Kiku answered quietly, "tell them that we do not bargain
with barbarians. Tell them to pick up the trash-be sure of forceful
translation!-with which they have littered our home, and get. quickly back to
their ship. They are required to take off at once. They must bundle their
precious Hroshia aboard, by force if need be, if they ever expect to see her
again-they will never again be allowed to land."
Ftaeml looked as if
he were about to burst into tears he was incapable of shedding. "Please! I
beg you not to antagonize them. I tell tales out of school. . . I go beyond my
professional duties. . . but they could now destroy this city without recourse
to their ship."
"Deliver the
message. The conference is ended." Mr. Kiku stood up, picked up the others
with his eyes, and headed for the retiring room.
The double went
ahead. MacClure caught Kiku by the arm and fell into step. "Henry. . .
you're running this, granted. But shouldn't you talk it over? They're savage
beasts. It could. . ."
"Mr.
MacClure," Kiku said softly, "as a distinguished predecessor once
said, in dealing with certain types you must step on their toes until they
apologize." He urged the Secretary toward the door.
"But suppose
they won't?"
"That is the
hazard. Please. . . let us not argue in their presence." They went into
the retiring room; the door closed behind them.
Greenberg turned to
Kiku. "Nice try, boss. . . but what do we do now?"
"We
wait."
"Okay."
Greenberg went nervously to a wall relay, picked up the scene inside the
auditorium. The Hroshii had not left. He could just make out Ftaeml, surrounded
by creatures much larger than the medusoid.
The double said to
Kiku, 'Through with me, sir?"
"Yes, Arthur.
A good job."
"Thanks. I've
got time to get this make-up off and catch the second game of the
doubleheader."
"Good. Perhaps
you had better change your appearance here."
"Shucks, the
photographers know. They play along." He left, whistling. MacClure sat
down, lit a cigar, took a puff, put it down. "Henry, you ought to notify
the Chief of Staff."
"He knows. We
wait."
They waited.
Greenberg said suddenly, "Here comes Ftaeml." He hurried to the door
and let the Rargyllian in.
Dr. Ftaeml seemed
very tense. "My dear Mr. Kiku-the Hroshij commander states that they will
agree to your strange wishes for sake of prompt settlement. He insists that you
now deliver the Stuart boy."
"Please tell
him that he misunderstands entirely the nature of friendly relations between
civilized people. We do not barter the freedom of one of our citizens against
their worthless favors, even as they would not barter the freedom of their
Hroshia Lummox. Then tell him that I order them to leave at once."
Ftaeml said
earnestly, "I reluctantly deliver your message."
He was back
quickly. "They agree to your terms."
"Good. Come,
Sergei. . . Mr. MacClure, there is no need for you to appear unless it suits
you." He went out into the hall, followed by Greenberg and Ftaeml.
The Hroshij
"boss," it seemed to Kiku was more baleful than ever. But the details
went promptly forward-an equal number of Hroshii and of humans to constitute
the, missions, passage to be provided in the Hroshij ship, one of the Hroshii
there present to be ambassador to the Federation. Ftaeml assured them that this
Hroshiu was of practical rank second only to the expedition commander.
And now, said the
Hroshij commander, it is time to turn over to us John Thomas Stuart. Ftaeml
added anxiously, "I trust you have made arrangements, my friend? I dislike
the tenor of this. It has been too easy."
With a feeling of
satisfaction soothing his troubled stomach Mr. Kiku answered, "I see no
difficulty. The Stuart boy is willing to go, now that we are assured of
civilized relations. Please make sure that they understand that he goes as a
free being, not a slave, not a pet. The Hroshii must guarantee his status and
his return passage, in one of their own ships, whenever he so wishes."
Ftaeml translated.
Presently he answered. "All of that is satisfactory except for something which
I will translate as a 'minor detail.' The Stuart boy will be a member of the
household of the Hroshia Lummox. Naturally-I translate here most
carefully-naturally the question of the boy returning, if ever, is a personal
prerogative of the Hroshia Lummox. Should she grow tired of him and wish to
return him, a ship would be made available."
"No."
"No what,
sir?"
"A simple
negative. The subject of the Stuart boy is finished."
Ftaeml turned back
to his clients.
"They
say," he answered presently, "that there is no treaty."
"I know that.
Treaties are not signed with . . . they have a word meaning 'servant'?"
"They have
servants of several sorts, some higher, some lower."
"Use the word
for the lowest sort. Tell them that there is no treaty because servants have no
power to treat. Tell them to go and be quick about it."
