For
GINNY
Copyright
(c) 1967, by Robert A. Heinlein
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ELEVENTH
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COPYRIGHT
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS: Life-Line, Copyright, 1939, by Street & Smith Publications,
Inc. The Roads Must Roll, Copyright, 1940, by Street & Smith Publications,
Inc. Blowups Happen, Copyright, 1940, by Street & Smith Publications, Inc.
The Man Who Sold the Moon, Copyright, 1949, by Robert A. Heinlein, Delilah and
the Space-Rigger, Copyright, 1949, by McCall Corporation, Inc. Space Jockey,
Copyright, 1947, by The Curtis Publishing Co. Requiem, Copyright, 1939, by
Street & Smith Publications, Inc. The Long Watch, Copyright, 1948, by The
American Legion. Gentlemen, Be Seated, Copyright, 1948, by Popular
Publications, Inc. The Black Pits of Luna, Copyright, 1947, by The Curtis
Publishing Co. "It's Great to Be Back!", Copyright, 1946, by The
Curtis Publishing Co. "-We Also Walk Dog?', Copyright, 1941, by Street
& Smith Publications, Inc. Searchlight, Copyright, 1962, by Carson Roberts,
Inc. Ordeal in Space, Copyright, 1947, by Hearst Publications, Inc. The Green
Hills of Earth, Copyright, 1947, by The Curtis Publishing Co. Logic of Empire,
Copyright, 1941, by Street & Smith Publications, Inc. The Menace from
Earth, Copyright, 1957, by Fantasy House, Inc. "If This Goes On-",
Copyright, 1940, by Street & Smith Publications, Inc. Coventry, Copyright,
1940, by Street & Smith Publications, Inc. Misfit, Copyright, 1939, by
Street & Smith Publications, Inc. Methuselah's Children-Earlier, shorter
version Copyright, 1941, by Street & Smith Publications, Inc. Copyright,
1958, by Robert A. Heinlein.
CONTENTS
Introduction
by Damon Knight
Life-Line
The
Roads Must Roll
Blowups
Happen.
The Man
Who Sold the Moon
Delilah
and the Space-Rigger
Space
Jockey
Requiem
The
Long Watch
Gentlemen,
Be Seated
The
Black Pits of Luna
It's
Great to Be Back!
We Also
Walk Dogs
Searchlight
Ordeal
in Space
The
Green Hills of Earth
Logic
of Empire
The
Menace from Earth
If This
Goes On
Coventry
Misfit
Methuselah's
Children
Introduction
by Damon Knight
The
year is 1967, and in Carmel, California, a retired admiral named Robert A.
Heinlein is tending his garden. Commissioned in 1929, he served through World
War II with distinction, taught aeronautical engineering for a few years, then
became a partner in a modestly successful electronics firm. Aside from his
neighbors, his business associates and Navy friends, no one has ever heard of
him.
This is a likely story, but not true. What
really happened is much less probable: six years after graduation from the
Naval Academy, while serving on a destroyer, Heinlein contracted tuberculosis.
He spent a couple of years in bed, then was retired at the age of 27.
Like the consumptive Robert Louis
Stevenson, like Mark Twain, whose career as a river-boat pilot was swept away
by the war, Heinlein turned to writing almost at random, because he could not
lead the more active life he would have preferred. Cut adrift from the Navy and
from the life-line that would have led him to that rose garden in Carmel, he
took graduate courses in physics and mathematics, intending to pursue his old
dream of becoming an astronomer, but was again forced to drop out because of
poor health. He tried his hand at silver mining, politics, real estate, without
conspicuous success.
Then, in 1939, he happened across the
announcement of an amateur short-story contest in a magazine called Thrilling
Wonder Stories. The prize was $50, not a fortune, but not to be sneezed at.
Heinlein wrote a story, called it 'Life-Line', and submitted it, not to the
contest editor, but to John W. Campbell, editor of Astounding Science-Fiction.
Campbell bought it, and the next one, and the next. Heinlein's reaction was,
'How long has this been going on? And why didn't anybody ever tell me?' Except
for the war years, which he spent at the Naval Air Experimental Station in
Philadelphia in 'the necessary tedium of aviation engineering', he never did
anything else for a living again. In the February, 1941, issue of Astounding,
in which two Heinlein stories appeared (one under the pseudonym Anson
MacDonald), the editor wrote:
Robert A. Heinlein's back again next month
with the cover story, "Logic of Empire". This story is, as usual with
Heinlein's material, a soundly worked out, fast-moving yarn, more than able to
stand on its own feet. But in connection with it, I'd like to mention something
that may or may not have been noticed by the regular readers of Astounding: all
Heinlein's science-fiction is laid against a common background of a proposed
future history of the world and of the United States. Heinlein's worked the
thing out in detail that grows with each story; he has an outlined and graphed
history of the future with characters, dates of major discoveries, et cetera,
plotted in. i'm trying to get him to let me have a photostat of that history
chart; if I lay hands on it, I'm going to publish it.'
He published the chart three months
later-the same chart, with some modifications and additions, that appears in
this book. Heinlein had the cover of that issue too, with a story called
'Universe'.
'Future History' is Campbell's phrase, not
Heinlein's, and the author has sometimes been mildly embarrassed by it. This
connected series of stories does not pretend to be prophetic. It is a history,
not of the future, but of a future-an alternate probability world (perhaps the
same one in which the retired Rear Admiral is tending his roses) which is
logically self consistent, dramatic, and recognizably an offshoot of our own
past. The stories really do not form a linear series at all-they are more like
a pyramid, in which earlier stories provide a solid base for later ones to rest
on.
Partly because of this pyramiding of
background and partly because of the author's broad knowledge-about which more
in a moment-Heinlein's readers find themselves in a world which is clearly our
own, only projected a few years or decades into the future. There have been
changes, naturally, but they are things you feel you could adjust to without
much trouble. People are still people: they read Time magazines, are worried
about money, smoke Luckies, argue with theft wives.
It is easy to say what the ideal science
fiction writer would be like. He would be a talented and imaginative writer,
trained in the physical and social sciences and in engineering, with a broad
and varied experience of people - not only scientists and engineers, but
secretaries, lawyers, labor leaders, admen, newspapermen, politicians,
businessmen. The trouble is that no one in his senses would spend the time to
acquire all this training and background merely in order to write science
fiction. But Heinlein had it all.
Far more of Heinlein's work comes out of
his own experience than most people realize. When he doesn't know something
himself, he is too conscientious a workman to guess at it: he goes and finds
out. His stories are full of precisely right details, the product of
painstaking research. But many of the things he writes about, including some
that strain the reader's credulity, are from his own life. A few examples, out
of many:
The elaborate discussion of the problems
of linkages in designing household robots, in The Door Into Summer. Heinlein
was an engineer, specializing in linkages.
The hand-to-hand combat skills of the
heroes of such stories as Gulf and Glory Road. Heinlein himself is an expert
marksman, swordsman and rough-and-tumble fighter.
The redheaded and improbably multi-skilled
heroine of The Puppet Masters and other Heinlein stories. Heinlein's redheaded
wife Ginny is a chemist, biochemist, aviation test engineer, experimental
horticulturist; she earned varsity letters at N.Y.U. in swimming, diving,
basketball and field hockey, and became a competitive figure skater after
graduation; she speaks seven languages so far, and is starting on an eighth.
The longevity of the 'Families' in
Methuselah's Children. Five of Heinlein's six brothers and sisters are still
living. So is his mother: she is 87, 'frail, but very much alive and mentally
active.' All the returns are not in yet.
Even the improbably talented families that
appear in The Rolling Stones and elsewhere are not wild inventions: Heinlein
himself played chess before he could read. Of his three brothers, one is a
professor of electrical engineering, one a professor of political science, and
the third is a retired major general who 'made it the hard way - i.e., from private
right up through every rank without any college education at all.'
Like Mark Twain, Heinlein is from
Missouri. It shows in his skepticism, his rich appreciation of human absurdity,
and in an occasional turn of phrase - a taste for gaudily embellished understatement.
He has the Missourian admiration for competence of any kind, for those who can
get things done - even (or perhaps especially) if they bend a few rules in the
process. (Heinlein: 'I stood quite high at the Naval Academy and would have
stood much higher save for a tendency to collect "Black N's" - major
offenses against military discipline.') Unlike most modern novelists, he has no
patience with the unskilled and incompetent. Those who contribute most to the
world, Heinlein thinks, are also those who have the most fun. Those who
contribute nothing are objects of pity; and pity for the self-pitying is not
high on Heinlein's list of virtues. This tough-mindedness is an altogether
different thing from the cynicism of other writers. Heinlein is a moralist to
the core; he devoutly believes in courage, honor, self-discipline,
self-sacrifice for love or duty. Above all, he is a libertarian. 'When any
government, or any church for that matter, undertakes to say to its subjects,
"This you may not read, this you must not see, this you are forbidden to
know," the end result is tyranny and oppression, no matter how holy the
motives. Mighty little force is needed to control a man whose mind has been
hoodwinked; contrariwise, no amount of force can control a free man, a man
whose mind is free. No, not the rack, not fission bombs, not anything - you
can't conquer a free man; the most you can do is kill him.'
The author himself has often denied that
the stories in this book are prophecy. Yet it is apparent that some of
Heinlein's fictional forecasts have already come true - not literally but
symbolically. 'The Roads Must Roll' predicts urban sprawl, and anticipates
Jimmy Hoffa's threat of a nationwide transport strike. The 1969 newspaper
headlines in Methuselah's Children, illustrating the character of 'The Crazy
Years' - Heinlein's term for the present era - seem less fantastic now than
they did in 1941.
'Blowups Happen', written and published
five years before the Bomb, is based on a series of shrewd guesses that turned
out to be wrong. The specific dilemma of that story never became real;
nevertheless, it mirrors the real, agonizing dilemma of atomic power with which
we have been living since 1945.
Some of
these stories are minor entertainments, but one, at least, is a major work of
art: 'The Man Who Sold the Moon'.
Written with deceptive ease and
simplicity, it functions brilliantly on half a dozen levels at once. It is a
story of man's conquest of the Moon, a penetrating essay on robber-baron
capitalism, and a warm, utterly convincing and human portrait of an
extraordinary man.
As for the still-unfolding future, there
are guideposts and warnings here. Heinlein continually reminds us that history
is a process, not something dead and embalmed in textbooks. The ultimate
problem is man's control of his own inventions-not only the minor ones, like
the crossbow and the atom bomb, but the major inventions-language, culture and
technology. We are a tough and resourceful lot, all things considered; our
descendants will need to be tougher and more resourceful still. The odds are
all against them. The stars are high, life is short, and the house always takes
a percentage. But Man himself is so unlikely that if he did not exist, his
possibility would not be worth discussing. Heinlein's money is on Man; and I
have a hunch that the next century will prove him right.
The
Anchorage
Milford,
Pennsylvania
Life-Line
THE
chairman rapped loudly for order. Gradually the catcalls and boos died away as
several self-appointed sergeants-at-arms persuaded a few hot-headed individuals
to sit down. The speaker on the rostrum by the chairman seemed unaware of the
disturbance. His bland, faintly insolent face was impassive. The chairman
turned to the speaker, and addressed him, in a voice in which anger and
annoyance were barely restrained.
"Doctor Pinero," - the
"Doctor" was faintly stressed - "I must apologize to you for the
unseemly outburst during your remarks. I am surprised that my colleagues should
so far forget the dignity proper to men of science as to interrupt a speaker,
no matter," he paused and set his mouth, "no matter how great the
provocation." Pinero smiled in his face, a smile that was in some way an
open insult. The chairman visibly controlled his temper and continued, "I
am anxious that the program be concluded decently and in order. I want you to
finish your remarks. Nevertheless, I must ask you to refrain from affronting
our intelligence with ideas that any educated man knows to be fallacious. Please
confine yourself to your discovery - if you have made one."
Pinero spread his fat white hands, palms
down. "How can I possibly put a new idea into your heads, if I do not
first remove your delusions?"
The audience stirred and muttered. Someone
shouted from the rear of the hail, "Throw the charlatan out! We've had
enough." The chairman pounded his gavel.
"Gentlemen! Please!" Then to
Pinero, "Must I remind you that you are not a member of this body, and
that we did not invite you?"
Pinero's eyebrows lifted. "So? I seem
to remember an invitation on the letterhead of the Academy?"
The chairman chewed his lower lip before
replying. "True. I wrote that invitation myself. But it was at the request
of one of the trustees - a fine public-spirited gentleman, but not a scientist,
not a member of the Academy."
Pinero smiled his irritating smile.
"So? I should have guessed. Old Bidwell, not so, of Amalgamated Life
Insurance? And he wanted his trained seals to expose me as a fraud, yes? For if
I can tell a man the day of his own death, no one will buy his pretty policies.
But how can you expose me, if you will not listen to me first? Even supposing
you had the wit to understand me? Bah! He has sent jackals to tear down a
lion." He deliberately turned his back on them. The muttering of the crowd
swelled and took on a vicious tone. The chairman cried vainly for order. There
arose a figure in the front row.
"Mister Chairman!"
The chairman grasped the opening and
shouted, "Gentlemen! Doctor Van RheinSmitt has the floor." The
commotion died away.
The doctor cleared his throat, smoothed
the forelock of his beautiful white hair, and thrust one hand into a side
pocket of his smartly tailored trousers. He assumed his women's club manner.
"Mister Chairman, fellow members of
the Academy of Science, let us have tolerance. Even a murderer has the right to
say his say before the state exacts its tribute. Shall we do less? Even though
one may be intellectually certain of the verdict? I grant Doctor Pinero every
consideration that should be given by this august body to any unaffiliated
colleague, even though" - he bowed slightly in Pinero's direction -
"we may not be familiar with the university which bestowed his degree. If
what he has to say is false, it can not harm us. If what he has to say is true,
we should know it." His mellow cultivated voice rolled on, soothing and
calming. "If the eminent doctor's manner appears a trifle in urbane for
our tastes, we must bear in mind that the doctor may be from a place, or a
stratum, not so meticulous in these little matters. Now our good friend and
benefactor has asked us to hear this person and carefully assess the merit of
his claims. Let us do so with dignity and decorum."
He sat down to a rumble of applause,
comfortably aware that he had enhanced his reputation as an intellectual
leader. Tomorrow the papers would again mention the good sense and persuasive
personality of "America's handsomest University President". Who knew?
Perhaps old Bidwell would come through with that swimming pool donation.
When the applause had ceased, the chairman
turned to where the center of the disturbance sat, hands folded over his little
round belly, face serene.
"Will you continue, Doctor
Pinero?"
"Why should I?"
The chairman shrugged his shoulders.
"You came for that purpose."
Pinero arose. "So true. So very true.
But was I wise to come? Is there anyone here who has an open mind who can stare
a bare fact in the face without blushing? I think not. Even that so beautiful
gentleman who asked you to hear me out has already judged me and condemned me.
He seeks order, not truth. Suppose truth defies order, will he accept it? Will
you? I think not. Still, if I do not speak, you will win your point by default.
The little man in the street will think that you little men have exposed me,
Pinero, as a hoaxer, a pretender. That does not suit my plans. I will
speak."
"I will repeat my discovery. In
simple language I have invented a technique to tell how long a man will live. I
can give you advance billing of the Angel of Death. I can tell you when the
Black Camel will kneel at your door. In five minutes time with my apparatus I
can tell any of you how many grains of sand are still left in your
hourglass." He paused and folded his arms across his chest. For a moment
no one spoke. The audience grew restless. Finally the chairman intervened.
"You aren't finished, Doctor
Pinero?"
"What more is there to say?"
"You haven't told us how your
discovery works."
Pinero's eyebrows shot up. "You
suggest that I should turn over the fruits of my work for children to play
with. This is dangerous knowledge, my friend. I keep it for the man who
understands it, myself." He tapped his chest.
"How are we to know that you have
anything back of your wild claims?"
"So simple. You send a committee to
watch me demonstrate. If it works, fine. You admit it and tell the world so. If
it does not work, I am discredited, and will apologize. Even I, Pinero, will
apologize."
A slender stoop-shouldered man stood up in
the back of the hail. The chair recognized him and he spoke:
"Mr. Chairman, how can the eminent
doctor seriously propose such a course? Does he expect us to wait around for
twenty or thirty years for some one to die and prove his claims?"
Pinero ignored the chair and answered
directly:
"Pfui! Such nonsense! Are you so
ignorant of statistics that you do not know that in any large group there is at
least one who will die in the immediate future? I make you a proposition; let
me test each one of you in this room and I will name the man who will die
within the fortnight, yes, and the day and hour of his death." He glanced
fiercely around the room. "Do you accept?"
Another figure got to his feet, a portly
man who spoke in measured syllables. "I, for one, can not countenance such
an experiment. As a medical man, I have noted with sorrow the plain marks of
serious heart trouble in many of our elder colleagues. If Doctor Pinero knows
those symptoms, as he may, and were he to select as his victim one of their
number, the man so selected would be likely to die on schedule, whether the
distinguished speaker's mechanical egg-timer works or not."
Another speaker backed him up at once.
"Doctor Shepard is right. Why should we waste time on voodoo tricks? It is
my belief that this person who calls himself Doctor Pinero wants to use this
body to give his statements authority. If we participate in this farce, we play
into his hands. I don't know what his racket is, but you can bet that he has
figured out some way to use us for advertising for his schemes. I move, Mister
Chairman, that we proceed with our regular business."
The motion carried by acclamation, but
Pinero did not sit down. Amidst cries of "Order! Order!" he shook his
untidy head at them, and had his say:
"Barbarians! Imbeciles! Stupid dolts!
Your kind have blocked the recognition of every great discovery since time
began. Such ignorant canaille are enough to start Galileo spinning in his
grave. That fat fool down there twiddling his elk's, tooth calls himself a medical
man. Witch doctor would be a better term! That little baldheaded runt over
there - You! You style yourself a philosopher, and prate about life and time in
your neat categories. What do you know of either one? How can you ever learn
when you won't examine the truth when you have a chance? Bah!" He spat
upon the stage. "You call this an Academy of Science. I call it an
undertaker's convention, interested only in embalming the ideas of your
red-blooded predecessors."
He paused for breath and was grasped on
each side by two members of the platform committee and rushed out the wings.
Several reporters arose hastily from the press table and followed him. The
chairman declared the meeting adjourned.
The newspapermen caught up with him as he
was going out by the stage door. He walked with a light springy step, and
whistled a little tune. There was no trace of the belligerence he had shown a
moment before. They crowded about him. "How about an interview, doe?"
"What dyu think of Modem Education?" "You certainly told 'em.
What are your views on Life after Death?" "Take off your hat, doe,
and look at the birdie."
He grinned at them all. "One at a
time, boys, and not so fast. I used to be a newspaperman myself. How about
coming up to my place, and we'll talk about it?"
A few minutes later they were trying to
find places to sit down in Pinero's messy bed-living-room, and lighting his
cigars. Pinero looked around and beamed. "What'll it be, boys? Scotch, or
Bourbon?" When that was taken care of he got down to business. "Now,
boys, what do you want to know?"
"Lay it on the line, doe. Have you
got something, or haven't you?"
"Most assuredly I have something, my
young friend."
"Then tell us how it works. That guff
you handed the profs won't get you anywhere now."
"Please, my dear fellow. it is my
invention. I expect to make some money with it. Would you have me give it away
to the first person who asks for it?"
"See here, doe, you've got to give us
something if you expect to get a break in the morning papers. What do you use?
A crystal ball?"
"No, not quite. Would you like to see
my apparatus?"
"Sure. Now we are getting
somewhere."
He ushered them into an adjoining room,
and waved his hand. "There it is, boys." The mass of equipment that
met their eyes vaguely resembled a medico's office x-ray gear. Beyond the
obvious fact that it used electrical power, and that some of the dials were
calibrated in familiar terms, a casual inspection gave no clue to its actual
use.
"What's the principle, doe?"
Pinero pursed his lips and considered.
"No doubt you are all familiar with the truism that life is electrical in
nature? Well, that truism isn't worth a damn, but it will help to give you an
idea of the principle. You have also been told that time is a fourth dimension.
Maybe you believe it, perhaps not. It has been said so many times that it has
ceased to have any meaning. It is simply a cliché that windbags use to impress
fools. But I want you to try to visualize it now and try to feel it
emotionally."
He stepped up to one of the reporters.
"Suppose we, take you as an example. Your name is Rogers, is it not? Very
well, Rogers, you are a space-time event having duration four ways. You are not
quite six feet tall, you are about twenty inches wide and perhaps ten inches
thick. In time, there stretches behind you more of this space-time event
reaching to perhaps nineteen-sixteen, of which we see a cross-section here at
right angles to the time axis, and as thick as the present. At the far end is a
baby, smelling of sour milk and drooling its breakfast on its bib. At the other
end lies, perhaps, an old man someplace in the nineteen-eighties. Imagine this
space-time event which we call Rogers as a long pink worm, continuous through
the years, one end at his mother's womb, the other at the grave. It stretches
past us here and the cross-section we see appears as a single discrete body.
But that is illusion. There is physical continuity to this pink worm, enduring
through the years. As a matter of fact there is physical continuity in, this
concept to the entire race, for these pink worms branch off from other pink
worms. In this fashion the race is like a vine whose branches intertwine and
send Out shoots. Only by taking a cross-section of the vine would we fall into
the error of believing that the shootlets were discrete individuals."
He paused and looked around at their
faces. One of them, a dour hard-bitten chap, put in a word.
"That's all very pretty, Pinero; if
true, but where does that get you?"
Pinero favored him with an unresentful
smile. "Patience, my friend. I asked you to think of life as electrical.
Now think of our long pink worm as a conductor of electricity. You have heard,
perhaps, of the fact that electrical engineers can, by certain measurements,
predict the exact location of a break in a trans-Atlantic cable without ever
leaving the shore. I do the same with our pink worms. By applying my
instruments to the cross-section here in this room I can tell where the break
occurs, that is to say, when death takes place. Or, if you like, I can reverse
the connections and tell you the date of your birth. But that is uninteresting;
you already know it."
The dour individual sneered. "I've
caught you, doe. If what you said about the race being like a vine of pink
worms is true, you can't tell birthdays because the connection with the race is
continuous at birth. Your electrical. conductor reaches on back through the
mother into a man's remotest ancestors."
Pinero beamed, "True, and clever, my
friend. But you have pushed the analogy too far. It is not done in the precise
manner in which one measures the length of an electrical conductor. In some
ways it is more like measuring the length of a long corridor by bouncing an
echo off the far end. At birth there is a sort of twist in the corridor, and,
by proper calibration, I can detect the echo from that twist. There is just one
case in which I can get no determinant reading; when a woman is actually
carrying a child, I can't sort out her life-line from that of the unborn
infant."
"Let's see you prove it."
"Certainly, my dear friend. Will you
be a subject?"
One of the others spoke up. "He's
called your bluff, Luke. Put up, or shut up."
"I'm game. What do I do?"
"First write the date of your birth
on a sheet of paper, and hand it to one of your colleagues."
Luke complied. "Now what?"
"Remove your outer clothing and step
upon these scales. Now tell me, were you ever very much thinner, or very much
fatter, than you are now. No? What did you weigh at birth? Ten pounds? A fine
bouncing baby boy. They don't come so big any more."
"What is all this flubdubbery?"
"I am trying to approximate the
average cross-section of our long pink conductor, my dear Luke. Now will you
seat yourself here. Then place this electrode in your mouth. No, it will not
hurt you; the voltage is quite low, less than one micro-volt, but I must have a
good connection." The doctor left him and went behind his apparatus, where
he lowered a hood over his head before touching his controls. Some of the
exposed dials came to life and a low humming came from the machine. It stopped
and the doctor popped out of his little hide-away.
"I get sometime in February,
nineteen-twelve. Who has the piece of paper with the date?"
It was produced and unfolded. The
custodian read, "February 22nd, 1912."
The stillness that followed was broken by
a voice from the edge of the little group. "Doe, can I have another
drink?"
The tension relaxed, and several spoke at
once, "Try it on me, doe." "Me first, doe, I'm an orphan and
really want to know." "How about it, doe. Give us all a little loose
play."
He smilingly complied, ducking in and out
of the hood like a gopher from its hole. When they all had twin slips of paper
to prove the doctor's skill, Luke broke a long silence.
"How about showing how you predict
death, Pinero."
"If you wish. Who will try it?"
No one answered. Several of them nudged
Luke forward. "Go ahead, smart guy. You asked for it." He allowed
himself to be seated in the chair. Pinero changed some of the switches, then
entered the hood. When the humming ceased, he came out, rubbing his hands
briskly together.
"Well, that's all there is to see,
boys. Got enough for a story?"
"Hey, what about the prediction? When
does Luke get his 'thirty'?"
Luke faced him. "Yes, how about it?
What's your answer?"
Pinero looked pained. "Gentlemen, I
am surprised at you. I give that information for a fee. Besides, it is a
professional confidence. I never tell anyone but the client who consults
me."
"I don't mind. Go ahead and tell
them."
"I am very sorry. I really must
refuse. I agreed only to show you how, not to give the results."
Luke ground the butt of his cigarette into
the floor. "It's a hoax, boys. He probably looked up the age of every reporter
in town just to be ready to pull this. It won't wash, Pinero."
Pinero gazed at him sadly. "Are you
married, my friend?"
"Do you have any one dependent on
you? Any close relatives?"
"No. WHY, do you want to adopt
me?"
Pinero shook his head sadly. "I am
very sorry for you, my dear Luke. You will die before tomorrow."
"SCIENCE MEET ENDS IN RIOT"
"SAVANTS SAPS SAYS SEER"
"DEATH PUNCHES TIMECLOCK"
"SCRIBE DIES PER DOC'S DOPE"
"HOAX' CLAIMS SCIENCE HEAD"
"... within twenty minutes of
Pinero's strange prediction, Timons was struck by a falling sign while walking
down Broadway toward the offices of the Daily Herald where he was employed.
"Doctor Pinero declined to comment
but confirmed the story that he had predicted Timons' death by means of his
so-called chronovitameter. Chief of Police Roy..."
Does
the FUTURE worry You????????
Don't
waste money on fortune tellers -
Consult
Doctor Hugo Pinero, Bio-Consultant
to help
you plan for the future by
infallible
scientific methods.
No
Hocus-Pocus. No "Spirit" Messages.
$10,000
Bond posted in forfeit to back
our
predictions. Circular on request.
SANDS
of TIME, Inc.
Majestic
Bldg., Suite 700
(adv.)
- Legal
Notice
To whom it may concern, greetings; I, John
Cabot Winthrop III, of the firm Winthrop, Winthrop, Ditmars & Winthrop,
Attorneys-at-Law, do affirm that Hugo Pinero of this city did hand to me ten
thousand dollars in lawful money of the United States, and instruct me to place
it in escrow with a chartered bank of my selection with escrow instructions as
follows:.
The entire bond shall be forfeit, and
shall forthwith be paid to the first client of Hugo Pinero and/or Sands of
Time, Inc. who shall exceed his life tenure as predicted by Hugo Pinero by one
per centurn, or to the estate of the first client who shall fail of such
predicted tenure in a like amount, whichever occurs first in point of time.
I do further affirm that I have this day
placed this bond in escrow with the above related instructions with the
Equitable-First National Bank of this city.
Subscribed--and
sworn,
John
Cabot Winthrop Ill
Subscribed
and sworn to before me
this
2nd day of April, 1951.
Albert
M. Swanson
Notary
Public in and for this county and state
My
commission expires June 17, 1951.
"Good evening Mr. and Mrs. Radio
Audience, let's go to Press! Flash! Hugo Pinero, The Miracle Man from Nowhere,
has made his thousandth death prediction without a claimant for the reward he
posted for anyone who catches him failing to call the turn. With thirteen of
his clients already dead it is mathematically certain that - he has a private
line to the main office of the Old Man with the Scythe. That is one piece of
news I don't want to know before it happens. Your Coast-to-Coast Correspondent
will not be a client of Prophet Pinero. . ."
The judge's watery baritone cut through
the stale air of the courtroom. "Please, Mr. Weeds, let us return to our
muttons. This court granted your prayer for a temporary restraining order, and
now you ask that it be made permanent. In rebuttal, Mr. Pinero claims that you
have presented no cause and asks that the injunction be lifted, and that I
order your client to cease from attempts to interfere with what Pinero
describes as a simple - lawful business. As you are not addressing a jury,
please omit the rhetoric and tell me in plain language why I should not grant
his prayer."
Mr. Weeds jerked his chin nervously,
making his flabby Grey dewlap drag across his high stiff collar, and resumed:
"May it please the honorable court, I
represent the public-"
"Just a moment. I thought you were
appearing for Amalgamated Life Insurance."
"I am, Your Honor, in a formal sense.
In a wider sense I represent several other major assurance, fiduciary, and
financial institutions; their stockholders, and policy holders, who constitute
a majority of the citizenry. In addition we feel that we protect the interests
of the entire population; unorganized, inarticulate, and otherwise
unprotected."
"I thought that I represented the
public," observed the judge dryly. "I am afraid I must regard you as
appearing for your client-of-record. But continue; what is your thesis?"
The elderly barrister attempted to swallow
his Adam's apple, then began again. "Your Honor, we contend that there are
two separate reasons why this injunction should be made permanent, and,
further, that each reason is sufficient alone. In the first place, this person
is engaged in the practice of soothsaying, an occupation proscribed both in
common law and statute. He is a common fortune teller, a vagabond charlatan who
preys on the gullibility of the public. He is cleverer than the ordinary gypsy
palm-reader, astrologer, or table tipper, and to the same extent more
dangerous. He makes false claims of modern scientific methods to give a
spurious dignity to his thaumaturgy. We have here in court leading
representatives of the Academy of Science to give expert witness as to the
absurdity of his claims.
"In the second place, even if this
person's claims were true-granting for the sake of argument such an
absurdity" - Mr. Weems permitted himself a thin-lipped smile - "we
contend that his activities are contrary to the public interest in general, and
unlawfully injurious to the interests of my client in particular. We are
prepared to produce numerous exhibits with the legal custodians to prove that
this person did publish, or cause to have published, utterances urging the
public to dispense with the priceless boon of life insurance to the great
detriment of their welfare and to the financial damage of my client."
Pinero arose in his place. "Your
Honor, may I say a few words?"
"What is it?"
"I believe I can simplify the
situation if permitted to make a brief analysis."
"Your Honor," cut in Weems,
"this is most irregular."
"Patience, Mr. Weems. Your interests
will be protected. It seems to me that we need more light and less noise in
this matter. If Dr. Pinero can shorten the proceedings by speaking at this
time, I am inclined to let him. Proceed, Dr. Pinero."
"Thank you, Your Honor. Taking the
last of Mr. Weems' points first, I am prepared to stipulate that I published
the utterances he speaks of"
"One moment, Doctor. You have chosen
to act as your own attorney. Are you sure you are competent to protect your own
interests?"
"I am prepared to chance it, Your
Honor. Our friends here can easily prove what I stipulate."
"Very well. You may proceed."
"I will stipulate that many persons
have cancelled life insurance policies as a result thereof, but I challenge
them to show that anyone so doing has suffered any loss or damage there from.
It is true that the Amalgamated has lost business through my activities, but
that is the natural result of my discovery, which has made their policies as
obsolete as the bow and arrow. If an injunction is granted on that ground, I
shall set up a coal oil lamp factory, then ask for an injunction against the
Edison and General Electric companies to forbid them to manufacture
incandescent bulbs."
"I will stipulate that I am engaged
in the business of making predictions of death, but I deny that I am practicing
magic, black, white, or rainbow colored. If to make predictions by methods of
scientific accuracy is illegal, then the actuaries of the Amalgamated have been
guilty for years in that they predict the exact percentage that will die each
year in any given large group. I predict death retail; the Amalgamated predicts
it wholesale. If their actions are legal, how can mine be illegal?"
"I admit that it makes a difference
whether I can do what I claim, or not; and I will stipulate that the so-called
expert witnesses from the Academy of Science will testify that I cannot. But
they know nothing of my method and cannot give truly expert testimony on
it."
"Just a moment, Doctor. Mr. Weems, is
it true that your expert witnesses are not conversant with Dr. Pinero's theory
and methods?"
Mr. Weems looked worried. He drummed on
the table top, then answered, "Will the Court grant me a few moments
indulgence?"
"Certainly."
Mr. Weems held a hurried whispered
consultation with his cohorts, then faced the bench. "We have a procedure
to suggest, Your Honor. If Dr. Pinero will take the stand and explain the
theory and practice of his alleged method, then these distinguished scientists
will be able to advise the Court as to the validity of his claims."
The judge looked inquiringly at Pinero,
who responded, "I will not willingly agree to that. Whether my process is
true or false, it would be dangerous to let it fall into the hands of fools and
quacks" he waved his hand at the group of professors seated in the front
row, paused and smiled maliciously "as these gentlemen know quite well.
Furthermore it is not necessary to know the process in order to prove that it
will work. Is it necessary to understand the complex miracle of biological
reproduction in order to observe that a hen lays eggs? Is it necessary for me
to reeducate this entire body of self-appointed custodians of wisdom - cure
them of their ingrown superstitions - in order to prove that my predictions are
correct? There are but two ways of forming an opinion in science. One is the
scientific method; the other, the scholastic. One can judge from experiment, or
one can blindly accept authority. To the scientific mind, experimental proof is
all important and theory is merely a convenience in description, to be junked
when it no longer fits. To the academic mind, authority is everything and facts
are junked when they do not fit theory laid down by authority."
"It is this point of view-academic
minds clinging like oysters to disproved theories-that has blocked every
advance of knowledge in history. I am prepared to prove my method by
experiment, and, like Galileo in another court, I insist, 'It still
moves!'"
"Once before I offered such proof to
this same body of self-styled experts, and they rejected it. I renew my offer;
let me measure the life lengths of the members of the Academy of Science. Let
them appoint a committee to judge the results. I will seal my findings in two
sets of envelopes; on the outside of each envelope in one set will appear the
name of a member, on the inside the date of his death. In the other envelopes I
will place names, on the outside I will place dates. Let the committee place
the envelopes in a vault, then meet from time to time to open the appropriate
envelopes. In such a large body of men some deaths may be expected, if
Amalgamated actuaries can be trusted, every week or two. In such a fashion they
will accumulate data very rapidly to prove that Pinero is a liar, or no."
He stopped, and pushed out his
little chest until it almost caught up with his little round belly. He glared
at the sweating savants. "Well?"
The judge raised his eyebrows, and caught
Mr. Weems' eye. "Do you accept?"
"Your Honor, I think the proposal
highly improper-"
The judge cut him short. "I warn you
that I shall rule against you if you do not accept, or propose an equally
reasonable method of arriving at the truth."
Weems opened his mouth, changed his mind,
looked up and down the faces of learned witnesses, and faced the bench.
"We accept, Your Honor."
"Very well. Arrange the details
between you. The temporary injunction is lifted, and Dr. Pinero must not be
molested in the pursuit of his business. Decision on the petition for permanent
injunction is reserved without prejudice pending the accumulation of evidence.
Before we leave this matter I wish to comment on the theory implied by you, Mr.
Weems, when you claimed damage to your client. There has grown up in the minds
of certain groups in this country the notion that because a man or corporation
has made a profit out of the public for a number of years, the government and
the courts are charged with the duty of guaranteeing such profit in the future,
even in the face of changing circumstances and contrary public interest. This
strange doctrine is not supported by statute nor common law. Neither
individuals nor corporations have any right to come into court and ask that the
clock of history be stopped, or turned back, for their private benefit. That is
all."
Bidwell grunted in annoyance. "Weems,
if you can't think up anything better than that, Amalgamated is going to need a
new chief attorney. It's been ten weeks since you lost the injunction, and that
little wart is coining money hand over fist. Meantime every insurance firm in
the country is going broke. Hoskins, what's our loss ratio?"
"It's hard to say, Mr. Bidwell. It
gets worse every day. We've paid off thirteen big policies this week; all of
them taken out since Pinero started operations."
A spare little man spoke up. "I say,
Bidwell, we aren't accepting any new applications for United until we have time
to check and be sure that they have not consulted Pinero. Can't we afford to
wait until the scientists show him up?"
Bidwell snorted. "You blasted
optimist! They won't show him up. Aldrich, can't you face a fact? The fat
little blister has got something; how I don't know. This is a fight to the
finish. If we wait, we're licked." He threw his cigar into a cuspidor, and
bit savagely into a fresh one. "Clear out of here, all of you! I'll handle
this my own way. You too, Aldrich. United may wait, but Amalgamated
won't."
Weems cleared his throat apprehensively.
"Mr. Bidwell, I trust you will consult with me before embarking on any
major change in policy?"
Bidwell grunted. They filed out. When they
were all gone and the door closed, Bidwell snapped the switch of the
inter-office announcer. "O.K.; send him in."
The outer door opened; a slight dapper
figure stood for a moment at the threshold. His small dark eyes glanced quickly
about the room before he entered, then he moved up to Bidwell with a quick soft
tread. He spoke to Bidwell in a flat emotionless voice. His face remained
impassive except for the live animal eyes. "You wanted to talk to
me?"
"Yes."
"What's the proposition?"
"Sit down, and we'll talk."
Pinero met the young couple at the door of
his inner office.
"Come in, my dears, come in. Sit
down. Make yourselves at home. Now tell me, what do you want of Pinero? Surely
such young people are not anxious about the final roll call?"
The boy's honest young face showed slight
confusion. "Well, you see, Dr. Pinero, I'm Ed Harley and this is my wife,
Betty. We're going to have-that is, Betty is expecting a baby and, well-"
Pinero smiled benignly. "I
understand. You want to know how long you will live in order to make the best
possible provision for the youngster. Quite wise. Do you both want readings, or
just yourself?"
The girl answered, "Both of us, we
think."
Pinero beamed at her. "Quite so. I
agree. Your reading presents certain technical difficulties at this time, but I
can give you some information now, and more later after your baby arrives. Now
come into my laboratory, my dears, and we'll commence." He rang for their
case histories, then showed them into his workshop. "Mrs. Harley first,
please. If you will go behind that screen and remove your shoes and your outer
clothing, please. Remember, I am an old man, whom you are consulting as you
would a physician."
He turned away and made some minor
adjustments of his apparatus. Ed nodded to his wife who slipped behind the
screen and reappeared almost at once, clothed in two wisps of silk. Pinero
glanced up, noted her fresh young prettiness and her touching shyness.
"This way, my dear. First we must
weigh you. There. Now take your place on the stand. This electrode in your
mouth. No, Ed, you mustn't touch her while she is in the circuit. It won't take
a minute. Remain quiet."
He dove under the machine's hood and the
dials sprang into life. Very shortly he came out with a perturbed look on his
face. "Ed, did you touch her?"
"No, Doctor." Pinero ducked back
again, remained a little longer. When he came out this time, he told the girl
to get down and dress. He turned to her husband.
"Ed, make yourself ready."
"What's Betty's reading,
Doctor?"
"There is a little difficulty. I want
to test you first."
When he came out from taking the youth's
reading, his face was more troubled than ever. Ed inquired as to his trouble.
Pinero shrugged his shoulders, and brought a smile to his lips.
"Nothing to concern you, my boy. A
little mechanical misadjustment, I think. But I shan't be able to give you two
your readings today. I shall need to overhaul my machine. Can you come back
tomorrow?"
"Why, I think so. Say, I'm sorry
about your machine. I hope it isn't serious."
"It isn't, I'm sure. Will you come
back into my office, and visit for a bit?"
"Thank you, Doctor. You are very
kind."
"But Ed, I've got to meet
Ellen."
Pinero turned the full force of his
personality on her.
"Won't you grant me a few moments, my
dear young lady? I am old and like the sparkle of young folk's company. I get
very little of it. Please." He nudged them gently into his office, and
seated them. Then he ordered lemonade and cookies sent in, offered them
cigarettes, and lit a cigar.
Forty minutes later Ed listened entranced,
while Betty was quite evidently acutely nervous and anxious to leave, as the
doctor spun out a story concerning his adventures as a young man in Tierra del
Fuego. When the doctor stopped to relight his cigar, she stood up.
"Doctor, - we really must leave.
Couldn't we hear the rest tomorrow?"
"Tomorrow? There will not be time
tomorrow."
"But you haven't time today either.
Your secretary has rung five times."
"Couldn't you spare me just a few
more minutes?"
"I really can't today, doctor. I have
an appointment. There is someone waiting for me."
"There is no way to induce you?"
"I'm afraid not. Come, Ed."
After they had gone, the doctor stepped to
the window and stared out over the city. Presently he picked out two tiny
figures as they left the office building. He watched them hurry to the corner,
wait for the lights to change, then start across the street. When they were
part way across, there came the scream of a siren. The two little figures
hesitated, started back, stopped, and turned. Then the car was upon them. As
the car slammed to a stop, they showed up from beneath it, no longer two
figures, but simply a limp unorganized heap of clothing.
Presently the doctor turned away - from
the window. Then he picked up his phone, and spoke to his secretary.
"Cancel my appointments for the rest
of the day.... No... No one... I don't care; cancel them." Then he sat down
in his chair. His cigar went out. Long after dark he held it, still unlighted.
Pinero sat down at his dining table and
contemplated the gourmet's luncheon spread before him. He had ordered this meal
with particular care, and had come home a little early in order to enjoy it
fully.
Somewhat later he let a few drops of fiori
d'Alpini roll around his tongue and trickle down his throat. The heavy fragrant
syrup warmed his mouth, and reminded him of the little mountain flowers for
which it was named. He sighed. It - had been a good meal, an exquisite meal and
had justified the exotic liqueur. His musing was interrupted by a disturbance
at the front door. The voice of his elderly maidservant was raised in
remonstrance. A heavy male voice interrupted her. The commotion moved down the
hail and the dining room door was pushed open.
"Madonna! Non si puo entrare! The
Master is eating!"
"Never mind, - Angela. I have time to
see these gentlemen. You ..may go." Pinero faced the surly-faced spokesman
of the intruders. "You have business with me; yes?"
"You bet we have. Decent people have
had enough of your damned nonsense."
"And so?"
The caller did not answer at once. A
smaller dapper individual moved out from behind him and faced Pinero.
"We might as well begin." The
chairman of the committee placed a key in the lock-box and opened it.
"Wenzell, will you help me pick out today's envelopes?" He was
interrupted by a touch on his arm. -
"Dr. Baird, you are wanted on the telephone."
"Very well. Bring the instrument
here."
When it was fetched he placed the receiver
to his ear. "Hello.... Yes; speaking.... What? .. No, we have beard
nothing... Destroyed the machine, you
say.... Dead! How?.... No! No statement. None at all.... Call me
later...."
He slammed the instrument down - and
pushed it from him.
"What's up? Who's dead now?"
Baird held up one hand. "Quiet,
gentlemen, please!
Pinero was murdered a few moments ago at
his home."
"Murdered?!"
"That isn't all. About the same time
vandals broke into his office and smashed his apparatus." -
No one spoke at first. The committee
members glanced around at each other. No one seemed anxious to be the first to
comment.
Finally one spoke up. "Get it
out."
"Get what out?"
"Pinero's envelope. It's in there
too. I've seen it."
Baird located it and slowly tore it open.
He unfolded the single sheet of paper, and scanned it.
"Well? Out with it!"
"One thirteen p.m. - today."
They took this in silence.
Their dynamic calm was broken by a member
across the table from Baird reaching for the lock-box. Baud interposed a hand.
"What do you want?"
"My prediction-it's in there-we're
all in there."
"Yes, yes. We're all in here. Let's
have them."
Baird placed both hands over the box. He
held the eye of the man opposite him but did not speak. He licked his lips. The
corner of his mouth twitched. His hands shook. Still he did not speak. The man
opposite relaxed back into his chair.
"You're right, of course," he
said.
"Bring me that waste basket."
Baird's voice was low and strained but steady.
He accepted it and dumped the litter on
the rug. He placed the tin basket on the table before him. He tore half a dozen
envelopes across, set a match to them, and dropped them in the basket. Then he
started tearing a double handful at a time, and fed the fire steadily. The
smoke made him cough, and tears ran out of his smarting eyes. Someone got up
and opened a window. When he was through, he pushed the basket away from him,
looked down, and spoke.
"I'm afraid I've ruined this table
top."
The
Roads Must Roll
"Who
makes the roads roll?"
The speaker stood still on the rostrum and
waited for his audience to answer him. The reply came in scattered shouts that
cut through the ominous, discontented murmur of the crowd.
"We do!" - "We do!" -
"Damn right!"
"Who does the dirty work 'down
inside' - so that Joe Public can ride at his ease?"
This time it was a single roar, "We
do!"
The speaker pressed his advantage, his
words tumbling out in a rasping torrent. He leaned toward the crowd, his eyes
picking out individuals at whom to fling his words. "What makes business?
The roads! How do they move the food they eat? The roads! How do they get to
work? The roads! How do they get home to their wives? The roads!" He
paused for effect, then lowered his voice. "Where would the public be if
you boys didn't keep them roads rolling? Behind the eight ball and everybody
knows it. But do they appreciate it? Pfui! Did we ask for too much? Were our
demands unreasonable? 'The right to resign whenever we want to.' Every working
stiff in other lines of work has that. 'The same pay as the engineers.' Why
not? Who are the real engineers around here? D'yuh have to be a cadet in a
funny little hat before you can learn to wipe a bearing, or jack down a rotor?
Who earns his keep: The 'gentlemen' in the control offices, or the boys 'down
inside'? What else do we ask? 'The right to elect our own engineers.' Why the
hell not? Who's competent to pick engineers? The technicians? - or some damn,
dumb examining board that's never been 'down inside', and couldn't tell a rotor
bearing from a field coil?"
He changed his pace with natural art, and
lowered his voice still further. "I tell you, brother, it's time we quit
fiddlin' around with petitions to the Transport Commission, and use a little
direct action. Let 'em yammer about democracy; that's a lot of eye wash - we've
got the power, and we're the men that count!"
A man had risen in the back of the hall
while the speaker was haranguing. He spoke up as the speaker paused.
"Brother Chairman," he drawled, "may I stick in a couple of
words?"
"You are recognized, Brother
Harvey."
"What I ask is: what's all the
shootin' for? We've got the highest hourly rate of pay of any mechanical guild,
full insurance and retirement, and safe working conditions, barring the chance
of going deaf." He pushed his anti-noise helmet further back from his
ears. He was still in dungarees, apparently just up from standing watch. "Of
course we have to give ninety days notice to quit a job, but, cripes, we knew
that when we signed up. The roads have got to roll - they can't stop every time
some lazy punk gets bored with his billet.
"And now Soapy-" The crack of
the gavel cut him short. "Pardon me, I mean Brother Soapy - tells us how
powerful we are, and how we should go in for direct action. Rats! Sure we could
tie up the roads, and play hell with the whole community-but so could any
screwball with a can of nitroglycerine, and he wouldn't have to be a technician
to do it, neither.
"We aren't the only frogs in the
puddle. Our jobs are important, sure, but where would we be without the farmers
- or the steel workers - or a dozen other trades and professions?"
He was interrupted by a sallow little man
with protruding upper teeth, who said, "Just a minute, Brother Chairman,
I'd like to ask Brother Harvey a question," then turned to Harvey and
inquired in a sly voice, "Are you speaking for the guild, Brother - or
just for yourself? Maybe you don't believe in the guild? You wouldn't by any
chance be" - he stopped and slid his eyes up and down Harvey's lank frame
- "a spotter, would you?"
Harvey looked over his questioner as if he
had found something filthy in a plate of food. "Sikes," he told him,
"if you weren't a runt, I'd stuff your store teeth down your throat. I
helped found this guild. I was on strike in 'sixty-six. Where were you in
'sixty-six? With the finks?"
The chairman's gavel pounded.
"There's been enough of this," he said. "Nobody who knows
anything about the history of this guild doubts the loyalty of Brother Harvey.
We'll continue with the regular order of business." He stopped to clear
his throat. "Ordinarily we don't open our floor to outsiders, and some of
you boys have expressed a distaste for some of the engineers we work under, but
there is one engineer we always like to listen to whenever he can get away from
his pressing duties. I guess maybe it's because he's had dirt under his nails
the same as us. Anyhow, I present at this time Mr. Shorty Van Kleeck-"
A shout from the floor stopped him.
"Brother Van Kleeck!"
"O.K.-Brother Van Kleeck, Chief
Deputy Engineer of this road-town."
"Thanks, Brother Chairman." The
guest speaker came briskly forward, and grinned expansively at the crowd,
seeming to swell under their approval. "Thanks, Brothers. I guess our
chairman is right. I always feel more comfortable here in the Guild Hall of the
Sacramento Sector - or any guild hail, for that matter - than I do in the
engineers' dubhouse. Those young punk cadet engineers get in my hair. Maybe I
should have gone to one of the fancy technical institutes, so I'd have the
proper point of view, instead of coming up from 'down inside'.
"Now about those demands of yours
that the Transport Commission just threw back in your face - Can I speak
freely?"
"Sure you can, Shorty!" -
"You can trust us!"
"Well, of course I shouldn't say
anything, but I can't help but understand how you feel. The roads are the big
show these days, and you are the men that make them roll. It's the natural
order of things that your opinions should be listened to, and your desires met.
One would think that even politicians would be bright enough to see that.
Sometimes, lying awake at night, I wonder why we technicians don't just take
things over, and-"
"Your wife is calling, Mr.
Gaines."
"Very well." He picked up the
handset and turned to the visor screen.
"Yes, darling, I know I promised, but
... You're perfectly right, darling, but Washington has especially requested
that we show Mr. Blekinsop anything be wants to see. I didn't know he was
arriving today.... No, I can't turn him over to a subordinate. It wouldn't be
courteous. He's Minister of Transport for Australia. I told you that.... Yes,
darling, I know that courtesy begins at home, but the roads must roll. It's my
job; you knew that when you married me. And this is part of my job. That's a
good girl. We'll positively have breakfast together. Tell you what, order
horses and a breakfast pack and we'll make it a picnic. I'll meet you in
Bakersfield - usual place.... Goodbye, darling. Kiss Junior goodnight for
me."
He replaced the handset on the desk
whereupon the pretty, but indignant, features of his wife faded from the visor
screen. A young woman came into his office. As she opened the door she exposed
momentarily the words printed on its outer side; "DIEGO-RENO ROADTOWN,
Office of the Chief Engineer." He gave her a harassed glance.
"Oh, it's you. Don't marry an
engineer, Dolores, marry an artist. They have more home life."
"Yes, Mr. Gaines. Mr. Blekinsop is
here, Mr. Gaines."
"Already? I didn't expect him so
soon. The Antipodes ship must have grounded early."
"Yes, Mr. Gaines."
"Dolores, don't you ever have any
emotions?"
"Yes, Mr. Gaines."
"Hmmm, it seems incredible, but you
are never mistaken. Show Mr. Blekinsop in."
"Very good, Mr. Gaines."
Larry Gaines got up to greet his visitor.
Not a particularly impressive little guy, he thought, as they shook hands and
exchanged formal amenities. The rolled umbrella, the bowler hat were almost too
good to be true.
An Oxford accent partially masked the
underlying clipped, flat, nasal twang of the native Australian. "It's a
pleasure to have you here, Mr. Blekinsop, and I hope we can make your stay enjoyable."
The little man smiled. "I'm sure it
will be. This is my first visit to your wonderful country. I feel at home
already. The eucalyptus trees, you know, and the brown hills-"
"But your trip is primarily
business?"
"Yes, yes. My primary purpose is to
study your roadcities, and report to my government on the advisability of
trying to adapt your startling American methods to our social problems Down
Under. I thought you understood that such was the reason I was sent to
you."
"Yes, I did, in a general way. I
don't know just what it is that you wish to find out. I suppose that you have
heard about our road towns, how they came about, how they operate, and so
forth."
"I've read a good bit, true, but I am
not a technical man, Mr. Gaines, not an engineer. My field is social and
political. I want to see how this remarkable technical change has affected your
people. Suppose you tell me about the roads as if I were entirely ignorant. And
I will ask questions."
"That seems a practical plan. By the
way, how many are there in your party?"
"Just myself. I sent my secretary on
to Washington."
"I see." Gaines glanced at his
wrist watch. "It's nearly dinner time. Suppose we run up to the Stockton
strip for dinner. There is a good Chinese restaurant up there that I'm partial
to. It will take us about an hour and you can see the ways in operation while
we ride."
"Excellent."
Gaines pressed a button on his desk, and a
picture formed on a large visor screen mounted on the opposite wall. It showed
a strong-boned, angular young man seated at a semi-circular control desk, which
was backed by a complex instrument board. A cigarette was tucked in one corner
of his mouth.
The young man glanced up, grinned, and
waved from the screen. "Greetings and salutations, Chief. What can I do
for you?"
"Hi, Dave. You've got the evening
watch, eh? I'm running up to the Stockton sector for dinner. Where's Van
Kleeck?"
"Gone to a meeting somewhere. He
didn't say."
"Anything to report?"
"No, sir. The roads are rolling, and
all the little people are going ridey-ridey home to their dinners."
"O.K.-keep 'em rolling."
"They'll roll, Chief."
Gaines snapped off the connection and
turned to Blekinsop. "Van Kleeck is my chief deputy. I wish he'd spend
more time on the road and less on politics. Davidson can handle things,
however. Shall we go?"
They glided down an electric staircase,
and debauched on the walkway which bordered the northbound five mile-an-hour
strip. After skirting a stairway trunk marked OVERPASS TO SOUTHBOUND ROAD, they
paused at the edge of the first strip. "Have you ever ridden a conveyor
strip before?" Gaines inquired. "It's quite simple. Just remember to
face against the motion of the strip as you get on."
They threaded their way through homeward-bound
throngs, passing from strip to strip. Down the center of the
twenty-mile-an-hour strip ran a glassite partition which reached nearly to the
spreading roof. The Honorable Mister Blekinsop raised his eyebrows inquiringly
as he looked at it.
"Oh, that?" Gaines answered the
unspoken inquiry as he slid back a panel door and ushered his guest through.
"That's a wind break. If we didn't
have some way of separating the air currents over the strips of different
speeds, the wind would tear our clothes off on the hundred-mile-an-hour
strip." He bent his head to Blekinsop's as he spoke, in order to cut
through the rush of air against the road surfaces, the noise of the crowd, and
the muted roar of the driving mechanism concealed beneath the moving strips.
The combination of noises inhibited further conversation as they proceeded
toward the middle of the roadway. After passing through three more wind screens
located at the forty, sixty, and eighty-mile-an-hour strips respectively, they
finally reached the maximum speed strip, the hundred-mile-an-hour strip, which
made the round trip, San Diego to Reno and back, in twelve hours.
Blekinsop found himself on a walkway
twenty feet wide facing another partition. Immediately opposite him an
illuminated show window proclaimed:
JAKE'S
STEAK HOUSE No. 4
The
Fastest Meal on the Fastest Road!
"To
dine on the fly Makes the miles roll by!!"
"Amazing!"
said Mr. Blekinsop. "It would be like dining in a tram. Is this really a
proper restaurant?"
"One of the best. Not fancy, but
sound."
"Oh, I say, could we-"
Gaines smiled at him. "You'd like to
try it, wouldn't you, sir?"
"I don't wish to interfere with your
plans-"
"Quite all right. I'm hungry myself,
and Stockton is a long hour away. Let's go in."
Gaines greeted the manageress as an old
friend. "Hello, Mrs. McCoy. How are you tonight?"
"If it isn't the chief himself! It's
a long time since we've had the pleasure of seeing your face." She led
them to a booth somewhat detached from the crowd of dining commuters. "And
will you and your friend be having dinner?"
"Yes, Mrs. McCoy-suppose you order
for us-but be sure it includes one of your steaks."
"Two inches thick-from a steer that
died happy." She glided away, moving her fat frame with surprising grace.
With sophisticated foreknowledge of the
chief engineer's needs, Mrs. McCoy had left a portable telephone at the table.
Gaines plugged it in to an accommodation jack at the side of the booth, and
dialed a number.
"Hello-Davidson? Dave, this is the
chief. I'm in Jake's beanery number four for supper. You can reach me by
calling ten-six-six."
He replaced the handset, and Blekinsop
inquired politely: "Is it necessary for you to be available at all
times?"
"Not strictly necessary," Gaines
told him, "but I feel safer when I am in touch. Either Van Kleeck, or
myself, should be where the senior engineer of the watch - that's Davidson this
shift - can get hold of us in a pinch. If it's a real emergency, I want to be
there, naturally."
"What would constitute a real
emergency?"
"Two things, principally. A power
failure on the rotors would bring the road to a standstill, and possibly strand
millions of people a hundred miles, or more, from their homes. If it happened
during a rush hour we would have to evacuate those millions from the road-not
too easy to do."
"You say millions-as many as
that?"
"Yes, indeed. There are twelve
million people dependent on this roadway, living and working in the buildings
adjacent to it, or within five miles of each side."
The Age of Power blends into the Age of
Transportation almost imperceptibly, but two events stand out as landmarks in
the change: the achievement of cheap sun power and the installation of the
first mechanized road.
The power resources of oil and coal of the
United States had - save for a few sporadic outbreaks of common sense - been
shamefully wasted in their development all through the first half of the
twentieth century. Simultaneously, the automobile, from its humble start as a
one-lunged horseless carriage, grew into a steel-bodied monster of over a
hundred horsepower and capable of making more than a hundred miles an hour.
They boiled over the countryside, like yeast in ferment. In 1955 it was
estimated that there was a motor vehicle for every two persons in the United
States.
They contained the seeds of their own
destruction. Eighty million steel juggernauts, operated by imperfect human
beings at high speeds, are more destructive than war. In the same reference
year the premiums paid for compulsory liability and property damage insurance
by automobile owners exceeded in amount the sum paid that year to purchase
automobiles. Safe driving campaigns were chronic phenomena, but were mere pious
attempts to put Humpty-Dumpty together again. It was not physically possible to
drive safely in those crowded metropolises. Pedestrians were sardonically
divided into two classes, the quick, and the dead.
But a pedestrian could be defined as a man
who had found a place to park his car. The automobile made possible huge
cities, then choked those same cities to death with their numbers. In 1900
Herbert George Wells pointed out that the saturation point in the size of a
city might be mathematically predicted in terms of its transportation
facilities. From a standpoint of speed alone the automobile made possible
cities two hundred miles in diameter, but traffic congestion, and the
inescapable, inherent danger of high-powered, individually operated vehicles
cancelled out the possibility.
In 1955 Federal Highway #66 from Los
Angeles to Chicago, "The Main Street of America", was transformed
into a superhighway for motor vehicles, with an underspeed limit of sixty miles
per hour. It was planned as a public works project to stimulate heavy industry;
it had an unexpected by-product. The great cities of Chicago and St. Louis
stretched out urban pseudopods toward each other, until they met near
Bloomington, Illinois. The two parent cities actually shrunk in population.
That same year the city of San Francisco
replaced its antiquated cable cars with moving stairways, powered with the
Douglas-Martin Solar Reception Screens. The largest number of automobile
licenses in history had been issued that calendar year, but the end of the
automobile era was in sight, and the National Defense Act of 1957 gave fair
warning.
This act, one of the most bitterly debated
ever to be brought out of committee, declared petroleum to be an essential and
limited material of war. The armed forces had first call on all oil, above or
below the ground, and eighty million civilian vehicles faced short and
expensive rations. The "temporary" conditions during World War II had
become permanent.
Take the superhighways of the period,
urban throughout their length. Add the mechanized streets of San Francisco's
hills. Heat to boiling point with an imminent shortage of gasoline. Flavor with
Yankee ingenuity. The first mechanized road was opened in 1960 between
Cincinnati and Cleveland.
It was, as one would expect, comparatively
primitive in design, being based on the ore belt conveyors of ten years
earlier. The fastest strip moved only thirty miles per hour and was quite
narrow, for no one had thought of the possibility of locating retail trade on
the strips themselves. Nevertheless, it was a prototype of social pattern which
was to dominate the American scene within the next two decades-neither rural,
nor urban, but partaking equally of both, and based on rapid, safe, cheap,
convenient transportation.
Factories - wide, low buildings whose
roofs were covered with solar power screens of the same type that drove the
road-lined the roadway on each side. Back of them and interspersed among them
were commercial hotels, retail stores, theatres, apartment houses. Beyond this
long, thin, narrow strip was the open country-side, where the bulk of the
population lived. Their homes dotted the hills, hung on the banks of creeks,
and nestled between the farms. They worked in the "city" but lived in
the "country" - and the two were not ten minutes apart.
Mrs. McCoy served the chief and his guest
in person. They checked their conversation at the sight of the magnificent
steaks.
Up and down the six hundred mile line,
Sector Engineers of the Watch were getting in their hourly reports from their
subsector technicians. "Subsector one-check!" "Subsector
two-check!" Tensionometer readings, voltage, load, bearing temperatures,
synchrotachometer readings-"Subsector seven-check!" Hard-bitten, able
men in dungarees, who lived much of their lives 'down inside' amidst the
unmuted roar of the hundred mile strip, the shrill whine of driving rotors, and
the complaint of the relay rollers.
Davidson studied the moving model of the
road, spread out before him in the main control room at Fresno Sector. He
watched the barely perceptible crawl of the miniature hundred mile strip and
subconsciously noted the reference number on it which located Jake's Steak
House No. 4. The chief would be getting in to Stockton soon; he'd give him a
ring after the hourly reports were in. Everything was quiet; traffic tonnage
normal for rush hour; he would be sleepy before this watch was over. He turned
to his Cadet Engineer of the Watch. "Mr. Barnes."
"Yes, sir."
"I think we could use some
coffee."
"Good idea, sir. I'll order some as
soon as the hourlies are in."
The minute hand of the control board
chronometer reached twelve. The cadet watch officer threw a switch. "All
sectors, report!" he said, in crisp, self-conscious tones.
The faces of two men flicked into view on
the visor Screen. The younger answered him with the same air of acting under
supervision. "Diego Circle -
rolling!"
They were at once replaced by two more.
Angeles Sector - rolling!"
Then: "Bakersfield
Sector - rolling!"
And: "Fresno
Sector - rolling!".
Finally, when Reno Circle had reported,
the cadet turned to Davidson and reported: "Rolling, sir."
"Very well-keep them rolling!"
The visor screen flashed on once more.
"Sacramento Sector, supplementary report."
"Proceed."
"Cadet Guenther, while on visual
inspection as cadet sector engineer of the watch, found Cadet Alec Jeans, on
watch as cadet subsector technician, and R. J. Ross, technician second class,
on watch as technician for the same subsector, engaged in playing cards. It was
not possible to tell with any accuracy how long they had neglected to patrol
their subsector."
"Any damage?"
"One rotor running hot, but still
synchronized. It was jacked down, and replaced."
"Very well. Have the paymaster give
Ross his time, and turn him over to the civil authorities. Place Cadet Jeans
under arrest and order him to report to me."
"Very well, sir."
"Keep them rolling!"
Davidson turned back to the control desk
and dialed Chief Engineer Gaines' temporary number.
"You mentioned that there were two
things that could cause major trouble on the road, Mr. Gaines, but you spoke
only of power failure to the rotors." Gaines pursued an elusive bit of
salad before answering. "There really isn't a second major trouble-it
won't happen. However - we are travelling along here at one hundred miles per
hour. Can you visualize what would happen if this strip under us should
break?"
Mr. Blekinsop shifted nervously in his
chair. "Hmm - rather a disconcerting idea, don't you think? I mean to say,
one is hardly aware that one is travelling at high speed, here in this snug
room. What would the result be?"
"Don't let it worry you; the strip
can't part. It is built up of overlapping sections in such a fashion that it
has a safety factor of better than twelve to one. Several miles of rotors would
have to shut down all at once, and the circuit breakers for the rest of the
line fail to trip out before there could possibly be sufficient tension on the
strip to cause it to part.
"But it happened once, on the
Philadelphia-Jersey City Road, and we aren't likely to forget it. It was one of
the earliest high speed roads, carrying a tremendous passenger traffic, as well
as heavy freight, since it serviced a heavily industrialized area. The strip
was hardly more than a conveyor belt, and no one had foreseen the weight it
would carry. It happened under maximum load, naturally, when the high speed way
was crowded. The part of the strip behind the break buckled for miles, crushing
passengers against the roof at eighty miles per hour. The section forward of
the break cracked like a whip, spilling passengers onto the slower ways,
dropping them on the exposed rollers and rotors down inside, and snapping them
up against the roof.
"Over three thousand people were
killed in that one accident, and there was much agitation to abolish the roads.