Ftaeml looked, at
Kiku sadly. "I admire you, my friend, but I do not envy you." He
turned to the expedition commander and whined for several moments.
The Hroshiu opened
his mouth wide, looked at Kiku, and squealed like a kicked puppy. Ftaeml gave a
start and moved away. "Very bad profanity, untranslatable. . ."The
monster continued to make noises; Ftaeml tried frantically to translate:
"Contempt. . . lower animal. . . eat you with relish. . . follow back your
ancestors and eat them as well. . . your despicable race must be taught
manners. . . kidnappers. . . child stealers. . ." He stopped in great agitation.
The Hroshiu
lumbered toward the platform, reared up until he was eye to eye with Mr. Kiku.
Greenberg slid a hand under his desk and located a control that would throw a
tanglefoot field over the lower floor. . . a permanent installation; the hall
had seen other disturbances.
But Mr. Kiku sat
like stone. They eyed each other, the massive thing from "Out There"
and the little elderly human. Nothing moved in the great hall, nothing was
said.
Then from the back
of the hall broke out a whining as if a whole basket of puppies had been
disturbed at once. The Hroshij commander whirled around, making the floor
shake, and shrilled to his retainers. He was answered and he whined back sharp
command. All twelve Hroshii swarmed out the door moving with speed incredible for
beings so ungainly.
Kiku stood up and
watched them. Greenberg grabbed his arm. "Boss! The Chief of Staff is
trying to reach you."
Kiku shook him off.
"Tell him not to be hasty. It is most important that he not be hasty. Is
our car waiting?"
XVI
"Sorry
We Messed Things Up"
John Thomas Stuart
XI had wanted to attend the conference; it required a flat refusal to keep him
away. He was in the Hotel Universal in the suite provided for him and his
mother, playing checkers with his bodyguard, when Betty Sorenson showed up with
Miss Holtz. Myra Holtz was an operative for BuSec of DepSpace, and concealed
her policewoman profession under a pleasant façade. Mr. Kiku's instructions to
her concerning Betty had been: "Keep a sharp eye on her. She has a taste for
excitement."
The two guards
greeted each other; Betty said, "Hi, Johnnie. Why aren't you over at the
heap big smoke?"
"They wouldn't
let me."
"Me,
too." She glanced around. "Where's the Duchess?"
"Cone
shopping. I'm still getting the silent treatment. Seventeen hats she's bought.
What have you done to your face?"
Betty turned to a
mirror. 'Like it? It's called 'Cosmic Contouring' and it's the latest
thing."
"Makes you
look like a zebra with the pip."
"Why, you
country oaf. Ed, you like it. Don't you?"
Ed Cowen looked up
from the checker board and said hastily, "I wouldn't know. My wife says I
have no taste."
"Most men
haven't. Johnnie, Myra and I have come to invite you two to go out on the town.
How about it?"
Cowen answered,
"I don't favor that, Myra."
"It was her
idea," Miss Holz answered.
John Thomas said to
Cowen, "Why not? I'm sick of checkers."
"Well. . . I'm
supposed to keep in touch with the office. They might want you any time
now."
"Pooh!"
put in Betty. "You carry a bodyphone. Anyhow Myra does."
Cowen shook his
head. "Let's play it safe."
"Am I under
arrest?" Betty persisted. "Is Johnnie?"
"Mmm. . . no.
It's more protective custody."
'Then you can
protectively cuss him wherever be is. Or stay here and play checkers with
yourself. Come on, Johnnie."
Cowen looked at
Miss Holtz; she answered slowly, "I suppose it's all right, Ed. We'll be
with them."
Cowen shrugged and
stood up. Johnnie said to Betty, "I'm not going out in public with you
looking like that. Wash your face."
"But Johnnie!
It took two hours to put it on."
"The taxpayers
paid for it, didn't they?"
"Well, yes,
but. . ."
"Wash your
face. Or we go nowhere. Don't you agree, Miss Holtz?"
Special Operative
Holtz had only a flower pattern adorning her left cheek, aside from the usual
tinting. She said thoughtfully, "Betty doesn't need it. Not at her
age."
"Oh, you're a
couple of Puritans!" Betty said bitterly, stuck her tongue at Johnnie and
slouched into the bath. She came out with her face glowing pink from scrubbing.
"Now I'm stark naked. Let's go."
There was another
tussle at the lift, which Ed Cowen won. They went to the roof to take an air
taxi for sightseeing, instead of going down to the streets. "Both you kids
have had your faces spread around the papers the past few days. And this town
has more crackpots than a second-hand shop. I don't want any incidents."
"If you hadn't
let them bully me, my face wouldn't be recognizable."
"But his
would."
"We could
paint him, too. Any male face would be improved with make-up." But she
entered the lift and they took an air taxi.
"Where to,
Chief?"
"Oh,"
said Cowen, "cruise around and show us sights. Put it on the hourly
rate."
"You're the
doctor. I can't fly across the Boulevard of Suns. Some parade, or
something."
"I know."
"Look,"
put in Johnnie, "take us to the space port."
"No,"
Cowen corrected. "Not out there."
"Why not, Ed?
I haven't seen Lummox yet. I want to look at him. He may not be well."
"That's one
thing you can't do," Cowen told him. "The Hroshii ship is out of bounds."
"Well, I can
see him from the air, can't I?"
"No!"
"But. .
."
"Never mind
him," Betty advised. "We'll get another taxi. I've got money,
Johnnie. So long, Ed."
"Look,"
complained the driver. "I'll take you to Timbuctu. But I can't hang around
over a landing flat. The cops get rude about it."
"Head for the
space port," Cowen said resignedly. There was a barricade around the many
acres assigned to the Hroshii except where it had been broken to let their
delegation enter the Boulevard of Suns, and even then the barricade joined
others carrying on down the avenue toward the administrative group. Inside the
enclosure the landing craft of the Hroshii sat squat and ugly, almost as large
as a terrestrial star ship. Johnnie looked at it and wondered what it was going
to be like to be on Hroshijud. He was uncomfortable at the thought, not because
he was fearful but because he had not yet told Betty that he was going. He had
started a couple of times but it had not worked out right.
Since she had not
raised the subject he assumed that she did not know.
There were other
sightseers in the air, and a crowd, not very thick, outside the barricade. No
single wonder lasted long in Capital; its residents prided themselves on being
blasé and in fact, the Hroshii were not fantastic compared with a dozen other
friendly races, some of them members of the Federation.
The Hroshii swarmed
around the base of their ship, doing unexplained things with artifacts they had
erected. Jo'hnnie tried to estimate their number, found it like guessing beans
in a bottle. Dozens, surely. . . how many more?
The taxi cruised
just outside the point patrol of police air cars. Johnnie suddenly called out,
"Hey! There's Lummie!"
Betty craned her
neck. "Where, Johnnie?"
"Corning into
sight on the far side of their ship. There!" He turned to the driver.
"Say, mister, could you put us around on the far side as close in as
they'll let you?"
The driver glanced
at Cowen, who nodded. They swung around, the police sentries and came in toward
the Hroshij craft from the far side. The driver picked a point between two
police cars and back a little. Lummox could be seen clearly now, closely
attended by a group of Hroshii and towering over them.
"I wish I had
binox," Johnnie complained. "I can't really see."
"Pair in the
glove compartment," offered the driver. Johnnie got them out. They were a
simple optical type, without electronic magnification, but they brought Lummox
up much closer. He stared into his friend's face.
"How does
Lummie look, Johnnie?"
"Okay. Kind of
skinny, though. I wonder if they are feeding him right?"
"Mr. Greenberg
tells me they aren't feeding Lummie at all. I thought you knew?"
"What? They
can't do that to Lummie!"
"I don't see
what we can do about it."
"Well. .
." John Thomas lowered the window and tried to get a better look.
"Say, can't you take it in closer? And lower maybe? I want to give him a
good checking over."
Cowen shook his
head. The driver grumbled, "I don't want no words with the cops." But
he did move in a little closer until he was lined up with the police cars.
Almost at once the
speaker in the car's overhead blared, "Hey, you! Number four eighty-four!
Where do you think you're going with that can? Drag it out of there!"
The driver muttered
and started to obey. John Thomas, still with the glasses to his eyes, said,
"Aw!". . . then added, "I wonder if he can hear me?
Lummie!" he shouted into the wind. "Oh Lummox!"
The Hroshia raised
her head and looked wildly around.
Cowen grabbed John
Thomas and reached for the window closure; But Johnnie shook free. "Oh,
you go fry eggs!" he said angrily. "I've been pushed around long
enough. Lummox! It's Johnnie, boy! Over here! Come over this way. .
."
Cowen dragged him
inside and slammed the window shut. "I knew we shouldn't have come out.
Driver, let's get out of here."
"Only too
happy!"
"But hold it
just back of the police lines. I want to check on this."