They were even shut down for a week by presidential order, but he was forced to
reopen them again. There was no alternative."
"Really? Why not?"
"The country bad become economically
dependent on the roads. They were the principal means of transportation in the
industrial areas-the only means of economic importance. Factories were shut
down; food didn't move; people got hungry-and the President was forced to let
them roll again. It was the only thing that could be done; the social pattern
had crystallized in one form, and it couldn't be changed overnight. A large,
industrialized population must have large-scale transportation, not only for
people, but for trade."
Mr. Blekinsop fussed with his napkin, and
rather diffidently suggested, "Mr., Gaines, I do not intend to disparage
the ingenious accomplishments of your great people, but isn't it possible that
you may have put too many eggs in one basket in allowing your whole economy to
become dependent on the functioning of one type of machinery?"
Gaines considered this soberly. "I
see your point. Yes-and no. Every civilization above the peasant and village
type is dependent on some key type of machinery. The old South was based on the
cotton gin. Imperial England was made possible by the steam engine. Large
populations have to have machines for power, for transportation, and for
manufacturing in order to live. Had it not been for machinery the large
populations could never have grown up. That's not a fault of the machine;
that's its virtue.
"But it is true that whenever we
develop machinery to the point where it will support large populations at a
high standard of living we are then bound to keep that machinery running, or
suffer the consequences. But the real hazard in that is not the machinery, but
the men who run the machinery. These roads, as machines, are all right. They
are strong and safe and will do everything they were designed to do. No, it's
not the machines, it's the men.
"When a population is dependent on a
machine, they are hostages of the men who tend the machines. If their morale is
high, their sense of duty strong-"
Someone up near the front of the
restaurant had turned up the volume control of the radio, letting out a blast
of music that drowned out Gaines' words. When the sound had been tapered down
to a more nearly bearable volume, he was saying:
"Listen to that. It illustrates my
point."
Blekinsop turned an ear to the music. It
was a swinging march of compelling rhythm, with a modern interpretive
arrangement. One could hear the roar of machinery, the repetitive clatter of
mechanisms. A pleased smile of recognition spread over the Australian's face.
"It's your Field Artillery Song, The Roll of the Caissons, isn't-it? But I
don't see the connection."
"You're right; it was the Roll of the
Caissons, but we adapted it to our own purposes. It's the Road Song of the
Transport Cadets. Wait."
The persistent throb of the march
continued, and seemed to blend with the vibration of the roadway underneath into
a single tympani. Then a male chorus took up the verse:
"Hear
them hum!
Watch
them run!
Oh, our
job is never done,
For our
roadways go rolling along!
While
you ride;
While
you glide;
We are
watching 'down inside',
So your
roadways keep rolling along!
"Oh,
it's Hie! Hie! Hee!
The
rotor men are we-
Check
off the sectors loud and strong!
(spoken) One! Two! Three!
Anywhere
you go
You are
bound to know
That
your roadways are rolling along!
(Shouted)
KEEP THEM ROLLING!
That
your roadways are rolling along!"
"See
said Gaines, with more animation in his voice, "See? That is the real
purpose of the United States Academy of Transport. That is the reason why the
transport engineers are a semi-military profession, with strict discipline. We
are the bottle neck, the sine qua non, of all industry, all economic life.
Other industries can go on strike, and only create temporary and partial
dislocations. Crops can fail here and there, and the country takes up the
slack. But if the roads stop rolling, everything else must stop; the effect
would be the same as a general strike-with this important difference: It takes
a majority of the population, fired by a real feeling of grievance, to create a
general strike; but the men that run the roads, few as they are, can create the
same complete paralysis.
"We had just one strike on the roads,
back in 'sixty-six. It was justified, I think, and it corrected a lot of real,
abuses-but it mustn't happen again."
"But what is to prevent it happening
again, Mr. Gaines?"
"Morale-esprit de corps. The
technicians in the road service are indoctrinated constantly with the idea that
their job is a sacred trust. Besides which we do everything we can to build up
their social position. But even more important is the Academy. We try to turn
out graduate engineers imbued with the same loyalty, the same iron
self-discipline, and determination to perform their duty to the community at
any cost, that Annapolis and West Point and Goddard are so successful in
inculcating in their graduates."
"Goddard? Oh, yes, the rocket field.
And have you been successful, do you think?"
"Not entirely, perhaps, but we will
be. It takes time to build up a tradition. When the oldest engineer is a man
who entered the Academy in his teens, we can afford to relax a little and treat
it as a solved problem."
"I suppose you are a graduate?"
Gaines grinned. "You flatter me-I
must look younger than I am. No, I'm a carry-over from the army. You see, the
Department of Defense operated the roads for some three months during
reorganization after the strike in 'sixty-six. I served on the conciliation
board that awarded pay increases and adjusted working conditions, then I was
assigned-"
The signal light of the portable telephone
glowed red. Gaines said, "Excuse me," and picked up the handset.'
"Yes?"
Blekinsop could overhear the voice at the
other end. "This is Davidson, Chief. The roads are rolling."
"Very well. Keep them rolling!"
"Had another trouble report from the
Sacramento Sector."
"Again? What this time?"
Before Davidson could reply he was cut
off. As Gaines reached out to dial him back, his coffee cup, half full, landed
in his lap. Blekinsop was aware, even as he was rocked against the edge of the
table, of a disquieting change in the hum of the roadway.
"What has happened, Mr. Gaines?"
"Don't know. Emergency stop-God knows
why." He was dialing furiously. Shortly he flung the phone down, without
bothering to return the handset to its cradle. "Phones are out. Come on!
No- You'll be safe here. Wait."
"Must I?"
"Well, come along then, and stick
close to me." He turned away, having dismissed the Australian cabinet
minister from his mind. The strip ground slowly to a stop, the giant rotors and
myriad rollers acting as fly wheels in preventing a disastrous sudden stop.
Already a little knot of commuters, disturbed at their evening meal, were
attempting to crowd out the door of the restaurant.
"Halt!"
There is something about a command issued
by one who is used to being obeyed which enforces compliance. It may be
intonation, or possibly a more esoteric power, such as animal tamers are
reputed to be able to exercise in controlling ferocious beasts. But it does
exist, and can be used to compel even those not habituated to obedience.
The commuters stopped in their tracks.
Gaines continued, "Remain in the
restaurant until we are ready to evacuate you. I am the Chief Engineer. You
will be in no danger here. You!" He pointed to a big fellow near the door.
"You're deputized. Don't let anyone leave without proper authority. Mrs.
McCoy, resume serving dinner."
Gaines strode out the door, Blekinsop
tagging along. The situation outside permitted no such simple measures.
The
hundred mile strip alone had stopped; a few feet away the next strip flew by at
an unchecked ninety-five miles an hour. The passengers on it flickered past,
unreal cardboard figures.
The twenty-foot walkway of the maximum
speed strip had been crowded when the breakdown occurred. Now the customers of
shops, of lunchstands, and of other places of business, the occupants of
lounges, of television theatres-all came crowding out onto the walkway to see
what had happened. The first disaster struck almost immediately.
The crowd surged, and pushed against a
middle-aged woman on its outer edge. In attempting to recover her balance she
put one foot over the edge of the flashing ninety-five mile strip. She realized
her gruesome error, for she screamed before her foot touched the ribbon.
She spun around, and landed heavily on the
moving strip, and was rolled by it, as the strip attempted to impart to her
mass, at one blow, a velocity of ninety-five miles per hour-one hundred and
thirty-nine feet per second: As she rolled she mowed down some of the cardboard
figures as a sickle strikes a stand of grass. Quickly, she was out of sight,
her identity, her injuries, and her fate undetermined, and already remote.
But the consequences of her mishap were
not done with. One of the flickering cardboard figures bowled over by her relative
momentum fell toward the hundred mile strip, slammed into the shockbound crowd,
and suddenly appeared as a live man-but broken and bleeding, amidst the
luckless, fallen victims whose bodies had checked his wild flight.
Even there it did not end. The disaster
spread from its source, each hapless human ninepin more likely than not to
knock down others so that they fell over the danger-laden boundary, and in turn
ricocheted to a dearly bought equilibrium.
But the focus of calamity sped out of
sight, and Blekinsop could see no more. His active mind, accustomed to dealing
with large' numbers of individual human beings, multiplied the tragic sequence
he had witnessed by twelve hundred miles of thronged conveyor strip, and his
stomach chilled.
To Blekinsop's surprise, Gaines made no
effort to succor the fallen, nor to quell the fear-infected mob, but turned an
expressionless face back to the restaurant. When Blekinsop saw that he was
actually re-entering the restaurant, he plucked at his sleeve. "Aren't we
going to help those poor people?"
The cold planes of the face of the man who
answered him bore no resemblance to his genial, rather boyish, host of a few
minutes before. "No. Bystanders can help them - I've got the whole road to
think of. Don't bother me."
Crushed, and somewhat indignant, the
politician did as he was ordered. Rationally, he knew that the Chief Engineer
was right-a man responsible for the safety of millions cannot turn aside from
his duty to render personal service to one-but the cold detachment of such
viewpoint was repugnant to him.
Gaines was back in the restaurant
"Mrs. McCoy, where is your get-away?"
"In the pantry, sir."
Gaines hurried there, Blekinsop at his
heels. A nervous Filipino salad boy shrank out of his way as he casually swept
a supply of prepared green stuffs onto the floor and stepped up on the counter
where they had rested. Directly above his head and within reach was a circular
manhole, counterweighted and operated by a handwheel set in its center. A short
steel ladder, hinged to the edge of the opening was swung up flat to ceiling
and secured by a hook.
Blekinsop lost his hat in his endeavor to
clamber quickly enough up the ladder after Gaines. When he emerged on the roof
of the building. Gaines was searching the ceiling of the roadway with a pocket
flashlight He was shuffling along, stooped double in the awkward four feet of
space between the roof underfoot and ceiling.
He found what he sought, some fifty feet
away-another manhole similar to the one they had used to escape from below. He
spun the wheel of the lock and stood up in the space, then rested his hands on
the sides of the opening and with a single. lithe movement vaulted to the roof
of the roadways. His companion followed him with more difficulty.
They stood in darkness, a fine, cold rain
feeling at their faces. But underfoot, and stretching beyond sight on each
hand, the sun power screens glowed with a faint opalescent radiance, their
slight percentage of inefficiency as transformers of radiant sun power to
available electrical power being evidenced as a mild phosphorescence. The
effect was not illumination, but rather like the ghostly sheen of a snow
covered plain seen by starlight.
The glow picked out the path they must
follow to reach the rain-obscured wall of buildings bordering the ways. The
path was a narrow black stripe which arched away into the darkness over the low
curve of the roof. They started away on this path at a dog trot, making as much
speed as the slippery footing and the dark permitted, while Blekinsop's mind
still fretted at the problem of Gaines' apparently callous detachment. Although
possessed of a keen intelligence his nature was dominated by a warm, human
sympathy, without which no politician, irrespective of other virtues or
shortcomings, is long successful.
Because of this trait he distrusted
instinctively any mind which was guided by logic alone. He was aware that, from
a standpoint of strict logic, no reasonable case could be made out for the
continued existence of the human race, still less for the human values he
served.
Had he been able to pierce the
preoccupation of his companion, he would have been reassured. On the surface
Gaines' exceptionally intelligent mind was clicking along with the facile ease
of an electronic integrator-arranging data at hand, making tentative decisions,
postponing judgments without prejudice until necessary data were available,
exploring alternatives. Underneath, in a compartment insulated by stern
self-discipline from the acting theatre of his mind, his emotions were a
torturing storm of self-reproach. He was heartsick at suffering he had seen,
and which he knew too well was duplicated up and down the line. Although he was
not aware of any personal omission, nevertheless, the fault was somehow his,
for authority creates responsibility.
He had carried too long the superhuman
burden of kingship - which no sane mind can carry light-heartedly - and was at
this moment perilously close to the frame of mind which sends captains down
with their ships. Only the need for immediate, constructive action sustained
him.
But no trace of this conflict reached his
features.
At the wall of buildings glowed a green
line of arrows, pointing to the left. Over them, at the terminus of the narrow
path, shone a sign: "ACCESS DOWN." They pursued this, Blekinsop
puffing in Gaines' wake, to a door let in the wall, which gave in to a narrow
stairway lighted by a single glowtube. Gaines plunged down this, still
followed, and they emerged on the crowded, noisy, stationary walkway adjoining
the northbound road.
Immediately adjacent to the stairway, on
the right, was a public tele-booth. Through the glassite door they could see a
portly, well-dressed man speaking earnestly to his female equivalent, mirrored
in the visor screen. Three other citizens were waiting outside the booth.
Gaines pushed past them, flung open the
door, grasped the bewildered and indignant man by the shoulders, and hustled
him outside, kicking the door closed after him. He cleared the visor screen
with one sweep of his hand, before the matron pictured therein could protest,
and pressed the emergency-priority button.
He dialed his private code number, and was
shortly looking into the troubled face of his Engineer of the Watch, Davidson.
"Report!"
"It's you, Chief! Thank God! Where
are you?" Davidson's' relief was pathetic.
"Report!"
The Senior Watch Officer repressed his
emotion and complied in direct, clipped phrases, "At seven-oh-nine p.m.
the consolidated tension reading, strip twenty, Sacramento Sector, climbed
suddenly. Before action could be taken, tension on strip twenty passed
emergency level; the interlocks acted, and power to subject strip cut out.
Cause of failure, unknown. Direct communication to Sacramento control office has
failed. They do not answer the auxiliary, nor the commercial line. Effort to
re-establish communication continues. Messenger dispatched from Stockton
Subsector Ten.
"No casualties reported. Warning
broadcast by public announcement circuit to keep clear of strip nineteen.
Evacuation has commenced."
"There are casualties," Gaines
cut in. "Police and hospital emergency routine. Move!"
"Yes, sir!" Davidson snapped
back, and hooked a thumb over his shoulder-but his Cadet Officer of the Watch
had already jumped to comply. "Shall I cut out the rest of the road,
Chief?"
"No. No more casualties are likely
after the first disorder. Keep up the broadcast warnings. Keep, those other
strips rolling, or we will have a traffic jam the devil himself couldn't untangle."
- Gaines had in mind the impossibility of bringing the strips up to speed under
load. The rotors were not powerful enough to do this. If the entire road was
stopped, he would have to evacuate every strip, correct the trouble on strip
twenty, bring all strips up to speed, and then move the accumulated peak load
traffic. In the meantime, over five million stranded passengers would,
constitute a tremendous police problem. It was simpler to evacuate passengers
on strip twenty over the roof, and allow them to return home via the remaining
strips. "Notify the Mayor and the Governor that I have assumed emergency
authority. Same to the Chief of Police and place him under your orders. Tell
the Commandant to arm all cadets available and await orders. Move!"
"Yes, sir. Shall I recall technicians
off watch?"
"No. This isn't an engineering
failure. Take a look at your readings; that entire sector went out
simultaneously. Somebody cut out those
rotors by hand. Place offwatch technicians on standby status-but don't arm
them, and don't send them down inside. Tell the Commandant to rush all
available senior-class cadets to Stockton Subsector Office number ten to report
in. I want them equipped with tumblebugs, pistols, and sleepy bombs."
"Yes, sir." A clerk leaned over
Davidson's shoulder and said something in his ear. "The Governor wants to
talk to you, Chief."
"Can't do it-nor can you. Who's your
relief? Have you sent for him?"
"Hubbard-he's just come in."
"Have him talk to the Governor, the
Mayor, the press - anybody that calls - even the White House. You stick to your
watch. I'm cutting off. I'll be back in communication as quickly as I can
locate a reconnaissance car." He was out of the booth almost before the
screen cleared.
Blekinsop did not venture to speak, but
followed him out to the northbound twenty-mile strip. There Gaines stopped,
short of the wind break, turned, and kept his eyes on the wall beyond the
stationary walkway. He picked out some landmark, or sign - not apparent to his
companion - and did an Eliza-crossing-the-ice back to the walkway, so rapidly
that Blekinsop was carried some hundred feet beyond him, and almost failed to
follow when Gaines ducked into a doorway and ran down a flight of stairs.
They came out on a narrow lower walkway,
'down inside'. The pervading din claimed them, beat upon their bodies as well
as their ears. Dimly, Blekinsop perceived their surroundings, as he struggled
to face that wall of sound. Facing him, illuminated by the yellow monochrome of
a sodium arc, was one of the rotors that drove the five-mile strip, its great,
drum-shaped armature revolving slowly around the stationary field coils in its
core. The upper surface of the drum pressed against the under side of the
moving way and imparted to it its stately progress.
To the left and right, a hundred yards
each way, and beyond at similar intervals, farther than he could see, were
other rotors. Bridging the gaps between the rotors were the slender rollers,
crowded together like cigars in a box, in order that the strip might have a
continuous rolling support. The rollers were supported by steel girder arches
through the gaps of which he saw row after row of rotors in staggered
succession, the rotors in each succeeding row turning over more rapidly than
the last.
Separated from the narrow walkway by a
line of supporting steel pillars, and lying parallel to it on the side away
from the rotors, ran a shallow paved causeway, joined to the walk at this point
by a ramp. Gaines peered up and down this tunnel in evident annoyance.
Blekinsop started to ask him what troubled him, but found his voice snuffed out
by the sound: He could not cut through the roar of thousands of rotors and the
whine of hundreds of thousands of rollers.
Gaines saw his lips move and guessed at
the question.'
He cupped his hands around Blekinsop's
right ear, and shouted, "No car - I expected to find a car here."
The Australian, wishing to be helpful,
grasped Gaines' arm and pointed back into the jungle of machinery.
Gaines' eye followed the direction
indicated and picked out something that he had missed in his preoccupation - a
half dozen men working around a rotor several strips away. They had jacked down
a rotor until it was no longer in contact with the road surface and were
preparing to replace it in toto. The replacement rotor was standing by on a
low, heavy truck.
The Chief Engineer gave a quick smile of
acknowledgment and thanks and aimed his flashlight at the group, the beam
focused down to a slender, intense needle of light.
One of the technicians looked up, and
Gaines snapped the light on and off in a repeated, irregular pattern. A figure
detached itself from the group, and ran toward them.
It was a slender young man, dressed in
dungarees and topped off with earpads and an incongruous, pillbox cap, bright
with gold braid and Insignia. He recognized the Chief Engineer and saluted, his
face falling into humorless, boyish intentness.
Gaines stuffed his torch into a pocket and
commenced to gesticulate rapidly with both hands-clear, clean gestures, as
involved and as meaningful as deaf-mute language. Blekinsop dug into his own
dilettante knowledge of anthropology and decided that it was most like American
Indian sign language, with some of the finger movements of hula. But it was
necessarily almost entirely strange, being adapted for a particular
terminology.
The cadet answered him in kind, stepped to
the edge of the causeway, and flashed his torch to the south. He picked out a
car, still some distance away, but approaching at headlong speed. It braked,
and came to a stop alongside them.
It was a small affair, ovoid in shape, and
poised on two centerline wheels. The forward, upper surface swung up and
disclosed the driver, another cadet. Gaines addressed him briefly in sign language,
then hustled Blekinsop ahead of him into the cramped passenger compartment.
As the glassite hood was being swung back
into place, a blast of wind smote them, and the Australian looked up in time to
glimpse the last of three much larger vehicles hurtle past them. They were
headed north, at a speed of not less than two hundred miles per hour. Blekinsop
thought that he had made out the little hats of cadets through the windows of
the last of the three, but he could not be sure.
He had no time to wonder - so violent was
the driver's getaway. Gaines ignored the accelerating surge; he was already
calling Davidson on the built-in communicator. Comparative silence had settled
down once the car was closed. The face of a female operator at the relay station
showed on the screen.
"Get me Davidson-Senior Watch
Office!"
"Oh! It's Mr. Gaines! The Mayor wants
to talk to you, Mr. Gaines."
"Refer him-and get me Davidson.
Move!"
"Yes, sir!"
"And see here-leave this circuit
hooked in to Davidson's board until I tell you personally to cut it."
"Right." Her face gave way to
the Watch Officer's.
"That you, Chief? We're
moving-progress O.K.-no change."
"Very well You'll be able to raise me
on this circuit, or at Subsector Ten office. Clearing now." Davidson's
face gave way to the relay operator.
"Your wife is calling, Mr. Gaines.
Will you take it?"
Gaines muttered something not quite
gallant, and answered, "Yes."
Mrs. Gaines flashed into facsimile. He
burst into speech before she could open her mouth. "Darling I'm all right
don't worry I'll be home when I get there I've go to go now." It was all
out in one breath, and he slapped the control that cleared the screen.
They slammed to a breath-taking stop
alongside the stair leading to the watch office of Subsector Ten, and piled
out. Three big lorries were drawn up on the ramp, and three platoons of cadets
were ranged in restless ranks alongside them.
A cadet trotted up to Gaines, and saluted.
"Lindsay, sir-Cadet Engineer of the Watch. The Engineer of the Watch
requests that you come at once to the control room."
The Engineer of the Watch looked up as
they came in. "Chief-Van Kleeck is calling you."
"Put him on."
When Van Kleeck appeared in the big visor,
Gaines greeted him with, "Hello, Van. Where are you?"
"Sacramento Office. Now,
listen-"
"Sacramento? That's good!
Report."
Van Kleeck looked disgruntled.
"Report, hell! I'm not your deputy any more, Gaines. Now, you-"
"What the hell are you talking
about?"
"Listen, and don't interrupt me, and
you'll find out. You're through, Gaines. I've been picked as Director of the
Provisional Central Committee for the New Order."
"Van, have you gone off your rocker?
What do you mean-the New Order?"
"You'll find out. This is it-the
functionalist revolution. We're in; you're out. We stopped strip twenty just to
give you a little taste of what we can do."
Concerning Function: A Treatise on the
Natural Order in Society, the bible of the functionalist movement, was first
published in 1930. It claimed to be a scientifically accurate theory of social
relations. The author, Paul Decker, disclaimed the "outworn and
futile" ideas of democracy and human equality, and substituted a system in
which human beings were evaluated "functionally" - that is to say, by
the role each filled in the economic sequence. The underlying thesis was that
it was right and proper for a man to exercise over his fellows whatever power
was inherent in his function, and that any other form of social organization
was silly, visionary, and contrary to the "natural order."
The complete interdependence of modern
economic life seems to have escaped him entirely.
His ideas were dressed up with a glib
mechanistic psendopsychology based on the observed orders of precedence among
barnyard fowls, and on the famous Pavlov conditioned-reflex experiments on
dogs. He failed to note that human beings are neither dogs, nor chickens. Old
Doctor Pavlov ignored him entirely, as he had ignored so many others who had,
blindly and unscientifically dogmatized about the meaning of his important, but
strictly limited, experiments.
Functionalism did not take hold at
once-during the thirties almost everyone, from truckdriver to hatcheck girl,
had a scheme for setting the world right in six easy lessons; and a surprising
percentage managed to get their schemes published. But it gradually spread.
Functionalism was particularly popular among little people everywhere who could
persuade themselves that their particular jobs were the indispensable ones, and
that, therefore, under the "natural order" they would be top dog.
With so many different functions actually indispensable such self-persuasion
was easy.
Gaines stared at Van Kleeck for a moment
before replying. "Van," he said slowly, "you don't really think you
can get away with this, do you?"
The little man puffed out his chest.
"Why not? We have gotten away with it. You can't start strip twenty until
I am ready to let you, and I can stop the whole road, if necessary."
Gaines was becoming uncomfortably aware
that he was dealing with unreasonable conceit, and held himself patiently in
check. "Sure you can, Van-but how about the rest of the country? Do you
think the United States Army will sit quietly by and let you run California as
your private kingdom?"
Van Kleeck looked sly. "I've
planned for that. I've just finished broadcasting a manifesto to all the road
technicians in the country, telling them what we have done, and telling them to
arise, and claim their rights. With every road in the country stopped, and
people getting hungry, I reckon the President will think twice before sending
the army to tangle with us. Oh, he could send a force to capture, or kill me -
I'm not afraid to die! - but he doesn't dare start shooting down road
technicians as a class, because the country can't get along without us -
consequently, he'll have to get along with us - on our terms!"
There was much bitter truth in what he
said. If an uprising of the road technicians became general, the government
could no more attempt to settle it by force than a man could afford to cure a
headache by blowing out his brains. But was the uprising general?
"Why do you think that the
technicians in the rest of the country will follow your lead?"
"Why not? It's the natural order of
things. This is an age of machinery; the real power everywhere is in the
technicians, but they have been kidded into not using their power with a lot of
obsolete catch-phrases. And of all the classes of technicians, the most
important, the absolutely essential, are the road technicians. From now on they
run the show - it's the natural order of things!" He turned away for a
moment, and fussed with some papers on the desk before him, then be added,
"That's all for now, Gaines - I've got to call the White House, and let
the President know how things stand. You carry on, and behave yourself, and you
won't get hurt."
Gaines sat quite still for some minutes
after the screen cleared. So that's how it was. He wondered what effect, if
any, Van Kleeck's invitation to strike had had on road technicians elsewhere.
None, he thought - but then he had not dreamed that it could happen among his
own technicians. Perhaps he had made a mistake in refusing. to take time to
talk to anyone outside the road. No - if he had stopped to talk to the
Governor, or the newspapermen, he would still be talking. Still - He dialed
Davidson.
"Any trouble in any other sectors,
Dave?"
"No, Chief."
"Or on any other road?"
"None reported."
"Did you hear my talk with Van
Kleeck?"
"I was cut in-yes."
"Good. Have Hubbard call the
President and the Governor, and tell them that I am strongly opposed to the use
of military force as long as the outbreak is limited to this road. Tell them
that I will not be responsible if they move in before I ask for help."
Davidson looked dubious. "Do you
think that is wise, Chief?"
"I do! If we try to blast Van and his
red-hots out of their position, we may set off a real, country-wide uprising.
Furthermore, he could wreck the road so that God himself couldn't put it back
together. What's your rolling tonnage now?"
"Fifty-three percent under evening
peak."
"How about strip twenty?"
"Almost evacuated."
"Good. Get the road clear of all
traffic as fast as possible. Better have the Chief of Police place a guard on
all entrances to the road to keep out new traffic. Van may stop all strips at
any time - or I may need to, myself. Here is my plan: I'm going 'down inside'
with these armed cadets. We will work north, overcoming any resistance we meet.
You arrange for watch technicians and maintenance crews to follow immediately
behind us. Each rotor, as they come to it, is to be cut out, then hooked in to
the Stockton control board. It will be a haywire rig, with no safety
interlocks, so use enough watch technicians to be able to catch trouble before
it happens.
"If this scheme works, we can move
control of the Sacramento Sector right out from under Van's feet, and he can
stay in this Sacramento control office until he gets hungry enough to be
reasonable."
He cut off and turned to the Subsector
Engineer of the Watch. "Edmunds, give me a helmet - and a pistol."
"Yes, sir." He opened a drawer,
and handed his chief a slender, deadly looking weapon. Gaines belted it on, and
accepted a helmet, into which he crammed his head, leaving the anti-noise ear
flaps up. Blekinsop cleared his throat.
"May - uh - may I have one of those
helmets?" he inquired.
"What?" Gaines focused his
attention. "Oh - You won't need one, Mr. Blekinsop. I want you to remain
right here until you hear from me."
"But-" The Australian statesman
started to speak, thought better of it, and subsided.
From the doorway the Cadet Engineer of the
Watch demanded the Chief Engineer's attention. "Mr. Gaines, there is a
technician out here who insists on seeing you - a man named Harvey."
"Can't do it."
"He's from the Sacramento Sector,
sir."
"Oh! Send him in."
Harvey quickly advised Gaines of what he
had seen and heard at the guild meeting that afternoon. "I got disgusted
and left while they were still jawin', Chief. I didn't think any more about it
until twenty stopped rolling. Then I heard that the trouble was in Sacramento
Sector, and decided to look you up."
"How long has this been building
up?"
"Quite some time, I guess. You know
how it is - there are a few soreheads everywhere and a lot of them are
functionalists. But you can't refuse to work with a man just because he holds
different political views. It's a free country."
"You should have come to me before,
Harvey." Harvey looked stubborn. Gaines studied his face. "No, I
guess you are right. It's my business to keep tab on your mates, not yours. As
you say, it's a free country. Anything else?"
"Well - now that it has come to this,
I thought maybe I could help you pick out the ringleaders."
"Thanks. You stick with me. We're
going 'down inside' and try to clear up this mess."
The office door opened suddenly, and a
technician and a cadet appeared, lugging a burden between them. They deposited
it on the floor, and waited.
It was a young man, quite evidently dead.
The front of his dungaree jacket was soggy with blood. Gaines looked at the
watch officer. "Who is he?"
Edmunds broke his stare and answered,
"Cadet Hughes-he's the messenger I sent to Sacramento when communication
failed. When he didn't report, I sent Marston and Cadet Jenkins after
him."
Gaines muttered something to himself, and
turned away. "Come along, Harvey."
The cadets waiting below had changed in
mood. Gaines noted that the boyish intentness for excitement had been replaced
by something uglier. 'There was much exchange of hand signals and several
appeared to be checking the loading of their pistols.
He sized them up, then signaled to the
cadet leader. There was a short interchange of signals. The cadet saluted,
turned to his men, gesticulated - briefly, and brought his arm down smartly.
They filed upstairs and into an empty standby room, Gaines following.
Once inside, and the noise shut out, he
addressed them,
"You saw Hughes brought in-how many
of you want a chance to kill the louse that did it?"
Three of the cadets reacted almost at
once, breaking ranks and striding forward. Gaines looked at them coldly.
"Very well. You three turn in your weapons, and return to your quarters.
Any of the rest of you that think this is a matter of private revenge, or, a
hunting party, may join them." He permitted a short silence to endure
before continuing. "Sacramento Sector has been seized by unauthorized
persons. We are going to retake it - if possible, without loss of life on
either side, and, if possible, without stopping the roads. The plan is to take
over 'down inside', rotor by rotor, and cross-connect through Stockton, The
task assignment of this group is to proceed north 'down inside', locating and
overpowering all persons in your path. You will bear in mind the probability
that most of the persons you will arrest are completely innocent. Consequently,
you will favor the use of sleep gas bombs, and will shoot to kill only as a
last resort.
"Cadet Captain, assign your men in
squads of ten each, with a squad leader. Each squad is to form a skirmish line
across 'down inside', mounted on tumblebugs, and will proceed north at fifteen
miles per hour. Leave an interval of one hundred yards between successive waves
of skirmishers. Whenever a man is sighted, the entire leading wave will
converge on him, arrest him, and deliver him to a transport car and then fall
in as the last wave. You will assign the transports that delivered you here to
receive prisoners. Instruct the drivers to keep abreast of the second wave.
"You will assign an attack group to
recapture subsector control offices, but no office is to be attacked until its
subsector has been cross-connected with Stockton. Arrange liaison accordingly.
"Any questions?" He let his eyes
run over the faces of the young men. When no one spoke up, he turned back to
the cadet in charge. "Very well, sir. Carry out your orders!"
By the time the dispositions bad been
completed, the follow-up crew of technicians had arrived, and Gaines had given
the engineer in charge his instructions. The cadets "stood to horse"
alongside their poised tumblebugs. The Cadet Captain looked expectantly at
Gaines. He nodded, the cadet brought his arm down smartly, and the first wave
mounted and moved out.
Gaines and Harvey mounted tumblebugs, and
kept abreast of the Cadet Captain, some twenty-five yards behind the leading
wave. It had been a long time since the Chief Engineer had ridden one of these
silly-looking little vehicles, and he felt awkward. A tumblebug does not give a
man dignity, since it is about the size and shape of a kitchen stool,
gyro-stabilized on a single wheel. But it is perfectly adapted to patrolling
the maze of machinery 'down inside', since it can go through an opening the width
of a man's shoulders, is easily controlled, and will stand patiently upright,
waiting, should its rider dismount.
The little reconnaissance car followed
Gaines at a short interval, weaving in and out among the rotors, while the
television and audio communicator inside continued as Gaines' link to his other
manifold responsibilities.
The first two hundred yards of the
Sacramento Sector passed without incident, then one of the skirmishers sighted
a tumblebug parked by a rotor. The technician it served was checking the gauges
at the rotor's base, and did not see them approach. He was unarmed and made no
resistance, but seemed surprised and indignant, as well as very bewildered.
The little command group dropped back and
permitted the new leading wave to overtake them.
Three miles farther along the score stood
thirty-seven men arrested, none killed. Two of the cadets had received minor
wounds, and had been directed to retire. Only four of the prisoners had been
armed, one of these Harvey had been able to identify definitely as a
ringleader. Harvey expressed a desire to attempt to parley with the outlaws, if
any occasion arose. Gaines agreed tentatively. He knew of Harvey's long and
honorable record as a labor leader, and was willing to try anything that
offered a hope of success with a minimum of violence.
Shortly thereafter the first wave flushed
another technician. He was on the far side of a rotor; they were almost on him
before he was, seen. He did not attempt to resist, although he was armed, and
the incident would not have been worth recording, had he not been talking into
a hush-a-phone which he had plugged into the telephone jack at the base of the
rotor.
Gaines reached the group as the capture
was being effected. He snatched at the soft rubber mask of the phone, jerking
it away from the man's mouth so violently that he could feel the
bone-conduction receiver grate between the man's teeth. The prisoner spat out a
piece of broken tooth and glared, but ignored attempts to question him.
Swift as Gaines had been, it was highly
probable that they had lost the advantage of surprise. It was necessary to
assume that the prisoner had succeeded in reporting the attack going on beneath
the ways. Word was passed down the line to proceed with increased caution.
Gaines' pessimism was justified shortly.
Riding toward them appeared a group of men, as yet several hundred feet away.
There were at least a score, but their exact strength could not be determined,
as they took advantage of the rotors for cover as they advanced. Harvey looked
at Gaines, who nodded, and signaled the Cadet Captain to halt his forces.
Harvey went on ahead, unarmed, his hands
held high above his head, and steering by balancing the weight of his body. The
outlaw party checked its speed uncertainly, and finally stopped. Harvey
approached within a couple of rods of them and stopped likewise. One of them,
apparently the leader, spoke to him in sign language, to which he replied.
They were too far away and the yellow
light too uncertain to follow the discussion. It continued for several minutes,
then ensued a pause. The leader seemed uncertain what to do. One of his party
rolled forward, returned his pistol to its holster, and conversed with the
leader. The leader shook his head at the man's violent gestures.
The man renewed his argument, but met the
same negative response. With a final disgusted wave of his hands, he desisted,
drew his pistol, and shot at Harvey. Harvey grabbed at his middle and leaned
forward. The man shot again; Harvey jerked, and slid to the ground.
The Cadet Captain beat Gaines to the draw.
The killer looked up as the bullet bit him. He looked as if he were puzzled by
some strange occurrence-being too freshly dead to be aware of it.
The cadets came in shooting. Although the
first wave was outnumbered better than two to one, they were helped by the
comparative demoralization of the enemy. The odds were nearly even after the
first ragged volley. Less than thirty seconds after the first treacherous shot
all of the insurgent party were dead, wounded, or under arrest. Gaines' losses
were two dead (including the murder of Harvey) and two wounded.
Gaines modified his tactics to suit the
changed conditions. Now that secrecy was gone, speed and striding power were of
first importance. The second wave was directed to close in practically to the
heels of the first. The third wave was brought up to within twenty-five yards
of the second. These three waves were to ignore unarmed men, leaving them to be
picked up by the fourth wave, but they were directed to shoot on sight any
person carrying arms.
Gaines cautioned them to shoot to wound,
rather than to kill, but he realized that his admonishment was almost
impossible to obey. There would be killing. Well, he had not wanted it, but he
felt that he had no choice. Any armed outlaw was a potential killer - he could
not, in fairness to his own men, lay too many restrictions on them.
When the arrangements for the new marching
order were completed, he signed the Cadet Captain to go ahead, and the first
and second waves started off together at the top speed of which the tumblebugs
were capable - not quite eighteen miles per hour. Gaines followed them.
He swerved to avoid Harvey's body,
glancing involuntarily down as he did so. The face was an ugly jaundiced yellow
under the sodium arc, but it was set in a death mask of rugged beauty in which
the strong fibre of the dead man's character was evident. Seeing this, Gaines
did not regret so much his order to shoot, but the deep sense of loss of
personal honor lay more heavily on him than before.
They passed several technicians during the
next few minutes, but had no occasion to shoot. Gaines was beginning to feel
somewhat hopeful of a reasonably bloodless victory, when he noticed a change in
the pervading throb of machinery which penetrated even through the heavy
anti-noise pads of his helmet. He lifted an ear pad in time to hear the end of
a rumbling diminuendo as the rotors and rollers slowed to rest.
The road was stopped.
He shouted, "Halt your men!" to
the Cadet Captain. His words echoed hollowly in the unreal silence.
The top of the reconnaissance car swung up
as he turned and hurried to it. "Chief!" the cadet within called out,
"relay station calling you."
The girl in the visor screen gave way to
Davidson as soon as she recognized Gaines' face. "Chief," Davidson
said at once, "Van Kleeck's calling you."
"Who stopped the road?"
"He did."
"Any other major change in the
situation?"
"No-the road was practically empty when
he stopped it."
"Good. Give me Van Kleeck."
The chief conspirator's face was livid
with uncurbed anger when he identified Gaines. He burst into speech. "So!
You thought I was fooling, eh? What do you think now, Mister Chief Engineer
Gaines?"
Gaines fought down an impulse to tell him
exactly what he thought, particularly about Van Kleeck. Everything about the
short man's manner affected him like a squeaking slate pencil.
But he could not afford the luxury of
speaking his mind. He strove to get just the proper tone into his voice which
would soothe the other man's vanity. "I've got to admit that you've won
this trick, Van - the roadway is stopped - but don't think I didn't take you
seriously. I've watched your work too long to underrate you. I know you mean
what you say."
Van Kleeck was pleased by the tribute, but
tried not to show it. "Then why don't you get smart, and give up?" he
demanded belligerently. "You can't win."
"Maybe not, Van, but you know I've
got to try. Besides," he went on, "why can't I win? You said yourself
that I could call on the whole United States Army."
Van Kleeck grinned triumphantly. "You
see that?" He held up a
pear-shaped electric push button, attached to a long cord. "If I push
that, it will blow a path right straight across the ways-blow it to Kingdom
Come. And just for good measure I'll take an ax, and wreck this control station
before I leave."
Gaines wished wholeheartedly that he knew
more about psychiatry. Well - he'd just have to do his best, and trust to horse
sense to give him the right answers. "That's pretty drastic, Van, but I
don't see how we can give up."
"No? You'd better have another think.
If you force me to blow up the road, how about all the people that will be
blown up along with it?"
Gaines thought furiously. He did not doubt
that Van Kleeck would carry out his threat; his very phraseology, the childish
petulance of "If you force me to do this-" betrayed the dangerous
irrationality of his mental processes. And such an explosion anywhere in the
thickly populated Sacramento Sector would be likely to wreck one, or more,
apartment houses, and would be certain to kill shopkeepers on the included
segment of strip twenty, as well as chance bystanders. Van was absolutely
right; he dare not risk the lives of bystanders who were not aware of the issue
and had not consented to the hazard - even if the road never rolled again.
For that matter, he did not relish
chancing major damage to the road itself-but it was the danger to innocent life
that left him helpless.
A tune ran through his head-"Hear
them hum; watch them run. Oh, our work is never done-" What to do? What to
do? "While you ride; while you glide; we are-"
This wasn't getting anyplace.
He turned back to the screen. "Look,
Van, you don't want to blow up the road unless you have to, I'm sure. Neither
do I. Suppose I come up to your headquarters, and we talk this thing over. Two
reasonable men ought to be able to make a settlement."
Van Kleeck was suspicious. "Is this
some sort of a trick?"
"How can it be? I'll come
alone, and unarmed, just as fast as my car can get there."
"How about your men?"
"They will sit where they are until
I'm back. You can put out observers to make sure of it."
Van Kleeck stalled for a moment, caught
between the fear of a trap, and the pleasure of having his erstwhile superior
come to him to sue for terms. At last he grudgingly consented.
Gaines left his instructions and told
Davidson what he intended to do. "If I'm not back within an hour, you're
on your own, Dave."
"Be careful, Chief."
"I will."
He evicted the cadet driver from the
reconnaissance car and ran it down the ramp into the causeway, then headed
north and gave it the gun. Now he would have a chance to collect his thoughts,
even at two hundred miles per hour. Suppose he pulled off this trick-there
would still have to be some changes made. Two lessons stood out like sore
thumbs: First, the strips must be cross-connected with safety interlocks so
that adjacent strips would slow down, or stop, if a strip's speed became
dangerously different from those adjacent. No repetition of what happened on
twenty!
But that was elementary, a mere mechanical
detail. The real failure had been in men, Well, the psychological
classification tests must be improved to insure that the roads employed only
conscientious, reliable men. But hell's bells - that was just exactly what the
present classification tests were supposed to insure beyond question. To the
best of his knowledge there had never been a failure from the improved
Hunim-Wadsworth-Burton method - not until today in the Sacramento Sector. How
had Van Kleeck gotten one whole sector of temperament - classified men to
revolt?
It didn't make sense.
Personnel did not behave erratically
without a reason. One man might be unpredictable, but in large numbers, they
were as dependable as machines, or figures. They could be measured, examined,
classified. His inner eye automatically pictured the personnel office, with its
rows of filing cabinets, its clerks - He'd got it! He'd got it! Van Kleeck, as
Chief Deputy, was ex officio personnel officer for the entire road!
It was the only solution that covered all
the facts. The personnel officer alone had the perfect opportunity to pick out
all the bad apples and concentrate them in one barrel. Gaines was convinced
beyond any reasonable doubt that there had been skullduggery, perhaps for
years, with the temperament classification tests, and that Van Kleeck had
deliberately transferred the kind of men he needed to one sector, after
falsifying their records.
And that taught another lesson-tighter
tests for officers, and no officer to be trusted with classification and
assignment without close supervision and inspection. Even he, Gaines, should be
watched in that respect. Qui custodiet ipsos custodes? Who will guard those
selfsame guardians? Latin might be obsolete, but those old Romans weren't
dummies.
He at last knew wherein he had failed, and
he derived melancholy pleasure from the knowledge. Supervision and inspection,
check and re-check, was the answer. It would be cumbersome and inefficient, but
it seemed that adequate safeguards always involved some loss of efficiency.
He should not have entrusted so much
authority to Van Kleeck without knowing more about him. He still should know
more about him- He touched the emergency-stop button, and brought the car to a
dizzying halt. "Relay station! See if you can raise my office."
Dolores' face looked out from the screen.
"You're still there-good!" he told her. "I was afraid you'd gone
home."
"I came back, Mr. Gaines."
"Good girl. Get me Van Kleeck's
personal file jacket. I want to see his classification record."
She was back with it in exceptionally
short order and read from it the symbols and percentages. He nodded repeatedly
as the data checked his hunches - masked introvert-inferiority complex. It
checked.
"'Comment of the Board:'" she
read, "'In spite of the potential instability shown by maxima A, and D on
the consolidated profile curve, the Board is convinced that this officer is,
nevertheless, fitted for duty. He has an exceptionally fine record, and is
especially adept in handling men. He is therefore recommended for retention and
promotion."
"That's all, Dolores. Thanks."
"Yes, Mr. Gaines!"
"I'm off for a showdown. Keep your
fingers crossed."
"But Mr. Gaines-" Back in
Fresno, Dolores stared wide-eyed at an empty screen.
"Take me to Mr. Van Kleeck!"
The man addressed took his gun out of
Gaines' ribs - reluctantly, Gaines thought - and indicated that the Chief
Engineer should precede him up the stairs. Gaines climbed out of the car, and
complied.
Van Kleeck had set himself up in the
sector control room proper, rather than the administrative office. With him
were half a dozen men, all armed.
"Good evening, Director Van
Kleeck." The little man swelled visibly at Gaines' acknowledgment of his
assumed rank.
"We don't go in much around here for
titles," he said, with ostentatious casualness. "Just call me Van.
Sit down, Gaines."
Gaines did so. It was necessary to get
those other men out. He looked at them with an expression of bored amusement.
"Can't you handle one unarmed man by yourself, Van? Or don't the
functionalists trust each other?"
Van Kleeck's face showed his annoyance,
but Gaines' smile was undaunted. Finally the smaller man picked up a pistol
from his desk, and motioned toward the door. "Get out, you guys!"
"But Van-"
"Get out, I said!"
When they were alone, Van Kleeck picked up
the electric push button which Gaines had seen in the visor screen, and pointed
his pistol at his former chief. "O.K.," he growled, "try any
funny stuff, and off it goes! What's your proposition?"
Gaines' irritating smile grew broader. Van
Kleeck scowled. "What's so damn funny?" he said.
Gaines granted him an answer. "You
are, Van - honest, this is rich. You start a functionalist revolution, and the
only function you can think of to perform is to blow up the road that justifies
your title. Tell me," he went on, "what is it you are so scared
of?"
"I am not afraid!"
"Not afraid? You? Sifting there,
ready to commit hara-kari with that toy push button, and you tell me that you
aren't afraid. If your buddies knew how near you are to throwing away what
they've fought for, they'd shoot you in a second. You're afraid of them, too,
aren't you?"
Van Kleek thrust the push button away from
him, and stood up; "I am not afraid!" he screamed, and came around
the desk toward Gaines.
Gaines sat where he was, and laughed.
"But you are! You're afraid of me, this minute. You're afraid I'll have
you on the carpet for the way you do your job. You're afraid the cadets won't
salute you. You're afraid they are laughing behind your back. You're afraid of
using the wrong fork at dinner. You're afraid people are looking at you - and
you are afraid that they won't notice you."
"I am not!" he protested.
"You - You dirty, stuck-up snob! Just because you went to a high-hat
school you think you're better than anybody." He choked, and became
incoherent, fighting to keep back tears of rage. "You, and your nasty
little cadets-"
Gaines eyed him cautiously. The weakness
in the man's character was evident now - he wondered why he had not seen it
before. He recalled how ungracious Van Kleeck had been one time when he had
offered to help him with an intricate piece of figuring.
The problem now was to play on his
weakness, to keep him so preoccupied that he would not remember the peril-laden
push button. He must be caused to center the venom of his twisted outlook on
Gaines, to the exclusion of every other thought.
But he must not goad him too carelessly,
or a shot from across the room might put an end to Gaines, and to any chance of
avoiding a bloody, wasteful struggle for control of the road.
Gaines chuckled. "Van," he said,
"you are a pathetic little shrimp. That was a dead give-away. I understand
you perfectly; you're a third-rater, Van, and all your life you've been afraid
that someone would see through you, and send you back to the foot of the class.
Director - phiu! If you are the best the functionalists can offer, we can
afford to ignore them - they'll fold up from their own rotten
inefficiency." He swung around in his chair, deliberately turning his back
on Van Kleeck and his gun.
Van Kleeck advanced on his tormentor,
halted a few feet away, and shouted: "You - I'll show you. - I'll put a
bullet in you; that's what I'll do!"
Gaines swung back around, got up, and
walked steadily toward him. "Put that popgun down before you hurt
yourself."
Van Kleeck retreated a step. "Don't
you come near me!" he screamed. "Don't you come near me - or I'll
shoot you - see if I don't!"
This is it, thought Gaines, and dived.
The pistol went off alongside his ear.
Well, that one didn't get him. They were on the floor. Van Kleeck was hard to
hold, for a little man. Where was the gun? There! He had it. He broke away.
Van Kleeck did not get up. He lay sprawled
on the floor, tears streaming out of his closed eyes, blubbering like a
frustrated child.
Gaines looked at him with something like compassion
in his eyes, and hit him carefully behind the ear with the butt of the pistol.
He walked over to the door, and listened for a moment, then locked it
cautiously.
The cord from the push button led to the
control board. He examined the hookup, and disconnected it carefully. That
done, he turned to the televisor at the control desk, and called Fresno.
"Okay, Dave," he said, "Let
'em attack now - and for the love of Pete, hurry!" Then he cleared the
screen, not wishing his watch officer to see how he was shaking.
Back in Fresno the next morning Gaines
paced around the Main Control Room with a fair degree of contentment in his
heart. The roads were rolling - before long they would be up to speed again. It
had been a long night. Every engineer, every available cadet, had been needed
to, make the inch-by-inch inspection of Sacramento Sector which he had
required. Then they had to cross-connect around two wrecked subsector control
boards. But the roads were rolling - he could feel their rhythm up through the
floor.
He stopped beside a haggard,
stubbly-bearded man. "Why don't you go home, Dave?" be asked.
"McPherson can carry on from here."
"How about yourself, Chief? You don't
look like a June bride."
"Oh, I'll catch a nap in my office
after a bit. I called my wife, and told her I couldn't make it. She's coming
down here to meet me."
"Was she sore?"
"Not very. You know how women
are." He turned back to the instrument board, and watched the clicking
'busy-bodies' assembling the data from six sectors. San Diego Circle, Angeles
Sector, Bakersfield Sector, Fresno Sector, Stockton-Stockton? Stockton! Good
grief! - Blekinsop! He had left a cabinet minister of Australia cooling his
heels in the Stockton office all night long!
He started for the door, while calling
over his shoulder, "Dave, will you order a car for me? Make it a fast
one!" He was across the hail, and had his head inside his private office
before Davidson could acknowledge the order.
"Dolores!"
"Yes, Mr. Gaines."
"Call my wife, and tell her I had to
go to Stockton. If she's already left home, just have her wait here. And
Dolores-"
"Yes, Mr. Gaines?"
"Calm her down."
She bit her lip, but her face was
impassive. "Yes, Mr. Gaines."
"That's a good girl." He was out
and started down the stairway. When he reached road level, the sight of the
rolling strips warmed him inside and made him feel almost cheerful.
He strode briskly away toward a door
marked ACCESS DOWN, whistling softly to himself. He opened the door, and the
rumbling, roaring rhythm from 'down inside' seemed to pick up the tune even as
it drowned out the sound of his whistling.
"Hie!
Hie! Hee!
The
rotor men are we-
Check
off your sectors loud and strong! One! Two! Three!
Anywhere
you go
You are
bound to know
That
your roadways are rolling along!"
Robert
A Heinlein
Blowups
Happen
"PUT down that wrench!"
The man addressed turned slowly around and
faced the speaker. His expression was hidden by a grotesque helmet, part of a
heavy, lead-and-cadmium armor which shielded his entire body, but the tone of
voice in which he answered showed nervous exasperation.
"What the hell's eating on you,
doc?" He made no move to replace the tool in question.
They faced each other like two helmeted,
arrayed fencers, watching for an opening. The first speaker's voice came from
behind his mask a shade higher in key and more peremptory in tone. "You
heard me, Harper. Put down that wrench at once, and come away from that
'trigger'. Erickson!"
A third armored figure came from the far
end of the control room. "What 'cha want, doe?"
"Harper is relieved from watch. You
take over as engineer-of-the-watch. Send for the standby engineer."
"Very well." His voice and
manner were phlegmatic, as he accepted the situation without comment. The
atomic engineer whom he had just relieved glanced from one to the other, then
carefully replaced the wrench in its rack.
"Just as you say, Doctor Silard, but
send for your relief, too. I shall demand an immediate hearing!" Harper
swept indignantly out, his lead-sheathed boots clumping on the floorplates.
Doctor Silard waited unhappily for the
ensuing twenty minutes until his own relief arrived. Perhaps he had been hasty.
Maybe he was wrong in thinking that Harper had at last broken under the strain
of tending the most dangerous machine in the world-the atomic breeder plant.
But if he had made a mistake, it had to be on the safe side-slips must not
happen in this business; not when a slip might result in atomic detonation of
nearly ten tons of uranium-238, U-235, and plutonium.
He tried to visualize what that would
mean, and failed. He had 'been told that uranium was potentially twenty million
times as explosive as T.N.T. The figure was meaningless that way. He thought of
the pile instead as a hundred million tons of high explosive, or as a thousand
Hiroshimas. It still did not mean anything. He had once seen an A-bomb dropped,
when he had been serving as a temperament analyst for the Air Forces. He could
not imagine the explosion of a thousand such bombs; his. brain balked. Perhaps
these atomic engineers could. Perhaps, with their greater mathematical ability
and closer comprehension of what actually went on inside the nuclear fission
chamber, they had some vivid glimpse of the mind-shattering horror locked up
beyond that shield. If so, no wonder they tended to blow up- He sighed.
Erickson looked away from the controls of the linear resonant accelerator on
which he had been making some adjustment.
"What's the trouble, doc?"
"Nothing. I'm sorry I had to relieve
Harper."
Silard could feel the shrewd glance of the
big Scandinavian. "Not getting the jitters yourself, are you, doc?
Sometimes you squirrel-sleuths blow up, too-"
"Me? I don't think so. I'm scared of
that thing in there-I'd be crazy if I weren't."
"So am I," Erickson told him
soberly, and went back to his work at the controls of the accelerator. The
accelerator proper lay beyond another shielding barrier; its snout disappeared
in the final shield between it and the pile and fed a steady stream of
terrifically speeded up sub-atomic bullets to the beryllium target located
within the pile itself. The tortured beryllium yielded up neutrons, which shot
out in all directions through the uranium mass. Some of these neutrons struck
uranium atoms squarely on their nuclei and split them in two. The fragments
were new elements, barium, xenon, rubidium-depending on the portions in which
each atom split. The new elements were usually unstable isotopes and broke down
into a, dozen more elements by radioactive disintegration in a progressive
reaction.
But these second transmutations were
comparatively safe; it was the original splitting of the uranium nucleus, with
the release of the awe-inspiring energy that bound it together-an incredible
two hundred million electron volts-that was important-and perilous.
For, while uranium was used to breed other
fuels by bombarding it with neutrons, the splitting itself gives up more
neutrons which in turn may land in other uranium nuclei and split them. If
conditions are favorable to a progressively increasing reaction of this sort,
it may get out of hand, build up in an unmeasurable fraction of a micro-second
into a complete atomic explosion-an explosion which would dwarf an atom bomb to
pop-gun size; an explosion so far beyond all human experience as to be as
completely incomprehensible as the idea of personal death. It could be feared,
but not understood.
But a self-perpetuating sequence of
nuclear splitting, just wider the level of complete explosion, was necessary to
the operation of the breeder plant. To split the first uranium nucleus by
bombarding it with neutrons from the beryllium target took more power than the
death of the atom gave up. In order that the breeder pile continue to operate
it was imperative that each atom split by a neutron from the beryllium target
should cause the splitting of many more.
It was equally imperative that this chain
of reactions should always tend to dampen, to die out. It must not build up, or
the uranium mass would explode within a time interval too short to be measured
by any means whatsoever.
Nor would there be anyone left to measure
it.
The atomic engineer on duty at the pile
could control this reaction by means of the "trigger", a term the
engineers used to include the linear resonant accelerator, the beryllium
target, the cadmium damping rods, and adjacent controls, instrument board, and
power sources. That is to say he could vary the bombardment on the beryllium
target to increase or decrease the level of operation of the plant, he could
change the "effective mass" of the pile with the cadmium dampers, and
he could tell from his instruments that the internal reaction was dampened-or,
rather, that it had been dampened the split second before. He could not
possibly know what was actually happening now within the pile-subatomic speeds
are too great and the time intervals too small. He was like the bird that flew
backward; he could see where he had been, but never knew where he was going.
Nevertheless, it was his
responsibility, and his alone, not only to maintain the pile at a high
efficiency, but to see that the reaction never passed the critical point and
progressed into mass explosion.
But that was impossible. He could not be
sure; he could never be sure.
He could bring to the job all of the skill
and learning of the finest technical education, and use it to reduce the hazard
to the lowest mathematical probability, but the blind laws of chance which
appear to rule in sub-atomic action might turn up a royal flush against him and
defeat his most skillful play.
And each atomic engineer knew it, knew
that he gambled not only with his own life, but with the lives of countless
others, perhaps with the lives of every human being on the planet. Nobody knew
quite what such an explosion would do. A conservative estimate assumed that, in
addition to destroying the plant and its personnel completely, it would tear a
chunk out of the populous and heavily traveled Los Angeles-Oklahoma Road-City a
hundred miles to the north.
The official, optimistic viewpoint on
which the plant had been authorized by the Atomic Energy Commission was based
on mathematics which predicted that such a mass of uranium would itself be
disrupted on a molar scale, and thereby limit the area of destruction, before
progressive and accelerated atomic explosion could infect the entire mass.
The atomic engineers, by and large, did
not place faith in the official theory. They judged theoretical mathematical
prediction for what it was worth-precisely nothing, until confirmed by
experiment.
But even from the official viewpoint, each
atomic engineer while on watch carried not only his own life in his hands, but
the lives of many others-how many, it was better not to think about. No pilot,
no general, no surgeon ever carried such a daily, inescapable, ever present
weight of responsibility for the lives of others as these men carried every
time they went on watch, every time they touched a venire screw, or read a
dial.
They were selected not alone for their
intelligence and technical training, but quite as much for their characters and
sense of social responsibility. Sensitive men were needed-men who could fully
appreciate the importance of the charge entrusted to them; no other sort would
do. But the burden of responsibility was too great to be borne indefinitely by
a sensitive man.
It was, of necessity, a psychologically
unstable condition. Insanity was an occupational disease.
Doctor Cummings appeared, still buckling
the straps of the armor worn to guard against stray radiation. "What's
up?" he asked Silard.
"I had to relieve Harper."
"So I guessed. I met him coming up.
He was sore as hell-just glared at me."
"I know. He wants an immediate
hearing. That's why I had to send for you."
Cummings grunted, then nodded toward the
engineer, anonymous in all-enclosing armor. "Who'd I draw?"
"Erickson."
"Good enough. Squareheads can't go
crazy-eh, Gus?"
Erickson looked up momentarily, and
answered, "That's your problem," and returned to his work. Cummings
turned back to Silard, and commented, "Psychiatrists don't seem very
popular around here. O.K.-I relieve you, sir."
"Very well, sir."
Silard threaded his way through the
zig-zag in the outer shield which surrounded the control room. Once outside
this outer shield, he divested himself of the cumbersome armor, disposed of it
in the locker room provided, and hurried to a lift. He left the lift at the
tube station, underground, and looked around for an unoccupied capsule. Finding
one, he strapped himself in, sealed the gasketed door, and settled the back of
his head into the rest against the expected surge of acceleration.
Five minutes later he knocked at the door
of the office of the general superintendent, twenty miles away.
The breeder plant proper was located in a
bowl of desert hills on the Arizona plateau. Everything not necessary to the
immediate operation of the plant-administrative offices, television station,
and so forth-lay beyond the hills. The buildings housing these auxiliary
functions were of the most durable construction technical ingenuity could
devise. It was hoped that, if the tag ever came, occupants would stand
approximately the chance of survival of a man going over Niagara Falls in a
barrel.
Silard knocked again. He was greeted by a
male secretary, Steinke. Silard recalled reading his case history. Formerly one
of the most brilliant of the young engineers, he had suffered a blanking out of
the ability to handle mathematical operations. A plain case of fugue, but there
had been nothing that the poor devil could do about it- he had been anxious
enough with his conscious mind to stay on duty. He had been rehabilitated as an
office worker.
Steinke ushered him into the
superintendent's private office. Harper was there before him, and returned his
greeting with icy politeness. The superintendent was cordial, but Silard
thought he. looked tired, as if the twenty-four-hour-a-day strain was too much
for him.
"Come in, Doctor, come In. Sit down.
Now. tell me about this. I'm a little' surprised. I thought Harper was one of
my steadiest men."
"I don't say he isn't, sir."
"Well?"
"He may be perfectly all right, but
your instructions to me are not to take any chances."
"Quite right" The superintendent
gave the engineer, silent and tense in his chair, a troubled glance, then
returned his attention to Silard. "Suppose you tell me about it."
Silard took a deep breath. "While on
watch as psychological observer at the control station I noticed that the engineer
of the watch seemed preoccupied and less responsive to stimuli than usual.
During my off-watch observation of this case, over a period of the past several
days, I have suspected an increasing lack of attention. For example, while
playing contract bridge, he now occasionally asks for a review of the bidding
which is contrary to his former behavior pattern.
"Other similar data are available. To
cut it short, at 3:11 today, while on watch, I saw Harper, with no apparent
reasonable purpose in mind, pick up a wrench used only for operating the valves
of the water shield and approach the trigger. I relieved him of duty, and sent
him out of the control room."
"Chief!" Harper calmed himself
somewhat and continued, "If this witch-doctor knew a wrench from an
oscillator, he'd know what I was doing. The wrench was on the wrong rack. I
noticed it, and picked it up to return it to its proper place. On the way, I
stopped to check the readings!"
The superintendent turned inquiringly to
Doctor Shard. "That may be true- Granting that it is true," answered
the psychiatrist doggedly, "my diagnosis still stands. Your behavior
pattern has altered; your present actions are unpredictable, and I can't
approve you for responsible work without a complete check-up."
General Superintendent King drummed on the
desktop, and sighed. Then he spoke slowly to Harper, "Cal, you're a good
boy, and believe me, I know how you feel. But: there is no way to avoid
it-you've got to go up for the psychometricals, and accept whatever disposition
the board makes of you." He paused, but Harper maintained an
expressionless silence. "Tell you what, son-why don't, you take a few
days' leave? Then, when you come back,' you can go up before the board, or
transfer to another department away from the bomb, whichever you prefer."
He looked to Shard for approval, and received a nod.
But Harper was not mollified. "No,
chief," he protested. "It won't do. Can't you' see what's wrong? It's
this constant supervision. Somebody always watching the back of your neck,
expecting you to go crazy. A man can't even shave in private. We're jumpy about
the most innocent acts, for fear some head doctor, half batty himself, will see
it and decide it's a sign we're slipping-good grief, what do you expect!"
His outburst having run its course, he
subsided into a flippant cynicism that did" not quite jell.
"O.K.-never mind the strait jacket; I'll go quietly. You're a good Joe in
spite of it, chief," he added, "and I'm glad to have worked under
you. Goodbye."
King kept the pain in his eyes out of his
voice. 'Wait a minute, Cal-you're not through here. Let's forget about the
vacation.' I'm transferring you to the radiation laboratory. You belong in
research anyhow; I'd never have spared you from it to stand watches if I hadn't
been short on number-one men.
"As for the constant psychological
observation, I hate it as much as you do. I don't suppose you know that they
watch me about twice as hard as they watch you duty engineers."
Harper showed his surprise, but Shard nodded
in sober conflation. "But we have to have this supervision. . . Do you
remember Manning? No, he was before your time. We didn't have' psychological
observers then. Manning was able and brilliant. Furthermore, he was always
cheerful; nothing seemed to bother him.
"I was glad to have him on the pile,
for he was always alert, and never seemed nervous about working with it-in fact
he grew more buoyant and cheerful the longer he stood control watches. I should
have known that was a very bad sign, but I didn't, and there was no observer to
'tell me so.
"His technician had to slug him one
night. . . He found him dismounting the, safety interlocks on the cadmium
assembly. Poor old Manning never pulled out of it- he's been violently insane
ever since. After Manning cracked up, we worked out the present system of two
qualified engineers and an observer for every watch. It seemed the only thing
to do."
"I suppose so, chief," Harper
mused, his face no longer sullen, but still unhappy. "It's a hell of a
situation just the same."
"That's putting it mildly." He
got up and put out his hand. "Cal, unless you're dead set on leaving us,
I'll expect to see you at the radiation laboratory tomorrow. Another thing-I
don't often recommend this, but it might do you good to get drunk
tonight."
King had signed to Shard to remain after
the young man left. Once the door was closed he turned back to the
psychiatrist. "There goes another one-and one of the best. Doctor, what am
I going to do?"
Silard pulled at his cheek. "I don't
know," he admitted. "The hell of it is, Harper's absolutely right. It
does increase the strain on them to know that they are being watched... and yet
they have to be watched. Your psychiatric staff isn't doing too well, either.
It makes us nervous to be around the Big Bomb... the more so because we don't
understand it. And it's a strain on us to be hated and despised as we are.
Scientific detachment is difficult under such conditions; I'm getting jumpy
myself."
King ceased pacing the floor and faced the
doctor. "But there must be some solution-" he insisted.
Silard shook his head. "It's beyond
me, Superintendent. I see no solution from the standpoint of psychology."
"No? Hmm-Doctor, who is the top man
in your field?" "Eh?"
"Who is the recognized number-one man
in handling this sort of thing?"
"Why, that's hard to say. Naturally,
there isn't any one, leading psychiatrist in the world; we specialize too
much." I know what you mean, though. You don't want the best industrial
temperament psychometrician; you want the" best all-around man for
psychoses non-lesional and situational. That would be Lentz."