"Make up your
mind."
It needed no
binoculars to see what was happening. Lummox headed straight for the barrier,
on a bee line with the taxi, scattering other Hroshii right and left. On
reaching the barrier no attempt was made to flow over it; Lummox went through
it.
"Jumping
jeepers!" Cowen said softly. "But the tanglefoot will stop her."
It did not. Lummox
slowed down, but one mighty foot followed another, as if the charged air had
been deep mud. With the persistence of a glacier the Hroshia was seeking the
point most closely under the taxi.
And more Hroshii
were pouring out the gap. They made still heavier weather of the immobilizing
field, but still they came. As Cowen watched, Lummox broke free of the zone and
came on at a gallop, with people scattering ahead of her.
Cowen snapped,
"Myra, get through on another circuit to the military! I'll call the
office."
Betty grabbed his
sleeve. "No!"
'Huh? You again!
Shut up or you'll get the back of my hand."
"Mr. Cowen,
will you listen." She went on hastily, "It’s no good calling
for help. There isn't anybody who can make Lummox listen but Johnnie-and they
won't listen to anybody but Lummox. You know that. So put him down where
he can talk to Lummie-or you're going to have a lot of people hurt and it will
be all your fault."
Security Operative
First Class Edwin Cowen stared at her and reviewed in his mind his past career
and future hopes. Then he made a brave decision almost instantly. "Take
her down," he snapped. "Land her and let the kid and me out."
The driver groaned.
"I'm charging extra for this." But he landed the car so fast that it
jarred them. Cowen snatched the door open and he and John Thomas burst out;
Myra Holtz tried to grab Betty, was unsuccessful. She herself jumped out as the
driver was already raising.
"Johnnie!"
squealed Lummox and held out mighty arms in a universal gesture of welcome.
John Thomas ran to
the star beast. "Lummie! Are you all right?"
"Sure,"
agreed Lummox. "Why not? Hi, Betty."
"Hi,
Lummie."
"Hungry,
though," Lummox added thoughtfully.
"We'll change
that."
"It's all
right. I'm not supposed to eat now."
John Thomas started
to answer this amazing statement when he noticed Miss Holtz ducking away from
one of the Hroshii. Others were milling around as if uncertain how to treat
this development. When Johnnie saw Ed Cowen draw his gun and place himself
between the Hroshiu and Myra he said suddenly, "Lummox! These are my
friends. Tell your friends to leave them alone-and get back inside.
Quickly!"
"Whatever you
say, Johnnie." The Hroshia spoke in the whining speech to her kin; at once
she was obeyed.
"And make us a
saddle. We'll go with you and have a long talk."
"Sure,
Johnnie."
They got aboard,
Johnnie giving Betty a hand up, and started in through the break in the
barrier. When Lummox struck the tanglefoot field again they stopped and Lummox
spoke sharply to one of the others.
That Hroshiu called
out to one inside; the tanglefoot field disappeared. They moved on in without
difficulty.
When Mr. Kiku,
Sergei Greenberg, and Dr Ftaeml arrived they found an armed truce, tense on
both sides. All the Hroshii were back inside the broken barrier; military craft
in quantity had replaced the police patrol and far overhead, out of sight,
bombers were ready in final extremity to turn the area into a radioactive
desert.
The Secretary
General and the Chief of Staff met them at the barricade. The Secretary General
looked grave. "Ah, Henry. It seems we have failed. Not your fault."
Mr. Kiku looked out
at the massed Hroshii. "Perhaps." The Chief of Staff added, "We
are evacuating the blast radius as rapidly as possible. But if we have to do
it, I don't know what we can do for those two youngsters in there."
"Then let's
not do anything, shall we? Not yet."
"I don't think
you understand the seriousness of the situation, Mr. Under Secretary. For
example, we placed an immobilizing locus entirely around this area. It's gone.
They cancelled it out. Not just here. Everywhere."
"So. Perhaps you
do not understand the seriousness of the situation, General. In any case, a few
words can do no harm. Come, Sergei. Coming, Doctor?" Mr. Kiku left the
group around the Secretary General and headed for the break in the barricade.
Wind sweeping across the miles-wide field forced him to clutch his hat. "I
do not like wind," he complained to Dr. Ftaeml. "It is
disorderly."
"There is a
stronger wind ahead," the Rargyllian answered soberly. "My friend, is
this wise? They will not hurt me; I am their employee. But you. . ."
"What else can
I do?"
"I do not
know. But there are situations in which courage is useless."