"Go on."
"Well- He covers the whole field of
environment adjustment. He's the man that correlated the theory of optimum
tonicity with the relaxation technique that Korzybski had developed
empirically. He actually worked under, Korzybski himself, when he was a young
student-it's the only thing he's vain about."
"He did? Then he must be pretty old;
Koxzybski died in- What year did he die?"
"I started to say that you must know
his work in symbology-theory of abstraction and calculus of statement, all that
sort of thing-because of its applications to engineering and mathematical
physics."
"That Lentz-yes, of course. But I had
never thought of him as a psychiatrist."
"No, you wouldn't, in your field.
Nevertheless, we are inclined to credit him with having done as much to check
and reduce the pandemic neuroses of the Crazy Years as any other man, and more
than any man left alive."
"Where is he?"
"Why, Chicago, I suppose. At the
Institute."
"Get him here."
"Get him down here. Get on that
visiphone and locate him. Then have Steinke call the Port of Chicago, and hire
a stratocar to stand by for him. I want to see him as soon as possible-before
the day is out." King sat up in his chair with the air of a man who is
once more master of himself and the situation. His spirit knew that warming
replenishment that comes only with reaching a decision. The harassed expression
was gone.
Silard looked dumbfounded. "But,
superintendent," he expostulated, "you can't ring for Doctor Lentz as
if he were a junior clerk. He's-he's Lentz."
"Certainly-that's why I want him. But
I'm not a neurotic clubwoman looking for sympathy, either. He'll come. If
necessary, turn on the heat from Washington. Have the White House call him. But
get him here at once. Move!" King strode out of the office.
When Erickson came off watch he inquired
around and found that Harper had left for town. Accordingly, he dispensed with
dinner at the base, shifted into "drinkin'clothes", and allowed
himself to be dispatched via tube to Paradise. Paradise, Arizona, was a hard
little boom town, which owed its existence to the breeder plant. It was
dedicated exclusively to the serious business of detaching the personnel of the
plant from their inordinate salaries. In this worthy project they received much
cooperation from the plant personnel themselves, each of whom was receiving
from twice to ten times as much money each payday as he had ever received in
any other job, and none of whom was certain of living long enough to justify
saving for old' age. Besides, the company carried a sinking fund in Manhattan
for their dependents; why be stingy?
It was claimed, with some truth, that any
entertainment or luxury obtainable in New York City could be purchased in
Paradise. The local chamber of commerce had appropriated the slogan of Reno,
Nevada, "Biggest Little City in the World." The Reno boosters
retaliated by claiming that, while a town that close to the atomic breeder
plant undeniably brought thoughts of death and the hereafter; Hell's Gates
would be a more appropriate name.
Erickson started making the rounds. There
were twenty-seven places licensed to sell liquor in the six blocks of the main street
of Paradise. He expected to find Harper in one of them, and, knowing the man's
habits and tastes, he expected to find him in the first two three he tried.
He was not mistaken. He found Harper
sitting alone a table in the rear of deLancey's Sans Souci Bar. Lancey's was a
favorite of both of them. There was old-fashioned comfort about its
chrome-plated bar red leather furniture that appealed to them more than the
spectacular fittings of the up-to-the-minute place. DeLancey was conservative;
he stuck to indirect light and soft music; his hostesses were required to be
fully clothed, even in the evening. The fifth of Scotch in front of Harper was
about two thirds full. Erickson shoved three fingers in front Harper's face and
demanded, "Count!"
"Three," announced Harper.
"Sit down, Gus."
"That's correct," Erickson
agreed, sliding his big frame into a low-slung chair. "You'll do-for now.
What the outcome?"
"Have a drink. Not," he went on,
"that this Scotch any good. I think Lance has taken to watering it. I
surrendered, horse and foot."
"Lance wouldn't do that-stick to that
theory anti you'll sink in the sidewalk up to your knees. How come you
capitulated? I thought you planned to beat 'em about the head and shoulders, at
least." ' I
"I did," mourned Harper,
"but, cripes, Gus, the chief is right. If a brain mechanic says you're
punchy, he has got to back him up, and take you off the watch list. The chief
can't afford to take a chance."
"Yeah, the chief's all right, but I
can't learn to love our dear psychiatrists. Tell you what-let's find us one,
and, see if he can feel pain. I'll hold him while you slug 'im."
"Oh, forget it, Gus. Have a
drink."
"A pious thought-but not Scotch. I'm
going to have a martini; we ought to eat pretty soon."
"I'll have one, too."
"Do you good." Erickson lifted
his blond head and bellowed, "Israfell"
A large, black person appeared at his
elbow. "Mistuh Erickson! Yes, sub!"
"Izzy, fetch two martinis. Make mine
with Italian." He turned back to Harper. "What are you going to do
now, Cal?"
"Radiation laboratory."
"Well, that's not so bad. I'd like to
have a go at the matter of rocket fuels 'myself. I've got some ideas."
Harper looked mildly amused. "You
mean atomic fuel for interplanetary flight? That problem's pretty well
exhausted. No, son, the ionosphere is the ceiling until we think up something
better than rockets. Of course, you could mount a pile in a ship, and figure
out some jury rig to convert some of its output into push, but where does that
get you? You would still have a terrible mass-ratio because of the shielding
and I'm betting you couldn't convert one percent into thrust. That's
disregarding the question of getting the company to lend you a power pile for
anything that doesn't pay dividends."
Erickson looked balky. "I don't
concede that you've covered all the alternatives. What have we got? The early
rocket boys went right ahead trying to build better rockets, serene in the
belief that, by the time they could build rockets good enough to fly to the
moon, a fuel would be perfected that would do the trick. And they did build
ships that were good enough-you could take any ship that makes the Antipodes
run, and refit it for the moon-if you had a fuel that was adequate. But they
haven't got it.
"And why not? Because we let 'em
down, that's why. Because they're still depending on molecular energy, on
chemical reactions, with atomic power sitting right here in our laps. It's not
their fault-old D. D. Harriman had Rockets Consolidated underwrite the whole
first issue of Antarctic Pitchblende, and took a big slice of it himself, in
the expectation that we would produce something usable in the way of a
concentrated rocket fuel. Did we do it? Like hell! The company went hog-wild
for immediate commercial exploitation, and there's no atomic rocket fuel
yet."
"But you haven't stated it
properly," Harper objected. "There are just two forms of atomic
power-available, radioactivity and atomic disintegration. The first is too
slow; the energy is there, but you can't wait years for it to come out-not in a
rocket ship. The second we can only manage in a large power plant. There you
are-stymied."
"We haven't really tried,"
Erickson answered. "The power is there; we ought to give 'em a decent
fuel"
"What would you call a 'decent
fuel'?"
Erickson ticked it off. "A small
enough critical mass so that all, or almost all, the energy could be taken up
as heat by the reaction mass-I'd like the reaction mass to be ordinary water.
Shielding that would have to be no more than a lead and cadmium jacket. And the
whole thing controllable to a fine point."
Harper laughed. "Ask for Angel's
wings and be done with it. You couldn't store such fuel in a rocket; it would~
Set itself off before it reached the jet chamber."
Erickson's Scandinavian stubbornness was
just gathering for another try at the argument when the waiter arrived with the
drinks. He set them down with a triumphant flourish. "There you are,
suh!"
"Want to roll for them, Izzy?"
Harper inquired.
"Don' mind if I do."
The Negro produced a leather dice cup and
Harper rolled. He selected his combinations with care and managed to get four
aces and jack in three rolls. Israfel took the cup. He rolled in the grand
manner with a backwards twist to his wrist. His score finished at five kings,
and he courteously accepted the price of six drinks. Harper stirred the
engraved cubes with his forefinger.
"Izzy," he asked, "are
these the same dice I rolled with?"
"Why, Mistuh Harper!" The
black's expression was pained.
"Skip it," Harper conceded.
"I should know better than to gamble with you. I haven't won a roll from
you in six weeks. What did you start to say, Gus?"
"I was just going to say that there
ought to be a better way to get energy out of-" But they were joined
again, this time by something very seductive in an evening gown that appeared
to have been sprayed on her lush figure. She was young, perhaps nineteen or
twenty. "You boys lonely?" she asked as she flowed into a chair.
"Nice of you to ask, but we're not,"
Erickson denied with patient politeness. He jerked a thumb at a solitary figure
seated across the room. "Go talk to Hannigan; he's not busy."
She followed his gesture with her eyes,
and answered with faint scorn, "Him? He's no use. He's been like that for
three weeks-hasn't spoken to a soul. If you ask me, I'd say that he was
cracking up."
"That so?" he observed
noncommittally. "Here-" He fished out a five-dollar bill and handed
it to her. "Buy yourself a drink. Maybe we'll look you up later."
"Thanks, boys." The money
disappeared under her clothing, and she stood up. "Just ask for
Edith."
"Hannigan does look bad," Harper
considered, noting the brooding stare and apathetic attitude, "and he has
been awfully stand-offish lately, for him. Do you suppose we're obliged to
report him?"
"Don't let it worry you,"
advised Erickson, "there's a spotter on the job now. Look." Harper
followed his companion's eyes and recognized Dr. Mott of the psychological
staff. He was leaning against the far end of the bar and nursing a tall glass,
which gave him protective coloration. But his stance was such that his field of
vision included not only Hannigan, but Erickson and Harper as well.
"Yeah, and he's studying us as
well," Harper added.' "Damn it to hell, why does it make my back hair
rise just to lay eyes on one of them?"
The question was rhetorical, Erickson
ignored it. "Let's get out of here," he suggested, "and have
dinner some where else."
"O.K."
DeLancey himself waited on them as they
left. "Going so soon,
gentlemen?" he asked, in a voice that implied that their departure would
leave him no reason to stay open. "Beautiful lobster thermidor tonight. If
you do not like it, you need not pay." He smiled brightly.
"No sea food, Lance," Harper
told him, "not tonight. Tell me-why do you stick around here when you know
that the pile is bound to get you in the long run? Aren't you afraid of
it?"
The tavern keeper's eyebrows shot up.
"Afraid of this pile? But it is my friend!"
"Makes you money, eh?"
"Oh, I do not mean that." He
leaned toward them confidentially. "Five years ago I come here to make
some money quickly for my family before my cancer of the stomach, it kills me.
At the clinic, with the wonderful new radiants you gentlemen make with the aid
of the Big Bomb, I am cured-I live again. No, I am not afraid of the pile; it is my good friend."
"Suppose it blows up?"
"When the good Lord needs me, he will
take me." He crossed himself quickly.
As they turned away, Erickson commented in
a low voice to Harper. "There's your answer, Cal-if all us engineers had
his faith, the job wouldn't get us down."
Harper was unconvinced. "I don't
know," be mused. 'I don't think it's faith; I think it's lack of
imagination and knowledge."
Notwithstanding King's confidence, Lentz
did not show up until the next day. The superintendent was subconsciously a
little surprised at his visitor's appearance. He had pictured a master
psychologist as wearing flowing hair, an imperial, and having piercing black
eyes. But this man was not overly tall, was heavy in his framework, and
fat-almost gross. He might have been a butcher. Little, piggy, faded-blue eyes
peered merrily out from beneath shaggy blond brows. There was no hair anywhere
else on the enormous skull, and the ape-like jaw was smooth and pink. He was
dressed in mussed pajamas of unbleached linen. A long cigarette holder jutted
permanently from one corner of a wide mouth, widened still more by a smile
which suggested unmalicious amusement at the worst that life, or men, could do.
He had gusto. King found him remarkably easy to talk to.
At Lentz' suggestion the Superintendent
went first into the history of atomic power plants, how the fission of the
uranium atom by Dr. Otto Hahn in December, 1938, had opened up the way to
atomic power. The door was opened just a crack; the process to be self
perpetuating and commercially usable required an enormously greater knowledge
than there was available in the entire civilized world at that time.
In 1938 the amount of separated
uranium-235 in the world was not the mass of the head of a pin. Plutonium was
unheard of. Atomic power was abstruse theory and a single, esoteric laboratory
experiment. World War II, the Manhattan Project, and Hiroshima changed that; by
late 1945 prophets were rushing into print with predictions of atomic power,
cheap, almost free atomic power, for everyone in a year or two.
It did not work out that way. The
Manhattan Project had been run with the single-minded purpose of making
weapons; the engineering of atomic power was still in the future.
The far future, so it seemed. The uranium
piles used to make the atom bomb were literally no good for commercial power;
they were designed to throw away power as a useless byproduct, nor could the
design of a pile, once in operation, be changed. A design-on paper-for an
economic, commercial power pile could be made, but it had two serious hitches.
The first was that such a pile would give off energy with such fury, if
operated at a commercially satisfactory level, that there was no known way of
accepting that energy and putting it to work.
This problem was solved first. A
modification of the Douglas-Martin power screens, originally designed to turn
the radiant energy of the sun (a natural atomic power pile itself) directly
into electrical power, was used to receive the radiant fury of uranium fission
and carry it away as electrical current.
The second hitch seemed to be no hitch at
all. An "enriched" pile-one in
which U-235 or plutonium had been added to natural uranium-was a quite
satisfactory source of commercial power. We knew how to get U-235 and
plutonium; that was the primary accomplishment of the Manhattan Project.
Or did we know how? Hanford produced
plutonium; Oak Ridge extracted U-235, true-but the Hanford piles used more
U-235 than they produced plutonium and Oak Ridge produced nothing but merely
separated out the 7/10 of one percent of U-235 in natural uranium and
"threw away" the 99%-plus of the energy which was still locked in the
discarded U-238. Commercially ridiculous, economically fantastic!
But there was another way to breed
plutonium, by means of a high-energy, unmoderated pile of natural uranium
somewhat enriched. At a million electron volts or more U-238 will fission at
somewhat lower energies it turns to plutonium. Such a pile supplies its own
"fire" and produces more "fuel" than it uses; it could
breed fuel for many other power piles of the usual moderated sort.
But an unmoderated power pile is almost by
definition an atom bomb.
The very name "pile" comes from
the pile of graphite bricks and uranium slugs set up in a squash court at the
University of Chicago at the very beginning of the Manhattan Project. Such a
pile, moderated by graphite or heavy water, cannot explode.
Nobody knew what an unmoderated,
high-energy pile might do. It would breed plutonium in great quantities- but
would it explode? Explode with such violence as to make the Nagasaki bomb seem
like a popgun?
Nobody knew.
In the meantime the power-hungry
technology of the United States grew still more demanding. The Douglas Martin
sunpower screens met the immediate crisis when oil became too scarce to be
wasted as fuel, but sunpower was limited to about one horsepower per square
yard and was at the mercy of the weather.
Atomic power was needed-demanded.
Atomic engineers lived through the period
in an agony of indecision. Perhaps a breeder pile could be controlled. Or
perhaps if it did go out of control it would simply blow itself apart and thus
extinguish its own fires. Perhaps it would explode like several atom bombs but
with low efficiency. But it might-it just might-explode its whole mass of many
tons of uranium at once and destroy the human race in the process.
There is an old story, not true, which
tells of a scientist who had made a machine which would instantly destroy the
world, so he believed, if he closed one switch. He wanted to know whether or
not lie was right. So he closed the switch-and never found out.
The atomic engineers were afraid to close
the switch.
"It was Destry's mechanics of
infinitesimals that showed a way out of the, dilemma," King went on.
"His equations appeared to predict that such an atomic explosion, once
started, would disrupt the molar mass enclosing it so rapidly that neutron loss
through the outer surface of the fragments would dampen the progression of the
atomic explosion to zero before complete explosion could be reached. In an atom
bomb such damping actually occurs.
"For the mass we use in the pile, his
equations predicted possible force of explosion one-seventh of one percent of
the force of complete explosion. That alone, of course, would be
incomprehensibly destructive-enough to wreck this end of the state. Personally,
I've never been sure that is all that would happen."
"Then why did you accept this
job?" inquired Lentz.
King fiddled with items on his desk before
replying. "I couldn't turn it down, doctor I couldn't. If I had refused,
they would have gotten someone else-and it was an opportunity that comes to a
physicist once in history."
Lentz nodded. "And probably they
would- have gotten someone not as competent. I understand, Dr. King-you were
compelled by the 'truth-tropism' of the scientist. He must go where the data is
to be found, even if it kills him. But about this fellow Destry, I've never
liked his mathematics; he postulates too much."
King looked up in quick surprise, then
recalled that this was the man who had refined and given rigor to the calculus
of statement. "That's just the hitch," he agreed. "His work is
brilliant, but I've never been sure that his predictions were worth the paper
they were written on. Nor, apparently," he added bitterly, "do my
junior engineers."
He told the psychiatrist Of the
difficulties they had had with personnel, of how the most carefully selected
men would, sooner or later, crack under the strain. "At first I thought it
might be some degenerating effect from the neutron radiation that leaks out
through the shielding, so we improved the screening and the personal armor. But
it didn't help. One young fellow who had joined us after the new screening was
installed became violent at dinner one night, and insisted that a pork chop was
about to explode. I hate to think of what might have happened if he had been on
duty at the pile when he blew up."
The inauguration of the system of constant
psychological observation had greatly reduced the probability of acute danger
resulting from a watch engineer cracking up, but King was forced to admit that
the system was not a success; there had actually been a marked increase in
psychoneuroses, dating from that time.
"And that's the picture, Dr. Lentz.
It gets worse all the time. It's getting me now. The strain is telling on me; I
can't sleep, and I don't think my judgment is as good as it used to be-I have
trouble making up my mind, of coming to a decision. Do you think you can do
anything for us?"
But Lentz had no immediate relief for his
anxiety. "Not so fast, superintendent," he countered. "You have
given me the background, but I have no real data as yet. I must look around for
a while, smell out the situation for myself, talk to your engineers, perhaps
have a few drinks with them, and get acquainted. That is possible, is it not?
Then in a few days, maybe, we know where we stand."
King had no alternative but to agree.
"And it is well that your young men
do not know what I am here for. Suppose I am your old friend, a visiting
physicist, eh?"
"Why, yes-of course. I can see to it
that that idea gets around. But say-" King was reminded again of something
that had bothered him from the time Silard had first suggested Lentz' name.
"May I ask a personal question?"
The merry eyes were undisturbed. "Go
ahead."
"I can't help but be surprised that
one man should attain eminence in two such widely differing fields as
psychology and mathematics. And right now I'm perfectly convinced of your
ability to pass yourself off as a physicist. I don't understand it."
The smile was more amused, without being
in the least patronizing, nor offensive. "Same subject," he answered.
"Eh? How's that-"
"Or rather, both mathematical physics
and psychology are branches of the same subject, symbology. You are a
specialist; it' would not necessarily come to your attention."
"I still don't follow you."
"No? Man lives in a world of ideas.
Any phenomenon is so complex that he cannot possibly grasp the whole of it. He
abstracts certain characteristics of a given phenomenon as an idea, then
represents that idea as a symbol, be it a word or a mathematical sign. Human
reaction is almost entirely reaction to symbols, and only negligibly to
phenomena. As a matter Of fact," he continued, removing the cigarette
holder from his mouth and settling into his subject, "it can be
demonstrated that the human mind can think only in terms of symbols.
"When we think, we let symbols
operate on other symbols in certain, set fashions-rules of logic, or rules of
mathematics. If the symbols have been abstracted so that they are structurally
similar to the phenomena they stand for, and if the symbol operations are
similar in structure and order to the operations of phenomena in the ~real~
world, we think sanely. If our logic-mathematics, or our word-symbols, have
been poorly chosen, we think not sanely.
"In mathematical physics you are
concerned with making your symbology fit physical phenomena. In psychiatry I am
concerned with precisely the same thing, except that I am more immediately
concerned with the man who does the thinking than with the phenomena he is
thinking about. But the same subject, always the dame subject."
"We're not getting anyplace,
Gus." Harper put down his slide rule and frowned.
"Seems like it, Cal," Erickson
grudgingly admitted.
"Damn it, though-there ought to be
some reasonable way of tackling the problem. What do we need? Some form of
concentrated, controllable power for rocket fuel. What have we got? Power
galore through fission. There must be some way to bottle that power, and serve
it out when we need it-and the answer is some place in one of the radioactive~
series. I know it." He stared glumly around the laboratory as if expecting
to find the answer written somewhere on the lead-sheathed walls.
"Don't be so down in the mouth about
it. You've got me convinced there is an answer; let's figure out how to find
it. In the first place the three natural radioactive series are out, aren't
they?"
"Yes ... at least we had agreed that
all that ground had been fully covered before."
"Okay; we have to assume that
previous investigators have done what their notes show they have done-otherwise
we might as well not believe anything, and start checking on everybody from
Archimedes to date. Maybe that is indicated, but Methuselah himself couldn't
carry out such an assignment. What have we got left?"
"Artificial radioactives."
"All right. Let's set up a list of
them, both those that have been made up to now, and those that might possibly
be made in the future. Call that our group-or rather, field, if you want to be
pedantic about definitions. There are a limited number of operations that can
be performed on each member of the group, and on the members taken in
combination. Set it up."
Erickson did so, using the curious
curlicues of the calculus of statement. Harper nodded. "All right-expand
it."
Erickson looked up after a few moments,
and asked, "Cal, have you any idea how many terms there are in the
expansion?"
"No. . . hundreds, maybe thousands, I
suppose."
"You're conservative. It reaches four
figures without considering possible new radioactives. We couldn't finish such
a research in a century. He chucked his pencil down and looked morose.
Cal Harper looked at him curiously, but
with sympathy. "Gus," he said gently, "the job isn't getting
you, too, is it?"
"I don't think so. Why?"
"I never saw you so willing to give
up anything before. Naturally you and I will never finish any such job, but at
the very worst we will have eliminated a lot of wrong answers for somebody
else. Look at Edison-sixty years of experimenting, twenty hours a day, yet he
never found out the one thing he was most interested in knowing. I guess if he
could take it, we can."
Erickson pulled out of his funk to some
extent. "I suppose so," he agreed. "Anyhow, maybe we could work
out some techniques for carrying a lot of experiments simultaneously."
Harper slapped him on the shoulder.
"That's the ol' fight. Besides, we may not need to finish the research, or
anything like it, to find a satisfactory fuel. The way I see it, there are
probably a dozen, maybe a hundred, right answers. We may run across one of them
any day. Anyhow, since you're willing to give me a hand with it in your off
watch time, I'm game to peck away at it till hell freezes."
Lentz puttered around the plant and the
administration center for several days, until he was known to everyone by sight
He made himself pleasant and asked questions. He was soon regarded as a
harmless nuisance, to be tolerated because he was a friend of the
superintendent. He even poked his nose into the commercial power end of the plant,
and had the radiation-to-electric-power sequence explained to him in detail.
This alone would have been sufficient to disarm any suspicion that he might be
a psychiatrist, for the staff psychiatrists paid no attention to the
hard-bitten technicians of the power-conversion unit. There was no need to;
mental instability on their part could not affect the pile, nor were they
subject to the strain of social responsibility. Theirs was simply a job
personally dangerous, a type of strain strong men have been inured to since the
jungle.
In due course he got around to the unit of
the radiation laboratory set aside for Calvin Harper's use. He rang the bell
and waited. Harper answered the door, his antiradiation helmet shoved back from
his face like some grotesque sunbonnet. "What is it?" he asked.
"Oh-it's you, Doctor Lentz. Did you want to see me?"
"Why, yes, and no," the older
man answered, "I was just looking around the experimental station and
wondered what you do in here. Will I be in the way?"
"Not at all. Come in. Gus!"
Erickson got up from where he had been
fussing over the power leads to their trigger a modified betatron rather than a
resonant accelerator. "Hello."
"Gus, this is Doctor Lentz-Gus
Erickson."
"We've met," said Erickson,
pulling off his gauntlet to shake hands. He had had a couple of drinks with
Lentz in town and considered him a "nice old duck." "You're just
between shows, but stick around and we'll start another run-not that there is
much to see."
While Erickson continued with the set-up,
Harper conducted Lentz around the laboratory, explaining the line of research
they were conducting, as happy as a father showing off twins. The psychiatrist
listened with one ear and made appropriate comments while he studied the young
scientist for signs of the instability he had noted to be recorded against him.
"You see," Harper explained,
oblivious to the interest in himself, "we are testing radioactive
materials to see if we can produce disintegration of the sort that takes place
in the pile, but in a minute, almost microscopic, mass. If we are successful,
we can use the breeder pile to make a safe, convenient, atomic fuel for
rockets-or for anything else." He went on to explain their schedule of
experimentation.
"I see," Lentz observed
politely. "What element are you examining now"
Harper told him. "But it's not a case
of examining one element-we've finished Isotope II of this element with
negative results. Our schedule calls next for running the same test on Isotope
V. Like this." He hauled out a lead capsule, and showed the label to
Lentz. He hurried away to the shield around the target of the betatron, left
open by Erickson. Lentz saw that he had opened the capsule, and was performing
some operation on it with 'a long pair of tongs in a gingerly manner, having
first lowered his helmet. Then he closed and clamped the target shield.
"Okay, Gus?" he called out.
"Ready to roll?"
"Yeah, I guess so," Erickson
assured him, coming around from behind the ponderous apparatus, and rejoining
them. They crowded behind a thick metal and concrete shield that cut them off
from direct sight of the set up.
"Will I need to put- on armor?"
inquired Lentz.
"No," Erickson reassured him,
"we wear it because we are around the stuff day in and day out. You just
stay behind the shield and you'll be all right."
Erickson glanced at Harper, who nodded,
and fixed his, eyes on a panel of instruments mounted behind the shield. Lentz
saw Erickson press a push button at the top of the board, then heard a series
of relays click on the far side of~ the shield. There was a short moment of
silence.
The floor slapped his feet like some
incredible bastinado. The concussion that beat on his ears was so intense that
it paralyzed the auditory nerve almost before it could be recorded as sound.
The air-conducted concussion wave flailed every inch of his body with a single,
stinging, numbing blow. As he picked himself up, he found he was trembling
uncontrollably and realized, for the first time, that he was getting old.
Harper was seated on the floor and had
commenced to bleed from the nose. Erickson had gotten up, his cheek was cut. He
touched a hand to the wound, then stood there, regarding the blood on his
fingers with a puzzled expression on his face.
"Are you hurt?" Lentz inquired
inanely. "What happened?"
Harper cut in. "Gus, we've done it!
We've done it! Isotope Five has turned the trick!"
Erickson looked still more bemused.
"Five?" he said stupidly, "-but that wasn't Five, that was
Isotope IL I put it in myself."
"You put it in? I put it in! It was
Five, I tell you!"
They stood staring at each other, still
confused by the explosion, and each a little annoyed at the boneheaded
stupidity the other displayed in the face of the obvious. Lentz diffidently interceded.
"Wait a minute, boys," he
suggested, "maybe there's a reason-Gus, you placed a quantity of the
second isotope in the receiver?"
"Why, yes, certainly. I wasn't
satisfied with the last run, and I wanted to check it."
Lentz nodded. "It's my fault,
gentlemen," he admitted ruefully. "I came in, disturbed your routine,
and both of you charged the receiver. I know Harper did, for I saw him do it
with Isotope V. I'm sorry."
Understanding broke over Harper's face,
and he slapped the older man on the shoulder. "Don't be sorry," he
laughed; "you can come around to our lab and help us make mistakes anytime
you feel in the mood- Can't he, Gus? This is the answer, Doctor Lentz, this is
it!"
"But," the psychiatrist pointed
out, "you don't know which isotope blew up."
"Nor care," Harper supplemented.
"Maybe it was both, taken together. But we will know-this business is
cracked now; we'll soon have it open." He gazed happily around at the
wreckage.
In spite of Superintendent King's anxiety,
Lentz refused to be hurried in passing judgment on the situation. Consequently,
when be did present himself at King's office, and announced that he was ready
to report, King was pleasantly surprised as well as relieved. "Well, I'm
delighted," he said. "Sit down, doctor, sit down. Have a cigar. What
do we do about it?"
But Lentz stuck to his perennial
cigarette, and refused to be hurried. "I must have some information first:
how important," he demanded, "is the power from your plant?"
King understood the implication at once.
"If you are thinking about shutting down - the plant for more than a
limited period, it can't be done."
"Why not? If the figures supplied me
are correct, your power output is less than thirteen percent of the total power
used in the country."
"Yes, that is true, but we
also supply another thirteen percent second hand through the plutonium we breed
here-and you haven't analyzed the items that make up the balance. A lot of it
is domestic power which householders get from sunscreens located on their
roofs. Another big slice is power for the moving roadways-that's sunpower
again. The portion we provide here directly or indirectly is the main power
source for most of the heavy industries-steel, plastics, lithics, all kinds of
manufacturing and processing. You might as well cut the heart out of a
man-"
"But the food industry isn't
basically dependent on you?" Lentz persisted.
"No ... Food isn't basically a power
industry though we do supply a certain percentage of the power used in
processing. I see your point, and will go on, concede that transportation, that
is to say, distribution food, could get along without us. But good heavens,
Doctor, you can't stop atomic power without causing the biggest panic this
country has ever seen. It's the keystone our whole industrial system."
"The country has lived through panics
before, and we got past the oil shortage safely."
"Yes because sunpower and atomic
power had to take the place of oil. You don't realize what would mean, Doctor.
It would be worse than a war; in system like ours, one thing depends on
another. If you cut off the heavy industries all at once, everything else stops
too."
"Nevertheless, you had better dump
the pile." The uranium in the pile was molten, its temperature bell
greater than twenty-four hundred degrees centigrade. The pile could be dumped
into a group of small containers when it was desired to shut it down. The mass
into one container would be too small to maintain progressive atomic
disintegration.
Icing glanced involuntarily at the
glass-enclosed relay mounted on his office wall, by which he, as well as the
engineer on duty, could dump the pile, if need be. "But ~ couldn't do that
... or rather, if I did, the plant wouldn't stay shut down. The directors would
simply replace me with someone who would operate it."
"You're right, of course." Lentz
silently considered the situation for some time, then said,
"Superintendent, will you order a car to fly me back to Chicago?"
"You're going, doctor?"
"Yes." He took the cigarette
holder from his face, and, for once, the smile of Olympian detachment was gone
completely. His entire manner was sober, even tragic.
"Short of shutting down the plant,
there is no solution to your problem-none whatsoever!"
"I owe you a full explanation,"
he continued, presently.
"You are confronted here with
recurring instances of situational psychoneurosis. Roughly, the symptoms
manifest themselves as anxiety neurosis, or some form of hysteria.
The partial amnesia of your secretary,
Steinke, is a good example of the latter. He might be cured with shock
technique, but it would hardly be a kindness, as he has achieved a stable
adjustment which puts him beyond the reach of the strain he could not stand.
"That other young fellow, Harper,
whose blowup was the immediate cause of you sending for me, is an anxiety case.
When the cause of the anxiety was eliminated from his matrix, he at once
regained full sanity. But keep a close watch on his friend, Erickson-
"However, it is the cause, and prevention, of situational psychoneurosis
we are concerned with here, rather than the forms in which it is manifested. In
plain language, psychoneurosis situational simply refers to the common fact
that, if you put a man in a situation that worries him more than he can stand,
in time he blows up, one way or another.
"That is precisely the situation
here. You take sensitive, intelligent young men, impress them with the fact
that a single slip on their part, or even some fortuitous circumstance beyond
their control, will result in the death of God knows how many other people, and
then expect them to remain sane. It's ridiculous-impossible!"
"But good heavens, doctor!-there must
be some answer- There must!" He got up and paced around the room. Lentz
noted, with pity, that King himself was riding the ragged edge of the very
condition they were discussing.
"No," he said slowly. "No
... let me explain. You don't dare entrust control to less sensitive, less
socially conscious men. You might as well turn the controls over to a mindless
idiot. And to psychoneurosis situational there are but two cures. The first
obtains when the psychosis results from a misevaluation of environment. That
cure calls for semantic readjustment. One assists the patient to evaluate
correctly his environment. The worry disappears because there never was a real
reason for worry in the situation itself, but simply in the wrong meaning the
patient's mind had assigned to it.
"The second case is when the patient
has correctly evaluated the situation, and rightly finds in it cause for
extreme worry. His worry is perfectly sane and proper, but he cannot stand up
under it indefinitely; it drives him crazy. The only possible cure is to change
the situation. I have stayed here long enough to assure myself that such is the
condition here. You engineers have correctly evaluated the public danger of
this thing, and it will, with dreadful certainty, drive all of you crazy!
"The only possible solution is to
dump the pile-and leave it dumped."
King had continued his nervous pacing of
the floor, as if the walls of the room itself were the cage of his dilemma. Now
he stopped and appealed once more to the psychiatrist. "Isn't there
anything I can do?"
"Nothing to cure. To alleviate-well,
possibly."
"How?"
"Situational psychosis results from
adrenalin exhaustion. When a man is placed under a nervous strain, his adrenal
glands increase their secretion to help compensate for the strain. If the
strain is too great and lasts too long, the adrenals aren't equal to the task,
and he cracks. That is what you have here. Adrenalin therapy might stave of a
mental breakdown, but it most assuredly would hasten a physical breakdown. But
that would be safer from a viewpoint of public welfare-even though it assumes
that physicists are expendable!
"Another thing occurs to me: If you
selected any new watch engineers from the membership of churches that practice
the confessional, it would increase the length of their usefulness."
King was plainly surprised. "I don't
follow you."
"The patient unloads most of his
worry on his confessor, who is not himself actually confronted by the
situation, and can stand it. That is simply an ameliorative, however. I am
convinced that in this situation, eventual insanity is inevitable. But there is
a lot of good sense in the confessional," he mused. "It fills a basic
human heed. I think that is why the early psychoanalysts were so surprisingly
successful, for all their limited knowledge." He fell silent for a while,
then added, "If you will be so kind as to order a stratocab for me-"
"You've nothing more to suggest?'
"No. You had better turn your
psychological staff loose on means of alleviation; they're able men, all of
them."
King pressed a switch, and spoke briefly
to Steinke. Turning back to Lentz, he said, "You'll wait here until your
car is ready?"
Lentz judged correctly that King desired
it, and agreed.
Presently the tube delivery on King's desk
went "Ping!"
The superintendent removed a small white
pasteboard, a calling card. He studied it with surprise and passed it over to
Lentz. "I can't imagine why he should be calling on me," he observed,
and added, "Would you like to meet him?"
Lentz read:
THOMAS
P. HARRINGTON
Captain
(Mathematics)
United
States Navy
Director
U.S. Naval
Observatory
"But I do know him," he said.
"I'd be very pleased to see him."
Harrington was a man with something on his
mind. He seemed relieved when Steinke had finished ushering him in and had
returned to the outer office. He commenced to speak at once, turning to Lentz,
who was nearer to him than King.
"You're King? Why, Doctor Lentz! What
are you doing here?"
"Visiting," answered Lentz,
accurately - but incompletely, as he shook hands. "This is Superintendent
King over here. Superintendent King-Captain Harrington."
"How do you do, Captain-it's a
pleasure to have you here."
"It's an honor to be here sir."
"Sit down?"
"Thanks." He accepted a chair,
and laid a briefcase at a corner of King's desk. "Superintendent, you are
entitle to an explanation as to why I have broken in on you Ilk this-"
"Glad to have you." In fact, the
routine of formal politeness was an anodyne to King's frayed nerves.
"That's kind of you, but that
secretary chap, the one that brought me in here, would it be too much to as for
you to tell him to forget my name? I know it seem strange-"
"Not at all." King was
mystified, but willing to grab any reasonable request of a distinguished
colleague in science. He summoned Steinke to the interoffice visiphone and gave
him his orders.
Lentz stood up, and indicated that he was
about to leave. He caught Harrington's eye. "I think you want private
palaver, Captain."
King looked from Harrington to Lentz, and
back at Harrington. The astronomer showed momentary indecision, then protested,
"I have no objection at all myself it's up to Doctor King. As a matter of
fact," he added," might be a very good thing if you did sit in on
it."
"I don't know what it is,
Captain," observed Kin~ "that you want to see me about, but Doctor
Lentz is a ready here in a confidential capacity."
"Good! Then that's settled .. I'll
get right down I business. Doctor King, you know Destry's mechanics
infinitesimals?"
"Naturally." Lentz cocked a brow
at King, who chose to ignore it.
"Yes, of course. Do you remember -
theorem six, an the transformation between equations thirteen and
fourteen?"
"I think so, but I'd want to see
them." King got up and went over to a bookcase. Harrington stayed him with
a hand.
"Don't bother. I have them
here." He hauled out a key, unlocked his briefcase, and drew out a large,
much thumbed, loose-leaf notebook. "Here. You, too, Doctor Lentz. Are you
familiar with this development?"
Lentz nodded. "I've had occasion to
look into them."
"Good-I think it's agreed that the
step between thirteen and fourteen is the key to the whole matter. Now the
change from thirteen to fourteen looks perfectly valid and would be, in some
fields. But suppose we expand it to show every possible phase of the matter,
every link in the chain of reasoning."
He turned a page, and showed them the same
two equations broken down into nine intermediate equations. He placed a finger
under an associated group of mathematical symbols. "Do you see that? Do
you see what that implies?" He peered anxiously at their faces.
King studied it, his lips moving.
"Yes. .. . I -believe I do see. 'Odd... I never looked at it just that way
before- yet I've studied those equations until I've dreamed about them."
He turned to Lentz. "Do you agree, Doctor?"
Lentz nodded slowly. "I believe so
... Yes, I think I may say so."
Harrington should have been pleased; he
wasn't. "I had hoped you could tell me I was wrong," he said, almost
petulantly, "but I'm afraid there is no further doubt about it. Doctor
Destry included an assumption valid in molar physics, but for which we have
absolutely no assurance in atomic physics. I suppose you realize what this
means to you, Doctor King?"
King's voice was a dry whisper.
"Yes," he said, "yes it means that if the Big Bomb out there
ever blows up, we must assume that it will all go up all at once, rather than
the way Destry predicted ... and God help the human race!"
Captain Harrington cleared his throat to
break the silence that followed. "Superintendent," he said, "I
would not have ventured to call had it been simply a matter of disagreement as
to interpretation of theoretical predictions-"
"You have something more to go
on?"
"Yes, and no. Probably you gentlemen
think of the Naval Observatory as being exclusively preoccupied with
ephemeredes and tide tables. In a way you would be right-but we still have some
time to devote to research as long as it doesn't cut into the appropriation. My
special interest has always been lunar theory.
"I don't mean lunar ballistics,"
he continued, "I mean the much more interesting problem of its origin and
history, the problem the younger Darwin struggled with, as well as my
Illustrious predecessor, Captain T. J. J. See. I think that it is obvious that
any theory of lunar origin and history must take into account the surface
features of the moon-especially the mountains, the craters, that mark its face
so prominently."
He paused momentarily, and Superintendent
King put in, "Just a minute, Captain-I may be stupid, or perhaps I missed
something, but-is there a connection between what we were discussing before and
lunar theory?"
"Bear with me for a few moments,
Doctor King," Harrington apologized; "there is a connection-at least,
I'm afraid there is a connection-but I would rather present my points in their
proper order before making my conclusions." They granted him an alert
silence; he went on:
"Although we are in the habit of
referring to the 'craters' of the moon, we know they are not volcanic craters.
Superficially, they follow none of the rules of terrestrial volcanoes in
appearance or distribution, but when Rutter came out in 952 with his monograph
on the dynamics of vulcanology, he proved rather conclusively that the lunar
craters could not be caused by anything that we know as volcanic action.
"That left the bombardment theory as
the simplest hypothesis. It looks good, on the face of it, and a few minutes
spent throwing pebbles in to a patch of mud will convince anyone that the lunar
craters could have been formed by falling meteors.
"But there are difficulties. If the
moon was struck so repeatedly, why not the earth? It hardly seems necessary to
mention that the earth's atmosphere would be no protection against masses big
enough to form craters like Endymion, or Plato. And if they fell after the moon
was a dead world while the earth was still young enough to change its face and
erase the marks of bombardment, why did the meteors avoid so nearly completely
the dry basins we call the seas?
"I want to cut this short; you'll
find the data and the mathematical investigations from the data here in my
notes. There is one other major objection to the meteor bombardment theory: the
great rays that spread from
Tycho across almost the entire surface of
the moon. It makes the moon look like a crystal ball that had been struck with
a hammer, and impact from - outside seems evident, but there are difficulties.
The striking mass, our hypothetical meteor, must have been smaller than the
present crater of Tycho, but it must have the mass and speed to crack an entire
planet."
"Work it out for yourself-you must
either postulate a chunk out of the core of a dwarf star, or speeds such as we
have never observed within the system. It's conceivable but a far-fetched
explanation"
He turned to King. "Doctor, does
anything occur to you that might account for a phenomenon like Tycho?"
The Superintendent grasped the arms of his
chair, then glanced at his palms. He fumbled for a handkerchief, and wiped
them. "Go ahead," he said, almost inaudibly.
"Very well then-" Harrington
drew out of his briefcase a large photograph of the moon-a beautiful full-moon
portrait made at Lick. "I want you to imagine the moon as she might have
been sometime in the past. The dark areas we call the 'Seas' are actual oceans.
It has an atmosphere, perhaps a heavier gas than oxygen and nitrogen, but an
active gas, capable of supporting some conceivable form of life.
"For this is an inhabited planet,
inhabited by intelligent beings, beings capable of discovering atomic power and
exploiting it!"
He pointed out on the photograph, near the
southern limb, the lime-white circle of Tycho, with its shining, incredible,
thousand-mile-long rays spreading, thrusting, jutting out from it. "Here
... here at Tycho was located their main atomic plant." He moved his
finger to a point near the equator, and somewhat east of meridian-the point
where three great dark areas merged, Mare Nubium, Mare Imbriwn, Oceanus
Procellarum-and picked out two bright splotches surrounded also by rays, but shorter,
less distinct, and wavy. "And here at Copernicus and at Kepler, on islands
at the middle of a great ocean, were secondary power stations."
He paused, and interpolated soberly,
"Perhaps they knew the danger they ran, but wanted power so badly that
they were willing to gamble the life of their race. Perhaps they were ignorant
of the ruinous possibilities of their little machines, or perhaps their
mathematicians assured them that it could not happen.
"But we will never know ... no one
can ever know. For it blew up, and killed them-and it killed their planet.
"It whisked off the gassy envelope
and blew it into outer space. It may even have set up a chain reaction, in that
atmosphere. It blasted great chunks of the planet's crust Perhaps some of that
escaped completely, too, but all that did not reach the speed of escape fell
back down in time and splashed great ring-shaped craters in the land.
"The oceans cushioned the shock; only
the more massive fragments formed craters through the water. Perhaps some life
still remained in those ocean depths. If so, it was doomed to die-for the
water, unprotected by atmospheric pressure, could not remain liquid and must
inevitably escape lit time to outer space. Its life blood drained away. The
planet was dead-dead by suicide!
He met the grave eyes of his two silent
listeners with an expression almost of appeal. "Gentlemen-this is only a
theory I realize ... only a theory, a dream, a nightmare- But it has kept me
awake so many nights that I had to come tell you about it, and see if you saw
it the same way I do.
As for the mechanics of it, it's all in
there, in my notes. You can check it-and I pray that you find some error! But
it is the only lunar theory I have examined which included all of the known
data, and accounted for all of them."
He appeared to have finished; Lentz spoke
up. "Suppose, Captain, suppose we check your mathematics and find no
flaw-what then?"
Harrington flung out his hands.
"That's what I came here to find out!"
Although Lentz had asked the question,
Harrington directed the appeal to King. The superintendent looked up; his eyes
met the astronomer's, wavered, and dropped again. "There's nothing to be
done," he said dully, "nothing at all."
Harrington stared at him in open
amazement. "But good God, man!" he burst out. "Don't you see it?
That pile has got to be disassembled at once!"
"Take it easy, Captain." Lentz's
calm voice was a spray of cold water. "And don't be too harsh on poor
King, this worries him even more than it does you. What he means is this; we're
not faced with a problem in physics, but with a political and economic
situation. Let's put it this way: King can no more dump his plant than a
peasant with a vineyard on the slopes of Mount Vesuvius can abandon his holdings
and pauperize his family simply because there will be an eruption someday.
"King doesn't own that plant out
there; he's only the custodian. If he dumps it against the wishes of the legal
owners, they'll simply oust him and put in someone more amenable. No, we have
to convince the owners."
"The President could make them do
it," suggested Harrington. "I could get to the President-"
"No doubt you could, through your
department. And you might even convince him. But could he help much?"
"Why, of course he could. He's the
President!"
"Wait a minute. You're Director of
the Naval Observatory; suppose you took a sledge hammer and tried to smash the
big telescope-how far would you get?"
"Not very far," Farrington
conceded. "We guard the big fellow pretty closely."
"Nor can the President act in an
arbitrary manner," Lentz persisted. "He's not an unlimited monarch.
If he shuts down this plant without due process of law, the federal courts will
tie him in knots. I admit that Congress isn't helpless, since the Atomic Energy
Commission takes orders from it, but-would you like to try to give a
congressional committee a course in the mechanics of infinitesimals?"
Harrington readily stipulated the point.
"But there is another way," he pointed out. "Congress is responsive
to public opinion. What we need to do is to convince the public that the pile
is a menace to everybody. That could be done without ever trying to explain
things in terms of higher mathematics."
"Certainly it could," Lentz
agreed. "You could go on the air with it and scare everybody half to
death. You could create the damnedest panic this slightly slug-nutty country
has ever seen. No, thank you. I, for one, would rather have us all take the
chance of being quietly killed than bring on a mass psychosis that would
destroy the culture we are building up. I think one taste of the Crazy Years is
enough."
"Well, then, what do you
suggest?"
Lentz considered shortly, then answered,
"All I see is a forlorn hope. We've got to work on the Board of Directors
and try to beat some sense in their heads."
King, who had been following the
discussion with attention in spite of his tired despondency, interjected a
remark. "How would you go about that?"
"I don't know," Lentz admitted.
"It will take some thinking. But it seems the most fruitful line of
approach. If it doesn't work, we can always fall back on Harrington's notion of
publicity-I don't insist that the world commit suicide to satisfy my criteria
of evaluation."
Harrington glanced at his wrist watch-a
bulky affair-and whistled. "Good heavens," he exclaimed, "I
forgot the time! I'm supposed officially to be at the Flag staff
Observatory."
King had automatically noted the time
shown by the Captain's watch as it was displayed. "But it can't be that late,"
he had objected. Harrington looked puzzled, then laughed.
"It isn't-not by two hours. We are in
zone plus-seven; this shows zone plus-five-it's radio-synchronized with the
master clock at Washington."
"Did you say
radio-synchronized?"
"Yes. Clever, isn't it?" He held
it out for inspection. "I call it a telechronometer; it's the only one of
its sort to date. My nephew designed it for me. He's a bright one, that boy.
He'll go far. That is"-his face clouded, as if the little interlude had
only served to emphasize the tragedy that hung over them-"if any of us
live that long!"
A signal light glowed at King's desk, and
Steinke's face showed on the communicator screen. King answered him, then said,
"Your car is ready, Doctor Lentz."
"Let Captain Harrington have
it."
"Then you're not going back to
Chicago?"
"No. The situation has changed. If
you want me, I'm stringing along."
The following Friday Steinike ushered
Lentz into King's office. King looked almost happy as he shook hands.
"When did you ground, Doctor? I didn't expect you back for another hour,
or so."
"Just now. I hired a cab instead of
waiting for.. the shuttle."
"Any luck?" King demanded.
"None. The same answer they gave you:
'The Company is assured by independent experts that Destry's mechanics is
valid, and sees no reason to encourage an hysterical attitude among its
employees."
King tapped on his desk top, his eyes
unfocused. Then, hitching himself around to face Lentz directly, he said,
"Do you suppose the Chairman is right?"
"How?"
"Could the three of us, you, me, and
Harrington, have gone off the deep end, slipped mentally?"
"No."
"You're sure?"
"Certain. I looked up some
independent experts of my own, not retained by the Company, and had them check
Harrington's work. It checks." Lentz purposely neglected to mention that
he had done so partly because he was none too sure of King's present mental
stability.
King sat up briskly, reached out and
stabbed a push button. "I am going to make one more try," he
explained, "to see if I can't throw a scare into Dixon's thick head.
Steinke," he said to the communicator, "get me Mr. Dixon on the
screen."
"Yes, sir."
In about two minutes the visiphone screen
came to life and showed the features of Chairman Dixon. He was transmitting,
not from his office, but from the boardroom of the power syndicate in Jersey
City. "Yes?" he said.
"What is it, Superintendent?"
His manner was somehow both querulous and affable.
"Mr. Dixon," King began,
"I've called to try to impress on you the seriousness of the Company's
action. I stake my scientific reputation that Harrington has proved
completely-"
"Oh, that? Mr. King, I thought you
understood that that was a closed matter."
"But Mr. Dixon-"
"Superintendent, please! If there was
any possible legitimate cause to fear do you think I would hesitate? I have
children you know, and grandchildren."
"That is just why-"
"We try to conduct the affairs of the
Company with reasonable wisdom, and in the public interest. But we have other
responsibilities, too. There are hundreds of thousands of little stockholders
who expect us to show a reasonable return on their investment. You must not
expect us to jettison a billion-dollar corporation just because you've taken up
astrology. Moon theory!" He sniffed.
"Very well, Mister Chairman."
King's tone was stiff.
"Don't, take it that way, Mr. King.
I'm glad you called, the Board has just adjourned a special meeting. They have
decided to accept you for retirement-with full pay, of course."
"I did not apply for
retirement!"
"I know, Mr. King, but the Board
feels that-"
"I understand. Goodbye!"
"Mr. King-"
"Goodbye!" He switched him off,
and turned to Lentz. "'-with full pay,'" he quoted, "which I can
enjoy in any way that I like for the rest of my life just as happy as a man in
the death house!"
"Exactly," Lentz agreed.
"Well, we've tried our way. I suppose we should call up Harrington now and
let him try the political and publicity method."
"I suppose so," King seconded
absent-mindedly. "Will you be leaving for Chicago now?"
"No . . ." said Lentz.
"No.... I think I will catch the shuttle for Los Angeles and take the
evening rocket for the Antipodes."
King looked surprised, but said nothing.
Lentz answered the unspoken comment. "Perhaps some of us on the other side
of the earth will survive. I've done all that I can here. I would rather be a
live sheepherder in Australia than a dead psychiatrist in Chicago."
King nodded vigorously. "That shows
horse sense. For two cents, I'd dump the pile now, and go with you."
"Not horse sense, my friend-a horse
will run back into a burning barn, which is exactly what I plan not to do. Why
don't you do it and come along. If you did, it would help Harrington to scare
'em to death."
"I believe I will!"
Steinke's face appeared again on the
screen. "Harper and Erickson are here, Chief."
"I'm busy."
"They are pretty urgent about seeing
you."
"Oh-all right," King said in a
tired voice, "show them in. It doesn't matter."
They breezed in, Harper in the van. He
commenced talking at once, oblivious to the superintendent's morose
preoccupation. "We've got it, Chief, we've got it! And it all checks out
to the umpteenth decimal!"
"You've got what? Speak
English."
Harper grinned. He was enjoying his moment
of triumph, and was stretching it out to savor it. "Chief, do you remember
a few weeks back when I asked for an additional allotment-a special one without
specifying how I was going to spend it?"
"Yes. Come on-get to the point."
"You kicked at first, but finally
granted it. Remember?
Well, we've got something to show for it,
all tied up in pink ribbon. It's the greatest advance in radioactivity since
Hahn split the nucleus. Atomic fuel, Chief, atomic fuel, safe, concentrated,
and controllable. Suitable for rockets, for power plants, for any damn thing
you care to use it for."
King showed alert interest for the first
time. "You mean a power source that doesn't require a pile?"
"Oh, no, I didn't say that. You use
the breeder pile to make the fuel, then you use the fuel anywhere and anyhow
you like, with something like ninety-two percent recovery of energy. But you
could junk the power sequence, if you wanted to."
King's first wild hope of a way out of his
dilemma was dashed; he subsided. "Go ahead. Tell me about it."
"Well-it's a matter of artificial
radioactives. Just before I asked for that special research allotment, Erickson
and I-Doctor Lentz had a finger in it too," he acknowledged with an
appreciative nod to the psychiatrist, "-found two isotopes that seemed to
be mutually antagonistic. That is, when we goosed 'em in the presence of each
other they gave up their latent energy all at once- blew all to hell. The
important point is we were using just a gnat's whisker of mass of each-the
reaction didn't require a big mass to maintain it."
"I don't see," objected King,
"how that could-"
"Neither do we, quite-but it works.
We've kept it quiet until we were sure. We checked on what we had, and we found
a dozen other fuels. Probably we'll be able to tailor-make fuels for any
desired purpose. But here it is." He handed him a bound sheaf of
typewritten notes which he had been carrying under his arm. "That's your
copy. Look it over."
King started to do so. Lentz joined him,
after a look that was a silent request for permission, which Erickson had
answered with his only verbal contribution, "Sure, doc."
As King read, the troubled feelings of an
acutely harassed executive left him. His dominant personality took charge, that
of the scientist. He enjoyed the controlled and cerebral ecstasy of the
impersonal seeker for the elusive truth. The emotions felt in his throbbing
thalamus were permitted only to form a sensuous obbligato for the cold flame of
cortical activity. For the time being, he was sane, more nearly completely sane
than most men ever achieve at any time.
For a long period there was only an
occasional grunt, the clatter of turned pages, a nod of approval. At last he
put it down.
"It's the stuff," he said.
"You've done it, boys. It's great; I'm proud of you."
Erickson glowed a bright pink, and
swallowed. Harper's small, tense figure gave the ghost of a wriggle,
reminiscent of a wire-haired terrier receiving approval. "That's fine,
Chief. We'd rather hear you say that than get the Nobel Prize."
"I think you'll probably get it.
However"-the proud light in his eyes died down-"I'm not going to take
any action in this matter."
"Why not, Chief?" His tone was
bewildered.
"I'm being retired. My successor will
take over in the near future; this is too big a matter to start just before a
change in administration."
"You being retired! What the
bell?"
"About the same reason I took you off
watch-at least, the directors think so."
"But that's nonsense! You were right
to take me off the watch-list; I was getting jumpy. But you're another
matter-we all depend on you."
"Thanks, Cal-but that's how it is;
there's nothing to be done about it." He turned to Lentz. "I think
this is the last ironical touch needed to make the whole thing pure
farce," he observed bitterly. "This thing is big, bigger than we can
guess at this stage-and I have to give it a miss."
"Well," Harper burst out,
"I can think of something to do about it!" He strode over to King's
desk and snatched up the manuscript. "Either you superintend the
exploitation, or the Company can damn well get along without our
discovery!" Erickson concurred belligerently.
"Wait a minute." Lentz had the
floor. "Doctor Harper... have you already achieved a practical rocket
fuel?"
"I said so. We've got it on hand
now."
"An escape-speed fuel?" They
understood his verbal shorthand a fuel that would lift a rocket free of the
earth's gravitational pull.
"Sure. Why, you could take any of the
Clipper rockets, refit them a trifle, and have breakfast on the moon."
"Very well. Bear with me. . . ."
He obtained a sheet of paper from King, and commenced to write. They watched in
mystified impatience. He continued briskly for some minutes, hesitating only
momentarily. Presently he stopped, and spun the paper over to King. "Solve
it!" he demanded.
King studied the paper. Lentz had assigned
symbols to a great number of factors, some social, some psychological, some
physical, some economic. He had thrown them together into a structural
relationship, using the symbols of calculus of statement. King understood the
paramathematical operations indicated by the symbols, but he was not as used to
them as he was to the symbols and operations of mathematical physics. He plowed
through the equations, moving his lips slightly in subconscious vocalization.
He accepted a pencil from Lentz, and
completed the solution. It required several more lines, a few more equations,
before they cancelled out, or rearranged themselves, into a definite answer.
He stared at this answer while puzzlement
gave way to dawning comprehension and delight.
He looked up. "Erickson!
Harper!" he rapped out.
"We will take your new fuel, refit a
large rocket, install the breeder pile in it, and throw it into an orbit around
the earth, far out in. space. There we will use it to make more fuel, safe
fuel, for use on earth, with the danger from the Big Bomb itself limited to the
operators actually on watch!"
There was no applause. It was not that
sort of an idea; their minds were still struggling with the complex
implications.
"But Chief," Harper finally
managed, "how about your retirement? We're still not going to stand for
it."
"Don't worry," King assured him.
"It's all in there, implicit in those equations, you two, me, Lentz, the
Board of Directors and just what we all have to do about it to accomplish
it."
"All except the matter of time,"
Lentz cautioned.
"You'll note that elapsed time
appears in your answer as an undetermined unknown."
"Yes.. . yes, of course. That's the chance
we have to take. Let's get busy!"
Chairman Dixon called the Board of
Directors to order. "This being a special meeting we'll dispense with
minutes and reports," he announced. "As set forth in the call we have
agreed to give the retiring superintendent two hours of our time."
"Mr. Chairman-"
"Yes, Mr. Strong?"
"I thought we had settled that
matter."
"We have, Mr. Strong, but in view of
Superintendent King's long and distinguished service, if he asks for a hearing,
we are honor bound to grant it. You have the floor, Doctor King."
King got up, and stated briefly,
"Doctor Lentz will speak for me." He sat down.
Lentz had to wait for coughing,
throat-clearing, and scraping of chairs to subside. It was evident that the
Board resented the outsider.
Lentz ran quickly over the main points in
the argument which contended that the bomb presented an intolerable danger
anywhere on the face of the earth. He moved on at once to the alternative
proposal that the bomb should be located in a rocket ship, an artificial
moonlet flying in a free orbit around the earth at a convenient distance- say
fifteen thousand miles-while secondary power stations on earth burned a safe
fuel manufactured by the bomb.
He announced the discovery the
Harper-Erickson technique and dwelt on what it meant to them commercially. Each
point was presented as persuasively as possible, with the full power of his
engaging personality. Then he paused and waited for them to blow off steam.
They did. "Visionary-"
"Unproved-" "No essential change in the situation-" The
substance of it was that they were very happy to hear of the new fuel, but not
particularly impressed by it. Perhaps in another twenty years, after it had
been thoroughly tested and proved commercially, they might consider setting up
another breeder pile outside the atmosphere. In the meantime there was no
hurry. Only one director supported the scheme and he was quite evidently
unpopular.
Lentz patiently and politely dealt with
their objections. He emphasized the increasing incidence of occupational
psychoneurosis among the engineers and the grave danger to everyone near the
bomb even under the orthodox theory. He reminded them of their insurance and
indemnity bond costs, and of the "squeeze" they paid state politicians.
Then he changed his tone and let them have it directly and brutally.
"Gentlemen," he said, "we believe that we are fighting for our
lives ... our own lives, our families, and every life on the globe, if you
refuse this compromise, we will fight as fiercely and with as little regard for
fair play as any cornered animal." With that he made. His first move in
attack. It was quite simple. He offered for their inspection the outline of a
propaganda campaign on a national scale, such as any major advertising firm could
carry out as a matter of routine. It was complete to the last detail,
television broadcasts, spot plugs, newspaper and magazine coverage with planted
editorials, dummy "citizens' committees," and-most important-a
supporting whispering campaign and a letters-to-Congress organization. Every
businessman there knew from experience how such things worked.
But its object was to stir up fear of the
Arizona pile and to direct that fear, not into panic, but into rage against the
Board of Directors personally, and into a demand that the Atomic Energy
Commission take action to have the Big Bomb removed to outer space.
"This is blackmail! We'll stop
you!"
"I think not," Lentz replied
gently. "You may be able to keep us out of some of the newspapers, but-you
can't stop the rest of it. You can't even keep us off the air-ask the Federal
Communications Commission." It was true. Harrington had handled the
political end and had performed his assignment well; the President was
convinced.
Tempers were snapping on all sides; Dixon
had to pound for order. "Doctor Lentz," he said, his own temper under
taut control, "you plan to make every-one of us appear a black-hearted
scoundrel with no oilier thought than personal profit, even at the expense of
the lives of others. You know that is not true; this is a simple difference of
opinion as to what is wise."
"I did not say it was true,"
Lentz admitted blandly, "but you will admit that I can convince the public
that you are deliberate villains. As to it being a difference of opinion ...
you are none of you atomic physicists; you are not entitled to hold opinions in
this matter.
"As a matter of fact," he went
on callously, "the only doubt in my mind is whether or not an enraged
public will destroy your precious plant before Congress has time to exercise
eminent domain, and take it away from you!"
Before they had time to think up arguments
in answer and ways of circumventing him, before their hot indignation had
cooled and set as stubborn resistance, he offered his gambit. He produced
another lay-out for a propaganda campaign-an entirely different sort.
This time the Board of Directors was to be
built up, not torn down. All of the same techniques were to be used;
behind-the-scenes feature articles with plenty of human interest would describe
the functions of the Company, describe it as a great public trust, administered
by patriotic, unselfish statesmen of the business world. At the proper point in
the campaign, the Harper-Erickson fuel would be announced, not as a semi-accidental
result of the initiative of two employees, but as the long-expected end product
of years of systematic research conducted under an axed policy of the Board of
Directors, a policy growing naturally out of their humane determination to
remove forever the menace from even the sparsely settled Arizona desert.
No mention was to be made of the danger of
complete, planet-embracing catastrophe.
Lentz discussed it. He dwelt on the
appreciation that would be due them from a grateful world. He invited them to
make a noble sacrifice, and, with subtle misdirection, tempted them to think of
themselves as heroes. He deliberately played on one of the most deep-rooted of
simian instincts, the desire for approval from one's kind, deserved or not.
All the while he was playing for time, as
he directed his attention from one hard case, one resistant mind, to another;
He soothed and he tickled and he played on personal foibles. For the benefit of
the timorous and the devoted family men, he again painted a picture of the
suffering, death, and destruction that might result from their well-meant
reliance on the unproved and highly questionable predictions of Destry's
mathematics. Then he described in glowing detail a picture of a world free from
worry but granted almost unlimited power, safe power from an invention which
was theirs for this one small concession. It worked. They did not reverse
themselves all at once, but a committee was appointed to investigate the
feasibility of the proposed spaceship power plant. By sheer brass Lentz
suggested names for the committee and Dixon confirmed his nominations, not
because he wished to, particularly, but because he was caught off guard and
could not think of a reason to refuse without affronting those colleagues.
Lentz was careful to include his one supporter in the list.
The impending retirement of King was not
mentioned by either side. Privately, Lentz felt sure that it never would be
mentioned.
It worked, but there was left much to do.
For the first few days, after the victory in committee, King felt much elated
by the prospect of an early release from the soul killing worry. He was buoyed
up by pleasant demands of manifold new administrative duties. Harper and
Erickson were detached to Goddard Field to collaborate with the rocket
engineers there in design of firing chambers, nozzles, fuel stowage, fuel
metering, and the like. A schedule had to be worked out with the business
office to permit as much use of the pile as possible to be diverted to making
atomic fuel, and a giant combustion chamber for atomic fuel had to be designed
and ordered to replace the pile itself during the interim between the time it
was shut down on earth and the later time when sufficient local, smaller plants
could be built to carry the commercial load. He was busy.
When the first activity had died down and
they were settled in a new routine, pending the shutting down of the plant and
its removal to outer space, King suffered an emotional reaction. There was, by
then, nothing to do but wait, and tend the pile, until the crew at Goddard
Field smoothed out the bugs and produced a space-worthy rocket ship.
At Goddard they ran into difficulties,
overcame them, and came across more difficulties. They had never used such high
reaction velocities; it took many trials to find a nozzle shape that would give
reasonably high efficiency. When that was solved, and success seemed in sight,
the jets burned out on a time-trial ground test. They were stalemated for weeks
over that hitch.
There was another problem quite separate
from the rocket problem: what to do with the power generated by the breeder
pile when relocated in a satellite rocket? It was solved drastically by
planning to place the pile proper outside the satellite, unshielded, and let it
waste its radiant energy. It would be a tiny artificial star, shining in the
vacuum of space. In the meantime research would go on for a means to harness it
again and beam the power back to Earth. But only its power would be wasted;
plutonium and the never atomic fuels would be recovered and rocketed back to
Earth.
Back at the power plant Superintendent
King could do nothing but chew his nails and wait He had not even the release
of running over to Goddard Field to watch the progress of the research, for,
urgently as he desired to, he felt an even stronger, an overpowering compulsion
to watch over the pile more lest it heartbreakingly blow up at the last minute.
He took to hanging around the control
room. He had to stop that; his unease communicated itself to his watch
engineers; two of them cracked up in a single day-one of them on watch.
He must face the fact-there had been a
grave upswing in psychoneurosis among his engineers since the period of
watchful waiting had commenced. At first, they had tried to keep the essential
facts of the plan a close secret, but it had leaked out, perhaps through some
member of the investigating committee. He admitted to himself now that it had
been a mistake ever to try to keep it secret-Lentz had advised against it, and
the engineers not actually engaged in the change-over were bound to know that
something was up.
He took all of the engineers into
confidence at last, under oath of secrecy that had helped for a week or more, a
week in which they were all given a spiritual lift-by the knowledge, as he had
been. Then it had worn off, the reaction had set in, and the psychological
observers had started disqualifying engineers for duty almost daily. They were
even reporting each other as mentally unstable with great frequency; he might
even be faced with a shortage of psychiatrists if that kept up, he thought to
himself with bitter amusement. His engineers were already standing four-hours
in every sixteen. If one more dropped out, he'd put himself on watch. That
would be a relief, to tell himself the truth.
Somehow some of the civilians around about
and the non-technical employees were catching on to the secret.
That mustn't go on-if it spread any
further there might be a nationwide panic. But how the hell could he stop it?
He couldn't.
He turned over in bed, rearranged his
pillow, and tried once more to get to sleep. No good. His head ached, his eyes
were balls of pain, and his brain was a ceaseless grind of useless, repetitive
activity, like a disc recording stuck in one groove.
God! This was unbearable! He wondered if
he were cracking up if he already had cracked up. This was worse, many times
worse, than the old routine when he had simply acknowledged the danger and
tried to forget it as much as possible. Not that the pile was any different-it
was this five-minutes-to-armistice feeling, this waiting for the curtain to go
up, this race against time with nothing to do to help. He sat up, switched on
his bed lamp, and looked at the clock. Three-thirty. Not so good. He got up,
went into his bathroom, and dissolved a sleeping powder in a glass of whisky
and water, half and half. He gulped it down and went back to bed. Presently he
dozed off.
He was running, fleeing down a long
corridor. At the end lay safety he knew that, but he was so utterly exhausted
that he doubted his ability to finish the race. The thing pursuing him was
catching up; he forced his leaden, aching legs into greater activity. The thing
behind him increased its pace, and actually touched him. His heart stopped, then
pounded again. He became aware that he was screaming, shrieking in mortal
terror. But he had to reach the end of that corridor, more depended on it than
just himself. He had to. He had to- He had to! Then the flash came and he
realized that he had lost, realized it with utter despair and utter, bitter
defeat. He had failed; the pile had blown up.
The flash was his bed lamp coming on
automatically; it was seven o'clock. His pajamas were soaked, chipping with
sweat, and his heart still pounded. Every ragged nerve throughout his body
screamed for release. It would take more than a cold shower to cure this case
of the shakes.
He got to the office before the janitor
was out of it. He sat there, doing nothing, until Lentz walked in on him, two
hours later. The psychiatrist came in just as he was taking two small tablets
from a box in his desk.
"Easy ... easy, old man," Lentz
said in a slow voice. "What have you there?" He came around and
gently took possession of the box.
"Just a sedative."
Lentz studied the inscription on the
cover. "How many have you had today?"
"Just two, so far."
"You don't need barbiturates; you
need a walk in the fresh air. Come take one with me."
"You're a fine one to talk you're
smoking a cigarette that isn't lighted!"
"Me? Why, so I am! We both need that
walk. Come."
Harper arrived less than ten minutes after
they had left the office. Steinke was not in the outer office. He walked on
through and pounded on the door of King's private office, then waited with the
man who accompanied him a hard young chap with an easy confidence to his
bearing. Steinke let them in.
Harper brushed on past him with a casual
greeting, then checked himself when he saw that there was no one else inside.
"Where's the chief?" he
demanded.
"Out. He'll be back soon."
"I'll wait. Oh-Steinke, this is
Greene. Greene Steinke."
The two shook hands. "What brings you
back, Cal?" Steinke asked, turning back to Harper.
'Well.. . I guess it's all right to tell
you-"
The communicator screen flashed into
sudden activity, and cut him short. A face filled most of the frame. It was
apparently too close to the pickup, as it was badly out of focus.
"Superintendent!" it yelled in an agonized voice. "The
pile-!"
A shadow flashed across the screen, they heard
a dull "Smack!", and the face slid out of the screen. As it fell it
revealed the control room behind it. Someone was down on the floor plates, a
nameless heap. Another figure ran across the field of pickup and disappeared.
Harper snapped into action first.
"That was Silard!" he shouted, "-in the control room! Come on,
Steinke!" He was already in motion himself.
Steinke went dead white, but hesitated
only an unmeasurable instant. He pounded sharp on Harper's heels. Greene
followed without invitation, in a steady run that kept easy pace with them.
They had to wait for a capsule to unload
at the tube station. Then all three of them tried to crowd into a two passenger
capsule. It refused to start and moments were lost before Greene piled out and
claimed another car.
The four minute trip at heavy acceleration
seemed an interminable crawl. Harper was convinced that the system had broken
down, when the familiar click and sigh announced their arrival at the station
under the plant. They jammed each other trying to get out at the same time.
The lift was up; they did not wait for it.
That was unwise; they gained no time by it, and arrived at the control level
out of breath. Nevertheless, they speeded up when they reached the top,
zigzagged frantically around the outer shield, and burst into the control room.
The limp figure was still on the floor,
and another, also inert, was near it.
A third figure was bending over the
trigger. He looked up as they came in, and charged them. They hit him together,
and all three went down. It was two to one, but they got in each other's way.
His heavy armor protected him from the force of their blows. He fought with
senseless, savage violence.
Harper felt a bright, sharp pain; his
right arm went limp and useless. The armored figure was struggling free of
them. There was a shout from somewhere behind them: "Hold still!"
He saw a flash with the corner of one eye,
a deafening crack hurried on top of it, and re-echoed painfully in the
restricted space.
The armored figure dropped back to his
knees, balanced there, and then fell heavily on his face. Greene stood in the
entrance, a service pistol balanced in his hand.
Harper got up and went over to the
trigger. He tried to reduce the power-level adjustment, but his right hand
wouldn't carry out his orders, and his left was too clumsy.
"Steinke," he called, "come
here! Take over."
Steinke hurried up, nodded as he glanced
at the readings, and set busily to work.
It was thus that King found them when he
bolted in a very few minutes later.
"Harper!" he shouted, while his
quick glance was still taking in the situation. "What's happened?"
Harper told him briefly. He nodded.
"I saw the tail end of the fight from my office Steinke!" He seemed
to grasp for the first time who was on the trigger. "He can't manage the
controls-" He hurried toward him.
Steinke looked up at his approach.
"Chief!" he called out, "Chief! I've got my mathematics
back!"
King looked bewildered, then nodded
vaguely, and let him be. He turned back to Harper. "How does it happen
you're here?"
"Me? I'm here to report-we've done
it, Chief!"
"Eh?"
"We've finished; it's all done.
Erickson stayed behind to complete the power plant installation on the big
ship. I came over in the ship we'll use to shuttle between Earth and the big
ship, the power plant. Four minutes from Goddard Field to here in her. That's
the pilot over there." He pointed to the door, where Greene's solid form
partially hid Lentz.
"Wait a minute. You say that
everything is ready to install the pile in the ship? You're sure?"
"Positive. The big ship has already
flown with our fuel-longer and faster than she will have to fly to reach
station in her orbit; I was in it-out in space, Chief! We're all set, six ways
from zero."
King stared at the dumping switch, mounted
behind glass at the top of the instrument board. "There's fuel
enough," he said softly, as if he were alone and speaking only to himself,
"there's been fuel enough for weeks."
He walked swiftly over to the switch, smashed
the glass with his fist, and pulled it.
The room rumbled and shivered as tons of
molten, massive metal, heavier than gold, coursed down channels, struck against
baffles, split into a dozen dozen streams, and plunged to rest in leaden
receivers-to rest, safe and harmless, until it should be reassembled far out in
space.
THE MAN
WHO SOLD THE MOON
CHAPTER
ONE
"YOU'VE
GOT TO BE A BELIEVER!"
George Strong snorted at his partner's
declaration. "Delos, why don't you give up? You've been singing this tune
for years. Maybe someday men will get to the Moon, though I doubt it. In any
case, you and I will never live to see it. The loss of the power satellite
washes the matter up for our generation."
D. D. Harriman grunted. "We won't see
it if we sit on our fat behinds and don't do anything to make it happen. But we
can make it happen."
"Question number one: how? Question
number two: why?"
"'Why?' The man asks 'why.' George,
isn't there anything in your soul but discounts, and dividends? Didn't you ever
sit with a girl on a soft summer night and stare up at the Moon and wonder what
was there?"
"Yeah, I did once. I caught a
cold."
Harriman asked the Almighty why he had
been delivered into the hands of the Philistines. He then turned back to his
partner. "I could tell you why, the real 'why,' but you wouldn't
understand me. You want to know why in terms of cash, don't you? You want to
know how Harriman & Strong and Harriman Enterprises can show a profit,
don't you?"
"Yes," admitted Strong,
"and don't give me any guff about tourist trade and fabulous lunar jewels.
I've had it."
"You ask me to show figures on a
brand-new type of enterprise, knowing I can't. It's like asking the Wright
brothers at Kitty Hawk to estimate how much money Curtiss-Wright Corporation
would someday make out of building airplanes. I'll put it another way, You
didn't want us to go into plastic houses, did you? If you had had your way we
would still be back in Kansas City, subdividing cow pastures and showing
rentals."
Strong shrugged.
"How much has New World Homes made to
date?"
Strong looked absent-minded while
exercising the talent he brought to the partnership. "Uh . . .
$172,946,004.62, after taxes, to the end of the last fiscal year. The running
estimate to date is-"
"Never mind. What was our share in
the take?"
"Well, uh, the partnership, exclusive
of the piece you took personally and then sold to me later, has benefited from
New World Homes during the same period by $1 3,010,437.20, ahead of personal
taxes. Delos, this double taxation has got to stop. Penalizing thrift is a sure
way to run this country straight into-"
"Forget it, forget it! How much have
we made out of Skyblast Freight and Antipodes Transways?"
Strong told him.
"And yet I had to threaten you with
bodily harm to get you to put up a dime to buy control of the injector patent.
You said rockets were a passing fad."
"We were lucky," objected
Strong. "You had no way of knowing that there would be a big uranium
strike in Australia. Without it, the Skyways group would have left us in the
red. For that matter New World Homes would have failed, too, if the roadtowns
hadn't come along and given us a market out from under local building
codes."
"Nuts on both points. Fast transportation
will pay; it always has. As for New World, when ten million families need new
houses and we can sell 'em cheap, they'll buy. They won't let building codes
stop them, not permanently. We gambled on a certainty. Think back, George: what
ventures have we lost money on and what ones have paid off? Everyone of my
crack-brain ideas has made money, hasn't it? And the only times we've lost our
ante was on conservative, blue-chip investments."
"But we've made money on some
conservative deals, too," protested Strong.
"Not enough to pay for your yacht. Be
fair about it, George; the Andes Development Company, the integrating
pantograph patent, every one of my wildcat schemes I've had to drag you
into-and every one of them paid."
"I've had to sweat blood to make them
pay," Strong grumbled.
"That's why we are partners. I get a
wildcat by the tail; you harness him and put him to work. Now we go to the
Moon-and you'll make it pay."
"Speak for yourself. I'm not going to
the Moon."
"I am."
"Hummph! Delos, granting that we have
gotten rich by speculating on your hunches, it's a steel-clad fact that if you
keep on gambling you lose your shirt. There's an old saw about the pitcher that
went once too often to the well."
"Damn it, George-I'm going to the Moon!
If you won't back me up, let's liquidate and I'll do it alone."
Strong drummed on his desk top. "Now,
Delos, nobody said anything about not backing you up."
"Fish or cut bait. Now is the
opportunity and my mind's made up. I'm going to be the Man in the Moon."
"Well . . . let's get going. We'll be
late to the meeting."
As they left their joint office, Strong,
always penny conscious, was careful to switch off the light. Harriman had seen
him do so a thousand times; this time he commented. "George, how about a
light switch that turns off automatically when you leave a room?"
"Hmm-but suppose someone were left in
the room?"
"Well. . . hitch it to stay on only
when someone was in the room-key the switch to the human body's heat radiation,
maybe."
"Too expensive and too
complicated."
"Needn't be. I'll turn the idea over
to Ferguson to fiddle with. It should be no larger than the present light
switch and cheap enough so that the power saved in a year will pay for
it."
"How would it work?" asked
Strong.
"How should I know? I'm no engineer;
that's for Ferguson and the other educated laddies."
Strong objected, "It's no good
commercially. Switching off a light when you leave a room is a matter of
temperament. I've got it; you haven't. If a man hasn't got it, you can't
interest him in such a switch."
"You can if power continues to be
rationed. There is a power shortage now; and there will be a bigger one."
"Just temporary. This meeting will
straighten it out."
"George, there is nothing in this
world so permanent as a temporary emergency. The switch will sell."
Strong took out a notebook and stylus.
"I'll call Ferguson in about it tomorrow."
Harriman forgot the matter, never to think
of it again. They had reached the roof; he waved to a taxi, then turned to
Strong. "How much could we realize if we unloaded our holdings in Roadways
and in Belt Transport Corporation-yes, and in New World Homes?"
"Huh? Have you gone crazy?"
"Probably. But I'm going to need all
the cash you can shake loose for me. Roadways and Belt Transport are no good
anyhow; we should have unloaded earlier."
"You are crazy! It's the one really
conservative venture you've sponsored."
"But it wasn't conservative when I
sponsored it. Believe me, George, roadtowns are on their way out. They are
growing moribund, just as the railroads did. In a hundred years there won't be
a one left on the continent. What's the formula for making money, George?"
"Buy low and sell high."
"That's only half of it. . . your
half. We've got to guess which way things are moving, give them a boost, and
see that we are cut in on the ground floor. Liquidate that stuff, George; I'll
need money to operate." The taxi landed; they got in and took off.
The taxi delivered them to the roof of the
Hemisphere Power Building they went to the power syndicate's board room, as far
below ground as the landing platform was above-in those days, despite years of
peace, tycoons habitually came to rest at spots relatively immune to atom
bombs. The room did not seem like a bomb shelter; it appeared to be a chamber
in a luxurious penthouse, for a "view window" back of the chairman's
end of the table looked out high above the city, in convincing, live stereo,
relayed from the roof.
The other directors were there before
them. Dixon nodded as they came in, glanced at his watch finger and said,
"Well, gentlemen, our bad boy is here, we may as well begin." He took
the chairman's seat and rapped for order.
"The minutes of the last meeting are
on your pads as usual. Signal when ready." Harriman glanced at the summary
before him and at once flipped a switch on the table top; a small green light
flashed on at his place. Most of the directors did the same.
"Who's holding up the
procession?" inquired Harriman, looking around. "Oh-you, George. Get
a move on."
"I like to check the figures,"
his partner answered testily, then flipped his own switch. A larger green light
showed in front of Chainnan Dixon, who then pressed a button; a transparency,
sticking an inch or two above the table top in front of him lit up with the
word RECORDING.
"Operations report," said Dixon
and touched another switch. A female voice came out from nowhere. Harriman
followed the report from the next sheet of paper at his place. Thirteen
Curie-type power piles were now in operation, up five from the last meeting.
The Susquehanna and Charleston piles had taken over the load previously
borrowed from Atlantic Roadcity and the roadways of that city were now up to
normal speed. It was expected that the Chicago-Angeles road could be restored
to speed during the next fortnight. Power would continue to be rationed but the
crisis was over.
All very interesting but of no direct
interest to Harriman. The power crisis that had been caused by the explosion of
the power satellite was being satisfactorily met-very good, but Harriman's
interest in it lay in the fact that the cause of interplanetary travel had
thereby received a setback from which it might not recover.
When the Harper-Erickson isotopic
artificial fuels had been developed three years before it had seemed that, in
addition to solving the dilemma of an impossibly dangerous power source which
was also utterly necessary to the economic life of the continent, an easy means
had been found to achieve interplanetary travel.
The Arizona power pile had been installed
in one of the largest of the Antipodes rockets, the rocket powered with
isotopic fuel created in the power pile itself, and the whole thing was placed
in an orbit around the Earth. A much smaller rocket had shuttled between
satellite and Earth, carrying supplies to the staff of the power pile, bringing
back synthetic radioactive fuel for the power-hungry technology of Earth.
As a director of the power syndicate
Harriman had backed the power satellite-with a private ax to grind: he expected
to power a Moon ship with fuel manufactured in the power satellite and thus to
achieve the first trip to the Moon almost at once. He had not even attempted to
stir the Department of Defense out of its sleep; he wanted no government
subsidy-the job was a cinch; anybody could do it-and Harriman would do it. He
had the ship; shortly he would have the fuel.
The ship had been a freighter of his own
Antipodes line, her chem-fuel motors replaced, her wings removed. She still
waited, ready for fuel-the recommissioned Santa Maria, nee City of Brisbane.
But the fuel was slow in coming. Fuel had
to be eannarked for the shuttle rocket; the power needs of a rationed continent
came next-and those needs grew faster than the power satellite could turn out
fuel. Far from being ready to supply him for a "useless" Moon trip,
the syndicate had seized on the safe but less efficient low temperature
uranium-salts and heavy water, Curie-type power piles as a means of using
uranium directly to meet the ever growing need for power, rather than build and
launch more satellites.
Unfortunately the Curie piles did not
provide the fierce star-interior conditions necessary to breeding the isotopic
fuels needed for an atomic-powered rocket. Harriman had reluctantly come around
to the notion that he would have to use political pressure to squeeze the
necessary priority for the fuels he wanted for the Santa Maria.
Then the power satellite had blown up.
Harriman was stirred out of his brown
study by Dixon's voice. "The operations report seems satisfactory,
gentlemen. If there is no objection, it will be recorded as accepted. You will
note that in the next ninety days we will be back up to the power level which
existed before we were forced to close down the Arizona pile."
"But with no provision for future
needs," pointed out Harriman. "There have been a lot of babies born
while we have been sitting here."
"Is that an objection to accepting
the report, D.D.?"
"No."
"Very well. Now the public relations
report-let me call attention to the first item, gentlemen. The vice-president
in charge recommends a schedule of annuities, benefits, scholarships and so
forth for dependents of the staff of the power satellite and of the pilot of
the Charon: see appendix 'C'."
A director across from Harriman-Phineas
Morgan, chairman of the food trust, Cuisine, Incorporated-protested, "What
is this, Ed? Too bad they were killed of course, but we paid them skyhigh wages
and carried their insurance to boot. Why the charity?"
Harriman grunted. "Pay it-I so move.
It's peanuts. 'Do not bind the mouths of the kine who tread the grain.'"
"I wouldn't call better than nine
hundred thousand 'peanuts,'" protested Morgan.
"Just a minute, gentlemen-" It
was the vice-president in charge of public relations, himself a director.
"If you'll look at the breakdown, Mr. Morgan, you will see that
eighty-five percent of the appropriation will be used to publicize the
gifts."
Morgan squinted at the figures.
"Oh-why didn't you say so? Well, I suppose the gifts can be considered
unavoidable overhead, but it's a bad precedent."
"Without them we have nothing to
publicize."
"Yes, but-"
Dixon rapped smartly. "Mr. Harriman
has moved acceptance. Please signal your desires." The tally board glowed
green; even Morgan, after hesitation, okayed the allotment. "We have a
related item next," said Dixon. "A Mrs.-uh, Garfield, through her
attorneys, alleges that we are responsible for the congenital crippled condition
of her fourth child. The putative facts are that her child was being born just
as the satellite exploded and that Mrs. Garfield was then on the meridian
underneath the satellite. She wants the court to award her half a
million."
Morgan looked at Harriman. "Delos, I suppose
that you will say to settle out of court."
"Don't be silly. We fight it."
Dixon looked around, surprised. "Why,
D.D.? It's my guess we could settle for ten or fifteen thousand-and that was
what I was about to recommend. I'm surprised that the legal department referred
it to publicity."
"It's obvious why; it's loaded with
high explosive. But we should fight, regardless of bad publicity. It's not like
the last case; Mrs. Garfield and her brat are not our people. And any dumb fool
knows you can't mark a baby by radioactivity at birth; you have to get at the
germ plasm of the previous generation at least. In the third place, if we let
this get by, we'll be sued for every double-yolked egg that's laid from now on.
This calls for an open allotment for defense and not one damned cent for
compromise."
"It might be very expensive,"
observed Dixon.
"It'll be more expensive not to
fight. If we have to, we should buy the judge."
The public relations chief whispered to
Dixon, then announced, "I support Mr. Harriman's view. That's my
department's recommendation."
It was approved. "The next
item," Dixon went on, "is a whole sheaf of suits arising out of
slowing down the roadcities to divert power during the crisis. They alleged
loss of business, loss of time, loss of this and that, but they are all based
on the same issue. The most touchy, perhaps, is a stockholder's suit which
claims that Roadways and this company are so interlocked that the decision to
divert the power was not done in the interests of the stockholders of Roadways.
Delos, this is your pidgin; want to speak on it?"
"Forget it."
"Why?"
"Those are shotgun suits. This
corporation is not responsible; I saw to it that Roadways volunteered to sell
the power because I anticipated this. And the directorates don't interlock; not
on paper, they don't. That's why dummies were born. Forget it-for every suit
you've got there, Roadways has a dozen. We'll beat them."
"What makes you so sure?"
"Well-" Harriman lounged back
and hung a knee over the arm of his chair. "-a good many years ago I was a
Western Union messenger boy. While waiting around the office I read everything
I could lay hands on, including the contract on the back of the telegram forms.
Remember those? They used to come in big pads of yellow paper; by writing a
message on the face of the form you accepted the contract in the fine print on
the backT only most people didn't realize that. Do you know what that contract
obhgated the company to do?"
"Send a telegram, I suppose."
"It didn't promise a durn thing. The
company offered to attempt to deliver the message, by camel caravan or snail
back, or some equally streamlined method, if convenient, but in event of
failure, the company was not responsible. I read that fine print until I knew
it by heart. It was the loveliest piece of prose I had ever seen. Since then
all my contracts have been worded on the same principle. Anybody who sues
Roadways will find that Roadways can't be sued on the element of time, because
time is not of the essence. In the event of complete non-performance-which
hasn't happened yet- Roadways is financially responsible only for freight
charges or the price of the personal transportation tickets. So forget
it."
Morgan sat up. "D.D., suppose I
decided to run up to my country place tonight, by the roadway, and there was a
failure of some sort so that I didn't get there until tomorrow? You mean to say
Roadways is not liable?"
Harriman grinned. "Roadways is not
liable even if you starve to death on the trip. Better use your copter."
He turned back to Dixon. "I move that we stall these suits and let
Roadways carry the ball for us."
"The regular agenda being
completed," Dixon announced later, "time is allotted for our
colleague, Mr. Harriman, to speak on a subject of his own choosing. He has not
listed a subject in advance, but we will listen until it is your pleasure to
adjourn."
Morgan looked sourly at Harriman. "I
move we adjourn."
Harriman grinned. "For two cents I'd
second that and let you die of curiosity." The motion failed for want of a
second. Harriman stood up.
"Mr. Chairman, friends-" He then
looked at Morgan. "-and associates. As you know, I am interested in space
travel."
Dixon looked at him sharply. "Not
that again, Delos! If I weren't in the chair, I'd move to adjourn myself."
"'That again'," agreed Harriman.
"Now and forever. Hear me out. Three years ago, when we were crowded into
moving the Arizona power pile out into space, it looked as if we had a bonus in
the shape of interplanetary travel. Some of you here joined with me in forming
Spaceways, Incorporated, for experimentation, exploration-and exploitation.
"Space was conquered; rockets that
could establish orbits around the globe could be modified to get to the
Moon-and from there, anywhere! It was just a matter of doing it. The problems
remaining were financial-and political.
"In fact, the real engineering
problems of space travel have been solved since World World II. Conquering
space has long been a matter of money and politics. But it did seem that the
Harper-Erickson process, with its concomitant of a round-the-globe rocket and a
practical economical rocket fuel, had at last made it a very present thing, so
close indeed that I did not object when the early allotments of fuel from the
satellite were earmarked for industrial power."
He looked around. "I shouldn't have
kept quiet. I should have squawked and brought pressure and made a hairy
nuisance of myself until you allotted fuel to get rid of me. For now we have
missed our best chance. The satellite is gone; the source of fuel is gone. Even
the shuttle rocket is gone. We are back where we were in 19 50.
Therefore-"
He paused again. "Therefore-I propose
that we build a space ship and send it to the Moon!"
Dixon broke the silence. "Delos, have
you come unzipped? You just said that it was no longer possible. Now you say to
build one."
"I didn't say it was impossible; I
said we had missed our best chance. The time is overripe for space travel. This
globe grows more crowded every day. In spite of technical advances the daily
food intake on this planet is lower than it was thirty years ago-and we get 46
new babies every minute, 6;,ooo every day, 25,ooo,ooo every year. Our race is
about to burst forth to the planets; if we've got the initiative Cod promised
an oyster we will help it along!
"Yes, we missed our best chance-but
the engineering details can be solved. The real question is who's going to foot
the bill? That is why I address you gentlemen, for right here in this room is
the financial capital of this planet."
Morgan stood up. "Mr. Chairman, if
all company business is finished, I ask to be excused."
Dixon nodded. Harriman said, "So
long, Phineas. Don't let me keep you. Now, as I was saying, it's a money
problem and here is where the money is. I move we finance a trip to the
Moon."
The proposal produced no special
excitement; these men knew Harriman. Presently Dixon said, "Is there a
second to D.D.'s proposal?"
"Just a minute, Mr. Chairman-"
It was Jack Entenza, president of Two-Continents Amusement Corporation. "I
want to ask Delos some questions." He turned to Harriman. "D.D., you
know I strung along when you set up Spaceways. It seemed like a cheap venture
and possibly profitable in educational and scientific values-I never did fall
for space liners plying between planets; that's fantastic. I don't mind playing
along with your dreams to a moderate extent, but how do you propose to get to
the Moon? As you say, you are fresh out of fuel."
Harriman was still grinning. "Don't
kid me, Jack, I know why you came along. You weren't interested in science;
you've never contributed a dime to science. You expected a monopoly on pix and
television for your chain. Well, you'll get 'em, if you stick with me-otherwise
I'll sign up 'Recreations, Unlimited'; they'll pay just to have you in the
eye."
Entenza looked at him suspiciously.
"What will it cost me?"
"Your other shirt, your eye teeth,
and your wife's wedding ring-unless 'Recreations' will pay more."
"Damn you, Delos, you're crookeder
than a dog's hind leg."
"From you, Jack, that's a compliment.
We'll do business. Now as to how I'm going to get to the Moon, that's a silly
question. There's not a man in here who can cope with anything more complicated
in the way of machinery than a knife and fork. You can't tell a left-handed
monkey wrench from a reaction engine, yet you ask me for blue prints of a space
ship.
"Well, I'll tell you how I'll get to
the Moon. I'll hire the proper brain boys, give them everything they want, see
to it that they have all the money they can use, sweet talk them into long
hours-then stand back and watch them produce. I'll run it like the Manhattan
Project-most of you remember the A-bomb job; shucks, some of you can remember
the Mississippi Bubble. The chap that headed up the Manhattan Project didn't
know a neutron from Uncle George-but he got results. They solved that trick
four ways. That's why I'm not worried about fuel; we'll get a fuel. We'll get
several fuels."
Dixon said, "Suppose it works? Seems
to me you're asking us to bankrupt the company for an exploit with no real
value, aside from pure science, and a one-shot entertainment exploitation. I'm
not against you-I wouldn't mind putting in ten, fifteen thousand to support a
worthy venture-but I can't see the thing as a business proposition."
Harriman leaned on his fingertips and
stared down the long table. "Ten or fifteen thousand gum drops! Dan, I
mean to get into you for a couple of megabucks at least-and before we're
through you'll be hollering for more stock. This is the greatest real estate
venture since the Pope carved up the New World. Don't ask me what we'll make a
profit on; I can't itemize the assets-but I can lump them. The assets are a
planet-a whole planet, Dan, that's never been touched. And more planets beyond
it. If we can't figure out ways to swindle a few fast bucks out of a sweet
set-up like that then you and I had better both go on relief. It's like having
Manhattan Island offered to you for twenty-four dollars and a case of
whiskey."
Dixon grunted. "You make it sound
like the chance of a lifetime."
"Chance of a lifetime, nuts! This is'
the greatest chance in all history. It's raining soup; grab yourself a
bucket."
Next to Entenza sat Gaston P. Jones,
director of Trans-America and half a dozen other banks, one of the richest men
in the room. He carefully removed two inches of cigar ash, then said dryly,
"Mr. Harriman, I will sell you all of my interest in the Moon, present and
future, for fifty cents."
Harriman looked delighted.
"Sold!"
Entenza had been pulling at his lower lip
and listening with a brooding expression on his face. Now he spoke up.
"Just a minute, Mr. Jones-I'll give you a dollar for it."
"Dollar fifty," answered
Harriman.
"Two dollars," Entenza answered
slowly.
"Five!"
They edged each other up. At ten dollars
Entenza let Harriman have it and sat back, still looking thoughtful. Harriman
looked happily around. "Which one of you thieves is a lawyer?" he
demanded. The remark was rhetorical; out of seventeen directors the normal
percentage-eleven, to be exact-were lawyers. "Hey, Tony," he
continued, "draw me up an instrument right now that will tie down this
transaction so that it couldn't be broken before the Throne of God. All of Mr.
Jones' interests, rights, title, natural interest, future interests, interests
held directly or through ownership of stock, presently held or to be acquired,
and so forth and so forth. Put lots of Latin in it. The idea is that every
interest in the Moon that Mr. Jones now has or may acquire is mine-for a ten
spot, cash in hand paid." Harriman slapped a bill down on the table.
"That right, Mr. Jones?"
Jones smiled briefly. "That's right,
young fellow." He pocketed the bill. "I'll frame this for my
grandchildren-to show them how easy it is to make money." Entenza's eyes
darted from Jones to Harriman.
"Good!" said Harriman.
"Gentlemen, Mr. Jones has set a market price for one human being's
interest in our satellite. With around three billion persons on this globe that
sets a price on the Moon of thirty billion dollars." He hauled out a wad
of money. "Any more suckers? I'm buying every share that's offered, ten
bucks a copy."
"I'll pay twenty!" Entenza
rapped out.
Harriman looked at him sorrowfully.
"Jack-don't do that! We're on the same team. Let's take the shares
together, at ten."
Dixon pounded for order. "Gentlemen,
please conduct such transactions after the meeting is adjourned. Is there a
second to Mr. Harriman's motion?"
Gaston Jones said, "I owe it to Mr.
Harriman to second his motion, without prejudice. Let's get on with a
vote."
No one objected; the vote was taken. It
went eleven to three against Harriman-Harriman, Strong, and Entenza for; all
others against. Harriman popped up before anyone could move to adjourn and
said, "I expected that. My real purpose is this: since the company is no
longer interested in space travel, will it do me the courtesy of selling me
what I may need of patents, processes, facilities, and so forth now held by the
company but relating to space travel and not relating to the production of
power on this planet? Our brief honeymoon with the power satellite built up a
backlog; I want to use it. Nothing formal-just a vote that it is the policy of
the company to assist me in any way not inconsistent with the primary interest
of the company. How about it, gentlemen? It'll get me out of your hair."
Jones studied his cigar again. "I see
no reason why we should not accommodate him, gentlemen . . . and I speak as the
perfect disinterested party."
"I think we can do it, Delos,"
agreed Dixon, "only we won't sell you anything, we'll lend it to you.
Then, if you happen to hit the jackpot, the company still retains an interest.
Has anyone any objection?" he said to the room at large.
There was none; the matter was recorded as
company policy and the meeting was adjourned. Harriman stopped to whisper with
Entenza and, finally, to make an appointment. Gaston Jones stood near the door,
speaking privately with Chairman Dixon. He beckoned to Strong, Harriman's
partner. "George, may I ask a personal question?"
"I don't guarantee to answer. Go
ahead."
"You've always struck me as a
level-headed man. Tell me-why do you string along with Harriman? Why, the man's
mad as a hatter."
Strong looked sheepish. "I ought to
deny that, he's my friend . . . but I can't. But dawggone it! Every time Delos
has a wild hunch, it turns out to be the real thing. I hate to string along-it
makes me nervous-but I've learned to trust his hunches rather than another
man's sworn financial report."
Jones cocked one brow. "The Midas
touch, eh?"
"You could call it that."
"Well, remember what happened to King
Midas-in the long run. Good day, gentlemen."
Harriman had left Entenza; Strong joined
him. Dixon stood staring at them, his face very thoughtful.
CHAPTER
TWO
HARRIMAN'S
HOME had been built at the time when everyone who could was decentralizing and
going underground. Above ground there was a perfect little Cape Cod cottage-the
clapboards of which concealed armor plate- and most delightful, skillfully
landscaped grounds; below ground there was four or five times as much
floorspace, immune to anything but a direct hit and possessing an independent
air supply with reserves for one thousand hours. During the Crazy Years the
conventional wall surrounding the grounds had been replaced by a wall which
looked the same but which would stop anything short of a broaching tank-nor
were the gates weak points; their gadgets were as personally loyal as a well-trained
dog.
Despite its fortress-like character the
house was comfortable. It was also very expensive to keep up.
Harriman did not mind the expense;
Charlotte liked the house and it gave her something to do. When they were first
married she had lived uncomplainingly in a cramped flat over a grocery store;
if Charlotte now liked to play house in a castle, Harriman did not mind.
But he was again starting a shoe-string
venture; the few thousand per month of ready cash represented by the household
expenses might, at some point in the game, mean the difference between success
and the sheriff's bailiffs. That night at dinner, after the servants fetched
the coffee, and port, he took up the matter.
"My dear, I've been wondering how you
would like a few months in Florida."
His wife stared at him. "Florida?
Delos, is your mind wandering? Florida is unbearable at this time of the
year."
"Switzerland, then. Pick your own
spot. Take a real vacation, as long as you like."
"Delos, you are up to
something."
Harriman sighed. Being "up to
something" was the unnameable and unforgivable crime for which any
American male could be indicted, tried, convicted, and sentenced in one breath.
He wondered how things had gotten rigged so that the male half of the race must
always behave to suit feminine rules and feminine logic, like a snotty-nosed
school boy in front of a stern teacher.
"In a way, perhaps. We've both agreed
that this house is a bit of a white elephant. I was thinking of closing it,
possibly even of disposing of the land- it's worth more now than when we bought
it. Then, when we get around to it, we could build something more modern and a
little less like a bombproof."
Mrs. Harriman was temporarily diverted.
"Well, I have thought it might be nice to build another place, Delos-say a
little chalet tucked away in the mountains, nothing ostentatious, not more than
two servants, or three. But we won't close this place until it's built,
Delos-after all, one must live somewhere."
"I was not thinking of building right
away," he answered cautiously. "Why not? We're not getting any
younger, Delos; if we are to enjoy the good things of life we had better not
make delays. You needn't worry about it; I'll manage everything."
Harriman turned over in his mind the
possibility of letting her build to keep her busy. If he earmarked the cash for
her "little chalet," she would live in a hotel nearby wherever she
decided to build it-and he could sell this monstrosity they were sitting in.
With the nearest roadcity now less than ten miles away, the land should bring
more than Charlotte's new house would cost and he would be rid of the monthly
drain on his pocketbook.
"Perhaps you are right," he
agreed. "But suppose you do build at once; you won't be living here;
you'll be supervising every detail of the new place. I say we should unload
this place; it's eating its head off in taxes, upkeep, and running
expenses."
She shook her head. "Utterly out of
the question, Delos. This is my home." He ground out an almost unsmoked
cigar. "I'm sorry, Charlotte, but you can't have it both ways. If you
build, you can't stay here. If you stay here, we'll close these below-ground
catacombs, fire about a dozen of the parasites I keep stumbling over, and live
in the cottage on the surface. I'm cutting expenses."
"Discharge the servants? Delos, if
you think that I will undertake to make a home for you without a proper staff,
you can just-"
"Stop it." He stood up and threw
his napkin down. "It doesn't take a squad of servants to make a home. When
we were first married you had no servants-and you washed and ironed my shirts
in the bargain. But we had a home then. This place is owned by that staff you
speak of. Well, we're getting rid of them, all but the cook and a handy
man."
She did not seem to hear. "Delos! sit
down and behave yourself. Now what's all this about cutting expenses? Are you
in some sort of trouble? Are you? Answer me!"
He sat down wearily and answered,
"Does a man have to be in trouble to want to cut out unnecessary
expenses?"
"In your case, yes. Now what
is it? Don't try to evade me."
"Now see here, Charlotte, we agreed a
long time ago that I would keep business matters in the office. As for the
house, we simply don't need a house this size. It isn't as if we had a passel of
kids to fill up-"
"Oh! Blaming me for that again!"
"Now see here, Charlotte," he
wearily began again, "I never did blame you and I'm not blaming you now.
All I ever did was suggest that we both see a doctor and find out what the
trouble was we didn't have any kids. And for twenty years you've been making me
pay for that one remark. But that's all over and done with now; I was simply
making the point that two people don't fill up twenty-two rooms. I'll pay a
reasonable price for a new house, if you want it, and give you an ample
household allowance." He started to say how much, then decided not to.
"Or you can close this place and live in the cottage above. It's just that
we are going to quit squandering money-for a while."
She grabbed the last phrase. "'For a
while.' What's going on, Delos? What are you going to squander money on?"
When he did not answer she went on. "Very well, if you won't tell me, I'll
call George. He will tell me."
"Don't do that, Charlotte. I'm
warning you. I'll-"
"You'll what!" She studied his
face. "I don't need to talk to George; I can tell by looking at you.
You've got the same look on your face you had when you came home and told me
that you had sunk all our money in those crazy rockets."
"Charlotte, that's not fair. Skyways
paid off. It's made us a mint of money."
"That's beside the point. I know why
you're acting so strangely; you've got that old trip-to-the-Moon madness again.
Well, I won't stand for it, do you hear? I'll stop you; I don't bave to put up
with it. I'm going right down in the morning and see Mr. Kamens and find out
what has to be done to make you behave yourself." The cords of her neck
jerked as she spoke.
He waited, gathering his temper before
going on. "Charlotte, you have no real cause for complaint. No matter what
happens to me, your future is taken care of."
"Do you think I want to be a
widow?"
He looked thoughtfully at her. "I
wonder."
"Why- Why, you heartless beast."
She stood up. "We'll say no more about it; do you mind?" She left
without waiting for an answer.
His "man" was waiting for him
when he got to his room. Jenkins got up hastily and started drawing Harriman's
bath. "Beat it," Harriman grunted. "I can undress myself."
"You require nothing more tonight,
sir?"
"Nothing. But don't go unless you
feel like it. Sit down and pour yourself a drink. Ed, how long you been
married?"
"Don't mind if I do." The
servant helped himself. "Twenty-three years, come May, sir."
"How's it been, if you don't mind me
asking?" -
"Not bad. Of course there have been
times-"
"I know what you mean. Ed, if you
weren't working for me, what would you be doing?"
"Well, the wife and I have talked
many times of opening a little restaurant, nothing pretentious, but good. A
place where a gentleman could enjoy a quiet meal of good food."
"Stag, eh?"
"No, not entirely, sir-but there
would be a parlor' for gentlemen only. Not even waitresses, I'd tend that room
myself."
"Better look around for locations,
Ed. You're practically in business."
CHAPTER
THREE
STRONG
ENTERED THEIR JOINT OFFICES the next morning at a precise nine o'clock, as
usual. He was startled to find Harriman there before him. For Harriman to fail
to show up at all meant nothing; for him to beat the clerks in was significant.
Harriman was busy with a terrestrial globe
and a book-the current Nautical Almanac, Strong observed. Harriman barely
glanced up. "Morning, George. Say, who've we got a line to in
Brazil?"
"Why?"
"I need some trained seals who speak
Portuguese, that's why. And some who speak Spanish, too. Not to mention three
or four dozen scattered around in this country. I've come across something
very, very interesting. Look here. . . according to these tables the Moon only
swings about twentyeight, just short of twenty-nine degrees north and south of
the equator." He held a pencil against the globe and spun it. "Like
that. That suggest anything?"
"No. Except that you're getting
pencil marks on a sixty dollar globe."
"And you an old real estate operator!
What does a man own when he buys a parcel of land?"
"That depends on the deed. Usually
mineral rights and other subsurface rights are-"
"Never mind that. Suppose he buys the
works, without splitting the rights: how far down does he own? How far up does
he own?"
"Well, he owns a wedge down to the
center of the Earth. That was settled in the slant-drilling and off-set oil
lease cases. Theoretically he used to own the space above the land, too, out
indefinitely, but that was modified by a series of cases after the commercial
airlines came in-and a good thing, for us, too, or we would have to pay tolls
every time one of our rockets took off for Australia."
"No, no, no, George! you didn't read
those cases right. Right of passage was established-but ownership of the space
above the land remained unchanged. And even right of passage was not absolute;
you can build a thousand-foot tower on your own land right where airplanes, or
rockets, or whatever, have been in the habit of passing and the ships will
thereafter have to go above it, with no kick back on you. Remember how we had
to lease the air south of Hughes Field to insure that our approach wasn't built
up?"
Strong looked thoughtful. "Yes. I see
your point. The ancient principle of land ownership remains undisturbed-down to
the center of the Earth, up to infinity. But what of it? It's a purely
theoretical matter. You're not planning to pay tolls to operate those
spaceships you're always talking about, are you?" He grudged a smile at
his own wit.
"Not on your tintype. Another matter
entirely. George-who owns the Moon?"
Strong's jaw dropped, literally.
"Delos, you're joking."
"I am not. I'll ask you again: if
basic law says that a man owns the wedge of sky above his farm out to infinity,
who owns the Moon? Take a look at this globe and tell me."
Strong looked. "But it can't mean
anything, Delos. Earth laws wouldn't apply to the Moon."
"They apply here and that's where I
am worrying about it. The Moon stays constantly over a slice of Earth bounded
by latitude twenty-nine north and the same distance south; if one man owned all
that belt of Earth-it's roughly the tropical zone-then he'd own the Moon, too,
wouldn't he? By all the theories of real property ownership that our courts pay
any attention to. And, by direct derivation, according to the sort of logic
that lawyers like, the various owners of that belt of land have title-good
vendable title-to the Moon somehow lodged collectively in them. The fact that
the distribution of the title is a little vague wouldn't bother a lawyer; they
grow fat on just such distributed titles every time a will is probated."
"It's fantastic!"
"George, when are you going to learn
that 'fantastic' is a notion that doesn't bother a lawyer?"
"You're not planning to try to buy
the entire tropical zone-that's what you would have to do."
"No," Harriman said slowly,
"but it might not be a bad idea to buy right, title and interest in the
Moon, as it may appear, from each of the sovereign countries in that belt. If I
thought I could keep it quiet and not run the market up, I might try it. You
can buy a thing awful cheap from a man if he thinks it's worthless and wants to
sell before you regain your senses.
"But that's not the plan," he
went on. "George, I want corporations- local corporations-in every one of
those countries. I want the legislatures of each of those countries to grant
franchises to its local corporation for lunar exploration, exploitation, et
cetera, and the right to claim lunar soil on behalf of the country-with fee simple,
naturally, being handed on a silver platter to the patriotic corporation that
thought up the idea. And I want all this done quietly, so that the bribes won't
go too high. We'll own the corporations, of course, which is why I need a flock
of trained seals. There is going to be one hell of a fight one of these days
over who owns the Moon; I want the deck stacked so that we win no matter how
the cards are dealt."
"It will be ridiculously expensive,
Delos. And you don't even know that you will ever get to the Moon, much less
that it will be worth anything after you get there."
"We'll get there! It'll be more
expensive not to establish these claims. Anyhow it need not be very expensive;
the proper use of bribe money is a homoeopathic art-you use it as a catalyst.
Back in the middle of the last century four men went from California to
Washington with $40,000; it was all they had. A few weeks later they were
broke-but Congress had awarded them a billion dollars' worth of railroad right
of way. The trick is not to run up the market."
Strong shook his head. "Your title
wouldn't be any good anyhow. The Moon doesn't stay in one place; it passes over
owned land certainly-but so does a migrating goose."
"And nobody has title to a migrating
bird. I get your point-but the Moon always stays over that one belt. If you
move a boulder in your garden, do you lose title to it? Is it still real
estate? Do the title laws still stand? This is like that group of real estate
cases involving wandering islands in the Mississippi, George-the land moved as
the river cut new channels, but somebody always owned it. In this case I plan
to see to it that we are the 'somebody.'"
Strong puckered his brow. "I seem to
recall that some of those island-andriparian cases were decided one way and
some another."
"We'll pick the decisions that suit
us. That's why lawyers' wives have mink coats. Come on, George; let's get
busy."
"On what?"
"Raising the money."
"Oh." Strong looked relieved.
"I thought you were planning to use our money."
"I am. But it won't be nearly enough.
We'll use our money for the senior financing to get things moving; in the
meantime we've got to work out ways to keep the money rolling in." He
pressed a switch at his desk; the face of Saul Kamens, their legal chief of
staff, sprang out at him. "Hey, Saul, can you slide in for a
p0w-wow?"
"WThatever it is, just tell them
'no,'" answered the attorney. "I'll fix it."
"Good. Now come on in-they're moving
Hell and I've got an option on the first ten loads."
Kamens showed up in his own good time.
Some minutes later Harriman had explained his notion for claiming the Moon
ahead of setting foot on it. "Besides those dummy corporations," he
went on, "we need an agency that can receive contributions without having
to admit any financial interest on the part of the contributor-like the
National Geographic Society."
Kamens shook his head. "You can't buy
the National Geographic Society."
"Damn it, who said we were going to?
We'll set up our own."
"That's what I started to say."
"Good. As I see it, we need at least
one tax-free, non-profit corporation headed up by the right people-we'll hang
on to voting control, of course. We'll probably need more than one; we'll set
them up as we need them. And we've got to have at least one new ordinary
corporation, not tax-free- but it won't show a profit until we are ready. The
idea is to let the nonprofit corporations have all of the prestige and all of
the publicity-and the other gets all of the profits, if and when. We swap assets
around between corporations, always for perfectly valid reasons, so that the
non-profit corporations pay the expenses as we go along. Come to think about
it, we had better have at least two ordinary corporations, so that we can let
one of them go through bankruptcy if we find it necessary to shake out the
water. That's the general sketch. Get busy and fix it up so that it's legal,
will you?"
Kamens said, "You know, Delos, it
would be a lot more honest if you did it at the point of a gun."
"A lawyer talks to me of honesty!
Never mind, Saul; I'm not actually going to cheat anyone-"
"Humph!"
"-and I'm just going to make a trip
to the Moon. That's what everybody will be paying for; that's what they'll get.
Now fix it up so that it's legal, that's a good boy."
"I'm reminded of something the elder
Vanderbilt's lawyer said to the old man under similar circumstances: 'It's
beautiful the way it is; why spoil it by making it legal?' Okeh, brother
gonoph, I'll rig your trap. Anything else?"
"Sure. Stick around, you might have
some ideas. George, ask Montgomery to come in, will you?" Montgomery,
Harriman's publicity chief, had two virtues in his employer's eyes: he was
personally loyal to Harriman, and, secondly, he was quite capable of planning a
campaign to convince the public that Lady Godiva wore a Caresse-brand girdle
during her famous ride
or that Hercules attributed his strength
to Crunchies for breakfast. He arrived with a large portfolio under his arm.
"Glad you sent for me, Chief. Get a load of this-" He spread the
folder open on Harriman's desk and began displaying sketches and layouts.
"Kinsky's work-is that boy hot!" Harriman closed the portfolio.
"What outfit is it for?"
"Huh? New World Homes."
"I don't want to see it; we're
dumping New World Homes. Wait a minute-don't start to bawl. Have the boys go
through with it; I want the price kept up while we unload. But open your ears
to another matter." He explained rapidly the new enterprise.
Presently Montgomery was nodding.
"When do we start and how much do we spend?"
"Right away and spend what you need
to. Don't get chicken about expenses; this is the biggest thing we've ever
tackled." Strong flinched; Harriman went on, "Have insomnia over it
tonight; see me tomorrow and we'll kick it around."
"Wait a see, Chief. How are you going
to sew up all those franchises from the, uh-the Moon states, those countries
the Moon passes over, while a big publicity campaign is going on about a trip
to the Moon and how big a thing it is for everybody? Aren't you about to paint
yourself into a corner?"
"Do I look stupid? We'll get the
franchise before you hand out so much as a filler-you'll get 'em, you and
Kamens. That's your first job."
"Hmmm. . . ." Montgomery chewed
a thumb nail. "Well, all right-I can see some angles. How soon do we have
to sew it up?"
"I give you six weeks. Otherwise just
mail your resignation in, written on the skin off your back."
"I'll write it right now, if you'll
help me by holding a mirror."
"Damn it, Monty, I know you can't do
it in six weeks. But make it fast; we can't take a cent in to keep the thing
going until you sew up those franchises. If you dilly-dally, we'll all
starve-and we won't get to the Moon, either."
Strong said, "D.D., why fiddle with
those trick claims from a bunch of moth-eaten tropical countries? If you are
dead set on going to the Moon, let's call Ferguson in and get on with the
matter."
"I like your direct approach,
George," Harriman said, frowning. "Mmmm back about i 84; or '46 an
eager-beaver American army officer captured California. You know what the State
Department did?"
"They made him hand it back. Seems he
hadn't touched second base, or something. So they had to go to the trouble of
capturing it all over again a few months later. Now I don't want that to happen
to us. It's not enough just to set foot on the Moon and claim it; we've got to
validate that claim in terrestrial courts-or we're in for a peck of trouble.
Eh, Saul?"
Kamens nodded. "Remember what
happened to Columbus."
"Exactly. We aren't going to let
ourselves be rooked the way Columbus was."
Montgomery spat out some thumb nail.
"But, Chief-you know damn well those banana-state claims won't be worth
two cents after I do tie them up. Why not get a franchise right from the U.N.
and settle the matter? I'd as lief tackle that as tackle two dozen cockeyed
legislatures. In fact I've got an angle already-we work it through the Security
Council and-"
"Keep working on that angle; we'll
use it later. You don't appreciate the full mechanics of the scheme, Monty. Of
course those claims are worth nothing-except nuisance value. But their nuisance
value is all important. Listen: we get to the Moon, or appear about to. Every
one of those countries puts up a squawk; we goose them into it through the
dummy corporations they have enfranchised. Where do they squawk? To the U.N.,
of course. Now the big countries on this globe, the rich and important ones,
are all in the northern temperate zone. They see what the claims are based on
and they take a frenzied look at the globe. Sure enough, the Moon does not pass
over a one of them. The biggest country of all-Russia-doesn't own a spadeful of
dirt south of twenty-nine north. So they reject all the claims.
"Or do they?" Harriman went on.
"The U.S. balks. The Moon passes over Florida and the southern part of
Texas. Washington is in a tizzy. Should they back up the tropical countries and
support the traditional theory of land title or should they throw their weight
to the idea that the Moon belongs to everyone? Or should the United States try
to claim the whole thing, seeing as how it was Americans who actually got there
first?
"At this point we creep out from
under cover. It seems that the Moon ship was owned and the expenses paid by a
non-profit corporation chartered by the U.N. itself-"
"Hold it," interrupted Strong.
"I didn't know that the U.N. could create corporations?"
"You'll find it can," his
partner answered. "How about it, Saul?" Kamens nodded.
"Anyway," Harriman continued, "I've already got the corporation.
I had it set up several years ago. It can do most anything of an educational or
scientific nature-and brother, that covers a lot of ground! Back to the
point-this corporation, the creature of the U.N., asks its parent to declare
the lunar colony autonomous territory, under the protection of the U.N. We
won't ask for outright membership at first because we want to keep it
simple-"
"Simple, he calls it!" said
Montgomery.
"Simple. This new colony will be a de
facto sovereign state, holding title to the entire Moon, and-listen
closely!-capable of buying, selling, passing laws, issuing title to land,
setting up monopolies, collecting tariffs, et cetera without end. And we own
it."
"The reason we get all this is
because the major states in the U.N. can't think up a claim that sounds as
legal as the claim made by the tropical states, they can't agree among
themselves as to how to split up the swag if they were to attempt brute force
and the other major states aren't willing to see the United States claim the
whole thing. They'll take the easy way out of their dilemma by appearing to
retain title in the U.N. itself. The real title, the title controlling all
economic and legal matters, will revert to us. Now do you see my point, Monty?"
Montgomery grinned. "Damned if I know
if it's necessary, Chief, but I love it. It's beautiful."
"Well, I don't think so," Strong
grumbled. "Delos, I've seen you rig some complicated deals-some of them so
devious that they turned even my stomach-but this one is the worst yet. I think
you've been carried away by the pleasure you get out of cooking up involved
deals in which somebody gets double-crossed."
Harriman puffed hard on his cigar before
answering, "I don't give a damn, George. Call it chicanery, call it
anything you want to. I'm going to the Moon! If I have to manipulate a million
people to accomplish it, I'll do it."
"But it's not necessary to do it this
way."
"Well, how would you do it?"
"Me? I'd set up a straightforward
corporation. I'd get a resolution in Congress making my corporation the chosen
instrument of the United States-"
"Bribery?"
"Not necessarily. Influence and
pressure ought to be enough. Then I would set about raising the money and make
the trip."
"And the United States would then own
the Moon?"
"Naturally," Strong answered a
little stiffly.
Harriman got up and began pacing.
"You don't see it, George, you don't see it. The Moon was not meant to be
owned by a single country, even the United States."
"It was meant to be owned by you, I
suppose."
"Well, if I own it-for a short
while-I won't misuse it and I'll take care that others don't. Damnation,
nationalism should stop at the stratosphere. Can you see what would happen if
the United States lays claim to the Moon? The other nations won't recognize the
claim. It will become a permanent bone of contention in the Security
Council-just when we were beginning to get straightened out to the point where
a man could do business planning without having his elbow jogged by a war every
few years. The other nations-quite rightfully-will be scared to death of the
United States. They will be able to look up in the sky any night and see the
main atom-bomb rocket base of the United States staring down the backs of their
necks. Are they going to hold still for it? No, sirree-they are going to try to
clip off a piece of the Moon for their own national use. The Moon is too big to
hold, all at once. There will be other bases established there and presently
there will be the worst war this planet has ever seen-and we'll be to blame.
"No, it's got to be an arrangement
that everybody will hold still for-and that's why we've got to plan it, think
of all the angles, and be devious about it until we are in a position to make
it work.
"Anyhow, George, if we claim it in
the name of the United States, do you know where we will be, as business
men?"
"In the driver's seat," answered
Strong.
"In a pig's eye! We'll be dealt right
out of the game. The Department of National Defense will say, 'Thank you, Mr.
Harriman. Thank you, Mr. Strong. We are taking over in the interests of
national security; you can go home now.' And that's just what we would have to
do-go home and wait for the next atom war.
"I'm not going to do it, George. I'm
not going to let the brass hats muscle in. I'm going to set up a lunar colony
and then nurse it along until it is big enough to stand on its own feet. I'm
telling you-all of you!-this is the biggest thing for the human race since the
discovery of fire. Handled right, it can mean a new and braver world. Handle it
wrong and it's a one-way ticket to Armageddon. It's coming, it's coming soon,
whether we touch it or not. But I plan to be the Man in the Moon myself-and
give it my personal attention to see that it's handled right."
He paused. Strong said, "Through with
your sermon, Delos?"
"No, I'm not," Harriman denied
testily. "You don't see this thing the right way. Do you know what we may
find up there?" He swung his arm in an arc toward the ceiling.
"People!"
"On the Moon?" said Kamens.
"Why not on the Moon?" whispered
Montgomery to Strong.
"No, not on the Moon-at least I'd be
amazed if we dug down and found anybody under that airless shell. The Moon has
had its day; I was speaking of the other planets-Mars and Venus and the
satellites of Jupiter. Even maybe out at the stars themselves. Suppose we do
find people? Think what it will mean to us. We've been alone, all alone, the
only intelligent race in the only world we know. We haven't even been able to
talk with dogs or apes. Any answers we got we had to think up by ourselves,
like deserted orphans. But suppose we find people, intelligent people, who have
done some thinking in their own way. We wouldn't be alone any more! We could
look up at the stars and never be afraid again."
He finished, seeming a little tired and
even a little ashamed of his outburst, like a man surprised in a private act.
He stood facing them, searching their faces.
"Gee whiz, Chief," said
Montgomery, "I can use that. How about it?"
"Think you can remember it?"
"Don't need to-I flipped on your
'silent steno."
"Well, damn your eyes!"
"We'll put it on video-in a play I
think."
Harriman smiled almost boyishly.
"I've never acted, but if you think it'll do any good, I'm game."
"Oh, no, not you, Chief,"
Montgomery answered in horrified tones. "You're not the type. I'll use
Basil Wilkes-Booth, I think. With his organlike voice and that beautiful
archangel face, he'll really send 'em."
Harriman glanced down at his paunch and
said gruffly, "O.K.-back to business. Now about money. In the first place
we can go after straight donations to one of the non-profit corporations, just
like endowments for colleges. Hit the upper brackets, where tax deductions
really matter. How much do you think we can raise that way?"
"Very little," Strong opined.
"That cow is about milked dry."
"It's never milked dry, as long as
there are rich men around who would rather make gifts than pay taxes. How much
will a man pay to have a crater on the Moon named after him?"
"I thought they all had names?"
remarked the lawyer.
"Lots of them don't-and we have the
whole back face that's not touched yet. We won't try to put down an estimate
today; we'll just list it. Monty, I want an angle to squeeze dimes out of the
school kids, too. Forty million school kids 'at a dime a head is
$4,000,000.00-we can use that."
"Why stop at a dime?" asked
Monty. "If you get a kid really interested he'll scrape together a
dollar."
"Yes, but what do we offer him for
it? Aside from the honor of taking part in a noble venture and so forth?"
"Mmmm. . . ." Montgomery used up
more thumb nail. "Suppose we go after both the dimes and the dollars. For
a dime he gets a card saying that he's a member of the Moonbeam club-"
"No, the 'Junior Spacemen'."
"O.K., the Moonbeams will be
girls-and don't forget to rope the Boy Scouts and Girl Scouts into it, too. We
give each kid a card; when he kicks in another dime, we punch it. When he's
punched out a dollar, we give him a certificate, suitable for framing, with his
name and some process engraving, and on the back a picture of the Moon."
"On the front," answered
Harriman. "Do it in one print job; it's cheaper and it'll look better. We
give him something else, too, a steelclad guarantee that his name will be on
the rolls of the Junior Pioneers of the Moon, which same will be placed in a
monument to be erected on the Moon at the landing site of the first Moon
ship-in microfilm, of course; we have to watch weight."
"Fine!" agreed Montgomery.
"Want to swap jobs, Chief? V/hen he gets up to ten dollars we give him a
genuine, solid gold-plated shooting star pin ~nd he's a senior Pioneer, with
the right to vote or something or other. And his name goes outside of the
monument-microengraved on a platinum strip."
Strong looked as if he had bitten a lemon.
"What happens when he reaches a hundred dollars?" he asked.
"Why, then," Montgomery answered
happily, "we give him another card and he can start over. Don't worry
about it, Mr. Strong-if any kid goes that high, he'll have his reward. Probably
we will take him on an inspection tour of the ship before it takes off and give
him, absolutely free, a picture of himself standing in front of it, with the
pilot's own signature signed across the bottom by some female clerk."
"Chiseling from kids. Bah!"
"Not at all," answered
Montgomery in hurt tones. "Intangibles are the most honest merchandise
anyone can sell. They are always worth whatever you are willing to pay for them
and they never wear out. You can take them to your grave untarnished."
"Hmmmph!"
Harriman listened to this, smiling and
saying nothing. Kamens cleared his throat. "If you two ghouls are through
cannibalizing the youth of the land, I've another idea."
"Spill it."
"George, you collect stamps, don't
you?"
"Yes."
"How much would a cover be worth
which had been to the Moon and been cancelled there?"
"Huh? But you couldn't, you
know."
"I think we could get our Moon ship
declared a legal post office substation without too much trouble. What would it
be worth?"
"Uh, that depends on how rare they
are."
"There must be some optimum number
which will fetch a maximum return. Can you estimate it?"
Strong got a faraway look in his eye, then
took out an old-fashioned pencil and commenced to figure. Harriman went on,
"Saul, my minor success in buying a share in the Moon from Jones went to
my head. How about selling building lots on the Moon?"
"Let's keep this serious, Delos. You
can't do that until you've landed there."
"I am serious. I know you are
thinking of that ruling back in the 'forties that such land would have to be
staked out and accurately described. I want to sell land on the Moon. You
figure out a way to make it legal. I'll sell the whole Moon, if I can-surface rights,
mineral rights, anything."
"Suppose they want to occupy
it?"
"Fine. The more the merrier. I'd like
to point out, too, that we'll be in a position to assess taxes on what we have
sold. If they don't use it and won't pay taxes, it reverts to us. Now you
figure out how to offer it, without going to jail. You may have to advertise it
abroad, then plan to peddle it personally in this country, like Irish
Sweepstakes tickets."
Kamens looked thoughtful. "We could
incorporate the land company in Panama and advertise by video and radio from
Mexico. Do you really think you can sell the stuff?"
"You can sell snowballs in
Greenland," put in Montgomery. "It's a matter of promotion."
Harriman added, "Did you ever read
about the Florida land boom, Saul? People bought lots they had never seen and
sold them at tripled prices without ever having laid eyes on them. Sometimes a
parcel would change hands a dozen times before anyone got around to finding out
that the stuff was ten-foot deep in water. We can offer bargains better than
that-an acre, a guaranteed dry acre with plenty of sunshine, for maybe ten
dollars-or a thousand acres at a dollar an acre. Who's going to turn down a
bargain like that? Particularly after the rumor gets around that the Moon is
believed to be loaded with uranium?"
"Is it?"
"How should I know? When the boom
sags a little we will announce the selected location of Luna City-and it will
just happen to work out that the land around the site is still available for
sale. Don't worry, Saul, if it's real estate, George and I can sell it. Why,
down in the Ozarks, where the land stands on edge, we used to sell both sides
of the same acre." Harriman looked thoughtful. "I think we'll reserve
mineral rights-there just might actually be uranium there!"
Kamens chuckled. "Delos, you are a
kid at heart. Just a great big, overgrown, lovable-juvenile delinquent."
Strong straightened up. "I make it
half a million," he said.
"Half a million what?" asked
Harriman.
"For the cancelled philatelic covers,
of course. That's what we were talking about. Five thousand is my best estimate
of the number that could be placed with serious collectors and with dealers.
Even then we will have to discount them to a syndicate and hold back until the
ship is built and the trip looks like a probability."
"Okay," agreed Harriman.
"You handle it. I'll just note that we can tap you for an extra half
million toward the end."
"Don't I get a commission?"
asked Kamens. "I thought of it."
"You get a rising vote of thanks-and
ten acres on the Moon. Now what other sources of revenue can we hit?"
"Don't you plan to sell stock?"
asked Kamens.
"I was coming to that. Of course-but
no preferred stock; we don't want to be forced through a reorganization.
Participating common, non-voting-"
"Sounds like another banana-state
corporation to me."
"Naturally-but I want some of it on
the New York Exchange, and you'll have to work that out with the Securities
Exchange Commission somehow. Not too much of it-that's our show case and we'll
have to keep it active and moving up."
"Wouldn't you rather I swam the
Hellespont?"
"Don't be like that, Saul. It beats
chasing ambulances, doesn't it?"
"I'm not sure."
"Well, that's what I want
you-wups!" The screen on Harriman's desk had come to life. A girl said,
"Mr. Harriman, Mr. Dixon is here. He has no appointment but he says that
you want to see him."
"I thought I had that thing shut
off," muttered Harriman, then pressed his key and said, "O.K., show
him in."
"Very well, sir-oh, Mr. Harriman, Mr.
Entenza came in just this second."
"Look who's talking," said
Kamens.
Dixon came in with Entenza behind him. He
sat down, looked around, started to speak, then checked himself. He looked
around again, especially at Entenza.
"Go ahead, Dan," Harriman
encouraged him. "'Tain't nobody here at all but just us chickens."