"Possibly.
I've never found one yet."
"One finds
such a situation but once."
They were
approaching the solid mass of Hroshti around Lummox. They could make Out the
two humans on the back of the Hroshia a good hundred yards beyond. Kiku
stopped. "Tell them to get out of my way. I wish to approach the Hroshia
Lummox."
Ftaeml translated.
Nothing happened, though the Hroshii stirred uneasily. Greenberg said,
"Boss, how about asking Lummox and the kids to come out here? That crowd
doesn't smell friendly."
"No. I dislike
shouting into this wind. Please call out to the Stuart lad and tell him to have
them make way."
"Okay, boss.
It will be fun to tell my grandchildren-if I have grandchildren." He
cupped his mouth and shouted, "Johnnie! John Stuart! Tell Lummox to have
them clear a path."
"Sure!"
A path wide enough
for a column of troops opened as if swept with a broom. The little procession
moved down the ranks of Hroshii. Greenberg felt goose flesh crawl up and down
his back.
Mr. Kiku's only
worry seemed to be keeping his hat on in the wind. He swore primly while
clutching at his head. They stopped in front of Lummox. "Howdy, Mr.
Kiku," John Thomas called out. "Shall we come down?"
"Perhaps it
would be best."
Johnnie slid off,
then caught Betty. "Sorry we messed things up."
"So am I. If
you did. Will you introduce me to your friend, please?"
"Oh, sure.
Lummox, this is Mr. Kiku. He's a nice fellow, a friend of mine."
"How do you
do, Mr. Kiku."
"How do you
do, Lummox." Mr. Kiku looked, thoughtful. "Doctor, is not that the
commander, there by the Hroshia? The one with the ugly glint in his eye?"
The Rargyllian
looked. "Yes, it is he."
"Um. Ask him
if he has reported the conference to his mistress."
"Very
well." The medusoid spoke to the Hroshij commander, was answered. "He
says not."
"Um. John
Thomas, we concluded a treaty with the Hroshii to permit all that I discussed
with you. Suddenly they repudiated the agreement when they discovered that we
would not surrender your person without guarantees. Will you help me find out
if such were the wishes of your friend?"
"You mean
Lummox? Sure."
"Very well.
Wait a moment. Dr. Ftaeml, will you report the essentials of our agreement to
the Hroshia Lummox-in the presence of the commander? Or are the concepts beyond
her?"
"Eh? Why
should they be? She was perhaps two hundred of your years old when she was
brought here."
"So much?
Well, speak ahead."
The Rargyllian
commenced the curious whines of the Hroshij tongue, addressing Lummox. Once or
twice Lummox interrupted, then allowed him to continue. When Dr. Ftaeml had
finished she spoke to the expedition commander. Ftaeml said to the humans,
"She asks, 'Can this be true?'"
The commander made
as wide a circle as space permitted, crept up in front of her, with the little
group representing the Federation giving way. His legs were retracted so that
he crawled like a caterpillar. Without lifting his head from the ground he
whined his answer.
"He is
admitting the truth but pleading necessity."
"I wish he
would hurry with it," Kiku fretted. "I'm getting chilly." His
thin knees trembled.
"She is not
accepting the explanation. I will spare you the exact tenor of her language-but
her rhetoric is superb."
Suddenly Lummox
spat out one squeal, then reared up with four legs clear of the ground. With
arms retracted the great beast swung down her head and struck the unfortunate
commander a smashing sidewise blow,
It lifted him off
the ground, bowled him into the crowd. Slowly he regained his feet, slunk back
to the spot in front of Lummox.
Lummox began to
speak. "She is saying. . . I wish you could hear this in her language!.. .
that so long as the Galaxy shall last the friends of Johnnie are her friends.
She adds that those who are not friends of her friends are nothing, less than
nothing, never to be suffered in her sight. She commands this in the names of.
. . it is a recitation of her ancestry with all its complicated branches and is
somewhat tedious. Shall I attempt to translate?"
"Don't
bother," Mr. Kiku told him. " 'Yes' is 'yes' in any language."
"But she tells
it with great beauty," Ftaeml said. "She is recalling to them things
dreadful and wonderful, reaching far into the past."
"I am
interested only in how it affects the future. . . and in getting out of this
pesky wind." Mr. Kiku sneezed.
"Oh
dear!"
Dr. Ftaeml took his
cape off and hung it around Mr. Kiku's narrow shoulders. "My friend. . .
my brother. I am sorry."
"No, no, you
will be cold."