Dixon made up his mind. "I've decided
to come in with you, D.D.," he announced. "As an act of faith I went
to the trouble of getting this." He took a formal-looking instrument from
his pocket and displayed it. It was a sale of lunar rights, from Phineas Morgan
to Dixon, phrased in exactly the same fashion as that which Jones had granted
to Harriman.
Entenza looked startled, then dipped into
his own inner coat pocket. Out came three more sales contracts of the same
sort, each from a director of the power syndicate. Harriman cocked an eyebrow
at them. "Jack sees you and raises you two, Dan. You want to call?"
Dixon smiled ruefully. "I can just
see him." He added two more to the pile, grinned and offered his hand to
Entenza.
"Looks like a stand off."
Harriman decided to say nothing just yet about seven telestated contracts now
locked in his desk-after going to bed the night before he had been quite busy
on the phone almost till midnight. "Jack, how much did you pay for those
things?"
"Standish held out for a thousand;
the others were cheap."
"Damn it, I warned you not to run the
price up. Standish will gossip. How about you, Dan?"
"I got them at satisfactory
prices."
"So you won't talk, eh? Never
mind-gentlemen, how serious are you about this? How much money did you bring
with you?"
Entenza looked to Dixon, who answered,
"How much does it take?"
"How much can you raise?"
demanded Harriman.
Dixon shrugged. "We're getting no
place. Let's use figures. A hundred thousand."
Harriman sniffed. "I take it what you
really want is to reserve a seat on the first regularly scheduled Moon ship.
I'll sell it to you at that price."
"Let's quit sparring, Delos. How
much?"
Harriman's face remained calm but he
thought furiously. He was caught short, with too little information-he had not
even talked figures with his chief engineer as yet. Confound it! Why had he
left that phone hooked in? "Dan, as I warned you, it will cost you at
least a million just to sit down in this game."
"So I thought. How much will it take
to stay in the game?"
"All you've got."
"Don't be silly, Delos. I've got more
than you have."
Harriman lit a cigar, his only sign of
agitation. "Suppose you match us, dollar for dollar."
"For which I get two shares?"
"Okay, okay, you chuck in a buck
whenever each of us does-share and share alike. But I run things."
"You run the operations," agreed
Dixon. "Very well, I'll put up a million now and match you as necessary.
You have no objection to me having my own auditor, of course."
"When have I ever cheated you,
Dan?"
"Never and there is no need to
start."
"Have it your own way-but be damned
sure you send a man who can keep his mouth shut."
"He'll keep quiet. I keep his heart
in a jar in my safe."
Harriman was thinking about the extent of
Dixon's assets. "We just might let you buy in with a second share later,
Dan. This operation will be expensive."
Dixon fitted his finger tips carefully
together. "We'll meet that question when we come to it. I don't believe in
letting an enterprise fold up for lack of capital."
"Good." Harriman turned to
Entenza. "You heard what Dan had to say, Jack. Do you like the
terms?"
Entenza's forehead was covered with sweat.
"I can't raise a million that fast."
"That's all right, Jack. We don't
need it this morning. Your note is good; you can take your time
liquidating."
"But you said a million is just the
beginning. I can't match you indefinitely; you've got to place a limit on it.
I've got my family to consider."
"No annuities, Jack? No monies
transferred in an irrevocable trust?"
"That's not the point. You'll be able
to squeeze me-freeze me out."
Harriman waited for Dixon to say
something. Dixon finally said, "We wouldn't squeeze you, Jack-as long as
you could prove you had converted every asset you hold. We would let you stay
in on a pro rata basis."
Harriman nodded. "That's right,
Jack." He was thinking that any shrinkage in Entenza's share would give
himself and Strong a clear voting majority.
Strong had been thinking of something of
the same nature, for he spoke up suddenly, "I don't like this. Four equal
partners-we can be deadlocked too easily."
Dixon shrugged. "I refuse to worry
about it. I am in this because I am betting that Delos can manage to make it
profitable."
"We'll get to the Moon, Dan!"
"I didn't say that. I am betting that
you will show a profit whether we get to the Moon or not. Yesterday evening I
spent looking over the public records of several of your companies; they were
very interesting. I suggest we resolve any possible deadlock by giving the
Director-that's you, Delos- the power to settle ties. Satisfactory,
Entenza?"
"Oh, sure!"
Harriman was worried but tried not to show
it. He did not trust Dixon, even bearing gifts. He stood up suddenly.
"I've got to run, gentlemen. I leave you to Mr. Strong and Mr. Kamens.
Come along, Monty." Kamens, he was sure, would not spill anything
prematurely, even to nominal full partners. As for Strong-George, he knew, had
not even let his left hand know how many fingers there were on his right.
He dismissed Montgomery outside the door
of the partners' personal office and went across the hall. Andrew Ferguson,
chief engineer of Harriman Enterprises, looked up as he came in. "Howdy,
Boss. Say, Mr. Strong gave me an interesting idea for a light switch this
morning. It did not seem practical at first but-"
"Skip it. Let one of the boys have it
and forget it. You know the line we are on now."
"There have been rumors,"
Ferguson answered cautiously.
"Fire the man that brought you the
rumor. No-send him on a special mission to Tibet and keep him there until we
are through. Well, let's get on with it. I want you to build a Moon ship as
quickly as possible."
Ferguson threw one leg over the arm of his
chair, took out a pen knife and began grooming his nails. "You say that
like it was an order to build a privy."
"Why not? There have been
theoretically adequate fuels since way back in '49. You get together the team
to design it and the gang to build it; you build it-I pay the bills. What could
be simpler?"
Ferguson stared at the ceiling.
"'Adequate fuels-'" he repeated dreamily.
"So I said. The figures show that
hydrogen and oxygen are enough to get a step rocket to the Moon and back-it's
just a matter of proper design."
"'Proper design,' he says,"
Ferguson went on ifl the same gentle voice, then suddenly swung around, jabbed
the knife into the scarred desk top and bellowed, "What do you know about
proper design? Where do I get the steels? What do I use for a throat liner? How
in the hell do I burn enough tons of your crazy mix per second to keep from
wasting all my power breaking loose? How can I get a decent mass-ratio with a
step rocket? Why in the hell didn't you let me build a proper ship when we had
the fuel?"
Harriman waited for him to quiet down,
then said, "What do we do about it, Andy?"
"Hmmm. . . . I was thinking about it
as I lay abed last night-and my old lady is sore as hell at you; I had to
finish the night on the couch. In the first place, Mr. Harriman, the proper way
to tackle this is to get a research appropriation from the Department of
National Defense. Then you-"
"Damn it, Andy, you stick to
engineering and let me handle the political and financial end of it. I don't
want your advice."
"Damn it, Delos, don't go off
half-cocked. This is engineering I'm talking about. The government owns a whole
mass of former art about rocketry-all classified. Without a government contract
you can't even get a peek at it."
"It can't amount to very much. What
can a government rocket do that a Skyways rocket can't do? You told me yourself
that Federal rocketry no longer amounted to anything."
Ferguson looked supercilious. "I am
afraid I can't explain it in lay terms. You will have to take it for granted
that we need those government research reports. There's no sense in spending
thousands of dollars in doing work that has already been done."
"Spend the thousands."
"Maybe millions."
"Spend the millions. Don't be afraid
to spend money. Andy, I don't want this to be a military job." He
considered elaborating to the engineer the involved politics back of his
decision, thought better of it. "How bad do you actually need that
government stuff? Can't you get the same results by hiring engineers who used
to work for the government? Or even hire them away from the government right
now?"
Ferguson pursed his lips. "If you
insist on hampering me, how can you expect me to get results?"
"I am not hampering you. I am telling
you that this is not a government project. If you won't attempt to cope with it
on those terms, let me know now, so that I can find somebody who will."
Ferguson started playing mumblety-peg on
his desk top. When he got to "noses"-and missed-he said quietly,
"I mind a boy who used to work for the government at White Sands. He was a
very smart lad indeed-design chief of section."
"You mean he might head up your
team?"
"That was the notion."
"What's his name? Where is he? Who's
he working for?"
"Well, as it happened, when the
government closed down White Sands, it seemed a shame to me that a good boy
should be out of a job, so I placed him with Skyways. He's maintenance chief
engineer out on the Coast."
"Maintenance? What a hell of a job
for a creative man! But you mean he's working for us now? Get him on the
screen. No-call the coast and have them send him here in a special rocket;
we'll all have lunch together."
"As it happens," Ferguson said
quietly, "I got up last night and called him-that's what annoyed the
Missus. He's waiting outside. Coster-Bob Coster."
A slow grin spread over Harriman's face.
"Andy! You black-hearted old scoundrel, why did you pretend to balk?"
"I wasn't pretending. I like it here,
Mr. Harriman. Just as long as you don't interfere, I'll do my job. Now my
notion is this: we'll make young Coster chief engineer of the project and give
him his head. I won't joggle his elbow; I'll just read the reports. Then you
leave him alone, d'you hear me? Nothing makes a good technical man angrier than
to have some incompetent nitwit with a check book telling him how to do his
job."
"Suits. And I don't want a
penny-pinching old fool slowing him down, either. Mind you don't interfere with
him, either, or I'll jerk the rug out from under you. Do we understand each
other?"
"I think we do."
"Then get him in here."
Apparently Ferguson's concept of a
"lad" was about age thirty-five, for such Harriman judged Coster to
be. He was tall, lean, and quietly eager. Harriman braced him immediately after
shaking hands with, "Bob, can you build a rocket that will go to the
Moon?"
Coster took it without blinking. "Do
you have a source of X-fuel?" he countered, giving the rocket man's usual
shorthand for the isotope fuel formerly produced by the power satellite.
Coster remained perfectly quiet for
several seconds, then answered, "I can put an unmanned messenger rocket on
the face of the Moon."
"Not good enough. I want it to go
there, land, and come back. Whether it lands here under power or by atmosphere
braking is unimportant."
It appeared that Coster never answered
promptly; Harriman had the fancy that he could hear wheels turning over in the
man's head. "That would be a very expensive job."
"Who asked you how much it would
cost? Can you do it?"
"I could try."
"Try, hell. Do you think you can do
it? Would you bet your shirt on it? Would you be willing to risk your neck in
the attempt? If you don't believe in yourself, man, you'll always lose."
"How much will you risk, sir? I told
you this would be expensive-and I doubt if you have any idea how
expensive."
"And I told you not to worry about
money. Spend what you need; it's my job to pay the bills. Can you do it?"
"I can do it. I'll let you know later
how much it will cost and how long it will take."
"Good. Start getting your team
together. Where are we going to do this, Andy?" he added, turning to
Ferguson. "Australia?"
"No." It was Coster who
answered. "It can't be Australia; I want a mountain catapult. That will
save us one step-combination."
"How big a mountain?" asked
Harriman~ "Will Pikes Peak do?"
"It ought to be in the Andes,"
objected Ferguson. "The mountains are taller and closer to the equator.
After all, we own facilities there-or the Andes Development Company does."
"Do as you like, Bob," Harriman
told Coster. "I would prefer Pikes Peak, but it's up to you." He was
thinking that there were tremendous business advantages to locating Earth's
space port ~ i inside the United States-and he could visualize the advertising
advantage of having Moon ships blast off from the top of Pikes Peak, in plain
view of everyone for hundreds of miles to the East.
"I'll let you know."
"Now about salary. Forget whatever it
was we were paying you; how much do you want?"
Coster actually gestured, waving the
subject away. "I'll work for coffee and cakes."
"Don't be silly."
"Let me finish. Coffee and cakes and
one other thing: I get to make the trip.
Harriman blinked. "Well, I can
understand that," he said slowly. "In the meantime I'll put you on a
drawing account." He added, "Better calculate for a three-man ship,
unless you are a pilot."
"I'm not."
"Three men, then. You see, I'm going
along, too."
CHAPTER
FOUR
"A
GOOD THING YOU DECIDED to come in, Dan," Harriman was saying, "or you
would find yourself out of a job. I'm going to put an awful crimp in the power
company before I'm through with this."
Dixon buttered a roll. "Really?
How?"
"We'll set up high-temperature piles,
like the Arizona job, just like the one that blew up, around the corner on the
far face of the Moon. We'll remote-control them; if one explodes it won't
matter. And I'll breed more X-fuel in a week than the company turned out in
three months. Nothing personal about it; it's just that I want a source of fuel
for interplanetary liners. If we can't get good stuff here, we'll have to make
it on the Moon."
"Interesting. But where do you
propose to get the uranium for six piles? The last I heard the Atomic Energy Commission
had the prospective supply earmarked twenty years ahead."
"Uranium? Don't be silly; we'll get
it on the Moon."
"On the Moon? Is there uranium on the
Moon?"
"Didn't you know? I thought that was
why you decided to join up with me?"
"No, I didn't know," Dixon said
deliberately. "What proof have you?"
"Me? I'm no scientist, but it's a
well-understood fact. Spectroscopy, or something. Catch one of the professors.
But don't go showing too much interest; we aren't ready to show our hand."
Harriman stood up. "I've got to run, or I'll miss the shuttle for
Rotterdam. Thanks for the lunch." He grabbed his hat and left.
Harriman stood up. "Suit yourself,
Mynheer van der Velde. I'm giving you and your colleagues a chance to hedge
your bets. Your geologists all agree that diamonds result from volcanic action.
What do you think we will find there?" He dropped a large photograph of
the Moon on the Hollander's desk.
The diamond merchant looked impassively at
the pictured planet, pockmarked by a thousand giant craters. "If you get
there, Mr. Harriman."
Harriman swept up the picture. "We'll
get there. And we'll find diamonds-though I would be the first to admit that it
may be twenty years or even forty before there is a big enough strike to
matter. I've come to you because I believe that the worst villain in our social
body is a man who introduces a major new economic factor without planning his
innovation in such a way as to permit peaceful adjustment. I don't like panics.
But all I can do is warn you. Good day."
"Sit down, Mr. Harriman. I'm always
confused when a man explains how he is going to do me good. Suppose you tell me
instead how this is going to do you good? Then we can discuss how to protect
the world market against a sudden influx of diamonds from the Moon."
Harriman sat down.
Harriman liked the Low Countries. He was
delighted to locate a dog-drawn milk cart whose young master wore real wooden
shoes; he happily took pictures and tipped the child heavily, unaware that the
set-up was arranged for tourists. He visited several other diamond merchants
but without speaking of the Moon. Among other purchases he found a brooch for
Charlotte- a peace offering.
Then he took a taxi to London, planted a
story with the representatives of the diamond syndicate there, arranged with
his London solicitors to be insured by Lloyd's of London through a dummy,
against a successful Moon flight, and called his home office. He listened to
numerous reports, especially those concerning Montgomery, and found that Montgomery
was in New Delhi. He called him there, spoke with him at length, then hurried
to the port just in time to catch his ship. He was in Colorado the next
morning.
At Peterson Field, east of Colorado
Springs, he had trouble getting through the gate, even though it was now his
domain, under lease. Of course he could have called Coster and gotten it
straightened out at once, but he wanted to look around before seeing Coster.
Fortunately the head guard knew him by sight; he got in and wandered around for
an hour or more, a tn-colored badge pinned to his coat to give him freedom.
The machine shop was moderately busy, so
was the foundry . . . but most of the shops were almost deserted. Harriman left
the shops, went into the main engineering building. The drafting room and the
loft were fairly active, as was the computation section. But there were
unoccupied desks in the structures group and a churchlike quiet in the metals
group and in the adjoining metallurgical laboratory. He was about to cross over
into the chemicals and materials annex when Coster suddenly showed up.
"Mr. Harriman! I just heard you were
here."
"Spies everywhere," remarked
Harriman. "I didn't want to disturb you."
"Not at all. Let's go up to my
office."
Settled there a few moments later Harriman
asked, "Well-how's it going?"
Coster frowned. "All right, I
guess."
Harriman noted that the engineer's desk
baskets were piled high with papers which spilled over onto the desk. Before
Harriman could answer, Coster's desk phone lit up and a feminine voice said
sweetly, "Mr. Coster- Mr. Morgenstern is calling."
"Tell him I'm busy."
After a short wait the girl answered in a
troubled voice, "He says he's just got to speak to you, sir."
Coster looked annoyed. "Excuse me a
moment, Mr. Harriman-O.K., put him on."
The girl was replaced by a man who said,
"Oh there you are-what was the hold up? Look, Chief, we're in a jam about
these trucks. Every one of them that we leased needs an overhaul and now it
turns out that the White Fleet company won't do anything about it-they're
sticking to the fine print in the contract. Now the way I see it, we'd do
better to cancel the contract and do business with Peak City Transport. They
have a scheme that looks good to me. They guarantee to-"
"Take care of it," snapped
Coster. "You made the contract and you have authority to cancel. You know
that."
"Yes, but Chief, I figured this would
be something you would want to pass on personally. It involves policy
and-"
"Take care of it! I don't give a damn
what you do as long as we have transportation when we need it." He
switched off.
"Who is that man?" inquired
Harriman.
"Who? Oh, that's Morgenstern, Claude
Morgenstem."
"Not his name-what does he do?"
"He's one of my assistants-buildings,
grounds, and transportation."
"Fire him!"
Coster looked stubborn. Before he could
answer a secretary came in and stood insistently at his elbow with a sheaf of
papers. He frowned, initialed them, and sent her out.
"Oh, I don't mean that as an
order," Harriman added, "but I do mean it as serious advice. I won't
give orders in your backyard,-but will you listen to a few minutes of
advice?"
"Naturally," Coster agreed
stiffly.
"Mmm . . . this your first job as top
boss?"
Coster hesitated, then admitted it.
"I hired you on Ferguson's belief
that you were the engineer most likely to build a successful Moon ship. I've
had no reason to change my mind. But top administration ain't engineering, and
maybe I can show you a few tricks there, if you'll let me." He waited.
"I'm not criticizing," he added. "Top bossing is like sex; until
you've had it, you don't know about it." Harriman had the mental
reservation that if the boy would not take advice, he would suddenly be out of
a job, whether Ferguson liked it or not.
Coster drummed on his desk. "I don't
know what's wrong and that's a fact. It seems as if I can't turn anything over
to anybody and have it done properly. I feel as if I were swimming in
quicksand."
"Done much engineering lately?"
"I try to." Coster waved at
another desk in the corner. "I work there, late at night."
"That's no good. I hired you as an
engineer. Bob, this setup is all wrong. The joint ought to be jumping-and it's
not. Your office ought to be quiet as a grave. Instead your office is jumping
and the plant looks like a graveyard."
Coster buried his face in his hands, then
looked up. "I know it. I know what needs to be done-but every time I try
to tackle a technical problem some bloody fool wants me to make a decision
about trucks-or telephones-or some damn thing. I'm sorry, Mr. Harriman. I
thought I could do it." Harriman said very gently, "Don't let it
throw you, Bob. You haven't had much sleep lately, have you? Tell you
what-we'll put over a fast one on Ferguson. I'll take that desk you're at for a
few days and build you a set-up to protect you against such things. I want that
brain of yours thinking about reaction vectors and fuel efficiencies and design
stresses, not about contracts for trucks." Harriman stepped to the door, looked
around the outer office and spotted a man who might or might not be the
office's chief clerk. "Hey, you! C'mere."
The man looked startled, got up, came to
the door and said, "Yes?"
"I want that desk in the corner and
all the stuff that's on it moved to an empty office on this floor, right
away."
The clerk raised his eyebrows. "And
who are you, if I may ask?"
"Damn it-"
"Do as he tells you, Weber,"
Coster put in.
"I want it done inside of twenty
minutes," added Harriman. "Jump!" He turned back to Coster's
other desk, punched the phone, and presently was speaking to the main offices
of Skyways. "Jim, is your boy Jock Berkeley around? Put him on leave and
send him to me, at Peterson Field, right away, special trip. I want the ship he
comes in to raise ground ten minutes after we sign off. Send his gear after
him." Harriman listened for a moment, then answered, "No, your
organization won't fall apart if you lose Jock- or, if it does, maybe we've
been paying the wrong man the top salary .
"Okay, okay, you're entitled to one
swift kick at my tail the next time you catch up with me but send Jock. So
long."
He supervised getting Coster and his other
desk moved into another office, saw to it that the phone in the new office was
disconnected, and, as an afterthought, had a couch moved in there, too.
"We'll install a projector, and a drafting machine and bookcases and other
junk like that tonight," he told Coster. "Just make a list of
anything you need-to work on engineering. And call me if you want anything."
He went back to the nominal chiefengineer's office and got happily to work
trying to figure where the organization stood and what was wrong with it.
Some four hours later he took Berkeley in
to meet Coster. The chief engineer was asleep at his desk, head cradled on his
arms. Harriman started to back out, but Coster roused. "Oh! Sorry,"
he said, blushing, "I must have dozed off."
"That's why I brought you the
couch," said Harriman. "It's more restful. Bob, meet Jock Berkeley.
He's your new slave. You remain chief engineer and top, undisputed boss. Jock
is Lord High Everything Else. From now on you've got absolutely nothing to
worry about-except for the little detail of building a Moon ship."
They shook hands. "Just one thing I
ask, Mr. Coster," Berkeley said seriously, "bypass me all you want
to-you'll have to run the technical show-but for God's sake record it so I'll
know what's going on. I'm going to have a switch placed on your desk that will
operate a sealed recorder at my desk."
"Fine!" Coster was looking,
Harriman thought, younger already.
"And if you want something that is
not technical, don't do it yourself. Just flip a switch and whistle; it'll get
done!" Berkeley glanced at Harriman. "The Boss says he wants to talk
with you about the real job. I'll leave you and get busy." He left.
Harriman sat down; Coster followed suit
and said, "Whew!"
"Feel better?"
"I like the looks of that fellow
Berkeley."
"That's good; he's your twin brother
from now on. Stop worrying; I've used him before. You'll think you're living in
a well-run hospital. By the way, where do you live?"
"At a boarding house in the
Springs."
"That's ridiculous. And you don't
even have a place here to sleep?" Harriman reached over to Coster's desk,
got through to Berkeley. "Jock-get a suite for Mr. Coster at the
Broadmoor, under a phony name."
"Right."
"And have this stretch along here
adjacent to his office fitted out as an apartment."
"Right. Tonight."
"Now, Bob, about the Moon ship. Where
do we stand?"
They spent the next two hours contentedly
running over the details of the problem, as Coster had laid them out.
Admittedly very little work had been done since the field was leased but Coster
had accomplished considerable theoretical work and computation before he had
gotten swamped in administrative details. Harriman, though no engineer and
certainly not a mathematician outside the primitive arithmetic of money, had
for so long devoured everything he could find about space travel that he was
able to follow most of what Coster showed him.
"I don't see anything here about your
mountain catapult," he said presently.
Coster looked vexed. "Oh, that! Mr.
Harriman, I spoke too quickly."
"Huh? How come? I've had Montgomery's
boys drawing up beautiful pictures of what things will look like when we are
running regular trips. I intend to make Colorado Springs the spaceport capital
of the world. We hold the franchise of the old cog railroad now; what's the
hitch?"
"Well, it's both time and
money."
"Forget money. That's my
pidgin."
"Time then. I still think an electric
gun is the best way to get the initial acceleration for a chem-powered ship.
Like this-" He began to sketch rapidly. "It enables you to omit the
first step-rocket stage, which is bigger than all the others put together and
is terribly inefficient, as it has such a poor mass-ratio. But what do you have
to do to get it? You can't build a tower, not a tower a couple of miles high,
strong enough to take the thrusts-not this year, anyway. So you have to use a
mountain. Pikes Peak is as good as any; it's accessible, at least.
"But what do you have to do to use
it? First, a tunnel in through the side, from Manitou to just under the peak,
and big enough to take the loaded ship-"
"Lower it down from the top,"
suggested Harriman.
Coster answered, "I thought of that.
Elevators two miles high for loaded space ships aren't exactly built out of
string, in fact they aren't built out of any available materials. It's possible
to gimmick the catapult itself so that the accelerating coils can be reversed
and timed differently to do the job, but believe me, Mr. Harrima; it will throw
you into other engineering problems quite as great . . . such as a giant
railroad up to the top of the ship. And it still leaves you with the shaft of
the catapult itself to be dug. It can't be as small as the ship, not like a gun
barrel for a bullet. It's got to be considerably larger; you don't compress a
column of air two miles high with impunity. Oh, a mountain catapult could be built,
but it might take ten years-or longer."
"Then forget it. We'll build it for
the future but not for this flight. No, wait-how about a surface catapult. We
scoot up the side of the mountain and curve it up at the end?"
"Quite frankly, I think something
like that is what will eventually be used. But, as of today, it just creates
new problems. Even if we could devise an electric gun in which you could make
that last curve-we can't, at present- the ship would have to be designed for
terrific side stresses and all the additional weight would be parasitic so far
as our main purpose is concerned, the design of a rocket ship."
"Well, Bob, what is your
solution?"
Coster frowned. "Go back to what we
know how to do-build a step rocket."
CHAPTER
FIVE
"MONTY-"
"Yeah, Chief?"
"Have you ever heard this song?"
Harriman hummed, "The Moon belongs to everyone; the best things in life
are free-," then sang it, badly off key.
"Can't say as I ever have."
"It was before your time. I want it
dug out again. I want it revivçd, plugged until Hell wouldn't have it, and on
everybody's lips."
"O.K." Montgomery took out his
memorandum pad. "When do you want it to reach its top?"
Harriman considered. "In, say, about
three months. Then I want the first phrase picked up and used in advertising
slogans."
"A cinch."
"How are things in Florida,
Monty?"
"I thought we were going to have to
buy the whole damned legislature until we got the rumor spread around that Los
Angeles had contracted to have a City-Limits-of-Los-Angeles sign planted on the
Moon for publicity pix. Then they came around."
"Good." Harriman pondered.
"You know, that's not a bad idea. How much do you think the Chamber of
Commerce of Los Angeles would pay for such a picture?"
Montgomery made another note. "I'll
look into it."
"I suppose you are about ready to
crank up Texas, now that Florida is loaded?"
"Most any time now. We're spreading a
few snide rumors first."
Headline from Dallas-Fort Worth Banner:
"THE
MOON BELONGS TO TEXAS!!!"
"-and that's all for tonight,
kiddies. Don't forget to send in those box tops, or reasonable facsimiles.
Remember-first prize is a thousand-acre ranch on the Moon itself, free and
clear; the second prize is a six-foot scale model of the actual Moon ship, and
there are fifty, count them, fifty third prizes, each a saddle-trained Shetland
pony. Your hundred word composition 'Why I want to go to the Moon' will be
judged for sincerity and originality, not on literary merit. Send those boxtops
to Uncle Taffy, Box 214, Juarez, Old Mexico."
Harriman was shown into the office of the
president of the Moka-Coka Company ("Only a Moke is truly a coke"-~
"Drink the Cola drink with the Lift"). He paused at the door, some
twenty feet from the president's desk and quickly pinned a two-inch wide button
to his lapel.
Patterson Griggs looked up. "Well,
this is really an honor, D.D. Do come in and-" The soft-drink executive
stopped suddenly, his expression changed. "What are you doing wearing
that?" he snapped. "Trying to annoy me?"
"That" was the two-inch disc;
Harriman unpinned it and put it in his pocket. It was a celluloid advertising
pin, in plain yellow; printed on it in black, almost covering it, was a simple
6+, the trademark of Moka-Coka's only serious rival.
"No," answered Harriman,
"though I don't blame you for being irritated. I see half the school kids
in the country wearing these silly buttons. But I came to give you a friendly
tip, not to annoy you."
"What do you mean?"
"When I paused at your door that pin
on my lapel was just the size-to you, standing at your desk-as the full Moon
looks when you are standing in your garden, looking up at it. You didn't have
any trouble reading what was on the pin, did you? I know you didn't; you yelled
at me before either one of us stirred."
"What about it?"
"How would you feel-and what would
the effect be on your sales-if there was 'six-plus' written across the face of
the Moon instead of just on a school kid's sweater?"
Griggs thought about it, then said,
"D.D., don't make poor jokes. I've had a bad day."
"I'm not joking. As you have probably
heard around the St~reet, I'm behind this Moon trip venture. Between ourselves,
Pat, it's quite an expensive undertaking, even for me. A few days ago a man
came to me-you'll pardon me if I don't mention names? You can figure it out.
Anyhow, this man represented a client who wanted to buy the advertising
concession for the Moon. He knew we weren't sure of success; but he said his
client would take the risk.
"At first I couldn't figure out what
he was talking about; he set me straight. Then I thought he was kidding. Then I
was shocked. Look at this-" Harriman took out a large sheet of paper and
spread it on Griggs' desk. "You see the equipment is set up anywhere near
the center of the Moon, as we see it. Eighteen pyrotechnics rockets shoot out
in eighteen directions, like the spokes of a wheel, but to carefully calculated
distances. They hit and the bombs they carry go off, spreading finely divided
carbon black for calculated distances. There's no air on the Moon, you know,
Pat-a fine powder will throw just as easily as a javelin. Here's your
result." He turned the paper over; on the back there was a picture of the
Moon, printed lightly. Overlaying it, in black, heavy print was:
"So it is that outfit-those
poisoners!"
"No, no, I didn't say so! But it
illustrates the point; six-plus is only two symbols; it can be spread large
enough to be read on the face of the Moon."
Griggs stared at the horrid advertisement.
"I don't believe it will work!"
"A reliable pyrotechnics firm has
guaranteed that it will-provided I can deliver their equipment to the spot.
After all, Pat, it doesn't take much of a pyrotechnics rocket to go a long
distance on the Moon. Why, you could throw a baseball a couple of miles
yourself-low gravity, you know."
"People would never stand for it.
It's sacrilege!"
Harriman looked sad. "I wish you were
right. But they stand for skywriting-and video commercials."
Griggs chewed his lip. "Well, I don't
see why you come to me with it," he exploded. "You know damn well the
name of my product won't go on the face of the Moon. The letters would be too
small to read."
Harriman nodded. "That's exactly why
I came to you. Pat, this isn't just a business venture to me; it's my heart and
soul. It just made me sick to think of somebody actually wanting to use the
face of the Moon for advertising. As you say, it's sacrilege. But somehow,
these jackals found out I was pressed for cash. They came to me when they knew
I would have to listen.
"I put them off. I promised them an
answer on Thursday. Then I went home and lay awake about it. After a while I
thought of you."
"Me?"
"You. You and your company. After
all, you've got a good product and you need legitimate advertising for it. It
occurred to me that there are more ways to use the Moon in advertising than by
defacing it. Now just suppose that your company bought the same concession, but
with the public-spirited promise of never letting it be used. Suppose you
featured that fact in your ads? Suppose you ran pictures of a boy and girl,
sitting out under the Moon, sharing a bottle of Moke? Suppose Moke was the only
soft drink carried on the first trip to the Moon? But I don't have to tell you
how to do it." He glanced at his watch finger. "I've got to run and I
don't want to rush you. If you want to do business just leave word at my office
by noon tomorrow and I'll have our man Montgomery get in touch with your
advertising chief."
The head of the big newspaper chain kept
him waiting the minimum time reserved for tycoons and cabinet members. Again
Harriman stopped at the threshold of a large office and fixed a disc to his
lapel.
"Howdy, Delos," the publisher
said, "how's the traffic in green cheese today?" He then caught sight
of the button and frowned. "If that is a joke, it is in poor taste."
Harriman pocketed the disc; it displayed
not 6+, but the hammer-and-sickle.
"No," he said, "it's not a
joke; it's a nightmare. Colonel, you and I are among the few people in this
country who realize that communism is still a menace."
Sometime later they were talking as
chummily as if the Colonel's chain had not obstructed the Moon venture since
its inception. The publisher waved a cigar at his desk. "How did you come
by those plans? Steal them?"
"They were copied," Harriman
answered with narrow truth. "But they aren't important. The important
thing is to get there first; we can't risk having an enemy rocket base on the
Moon. For years I've had a recurrent nightmare of waking up and seeing
headlines that the Russians had landed on the Moon and declared the Lunar
Soviet-say thirteen men and two female scientists-and had petitioned for
entrance into the U.S.S.R.-and the petition had, of course, been graciously
granted by the Supreme Soviet. I used to wake up and tremble. I don't know that
they would actually go through with painting a hammer and sickle on the face of
the Moon, but it's consistent with their psychology. Look at those enormous
posters they are always hanging up."
The publisher bit down hard on his cigar.
"We'll see what we can work out. Is there any way you can speed up your
take-off?"
CHAPTER
SIX
"MR.
HARRIMAN?"
"Yes?"
"That Mr. LeCroix is here
again."
"Tell him I can't see him."
"Yes, sir-uh, Mr. Harriman, he did
not mention it the other day but he says he is a rocket pilot."
"Send him around to Skyways. I don't
hire pilots."
A man's face crowded into the screen,
displacing Harriman's reception secretary. "Mr. Harriman-I'm Leslie
LeCroix, relief pilot of the Charon."
"I don't care if you are the Angel
Gab- Did you say Charon?"
"I said Charon. And I've got to talk
to you."
"Come in."
Harriman greeted his visitor, offered him
tobacco, then looked him over with interest. The Charon, shuttle rocket to the
lost power satellite, had been the nearest thing to a space ship the world had
yet seen. Its pilot, lost in the same explosion that had destroyed the
satellite and the Charon had been the first, in a way, of the coming breed of
spacemen.
Harriman wondered how it had escaped his
attention that the Charon had alternating pilots. He had known it, of
course-but somehow he had forgotten to take the fact into account. He had
written off the power satellite, its shuttle rocket and everything about it,
ceased to think about them. He now looked at LeCroix with curiosity.
He saw a small, neat man with a thin,
intelligent face, and the big, competent hands of a jockey. LeCroix returned
his inspection without embarrassment. He seemed calm and utterly sure of
himself.
"Well, Captain LeCroix?"
"You are building a Moon ship."
"Who says so?"
"A Moon ship is being built. The boys
all say you are behind it."
"Yes?"
"I want to pilot it."
"Why should you?"
"I'm the best man for it."
Harriman paused to let out a cloud of
tobacco smoke. "If you can prove that, the billet is yours."
"It's a deal." LeCroix stood up.
"I'll leave my nameand address outside."
"Wait a minute. I said 'if.' Let's
talk. I'm going along on this trip myself; I want to know more about you before
I trust my neck to you."
They discussed Moon flight, interplanetary
travel, rocketry, what they might find on the Moon. Gradually Harriman warmed
up, as he found another spirit so like his own, so obsessed with the Wonderful
Dream. Subconsciously he had already accepted LeCroix; the conversation began
to assume that it would be a joint venture.
After a long time Harriman said,
"This is fun, Les, but I've got to do a few chores yet today, or none of
us will get to the Moon. You go on out to Peterson Field and get acquainted
with Bob Coster-I'll call him. If the pair of you can manage to get along,
we'll talk contract." He scribbled a chit and handed it to LeCroix.
"Give this to Miss Perkins as you go out and she'll put you on the
payroll."
"That can wait."
"Man's got to eat."
LeCroix accepted it but did not leave.
"There's one thing I don't understand, Mr. Harriman."
"Huh?"
"Why are you planning on a chemically
powered ship? Not that I object; I'll herd her. But why do it the hard way? I
know you had the City of Brisbane refitted for X-fuel-"
Harriman stared at him. "Are you off
your nut, Les? You're asking why pigs don't have wings-there isn't any X-fuel
and there won't be any more until we make some ourselves-on the Moon."
"Who told you that?"
"What do you mean?"
"The way I heard it, the Atomic
Energy Commission allocated X-fuel, under treaty, to several other
countries-and some of them weren't prepared to make use of it. But they got it
just the same. What happened to it?"
"Oh, that! Sure, Les, several of the
little outfits in Central America and South America were cut in for a slice of
pie for political reasons, even though they had no way to eat it. A good thing,
too-we bought it back and used it to ease the immediate power shortage."
Harriman frowned. "You're right, though. I should have grabbed some of the
stuff then."
"Are you sure it's all gone?"
"Why, of course, I'm- No, I'm not.
I'll look into it. G'bye, Les."
His contacts were able to account for
every pound of X-fuel in short order-save for Costa Rica's allotment. That
nation had declined to sell back its supply because its power plant, suitable
for X-fuel, had been almost finished at the time of the disaster. Another
inquiry disclosed that the power plant had never been finished.
Montgomery was even then in Managua;
Nicaragua had had a change in administration and Montgomery was making certain
that the special position of the local Moon corporation was protected. Harriman
sent him a coded message to proceed to San José, locate X-fuel, buy it and ship
it back-at any cost. He then went to see the chairman of the Atomic Energy
Commission.
That official was apparently glad to see
him and anxious to be affable. Harriman got around to explaining that he wanted
a license to do experimental work in isotopes-X-fuel, to be precise.
"This should be brought up through
the usual channels, Mr. Harriman."
"It will be. This is a preliminary
inquiry. I want to know your reactions."
"After all, I am not the only
commissioner . . . and we almost always follow the recommendations of our
technical branch."
"Don't fence with me, Carl. You know
dern well you control a working majority. Off the record, what do you
say?"
"Well, D.D.-off the record-you can't
get any X-fuel, so why get a license?"
"Let me worry about that."
"Mmmm . . we weren't required by law
to follow every millicurie of X-fuel, since it isn't classed as potentially
suitable for mass weapons. Just the same, we knew what happened to it. There's
none available."
Harriman kept quiet.
"In the second place, you can have an
X-fuel license, if you wish-for any purpose but rocket fuel."
"Why the restriction?"
"You are building a Moon ship, aren't
you?"
"Me?"
"Don't you fence with me, D.D. It's
my business to know things. You can't use X-fuel for rockets, even if you can
find it-which you can't." The chairman went to a vault back of his desk
and returned with a quarto volume, which he laid in front of Harriman. It was
titled: Theoretical Investigation into the Stability of Several Radioisotopic
Fuels-With Notes on the Charon-Power-Satellite Disaster. The cover had a serial
number and was stamped: SECRET.
Harriman pushed it away. "I've got no
business looking at that-and I wouldn't understand it if I did."
The chairman grinned. "Very well,
I'll tell you what's in it. I'm deliberately tying your hands, D.D., by
trusting you with a defense secret-"
"I won't have it, I tell you!"
"Don't try to power a space ship with
X-fuel, D.D. It's a lovely fuel- but it may go off like a firecracker anywhere
out in space. That report tells why."
"Confound it, we ran the Charon for
nearly three years!"
"You were lucky. It is the
official-but utterly confidential-opinion of the government that the Charon set
off the power satellite, rather than the satellite setting off the Charon. We
had thought it was the other way around at first, and of course it could have
been, but there was the disturbing matter of the radar records. It seemed as if
the ship had gone up a split second before the satellite. So we made an
intensive theoretical investigation. X-fuel is too dangerous for rockets."
"That's ridiculous! For every pound
burned in the Charon there were at least a hundred pounds used in power plants
on the surface. How come they didn't explode?"
"It's a matter of shielding. A rocket
necessarily uses less shielding than a stationary plant, but the worst feature
is that it operates out in space. The disaster is presumed to have been triggered
by primary cosmic radiation. If you like, I'll call in one of the mathematical
physicists to elucidate."
Harriman shook his head. "You know I
don't speak the language." He considered. "I suppose that's all there
is to it?"
"I'm afraid so. I'm really
sorry." Harriman got up to leave. "Uh, one more thing, D.D.-you
weren't thinking of approaching any of my subordinate colleagues, were
you?"
"Of course not. Why should I?"
"I'm glad to hear it. You know, Mr.
Harriman, some of our staff may not be the most brilliant scientists in the
world-it's very hard to keep a first-class scientist happy in the conditions of
government service. But there is one thing I am sure of; all of them are
utterly incorruptible. Knowing that, I would take it as a personal affront if
anyone tried to influence one of my people-a very personal affront."
"So?"
"Yes. By the way, I used to box
light-heavyweight in college. I've kept it up."
"Hmmm . . . well, I never went to
college. But I play a fair game of poker." Harriman suddenly grinned.
"I won't tamper with your boys, Carl. It would be too much like offering a
bribe to a starving man. Well, so long."
When Harriman got back to his office he
called in one of his confidential clerks. "Take another coded message to
Mr. Montgomery. Tell him to ship the stuff to Panama City, rather than to the
States." He started to dictate another message to Coster, intending to
tell him to stop work on the Pioneer, whose skeleton was already reaching
skyward on the Colorado prairie, and shift to the Santa Maria, formerly the
City of Brisbane.
He thought better of it. Take-off would
have to be outside the United States; with the Atomic Energy Commission acting
stuffy, it would not do to try to move the Santa Maria: it would give the show
away.
Nor could she be moved without refitting
her for chem-powered flight. No, he would have another ship of the Brisbane
class taken out of service and sent to Panama, and the power plant of the Santa
Maria could be disassembled and shipped there, too. Coster could have the new
ship ready in six weeks, maybe sooner . . . and he, Coster, and LeCroix would
start for the Moon!
The devil with worries over primary cosmic
rays! The Charon operated for three years, didn't she? They would make the
trip, they would prove it could be done, then, if safer fuels were needed,
there would be the incentive to dig them out. The important thing was to do it,
make the trip. If Columbus had waited for decent ships, we'd all still be in
Europe. A man had to take some chances or he never got anywhere.
Contentedly he started drafting the
messages that would get the new scheme underway.
He was interçupted by a secretary.
"Mr. Harriman, Mr. Montgomery wants to speak to you."
"Eh? Has he gotten my code
already?"
"I don't know, sir."
"Well, put him on."
Montgomery had not received the second
message. But he had news for Harriman:Costa Rica had sold all its X-fuel to the
English Ministry of Power, soon after the disaster. There was not an ounce of
it left, neither in Costa Rica, nor in England.
Harriman sat and moped for several minutes
after Montgomery had cleared the screen. Then he called Coster. "Bob? Is
LeCroix there?"
"Right here-we were about to go out
to dinner together. Here he is, now."
"Howdy, Les. Les, that was a good
brain storm of yours, but it didn't work. Somebody stole the baby."
"Eh? Oh, I get you. I'm sorry."
"Don't ever waste time being sorry.
We'll go ahead as originally planned. We'll get there!"
"Sure we will."
CHAPTER
SEVEN
FROM
THE JUNE ISSUE of Popular Technics magazine: "URANIUM PROSPECTING ON THE
MOON-A Fact Article about a soon-to-come Major Industry."
From HOLIDAY: "Honeymoon on the
Moon-A Discussion of the Miracle Resort that your children will enjoy, as told
to our travel editor."
From the American Sunday Magazine:
"DIAMONDS ON THE MOON?-A World Famous Scientist Shows Why Diamonds Must Be
Common As Pebbles in the Lunar Craters."
"Of course, Clem, I don't know
anything about electronics, but here is the way it was explained to me. You can
hold the beam of a television broadcast down to a degree or so these days,
can't you?"
"Yes-if you use a big enough
reflector."
"You'll have plenty of elbow room.
Now Earth covers a space two degrees wide, as seen from the Moon. Sure, it's
quite a distance away, but you'd have no power losses and absolutely perfect
and unchanging conditions for transmission. Once you made your set-up, it
wouldn't be any more expensive than broadcasting from the top of a mountain
here, and a derned sight less expensive than keeping copters in the air from
coast to coast, the way you're having to do now."
"It's a fantastic scheme,
Delos."
"What's fantastic about it? Getting
to the Moon is my worry, not yours. Once we are there, there's going to be
television back to Earth, you can bet your shirt on that. It's a natural set-up
for line-of-sight transmission. If you aren't interested, I'll have to find
someone who is."
"I didn't say I wasn't
interested."
"Well, make up your mind. Here's
another thing, Clem-I don't want to go sticking my nose into your business, but
haven't you had a certain amount of trouble since you lost the use of the power
satellite as a relay station?"
"You know the answer; don't needle
me. Expenses have gone out of sight without any improvement in revenue."
"That wasn't quite what I meant. How
about censorship?"
The television executive threw up his
hands. "Don't say that word! How anybody expects a man to stay in business
with every two-bit wowser in the country claiming a veto over wLhat we can say
and can't say and what we can show and what we can't show-it's enough to make
you throw up. The whole principle is wrong; it's like demanding that grown men
live on skim milk because the baby can't eat steak. If I were able to lay my
hands on those confounded, prurient-minded, slimy-"
"Easy! Easy!" Harriman
interrupted. "Did it ever occur to you that there is absolutely no way to
interfere with a telecast from the Moon-and that boards of censorship on Earth
won't have jurisdiction in any case?"
"What? Say that again."
"LIFE goes to the Moon.' LIFE-TIME
Inc. is proud to announce that arrangements have been completed to bring LIFE'S
readers a personally conducted tour of the first trip to our satellite. In place
of the usual weekly feature 'LIFE Goes to a Party' there will commence,
immediately after the return of the first successful-"
"ASSURANCE FOR THE NEW AGE"
(An excerpt from an advertisement of the
North Atlantic Mutual Insurance and Liability Company)
"-the same looking-to-the-future that
protected our policy-holders after the Chicago Fire, after the San Francisco
Fire, after every disaster since the War of 1812, now reaches out to insure you
from unexpected loss even on the Moon-"
"THE UNBOUNDED FRONTIERS OF
TECHNOLOGY"
"When the Moon ship Pioneer climbs
skyward on a ladder of flame, twenty-seven essential devices in her 'innards'
will be powered by especiallyengineered DELTA batteries-"
"Mr. Harriman, could you come out to
the field?"
"What's up, Bob?"
"Trouble," Coster answered
briefly.
"What sort of trouble?"
Coster hesitated. "I'd rather not
talk about it by screen. If you can't come, maybe Les and I had better come
there."
"I'll be there this evening."
When Harriman got there he saw that
LëCroix's impassive face concealed bitterness, Coster looked stubborn and
defensive. He waited until the three were alone in Coster's workroom before he
spoke. "Let's have it, boys."
LeCroix looked at Coster. The engineer
chewed his lip and said, "Mr. Harriman, you know the stages this design
has been through."
"More or less."
"We had to give up the catapult idea.
Then we had this-" Coster rummaged on his desk, pulled out a perspective
treatment of a four-step rocket, large but rather graceful."Theoretically
it was a possibility; practically it cut things too fine. By the time the
stress group boys and the auxiliary group and the control group got through
adding things we were forced to come to this-" He hauled out another sketch;
it was basically like the first, but squattier, almost pyramidal. "We
added a fifth stage as a ring around the fourth stage. We even managed to save
some weight by using most of the auxiliary and control equipment for the fourth
stage to control the fifth stage. And it still had enough sectional density to
punch through the atmosphere with no important drag, even if it was
clumsy."
Harriman nodded. "You know, Bob,
we're going to have to get away from the step rocket idea before we set up a
schedule run to the Moon."
"I don't see how you can avoid it
with chem-powered rockets."
"If you had a decent catapult you
could put a single-stage chem-powered rocket into an orbit around the Earth,
couldn't you?"
"Sure."
"That's what we'll do. Then it will
refuel in that orbit."
"The old space-station set-up. I
suppose that makes sense-in fact I know it does. Only the ship wouldn't refuel
and continue on to the Moon. The economical thing would be to have special
ships that never landed anywhere make the jump from there to another fueling
station around the Moon. Then-"
LeCroix displayed a most unusual
impatience. "AJ1 that doesn't mean anything now. Get on with the story,
Bob."
"Right," agreed Harriman.
"Well, this model should have done
it. And, damn it, it still should do it." Harriman looked puzzled.
"But, Bob, that's the approved design, isn't it? That's what you've got
two-thirds built right out there on the field."
"Yes." Coster looked stricken.
"But it won't do it. It won't work."
"Why not?"
"Because I've had to add in too much
dead weight, that's why. Mr. Harriman, you aren't an engineer; you've no idea
how fast the performance falls off when you have to clutter up a ship with
anything but fuel and power plant. Take the landing arrangements for the
fifth-stage power ring. You use that stage for a minute and a half, then you
throw it away. But you don't dare take a chance of it falling on Wichita or
Kansas City. We have to include a parachute sequence. Even then we have to plan
on tracking it by radar and cutting the shrouds by radio control when it's over
empty countryside and not too high. That means more weight, besides the
parachute. By the time we are through, we don't get a net addition of a mile a
second out of that stage. It's not enough."
Harriman stirred in his chair. "Looks
like we made a mistake in trying to launch it from the States. Suppose we took
off from someplace unpopulated, say the Brazil coast, and let the booster
stages fall in the Atlantic; how much would that save you?"
Coster looked off in the distance, then
took out a slide rule. "Might work."
"How much of a chore will it be to
move the ship, at this stage?"
"Well . . . it would have to be
disassembled completely; nothing less would do. I can't give you a cost
estimate off hand, but it would be expensive."
"How long would it take?"
"Hmm. . .shucks, Mr. Harriman, I
can't answer off hand. Two years- eighteen months, with luck. We'd have to
prepare a site. We'd have to build shops."
Harriman thought about it, although he
knew the answer in his heart. His shoe string, big as it was, was stretched to
the danger point. He couldn't keep up the promotion, on talk alone, for another
two years; he had to have a successful flight and soon-or the whole jerry-built
financial structure would burst. "No good, Bob."
"I was afraid of that. Well, I tried
to add still a sixth stage." He held up another sketch. "You see that
monstrosity? I reached the point of diminishing returns. The final effective
velocity is actually less with this abortion than with the five-step job."
"Does that mean you are whipped, Bob?
You can't build a Moon ship?"
"No, I-"
LeCroix said suddenly, "Clear out
Kansas."
"Eh?" asked Harriman.
"Clear everybody out of Kansas and
Eastern Colorado. Let the fifth and fourth sections fall anywhere in that area.
The third section falls in the Atlantic; the second section goes into a
permanent orbit-and the ship itself goes on to the Moon. You could do it if you
didn't have to waste weight on the parachuting of the fifth and fourth
sections. Ask Bob."
"So? How about it, Bob?"
"That's what I said before. It was
the parasitic penalties that whipped us. The basic design is all right."
"Hmmm. . . somebody hand me an
Atlas." Harriman looked up Kansas and Colorado, did some rough figuring.
He stared off into space, looking surprisingly, for the moment, as Coster did
when the engineer was thinking about his own work. Finally he said, "It
won't work."
"Why not?"
"Money. I told you not to worry about
money-for the ship. But it would cost upward of six or seven million dollars to
evacuate that area even for a day. We'd have to settle nuisance suits out of
hand; we couldn't wait. And there would be a few diehards who just couldn't
move anyhow."
LeCroix said savagely, "If the crazy
fools won't move, let them take their chances."
"I know how you feel, Les. But this
project is too big to hide and too big to move. Unless we protect the
bystanders we'll be shut down by court order and force. I can't buy all the
judges in two states. Some of them wouldn't be for sale."
"It was a nice try, Les,"
consoled Coster.
"I thought it might be an answer for
all of us," the pilot answered.
Harriman said, "You were starting to
mention another solution, Bob?" Coster looked embarrassed. "You know
the plans for the ship itself-a three-man job, space and supplies for
three."
"Yes. What are you driving at?"
"It doesn't have to be three men.
Split the first step into two parts, cut the ship down to the bare minimum for
one man and jettison the remainder. That's the only way I see to make this
basic design work." He got out another sketch. "See? One man and
supplies for less than a week. No airlock- the pilot stays in his pressure
suit. No galley. No bunks. The bare minimum to keep one man alive for a maximum
of two hundred hours. It will work."
"It will work," repeated
LeCroix, looking at Coster.
Harriman looked at the sketch with an odd,
sick feeling at his stomach. Yes, no doubt it would work-and for the purposes
of the promotion it did not matter whether one man or three went to the Moon
and returned. Just to do it was enough; he was dead certain that one successful
flight would cause money to roll in so that there would be capital to develop
to the point of practical, passenger-carrying ships.
The Wright brothers had started with less.
"If that is what I have to put up
with, I suppose I have to," he said slowly. Coster looked relieved.
"Fine! But there is one more hitch. You know the conditions under which I
agreed to tackle this job-I was to go along. Now Les here waves a contract
under my nose and says he has to be the pilot."
"It's not just that," LeCroix
countered. "You're no pilot, Bob. You'll kill yourself and ruin the whole
enterprise, just through bull-headed stubbornness."
"I'll learn to fly it. After all, I
designed it. Look here, Mr. Harriman, I hate to let you in for a suit-Les says
he will sue-but my contract antedates his. I intend to enforce it."
"Don't listen to him, Mr. Harriman.
Let him do the suing. I'll fly that ship and bring her back. He'll wreck
it."
"Either I go or I don't build the
ship," Coster said flatly.
Harriman motioned both of them to keep
quiet. "Easy, easy, both of you. You can both sue me if it gives you any
pleasure. Bob, don't talk nonsense; at this stage I can hire other engineers to
finish the job. You tell me it has to be just one man."
"That's right."
"You're looking at him."
They both stared.
"Shut your jaws," Harriman
snapped. "What's funny about that? You both knew I meant to go. You don't
think I went to all this trouble just to give you two a ride to the Moon, do
you? I intend to go. What's wrong with me as a pilot? I'm in good health, my
eyesight is all right, I'm still smart enough to learn what I have to learn. If
I have to drive my own buggy, I'll do it. I won't step aside for anybody, not
anybody, d'you hear me?"
Coster got his breath first. "Boss,
you don't know what you are saying." Two hours later they were still
wrangling. Most of the time Harriman had stubbornly sat still, refusing to
answer their arguments. At last he went out of the room for a few minutes, on
the usual pretext. When he came back in he said, "Bob, what do you
weigh?"
"Me? A little over two hundred."
"Close to two twenty, I'd judge. Les,
what do you weigh?"
"One twenty-six."
"Bob, design the ship for a net load
of one hundred and twenty-six pounds."
"Huh? Now wait a minute, Mr.
Harriman-"
"Shut up! If I can't learn to be a
pilot in six weeks, neither can you."
"But I've got the mathematics and the
basic knowledge to-"
"Shut up I said! Les has spent as
long learning his profession as you have learning yours. Can he become an
engineer in six weeks? Then what gave you the conceit to think that you can
learn his job in that time? I'm not going to have you wrecking my ship to
satisfy your swollen ego. Anyhow, you gave out the real key to it when you were
discussing the design. The real limiting factor is the actual weight of the
passenger or passengers, isn't it? Everything-everything works in proportion to
that one mass. Right?"
"Yes, but-"
"Right or wrong?"
"Well . . . yes, that's right. I just
wanted-"
"The smaller man can live on less
water, he breathes less air, he occunies less space. Les goes." Harriman
walked over and put a hand on Coster's shoulder. "Don't take it hard, son.
It can't be any worse on you than it is on me. This trip has got to succeed-and
that means you and I have got to give up the honor of being the first man on
the Moon. But I promise you this: we'll go on the second trip, we'll go with
Les as our private chauffeur. It will be the first of a lot of passenger trips.
Look, Bob-you can be a big man in this game, if you'll play along now. How
would you like to be chief engineer of the first lunar colony?"
Coster managed to grin. "It might not
be so bad."
"You'd like it. Living on the Moon
will be an engineering problem; you and I have talked about it. How'd you like
to put your theories to work? Build the first city? Build the big observatory
we'll found there? Look around and know that you were the man who had done
it?"
Coster was definitely adjusting himself to
it. "You make it sound good. Say, what will you be doing?"
"Me? Well, maybe I'll be the first
mayor of Luna City." It was a new thought to him; he savored it. "The
Honorable Delos David Harriman, Mayor of Luna City. Say, I like that! You know,
I've never held any sort of public office; I've just owned things." He
looked around. "Everything settled?"
"I guess so," Coster said
slowly. Suddenly he stuck his hand out at LeCroix. "You fly her, Les; I'll
build her."
LeCroix grabbed his hand. "It's a
deal. And you and the Boss get busy and start making plans for the next job-big
enough for all of us."
"Right!"
Harriman put his hand on top of theirs.
"That's the way I like to hear you talk. We'll stick together and we'll
found Luna City together."
"I think we ought to call it
"Harriman," LeCroix said seriously.
"Nope, I've thought of it as Luna
City ever since I was a kid; Luna City it's going to be. Maybe we'll put
Harriman Square in the middle of it," he added.
"I'll mark it that way in the
plans," agreed Coster.
Harriman left at once. Despite the
solution he was terribly depressed and did not want his two colleagues to see
it. It had been a Pyrrhic victory; he had saved the enterprise but he felt like
an animal who has gnawed off his own leg to escape a trap.
CHAPTER
EIGHT
STRONG
WAS ALONE in the offices of the partnership when he got a call from Dixon.
"George, I was looking for D.D. Is he there?"
"No, he's back in
Washington-something about clearances. I expect him back soon."
"Hmmm. . . . Entenza and I want to
see him. We're coming over." They arrived shortly. Entenza was quite
evidently very much worked up over something; Dixon looked sleekly impassive as
usual. After greetings Dixon waited a moment, then said, "Jack, you had
some business to transact, didn't you?"
Entenza jumped, then snatched a draft from
his pocket.
"Oh, yes! George, I'm not going to
have to pro-rate after all. Here's my payment to bring my share up to full
payment to date."
Strong accepted it. "I know that
Delos will be pleased." He tucked it in a drawer.
"Well," said Dixon sharply,
"aren't you going to receipt for it?"
"If Jack wants a receipt. The
cancelled draft will serve." However, Strong wrote out a receipt without
further comment; Entenza accepted it.
They waited a while. Presently Dixon said,
"George, you're in this pretty deep, aren't you?"
"Possibly."
"Want to hedge your bets?"
"How?"
"Well, candidly, I want to protect
myself. Want to sell one half of one. percent of your share?"
Strong thought about it. In fact he was
worried-worried sick. The presence of Dixon's auditor had forced them to keep
on a cash basis-and only Strong knew how close to the line that had forced the
partners. "Why do you want it?"
"Oh, I wouldn't use it to interfere
with Delos's operations. He's our man; we're backing him. But I would feel a
lot safer if I had the right to call a halt if he tried to commit us to
something we couldn't pay for. You know Delos; he's an incurable optimist. We
ought to have some sort of a brake on him."
Strong thought about it. The thing that
hurt him was that he agreed with everything Dixon said; he had stood by and
watched while Delos dissipated two fortunes, painfully built up through the
years. D.D. no longer seemed to care. Why, only this morning he had refused
even to look at a report on the H & S automatic household switch-after
dumping it on Strong.
Dixon leaned forward. "Name a price,
George. I'll be generous."
Strong squared his stooped shoulders.
"I'll sell-"
"Good!"
"-if Delos okays it. Not
otherwise."
Dixon muttered something. Enteuza snorted.
The conversation might have gone acrimoniously further, had not Harriman walked
in.
No one said anything about the proposal to
Strong. Strong inquired about the trip; Harriman pressed a thumb and finger
together. "All in the groove! But it gets more expensive to do business in
Washington every day." He turned to the others. "How's tricks? Any
special meaning to the assemblage? Are we in executive session?"
Dixon turned to Entenza. "Tell him,
Jack."
Entenza faced Harriman. "What do you
mean by selling television rights?"
Harriman cocked a brow. "And why
not?"
"Because you promised them to me,
that's why. That's the original agreement; I've got it in writing."
"Better take another look at the
agreement, Jack. And don't go off halfcocked. You have the exploitation rights
for radio, television, and other amusement and special feature ventures in
connection with the first trip to the Moon. You've still got 'em. Including
broadcasts from the ship, provided we are able to make any." He decided
that this was not a good time to mention that weight considerations had already
made the latter impossible; the Pioneer would carry no electronic equipment of
any sort not needed in astrogation. "What I sold was the franchise to
erect a-television station on the Moon, later. By the way, it wasn't even an
exclusive franchise, although Clem Haggerty thinks it is. If you want to buy
one yourself, we can accommodate you."
"Buy it! Why you-"
"Wups! Or you can have it free, if
you can get Dixon and George to agree that you are entitled to it. I won't be a
tightwad. Anything else?"
Dixon cut in. "Just where do we stand
now, Delos?"
"Gentlemen, you can take it for
granted that the Pioneer will leave on schedule-next Wednesday. And now, if you
will excuse me, I'm on my way to Peterson Field."
After he had left his three associates sat
in silence for some time, Entenza muttering to himself, Dixon apparently
thinking, and Strong just waiting. Presently Dixon said, "How about that
fractional share, George?"
"You didn't see fit to mention it to
Delos."
"I see." Dixon carefully
deposited an ash. "He's a strange man, isn't he?" Strong shifted
around. "Yes."
"How long have you known him?"
"Let me see-he came to work for me
in-"
"He worked for you?"
"For several months. Then we set up
our first company." Strong thought back about it. "I suppose he had a
power complex, even then."
"No," Dixon said carefully.
"No, I wouldn't call it a power complex. It's more of a Messiah
complex."
Entenza looked up. "He's a crooked
son of a bitch, that's what he is!"
Strong looked at him mildly. "I'd
rather you wouldn't talk about him that way. I'd really rather you
wouldn't."
"Stow it, Jack," ordered Dixon.
"You might force George to take a poke at you. One of the odd things about
him," went on Dixon, "is that he seems to be able to inspire an
almost feudal loyalty. Take yourself. I know you are cleaned out, George-yet
you won't let me rescue you. That goes beyond logic; it's personal."
Strong nodded. "He's an odd man.
Sometimes I think he's the last of the Robber Barons."
Dixon shook his head. "Not the last.
The last of them opened up the American West. He's the first of the new Robber
Barons-and you and I won't see the end of it. Do you ever read Carlyle?"
Strong nodded again. "I see what you
mean, the 'Hero' theory, but I don't necessarily agree with it."
"There's something to it,
though," Dixon answered. "Truthfully, I don't think Delos knows what
he is doing. He's setting up a new imperialism.
There'll be the devil to pay before it's
cleaned up." He stood up. "Maybe we should have waited. Maybe we
should have balked him-if we could have. Well, it's done. We're on the
merry-go-round and we can't get off. I hope we enjoy the ride.. Come on,
Jack."
CHAPTER
NINE
THE
COLORADO p~ArRIE was growin'~ dusky. The Sun was behind the peak and the broad
white face of Luna, full and round, was rising in the east. In the middle of
Peterson Field the Pioneer thrust toward the sky. A barbedwire fence, a
thousand yards from its base in all directions, held back the crowds. Just
inside the barrier guards patrolled restlessly. More guards circulated through
the crowd. Inside the fence, close to it, trunks and trailers for camera,
sound, and television equipment were parked and, at the far ends of cables,
remote-control pick-ups were located both near and far from the ship on all
sides. There were other trucks near the ship and a stir of organized activity.
Harriman waited in Coster's office; Coster
himself was out on the field, and Dixon and Entenza had a room to themselves.
LeCroix, still in a drugged sleep, was in the bedroom of Coster's on-the-job
living quarters.
There was a stir and a challenge outside
the door. Harriman opened it a crack. "If that's another reporter, tell
him 'no.' Send him to Mr. Montgomery across the way. Captain LeCroix will grant
no unauthorized interviews."
"Delos! Let me in."
"Oh-you, George. Come in. We've been
hounded to death."
Strong came in and handed Harriman a large
and heavy handbag. "Here it is."
"Here is what?"
"The cancelled covers for the
philatelic syndicate. You forgot them. That's half a million dollars,
Delos," he complained. "If I hadn't noticed them in your coat locker
we'd have been in the soup."
Harriman composed his features.
"George, you're a brick, that's what you are."
"Shall I put them in the ship
myself?" Strong said anxiously.
"Huh? No, no. Les will handle
them." He glanced at his watch. "We're about to waken him. I'll take
charge of the covers." He took the bag and added, "Don't come in now.
You'll have a chance to say goodbye on the field."
Harriman went next door, shut the door
behind him, waited for the nurse to give the sleeping pilot a counteracting
stimulant by injection, then chased her out. When he turned around the pilot
was sitting up, rubbing his eyes. "How do you feel, Les?"
"Fine. So this is it."
"Yup. And we're all rooting for you,
boy. Look, you've got to go out and face them in a couple of minutes.
Everything is ready-but I've got a couple of things I've got to say to
you."
"Yes?"
"See this bag?" Harriman rapidly
explained what it was and what it signified.
LeCroix looked dismayed. "But I can't
take it, Delos; It's all figured to the last ounce."
"Who said you were going to take it?
Of course you can't; it must weigh sixty, seventy pounds. I just plain forgot
it. Now here's what we do: for the time being I'll just hide it in here-"
Harriman stuffed the bag far back into a clothes closet. "When you land,
I'll be right on your tail. Then we pull a sleight-of-hand trick and you fetch
it out of the ship."
LeCroix shook his head ruefully.
"Delos, you beat me. Well, I'm in no mood to argue."
"I'm glad you're not; otherwise I'd
go to jail for a measly half million dollars. We've already spent that money.
Anyhow, it doesn't matter," he went on. "Nobody but you and me will
know it-and the stamp collectors will get their money's worth." He looked
at the younger man as if anxious for his approval.
"Okay, okay," LeCroix answered.
"Why should I care what happens to a stamp collector-tonight? Let's get
going."
"One more thing," said Harriman
and took out a small cloth bag. "This you take with you-and the weight has
been figured in. I saw to it. Now here is what you do with it." He gave
detailed and very earnest instructions.
LeCroix was puzzled. "Do I hear you
straight? I let it be found-then I tell the exact truth about what
happened?"
"That's right."
"Okay." LeCroix zipped the
little bag into a pocket of his coveralls. "Let's get out to the field.
H-hour minus twenty-one minutes already."
Strong joined Harriman in the control
blockhouse after LeCroix had gone up inside the ship. "Did they get
aboard?" he demanded anxiously. "LeCroix wasn't carrying
anything."
"Oh, sure," said Harriman.
"I sent them ahead. Better take your place. The ready flare has already
gone up."
Dixon, Entenza, the Governor of Colorado,
the Vice-President of the United States, and a round dozen of V.I.P.'s were
already seated at periscopes, mounted in slits, on a balcony above the control
level. Strong and Harriman climbed a ladder and took the two remaining chairs.
Harriman began to sweat and realized he
was trembling. Through his periscope out in front he could see the ship; from
below he could hear Coster's voice, nervously checking departure station
reports. Muted through a speaker by him was a running commentary of one of the
newscasters reporting the show. Harriman himself was the-well, the admiral, he
decided-of the operation, but there was nothing more he could do, but wait,
watch, and try to pray.
A second flare arched up in the sky, burst
into red and green. Five minutes.
The seconds oozed away. At minus two
minutes Harriman realized that he could not stand to watch through a tiny slit;
he had to be outside, take part in it himself-he had to. He climbed down,
hurried to the exit of the blockhouse. Coster glanced around, looked startled,
but did not try to stop him; Coster could not leave his post no matter what
happened. Harriman elbowed the guard aside and went outdoors.
To the east the ship towered skyward, her
slender pyramid sharp black against the full Moon. He waited.
And waited.
What had gone wrong? There had remained
less than two minutes when he had come out; he was sure of that-yet there she
stood, silent, dark, unmoving. There was not a sound, save the distant
ululation of sirens warning the spectators behind the distant fence. Harriman
felt his own heart stop, his breath dry up in his throat. Something had failed.
Failure.
A single flare rocket burst from the top
of the blockhouse; a flame licked at the base of the ship.
It spread, there was a pad of white fire
around the base. Slowly, almost lumberingly, the Pioneer lifted, seemed to
hover for a moment, balanced on a pillar of fire-then reached for the sky with
acceleration so great that she was above him almost at once, overhead at the
zenith, a dazzling circle of flame. So quickly was she above, rather than out
in front, that it seemed as if she were arching back over him and must surely
fall on him. Instinctively and futilely he threw a hand in front of his face.
The sound reached him.
Not as sound-it was a white noise, a roar
in all frequencies, sonic, subsonic, supersonic, so incredibly loaded with
energy that it struck him in the chest. He heard it with his teeth and with his
bones as well as with his ears. He crouched his knees, bracing against it.
Following the sound at the snail's pace of
a hurricane came the backwash of the splash. It ripped at his clothing, tore
his breath from his lips. He stumbled blindly back, trying to reach the lee of
the concrete building, was knocked down.
He picked himself up coughing and
strangling and remembered to look at the sky. Straight overhead was a dwindling
star. Then it was gone.
He went into the blockhouse.
The room was a babble of high-tension,
purposeful confusion. Harriman's ears, still ringing, heard a speaker blare,
"Spot One! Spot One to blockhouse! Step five loose on schedule-ship and
step five showing separate blips-" and Coster's voice, high and angry, cutting
in with, "Get Track One! Have they picked up step five yet? Are they
tracking it?"
In the background the news commentator was
still blowing his top. "A great day, folks, a great day! The mighty
Pioneer, climbing like an angel of the Lord, flaming sword at hand, is even now
on her glorious way to our sister planet. Most of you have seen her departure
on your screens; I wish you could have seen it as I did, arching up into the
evening sky, bearing her precious load of-"
"Shut that thing off!" ordered
Coster, then to the visitors on the observation platform, "And pipe down
up there! Quiet!"
The Vice-President of the United States
jerked his head around, closed his mouth. He remembered to smile. The other
V.I.P.'s shut up, then resumed again in muted whispers. A girl's voice cut
through the silence, "Track One to Blockhouse-step five tracking high,
plus two." There was a stir in the corner. There a large canvas hood
shielded a heavy sheet of Plexiglass from direct light. The sheet was mounted
vertically and was edge-lighted; it displayed a coordinate map of Colorado and
Kansas in fine white lines; the cities and towns glowed red. Unevacuated farms
were tiny warning dots of red light.
A man behind the transparent map touched
it with a grease pencil; the reported location of step five shone out. In front
of the map screen a youngish man sat quietly in a chair, a pear-shaped switch
in his hand, his thumb lightly resting on the button. He was a bombardier,
borrowed from the Air Forces; when he pressed the switch, a radio-controlled
circuit in step five should cause the shrouds of step five's landing 'chute to
be cut and let it plummet to Earth. He was working from radar reports aloi~e
with no fancy computing bombsight to think for him. He was working almost by
instinct- or, rather, by the accumulated subconscious knowledge of his trade,
integrating in his brain the meager data spread before him, deciding where the
tons of step five would land if he were to press his switch at any particular
instant. He seemed unworried.
"Spot One to Blockhouse!" came a
man's voice again. "Step four free on schedule," and almost
immediately following, a deeper voice echoed, "Track Two, tracking step
four, instantaneous altitude nine-five-one miles, predicted vector."
No one paid any attention to Harriman.
Under the hood the observed trajectory of
step five grew in shining dots of grease, near to, but not on, the dotted line
of its predicted path. Reaching out from each location dot was drawn a line at
right angles, the reported altitude for that location.
The quiet man watching the display
suddenly pressed down hard on his switch. He then stood up, stretched, and
said, "Anybody got a cigaret?" "Track Two!" he was
answered. "Step four-first impact prediction-forty miles west of
Charleston, South Carolina."
"Repeat!" yelled Coster.
The speaker blared out again without
pause, "Correction, correction- forty miles east, repeat east."
Coster sighed. The sigh was cut short by a
report. "Spot One to Blockhouse-step three free, minus five seconds,"
and a talker at Coster's control desk called out, "Mr. Coster, Mister
Coster-Palomar Observatory wants to talk to you."
"Tell 'em to go-no, tell 'em to
wait." Immediately another voice cut in with, "Track One, auxiliary
range Fox-Step one about to strike near Dodge City, Kansas~"
"How near?"
There was no answer. Presently the voice
of Track One proper said, "Impact reported approximately fifteen miles
southwest of Dodge City."
"Casualties?"
Spot One broke in before Track One could
answer, "Step two free, step two free-the ship is now on its own."
"Mr. Coster-please, Mr. Coster-"
And a totally new voice: "Spot Two to
Blockhouse-we are now tracking the ship. Stand by for reported distances and
bearings. Stand by-"
"Track Two to Blockhouse-step four
will definitely land in Atlantic, estimated point of impact oh-five-seven miles
east of Charleston bearing ohnine-three. I will repeat-"
Coster looked around irritably.
"Isn't there any drinking water anywhere in this dump?"
"Mr. Coster, please-Palomar says
they've just got to talk to you."
Harriman eased over to the door and
stepped out. He suddenly felt very much let down, utterly weary, and depressed.
The field looked strange without the ship.
He had watched it grow; now suddenly it was gone. The Moon, still rising,
seemed oblivious-and space travel was as remote a dream as it had been in his
boyhood.
There were several tiny figures prowling
around, the flash apron where the ship had stood-souvenir hunters, he thought
contemptuously. Someone came up to him in the gloom. "Mr. Harriman?"
"Eh?"
"Hopkins-with the A.P. How about a
statement?"
"Uh? No, no comment. I'm
bushed."
"Oh, now, just a word. How does it
feel to have backed the first successful Moon flight-if it is successful."
"It will be successful." He
thought a moment, then squared his tired shoulders and said, "Tell them
that this is the beginning of the human race's greatest era. Tell them that
every one of them will have a chance to follow in Captain LeCroix's footsteps,
seek out new planets, wrest a home for themselves in new lands. Tell them that
this means new frontiers, a shot in the arm for prosperity. It means-" He
ran down. "That's all tonight. I'm whipped, son. Leave me alone, will
you?"
Presently Côster came out, followed by the
V.I.P.'s. Harriman went up to Coster. "Everything all right?"
"Sure. Why shouldn't it be? Track
three followed him out to the limit of range-all in the groove." Coster
added, "Step five killed a cow when it grounded."
"Forget it-we'll have steak for
breakfast." Harriman then had to make conversation with the Governor and
the Vice-President, had to escort them out to their ship. Dixon and Entenza
left together, less formally; at last Coster and Harriman were alone save for
subordinates too junior to constitute a strain and for guards to protect them
from the crowds. "Where you headed, Bob?"
"Up to the Broadmoor and about a
week's sleep. How about you?"
"if you don't mind, I'll doss down in
your apartment."
"Help yourself. Sleepy pills in the
bathroom."
"I won't need them." They had a
drink together in Coster's quarters, talked aimlessly, then Coster ordered a
copter cab and went to the hotel. Harriman went to bed, got up, read a day-old
copy of the Denver Post filled with pictures of the Pioneer, finally gave up
and took two of Coster's sleeping capsules.
CHAPTER
TEN
SOMEONE
WAS SHAKING HIM. "Mr. Harriman! Wake up-Mr. Caster is on the screen."
"Huh? Wazza? Oh, all right." He
got up and padded to the phone. Caster was :ooking tousie-headea and excited.
"Hey, Boss-he made it!"
"Huh? What do you mean?"
"Palomar just called me. They saw the
mark and now they've spotted the ship itself. He-"
"Wait a minute, Bob. Slow up. He
can't be there yet. He just left last night."
Coster looked disconcerted. "What's
the matter, Mr. Harriman? Don't you feel well? He left Wednesday."
Vaguely, Harriman began to be oriented.
No, the take-off had not been the night before-fuzzily he recalled a drive up
into the mountains, a day spent dozing in the sun, some sort of a party at
which he had drunk too much. What day was today? He didn't know. If LeCroix had
landed on the Moon, then-never mind. "It's all right, Bob-I was half
asleep. I guess I dreamed the take-off all over again. Now tell me the news,
slowly."
Coster started over. "LeCroix has
landed, just west of Archimedes crater. They can see his ship, from Palomar.
Say that was a great stunt you thought up, marking the spot with carbon black.
Les must have covered two acres with it. They say it shines out like a
billboard, through the Big Eye."
"Maybe we ought to run down and have
a look. No-later," he amended. "We'll be busy."
"I don't see what more we can do, Mr.
Harriman. We've got twelve of our best ballistic computers calculating possible
routes for you now."
Harriman started to tell the man to put on
another twelve, switched off the screen instead. He was still at Peterson
Field, with one of Skyways' best stratoships waiting for him outside, waiting
to take him to whatever point on the globe LeCroix might ground. LeCroix was in
the upper stratosphere, had been there for more than twenty-four hours. The
pilot was slowly, cautiously wearing out his terminal velocity, dissipating the
incredible kinetic energy as shock wave and radiant heat.
They had tracked him by radar around the
globe and around again-and again . . . yet there was no way of knowing just
where and what sort of landing the pilot would choose to risk. Harriman
listened to the running radar reports and cursed the fact that they had elected
to save the weight of radio equipment.
The radar figures started coming closer
together. The voice broke off and started again: "He's in his landing
glide!"
"Tell the field to get ready!"
shouted Harriman. He held his breath and waited. After endless seconds another
voice cut in with, "The Moon ship is now landing. It will ground somewhere
west of Chihuahua in Old Mexico."
Harriman started for the door at a run.
Coached by radio en route, Harriman's
pilot spotted the Pioneer incredibly small against the desert sand. He put his
own ship quite close to it, in a beautiful landing. Harriman was fumbling at
the cabin door before the ship was fairly stopped.
LeCroix was sitting on the ground, resting
his back against a skid of his ship and enjoying the shade of its stubby
triangular wings. A paisano sheepherder stood facing him, open-mouthed. As
Harriman trotted out and lumbered toward him LeCroix stood up, flipped a
cigaret butt away and said, "Hi, Boss!"
"Les!" The older man threw his
arms around the younger. "It's good to see you, boy."
"It's good to see you. Pedro here
doesn't speak my language." LeCroix glanced around; there was no one else
nearby but the pilot of Harriman's ship. "Where's the gang? Where's
Bob?"
"I didn't wait. They'll surely be
along in a few minutes-hey, there they come now!" It was another
stratoship, plunging in to a landing. Harriman turned to his pilot.
"Bill-go over and meet them."
"Huh? They'll come, never fear."
"Do as I say."
"You're the doctor." The pilot
trudged through the sand, his back expressing disapproval. LeCroix looked
puzzled. "Quick, Les-help me with this."
"This" was the five thousand
cancelled envelopes which were supposed to have been to the Moon. They got them
out of Harriman's stratoship and into the Moon ship, there to be stowed in an
empty food locker, while their actions were still shielded from the later
arrivals by the bulk of the strataship. "Whew!" said Harriman.
"That was close. Half a million dollars. We need it, Les."
"Sure, but look, Mr. Harriman, the
di-"
"Sssh! The others are coming. How
about the other business? Ready with your act?"
"Yes. But I was trying to tell
you-"
"Quiet!"
It was not their colleagues; it was a shipload
of reporters, camera men, mike men, commentators, technicians. They swarmed
over them.
Harriman waved to them jauntily.
"Help yourselves, boys. Get a lot of pictures. Climb through the ship.
Make yourselves at home. Look at anything you want to. But go easy on Captain
LeCroix-he's tired."
Another ship had landed, this time with
Caster, Dixon and Strong. Entenza showed up in his own chartered ship and began
bossing the TV, pix, and radio men, in the course of which he almost had a
fight with an unauthorized camera crew. A large copter transport grounded and
spilled out nearly a platoon of khaki-clad Mexican troops. Fom somewhere-out of
the sand apparently-several dozen native peasants showed up. Harriman broke
away from reporters, held a quick and expensive discussion with the captain of
the local troops and a degree of order was restored in time to save the Pioneer
from being picked to pieces.
"Just let that be!" It was
LeCroix's voice, from inside the Pioneer. Harriman waited and listened.
"None of your business!" the pilot's voice went on, rising higher,
"and put them back!"
Harriman pushed his way to the door of the
ship. "What's the trouble, Les?"
Inside the cramped cabin, hardly large
enough for a TV booth, three men stood, LeCroix and two reporters. All three
men looked angry. "What's the trouble, Les?" Harriman repeated.
LeCroix was holding a small cloth bag
which appeared to be empty. Scattered on the pilot's acceleration rest between
him and the reporters were several small, dully brilliant stones. A reporter
held one such stone up to the light.
"These guys were poking their noses
into things that didn't concern them," LeCroix said angrily.
The reporter looked at the stone said,
"You told us to look at what we liked, didn't you, Mr. Harriman?"
"Yes."
"Your pilot here-" He jerked a
thumb at LeCroix. "-apparently didn't expect us to find these. He had them
hidden in the pads of his chair."
"What of it?"
"They're diamonds."
"What makes you think so?"
"They're diamonds all right."
Harriman stopped and unwrapped a cigar.
Presently he said, "Those diamonds were where you found them because I put
them there."
A flashlight went off behind Harriman; a
voice said, "Hold the rock up higher, Jeff."
The reporter called Jeff obliged, then
said, "That seems an odd thing to do, Mr. Harriman."
"I was interested in the effect of
outer space radiations on raw diamonds. On my orders Captain LeCroix placed
that sack of diamonds in the ship."
Jeff whistled thoughtfully. "You
know, Mr. Harriman, if you did not have that explanation, I'd think LeCroix had
found the rocks on the Moon and was trying to hold out on you."
"Print that and you will be sued for
libel. I have every confidence in Captain LeCroix. Now give me the
diamonds."
Jeff's eyebrows went up. "But not
confidence enough in him to let him keep them,.maybe?"
"Give me the stones. Then get
out."
Harriman got LeCroix away from the
reporters as quickly as possible and into Harriman's own ship. "That's all
for now," he told the news and pictures people. "See us at Peterson
Field."
Once the ship raised ground he turned to
LeCroix. "You did a beautiful job, Les."
"That reporter named Jeff must be
sort of confused."
"Eh? Oh, that. No, I mean the flight.
You did it. You're head man on this planet."
LeCroix shrugged it off. "Bob built a
good ship. It was a cinch. Now about those diamonds-"
"Forget the diamonds. You've done
your part. We placed those rocks in the ship; now we tell everybody we
did-truthful as can be. It's not our fault if they don't believe us."
"But Mr. Harriman-"
"What?"
LeCroix unzipped a pocket in his
coveralls, hauled out a soiled handkerchief, knotted into a bag. He untied
it-and spilled into Harriman's hands many more diamonds than had been displayed
in the ship-larger, finer diamonds.
Harriman stared at them. He began to
chuckle.
Presently he shoved them back at LeCroix.
"Keep them."
"I figure they belong to all of
us."
"Well, keep them for us, then. And
keep your mouth shut about them. No, wait." He picked out two large
stones. "I'll have rings made from these two, one for you, one for me. But
keep your mouth shut, or they won't be worth anything, except as
curiosities."
It was quite true, he thought. Long ago
the diamond syndicate had realized that diamonds in plentiful supply were worth
little more than glass, except for industrial uses. Earth had more than enough
for that, more than enough for jewels. If Moon diamonds were literally
"common as pebbles" then they were just that-pebbles.
Not worth the expense of bringing them to
earth. But now take uranium. If that were plentiful- Harriman sat back and
indulged in daydreaming. Presently LeCroix said softly, "You know, Boss,
it's wonderful there."
"Eh? Where?"
"Why, on the Moon of course. I'm
going back. I'm going back just as soon as I can. We've got to get busy on the
new ship."
"Sure, sure! And this time we'll
build one big enough for all of us. This time I go, too!"
"You bet."
"Les-" The older man spoke
almost diffidently. "What does it look like when you look back and see the
Earth?"
"Huh? It looks like- It looks-"
LeCroix stopped. "Hell's bells, Boss, there isn't any way to tell you.
It's wonderful, that's all. The sky is black and-well, wait until you see the
pictures I took. Better .yet, wait and see it yourself."
Harriman nodded. "But it's hard to
wait."
CHAPTER
ELEVEN
"FIELDS
OF DIAMONDS ON THE MOONU!"
"BILLIONAIRE
BACKER DENIES DIAMOND STORY Says Jewels Taken Into Space for Science
Reasons"
"MOON
DIAMONDS: HOAX OR FACT?"
"-but consider this, friends of the
invisible audience: why would anyone take diamonds to the moon? Every ounce of
that ship and its cargo was calculated; diamonds would not be taken along
without reason. Many scientific authorities have pronounced Mr. Harriman's
professed reason an absurdity. It is easy to guess that diamonds might be taken
along for the purpose of 'salting' the Moon, so to speak, with earthly jewels,
with the intention of convincing us that diamonds exist on the Moon-but Mr.
Harriman, his pilot Captain LeCroix, and everyone connected with the enterprise
have sworn from the beginning that the diamonds did not come from the Moon. But
it is an absolute certainty that the diamonds were in the space ship when it
landed. Cut it how you will; this reporter is going to try to buy some lunar
diamond mining stock-"
Strong was, as usual, already in the
office when Harriman came in. Before the partners could speak, the screen
called out, "Mr. Harriman, Rotterdam calling."
"Tell them to go plant a tulip."
"Mr. van der Velde is waiting, Mr.
Harriman."
"Okay."
Harriman let the Hollander talk, then
said, "Mr. van der Velde, the statements attributed to me are absolutely
correct. I put those diamonds the reporters saw into the ship before it took
off. They were mined right here on Earth. In fact I bought them when I came
over to see you; I can prove it."
"But Mr. Harriman-"
"Suit yourself. There may be more
diamonds on the Moon than you can run and jump over. I don't guarantee it. But
I do guarantee that those diamonds the newspapers are talking about came from
Earth."
"Mr. Harriman, why would you send
diamonds to the Moon? Perhaps you intended to fool us, no?"
"Have it your own way. But I've said
all along that those diamonds came from Earth. Now see here: you took an
option-an option on an option, so to speak. If you want to make the second
payment on that option and keep it in force, the deadline is nine o'clock
Thursday, New York time, as specified in the contract. Make up your mind."
He switched off and found his partner
looking at him sourly. "What's eating you?"
"I wondered about those diamonds,
too, Delos. So I've been looking through the weight schedule of the
Pioneer."
"Didn't know you were interested in
engineering."
"I can read figures."
"Well, you found it, didn't you?
Schedule F-i 7-c, two ounces, allocated to me personally."
"I found it. It sticks out like a
sore thumb. But I didn't find something else."
Harriman felt a 'cold chill in his stomach.
"What?"
"I didn't find a schedule for the
cancelled covers." Strong stared at him.
"It must be there. Let me see that
weight schedule."
"It's not there, Delos. You know, I
thought it was funny when you insisted on going to meet Captain LeCroix by
yourself. What happened, Delos? Did you sneak them aboard?" He continued
to stare while Harriman fidgeted. "We've put over some sharp business
deals-but this will be the first time that anyone can say that the firm of
Harriman and Strong has cheated."
"George-I would cheat, lie, steal,
beg, bribe-do anything to accomplish what we have accomplished."
Harriman got up and paced the room.
"We had to have that money, or the ship would never have taken off. We're
cleaned out. You know that, don't you?"
Strong nodded. "But those covers
should have gone to the Moon. That's what we contracted to do."
"I just forgot it. Then it was too
late to figure the weight in. But it doesn't matter. I figured that if the trip
was a failure, if LeCroix cracked up, nobody would know or care that the covers
hadn't gone. And I knew if he made it, it wouldn't matter; we'd have plenty of
money. And we will, George, we will!"
"We've got to pay the money
back."
"Now? Give me time, George. Everybody
concerned is 'happy the way it is. Wait until we recover our stake; then I'll
buy every one of those covers back-out of my own pocket. That's a
promise."
Strong continued to sit. Harriman stopped
in front of him. "I ask you, George, is it worth while to wreck an
enterprise of this size for a purely theoretical point?"
Strong sighed and said, "When the
time comes, use the firm's money."
"That's the spirit! But I'll use my
own, I promise you."
"No, the firm's money. If we're in it
together, we're in it together."
"O.K., if that's the way you want
it."
Harriman turned back to his desk. Neither
of the two partners had anything to say for a long while. Presently Dixon and
Entenza were announced.
"Well, Jack," said Harriman.
"Feel better now?"
"No thanks to you. I had to fight for
what I did put on the air-and some of it was pirated as it was. Delos, there
should have been a television pick-up in the ship."
"Don't fret about it. As I told you,
we couldn't spare the weight this time. But there will be the next trip, and the
next. Your concession is going to be worth a pile of money."
Dixon cleared his throat. "That's
what we came to see you about, Delos. What are your plans?"
"Plans? We go right ahead. Les and
Coster and I make the next trip. We set up a permanent base. Maybe Coster stays
behind. The third trip we send a real colony-nuclear engineers, miners,
hydroponics experts, communications engineers. We'll found Luna City, first
city on another planet."
Dixon looked thoughtful. "And when
does this begin to pay off?"
"What do you mean by 'pay off'? Do
you want your capital back, or do you want to begin to see some return on your
investment? I can cut it either way."
Entenza was about to say that he wanted
his investment back; Dixon cut in first, "Profits, naturally. The
investment is already made."
"Fine!"
"But I don't see how you expect
profits. Certainly, LeCroix made the trip and got back safely. There is honor
for all of us. But where are the royalties?"
"Give the crop time to ripen, Dan. Do
I look worried? What are our assets?" Harriman ticked them off on his
fingers. "Royalties on pictures, television, radio-."
"Those things go to Jack."
"Take a look at the agreement. He has
the concession, but he pays the firm-that's all of us-for them."
Dixon said, "Shut up, Jack!"
before Entenza could speak, then added, "What else? That won't pull us out
of the red."
"Endorsements galore. Monty's boys
are working on that. Royalties from the greatest best seller yet-I've got a
ghost writer and a stenographer following LeCroix around this very minute. A
franchise for the first and only space line-"
"From whom?"
"We'll get it. Kamens and Montgomery
are in Paris now, working on it. I'm joining them this afternoon. And we'll tie
down that franchise with a franchise from the other end, just as soon as we can
get a permanent colony there, no matter how small. It will be the autonomous
state of Luna, under the protection of the United Nations-and no ship will land
or take off in its territory without its permission. Besides that we'll have
the right to franchise a dozen other companies for various purposes-and tax
them, too-just as soon as we set up the Municipal Corporation of the City of
Luna under the laws of the State of Luna. We'll sell everything but vacuum-
we'll even sell vacuum, for experimental purposes. And don't forgct-we'll still
have a big chunk of real estate, sovereign title in us-as a state-and not yet
sold. The Moon is big."
"Your ideas are rather big, too,
Delos," Dixon said dryly. "But what actually happens next?"
"First we get title confirmed by the
U.N. The Security Council is now in secret session; the Assembly meets tonight.
Things will be popping; that's why I've got to be there. When the United
Nations decides-as it will!- that its own non-profit corporation has the only
real claim to the Moon, then I get busy. The poor little weak non-profit
corporation is going to grant a number of things to some real honest-to-god
corporations with hair on their chests-in return for help in setting up a
physics research lab, an astronomical observatory, a lunography institute and
some other perfectly proper nonprofit enterprises. That's our interim pitch
until we get a permanent colony with its own laws. Then we-"
Dixon gestured impatiently. "Never mind
the legal shenanigans, Delos. I've known you long enough to know that you can
figure out such angles. What do we actually have to do next?"
"Huh? We've got to build another
ship, a bigger one. Not actually bigger, but effectively bigger. Coster has started
the design of a surface catapult- it will reach from Manitou Springs to the top
of Pikes Peak. With it we can put a ship in free orbit around the Earth. Then
we'll use such a ship to fuel more ships-it amounts to a space station, like
the power station. It adds up to a way to get there on chemical power without
having to throw away nine-tenths of your ship to do it."
"Sounds expensive."
"It will be. But don't worry; we've
got a couple of dozen piddling little things to keep the money coming in while
we get set up on a commercial basis, then we sell stock. We- sold stock before;
now we'll sell a thousand dollars' worth where we sold ten before."
"And you think that will carry you
through until the enterprise as a whole is on a paying basis? Face it, Delos,
the thing as a whole doesn't pay off until you have ships plying between here
and the Moon on a paying basis, figured in freight and passenger charges. That
means customers, with cash. What is there on the Moon to ship-and who pays for
it?"
"Dan, don't you believe there will
be? If not, why are you here?"
"I believe in it, Delos-or I believe
in you. But what's your time schedule? What's your budget? What's your
prospective commodity? And please don't mention diamonds; I think I understand
that caper."
Harriman chewed his cigar for a few
moments. "There's one valuable commodity we'll start shipping at
once."
"What?"
"Knowledge."
Entenza snorted. Strong looked puzzled.
Dixon nodded. "I'll buy that. Knowledge is always worth something-to the
man who knows how to exploit it. And I'll agree that the Moon is a place to
find new knowledge. I'll assume that you can make the next trip pay off. What's
your budget and your time table for that?"
Harriman did not answer. Strong searched
his face closely. To him Harriman's poker face was as revealing as large
print-he decided that his partner had been crowded into a corner. He waited,
nervous but ready to back Harriman's play. Dixon went on, "From the way
you describe it, Delos, I judge that you don't have money enough for your next
step-and you don't know where you will get it. I believe in you, Delos-and I
told you at the start that I did not believe in letting a new business die of
anemia. I'm ready to buy in with a fifth share."
Harriman stared. "Look," he said
bluntly, "you own Jack's share now, don't you?"
"I wouldn't say that."
"You vote it. It sticks out all
over."
Entenza said, "That's not true. I'm
independent. I-"
"Jack, you're a damn liar,"
Harriman said dispassionately. "Dan, you've got fifty percent now. Under
the present rules I decide deadlocks, which gives me control as long as George
sticks by me. If we sell you another share, you vote three-fifths-and are boss.
Is that the deal you are looking for?"
"Delos, as I told you, I have
confidence in you."
"But you'd feel happier with the whip
hand. Well, I won't do it. I'll let space travel-real space travel, with
established runs-wait another twenty years before I'll turn loose. I'll let us
all go broke and let us live on glory before I'll turn loose. You'll have to
think up another scheme."
Dixon said nothing. Harriman got up and
began to pace. He stopped in front of Dixon. "Dan, if you really
understood what this is all about, I'd let you have control. But you don't. You
see this is just another way to money and to power. I'm perfectly willing to
let you vultures get rich-but I keep control. I'm going to see this thing
developed, not milked. The human race is heading out to the stars-and this
adventure is going to present new problems compared with which atomic power was
a kid's toy. Unless the whole matter is handled carefully, it will be fouled
up. You'll foul it up, Dan, if I let you have the deciding vote in it-because
you don't understand it."
He caught his breath and went on,
"Take safety for instance. Do you know why I let LeCroix take that ship
out instead of taking it myself? Do you think I was afraid? No! I wanted it to
come back-safely. I didn't want space travel getting another set-back. Do you
know why we have to have a monopoly, for a few years at least? Because every
so-and-so and his brother is going to want to build a Moon ship, now that they
know it can be done. Remember the first days of ocean flying? After Lindbergh
did it, every so-called pilot who could lay hands on a crate took off for some
over-water point. Some of them even took their kids along. And most of them
landed in the drink. Airplanes get a reputation for being dangerous. A few
years after that the airlines got so hungry for quick money in a highly
competitive field that you couldn't pick up a paper without seeing headlines
about another airliner crash.
"That's not going to happen to space
travel! I'm not going to let it happen.
Space ships are too big and too expensive;
if they get a reputation for being unsafe as well, we might as well have stayed
in bed. I run things."
He stopped. Dixon waited and then said,
"I said I believed in you, Delos. How much money do you need?"
"Eh? On what terms?"
"Your note."
"My note? Did you say my note?"
"I'd want security, of course."
Harriman swore. "I knew there was a
hitch in it. Dan, you know everything I've got is tied up in this
venture."
"You have insurance. You have quite a
lot of insurance, I know."
"Yes, but that's all made out to my
wife."
"I seem to have heard you say
something about that sort of thing to Jack Entenza," Dixon said.
"Come, now-if I know your tax-happy sort, you have at least one
irrevocable trust, or paid-up annuities, or something, to keep Mrs. Harriman
out of the poor house."
Harriman thought fiercely about it.
"When's the call date on this note?"
"In the sweet bye and bye. I want a
no-bankruptcy clause, of course."
"Why? Such a clause has no legal
validity."
"It would be valid with you, wouldn't
it?"
"Mmm . . . yes. Yes, it would."
"Then get out your policies and see
how big a note you can write." Harriman looked at him, turned abruptly and
went to his safe. He came back with quite a stack of long, stiff folders. They
added them up together; it was an amazingly large sum-for those days. Dixon
then consulted a memorandum taken from his pocket and said, "One seems to
be missing- a rather large one. A North Atlantic Mutual policy, I think."
Harriman glared at him. "Am I going
to have to fire every confidential clerk in my force?"
"No," Dixon said mildly, "I
don't get my information from your staff. Harriman went back to the safe, got
the policy and added it to the pile. Strong spoke up, "Do you want mine,
Mr. Dixon?"
"No," answered Dixon, "that
won't be necessary." He started stuffing the policies in his pocket.
"I'll keep these, Delos, and attend to keeping up the premiums. I'll bill
you of course. You can send the note and the changeof-beneficiary forms to my
office. Here's your draft." He took out another slip of paper; it was the
draft-already made out in the amount of the policies.
Harriman looked at it.
"Sometimes," he said slowly, "I wonder who's kidding who?"
He tossed the draft over to Strong. "O.K., George, take care of it. I'm
off to Paris, boys. Wish me luck." He strode out as jauntily as a fox
terrier.
Strong looked from the closed door to
Dixon, then at the note. "I ought to tear this thing up!"
"Don't do it," advised Dixon.
"You see, I really do believe in him." He added, "Ever read Carl
Sandburg, George?"
"I'm not much of a reader."
"Try him some time. He tells a story
about a man who started a rumor that they had struck oil in hell. Pretty soon
everybody has left for hell, to get in on the boom. The man who started the
rumor watches them all go, then scratches his head and says to himself that
there just might be something in it, after all. So he left for hell, too."
Strong waited, finally said, "I don't
get the point."
"The point is that I just want to be
ready to protect myself if necessary, George-and so should you. Delos might
begin believing his own rumors. Diamonds! Come, Jack."
CHAPTER
TWELVE
THE
ENSUING MONTHS were as busy as the period before the flight of the Pioneer (now
honorably retired to the Smithsonian Institution). One engineering staff and
great gangs of men were working on the catapult, two more staffs were busy with
two new ships; the Mayflower, and the Colonial; a third ship was on the
drafting tables. Ferguson was chief engineer for all of this; Coster, still
buffered by Jock Berkeley, was engineering consultant, working where and as he
chose. Colorado Springs was a boom town; the Denver-Trinidad roadcity
settlements spread out at the Springs until they surrounded Peterson Field.
Harriman was as busy as a cat with two
tails. The constantly expanding exploitation and promotion took eight full days
a week of his time, but, by working Kamens and Montgomery almost to ulcers and
by doing without sleep himself, he created frequent opportunities to run out to
Colorado and talk things over with Caster.
Luna City, it was decided, would be
founded on the very next trip. The Mayflower was planned for a pay-load not
only of seven passengers, but with air, water and food to carry four of them
over to the next trip; they would live in an aluminum Quonset-type hut, sealed,
pressurized, and buried under the loose soil of Luna until-and assuming-they
were succored.
The choice of the four extra passengers
gave rise to another contest, another publicity exploitation-and more sale of
stock. Harriman insisted that they be two married couples, over the united
objections of scientific organizations everywhere. He gave in only to the
extent of agreeing that there was no objection to all four being scientists,
providing they constituted two married couples. This gave rise to several hasty
marriages-and some divorces, after the choices were announced.
The Mayflower was the maximum size that
calculations showed would be capable of getting into a free orbit around the Earth
from the boost of the catapult, plus the blast of her own engines. Before she
took off, four other ships, quite as large, would precede her. But they were
not space ships; they were mere tankers-nameless. The most finicky of ballistic
calculations, the most precise of launchings, would place them in the same
orbit at the same spot. There the Mayflower would rendezvous and accept their
remaining fuel.
This was the trickiest part of the entire
project. If the four tankers could be placed close enough together, LeCroix,
using a tiny maneuvering reserve, could bring his new ship to them. If
not-well, it gets very lonely out in Space.
Serious thought was given to placing
pilots in the tankers and accepting as a penalty the use of enough fuel from
one tanker to permit a get-away boat, a life boat with wings, to decelerate,
reach the atmosphere and brake to a landing. Caster found a cheaper way.
A radar pilot, whose ancestor was the
proximity fuse and whose immediate parents could be found in the homing devices
of guided missiles, was given the task of bringing the tankers together. The
first tanker would not be so equipped, but th~ second tanker through its robot
would smell out the first and home on it with a pint-sized rocket engine, using
the smallest of vectors to bring them together. The third would home on the
first two and the fourth on the group.
LeCroix shouid have no trouble-if the
scheme worked.
CHAPTER
THIRTEEN
STRONG
WANTED TO SHOW HARRIMAN the sales reports on the H & S automatic household
switch; Harriman brushed them aside.
Strong shoved them back under his nose.
"You'd better start taking an interest in such things, Delos. Somebody
around this office had better start seeing to it that some money comes in-some
money that belongs to us, personally-or you'll be selling apples on a street
corner."
Harriman leaned back and clasped his hands
back of his head. "George, how can you talk that way on a day like this?
Is there no poetry in your soul? Didn't you hear what I said when I came in?
The rendezvous worked. Tankers one and two are as close together as Siamese
twins. We'll be leaving within the week."
"That's as may be. Business has to go
on."
"You keep it going; I've got a date.
When did Dixon say he would be over?"
"He's due now."
"Good!" Harriman bit the end off
a cigar and went on, "You know, George, I'm not sorry I didn't get to make
the first trip. Now I've still got it t~ do. I'm as expectant as a
bridegroom-and as happy." He started to hum.
Dixon came in without Entenza, a situation
that had obtained since the day Dixon had dropped the pretence that he
controlled only one share. He shook hands. "You heard the news, Dan?"
"George told me."
"This is it-or almost. A week from
now, more or less, I'll be on the Moon. I can hardly believe it."
Dixon sat down silently. Harriman went on,
"Aren't you even going to congratulate me? Man, this is a great dayl"
Dixon said, "D.D., why are you
going?"
"Huh? Don't ask foolish questions.
This is what I ~have been working toward."
"It's not a foolish question. I asked
why you were going. The four colonists have an obvious reason, and each is a
selected specialist observer as well. LeCroix is the pilot. Coster is the man
who is designing the permanent colony. But why are you going? What's your
function?"
"My function? Why, I'm the guy who
runs things. Shucks, I'm going to run for mayor when I get there. Have a cigar,
friend-the name's Harriman. Don't forget to vote." He grinned.
Dixon did not smile. "I did not know
you planned on staying."
Harriman looked sheepish. "Well,
that's still up in the air. If we get the shelter built in a hurry, we may save
enough in the way of supplies to let me sort of lay over until the next trip.
You wouldn't begrudge me that, would you?"
Dixon looked him in the eye. "Delos,
I can't let you go at all."
Harriman was too startled to talk at
first. At last he managed to say, "Don't joke, Dan. I'm going. You can't
stop me. Nothing on Earth can stop me."
Dixon shook his head. "I can't permit
it, Delos. I've got too much sunk in this. If you go and anything happens to
you, I lose it all."
"That's silly. You and George would
just carry on, that's all."
"Ask George."
Strong had nothing to say. He did not seem
anxious to meet Harriman's eyes. Dixon went on, "Don't try to kid your way
out of it, Delos. This venture is you and you are this venture. If you get
killed, the whole thing folds up. I don't say space travel folds up; I think
you've already given that a boost that will carry it along even with lesser men
in your shoes. But as for this venture-our company-it will fold up. George and
I will have to liquidate at about half a cent on the dollar. It would take sale
of patent rights to get that much. The tangible assets aren't worth anything."
"Damn it, it's the intangibles we
sell. You knew that all along."
"You are the intangible asset, Delos.
You are the goose that lays the golden eggs. I want you to stick around until
you've laid them. You must not risk your neck in space flight until you have
this thing on a profit-making basis, so that any competent manager, such as
George or myself, thereafter can keep it solvent. I mean it, Delos. I've got
too much in it to see you risk it in a joy ride."
Harriman stood up and pressed his fingers
down on the edge of his desk. He was breathing hard. "You can't stop
me!" he said slowly and forcefully. "Not all the forces of heaven or
hell can stop me."
Dixon answered quietly, "I'm sorry,
Delos. But I can stop you and I will. I can tie up that ship out there."
"Try it! I own as many lawyers as you
do-and better ones!"
"I think you will find that you are
not as popular in American courts as you once were-not since the United States
found out it didn't own the Moon after all."
"Try it, I tell you. I'll break you
and I'll take your shares away from you, too."
"Easy, Delos! I've no doubt you have
some scheme whereby you could milk the basic company right away from George and
me if you decided to. But it won't be necessary. Nor will it be necessary to
tie up the ship. I want the flight to take place as much as you do. But you
won't be on it, because you will decide not to go."
"I will, eh? Do I look crazy from
where you sit?"
"No, on the contrary."
"Then why won't I go?"
"Because of your note that I hold. I
want to collect it."
"What? There's no due date."
"No. But I want to be sure to collect
it."
"Why, you dumb fool, if I get killed
you collect it sooner than ever."
"Do I? You are mistaken, Delos. If
you are killed-on a flight to the Moon-I collect nothing. I know; I've checked
with every one of the companies underwriting you. Most of them have escape
clauses covering experimental vehicles that date back to early aviation. In any
case all of them will cancel and fight it out in court if you set foot inside
that ship."
"You put them up to this!"
"Calm down, Delos. You'll be bursting
a blood vessel. Certainly I queried them, but I was legitimately looking after
my own interests. I don't want to collect on that note-not now, not by your
death. I want you to pay it back out of your own earnings, by staj'ing here and
nursing this company through till it's stable."
Harriman chucked his cigar, almost
unsmoked and badly chewed, at a waste basket. He missed. "I don't give a
hoot if you lose on it. If you hadn't stirred them up, they'd have paid without
a quiver."
"But it did dig up a weak point in
your plans, Delos. If space travel is to be a success, insurance will have to
reach out and cover the insured anywhere."
"Confound it, one of them does now-N.
A. Mutual."
"I've seen their ad and I've looked
over what they claim to offer. It's just window dressing, with the usual escape
clause. No, insurance will have to be revamped, all sorts of insurance."
Harriman looked thoughtful. "I'll
look into it. George, call Kamens. Maybe we'll have to float our own
company."
"Never mind Kamens," objected
Dixon. "The point is you can't go on this trip. You have too many details
of that sort to watch and plan for and nurse along."
Harriman looked back at him. "You
haven't gotten it through your head, Dan, that I'm going! Tie up the ship if
you can. If you put sheriffs around it, I'll have goons there to toss them
aside."
Dixon looked pained. "I hate to
mention this point, Delos, but I am afraid you will be stopped even if I drop
dead."
"How?"
"Your wife."
"What's she got to do with it?"
"She's ready to sue for separate
maintenance right now-she's found out about this insurance thing. When she
hears about this present plan, she'll force you into court and force an
accounting of your assets."
"You put her up to it!"
Dixon hesitated. He knew that Entenza had
spilled the beans to Mrs. Harriman-maliciously. Yet there seemed no point in
adding to a personal feud. "She's bright enough to have done some
investigating on her own account. I won't deny I've talked to her-but she sent
for me."
"I'll fight both of you!"
Harriman stomped to a window, stood looking out-it was a real window; he liked
to look at the sky.
Dixon came over and put a hand on his
shoulder, saying softly, "Don't take it this way, Delos. Nobody's trying
to keep you from your dream. But you can't go just yet; you can't let us down.
We've stuck with you this far; you owe it to us to stick with us until it's done."
Harriman did not answer; Dixon went on,
"If you don't feel any loyalty toward me, how about George? He's stuck
with you against me, when it hurt him, when he thought you were ruining him-and
you surely were, unless you finish this job. How about George, Delos? Are you
going to let him down, too?"
Harriman swung around, ignoring Dixon and
facing Strong. "What about it, George? Do you think I should stay
behind?"
Strong rubbed his hands and chewed his
lip. Finally he looked up. "It's all right with me, Delos. You do what you
think is best."
Harriman stood looking at him for a long
moment, his face working as if he were going to cry. Then he said huskily,
"Okay, you rats. Okay. I'll stay behind."
CHAPTER
FOURTEEN
IT WAS
ONE OF THOSE GLORIOUS EVENINGS so common in the Pikes Peak region, after a day
in which the sky has been well scrubbed by thunderstorms. The track of the
catapult crawled in a straight line up the face of the mountain, whole
shoulders having been carved away to permit it. At the temporary space port,
still raw from construction, Harriman, in company with visiting notables, was
saying good-bye to the passengers and crew of the Mayflower.
The crowds came right up to the rail of
the catapult. There was no need to keep them back from the ship; the jets would
not blast until she was high over the peak. Only the ship itself was guarded,
the ship and the gleaming rails.
Dixon and Strong, together for company and
mutual support, hung back at the edge of the area roped off for passengers and
officials. They watched Harriman jollying those about to leave: "Good-bye,
Doctor. Keep an eye on him, Janet. Don't let him go looking for Moon
Maidens." They saw him engage Coster in private conversation, then clap
the younger man on the back.
"Keeps his chin up, doesn't he?"
whispered Dixon.
"Maybe we should have let him
go," answered Strong.
"Eh? Nonsense! We've got to have him.
Anyway, his place in history is secure."
"He doesn't care about history,"
Strong answered seriously, "he just wants to go to the Moon."
"Well, confound it-he can go to the
Moon . . . as soon as he gets his job done. After all, it's his job. He made
it."
"I know."
Harriman turned around, saw them, started
toward them. They shut up. "Don't duck," he said jovially. "It's
all right. I'll go on the next trip. By then I plan to have it running itself.
You'll see." He turned back toward the Mayflower. "Quite a sight,
isn't she?"
The outer door was closed; ready lights
winked along the track and from the control tower. A siren sounded.
Harriman moved a step or two closer.
"There she goes!"
It was a shout from the whole crowd. The
great ship started slowly, softly up the track, gathered speed, and shot toward
the distant peak. She was already tiny by the time she curved up the face and
burst into the sky.
She hung there a split second, then a
plume of light exploded from her tail. Her jets had fired.
Then she was a shining light in the sky, a
ball of flame, then-nothing. She was gone, upward and outward, to her
rendezvous with her tankers.
The crowd had pushed to the west end of
the platform as the ship swarmed up the mountain. Harriman had stayed where he
was, nor had Dixon and Strong followed the crowd. The three were alone,
Harriman most alone for he did not seem aware that the others were near him. He
was watching the sky.
Strong was watching him. Presently Strong
barely whispered to Dixon, "Do you read the Bible?"
"Some."
"He looks as Moses must have looked,
when he gazed out over the promised land."
Harriman dropped his eyes from the sky and
saw them. "You guys still here?" he said. "Come on-there's work
to be done."
Delilah and the Space-Rigger
SURE, WE HAD TROUBLE building Space
Station One-but the trouble was people.
Not that building a station twenty-two
thousand three hundred miles out in space is a breeze. It was an engineering
feat bigger than the Panama Canal or the Pyramids-or even the Susquehanna Power
Pile. But "Tiny" Larsen built her and a job Tiny tackles gets built.
I first saw Tiny playing guard on a
semi-pro team, working his way through Oppenheimer Tech. He worked summers for
me thereafter till he graduated. He stayed in construction and eventually I
went to work for him.
Tiny wouldn't touch a job unless he was
satisfied with the engineering. The Station had jobs designed into it that
called for six-armed monkeys instead of grown men in space suits. Tiny spotted
such boners; not a ton of material went into the sky until the specs and
drawings suited him.
But it was people that gave us the
headaches. We bad a sprinkling of married men, but the rest were wild kids,
attracted by high pay and adventure. Some were busted spacemen. Some were
specialists, like electricians and instrument men. About half were deep-sea
divers, used to working in pressure suits. There were sandhogs and riggers and
welders and ship fitters and two circus acrobats.
We fired four of them for being drunk on
the job; Tiny had to break one stiff's arm before he would stay fired. What worried
us was where did they get it? Turned out a ship fitter had rigged a heatless
still, using the vacuum around us. He was making vodka from potatoes swiped
from the commissary. I hated to let him go, but he was too smart.
Since we were falling free in a 24-hour
circular orbit, with everything weightless and floating, you'd think that
shooting craps was impossible. But a radioman named Peters figured a dodge to
substitute steel dice and a magnetic field. He also eliminated the element of
chance, so we fired him.
We planned to ship him back in the next
supply ship, the R.S. Half Moon. I was in Tiny's office when she blasted to
match our orbit. Tiny swam to the view port "Send for Peters, Dad,"
he said, "and give him the old heave ho. Who's his relief?"
"Party named G. Brooks McNye," I
told him.
A line came snaking over from the ship.
Tiny said, "I don't believe she's matched." He buzzed the radio shack
for the ship's motion relative to the Station. The answer didn't please him and
he told them to call the Half Moon.
Tiny waited until the screen showed the
rocket ship.
C.O. "Good morning, Captain. Why have
you placed a line on us?"
"For cargo, naturally. Get your
hopheads over here. I want to blast off before we enter the shadow." The
Station spent about an hour and a quarter each day passing through Earth's
shadow; we worked two eleven-hour shifts and skipped the dark period, to avoid
rigging lights and heating suits.
Tiny shook his head. "Not until
you've matched course and speed with us."
"I am matched!"
"Not to specification, by my
instruments."
"Have a heart, Tiny! I'm short on
maneuvering fuel. If I juggle this entire ship to make a minor correction on a
few lousy tons of cargo, I'll be so late I'll have to put down on a secondary field.
I may even have to make a dead-stick landing." In those days all ships had
landing wings.
"Look, Captain," Tiny said
sharply, "the only purpose of your lift was to match orbits for those same
few lousy tons. I don't care if you land in Little America on a pogo stick. The
first load here was placed with loving care in the proper orbit, and I'm making
every other load match. Get that covered wagon into the groove."
"Very well, Superintendent!"
Captain Shields said stiffly. "Don't be sore, Don," Tiny said softly.
"By the way, you've got a passenger for me?"
"Oh, yes, so I have!" Shields'
face broke out in a grin.
"Well, keep him aboard until we
unload. Maybe we can beat the shadow yet."
"Fine, fine! After all, why should I
add to your troubles?" The skipper switched off, leaving my boss looking
puzzled.
We didn't have time to wonder at his
words. Shields whipped his ship around on gyros, blasted a second or two, and
put her dead in space with us pronto-and used very little fuel, despite his bellyaching.
I grabbed every man we could spare and managed to get the cargo clear before we
swung into Earth's shadow. Weightlessness is an unbelievable advantage in
handling freight; we gutted the Half Moon-by hand, mind you-in fifty-four
minutes.
The stuff was oxygen tanks, loaded, and
aluminum mirrors to shield them, panels of outer skin-sandwich stuff of
titanium alloy sheet with foamed glass filling-and cases of jato units to spin
the living quarters. Once it was all out and snapped to our cargo line I sent
the men back by the same line-I won't let a man work outside without a line no
matter how space happy he figures he is. Then I told Shields to send over the
passenger and cast off.
This little guy came out the ship's air
lock, and hooked on to the ship's line. Handling himself like he was used to
space, he set his feet and dived, straight along the stretched line, his snap
hook running free. I hurried back and motioned him to follow me. Tiny, the new
man, and I reached the air locks together.
Besides the usual cargo lock we had three
Kwikloks. A Kwiklok is an Iron Maiden without spikes; it fits a man in a suit,
leaving just a few pints of air to scavenge, and cycles automatically. A big
time saver in changing shifts. I passed through the middle-sized one; Tiny, of
course, used the big one. Without hesitation the new man pulled himself into
the small one.
We went into Tiny's office. Tiny strapped
down, and pushed his helmet back. "Well, McNye," he said. "Glad
to have you with us."
The new radio tech opened his helmet. I
heard a low, pleasant voice answer, "Thank you."
I stared and didn't say anything. From
where I was I could see that the radio tech was wearing a hair ribbon.
I thought Tiny would explode. He didn't
need to see the hair ribbon; with the helmet up it was clear that the new
"man" was as female as Venus deMilo. Tiny sputtered, then he was
unstrapped and diving for the view port. "Dad!" he yelled. "Get
the radio shack. Stop that ship!"
But the Half Moon was already a ball of
fire in the distance. Tiny looked dazed. "Dad," he said, "who
else knows about this?"
"Nobody, so far as I know."
He thought a bit. "We've got to keep
her out of sight.
That's it-we keep her locked up and out of
sight until the next ship matches in." He didn't look at her.
"What in the world are you talking
about?" McNye's voice was higher and no longer pleasant.
Tiny glared. "You, that's what. What
are you-a stowaway?'
"Don't be silly! I'm G. B. McNye,
electronics engineer. Don't you have my papers?"
Tiny turned to me. "Dad, this is your
fault. How in Chr- pardon me, Miss. How did you let them send you a woman?
Didn't you even read the advance report on her?"
"Me?" I said. "Now see
here, you big squarehead! Those forms don't show sex; the Fair Employment
Commission won't allow it except where it's pertinent to the job."
"You're telling me it's not pertinent
to the job here?"
"Not by job classification it ain't.
There's lots of female radio and radar men, back Earthside."
"This isn't Earthside." He had
something. He was thinking of those two-legged wolves swarming over the job
outside. And G. B. McNye was pretty. Maybe eight months of no women at all
affected my judgment, but she would pass.
"I've even heard of female rocket
pilots," I added, for spite.
"I don't care if you've heard of
female archangels; I'll have no women here!"
"Just a minute!" If I was riled,
she was plain sore. "You're the construction superintendent, are you
not?"
"Yes," Tiny admitted.
"Very well, then, how do you know
what sex I am?'
"Are you trying to deny that you are
a woman?"
"Hardly! I'm proud of it. But
officially you don't know what sex G. Brooks McNye is. That's why I use 'G'
instead of Gloria. I don't ask favors."
Tiny grunted. "You won't get any. I
don't know how you sneaked in, but get this, McNye, or Gloria, or whatever.
you're fired. You go back on the next ship. Meanwhile we'll try to keep the men
from knowing we've got a woman aboard."
I could see her count ten. "May I
speak," she said finally, "or does your Captain Bligh act extend to
that, too?"
"Say your say."
"I didn't sneak in. I am on the
permanent staff of the Station, Chief Communications Engineer. I took this
vacancy myself to get to know the equipment while it was being installed. I'll
live here eventually; I see no reason not to start now."
Tiny waved it away. "There'll be men
and women both here some day. Even kids. Right now it's stag and it'll stay
that way."
"We'll see. Anyhow, you can't fire
me; radio personnel don't work for you." She had a point; communicators
and some other specialists were lent to the contractors, Five Companies,
Incorporated, by Harriman Enterprises.
Tiny snorted. "Maybe I can't fire
you; I can send you home. Requisitioned personnel must be satisfactory to the
contractor, meaning me. Paragraph Seven, clause M; I wrote that clause
myself."
"Then you know that if requisitioned
personnel are refused without cause the contractor bears the replacement
cost"
"I'll risk paying your fare home, but
I won't have you here."
"You are most unreasonable!"
"Perhaps, but I'll decide what's good
for the job. I'd rather have a dope peddler than have a woman sniffing around
my boys!"
She gasped. Tiny knew he had said too
much; he added, "Sorry, Miss. But that's it. You'll' stay under cover
until I can get rid of you."
Before she could speak I cut in.
"Tiny-look behind you!" Staring in the port was one of the riggers,
his eyes bugged out. Three or four more floated up and joined him.
Then Tiny zoomed up to the port and they
scattered like minnows. He scared them almost out of their suits; I thought he
was going to shove his fists through the quartz.
He came back looking whipped.
"Miss," he said, pointing, "wait in my room." When she was
gone he added, "Dad, what'll we do?"
I said, "I thought you had made up
your mind, Tiny."
"I have," he answered peevishly.
"Ask the Chief Inspector to come in, will you?"
That showed how far gone he was. The
inspection gang belonged to Harriman Enterprises, not to us, and Tiny rated
them mere nuisances. Besides, Tiny was an Oppenheimer graduate; Dalrymple was
from M.I.T.
He came in, brash and cheerful. "Good
morning, Superintendent. Morning, Mr. Witherspoon. What can I do for you?"
Glumly, Tiny told the story. Dalrymple
looked smug. "She's right, old man. You can send her back and even specify
a male relief. But I can hardly endorse 'for proper cause' now, can I?"
"Damnation. Dalrymple, we can't have
a woman around here!"
"A moot point. Not covered by
contract, y'know."
"If your office hadn't sent us a
crooked gambler as her predecessor I wouldn't be in this am!"
"There, there! Remember the old blood
pressure. Suppose we leave the endorsement open and arbitrate the cost. That's
fair, eh?"
"I suppose so. Thanks."
"Not at all. But consider this: when
you rushed Peters off before interviewing the newcomer, you cut yourself down
to one operator. Hammond can't stand watch twenty-four hours a day."
"He can sleep in the shack. The alarm
will wake him."
"I can't accept that. The home office
and ships' frequencies must be guarded at all times. Harriman Enterprises has
supplied a qualified operator; I am afraid you must use her for the time
being."
Tiny will always cooperate with the
inevitable; he said quietly, "Dad, she'll take first shift. Better put the
married men on that shift."
Then he called her in. "Go to the
radio shack and start makee-learnee, so that Hammond can go off watch soon.
Mind what he tells you. He's a good man."
"I know," she said briskly.
"I trained him."
Tiny bit his lip. The C.I. said, "The
Superintendent doesn't bother with trivia-I'm Robert Dalrymple, Chief
Inspector. He probably didn't introduce his assistant either-Mr.
Witherspoon."
"Call me Dad," I said.
She smiled and said, "Howdy,
Dad." I felt warm clear through. She went on to Dalrymple, "Odd that
we haven't met before."
Tiny butted in. "McNye, you'll sleep
in my room-"
She raised her eyebrows; he went on
angrily, "Oh, I'll get my stuff out-at once. And get this: keep the door
locked, off shift.'
"You're darn tootin' I will!"
Tiny blushed.
I was too busy to see much of Miss Gloria.
There was cargo to stow, the new tanks to install and shield. That left the
most worrisome task of all: putting spin on the living quarters. Even the
optimists didn't expect much interplanetary traffic for some years;
nevertheless Harriman Enterprises wanted to get some activities moved in and
paying rent against their enormous investment.
I.T.&T. had leased space for a
microwave relay station several million a year from television alone. The
Weather Bureau was itching to set up its hemispheric integrating station;
Palomar Observatory had a concession (Harriman Enterprises donated that space);
the Security Council had, some hush-hush project; Fermi Physical Labs and
Kettering Institute each had space-a dozen tenants wanted to move in now, or
sooner, even if we never completed accommodations for tourists and travelers.
There were time bonuses in it for Five
Companies, Incorporated-and their help. So we were in a hurry to get spin on
the quarters.
People who have never been out have
trouble getting through their heads-at least I had-that there is no feeling of
weight, no up and down, in a free orbit in space. There's' Earth, round and beautiful,
only twenty-odd thousand miles away, close enough to brush your sleeve. You
know it's pulling you towards it. Yet you feel no weight, absolutely none. You
float..
Floating is fine for some types of work,
but when it's time to eat, or play cards, or bathe, it's good to feel weight on
your feet. Your dinner stays quiet and you feel more natural.
You've seen pictures of the Station-a huge
cylinder, like a bass drum, with ships' nose pockets dimpling its sides.
Imagine a snare drum, spinning around inside the bass drum; that's the living
quarters, with centrifugal force pinch-hitting for gravity. We could have spun
the whole Station but you can't berth a ship against a whirling dervish.
So we built a spinning part for creature
comfort and an outer, stationary part for docking, tanks, storerooms, and the
like. You pass from one to the other at the hub. When Miss Gloria joined us the
inner part was closed in and pressurized, but the rest was a skeleton of
girders.
Mighty pretty though, a great network of
shiny struts and ties against black sky and stars-titanium alloy 1403, light,
strong, and non-corrodible. The Station is flimsy compared with a ship, since
it doesn't have to take blastoff stresses. That meant we didn't dare put on
spin by violent means-which is where jato units come in.
"Jato"-Jet Assisted
Take-Off-rocket units invented to give airplanes a boost. Now we use them
wherever a controlled push is needed, say to get a truck out of the mud on a
dam job. We mounted four thousand. of them around the frame of the living
quarters, each one placed just so. They were wired up and ready to fire when
Tiny came to me looking worried. "Dad," he said, "let's drop
everything and finish compartment D-ll3."
"Okay," I said. D-l13 was in the
non-spin part.
"Rig an air lock and stock it with
two weeks supplies."
"That'll change your mass
distribution for spin," I suggested.
"I'll refigure it next dark period.
Then we'll shift jatos."
When Dalrymple heard about it he came
charging around. It meant a delay in making rental space available.
"What's the idea?"
Tiny stared at him. They had been cooler
than ordinary lately; Dalrymple had been finding excuses to seek out Miss
Gloria. He had to pass through Tiny's office to reach her temporary room, and
Tiny had finally told him to get out and stay out. "The idea," Tiny
said slowly, "is to have a pup tent in case the house burns."
"What do you mean?"
"Suppose we fire up the jatos and the
structure cracks? Want to hang around in a space suit until a ship happens
by?"
"That's silly. The stresses have been
calculated."
"That's what the man said when the
bridge fell. We'll do it my way."
Dalrymple stormed off.
Tiny's efforts to keep Gloria fenced up
were sort of pitiful. In the first place, the radio tech's biggest job was
repairing suit walkie-talkies, done on watch. A rash of such troubles broke
out-on her shift. I made some shift transfers and docked a few for costs, too;
it's not proper maintenance when a man deliberately busts his aerial.
There were other symptoms. It became
stylish to shave. Men started wearing shirts around quarters and bathing
increased to where I thought I would have to rig another water still.
Came the shift when D-l13 was ready and
the jatos readjusted. I don't mind saying I was nervous. All hands were ordered
out of the quarters and into suits. They perched around the girders and waited.
Men in space suits all look alike; we used
numbers and colored armbands. Supervisors had two antennas, one for a gang
frequency, one for the supervisors' circuit. With Tiny and me the second
antenna hooked back through the radio shack and to all the gang frequencies-a
broadcast.
The supervisors had reported their men
clear of the fireworks and I was about to give Tiny the word, when this figure
came climbing through the girders, inside the danger zone. No safety line. No
armband. One antenna.
Miss Gloria, of course. Tiny hauled her
out of the blast zone, and anchored her with his own safety line. I heard his
voice, harsh in my helmet: "Who do you think you are? A sidewalk
superintendent?"
And her voice: "What do you expect me
to do? Go park on, a star?"
"I told you to stay away from the
job. If you can't obey orders, I'll lock you up."
I reached him, switched off my radio and
touched helmet. "Boss! Boss!" I said. "You're
broadcasting!"
"Oh-" he says, switches off, and
touches helmets with her. We could still hear her; she didn't switch off.
"Why, you big baboon, I came outside because you sent a search party to
clear everybody out," and, "How would I know about a safety line
rule? You've kept me penned up." And finally, "We'll see!"
I dragged him away and he told the boss
electrician to go ahead. Then we forgot the row for we were looking at the
prettiest fireworks ever seen, a giant St. Catherine's wheel, rockets blasting
all over it. Utterly soundless, out there in space-but beautiful beyond
compare.
The blasts died away and there was the
living quarters, spinning true as a flywheel-Tiny and I both let out sighs of
relief. We all went back inside then to see what weight tasted like.
It tasted funny. I went through the shaft
and started down the ladders, feeling myself gain weight as I neared the rim. I
felt seasick, like the first time I experienced no weight. I could hardly walk
and my calves cramped.
We inspected throughout, then went to the
office and sat down. It felt good, just right for comfort, one-third gravity at
the rim. Tiny rubbed his chair arms and grinned, "Beats being penned up in
D-113."
"Speaking of being penned up,"
Miss Gloria said, walking in, "may I have a word with you, Mr.
Larsen?"
"Uh? Why, certainly. Matter of fact,
I wanted to see you. I owe you an apology, Miss McNye.'I was-"
"Forget it," she cut in.
"You were on edge. But I want to know this: how long are you going to keep
up this nonsense, of trying to chaperone me?"
He studied her. "Not long. Just till
your relief arrives."
"So? Who is the shop steward around
here?"
"A shipfitter named McAndrews. But
you can't use him. You're a staff member."
"Not in the job I'm filling. I am
going to talk to him. You're discriminating against me, and in my off time at
that."
"Perhaps, but you will find I have
the authority. Legally I'm a ship's captain, while on this job. A captain in
space has wide discriminatory powers."
"Then you should use them with
discrimination!" He grinned. "Isn't that what you just said I was
doing?" We didn't hear from the shop steward, but Miss Gloria started
doing as she pleased. She showed up at the movies, next off shift, with
Dalrymple. Tiny left in the middle-good show, too; Lysistrata Goes to Town,
relayed up from New York.
As she was coming back alone he stopped
her, having seen to it that I was present. "Umm-Miss McNye. . . ."
"Yes?"
"I think you should know, uh,
well...Chief Inspector Dalrymple is a married man."
"Are you suggesting that my conduct
has been improper?"
"No, but-"
"Then mind your own business!"
Before he could answer she added, "It might interest you that he told me
about your four children."
Tiny sputtered. "Why. . . why, I'm
not even married!"
"So? That makes it worse, doesn't
it?" She swept out.