"Not I."
"Let us share
it, then."
"I am
honored," the medusoid answered softly, his tendrils twitching with
emotion. He spread it around them and they huddled together while Lummox finished
her peroration. Betty turned to Johnnie.
"That's more
than you ever did for me."
"Now, Slugger,
you know you're never cold."
"Well, put
your arm around me at least."
"Huh? In front
of everybody? Go snuggle up to Lummox."
While speaking
Lummox had stayed reared up. As the oration progressed the assembled Hroshii
sank down, retracting their legs until they were all in the humble position of
the commander. At last it was over and Lummox added one sharp remark. The
Hroshii stirred and began to move. "She says," translated Ftaeml,
"that she now wishes to be alone with her friends."
"Ask
her;" directed Kiku, "please to assure her friend John Thomas that
all she has said is true and binding."
"Very
well." As the other Hroshii hurried away Ftaeml spoke briefly to Lummox.
Lummox listened,
then turned to John Thomas. Out of the great mouth came the piping, little-girl
voice. "That's right, Johnnie. Cross my heart."
John Thomas nodded
solemn agreement. "Don't worry, Mr. Kiku. You can depend on it."
XVII
Ninety-Seven
Pickle Dishes
"Send her
in."
Mr. Kiku composed
himself nervously, giving the tea tray one last glance, making sure that the
intimate little conference room was all that he wished of it. While he was thus
fussing a door dilated and Betty Sorenson walked in, said sweetly, 'Hello, Mr.
Kiku," and seated herself with composure.
He said, "How
do you do, Miss Sorenson?"
"Call me
Betty. My friends all do."
"Thank you. I
would wish to be one." He looked her over and shuddered. Betty had been
experimenting with a new design of bars; it made her face somewhat like a
checker board. Besides that she had evidently been shopping and was dressed in
styles far too old for her. Mr. Kiku was forced to remind himself that customs
varied. "Um. . . my dear young lady, the purpose of this consultation is
somewhat difficult to explain."
"Make it easy
on yourself. I'm in no hurry."
"Will you have
tea?"
"Let me pour
for us. It's chummier." He allowed her to, then sat back with his cup in a
relaxed attitude he did not feeL
"I trust you
have been enjoying your stay?"
"Oh my, yes!
I've never been able to shop before without counting pennies. Everybody should
have an expense account."
"Enjoy it I
assure you it will never show in the annual budget. . . literally. Our
discretionary fund. Uh, you are an orphan, are you not?"
"A legal
orphan. I'm a Free Child. My guardian is the Westville Home for Free Children.
Why?"
"Then you are
not of age?"
"Depends on
how you look at it. I think I am, the court says I'm not. But it won't be long
now, thank goodness."
"Um, yes.
Perhaps I should say that I knew all this,"
"I figured you
did. What's it all about?"
"Um. Perhaps I
should tell a little story. Did you ever raise rabbits? Or cats?"
"I've had
cats."
"We have run
into a difficulty with the Hroshia we know as Lummox. Nothing disastrous; our
treaty with them is not affected, since she has given her word. But, uh, shall
we say that if we could oblige Lummox in a certain matter, it would make for
better feelings, better future relations?"
"I suppose we
shall say so, if you say so. What is it, Mr. Kiku?"
'Um. We are both
aware that this Hroshia Lummox has long been a pet of John Thomas Stuart."
"Why, certainly.
It worked out funny, didn't it?"
"Um, yes. And
that Lummox was the pet of John Thomas's father before him, and so on for four
generations."
"Yes, of
course. Nobody could want a sweeter pet."
"Now, that is
just the point, Miss Sorenson. . . Betty. That is the point of view of John
Thomas and his forebears. But there are always at least two points of view.
From the viewpoint of Lummox she. . . he. . . was not a pet. Quite the
contrary. John Thomas was his pet. Lummox was engaged in raising John
Thomases."
Betty's eyes
widened, then she started to laugh and choked. "Mr. Kiku! Oh no!"
"I am quite
serious. It is a matter of viewpoint and made more reasonable by considering
relative lifetimes. Lummox had raised several generations of John Thomases. It
was Lummox's only hobby and principal interest. Childish, but Lummox was, and
still is, a child."
Betty got herself
under control to the point where she could talk through giggles. ''Raising John
Thomases." Does Johnnie know about this?"
"Well, yes,
but I explained it to him somewhat differently."
"Does Mrs.
Stuart know about this?"
"Ah. . . I
haven't found it necessary to tell her."
"May I tell
her? I want to see her face. 'John Thomases'. . . oh my!"
"I think that
would be cruel," Mr. Kiku answered stiffly.
"I suppose so.
All right, I won't do it. But I can dream about it, can't I?"
"We all can
dream. But to continue: Lummox appears to have been perfectly happy with this
innocent hobby. It was the Hroshia's intention to continue it indefinitely.
That was the reason that we found ourselves faced with this curious dilemma of
being unable to get the Hroshii to leave after their sibling had been restored.
Lummox wished to continue, uh, raising John Thomases." He hesitated.
Finally Betty said,
"Well, Mr. Kiku? Go on."
"Uh, what are
your own plans, Betty. . . Miss Sorenson?"
"Mine? I
haven't discussed them with anyone."
"Um. Pardon me
if I was unduly personal. You see, there are requirements in any endeavor and
Lummox, it appears, is aware of one of the requirements. . . uh, let's put it
this way. If we have here a rabbit. . . or a cat. . ." He stopped dead, unable
to go on.
She searched his
unhappy face. "Mr. Kiku, are you trying to say that it takes two rabbits
to have more rabbits?"
"Well, yes.
That was part of it."
"Now, really!
Why make such a fuss about it? Everybody knows it. I suppose the rest is that
Lummox knows that the same rule applies to John Thomases?"
He could only nod
dumbly.
"You poor
dear, you should have written me a note about it. It would have been less of a
strain on you. I suppose I'll have to help you with the rest, too. You thought
I might figure in this plan?"
"I had no wish
to intrude. . . but I did want to sound out your intentions."
"Am I going to
marry John Thomas? I've never had any other intention. Of course."
Mr. Kiku sighed.
"Thank you."
"Oh, I won't
be doing it to please you."
"Oh no! I was
thanking you for assisting me."
"Thank Lummie.
Good old Lummie! You can't fool Lummox."
"I take it
that this is all settled?"
"Huh? I
haven't proposed to him yet. But I will. . . I was waiting until it was a
little nearer time for the ship to leave. You know how men are-nervous and
skittery. I didn't want to leave him time to worry. Did your wife propose to
you right off? Or did she wait until you were ripe for the kill?"
"Uh, well, the
customs of my people are somewhat different. Her father arranged it with my
father."
Betty looked
shocked. "Slavery," she stated baldly.
"No doubt.
However I have not been unhappy under it." He stood up. "I'm glad
that we have concluded our talk so amiably."
"Just a
moment, Mr. Kiku. There are one or two other matters. Just what are you doing
for John Thomas?"
"Eh?"
"What's the
contract?"
"Oh.
Financially we mean to be liberal. He will devote most of his time to his
education, but I had thought of giving him a nominal title in the
embassy-special attaché, or assistant secretary, or some such."
Betty remained
silent. "Of course, since you are going along, it might be well to give
you a semi-official status, too. Say special aide, with the same salary? It
would give you two a nice nest egg if you return. . .when you return."
She shook her head.
"Johnnie isn't ambitious. I am."
"Yes?"
"Johnnie is to
be ambassador to the Hroshii."
Mr. Kiku had grave
trouble talking. At last he managed to say, "My dear young lady. Quite
impossible."
"That's what
you think. Look, Mr. MacClure got cold feet and welched on you, didn't he?
Don't beat around the bush; by now I have my connections inside your
department. He did. Therefore the job is open. It's for Johnnie."
"But, my
dear," he said weakly, "it is not a job for an untrained boy. . .
much as I think of Mr. Stuart."
"MacClure was
going to be dead wood, wasn't he? Everybody knows that. Johnnie would not be
dead wood. Who knows the most about Hroshii? Johnnie."
"My dear, I
admit his special knowledge; I grant that we will make use of it. But
ambassador? No."
"Yes."
"Chargé
d'Affaires? That's an awfully high rank, but I'm willing to stretch a point But
Mr. Greenberg must be the ambassador. We require a diplomat."
"What's so
hard about being a diplomat? Or to put it another way, what could Mr. MacClure
do that my Johnnie can't do better?"
He sighed deeply.
"You have me there. All I can say is that there are situations which I am
forced to accept, knowing them to be wrong, and others that I need not accept.
If you were my own daughter I would paddle you. No."
She grinned at him.
"I'll bet I outweigh you. But that's not the point. I don't think you
understand the situation."
"No?"
"No. Johnnie
and I are important to you in this dicker, aren't we? Especially Johnnie."
"Yes.