Tiny quit trying to keep her in her room,
but told her to notify him whenever she left it. It kept him busy riding herd
on her. I refrained from suggesting that he get Dalrymple to spell him.
But I was surprised when he told me to put
through the order dismissing her. I had been pretty sure he was going to drop
it.
"What's the charge?" I asked.
"Insubordination!"
I kept mum. He said, "Well, she won't
take orders."
"She does her work okay. You give her
orders you wouldn't give to one of the men and that a man wouldn't take."
"You disagree with my orders?"
"That's not the point. You can't
prove the charge, Tiny."
"Well, charge her with being female!
I can prove that."
I didn't say anything. "Dad," he
added wheedlingly, "you know how to write it. No personal animus against
Miss McNye, but it is felt that as a matter of policy, and so forth and so
on."
I wrote it and gave it to Hammond
privately. Radio techs are sworn to secrecy but it didn't surprise me when I
was stopped by O'Connor, one of our best metalsmiths. "Look, Dad, is it
true that the Old Man is getting rid of Brooksie?"
"Brooksie?"
"Brooksie McNye, she says to call her
Brooks. Is it true?" I admitted it, then went on, wondering if I should
have lied.
It takes four hours, about, for a ship to
lift from Earth. The shift before the Pole Star was due, with Miss Gloria's
relief, the timekeeper brought me two separation slips. Two men were nothing;
we averaged more each ship. An hour later he reached me by supervisors circuit,
and asked me to come to the time office. I was out on the rim inspecting a weld
job; I said no. "Please, Mr. Witherspoon," he begged, "you've
got to." When one of the boys doesn't call me 'Dad,' it means something. I
went.
There was a queue like mail call outside
his door; I went in and he shut the door on them. He handed me a double handful
of separation slips. "What in the great depths of night is this?" I
asked.
"There's dozens more I ain't had time
to write up yet."
None of the slips had any reason
given-just "own choice." "Look, Jimmie what goes on here?"
"Can't you dope it out, Dad? Shucks,
I'm turning in one, too."
I told him my guess and he admitted it. So
I took the slips, called Tiny and told him for the love of Heaven to come to
his office.
Tiny chewed his lip considerable.
"But, Dad, they can't strike. It's a non-strike contract with bonds from
every union concerned."
"It's no strike, Tiny. You can't stop
a man from quitting."
"They'll pay their own fares back, so
help me!"
"Guess again. Most of 'em have worked
long enough for the free ride."
"We'll have to hire others quick, or
we'll miss our date."
"Worse than that, Tiny, we won't
finish. By next dark period you won't even have a maintenance crew."
"I've never had a gang of men quit
me. I'll talk to them."
"No good, Tiny. You're up against
something too strong for you."
"You're against me, Dad?"
"I'm never against you, Tiny."
He said, "Dad, you think I'm
pig-headed, but I'm right. You can't have one woman among several hundred men.
It drives 'em nutty."
I didn't say it affected him the same way;
I said, "Is that bad?"
"Of course. I can't let the job be
ruined to humor one woman."
"Tiny, have you looked at the
progress charts lately?"
"I've hardly had time to-what about
them?"
I knew why he hadn't had time.
"You'll have trouble proving Miss Gloria interfered with the job. We're
ahead of schedule."
"We are?"
While he was studying the charts I put an
arm around his shoulder. "Look, son," I said, "sex has been
around our planet a long time. Earthside, they never get away from it, yet some
pretty big jobs get built anyhow. Maybe we'll just have to learn to live with
it here, too. Matter of fact, you had the answer a minute ago."
"I did? I sure didn't know it."
"You said, 'You can't have one woman
among several hundred men. Get me?"
"Huh? No, I don't. Wait a minute!
Maybe I do."
"Ever tried ju jitsu? Sometimes you
win by relaxing."
"Yes. Yes!"
"When you can't beat 'em, you join
'em."
He buzzed the radio shack. "Have
Hammond relieve you, McNye, and come to my office."
He did it handsomely, stood up and made a
speech-he'd been wrong, taken him a long time to see it, hoped there were no
hard feelings, etc. He was instructing the home office to see how many jobs
could be filled at once with female help. "Don't forget married
couples," I put in mildly, "and better ask for some older women,
too."
"I'll do that," Tiny agreed.
"Have I missed anything, Dad?"
"Guess not. We'll have to rig
quarters, but there's time."
"Okay. I'm telling them to hold the
Pole Star, Gloria, so they can send us a few this trip."
"That's fine" She looked really
happy.
He chewed his lip. "I've a feeling
I've missed something. Hmm-I've got it. Dad, tell them to send up a chaplain
for the Station, as soon as possible. Under the new policy we may need one
anytime." I thought so, too.
Space Jockey
JUST AS
THEY WERE LEAVING the telephone called his name. "Don't answer it,"
she pleaded. "We'll miss the curtain."
"Who is it?" he called out. The
viewplate lighted; he recognized Olga Pierce, and behind her the Colorado
Springs office of Trans-Lunar Transit.
"Calling Mr. Pemberton. Calling-Oh,
it's you, Jake. You're on. Flight 27, Supra-New York to Space Terminal. I'll
have a copter pick you up in twenty minutes."
"How come?" he protested.
"I'm fourth down on the call board."
"You were fourth down. Now you are
standby pilot to Hicks-and he just got a psycho down-check."
"Hicks got psychoed? That's
silly!"
"Happens to the best, chum. Be ready.
"Bye now."
His wife was twisting sixteen dollars
worth of lace handkerchief to a shapeless mass. "Jake, this is ridiculous.
For three months I haven't seen enough of you to know what you look like."
"Sorry, kid. Take Helen to the
show."
"Oh, Jake, I don't care about the
show; I wanted to get you where they couldn't reach you for once."
"They would have called me at the
theater."
"Oh, no! I wiped out the record you'd
left."
"Phyllis! Are you trying to get me
fired?"
"Don't look at me that way." She
waited, hoping that he would speak, regretting the side issue, and wondering
how to tell him that her own fretfulness was caused, not by disappointment, but
by gnawing worry for his safety every time he went out into space.
She went on desperately, "You don't
have to take this flight, darling; you've been on Earth less than the time limit.
Please, Jake!"
He was peeling off his tux. "I've
told you a thousand times: a pilot doesn't get a regular run by playing
space-lawyer with the rule book. Wiping out my follow-up message-why did you do
it, Phyllis? Trying to ground me?"
"No, darling, but I thought just this
once-"
"When they offer me a flight I take
it." He walked stiffly out of the room.
He came back ten minutes later, dressed
for space and apparently in good humor; he was whistling: "-the caller
called Casey at half past four; he kissed his-" He broke off when he saw
her face, and set his mouth. "Where's my coverall?"
"I'll get it. Let me fix you
something to eat."
'You know I can't take high acceleration
on a full stomach. And why lose thirty bucks to lift another pound?"
Dressed as he was, in shorts, singlet,
sandals, and pocket belt, he was already good for about minus-fifty pounds in
weight bonus; she started to tell him the weight penalty on a sandwich and -a
cup of coffee did not matter to them, but it was just one more possible cause
for misunderstanding.
Neither of them said much until the
taxicab clumped on the roof. He kissed her goodbye and told her not to come
outside. She obeyed-until she heard the helicopter take off. Then she climbed
to the roof and watched it out of sight.
The traveling-public gripes at the lack of
direct Earth-to-Moon service, but it takes three types of rocket ships and two
space-station changes to make a fiddling quarter-million-mile jump for a good
reason: Money.
The Commerce Commission has set the
charges for the present three-stage lift from here to the Moon at thirty
dollars a pound. Would direct service be cheaper? A ship designed to blast off from Earth, make an airless landing
on the Moon, return and make an atmosphere landing, would be so cluttered up
with heavy special equipment used only once in the trip that it could not show
a profit at a thousand dollars a pound! Imagine combining a ferry boat, a
subway train, and an express elevator. So Trans-Lunar uses rockets braced for
catapulting, and winged for landing on return to Earth to make the terrific
lift from Earth to our satellite station Supra-New York. The long middle lap,
from there to where Space Terminal circles the Moon, calls for comfort-but no
landing gear. The Flying Dutchman and the Philip Nolan never land; they were
even assembled in space, and they resemble winged rockets like the Skysprite
and the Firefly as little as a Pullman train resembles a parachute.
The Moonbat and the Gremlin are good only
for the jump from Space Terminal down to Luna . . . no wings, cocoon-like
acceleration-and-crash hammocks, fractional controls on their enormous jets.
The change-over points would not have to
be more than air-conditioned tanks. Of course Space Terminal is quite a city,
what with the Mars and Venus traffic, but even today Supra-New York is still
rather primitive, hardly more than a fueling point and a restaurant-waiting
room. It has only been the past five years that it has even been equipped to
offer the comfort of one-gravity centrifuge service to passengers with queasy
stomachs.
Pemberton weighed in at the spaceport
office, then hurried over to where the Skysprite stood cradled in the catapult.
He shucked off his coverall, shivered as he handed it to the gateman, and
ducked inside. He went to his acceleration hammock and went to sleep; the lift
to Supra-New York was not his worry-his job was deep space.
He woke at the surge of the catapult and
the nerve-tingling rush up the face of Pikes Peak. When the Skysprite went into
free flight, flung straight up above the Peak, Pemberton held his breath; if
the rocket jets failed to fire, the ground-to-space pilot must try to wrestle
her into a glide and bring her down, on her wings.
The rockets roared on time; Jake went back
to sleep.
When the Skysprite locked in with
Supra-New York, Pemberton went to the station's stellar navigation room. He was
pleased to find Shorty Weinstein, the computer, on duty. Jake trusted Shorty's
computations-a good thing when your ship, your passengers, and your own skin
depend thereon. Pemberton had to be a better than average mathematician himself
in order to be a pilot; his own limited talent made him appreciate the genius
of those who computed the orbits.
"Hot Pilot Pemberton, the Scourge of
the Spaceways - Hi!" Weinstein handed him a sheet of paper.
Jake looked at it, then looked amazed.
"Hey, Shorty- you've made a mistake."
"Huh? Impossible. Mabel can't make
mistakes." Weinstein gestured at the giant astrogation computer filling
the far wall.
"You made a mistake. You gave me an
easy fix - 'Vega, Antares, Regulus.' You make things easy for the pilot and
your guild'll chuck you out." Weinstein looked sheepish but pleased.
"I see I don't blast off for seventeen hours. I could have taken the
morning freight." Jake's thoughts went back to Phyllis.
"UN canceled the morning trip."
"Oh-" Jake shut up, for he knew
Weinstein knew as little as he did. Perhaps the flight would have passed too
close to an A-bomb rocket, circling the globe like a policeman. The General
Staff of the Security Council did not give out information about the top
secrets guarding the peace of the planet. Pemberton shrugged. "Well, if
I'm asleep, call me three hours minus."
"Right. Your tape will be
ready."
While he slept, the Flying Dutchman nosed
gently into her slip, sealed her airlocks to the Station, discharged passengers
and freight from Luna City. When he woke, her holds were filling, her fuel
replenished, and passengers boarding. He stopped by the post office radio desk,
looking for a letter from Phyllis. Finding none, he told himself that she would
have sent it to Terminal. He went on into the restaurant, bought the facsimile
Herald-Tribune, and settled down grimly to enjoy the comics and his breakfast.
A man sat down opposite him and proceeded
to plague him with silly questions about rocketry, topping it by
misinterpreting the insignia embroidered on Pemberton's singlet and miscalling
him "Captain." Jake hurried through breakfast to escape him, then
picked up the tape from his automatic pilot, and went aboard the Flying
Dutchman.
After reporting to the Captain he went to
the control room, floating and pulling himself along by the handgrips. He
buckled himself into the pilot's chair and started his check off.
Captain Kelly drifted in and took the
other chair as Pemberton was finishing his checking runs on the ballistic
tracker. "Have a Camel, Jake."
"I'll take a rain check." He
continued. Kelly watched him with a slight frown. Like captains and pilots on
Mark Twain's Mississippi-and for the same reasons-a spaceship captain bosses
his ship, his crew, his cargo, and his passengers, but the pilot is the final,
legal, and unquestioned boss of how the ship is handled from blast-off to the
end of the trip. A captain may turn down a given pilot-nothing more. Kelly
fingered a slip of paper tucked in his pouch and turned over in his mind the
words with which the Company psychiatrist on duty had handed it to him.
"I'm giving this pilot clearance,
Captain, but you need not accept it."
"Pemberton's a good man. What's
wrong?"
The psychiatrist thought over what he had
observed while posing as a silly tourist bothering a stranger at breakfast.
"He's a little more anti-social than his past record shows. Something on
his mind. Whatever it is, he can tolerate it for the present. We'll keep an eye
on him."
Kelly had answered, "Will you come
along with him as pilot?"
"If you wish."
"Don't bother-I'll take him. No need
to lift a deadhead." Pemberton fed Weinstein's tape into the robot-pilot,
then turned to Kelly. "Control ready, sir."
"Blast when ready, Pilot." Kelly
felt relieved when he heard himself make the irrevocable decision.
Pemberton signaled the Station to cast
loose. The great ship was nudged out by an expanding pneumatic ram until she
swam in space a thousand feet away, secured by a single line. He then turned
the ship to its blast-off direction by causing a flywheel, mounted on gimbals
at the ship's center of gravity, to spin rapidly. The ship spun slowly in the
opposite direction, by grace of Newton's Third Law of Motion.
Guided by the tape, the robot-pilot tilted
prisms of the pilot's periscope so that Vega, Antares, and Regulus would shine
as one image when the ship was headed right; Pemberton nursed the ship to that
heading . . . fussily; a mistake of one minute of arc here meant two hundred
miles at destination.
When the three images made a pinpoint, he
stopped the flywheels and locked in the gyros. He then checked the heading of
his ship by direct observation of each of the stars, just as a salt-water
skipper uses a sextant, but with incomparably more accurate instruments. This
told him nothing about the correctness of the course Weinstein had ordered-he
had to take that as Gospel-but it assured him that the robot and its tape were
behaving as planned. Satisfied, he cast off the last line.
Seven minutes to go-Pemberton flipped the
switch permitting the robot-pilot to blast away when its clock told it to. He
waited, hands poised over the manual controls, ready to take over if the robot
failed, and felt the old, inescapable sick excitement building up inside him.
Even as adrenaline poured into him,
stretching his time sense, throbbing in his ears, his mind kept turning back to
Phyllis.
He admitted she had a kick coming-spacemen
shouldn't marry. Not that she'd starve if he messed up a landing, but a gal
doesn't want insurance; she wants a husband-minus six minutes. If he got a
regular run she could live in Space Terminal.
No good-idle women at Space Terminal went
bad. Oh, Phyllis wouldn't become a tramp or a rum bum; she'd just go bats.
Five minutes more-he didn't care much for
Space Terminal himself. Nor for space! "The Romance of Interplanetary
Travel" - it looked well in print, but he knew what it was: A job.
Monotony. No scenery. Bursts of work, tedious waits. No home life.
Why didn't he get an honest job and stay
home nights?
He knew! Because he was a space jockey and
too old to change.
What chance has a thirty-year-old married
man, used to important money, to change his racket? (Four minutes) He'd look
good trying to sell helicopters on commission, now, wouldn't he?
Maybe he could buy a piece of irrigated
land and - Be your age, chum! You know as much about farming as a cow knows
about cube root! No, he had made his bed when he picked rockets during his
training hitch. If he had bucked for the electronics branch, or taken a 01
scholarship-too late now. Straight from the service into Harriman's Lunar
Exploitations, hopping ore on Luna. That had torn it.
"How's it going, Doc?" Kelly's
voice was edgy.
"Minus two minutes some
seconds." Damnation-Kelly knew better than to talk to the pilot on minus
time.
He caught a last look through the
periscope. Antares seemed to have drifted. He unclutched the gyro, tilted and
spun the flywheel, braking it savagely to a stop a moment later. The image was
again a pinpoint. He could not have explained what he did: it was virtuosity,
exact juggling, beyond textbook and classroom.
Twenty seconds . . . across the
chronometer's face beads of light trickled the seconds away while he tensed,
ready to fire by hand, or even to disconnect and refuse the trip if his
judgment told him to. A too-cautious decision might cause Lloyds' to cancel his
bond; a reckless decision could cost his license or even his life-and others.
But he was not thinking of underwriters
and licenses, nor even of lives. In truth he was not thinking at all; he was
feeling, feeling his ship, as if his nerve ends extended into every part of
her. Five seconds . . . the safety disconnects clicked out. Four seconds . . .
three seconds. . . two seconds. . . one-
He was stabbing at the hand-fire button
when the roar hit him.
Kelly relaxed to the pseudo-gravity of the
blast and watched. Pemberton was soberly busy, scanning dials, noting time,
checking his progress by radar bounced off Supra-New York. Weinstein's figures,
robot-pilot, the ship itself, all were clicking together.
Minutes later, the critical instant neared
when the robot should cut the jets. Pemberton poised a finger over the hand
cut-off, while splitting his attention among radarscope, accelerometer,
periscope, and chronometer. One instant they were roaring along on the jets;
the next split second the ship was in free orbit, plunging silently toward the
Moon. So perfectly matched were human and robot that Pemberton himself did not
know which had cut the power.
He glanced again at the board, then
unbuckled. "How about that cigarette, Captain? And you can let your
passengers unstrap."
No co-pilot is needed in space and most
pilots would rather share a toothbrush than a control room. The pilot works
about an hour at blast off, about the same before contact, and loafs during
free flight, save for routine checks and corrections. Pemberton prepared to
spend one hundred and four hours eating, reading, writing letters, and
sleeping-especially sleeping.
When the alarm woke him, he checked the
ship's position, then wrote to his wife. "Phyllis my dear," he began,
"I don't blame you for being upset at missing your night out. I was
disappointed, too. But bear with me, darling, I should be on a regular run
before long. In less than ten years I'll be up for retirement and we'll have a
chance to catch up on bridge and golf and things like that. I know it's pretty
hard to-"
The voice circuit cut in "Oh,
Jake-put on your company face. I'm bringing a visitor to the control
room."
"No visitors in the control room,
Captain."
"Now, Jake. This lunkhead has a
letter from Old Man Harriman himself. 'Every possible courtesy-' and so
forth."
Pemberton thought quickly. He could
refuse-but there was no sense in offending the big boss. "Okay, Captain.
Make it short."
The visitor was a man, jovial,
oversize-Jake figured him for an eighty pound weight penalty. Behind him a
thirteen year-old male counterpart came zipping through the door and lunged for
the control console. Pemberton snagged him by the arm and forced himself to
speak pleasantly. "Just hang on to that bracket, youngster. I don't want
you to bump your head."
"Leggo me! Pop-make him let go."
Kelly cut in. "I think he had best
hang on, Judge."
"Umm, uh-very well. Do as the Captain
says, Junior."
"Aw, gee, Pop!"
"Judge Schacht, this is First Pilot
Pemberton," Kelly said rapidly. "He'll show you around."
"Glad to know you, Pilot. Kind of
you, and all that."
"What would you like to see,
Judge?" Jake said carefully.
"Oh, this and that. It's for the
boy-his first trip. I'm an old spacehound myself-probably more hours than half
your crew." He laughed. Pemberton did not.
"There's not much to see in free
flight."
"Quite all right. We'll just make
ourselves at home-eh, Captain?"
"I wanna sit in the control
seat," Schacht Junior announced.
Pemberton winced. Kelly said urgently,
"Jake, would you mind outlining the control system for the boy? Then we'll
go."
"He doesn't have to show me anything.
I know all about it. I'm a Junior Rocketeer of America-see my button?" The
boy shoved himself toward the control desk.
Pemberton grabbed him, steered him into
the pilot's chair, and strapped him in. He then flipped the board's disconnect.
"Whatcha doing?"
"I cut off power to the controls so I
could explain them."
"Aintcha gonna fire the jets?"
"No." Jake started a rapid description
of the use and purpose of each button, dial, switch, meter, gimmick, and scope.
Junior squirmed. "How about
meteors?" he demanded.
"Oh, that-maybe one collision in half
a million EarthMoon trips. Meteors are scarce."
"So what? Say you hit the jackpot?
You're in the soup."
"Not at all. The anti-collision radar
guards all directions five hundred miles out. If anything holds a steady
bearing for three seconds, a direct hook-up starts the jets. First a warning
gong so that everybody can grab something solid, then one second later - Boom!
- We get out of there fast."
"Sounds corny to me. Lookee, I'll
show you how Commodore Cartwright did it in The Comet Busters-"
"Don't touch those controls!"
"You don't own this ship. My pop
says-"
"Oh, Jake!" Hearing his name;
Pemberton twisted, fish-like, to face Kelly.
"Jake, Judge Schacht would like to
know-" From the corner of his eye Jake saw the boy reach for the board. He
turned, started to shout-acceleration caught him, while the jets roared in his
ear.
An old spacehand can usually recover,
catlike, in an unexpected change from weightlessness to acceleration. But Jake
had been grabbing for the boy, instead of for anchorage. He fell back and down,
twisted to try to avoid Schacht, banged his head on the frame of the open
air-tight door below, and fetched up on the next deck, out cold. - Kelly was
shaking him. ".You all right, Jake?"
He sat up. "Yeah. Sure." He
became aware of the thunder, the shivering deckplates. "The jets! Cut the
power!"
He shoved Kelly aside and swarmed up into
the control room, jabbed at the cut-off button. In sudden ringing silence, they
were again weightless.
Jake turned, unstrapped Schacht Junior,
and hustled him to Kelly. "Captain, please remove this menace from my
control room."
"Leggo! Pop-he's gonna hurt me!"
The elder Schacht bristled at once.
"What's the meaning of this? Let go of my son!"
"Your precious son cut in the
jets."
"Junior-did you do that?"
The boy shifted his eyes. "No, Pop.
It . . . it was a meteor."
Schacht looked puzzled. Pemberton snorted.
"I had just told him how the radar-guard can blast to miss a meteor. He's
lying."
Schacht ran through the process he called
"making up his mind", then answered, "Junior never lies. Shame
on you, a grown man, to try to put the blame on a helpless boy. I shall report
you, sir. Come, Junior."
Jake grabbed his arm. "Captain, I
want those controls photographed for fingerprints before this man leaves the
room. It was not a meteor; the controls were dead, until this boy switched them
on. Furthermore the anti-collision circuit sounds an alarm."
Schacht looked wary. "This is
ridiculous. I simply objected to the slur on my son's character. No harm has
been done."
"No harm, eh? How about broken
arms-or necks? And wasted fuel, with more to waste before we're back in the
groove. Do you know, Mister 'Old Spacehound,' just how precious a little fuel
will be when we try to match orbits with Space Terminal-if we haven't got it?
We may have to dump cargo to save the ship, cargo at $60,000 a ton on freight
charges alone. Fingerprints will show the Commerce Commission whom to nick for
it."
When they were alone again Kelly asked
anxiously, "You won't really have to jettison? You've got a maneuvering
reserve."
"Maybe we can't even get to Terminal.
How long did she blast?"
Kelly scratched his head. "I was
woozy myself."
"We'll open the accelerograph and
take a look."
Kelly brightened. "Oh, sure! If the
brat didn't waste too much, then we just swing ship and blast back the same
length of time."
Jake shook his head. "You forgot the
changed mass-ratio."
"Oh ... oh, yes!" Kelly looked
embarrassed. Mass-ratio under power, the ship lost the weight of fuel burned.
The thrust remained constant; the mass it pushed shrank. Getting back to proper
position, course, and speed became a complicated problem in the calculus of
ballistics. "But you can do it, can't you?"
"I'll have to. But I sure wish I had
Weinstein here."
Kelly left to see about his passengers;
Jake got to work. He checked his situation by astronomical observation and by
radar. Radar gave him all three factors quickly but with limited accuracy.
Sights taken of Sun, Moon, and Earth gave him position, but told nothing of
course and speed, at that time-nor could he afford to wait to take a second
group of sights for the purpose.
Dead reckoning gave him an estimated
situation, by adding Weinstein's predictions to the calculated effect of young
Schacht's meddling. This checked fairly well with the radar and visual
observations, but still he had no notion of whether or not he could get back in
the groove and reach his destination; it was now necessary to calculate what it
would stake and whether or not the remaining fuel would be enough to brake his
speed and match orbits.
In space, it does no good to reach your
journey's end if you flash on past at miles per second, or even crawling along
at a few hundred miles per hour. To catch an egg on a plate - don't bump!
He started doggedly to work to compute how
to do it using the least fuel, but his little Marchant electronic calculator
was no match for the tons of IBM computer at Supra-New York, nor was he
Weinstein. Three hours later he had an answer of sorts. He called Kelly.
"Captain? You can start by jettisoning Schacht & Son."
"I'd like to. No way out, Jake?"
"I can't promise to get your ship in
safely without dumping. Better dump now, before we blast. It's cheaper."
Kelly hesitated; he would as cheerfully
lose a leg. "Give me time to pick out what to dump."
"Okay." Pemberton returned sadly
to his figures, hoping to find a saving mistake, then thought better of it. He
called the radio room. "Get me Weinstein at Supra-New York."
"Out of normal range."
"I know that. This is the Pilot.
Safety priority-urgent. Get a tight beam on them and nurse it."
"Uh . . . aye aye, sir. I'll
try."
Weinstein was doubtful. "Cripes,
Jake, I can't pilot you."
"Dammit, you can work problems for
me!"
"What good is seven-place accuracy
with bum data?"
"Sure, sure. But you know what
instruments I've got; you know about how well I can handle them. Get me a
better answer."
"I'll try." Weinstein called
back four hours later. "Jake? Here's the dope: You planned to blast back
to match your predicted speed, then made side corrections for position.
Orthodox but uneconomical. Instead I had Mabel solve for it as one
maneuver."
"Good!"
"Not so fast. It saves fuel but not
enough. You can't possibly get back in your old groove - and then match T
without dumping."
Pemberton let it sink in, then said,
"I'll tell Kelly."
"Wait a minute, Jake. Try this. Start
from scratch."
"Huh?"
"Treat it as a brand-new problem.
Forget about the orbit on your tape. With your present course, speed, and
position compute the cheapest orbit to match with Terminal's. Pick it!, new
groove."
Pemberton felt foolish. "I never
thought of that."
"Of course not. With the ship's
little one-lung calculator it'd take you three weeks to solve it. You set to
record?"
"Sure."
"Here's your data." Weinstein
started calling it off. When they had checked it, Jake said, "That'll get
me there?"
"Maybe. If the data you gave me is up
to your limit of accuracy; if you can follow instructions as exactly as a
robot, if you can blast off and make contact so precisely that you don't need
side corrections, then you might squeeze home. Maybe. Good luck, anyhow."
The wavering reception muffled their goodbyes.
Jake signaled Kelly. "Don't jettison,
Captain. Have your passengers strap down. Stand by to blast. Minus fourteen
minutes."
"Very well, Pilot."
The new departure made and checked, he
again had time to spare. He took out his unfinished letter, read it, then tore
it up.
"Dearest Phyllis," he started
again, "I've been doing some hard thinking this trip and have decided that
I've just been stubborn. What am I doing way out here? I like my home. I like
to see my wife.
"Why should I risk my neck and your
peace of mind to herd junk through the sky? Why hang around a telephone -
waiting to chaperon fatheads to the Moon -numbskulls who couldn't pilot a
rowboat and should have stayed at home in the first place?
"Money, of course. I've been afraid
to risk a change. I won't find another job that will pay half as well, but, if
you are game, I'll ground myself and we'll start over. All my love, "Jake"
He put it away and went to sleep, to dream
that an entire troop of Junior Rocketeers had been quartered in his control
room.
The closeup view of the Moon is second
only to the spaceside view of the Earth as a tourist attraction; nevertheless
Pemberton insisted that all passengers strap down during the swing around to
Terminal. With precious little fuel for the matching maneuver, he refused to
hobble his movements to please sightseers.
Around the bulge of the Moon, Terminal
came into sight - by radar only, for the ship was tail foremost. After each
short braking blast Pemberton caught a new radar fix, then compared his
approach with a curve he had plotted from Weinstein's figures-with one eye on
the time, another on the 'scope, a third on the plot, and a fourth on his fuel
gages.
"Well, Jake?" Kelly fretted.
"Do we make it?"
"How should I know? You be ready to
dump." They had agreed on liquid oxygen as the cargo to dump, since it
could be let boil out through the outer valves, without handling.
"Don't say it, Jake."
"Damn it-I won't if I don't have
to." He was fingering his controls again; the blast chopped off his words.
When it stopped, the radio maneuvering circuit was calling him.
"Flying Dutchman, Pilot
speaking," Jake shouted back.
"Terminal Control-Supro reports you
short on fuel."
"Right."
"Don't approach. Match speeds outside
us. We'll send a transfer ship to refuel you and pick up passengers."
"I think I can make it."
"Don't try it. Wait for
refueling."
"Quit telling me how to pilot my
ship!" Pemberton switched off the circuit, then stared at the board,
whistling morosely. Kelly filled in the words in his mind: "Casey said to
the fireman, 'Boy, you better jump, cause two locomotives are agoing to
bump!'"
"You going in the slip anyhow,
Jake?"
"Mmm-no, blast it. I can't take a
chance of caving in the side of Terminal, not with passengers aboard. But I'm
not going to match speeds fifty miles outside and wait for a piggyback."
He aimed for a near miss just outside
Terminal's orbit, conning by instinct, for Weinstein's figures meant nothing by
now. His aim was good; he did not have to waste his hoarded fuel on last minute
side corrections to keep from hitting Terminal. When at last he was sure of
sliding safely on past if unchecked, he braked once more. Then, as he started
to cut off the power, the jets coughed, sputtered, and quit.
The Flying Dutchman floated in space, five
hundred yards outside Terminal, speeds matched.
Jake switched on the radio.
"Terminal-stand by for my line. I'll warp her in."
He had filed his report, showered, and was
headed for the post office to radiostat his letter, when the bullhorn summoned
him to the Commodore-Pilot's office. Oh, oh, he told himself, Schacht has
kicked the Brass-I wonder just how much stock that bliffy owns? And there's
that other matter - getting snotty with Control.
He reported stiffly. "First Pilot
Pemberton, sir."
Commodore Soames looked up.
"Pemberton-oh, yes. You hold two ratings, space-to-space and
airless-landing."
Let's not stall around, Jake told himself.
Aloud he said, "I have no excuses for anything this last trip. If the
Commodore does not approve the way I run my control room, he may have my
resignation."
"What are you talking about?"
"I, well-don't you have a passenger
complaint on me?"
"Oh, that!" Soames brushed it
aside. "Yes, he's been here. But I have Kelly's report, too-and your chief
jetman's, and a special from Supra-New York. That was crack piloting,
Pemberton."
"You mean there's no beef from the
Company"
"When have I failed to back up my
pilots? You were perfectly right; I would have stuffed him out the air lock.
Let's get down to business: You're on the space-to-space board, but I want to
send a special to Luna City. Will you take it, as a favor to me?"
Pemberton hesitated; Soames went on,
"That oxygen you saved is for the Cosmic Research Project. They blew the
seals on the north tunnel and lost tons of the stuff. The work is stopped-about
$130,000 a day in overhead, wages, and penalties. The Gremlin is here, but no
pilot until the Moonbat gets in-except you. Well?"
"But I-look, Commodore, you can't
risk people's necks on a jet landing of mine. I'm rusty; I need a refresher and
a checkout."
"No passengers, no crew, no
captain-your neck alone."
"I'll take her."
Twenty-eight minutes later, with the ugly,
powerful hull of the Gremlin around him, he blasted away. One strong shove to
kill her orbital speed and let her fall toward the Moon, then no more worries
until it came time to "ride 'er down on her tail".
He felt good-until he hauled out two
letters, the one he had failed to send, and one from Phyllis, delivered at
Terminal.
The letter from Phyllis was
affectionate-and superficial. She did not mention his sudden departure; she
ignored his profession completely. The letter was a model of correctness, but
it worried him.
He tore up both letters and started
another. It said, in part: "-never said so outright, but you resent my
job.
"I have to work to support us. You've
got a job, too. It's an old, old job that women have been doing a long
time-crossing the plains in covered wagons, waiting for ships to come back from
China, or waiting around a mine head after an explosion-kiss him goodbye with a
smile, take care of him at home.
"You married a spaceman, so part of
your job is to accept my job cheerfully. I think you can do it, when you
realize it. I hope so, for the way things have been going won't do for either
of us. Believe me, I love you. Jake"
He brooded on it until time to bend the
ship down for his approach. From twenty miles altitude down to one mile he let
the robot brake her, then shifted to manual while still falling slowly. A
perfect airless-landing would be the reverse of the take-off of a war
rocket-free fall, then one long blast of the jets, ending with the ship stopped
dead as she touches the ground. In practice a pilot must feel his way down, not
too slowly; a ship could burn all the fuel this side of Venus fighting gravity
too long.
Forty seconds later, falling a little more
than 140 miles per hour, he picked up in his periscopes the thousand-foot
static towers. At 300 feet he blasted five gravities for more than a second,
cut it, and caught her with a one-sixth gravity, Moon-normal blast. Slowly he
eased this off, feeling happy.
The Gremlin hovered, her bright jet
splashing the soil of the Moon, then settled with dignity to land without a
jar.
The ground crew took over; a sealed
runabout jeeped Pemberton to the tunnel entrance. Inside Luna City, he found
himself paged before he finished filing his report. When he took the call,
Soames smiled at him from the viewpláte. "I saw that landing from the
field pick-up, Pemberton. You don't need a refresher course."
Jake blushed. "Thank you, sir."
"Unless you are dead set on
space-to-space, I can use you on the regular Luna City run. Quarters here or
Luna City? Want it?"
He heard himself saying, "Luna City.
I'll take it."
He tore up his third letter as he walked
into Luna City post office. At the telephone desk he spoke to a blonde in a
blue moonsuit. "Get me Mrs. Jake Pemberton, Suburb six-four-oh-three,
Dodge City, Kansas, please."
She looked him over. "You pilots sure
spend money."
"Sometimes phone calls are cheap.
Hurry it, will you?"
Phyllis was trying to phrase the letter
she felt she should have written before. It was easier to say in writing that
she was not complaining of loneliness nor lack of fun, but that she could not
stand the strain of worrying about his safety. But then she found herself quite
unable to state the logical conclusion. Was she prepared to face giving him up
entirely if he would not give up space? She truly did not know . . . the phone
call was a welcome interruption.
The viewplate stayed blank. "Long
distance," came a thin voice. "Luna City calling."
Fear jerked at her heart. "Phyllis
Pemberton speaking."
An interminable delay-she knew it took
nearly three seconds for radio waves to make the Earth-Moon round trip, but she
did not remember it and it would not have reassured her. All she could see was
a broken home, herself a widow, and Jake, beloved Jake, dead in space.
"Mrs. Jake Pemberton?"
"Yes, yes! Go ahead." Another
wait-had she sent him away in a bad temper, reckless, his judgment affected?
Had he died out there, remembering only that she fussed at him for leaving her
to go to work? Had she failed him when he needed her? She knew that her Jake
could not be tied to apron strings; men - grown-up men, not mammas' boys - had
to break away from mother's apron strings. Then why had she tried to tie him to
hers? She had known better; her own
mother had warned her not to try it.
She prayed.
Then another voice, one that weakened her
knees with relief: "That you, honey?"
"Yes, darling, yes! What are you
doing on the Moon?"
"It's a long story. At a dollar a
second it will keep. What I want to know is-are you willing to come to Luna
City?"
It was Jake's turn to suffer from the
inevitable lag in reply. He wondered if Phyllis were stalling, unable to make
up her mind. At last he heard her say, "Of course, darling. When do I
leave?"
"When-say, don't you even want to
know why?"
She started to say that it did not matter,
then said, "Yes, tell me." The lag was still present but neither of
them cared. He told her the news, then added, "Run over to the Springs and
get Olga Pierce to straighten out the red tape for you. Need my help to
pack?"
She thought rapidly. Had he meant to come
back anyhow, he would not have asked. "No. I can manage."
"Good girl. I'll radiostat you a long
letter about what to bring and so forth. I love you. 'Bye now!"
"Oh, I love you, too. Goodbye,
darling."
Pemberton came out of the booth whistling.
Good girl, Phyllis. Staunch. He wondered why he had ever doubted her.
Requiem
On a high hill in Samoa there is a grave.
Inscribed on the marker are these words:
"Under
the wide and starry sky
Dig
my grave and let me lie
Glad
did I live and gladly die
And
I lay me down with a will!
"This
be the verse which you grave for me:
'Here
he lies where he longed to be,
Home
is the sailor, home from the sea,
And
the hunter home from the hill.'"
These lines appear another place --
scrawled on a shipping tag torn from a compressed-air container, and pinned to
the ground with a knife.
It wasn't much of a fair, as fairs go. The
trottin' races didn't promise much excitement, even though several entries
claimed the blood of the immortal Dan Patch. The tents and concession booths
barely covered the circus grounds, and the pitchmen seemed discouraged.
D.D. Harriman's chauffeur could not see
any reason for stopping. They were due in Kansas City for a directors' meeting,
that is to say, Harriman was. The chauffeur had private reasons for promptness,
reasons involving darktown society on Eighteenth Street. But the Boss not only
stopped, but hung around.
Bunting and a canvas arch made the
entrance to a large enclosure beyond the race track. Red and gold letters
announced:
This
way to the MOON ROCKET!!!!
See it in actual flight!
Public Demonstration Flights
Twice Daily
This
is the ACTUAL TYPE used by the
First Man to reach the MOON!!!
YOU can ride in it!! -- $50.OO
A boy, nine or ten years old, hung around
the entrance and stared at the posters.
"Want to see the ship, son?"
The kid's eyes shone. "Gee, mister. I
sure would."
"So would I. Come on." Harriman
paid out a dollar for two pink tickets which entitled them to enter the
enclosure and examine the rocket ship. The kid took his and ran on ahead with
the single-mindedness of youth. Harriman looked over the stubby curved lines of
the ovoid body. He noted with a professional eye that she was a single-jet type
with fractional controls around her midriff. He squinted through his glasses at
the name painted in gold on the carnival red of the body, _Care Free_. He paid
another quarter to enter the control cabin.
When his eyes had adjusted to the gloom
caused by the strong ray filters of the ports he let them rest lovingly on the
keys of the console and the semi-circle of dials above. Each beloved gadget was
in its proper place. He knew them, graven in his heart.
While he mused over the instrument board,
with the warm liquid of content soaking through his body, the pilot entered and
touched his arm.
"Sorry, sir. We've got to cast loose
for the flight."
"Eh?" Harriman started, then
looked at the speaker. Handsome devil, with a good skull and strong shoulders,
reckless eyes and a self-indulgent mouth, but a firm chin. "Oh, excuse me,
Captain."
"Quite all right."
"Oh, I say, Captain, er, uh. .
."
"McIntyre."
"Captain McIntyre, could you take a
passenger this trip?" The old man leaned eagerly toward him.
"Why, yes, if you wish. Come
along with me." He ushered Harriman into a shed marked OFFICE which stood
near the gate. "Passenger for a check over, doc."
Harriman looked startled but permitted the
medico to run a stethoscope over his thin chest, and to strap a rubber bandage
around his arm. Presently he unstrapped it, glanced at McIntyre, and shook his
head.
"No go, doc?"
"That's right, Captain."
Harriman looked from face to face.
"My heart's all right -- that's just a flutter."
The physician's brows shot up. "Is
it? But it's not just your heart; at your age your bones are brittle, too
brittle to risk a take-off."
"Sorry, sir," added the pilot,
"but the Bates County Fair Association pays the doctor here to see to it
that I don't take anyone up who might be hurt by the acceleration."
The old man's shoulders drooped miserably.
"I rather expected it."
"Sorry, sir." McIntyre turned to
go, but Harriman followed him out.
"Excuse me, Captain--"
"Yes?"
"Could you and your, uh, engineer
have dinner with me after your flight?"
The pilot looked at him quizzically.
"I don't see why not. Thanks."
"Captain McIntyre, it is difficult
for me to see why anyone would quit the Earth-Moon run." Fried chicken and
hot biscuits in a private dining room of the best hotel the little town of
Butler afforded, three-star Hennessey and Corona-Coronas had produced a
friendly atmosphere in which three men could talk freely.
"Well, I didn't like it."
"Aw, don't give him that, Mac -- you
know damn well it was Rule G that got you." McIntyre's mechanic poured
himself another brandy as he spoke.
McIntyre looked sullen. "Well, what
if I did take a couple o' drinks? Anyhow, I could have squared that -- it was
the damn persnickety regulations that got me fed up. Who are you to talk? --
Smuggler!"
"Sure I smuggled! Who wouldn't with
all those beautiful rocks just aching to be taken back to Earth. I had a
diamond once as big as... But if I hadn't been caught I'd be in Luna City
tonight. And so would you, you drunken blaster ... with the boys buying us
drinks, and the girls smiling and making suggestions..." He put his face
down and began to weep quietly.
McIntyre shook him. "He's
drunk."
"Never mind." Harriman
interposed a hand. "Tell me, are you really satisfied not to be on the run
any more?"
McIntyre chewed his lip. "No, he's
right of course. This barnstorming isn't what it's all cracked up to be. We've
been hopping junk at every pumpkin doin's up and down the Mississippi valley --
sleeping in tourist camps, and eating at grease burners. Half the time the
sheriff has an attachment on the ship, the other half the Society for the
Prevention of Something or Other gets an injunction to keep us on the ground.
It's no sort of a life for a rocket man."
"Would it help any for you to get to
the Moon?"
"Well. . . Yes. I couldn't get back
on the Earth-Moon run, but if I was in Luna City, I could get a job hopping ore
for the Company -- they're always short of rocket pilots for that, and they
wouldn't mind my record. If I kept my nose clean, they might even put me back
on the run, in time."
Harriman fiddled with a spoon, then looked
up. "Would you young gentlemen be open to a business proposition?"
"Perhaps. What is it?"
"You own the _Care Free_?"
"Yeah. That is, Charlie and I do --
barring a couple of liens against her. What about it?"
"I want to charter her... for you and
Charlie to take me to the Moon!"
Charlie sat up with a jerk. "D'joo
hear what he said, Mac? He wants us to fly that old heap to the Moon!"
McIntyre shook his head. "Can't do
it, Mister Harriman. The old boat's worn out. You couldn't convert to escape
fuel. We don't even use standard juice in her -- just gasoline and liquid air.
Charlie spends all of his time tinkering with her at that She's going to blow
up some day."
"Say, Mister Harriman," put in
Charlie, "what's the matter with getting an excursion permit and going in
a Company ship?"
"No, son," the old man replied,
"I can't do that. You know the conditions under which the U. N. granted
the Company a monopoly on lunar exploitation -- no one to enter space who was
not physically qualified to stand up under it. Company to take full
responsibility for the safety and health of all citizens beyond the
stratosphere. The official reason for granting the franchise was to avoid
unnecessary loss of life during the first few years of space travel."
"And you can't pass the physical
exam?" Harriman shook his head.
"Well, what the hell -- if you can
afford to hire us, why don't you just bribe yourself a brace of Company docs?
It's been done before."
Harriman smiled ruefully. "I know it
has, Charlie, but it won't work for me. You see, I'm a tad too prominent. My
full name is Delos D. Harriman."
"What? You are old D.D.? But hell's
bells, you own a big slice of the Company yourself -- you practically are the
Company; you ought to be able to do anything you like, rules or no rules."
"That is a not unusual opinion, son,
but it is incorrect. Rich men aren't more free than other men; they are less free,
a good deal less free. I tried to do what you suggest, but, the other directors
would not permit me. They are afraid of losing their franchise. It costs them a
good deal in -- uh -- political contact expenses to retain it, as it is."
"Well, I'll be a-- Can you tie that,
Mac? A guy with lots of dough, and he can't spend it the way he wants to."
McIntyre did not answer, but waited for Harriman to continue.
"Captain McIntyre, if you had a ship,
would you take me?"
McIntyre rubbed his chin. "It's against
the law."
"I'd make it worth your while."
"Sure he would, Mr. Harriman. Of
course you would, Mac. Luna City! Oh, baby!"
"Why do you want to go to the Moon so
badly, Mister Harriman?"
"Captain, it's the one thing I've
really wanted to do all my life -- ever since I was a young boy. I don't know
whether I can explain it to you, or not. You young fellows have grown up to
rocket travel the way I grew up to aviation. I'm a great deal older than you
are, at least fifty years older. When I was a kid practically nobody believed
that men would ever reach the Moon. You've seen rockets all your lives, and the
first to reach the Moon got there before you were a young boy. When I was a boy
they laughed at the idea.
"But I believed -- I believed. I read
Verne, and Wells, and Smith, and I believed that we could do it -- that we
would do it. I set my heart on being one of the men to walk the surface of the
Moon, to see her other side, and to look back on the face of the Earth, hanging
in the sky.
"I used to go without my lunches to
pay my dues in the American Rocket Society, because I wanted to believe that I
was helping to bring the day nearer when we would reach the Moon. I was already
an old man when that day arrived. I've lived longer than I should, but I would
not let myself die... I will not! -- until I have set foot on the Moon."
McIntyre stood up and put out his hand.
"You find a ship, Mister Harriman. I'll drive 'er."
"Atta' boy, Mac! I told you he would,
Mister Harriman."
Harriman mused and dozed during the
half-hour run to the north into Kansas City, dozed in the light troubled sleep
of old age. Incidents out of a long life ran through his mind in vagrant
dreams. There was that time... oh, yes, 1910 ... A little boy on a warm spring
night;
"What's that, Daddy?" --
"That's Halley's comet, Sonny." -- "Where did it come
from?" -- "I don't know, Son. From way out in the sky
somewhere." -- "It's _beyoootiful_, Daddy. I want to touch it."
-- "'Fraid not, Son."
"Delos, do you mean to stand there and
tell me you put the money we had saved for the house into that crazy rocket
company?" -- "Now, Charlotte, please! It's not crazy; it's a sound
business investment. Someday soon rockets will fill the sky. Ships and trains
will be obsolete. Look what happened to the men that had the foresight to
invest in Henry Ford." -- "We've been all over this before." --
"Charlotte, the day will come when men will rise up off the Earth and
visit the Moon, even the planets. This is the beginning." -- "Must
you shout?" -- "I'm sorry, but--" -- "I feel a headache
coming on. Please try to be a little quiet when you come to bed."
He hadn't gone to bed. He had sat out on
the veranda all night long, watching the full Moon move across the sky. There
would be the devil to pay in the morning, the devil and a thin-lipped silence.
But he'd stick by his guns. He'd given in on most things, but not on this. But
the night was his. Tonight he'd be alone with his old friend. He searched her
face. Where was Mare Crisium? Funny, he couldn't make it out. He used to be
able to see it plainly when he was a boy. Probably needed new glasses -- this
constant office work wasn't good for his eyes.
But he didn't need to see, he knew where
they all were; Crisium, Mare Fecunditatis, Mare Tranquilitatis -- that one had
a satisfying roll! -- the Apennines, the Carpathians, old Tycho with it's
mysterious rays.
Two hundred and forty thousand miles --
ten times around the Earth. Surely men could bridge a little gap like that.
Why, he could almost reach out and touch it, nodding there behind the elm
trees. Not that he could help. He hadn't the education.
"Son, I want to have a little serious
talk with you." -- "Yes, Mother." -- "I know you had hoped
to go to college next year--" (Hoped! He had lived for it. The University
of Chicago to study under Moulton, then on to the Yerkes Observatory to work
under the eye of Dr. Frost himself) -- "and I had hoped so too. But with
your father gone, and the girls growing up, it's harder to make ends meet. You've
been a good boy, and worked hard to help out. I know you'll understand."
-- "Yes, Mother."
"Extra! Extra! STRATOSPHERE ROCKET
REACHES PARIS. Read aaaaallllll about 't." The the little man in the
bifocals snatched at the paper and hurried back to the office. -- "Look at
this, George." -- "Huh? Hmm, interesting, but what of it?" --
"Can't you see? The next stage is to the Moon!" -- "God, but
you're a sucker, Delos. The trouble with you is, you read too many of those trashy
magazines. Now I caught my boy reading one of 'em just last week, _Stunning
Stories_, or some such title, and dressed him down proper. Your folks should
have done you the same favor." -- Harriman squared his narrow, middle-aged
shoulders. "They will so reach the Moon!" -- His partner laughed.
"Have it your own way. If baby wants the Moon, papa bring it for him. But
you stick to your discounts and commissions; that's where the money is."
The big car droned down the Paseo, and
turned off on Armour Boulevard. Old Harriman stirred uneasily in his sleep and
muttered to himself.
"But Mister Harriman--" The
young man with the notebook was plainly perturbed. The old man grunted.
"You heard me. Sell 'em. I want every
share I own realized in cash as rapidly as possible; Spaceways, Spaceways Provisioning
Company, Artemis Mines, Luna City Recreations, the whole lot of them."
"It will depress the market. You
won't realize the full value of your holdings."
"Don't you think I know that? I can
afford it."
"What about the shares you had
earmarked for Richardson Observatory, and for the Harriman Scholarships?"
"Oh, yes. Don't sell those. Set up a
trust. Should have done it long ago. Tell young Kamens to draw up the papers.
He knows what I want"
The interoffice visor flashed into life.
"The gentlemen are here, Mr. Harriman."
"Send 'em in. That's all, Ashley. Get
busy." Ashley went out as McIntyre and Charlie entered. Harriman got up
and trotted forward to greet them.
"Come in, boys, come in. I'm so glad
to see you. Sit down. Sit down. Have a cigar."
"Mighty pleased to see you, Mr.
Harriman," acknowledged Charlie. "In fact, you might say we need to
see you."
"Some trouble, gentlemen?"
Harriman glanced from face to face. McIntyre answered him.
"You still mean that about a job for
us, Mr. Harriman?"
"Mean it? Certainly, I do. You're not
backing out on me?"
"Not at all. We need that job now.
You see the _Care Free_ is lying in the middle of the Osage River, with her jet
split clear back to the injector."
"Dear me! You weren't hurt?"
"No, aside from sprains and bruises.
We jumped."
Charlie chortled. "I caught a catfish
with my bare teeth."
In short order they got down to business.
"You two will have to buy a ship for me. I can't do it openly; my
colleagues would figure out what I mean to do and stop me. I'll supply you with
all the cash you need. You go out and locate some sort of a ship that can be
refitted for the trip. Work, up some good story about how you are buying it for
some playboy as a stratosphere yacht, or that you plan to establish an
arctic-antarctic tourist route. Anything as long as no one suspects that she is
being-outfitted for space flight.
"Then, after the Department of
Transport licenses her for strato flight, you move out to a piece of desert out
west -- I'll find a likely parcel of land and buy it -- and then I'll join you.
Then we'll install the escape-fuel tanks, change the injectors, and timers, and
so forth, to fit her for the hop. How about it?"
McIntyre looked dubious. "It'll take
a lot of doing. Charlie, do you think you can accomplish that changeover
without a dockyard and shops?"
"Me? Sure I can -- with your
thick-fingered help. Just give me the tools and materials I want, and don't
hurry me too much. Of course, it won't be fancy--"
"Nobody wants it to be fancy. I just
want a ship that won't blow when I start slapping the keys. Isotope fuel is no
joke."
"It won't blow, Mac."
"That's what you thought about the
_Care Free_."
"That ain't fair, Mac. I ask you, Mr.
Harriman -- That heap was junk, and we knew it. This'll be different. We're
going to spend some dough and do it right. Ain't we, Mr. Harriman?"
Harriman patted him on the shoulder.
"Certainly we are, Charlie. You can have all the money you want. That's
the least of our worries. Now do the salaries and bonuses I mentioned suit you?
I don't want you to be short."
"--as you know, my clients are his
nearest relatives and have his interests at heart. We contend that Mr.
Harriman's conduct for the past several weeks, as shown by the evidence here
adduced, gives clear indication that a mind, once brilliant in the world of
finance, has become senile. It is, therefore, with the deepest regret that we
pray this honorable court, if it pleases, to declare Mr. Harriman incompetent
and to assign a conservator to protect his financial interests and those of his
future heirs and assigns." The attorney sat down, pleased with himself.
Mr. Kamens took the floor. "May it
please the court, if my esteemed friend is quite through, may I suggest that in
his last few words be gave away his entire thesis. '--the financial interests
of future heirs and assigns.' It is evident that the petitioners believe that
my client should conduct his affairs in such a fashion as to insure that his
nieces and nephews, and their issue, will be supported in unearned luxury for
the rest of their lives. My client's wife has passed on, he has no children. It
is admitted that he has provided generously for his sisters and their children
in times past, and that he has established annuities for such near kin as are
without means of support.
"But now like vultures, worse than
vultures, for they are not content to let him die in peace, they would prevent
my client from enjoying his wealth in whatever manner best suits him for the few
remaining years of his life. It is true that he has sold his holdings; is it
strange that an elderly man should wish to retire? It is true that he suffered
some paper losses in liquidation. 'The value of a thing is what that thing will
bring.' He was retiring and demanded cash. Is there anything strange about
that?
"It is admitted that he refused to
discuss his actions with his so-loving kinfolk. What law, or principle,
requires a man to consult with his nephews on anything?
"Therefore, we pray that this court
will confirm my client in his right to do what he likes with his own, deny this
petition, and send these meddlers about their business."
The judge took off his spectacles .and
polished them thoughtfully.
"Mr. Kamens, this court has as high a
regard for individual liberty as you have, and you may rest assured that any
action taken will be solely in the interests of your client. Nevertheless, men
do grow old, men do become senile, and in such cases must be protected.
"I shall take this matter under
advisement until tomorrow. Court is adjourned."
From the Kansas City Star:
"ECCENTRIC MILLIONAIRE
DISAPPEARS"
"--failed to appear for the adjourned
hearing. The bailiffs returned from a search of places usually frequented by
Harriman with the report that he had not been seen since the previous day. A
bench warrant under contempt proceedings has been issued and--"
A desert sunset is a better stimulant for
the appetite than a hot dance orchestra. Charlie testified to this by polishing
the last of the ham gravy with a piece of bread. Harriman handed each of the
younger men cigars and took one himself.
"My doctor claims that these weeds
are bad for my heart condition," he remarked as he lighted it, "but
I've felt so much better since I joined you boys here on the ranch that I am
inclined to doubt him." He exhaled a cloud of blue-grey smoke and resumed.
"I don't think a man's health depends so much on what he does as on
whether he wants to do it. I'm doing what I want to do."
"That's all a man can ask of
life," agreed McIntyre.
"How does the work look now,
boys?"
"My end's in pretty good shape,"
Charlie answered. "We finished the second pressure tests on the new tanks
and the fuel lines today. The ground tests are all done, except the calibration
runs. Those won't take long -- just the four hours to make the runs if I don't
run into some bugs. How about you, Mac?"
McIntyre ticked them off on his fingers.
"Food supplies and water on board. Three vacuum suits, a spare, and
service kits. Medical supplies. The buggy already had all the standard
equipment for strato flight. The late lunar ephemerides haven't arrived as
yet."
"When do you expect them?"
"Any time -- they should be here now.
Not that it matters. This guff about how hard it is to navigate from here to
the Moon is hokum to impress the public. After all you can see your destination
-- it's not like ocean navigation. Gimme a sextant and a good radar and I'll
set you down any place on the Moon you like, without cracking an almanac or a
star table, just from a general knowledge of the relative speeds
involved."
"Never mind the personal buildup,
Columbus," Charlie told him, "we'll admit you can hit the floor with
your hat. The general idea is, you're ready to go now. Is that right?"
"That's it."
"That being the case, I could run
those tests tonight. I'm getting jumpy -- things have been going too smoothly.
If you'll give me a hand, we ought to be in bed by midnight."
"O.K., when I finish this
cigar."
They smoked in silence for a while, each
thinking about the coming trip and what it meant to him. Old Harriman tried to
repress the excitement that possessed him at the prospect of immediate
realization of his life-long dream.
"Mr. Harriman--"
"Eh? What is it, Charlie?"
"How does a guy go about getting
rich, like you did?"
"Getting rich? I can't say; I never
tried to get rich. I never wanted to be rich, or well known, or anything like
that."
"Huh?"
"No, I just wanted to live a long
time and see it all happen. I wasn't unusual; there were lots of boys like me
-- radio hams, they were, and telescope builders, and airplane amateurs. We had
science clubs, and basement laboratories, and science-fiction leagues -- the
kind of boys who thought there was more romance in one issue of the _Electrical
Experimenter_ than in all the books Dumas ever wrote. We didn't want to be one
of Horatio Alger's Get-Rich heroes either, we wanted to build space ships.
Well, some of us did."
"Jeez, Pop, you make it sound
exciting."
"It was exciting, Charlie. This has
been a wonderful, romantic century, for all of its bad points. And it's grown
more wonderful and more exciting every year. No, I didn't want to be rich; I
just wanted to live long enough to see men rise up to the stars, and, if God was
good to me, to go as far as the Moon myself." He carefully deposited an
inch of white ash in a saucer. "It has been a good life. I haven't any
complaints."
McIntyre pushed back his chair. "Come
on, Charlie, if you're ready."
They all got up. Harriman started to
speak, then grabbed at his chest, his face a dead grey-white. "Catch him,
Mac!"
"Where's his medicine?"
"In his vest pocket."
They eased him over to a couch, broke a
small glass capsule in a handkerchisf, and held it under his nose. The volatile
released by the capsule seemed to bring a little color into his face. They did
what little they could for him, then waited for him to regain consciousness.
Charlie broke the uneasy silence.
"Mac, we ain't going through with this."
"Why not?"
"It's murder. He'll never stand up
under the initial acceleration."
"Maybe not, but it's what he wants to
do. You heard him."
"But we oughtn't to let him."
"Why not? It's neither your business,
nor the business of this damn paternalistic government, to tell a man not to
risk his life doing what he really wants to do."
"All the same, I don't feel right
about it. He's such a swell old duck."
"Then what d'yuh want to do with him
-- send him back to Kansas City so those old harpies can shut him up in a
laughing academy till he dies of a broken heart?"
"N-no-o-o -- not that."
"Get out there, and make your set-up
for those test runs. I'll be along."
A wide-tired desert runabout rolled in the
ranch yard gate the next morning and stopped in front of the house. A heavy-set
man with a firm, but kindly, face climbed out and spoke to McIntyre, who
approached to meet him.
"You James Mcintyre?"
"What about it?"
"I'm the deputy federal marshal
hereabouts. I got a warrant for your arrest."
"What's the charge?"
"Conspiracy to violate the Space
Precautionary Act."
Charlie joined the pair. "What's up,
Mac?"
The deputy answered. "You'd be
Charles Cummings, I guess. Warrant here for you. Got one for a man named
Harriman, too, and a court order to put seals on your space ship."
"We've no space ship."
"What d'yuh keep in that big
shed?"
"Strato yacht."
"So? Well, I'll put seals on her
until a space ship comes along. Where's Harriman?"
"Right in there." Charlie
obliged by pointing, ignoring McIntyre's scowl.
The deputy turned his head. Charlie
couldn't have missed the button by a fraction of an inch for the deputy
collapsed quietly to the ground. Charlie stood over him, rubbing his knuckles
and mourning.
"Damn it to hell -- that's the finger
I broke playing shortstop. I'm always hurting that finger."
"Get Pop into the cabin," Mac
cut him short, "and strap him into his hammock."
"Aye aye, Skipper."
They dragged the ship by tractor out of
the hangar, turned, and went out the desert plain to find elbow room for the
take-off. They climbed in. McIntyre saw the deputy from his starboard conning
port. He was staring disconsolately after them.
Mcintyre fastened his safety belt, settled
his corset, and spoke into the engineroom speaking tube. "All set,
Charlie?"
"All set, Skipper. But you can't
raise ship yet, Mac -- _She ain't named!_"
"No time for your
superstitions!"
Harriman's thin voice reached them.
"Call her the _Lunatic_ -- It's the only appropriate name!"
McIntyre settled his head into the pads,
punched two keys, then three more in rapid succession, and the _Lunatic_ raised
ground.
"How are you, Pop?"
Charlie searched the old man's face
anxiously. Harriman licked his lips and managed to speak. "Doing fine,
son. Couldn't be better."
"The acceleration is over; it won't
be so bad from here on. I'll unstrap you so you can wiggle around a little. But
I think you'd better stay in the hammock." He tugged at buckles. Harriman
partially repressed a groan.
"What is it, Pop?"
"Nothing. Nothing at all. Just go
easy on that side."
Charlie ran his fingers over the old man's
side with the sure, delicate touch of a mechanic. "You ain't foolin' me
none, Pop. But there isn't much I can do until we ground."
"Charlie--"
"Yes, Pop?"
"Can't I move to a port? I want to
watch the Earth."
"Ain't nothin' to see yet; the ship
hides it. As soon as we turn ship, I'll move you. Tell you what; I'll give you
a sleepy pill, and then wake you when we do."
"No!"
"Huh?"
"I'll stay awake."
"Just as you say, Pop."
Charlie clambered monkey fashion to the
nose of the ship, and anchored to the gymbals of the pilot's chair. McIntyre
questioned him with his eyes.
"Yeah, he's alive all right,"
Charlie told him, "but he's in bad shape."
"How bad?"
"Couple of cracked ribs anyhow. I
don't know what else. I don't know whether he'll last out the trip, Mac. His
heart was pounding something awful."
"He'll last, Charlie. He's
tough."
"Tough? He's delicate as a
canary."
"I don't mean that. He's tough way
down inside where it counts."
"Just the same you'd better set her
down awful easy if you want to ground with a full complement aboard."
"I will. I'll make one full swing
around the Moon and ease her in on an involute approach curve. We've got enough
fuel, I think."
They were now in a free orbit; after
McIntyre turned ship, Charlie went back, unslung the hammock, and moved
Harriman, hammock and all, to a side port. Mcliityre steadied the ship about a
transverse axis so that the tail pointed toward the sun, then gave a short
blast on two tangential jets opposed in couple to cause the ship to spin slowly
about her longitudinal axis, and thereby create a slight artificial gravity.
The initial weightlessness when coasting commenced had knotted the old man with
the characteristic nausea of free flight, and the pilot wished to save his
passenger as much discomfort as possible.
But Harriman was not concerned with the
condition of his stomach. There it was, all as he had imagined it so many
times.
The Moon swung majestically past the view
port, wider than he had ever seen it before, all of her familiar features cameo
clear. She gave way to the Earth as the ship continued its slow swing, the
Earth itself as he had envisioned her, appearing like a noble moon, many times
as wide as the Moon appears to the Earthbound, and more luscious, more
sensuously beautiful than the silver Moon could be. It was sunset near the
Atlantic seaboard -- the line of shadow cut down the coast line of North America,
slashed through Cuba, and obscured all but the west coast of South America. He
savored the mellow blue of the Pacific Ocean, felt the texture of the soft
green and brown of the continents, admired the blue-white cold of the polar
caps. Canada and the northern states were obscured by cloud, a vast low
pressure area that spread across the continent. It shone with an even more
satisfactory dazzling white than the polar caps.
As the ship swung slowly, around, Earth
would pass from view, and the stars would march across the port the same stars
he had always known, but steady, brighter, and unwinking against a screen of
perfect, live black. Then the Moon would swim into view again to claim his
thoughts.
He was serenely happy in a fashion not
given to most men, even in a long lifetime. He felt as if he were every man who
has ever lived, looked up at the stars, and longed.
As the long hours came and went he watched
and dozed and dreamed. At least once he must have fallen into deep sleep, or
possibly delirium, for he came to with a start, thinking that his wife,
Charlotte, was calling to him. "Delos!" the voice had said.
"Delos! Come in from there! You'll catch your death of cold in that night
air."
Poor Charlotte! She had been a good wife
to him, a good wife. He was quite sure that her only regret in dying had been
her fear that he could not take proper care of himself. It had not been her
fault that she had not shared his dream, and his need.
Charlie rigged the hammock in such a
fashion that Harriman could watch from the starboard port when they swung
around the far face of the Moon. He picked out the landmarks made familiar to
him by a thousand photographs with nostalgic pleasure, as if he were returning
to his own country. Mcintyre brought her slowly down as they came back around
to the Earthward face, and prepared to land east of Mare Fecunditatis, about
ten miles from Luna City.
It was not a bad landing, all things
considered. He had to land without coaching from the ground, and he had no
second pilot to watch the radar for him. In his anxiety to make it gentle he
missed his destination by some thirty miles, but he did his cold-sober best.
But at that it was bumpy. As they grounded and the pumice dust settled around
them, Charlie came up to the control station.
"How's our passenger?" Mac
demanded.