Especially Johnnie. You are not essential . . even in the, uh, raising of John
Thomases."
"Want to put
it to a test? Do you think you can get John Thomas Stuart one half inch off
this planet if I set myself against it?"
"Hmm. . . I
wonder."
"So do I. But
I've got nerve enough to put it to a trial. If I win, where are you? Out on a
windy field, trying to talk your way out of a mess again. . . without Johnnie
to help you."
Mr. Kiku went over
to a window and looked out. Presently he turned. "More tea?" Betty
asked politely.
"Thank you,
no. Miss, do you have any idea what an ambassador extraordinary and minister
plenipotentiary is?"
"I've heard
the term."
"It is the
same rank and pay as an ambassador, except that it is a special case. This is a
special case. Mr. Greenberg will be the ambassador and carry the authority; the
special, and purely nominal, rank will be created for John Thomas."
"Rank and
pay," she answered. "I'm acquiring a taste for shopping."
"And
pay," he agreed. "Young lady, you have the morals of a snapping
turtle and the crust of a bakery pie. Very well, it's a deal. . . if you can
get your young man to agree to it."
She giggled.
"I. won't have any trouble."'
"I didn't mean
that. I'm betting on his horse sense and natural modesty against your avarice.
I think he'll settle for assistant embassy secretary. We'll see."
"Oh, Yes,
we'll see. By the way, where is he?"
"Eh?"
"He's not at
the hotel. You have him here, don't you?"
"He is here,
as a matter of fact."
"Good."
She walked up and patted him on the cheek. "I like you, Mr. Kiku. Now trot
Johnnie in here and leave us alone. It will take me about twenty minutes. You
don't have a thing to worry about."
"Miss
Sorenson," Mr. Kiku asked wonderingly, "how does it happen that you
do not ask to be ambassador yourself?"
Lummox was the only
non-human to attend the wedding. Mr. Kiku stood up for the bride. He noticed
that she was wearing no make-up, which made him wonder if possibly the
embassy's junior secretary might not be master in his own home after all.
They received the
usual ninety-seven pickle dishes, mostly from strangers, and other assorted
costly junk that they would not take with them, including an all-expense trip
to Hawaii for which they had no possible use. Mrs. Stuart wept and had her
picture taken and greatly enjoyed herself; all in all it was a very successful
wedding. Mr. Kiku leaked a few tears during the responses, but Mr. Kiku was a
very sentimental man.
He was sitting at
his desk the next morning, ignoring lights, with his Kenya-farm brochures
spread out before him, but he was not looking at them. Dr. Ftaeml and he had
gone out together and done the town after they got the kids safely married-and
Mr. Kiku was feeling it somewhat, in a pleasant, relaxed manner. Even though
his head buzzed and his coordination was poor, his stomach was not troubling
him. He felt fine.
He was trying
fuzzily to sum up the affair in his mind. All this fuss, all this grief,
because some fool spaceman more than a century ago didn't have sense enough not
to tamper with native life until protocol had been worked out. Oh my people, my
people!
On second thought,
he told himself not to point the finger of scorn; he might be looking in a
mirror.
There was something
that good old Ftaeml had said last night. . . something. . . now what was it he
had said? Something which, at the time, convinced Kiku that the Hroshii never
had had any weapons capable of seriously damaging Earth. Of course a Rargyllian
would not lie, not professionally. . . but would one skate around the truth in
order to conclude successfully a negotiation which seemed about to fail?
Well, since it had
all been settled without violence he could only wonder. Just as well, perhaps.
Besides, the next
heathens to show up might not be bluffing. That would not be good.
Mildred's voice
came to him. "Mr. Kiku, the Randavian delegation is waiting."
"Tell them I'm
molting!"
"Sir?"
"Never mind.
Tell them I'll be right in. East conference room."
He sighed, decided
to treat himself to just one pill, then got up and headed for the door, ready
to stick his finger in another hole in the dike. Chinese obligation, be
thought; once you take it on you can't drop it.
But he still felt
cheerful and sang a snatch of the only song he knew all the way through: ".
. . this story has no moral, this story has no end. This story only goes to
show that there ain't no good in men."
In the meantime, out at the space port, the
new Secretary for Spatial Affairs was seeing off the noble Hroshii. Her Imperial
Highness, the Infanta of that race, 213th of her line, heiress to the
matriarchy of the Seven Suns, future ruler over nine billion of her own kind,
and lately nicknamed "The Lummox" contentedly took her pair of pets
aboard the imperial yacht.