"I'll see, but I wouldn't make any
bets. That landing stunk, Mac."
"Damn it, I did my best."
"I know you did, Skipper. Forget
it."
But the passenger was alive and conscious
although bleeding from the nose and with a pink foam on his lips. He was feebly
trying to get himself out of his cocoon. They helped him, working together.
"Where are the vacuum suits?"
was his first remark.
"Steady, Mr. Harriman. You can't go
out there yet. We've got to give you some first aid."
"_Get me that suit!_ First aid can
wait."
Silently they did as he ordered. His left
leg was practically useless, and they had to help him through the lock, one on
each side. But with his inconsiderable mass having a lunar weight of only
twenty pounds, he was no burden.. They found a place some fifty yards from the
ship where they could prop him up and let him look, a chunk of scoria
supporting his head.
Mcintyre put his helmet against the old
man's and spoke. "We'll leave you here to enjoy the view while we get
ready for the trek into town. It's a forty-miler, pretty near, and we'll have
to break out spare air bottles and rations and stuff. We'll be back soon."
Harriman nodded without answering, and
squeezed their gauntlets with a grip that was surprisingly strong.
He sat very quietly, rubbing his hands
against the soil of the Moon and sensing the curiously light pressure of his
body against the ground. At long last there was peace in his heart. His hurts
had ceased to pain him. He was where he had longed to be -- he had followed his
need.
Over the western horizon hung the Earth at
last quarter, a green-blue giant moon. Overhead the Sun shone down from a black
and starry sky. And underneath the Moon, the soil of the Moon itself. He was on
the Moon!
He lay back still while a bath of content
flowed over him like a tide at flood, and soaked to his very marrow.
His attention strayed momentarily, and he
thought once again that his name was called. Silly, he thought, I'm getting old
-- my mind wanders.
Back in the cabin Charlie and Mac were
rigging shoulder yokes on a stretcher. "There. That will do," Mac
commented. "We'd better stir Pop out; we ought to be going."
"I'll get him," Charlie replied.
"I'll just pick him up and carry him. He don't weigh nothing."
Charlie was gone longer than Mcintyre had
expected him to be. He returned alone. Mac waited for him to close the lock,
and swing back his helmet. "Trouble?"
"Never mind the stretcher, Skipper.
We won't be needin' it.
"Yeah, I mean it," he continued.
"Pop's done for. I did what was necessary."
Mcintyre bent down without a word and
picked up the wide skis necessary to negotiate the powdery ash. Charlie
followed his example. Then they swung the spare air bottles over their
shoulders, and passed out through the lock.
They didn't bother to close the outer door
of the lock behind them.
The Long Watch
"Nine
ships blasted off from Moon Base. Once in space, eight of them formed a globe
around the smallest. They held this formation all the way to Earth.
"The
small ship displayed the insignia of an admiral-yet there was no living thing
of any sort in her. She was not even a passenger ship, but a drone, a robot
ship intended for radioactive cargo. This trip she carried nothing but a lead
coffin - and a Geiger counter that was never quiet." -from the editorial
After Ten Years, film 38, 17 June 2009, Archives of the N.Y. Times
JOHNNY DAHLQUIST blew smoke at the Geiger
counter. He grinned wryly and tried it again. His whole body was radioactive by
now. Even his breath, the smoke from his cigarette, could make the Geiger
counter scream. How long had he been here? Time doesn't mean much on the Moon.
Two days? Three? A week? He let his mind run back: the last clearly marked time
in his mind was when the Executive Officer had sent for him, right after
breakfast - "Lieutenant Dahlquist, reporting to the Executive
Officer."
Colonel Towers looked up. "Ah, John
Ezra. Sit down, Johnny. Cigarette?"
Johnny sat down, mystified but flattered.
He admired Colonel Towers, for his brilliance, his ability to dominate, and for
his battle record. Johnny had no battle record; he had been commissioned on
completing his doctor's degree in nuclear physics and was now junior bomb
officer of Moon Base.
The Colonel wanted to talk politics;
Johnny was puzzled. Finally Towers had come to the point; it was not safe (so
he said) to leave control of the world in political hands; power must be held
by a scientifically selected group. In short - The Patrol.
Johnny was startled rather than shocked.
As an abstract idea, Towers' notion sounded plausible. The League of Nations
had folded up; what would keep the United Nations from breaking up, too, and
thus lead to another World War. "And you know how bad such a war would be,
Johnny."
Johnny agreed. Towers said he was glad
that Johnny got the point. The senior bomb officer could handle the work, but
it was better to have both specialists.
Johnny sat up with a jerk. "You are
going to do something about it?" He had thought the Exec was just talking.
Towers smiled. "We're not
politicians; we don't just talk. We act."
Johnny whistled. "When does this
start?"
Towers flipped a switch. Johnny was
startled to hear his own voice, then identified the recorded conversation as
having taken place in the junior officers' messroom. A political argument he
remembered, which he had walked out on... a good thing, too! But being spied on
annoyed him.
Towers switched it off. "We have
acted," he said. "We know who is safe and who isn't. Take
Kelly-" He waved at the loudspeaker. "Kelly is politically
unreliable. You noticed he wasn't at breakfast?"
"Huh? I thought he was on
watch."
"Kelly's watch-standing days are
over. Oh, relax; he isn't hurt."
Johnny thought this over. "Which list
am I on?" he asked. "Safe or unsafe?"
"Your name has a question mark after
it. But I have said all along that you could be depended on." He grinned
engagingly. "You won't make a liar of me, Johnny?"
Dahlquist didn't answer; Towers said
sharply, "Come now - what do you think of it? Speak up."
"Well, if you ask me, you've bitten
off more than you can chew. While it's true that Moon Base controls the Earth,
Moon Base itself is a sitting duck for a ship. One bomb - blooie!"
Towers picked up a message form and handed
it over; it read: I HAVE YOUR CLEAN LAUNDRY-ZACK. "That means every bomb
in the Trygve Lie has been put out of commission. I have reports from every
ship we need worry about." He stood up. "Think it over and see me
after lunch. Major Morgan needs your help right away to change control
frequencies on the bombs."
"The control frequencies?"
"Naturally. We don't want the bombs
jammed before they reach their targets."
"What? You said the idea was to prevent
war."
Towers brushed it aside. "There
won't, be a war-just a psychological demonstration, an unimportant town or two.
A little bloodletting to save an all-out war. Simple arithmetic."
He put a hand on Johnny's shoulder.
"You aren't squeamish, or you wouldn't be a bomb officer. Think of it as a
surgical operation. And think of your family."
Johnny Dahlquist had been thinking of his
family. "Please, sir, I want to see the Commanding Officer."
Towers frowned. "The Commodore is not
available. As you know, I speak for him. See me again-after lunch."
The Commodore was decidedly not available;
the Commodore was dead. But Johnny did not know that.
Dahlquist walked back to the messroom,
bought cigarettes, sat down and had a smoke. He got up, crushed out the butt,
and headed for the Base's west airlock. There he got into his space suit and
went to the lockmaster. "Open her up, Smitty."
The marine looked surprised. "Can't
let anyone out on the surface without word from Colonel Towers, sir. Hadn't you
heard?"
"Oh, yes! Give me your order
book." Dahlquist took it, wrote a pass for himself, and signed it "by
direction of Colonel Towers." He added, "Better call the Executive
Officer and check it."
The lockmaster read it and stuck the book
in his pocket. "Oh, no, Lieutenant. Your word's good."
"Hate to disturb the Executive
Officer, eh? Don't blame you." He stepped in, closed the inner door, and
waited for the air to be sucked out.
Out on the Moon's surface he blinked at
the light and hurried to the track-rocket terminus; a car was waiting. He
squeezed in, pulled down the hood, and punched the starting button. The rocket
car flung itself at the hills dived through and came out on a plain studded
with projectile rockets, like candles on a cake. Quickly it dived into a second
tunnel through more hills. There was a stomach-wrenching deceleration and the
car stopped at the underground atom-bomb armory.
As Dahlquist climbed out he switched on
his walkie-talkie. The space-suited guard at the entrance came to port-arms.
Dahlquist said, "Morning, Lopez," and walked by him to the airlock.
He pulled it open. . .
The guard motioned him back. "Hey!
Nobody goes in without the Executive Officer's say-so." He shifted his
gun, fumbled in his pouch and got out a paper. "Read it, Lieutenant."
Dahlquist waved it away. "I drafted
that order myself. You read it; you've misinterpreted it."
"I don't see how, Lieutenant."
Dahlquist snatched the paper, glanced at
it, then pointed to a line. "See? '-except persons specifically designated
by the Executive Officer.' That's the bomb officers, Major Morgan and me."
The guard looked worried. Dahlquist said,
"Damn it, look up 'specifically designated' - it's under 'Bomb Room,
Security, Procedure for' in your standing orders. Don't tell me you left them
in the barracks!"
"Oh, no, sir! I've got 'em." The
guard reached into his pouch. Dahlquist gave him back the sheet; the guard took
it, hesitated, then leaned his weapon against his hip, shifted the paper to his
left hand, and dug into his pouch with his right.
Dahlquist grabbed the gun, shoved it
between the guard's legs, and jerked. He threw the weapon away and ducked into
the airlock. As he slammed the door he saw the guard struggling to his feet and
reaching for his side arm. He dogged the outer door shut and felt a tingle in
his fingers as a slug struck the door.
He flung himself at the inner door, jerked
the spill lever, rushed back to the outer door and hung his weight on the
handle. At once he could feel it stir. The guard was lifting up; the lieutenant
was pulling down, with only his low Moon weight to anchor him. Slowly the
handle raised before his eyes.
Air from the bomb room rushed into the
lock through the spill valve. Dahlquist felt his space suit settle on his body
as the pressure in the lock began to equal the pressure in the suit. He quit
straining and let the guard raise the handle. It did not matter; thirteen tons
of air pressure now held the door closed.
He latched open the inner door to the bomb
room, so that it could not swing shut. As long as it was open, the airlock
could not operate; no one could enter.
Before him in the room, one for each
projectile rocket, were the atom bombs, spaced in rows far enough apart to
defeat any faint possibility of spontaneous chain reaction. They were the
deadliest things in the known universe, but they were his babies. He had placed
himself between them and anyone who would misuse them.
But, now that he was here, he had no plan
to use his temporary advantage.
The speaker on the wall sputtered into
life. "Hey! Lieutenant! What goes on here? You gone crazy?" Dahlquist
did not answer. Let Lopez stay confused-it would take him that much longer to
make up his mind what to do. And Johnny Dahlquist needed as many minutes as he
could squeeze. Lopez went on protesting. Finally he shut up.
Johnny had followed a blind urge not to
let the bombs - his bombs! - be used for "demonstrations on unimportant
towns." But what to do next? Well, Towers couldn't get through the lock.
Johnny would sit tight until hell froze over.
Don't kid yourself, John Ezra! Towers
could get in. Some high explosive against the outer door-then the air would
whoosh out, our boy Johnny would drown in blood from his burst lungs-and the
bombs would be sitting there, unhurt. They were built to stand the jump from
Moon to Earth; vacuum would not hurt them at all.
He decided to stay in his space suit;
explosive decompression didn't appeal to him. Come to think about it, death
from old age was his choice.
Or they could drill a hole, let out the
air, and open, the door without wrecking the lock. Or Towers might even have a
new airlock built outside the old. Not likely, Johnny thought; a coup d'etat
depended on speed. Towers was almost sure to take the quickest way-blasting.
And Lopez was probably calling the Base right now. Fifteen minutes for Towers
to suit up and get here, maybe a short dicker-then whoosh! the party is over.
Fifteen minutes - In fifteen minutes the
bombs might fall back into the hands of the conspirators; in fifteen minutes he
must make the bombs unusable.
An atom bomb is just two or more pieces of
fissionable metal, such as plutonium. Separated, they are no more explosive
than a pound of butter; slapped together, they explode. The complications lie
in the gadgets and circuits and gun used to slap them together in the exact way
and at the exact time and place required.
These circuits, the bomb's
"brain," are easily destroyed - but the bomb itself is hard to
destroy because of its very simplicity. Johnny decided to smash the
"brains" - and quickly!
The only tools at hand were simple ones
used in handling the bombs. Aside from a Geiger counter, the speaker on the
walkie-talkie circuit, a television rig to the base, and the bombs themselves,
the room was bare. A bomb to be worked on was taken elsewhere-not through fear
of explosion, but to reduce radiation exposure for personnel. The radioactive
material in a bomb is buried in a "tamper" - in these bombs, gold.
Gold stops alpha, beta, and much of the deadly gamma radiation - but not
neutrons.
The slippery, poisonous neutrons which
plutonium gives off had to escape, or a chain reaction - explosion! - would
result. The room was bathed in an invisible, almost undetectable rain of
neutrons. The place was unhealthy; regulations called for staying in it as
short a time as possible.
The Geiger counter clicked off the
"background" radiation, cosmic rays, the trace of radioactivity in
the Moon's crust, and secondary radioactivity set up all through the room by
neutrons. Free neutrons have the nasty trait of infecting what they strike,
making it radioactive, whether it be concrete wall or human body. In time the
room would have to be abandoned.
Dahlquist twisted a knob on the Geiger
counter; the instrument stopped clicking. He had used a suppressor circuit to
cut out noise of "background" radiation at the level then present. It
reminded him uncomfortably of the danger of staying here. He took out the
radiation exposure film all radiation personnel carry; it was a direct-response
type and had been fresh when he arrived. The most sensitive end was faintly
darkened already. Half way down the film a red line crossed it. Theoretically,
if the wearer was exposed to enough radioactivity in a week to darken the film
to that line, he was, as Johnny reminded himself, a "dead duck".
Off came the cumbersome space suit; what
he needed was speed. Do the job and surrender-better to be a prisoner than to
linger in a place as "hot" as this.
He grabbed a ball hammer from the tool
rack and got busy, pausing only to switch off the television pick-up. The first
bomb bothered him. He started to smash the covet plate of the
"brain," then stopped, filled with reluctance. All his life he had
prized fine apparatus.
He nerved himself and swung; glass
tinkled, metal creaked. His mood changed; he began to feel a shameful pleasure
in destruction. He pushed on with enthusiasm, swinging, smashing, destroying!
So intent was he that he did not at first
hear his name called. "Dahlquist! Answer me! Are you there?"
He wiped sweat and looked at the TV
screen. Towers' perturbed features stared out.
Johnny was shocked to find that he had
wrecked only six bombs. Was he going to be caught before he could finish? Oh,
no! He had to finish. Stall, son, stall! "Yes, Colonel? You called
me?"
"I certainly did! What's the meaning
of this?"
"I'm sorry, Colonel."
Towers' expression relaxed a little.
"Turn on your pick-up, Johnny, I can't see you. What was that noise?"
"The pick-up is on," Johnny
lied. "It must be out of order. That noise-uh, to tell the truth, Colonel,
I was fixing things so that nobody could get in here."
Towers hesitated, then said firmly,
"I'm going to assume that you are sick and send you to the Medical Officer.
But I want you to come out of there, right away. That's an order, Johnny."
Johnny answered slowly. "I can't just
yet, Colonel. I came here to make up my mind and I haven't quite made it up.
You said to see you after lunch."
"I meant you to stay in your
quarters."
"Yes, sir. But I thought I ought to
stand watch on the bombs, in case I decided you were wrong."
"It's not for you to decide, Johnny.
I'm your superior officer. You are sworn to obey me."
"Yes, sir." This was wasting
time; the old fox might have a squad on the way now. "But I swore to keep
the peace, too. Could you come out here and talk it over with me? I don't want
to do the wrong thing."
Towers smiled. "A good idea, Johnny.
You wait there. I'm sure you'll see the light." He switched off.
"There," said Johnny. "I
hope you're convinced that I'm a half-wit-you slimy mistake!" He picked up
the hammer, ready to use the minutes gained.
He stopped almost at once; it dawned on
him that wrecking the "brains" was not enough. There were no spare
"brains," but there was a well-stocked electronics shop. Morgan could
jury-rig control circuits for bombs. Why, he could himself - not a neat job,
but one that would work. Damnation! He would have to wreck the bombs themselves
- and in the next ten minutes.
But a bomb was solid chunks of metal,
encased in a heavy tamper, all tied in with a big steel gun. It couldn't be
done - not in ten minutes.
Damn!
Of course, there was one way. He knew the
control circuits; he also knew how to beat them. Take this bomb: if he took out
the safety bar, unhooked the proximity circuit, shorted the delay circuit, and
cut in the arming circuit by hand - then unscrewed that and reached in there,
he could, with just a long, stiff wire, set the bomb off.
Blowing the other bombs and the valley
itself to Kingdom Come.
Also Johnny Dahlquist. That was the rub.
All this time he was doing what he had
thought out, up to the step of actually setting off the bomb. Ready to go, the
bomb seemed to threaten, as if crouching to spring. He stood up, sweating.
He wondered if he had the courage. He did
not want to funk - and hoped that he would. He dug into his jacket and took out
a picture of Edith and the baby. "Honeychild," he said, "if I
get out of this, I'll never even try to beat a red light." He kissed the
picture and put it back. There was nothing to do but wait.
What was keeping Towers? Johnny wanted to
make sure that Towers was in blast range. What a joke on the jerk! Me sitting
here, ready to throw the switch on him. The idea tickled him; it led to a
better: why blow himself up - alive?
There was another way to rig it - a
"dead man" control. Jigger up some way so that the last step, the one
that set off the bomb, would not happen as long as he kept his hand on a switch
or a lever or something. Then, if they blew open the door, or shot him, or
anything - up goes the balloon!
Better still, if he could hold them off
with the threat of it, sooner or later help would come - Johnny was sure that
most of the Patrol was not in this stinking conspiracy - and then: Johnny comes
marching home! What a reunion! He'd resign and get a teaching job; he'd stood
his watch.
All the while, he was working. Electrical?
No, too little time. Make it a simple mechanical linkage. He had it doped out
but had hardly begun to build it when the loudspeaker called him.
"Johnny?"
"That you, Colonel?" His hands
kept busy.
"Let me in."
"Well, now, Colonel, that wasn't in
the agreement." Where in blue blazes was something to use as a long lever?
"I'll come in alone, Johnny, I give
you my word. We'll talk face to face."
His word! "We can talk over the
speaker, Colonel." Hey, that was it-a yardstick, hanging on the tool rack.
"Johnny, I'm warning you. Let me in,
or I'll blow the door off."
A wire-he needed a wire, fairly long and
stiff. He tore the antenna from his suit. "You wouldn't do that, Colonel.
It would ruin the bombs."
"Vacuum won't hurt the bombs. Quit
stalling."
"Better check with Major Morgan.
Vacuum won't hurt them; explosive decompression would wreck every
circuit." The Colonel was not a bomb specialist; he shut up for several
minutes. Johnny went on working.
"Dahlquist," Towers resumed,
"that was a clumsy, lie. I checked with Morgan. You have sixty seconds to
get into your suit, if you aren't already. I'm going to blast the door."
"No, you won't," said Johnny.
"Ever hear of a 'dead man' switch?" Now for a counterweight-and a
sling.
"Eh? What do you mean?"
"I've rigged number seventeen to set
off by hand. But I put in a gimmick. It won't blow while I hang on to a strap
I've got in my hand. But if anything happens to me - up she goes! You are about
fifty feet from the blast center. Think it over."
There was a short silence. "I don't
believe you."
"No? Ask Morgan. He'll believe me. He
can inspect it, over the TV pickup." Johnny lashed the belt of his space
suit to the end of the yardstick.
"You said the pick-up was out of
order."
"So I lied. This time I'll prove it.
Have Morgan call me."
Presently Major Morgan's face appeared.
"Lieutenant Dahlquist?"
"Hi, Stinky. Wait a sec." With
great care Dahlquist made one last connection while holding down the end of the
yardstick. Still careful, he shifted his grip to the belt, sat down on the
floor, stretched an arm and switched on the TV pick-up, "Can you see me,
Stinky?"
"I can see you," Morgan answered
stiffly. "What is this nonsense?"
"A little surprise I whipped
up." He explained it-what circuits he had cut out, what ones had been
shorted, just how the jury-rigged mechanical sequence fitted in.
Morgan nodded. "But you're bluffing,
Dahlquist. I feel sure that you haven't disconnected the 'K' circuit. You don't
have the guts to blow yourself up."
Johnny chuckled. "I sure haven't. But
that's the beauty of it. It can't go off, so long as I am alive. If your greasy
boss, ex-Colonel Towers, blasts the door, then I'm dead and the bomb goes off.
It won't matter to me, but it will to him. Better tell him." He switched
off.
Towers came on over the speaker shortly.
"Dahlquist?"
"I hear you."
"There's no need to throw away your
life. Come out and you will be retired on full pay. You can go home to your
family. That's a promise."
Johnny got mad. "You keep my family
out of this!"
"Think of them, man."
"Shut up. Get back to your hole. I
feel a need to scratch and this whole shebang might just explode in your
lap."
2
JOHNNY SAT UP with a start. He had dozed,
his hand hadn't let go the sling, but he had the shakes when he thought about
it.
Maybe he should disarm the bomb and depend
on their not daring to dig him out? But Towers' neck was already in hock for
treason; Towers might risk it. If he did and the bomb were disarmed, Johnny
would be dead and Towers would have the bombs. No, he had gone this far; he
wouldn't let his baby girl grow up in a dictatorship just to catch some sleep.
He heard the Geiger counter clicking and
remembered having used the suppressor circuit The radioactivity in the room
must be increasing, perhaps from scattering the "brain" circuits-the
circuits were sure to be infected; they had lived too long too close to
plutonium. He dug out his film.
The dark area was spreading toward the red
line.
He put it back and said, "Pal, better
break this deadlock or you are going to shine like a watch dial." It was a
figure of speech; infected animal tissue does not glow-it simply dies, slowly.
The TV screen lit up; Towers' face
appeared. "Dahlquist? I want to talk to you."
"Go fly a kite."
"Let's admit you have us
inconvenienced."
"Inconvenienced, hell-I've got you
stopped."
"For the moment I'm arranging to get
more bombs-"
"Liar."
"-but you are slowing us up. I have a
proposition."
"Not interested."
"Wait. When this is over I will be
chief of the world government. If you cooperate, even now, I will make you my
administrative head."
Johnny told him what to do with it. Towers
said, "Don't be stupid. What do you gain by dying?"
Johnny grunted. "Towers, what a prime
stinker you are. You spoke of my family. I'd rather see them dead than living
under a two-bit Napoleon like you. Now go away-I've got some thinking to
do."
Towers switched off.
Johnny got out his film again. It seemed
no darker but it reminded, him forcibly that time was running out. He was
hungry and thirsty-and he could not stay awake forever. It took four days to
get a ship up from Earth; he could not expect rescue any sooner. And he
wouldn't last four days-once the darkening spread past the red line he was a
goner.
His only chance was to wreck the bombs
beyond repair, and get out-before that film got much darker.
He thought about ways, then got busy. He
hung a weight on the sling, tied a line to it. If Towers blasted the door, he
hoped to jerk the rig loose before he died.
There was a simple, though arduous, way to
wreck the bombs beyond any capacity of Moon Base to repair them. The heart of
each was two hemispheres of plutonium, their flat surfaces polished smooth to
permit perfect contact when slapped together. Anything less would prevent the
chain reaction on which atomic explosion depended.
Johnny started taking apart one of the
bombs.
He had to bash off four lugs, then break
the glass envelope around the inner assembly. Aside from that the bomb came
apart easily. At last he had in front of him two gleaming, mirror-perfect half
globes.
A blow with the hammer-and one was no
longer perfect. Another blow and the second cracked like glass; he had tapped
its crystalline structure just right.
Hours later, dead tired, he went back to
the armed bomb. Forcing himself to steady down, with extreme care he disarmed
it. Shortly its silvery hemispheres too were useless. There was no longer a
usable bomb in the room-but huge fortunes in the most valuable, most poisonous,
and most deadly metal in the known world were spread around the floor.
Johnny looked at the deadly stuff.
"Into your suit and out of here, son," he said aloud. "I wonder
what Towers will say?"
He walked toward the rack, intending to
hang up the hammer. As he passed, the Geiger counter chattered wildly.
Plutonium hardly affects a Geiger counter;
secondary infection from plutonium does. Johnny looked at the hammer, then held
it closer to the Geiger counter. The counter screamed...
Johnny tossed it hastily away and started
back toward his suit.
As he passed the counter it chattered
again. He stopped short.
He pushed one hand close to the counter.
Its clicking picked up to a steady roar. Without moving he reached into his
pocket and took out his exposure film.
It was dead black from end to end.
3
PLUTONIUM TAKEN into the body moves
quickly to bone marrow. Nothing can be done; the victim is finished. Neutrons
from it smash through the body, ionizing tissue, transmuting atoms into
radioactive isotopes, destroying and killing. The fatal dose is unbelievably
small; a mass a tenth the size of a grain of table salt is more than enough-a
dose small enough to enter through the tiniest scratch. During the historic
"Manhattan Project" immediate high amputation was considered the only
possible first-aid measure.
Johnny knew all this but it no longer
disturbed him. He sat on the floor, smoking a hoarded cigarette, and thinking.
The events of his long watch were running through his mind.
He blew a puff of smoke at the Geiger
counter and smiled without humor to hear it chatter more loudly. By now even
his breath was "hot" carbon-14, he supposed, exhaled from his blood
stream as carbon dioxide. It did not matter.
There was no longer any point in
surrendering, nor would he give Towers the satisfaction-he would finish out
this watch right here. Besides, by keeping up the bluff that one bomb was ready
to blow, he could stop them from capturing the raw material from which bombs
were made. That might be important in the long run.
He accepted, without surprise, the fact
that he was not unhappy. There was a sweetness about having no further worries
of any sort. He did not hurt, he was not uncomfortable, he was no longer even
hungry. Physically he still felt fine and his mind was at peace. He was dead -
he knew that he was dead; yet for a time he was able to walk and breathe and
see and feel.
He was not even lonesome. He was not
alone; there were comrades with him - the boy with his finger in the dike,
Colonel Bowie, too ill to move but insisting that he be carried across the
line, the dying Captain of the Chesapeake still with deathless challenge on his
lips, Rodger Young peering into the gloom. They gathered about him in the dusky
bomb room.
And of course there was Edith. She was the
only one he was aware of. Johnny wished that he could see her face more
clearly. Was she angry? Or proud and happy?
Proud though unhappy - he could see her
better now and even feel her hand. He held very still.
Presently his cigarette burned down to his
fingers. He took a final puff, blew it at the Geiger counter, and put it out.
It was his last. He gathered several butts and fashioned a roll-your-own with a
bit of paper found in a pocket. He lit it carefully and settled back to wait
for Edith to show up again. He was very happy.
He was still propped against the bomb
case, the last of his salvaged cigarettes cold at his side, when the speaker
called out again. "Johnny? Hey, Johnny! Can you hear me? This is Kelly.
It's all over. The Lafayette landed and Towers blew his brains out. Johnny?
Answer me."
When they opened the outer door, the first
man in carried a Geiger counter in front of him on the end of a long pole. He
stopped at the threshold and backed out hastily. "Hey, chief!" he
called. "Better get some handling equipment - uh, and a lead coffin,
too."
"Four days it took the little ship
and her escort to reach Earth. Four days while all of Earth's people awaited
her arrival. For ninety-eight hours all commercial programs were off
television; instead there was an endless dirge - the Dead March from Saul, the
Valhalla theme, Going Home, the Patrol's own Landing Orbit.
"The nine ships landed at Chicago
Port. A drone tractor removed the casket from the small ship; the ship was then
refueled and blasted off in an escape trajectory, thrown away into outer space,
never again to be used for a lesser purpose.
"The tractor progressed to the
Illinois town where Lieutenant Dahlquist had been born, while the dirge
continued. There it placed the casket on a pedestal, inside a barrier marking
the distance of safe approach. Space marines, arms reversed and heads bowed,
stood guard around it; the crowds stayed outside this circle. And still the
dirge continued.
"When enough time had passed, long,
long after the heaped flowers had withered, the lead casket was enclosed in
marble, just as you see it today."
Gentlemen,
Be Seated
IT TAKES both agoraphobes and
claustrophobes to colonize the Moon. Or make it agoraphiles and claustrophiles,
for the men who go out into space had better not have phobias. If anything on a
planet, in a planet, or in the empty reaches around the planets can frighten a
man, he should stick to Mother Earth. A man who would make his living away from
terra firma must be willing to be shut up in a cramped spaceship, knowing that
it may become his coffin, and yet he must be undismayed by the wide-open spaces
of space itself. Spacemen-men who work in space, pilots and jetmen and
astrogators and such-are men who like a few million miles of elbow room.
On the other hand the Moon colonists need
to be the sort who feel cozy burrowing around underground like so many pesky
moles.
On my second trip to Luna City I went over
to Richardson Observatory both to see the Big Eye and to pick up a story to pay
for my vacation. I flashed my Journalists' Guild card, sweet-talked a bit, and
ended with the paymaster showing me around. We went out the north tunnel, which
was then being bored to the site of the projected coronascope.
It was a dull trip-climb on a scooter,
ride down a completely featureless tunnel, climb off and go through an airlock,
get on another scooter and do it all over again. Mr. Knowles filled in with
sales talk. "This is temporary," he explained. "When we get the
second tunnel dug, we'll cross-connect, take out the airlocks, put a northbound
slidewalk in this one, a southbound slidewalk in the other one, and you'll make
the trip in less than three minutes. Just like Luna City-or Manhattan."
"Why not take out the airlocks
now?" I asked, as we entered another airlock-about the seventh. "So
far, the pressure is the same on each side of each lock."
Knowles looked at me quizzically.
"You wouldn't take advantage of a peculiarity of this planet just to work
up a sensational feature story?"
I was irked. "Look here," I told
him. "I'm as reliable as the next word-mechanic, but if something is not
kosher about this project let's go back right now and forget it. I won't hold
still for censorship."
"Take it easy, Jack," he said mildly-it
was the first time he had used my first name; I noted it and discounted it.
"Nobody's going to censor you. We're glad to cooperate with you fellows,
but the Moon's had too much bad publicity now-publicity it didn't
deserve."
I didn't say anything.
"Every engineering job has its own
hazards," he insisted, "and its advantages, too. Our men don't get
malaria and they don't have to watch out for rattlesnakes. I can show you
figures that prove it's safer to be a sandhog in the Moon than it is to be a
file clerk in Des Moines-all things considered. For example, we rarely have any
broken bones in the Moon; the gravity is so low-while that Des Moines file
clerk takes his life in his hands every time he steps in or out of his
bathtub."
"Okay, okay," I interrupted,
"so the place is safe. What's the catch?"
"It is safe. Not company figures,
mind you, nor Luna City Chamber of Commerce, but Lloyd's of London."
"So you keep unnecessary airlocks.
Why?"
He hesitated before he answered,
"Quakes."
Quakes. Earthquakes-moonquakes, I mean. I
glanced at the curving walls sliding past and I wished I were in Des Moines.
Nobody wants to be buried alive, but to have it happen in the Moon-why, you
wouldn't stand a chance. No matter how quick they got to you, your lungs would
be ruptured. No air.
"They don't happen very often,"
Knowles went on, "but we have to be prepared. Remember, the Earth is
eighty times the mass of the Moon, so the tidal stresses here are eighty times
as great as the Moon's effect on Earth tides."
"Come again," I said.
"There isn't any water on the Moon. How can there be tides?"
"You don't have to have water to have
tidal stresses. Don't worry about it; just accept it. What you get is
unbalanced stresses. They can cause quakes."
I nodded. "I see. Since everything in
the Moon has to be sealed airtight, you've got to watch out for quakes. These
airlocks are to confine your losses." I started visualizing myself as one
of the losses.
"Yes and no. The airlocks would limit
an accident all right, if there was one-which there won't be-this place is
safe. Primarily they let us work on a section of the tunnel at no pressure
without disturbing the rest of it. But they are more than that; each one is a
temporary expansion joint. You can tie a compact structure together and let it
ride out a quake, but a thing as long as this tunnel has to give, or it will
spring a leak. A flexible seal is hard to accomplish in the Moon."
"What's wrong with rubber?" I
demanded. I was feeling jumpy enough to be argumentative. "I've got a
ground-car back home with two hundred thousand miles on it, yet I've never
touched the tires since they were sealed up in Detroit."
Knowles sighed. "I should have
brought one of the engineers along, Jack. The volatiles that keep rubbers soft
tend to boil away in vacuum and the stuff gets stiff. Same for the flexible
plastics. When you expose them to low temperature as well they get brittle as
eggshells."
The scooter stopped as Knowles was
speaking and we got off just in time to meet half a dozen men coming out of the
next airlock. They were wearing spacesuits, or, more properly, pressure suits,
for they had hose connections instead of oxygen bottles, and no sun visors.
Their helmets were thrown back and each man had his head pushed through the
opened zipper in the front of his suit, giving him a curiously two headed look.
Knowles called out, "Hey, Konski!"
One of the men turned around. He must have
been six feet two and fat for his size. I guessed him at three hundred pounds,
earthside. "It's Mr. Knowles," he said happily. "Don't tell me
I've gotten a raise."
"You're making too much money now,
Fatso. Shake hands with Jack Arnold. Jack, this is Fatso Konski-the best
sandhog in four planets."
"Only four?" inquired Konski. He
slid his right arm out of his suit and stuck his bare hand into mine. I said I
was glad to meet him and tried to get my hand back before he mangled It.
"Jack Arnold wants to see how you
seal these tunnels," Knowles went on. "Come along with us."
Konski stared at the overhead. "Well,
now that you mention it, Mr. Knowles, I've just finished my shift."
Knowles said, "Fatso, you're a money
grubber and inhospitable as well. Okay-time-and-a-half." Konski turned and
started unsealing the airlock.
The tunnel beyond looked much the same as
the section we had left except that there were no scooter tracks and the lights
were temporary, rigged on extensions. A couple of hundred feet away the tunnel
was blocked by a bulkhead with a circular door in it. The fat man followed my
glance. "That's the movable lock," he explained. "No air beyond
it. We excavate just ahead of it."
"Can I see where you've been
digging?"
"Not without we go back and get you a
suit."
I shook my head. There were perhaps a
dozen bladder-like objects in the tunnel, the size and shape of toy balloons.
They seemed to displace exactly their own weight of air; they floated without
displaying much tendency to rise or settle. Konski batted one out of his way
and answered me before I could ask. "This piece of tunnel was pressurized
today," he told me. "These tag-alongs search out stray leaks. They're
sticky inside. They get sucked up against a leak, break, and the goo gets
sucked in, freezes and seals the leak."
"Is that a permanent repair?" I
wanted to know.
"Are you kidding? It just shows the
follow-up man where to weld."
"Show him a flexible joint,"
Knowles directed.
"Coming up." We paused half-way
down the tunnel and Konski pointed to a ring segment that ran completely around
the tubular tunnel. "We put in a flex joint every hundred feet. It's glass
cloth, gasketed onto the two steel sections it joins. Gives the tunnel a
certain amount of springiness."
"Glass cloth? To make an airtight
seal?" I objected.
"The cloth doesn't seal; it's for strength.
You got ten layers of cloth, with a silicone grease spread between the layers.
It gradually goes bad, from the outside in, but it'll hold five years or more
before you have to put on another coat."
I asked Konski how he liked his job,
thinking I might get some story. He shrugged. "It's all right. Nothing to
it. Only one atmosphere of pressure. Now you take when I was working under the
Hudson-"
"And getting paid a tenth of what you
get here," put in Knowles.
"Mr. Knowles, you grieve me,"
Konski protested. "It ain't the money; it's the art of the matter. Take
Venus. They pay as well on Venus and a man has to be on his toes. The muck is
so loose you have to freeze it. It takes real caisson men to work there. Half
of these punks here are just miners; a case of the bends would scare 'em
silly."
"Tell him why you left Venus,
Fatso."
Konski expressed dignity. "Shall we
examine the movable shield, gentlemen?" he asked.
We puttered around a while longer and I
was ready to go back. There wasn't much to see, and the more I saw of the place
the less I liked it. Konski was undogging the door of the airlock leading back
when something happened.
I was down on my hands and knees and the
place was pitch dark. Maybe I screamed-I don't know. There was a ringing in my
ears. I tried to get up and then stayed where I was. It was the darkest dark I
ever saw, complete blackness. I thought I was blind.
A torchlight beam cut through it, picked
me out, and then moved on. "What was it?" I shouted. "What
happened? Was it a quake?"
"Stop yelling," Konski's voice
answered me casually. "That was no quake, it was some sort of explosion.
Mr. Knowles-you all right?"
"I guess so." He gasped for
breath. "What happened?"
"Dunno. Let's look around a
bit." Konski stood up and poked his beam around the tunnel, whistling
softly. His light was the sort that has to be pumped; it flickered.
"Looks tight, but I hear-Oh, oh!
Sister!" His beam was focused on a part of the flexible joint, near the
floor.
The "tag-along" balloons were
gathering at this spot. Three were already there; others were drifting in
slowly. As we watched, one of them burst and collapsed in a sticky mass that
marked the leak.
The hole sucked up the burst balloon and
began to hiss. Another rolled onto the spot, joggled about a bit, then it, too,
burst. It took a little longer this time for the leak to absorb and swallow the
gummy mass.
Konski passed me the light. "Keep
pumping it, kid." He shrugged his right arm out of the suit and placed his
bare hand over the spot where, at that moment, a third bladder burst.
"How about it, Fats?" Mr.
Knowles demanded.
"Couldn't say. Feels like a hole as
big as my thumb. Sucks like the devil."
"How could you get a hole like
that?"
"Search me. Poked through from the
outside, maybe."
"You got the leak checked?"
"I think so. Go back and check the
gage. Jack, give him the light."
Knowles trotted back to the airlock.
Presently he sang out, "Pressure steady!"
"Can you read the vernier?"
Konski called to him.
"Sure. Steady by the vernier."
"How much we lose?"
"Not more than a pound or two. What
was the pressure before?"
"Earth-normal."
"Lost a pound four tenths,
then."
"Not bad. Keep on going, Mr. Knowles.
There's a tool kit just beyond the lock in the next section. Bring me back a
number three patch, or bigger."
"Right." We heard the door open
and clang shut, and we were again in total darkness. I must have made some
sound for Konski told me to keep my chin up.
Presently we heard the door, and the
blessed light shone out again. "Got it?" said Konski.
"No, Fatso. No . . ." Knowles'
voice was shaking. "There's no air on the other side. The other door
wouldn't open."
"Jammed, maybe?"
"No, I checked the manometer. There's
no pressure in the next section."
Konski whistled again. "Looks like
we'll wait till they come for us. In that case-- Keep the light on me, Mr.
Knowles. Jack, help me out of this suit."
"What are you planning to do?"
"If I can't get a patch, I got to
make one, Mr. Knowles. This suit is the only thing around." I started to
help him-a clumsy job since he had to keep his hand on the leak.
"You can stuff my shirt in the
hole," Knowles suggested.
"I'd as soon bail water with a fork.
It's got to be the suit; there's nothing else around that will hold the
pressure." When he was free of the suit, he had me smooth out a portion of
the back, then, as he snatched his hand away, I slapped the suit down over the
leak. Konski promptly sat on it. "There," he said happily,
"we've got it corked. Nothing to do but wait."
I started to ask him why he hadn't just
sat down on the leak while wearing the suit; then I realized that the seat of
the suit was corrugated with insulation-he needed a smooth piece to seal on to
the sticky stuff left by the balloons.
"Let me see your hand," Knowles
demanded.
"It's nothing much." But Knowles
examined it anyway. I looked at it and got a little sick. He had a mark like a
stigma on the palm, a bloody, oozing wound. Knowles made a compress of his
handkerchief and then used mine to tie it in place.
"Thank you, gentlemen," Konski
told us, then added, "we've got time to kill. How about a little
pinochle?"
"With your cards?" asked
Knowles.
"Why, Mr. Knowles! Well-never mind.
It isn't right for paymasters to gamble anyhow. Speaking of paymasters, you
realize this is pressure work now, Mr. Knowles?"
"For a pound and four tenths
differential?"
"I'm sure the union would take that
view-in the circumstances."
"Suppose I sit on the leak?"
"But the rate applies to helpers,
too."
"Okay, miser-triple-time it is."
"That's more like your own sweet
nature, Mr. Knowles. I hope it's a nice long wait."
"How long a wait do you think it will
be, Fatso?"
"Well, it shouldn't take them more
than an hour, even if they have to come all the way from Richardson."
"Hmm ... what makes you think they
will be looking for us?"
"Huh? Doesn't your office know where
you are?"
"I'm afraid not. I told them I
wouldn't be back today."
Konski thought about it. "I didn't
drop my time card. They'll know I'm still inside."
"Sure they will-tomorrow, when your
card doesn't show up at my office."
"There's that lunkhead on the gate.
He'll know he's got three extra inside."
"Provided he remembers to tell his
relief. And provided he wasn't caught in it, too."
"Yes, I guess so," Konski said
thoughtfully. "Jack-better quit pumping that light. You just use up more
oxygen."
We sat there in the darkness for quite a
long time, speculating about what had happened. Konski was sure it was an
explosion; Knowles said that it put him in mind of a time when he had seen a
freight rocket crash on take off. When the talk started to die out, Konski told
some stories. I tried to tell one, but I was so nervous-so afraid, I should
say-that I couldn't remember the snapper. I wanted to scream.
After a long silence Konski said,
"Jack, give us the light again. I got something figured out."
"What is it?" Knowles asked.
"If we had a patch, you could put on
my suit and go for help."
"There's no oxygen for the
suit."
"That's why I mentioned you. You're
the smallest-there'll be enough air in the suit itself to take you through the
next section."
"Well-okay. What are you going to use
for a patch?"
"I'm sitting on it."
"Huh?"
"This big broad, round thing I'm
sitting on. I'll take my pants off. If I push one of my hams against that hole,
I'll guarantee you it'll be sealed tight."
"But-No, Fats, it won't do. Look what
happened to your hand. You'd hemorrhage through your skin and bleed to death
before I could get back."
"I'll give you two to one I
wouldn't-for fifty, say."
"If I win, how do I collect?"
"You're a cute one, Mr. Knowles. But
look-I've got two or three inches of fat padding me. I won't bleed much-a
strawberry mark, no more."
Knowles shook his head. "It's not
necessary. If we keep quiet, there's air enough here for several days."
"It's not the air, Mr. Knowles.
Noticed it's getting chilly?"
I had noticed, but hadn't thought about
it. In my misery and funk being cold didn't seem anything more than
appropriate. Now I thought about it. When we lost the power line, we lost the
heaters, too. It would keep getting colder and colder ... and colder.
Mr. Knowles saw it, too. "Okay, Fats.
Let's get on with it."
I sat on the suit while Konski got ready.
After he got his pants off he snagged one of the tag-alongs, burst it, and
smeared the sticky insides on his right buttock. Then he turned to me.
"Okay, kid-up off the nest." We made the swap-over fast, without losing
much air, though the leak hissed angrily. "Comfortable as an easy chair,
folks." He grinned.
Knowles hurried into the suit and left,
taking the light with him. We were in darkness again.
After a while, I heard Konski's voice.
"There a game we can play in the dark, Jack. You play chess?"
"Why, yes-play at it, that is."
"A good game. Used to play it in the
decompression chamber when I was working under the Hudson. What do you say to
twenty on a side, just to make it fun?"
"Uh? Well, all right." He could
have made it a thousand; I didn't care.
"Fine. King's pawn to king
three."
"Uh-king's pawn to king's four."
"Conventional, aren't you? Puts me in
mind of a girl I knew in Hoboken--" What he told about her bad nothing to
do with chess, although it did prove she was conventional, in a manner of
speaking. "King's bishop to queen's bishop four. Remind me to tell you
about her sister, too. Seems she hadn't always been a redhead, but she wanted
people to think so. So she-sorry. Go ahead with your move."
I tried to think but my head was spinning.
"Queen's pawn to queen three."
"Queen to king's bishop three.
Anyhow, she--" He went on in great detail. It wasn't new and I doubt if it
ever happened to him, but it cheered me up. I actually smiled, there in the dark.
"It's your move," he added.
"Oh." I couldn't remember the
board. I decided to get ready to castle, always fairly safe in the early game.
"Queen's knight to queen's bishop three."
"Queen advances to capture your
king's bishop's pawn-checkmate. You owe me twenty, Jack."
"Huh? Why that can't be!"
"Want to run over the moves?" He
checked them off.
I managed to visualize them, then said,
"Why, I'll be a dirty name! You hooked me with a fool's mate!"
He chuckled. "You should have kept
your eye on my queen instead of on the redhead."
I laughed out loud. "Know any more
stories?"
"Sure." He told another. But
when I urged him to go on, he said, "I think I'll just rest a little
while, Jack."
I got up. "You all right, Fats?"
He didn't answer; I felt my way over to him in the dark. His face was cold and
he didn't speak when I touched him. I could hear his heart faintly when I
pressed an ear to his chest, but his hands and feet were like ice.
I had to pull him loose; he was frozen to
the spot. I could feel the ice, though I knew it must be blood. I started to
try to revive him by rubbing him, but the hissing of the leak brought me up
short. I tore off my own trousers, had a panicky time before I found the exact
spot in the dark, and sat down on it, with my right buttock pressed firmly
against the opening.
It grabbed me like a suction cup, icy
cold. Then it was fire spreading through my flesh. After a time I couldn't feel
anything at all, except a dull ache and coldness.
There was a light someplace. It flickered
on, then went out again. I heard a door clang. I started to shout.
"Knowles!" I Screamed. "Mr.
Knowles!"
The light flickered on again.
"Coming, Jack--"
I started to blubber. "Oh, you made
it! You made it."
"I didn't make it, Jack. I couldn't
reach the next section. When I got back to the lock I passed out." He
stopped to wheeze. "There's a crater--" The light flickered off and
fell clanging to the floor. "Help me, Jack," he said querulously.
"Can't you see I need help? I tried to--"
I heard him stumble and fall. I called to
him, but he didn't answer.
I tried to get up, but I was stuck fast, a
cork in a bottle . . .
I came to, lying face down-with a clean
sheet under me. "Feeling better?" someone asked. It was Knowles,
standing by my bed, dressed in a bathrobe.
"You're dead," I told him.
"Not a bit." He grinned.
"They got to us in time."
"What happened?" I stared at
him, still not believing my eyes.
"Just like we thought-a crashed
rocket. An unmanned mail rocket got out of control and hit the tunnel."
"Where's Fats?"
"Hi!"
I twisted my head around; it was Konski,
face down like myself.
"You owe me twenty," he said
cheerfully.
"I owe you--" I found I was
dripping tears for no good reason. "Okay, I owe you twenty. But you'll
have to come to Des Moines to collect it."
The Black Pits of Luna
THE MORNING after we got to the Moon we
went over to Rutherford. Dad and Mr. Latham - Mr. Latham is the man from the
Harriman Trust that Dad came to Luna City to see.
Dad and Mr. Latham had to go anyhow, on
business. I got Dad to promise I could go along because it looked like just
about my only chance to get out on the surface of the Moon. Luna City is all
right, I guess, but I defy you to tell a corridor in Luna City from the
sublevels in New York-except that you're light on your feet, of course.
When Dad came into our hotel suite to say
we were ready to leave, I was down on the floor, playing mumblety-peg with my
kid brother. Mother was lying down and had asked me to keep the runt quiet. She
had been dropsick all the way out from Earth and I guess she didn't feel very
good. The runt had been fiddling with the lights, switching them from
"dusk" to "desert suntan" and back again. I collared him
and sat him down on the floor.
Of course, I don't play mumblety-peg any
more, but, on the Moon, it's a right good game. The knife practically floats
and you can do all kinds of things with it. We made up a lot of new rules.
Dad said, "Switch in plans, my dear.
We're leaving for Rutherford right away. Let's pull ourselves together."
Mother said, "Oh, mercy me-I don't
think I'm up to it. You and Dickie run along. Baby Darling and I will just
spend a quiet day right here."
Baby Darling is the runt.
I could have told her it was the wrong
approach. He nearly put my eye out with the knife and said, "Who? What?
I'm going too. Let's go!"
Mother said, "Oh, now, Baby
Darling-don't cause Mother Dear any trouble, We'll go to the movies, just you
and I."
The runt is seven years younger than I am,
but don't call him "Baby Darling" if you want to get anything out of
him. He started to bawl. "You said I could go!" he yelled.
"No, Baby Darling. I haven't
mentioned it to you. I-"
"Daddy said I could go!"
"Richard, did you tell Baby he could
go?"
"Why, no, my dear, not that I recall.
Perhaps I-"
The kid cut in fast. "You said I
could go anywhere Dickie went. You promised me you promised me you promised
me." Sometimes you have to hand it to the runt; he had them jawing about
who told him what in nothing flat. Anyhow, that is how twenty minutes later,
the four of us were up at the rocket port with Mr. Lathani and climbing into
the shuttle for Rutherford.
The trip only takes about ten minutes and
you don't see much, just a glimpse of the Earth while the rocket is still near
Luna City and then not even that, since the atom plants where we were going are
all on the back side of the Moon, of course. There were maybe a dozen tourists
along and most of them were dropsick as soon as we went into free flight. So
was Mother. Some people never will get used to rockets.
But Mother was all right as soon as we
grounded and were inside again. Rutherford isn't like Luna City; instead of
extending a tube out to the ship, they send a pressurized car out to latch on
to the airlock of the rocket, then you jeep back about a mile to the entrance
to underground. I liked that and so did the runt. Dad had to go off on business
with Mr. Latham, leaving Mother and me and the runt to join up with the party
of tourists for the trip through the laboratories.
It was all right but nothing to get
excited about. So far as I can see, one atomics plant looks about like another;
Rutherford could just as well have been. the main plant outside Chicago. I mean
to say everything that is anything is out of sight, covered up, shielded. All
you get to see are some dials and instrument boards and people watching them.
Remote control stuff, like Oak Ridge. The guide tells you about the experiments
going on and they show you some movies - that's all.
I liked our guide. He looked like Tom
Jeremy in The Space Troopers. I asked him if he was a spaceman and he looked at
me kind of funny and said, no, that he was just a Colonial Services ranger.
Then he asked me where I went to school and if I belonged to the Scouts. He
said he was scoutmaster of Troop One, Rutherford City, Moonbat Patrol.
I found out there was just the one
patrol-not many scouts on the Moon, I suppose.
Dad and Mr. Latham joined us just as we
finished the tour while Mr. Perrin - that's our guide - was announcing the trip
outside. "The conducted tour of Rutherford," he said, talking as if
it were a transcription, "includes a trip by spacesuit out on the surface
of the Moon, without extra charge, to see the Devil's Graveyard and the site of
the Great Disaster of 1984. The trip is optional. There is nothing particularly
dangerous about it and we've never had any one hurt, but the Commission
requires that you sign a separate release for your own safety if you choose to
make this trip. The trip takes about one hour. Those preferring to remain
behind will find movies and refreshments in the coffee shop."
Dad was rubbing his hands together.
"This is for me," he announced. "Mr. Latham, I'm glad we got
back in time. I wouldn't have missed this for the world."
"You'll enjoy it," Mr. Latham
agreed, "and so will you, Mrs. Logan. I'm tempted to come along
myself."
"Why don't you?' Dad asked.
"No, I want to have the papers ready
for you and the Director to sign when you get back and before you leave for
Luna City."
"Why knock yourself out?" Dad
urged him. "If a man's word is no good, his signed contract is no better.
You can mail the stuff to me at New York."
Mr. Latham shook his head. "No, really
- I've been out on the surface dozens of times. But I'll come along and help
you into your spacesuits."
Mother said, "Oh dear," she
didn't think she'd better go; she wasn't sure she could stand the thought of
being shut up in a spacesuit and besides glaring sunlight always gave her a
headache.
Dad said, "Don't be silly, my dear;
it's the chance of a lifetime," and Mr. Latham told her that the filters
on the helmets kept the light from being glaring. Mother always objects and
then gives in. I suppose women just don't have any force of character. Like the
night before - earth-night, I mean, Luna City time - she had bought a fancy
moonsuit to wear to dinner in the Earth-View room at the hotel, then she got
cold feet. She complained to Dad that she was too plump to dare to dress like
that.
Well, she did show an awful lot of skin.
Dad said, "Nonsense, my dear. You look ravishing." So she wore it and
had a swell time, especially when a pilot tried to pick her up.
It was like that this time. She came along.
We went into the outfitting room and I looked around while Mr. Perrin was
getting them all herded in and having the releases signed. There was the door
to the airlock to the surface at the far end, with a bull's-eye window in it
and another one like it in the door beyond. You could peek through and see the
surface of the Moon beyond, looking hot and bright and sort of improbable, in
spite of the amber glass in the windows. And there was a double row of
spacesuits hanging up, looking like empty men. I snooped around until Mr.
Perrin got around to our party.
"We can arrange to leave the
youngster in the care of the hostess in the coffee shop," he was telling
Mother. He reached down and tousled the runt's hair. The runt tried to bite him
and he snatched his hand away in a hurry.
"Thank you, Mr. Perkins," Mother
said, "I suppose that's best-though perhaps I had better stay behind with
him."
"'Perrin' is the name," Mr.
Perrin said mildly. "It won't be necessary. The hostess will take good
care of him."
Why do adults talk in front of kids as if
they couldn't understand English? They should have just shoved him into the
coffee shop. By now the runt knew he was being railroaded. He looked around
belligerently. "I go, too," he said loudly. "You promised
me."
"Now Baby Darling,"
Mother tried to stop him. "Mother Dear didn't tell you-" But she was
just whistling to herself; the runt turned on the sound effects.
"You said I could go where Dickie
went; you promised me when I was sick. You promised me you promised me-"
and on and on, his voice getting higher and louder all the time.
Mr. Perrin looked embarrassed. Mother
said, "Richard, you'll just have to deal with your child. After all, you
were the one who promised him."
"Me, dear?" Dad looked
surprised. "Anyway, I don't see anything so complicated about it. Suppose
we did promise him that he could do what Dickie does-we'll simply take him
along; that's all."
Mr. Perrin cleared his throat. "I'm
afraid not. I can outfit your older son with a woman's suit; he's tall for his
age. But we just don't make any provision for small children."
Well, we were all tangled up in a mess in
no time at all. The runt can always get Mother to go running in circles. Mother
has the same effect on Dad. He gets red in the face and starts laying down the
law to me. It's sort of a chain reaction, with me on the end and nobody to pass
it along to. They came out with a very simple solution - I was to stay behind
and take care of Baby Darling brat!
"But, Dad, you said-" I started in.
"Never mind!" he cut in. "I
won't have this family disrupted in a public squabble. You heard what your
mother said."
I was desperate. "Look, Dad," I
said, keeping my voice low, "if I go back to Earth without once having put
on a spacesuit and set foot on the surface, you'll just have to find another
school to send me to. I won't go back to Lawrenceville; I'd be the joke of the
whole place."
"We'll settle that when we get
home."
"But, Dad, you promised me
specifically-"
"That'll be enough out of you, young
man. The matter is closed."
Mr. Lathain had been standing near by,
taking it in but keeping his mouth shut. At this point he cocked an eyebrow at
Dad and said very quietly, "Well, R.J., I thought your word was your
bond?"
I wasn't supposed to hear it and nobody
else did - a good thing, too, for it doesn't do to let Dad know that you know
that he's wrong; it just makes him worse. I changed the subject in a hurry.
"Look, Dad, maybe we all can go out. How about that suit over there?"
I pointed at a rack that was inside a railing with a locked gate on it. The
rack had a couple of dozen suits on it and at the far end, almost out of sight,
was a small suit - the boots on it hardly came down to the waist of the suit
next to it.
"Huh?" Dad brightened up.
"Why, just the thing! Mr. Perrin! Oh, Mr. Perrin-here a minute! I thought
you didn't have any small suits, but here's one that I think will fit."
Dad was fiddling at the latch of the
railing gate. Mr. Perrin stopped him. "We can't use that suit, sir."
"Uh? Why not?"
"All the suits inside the railing are
private property, not for rent."
"What? Nonsense-Rutherford is a
public enterprise. I want that suit for my child."
"Well, you can't have it."
"I'll speak to the Director."
"I'm afraid you'll have to. That suit
was specially built for his daughter."
And that's just what they did. Mr. Latham
got the Director on the line, Dad talked to him, then the Director talked to
Mr. Perrin, then he talked to Dad again. The Director didn't mind lending the
suit, not to Dad, anyway, but he wouldn't order Mr. Perrin to take a below-age
child outside.
Mr. Perrin was feeling stubborn and I
don't blame him, but Dad soothed his feathers down and presently we were all
climbing into our suits and getting pressure checks and checking our oxygen
supply and switching on our walkie-talkies. Mr. Perrin was calling the roll by
radio and reminding us that we were all on the same circuit, so we had better
let him do most of the talking and not to make casual remarks or none of us
would be able to hear. Then we were in the airlock and he was warning us to
stick close together and not try to see how fast we could run or how high we
could jump. My heart was rocking around in my chest.
The outer door of the lock opened and we
filed out on the face of the Moon. It was just as wonderful as I dreamed it
would be, I guess, but I was so excited that I hardly knew it at the time. The
glare of the sun was the brightest thing I ever saw and the shadows so inky
black you could hardly see into them. You couldn't hear anything but voices
over your radio and you could reach down and switch off that.
The pumice was soft and kicked up around
our feet like smoke, settling slowly, falling in slow motion. Nothing else
moved. It was the deadest place you can imagine.
We stayed on a path, keeping close
together for company, except twice when I had to take out after the runt when
he found out he could jump twenty feet. I wanted to smack him, but did you ever
try to smack anybody wearing a spacesuit? It's no use.
Mr. Perrin told us to halt presently and
started his talk. "You are now in the Devil's Graveyard. The twin spires
behind you are five thousand feet above the floor of the plain and have never
been scaled. The spires, or monuments, have been named for apocryphal or
mythological characters because of the fancied resemblance of this fantastic
scene to a giant cemetery. Beelzebub, Thor, Siva, Cain, Set-" He pointed
around us. "Lunologists are not agreed as to the origin of the strange
shapes. Some claim to see indications of the action of air and water as well as
volcanic action. If so, these spires must have been standing for an unthinkably
long period, for today, as you see, the Moon-" It was the same sort of
stuff you can read any month in Spaceways Magazine, only we were seeing it and
that makes a difference, let me tell you.
The spires reminded me a bit of the rocks
below the lodge in the Garden of the Gods in Colorado Springs when we went
there last summer, only these spires were lots bigger and, instead of blue sky,
there was just blackness and hard, sharp stars overhead. Spooky.
Another ranger bad come with us, with a
camera. Mr. Perrin tried to say something else, but the runt had started
yapping away and I had to switch off his radio before anybody could hear
anything. I kept it switched off until Mr. Perrin finished talking.
He wanted us to line up for a picture with
the spires and the black sky behind us for a background. "Push your faces
forward in your helmets so that your features will show. Everybody look pretty.
There!" he added as the other guy snapped the shot. "Prints will be
ready when you return, at ten dollars a copy."
I thought it over. I certainly needed one
for my room at school and I wanted one to give to - anyhow, I needed another
one. I had eighteen bucks left from my birthday money; I could sweet-talk
Mother for the balance. So I ordered two of them.
We climbed a long rise and suddenly we
were staring out across the crater, the disaster crater, all that was left of
the first laboratory. It stretched away from us, twenty miles across, with the
floor covered with shiny, bubbly green glass instead of pumice. There was a
monument. I read it:
HERE ABOUT YOU ARE THE MORTAL REMAINS OF
Kurt
Schaeffer
Maurice
Feinstein
Thomas
Dooley
Hazel
Hayakawa
Cl.
Washington Slappey
Sam
Houston Adams
WHO DIED FOR THE TRUTH THAT MAKES MEN FREE
On the Eleventh Day of August 1984
I felt sort of funny and backed away and
went to listen to Mr. Perrin. Dad and some of the other men were asking him
questions. "They don't know exactly," he was saying. "Nothing
was left. Now we telemeter all the data back to Luna City, as it comes off the
instruments, but that was before the line-of-sight relays were set up."
"What would have happened," some
man asked, "if this blast had gone off on Earth?"
"I'd hate to try to tell you-but
that's why they put the lab here, back of the Moon." He glanced at his
watch. "Time to leave, everybody." They were milling around, heading
back down toward the path, when Mother screamed.
"Baby! Where's Baby Darling?"
I was startled but I wasn't scared, not
yet. The runt is always running around, first here and then there, but he
doesn't go far away, because he always wants to have somebody to yap to.
My father had one arm around Mother; he
signaled to me with the other. "Dick," he snapped, his voice sharp in
my earphones, "what have you done with your brother?'
"Me?" I said. "Don't look
at me-the last I saw Mother had him by the hand, walking up the hill
here."
"Don't stall around, Dick. Mother sat
down to rest when we got here and sent him to you."
"Well, if she did, he never showed
up." At that, Mother started to scream in earnest. Everybody had been
listening, of course-they had to; there was just the one radio circuit. Mr.
Perrin stepped up and switched off Mother's talkie, making a sudden silence.
"Take care of your wife, Mr.
Logan," he ordered, then added, "When did you see your child
last?"
Dad couldn't help him any; when they tried
switching Mother back into the hook-up, they switched her right off again. She
couldn't help and she deafened us. Mr.
Perrin addressed the rest of us. "Has anyone seen the small child we had
with us? Don't answer unless you have something to contribute. Did anyone see
him wander away?"
Nobody had. I figured he probably ducked
out when everybody was looking at the crater and had their backs to him. I told
Mr. Perrin so. "Seems likely," he agreed. "Attention, everybody!
I'm going to search for the child. Stay right where you are. Don't move away
from this spot. I won't be gone more than ten minutes."
"Why don't we all go?" somebody
wanted to know.
"Because," said Mr. Perrin,
"right now I've - only got one lost. I don't want to make it a
dozen." Then he left, taking big easy lopes that covered fifty feet at a
step.
Dad started to take out after him, then
thought better of it, for Mother suddenly keeled over, collapsing at the knees
and floating gently to the ground. Everybody started talking at once. Some
idiot wanted to take her helmet off, but Dad isn't crazy. I switched off my
radio so I could hear myself think and started looking around, not leaving the
crowd but standing up on the lip of the crater and trying to see as much as I
could.
I was looking back the way we had come;
there was no sense in looking at the crater-if he had been in there he would
have shown up like a fly on a plate.
Outside the crater was different; you
could have hidden a regiment within a block of us, rocks standing up every
which way, boulders big as houses with blow holes all through them, spires,
gulleys-it was a mess. I could see Mr. Perrin every now and then, casting
around like a dog after a rabbit, and making plenty of time. He was practically
flying. When he came to a big boulder he would jump right over it, leveling off
face down at the top of his jump, so he could see better.
Then he was heading back toward us and I
switched my radio back on. There was still a lot of talk. Somebody was saying,
"We've got to find him before sundown," and somebody else answered,
"Don't be silly; the sun won't be down for a week. It's his air supply, I
tell you. These suits are only good for four hours." The first voice said,
"Oh!" then added softly, "like a fish out of water-" It was
then I got scared.
A woman's voice, sounding kind of choked,
said, "The poor, poor darling! We've got to find him before he
suffocates," and my father's voice cut in sharply, "Shut up talking
that way!" I could hear somebody sobbing. It might have been Mother.
Mr. Perrin was almost up to us and he cut
in, "Silence everybody! I've got to call the base," and he added
urgently, "Perrin, calling airlock control; Perrin, calling airlock
control!"
A woman's voice answered, "Come in, Perrin."
He told her what was wrong and added, "Send out Smythe to take this party
back in. I'm staying. I want every ranger who's around and get me volunteers
from among any of the experienced Moon hands. Send out a radio direction-finder
by the first ones to leave."
We didn't wait long, for they came
swarming toward us like grasshoppers. They must have been running forty or
fifty miles an hour. It would have been something to see, if I hadn't been so
sick at my stomach.
Dad put up an argument about going back,
but Mr. Perrin shut him up. "If you hadn't been so confounded set on
having your own way, we wouldn't be in a mess. If you had kept track of your
kid, he wouldn't be lost. I've got kids of my own; I don't let 'em go out on
the face of the Moon when they're too young to take care of themselves. You go
on back - I can't be burdened by taking care of you, too."
I think Dad might even have gotten in a
fight with him if Mother hadn't gotten faint again. We went on back with the
party.
The next couple of hours were pretty
awful. They let us sit just outside the control room where we could hear Mr.
Perrin directing the search, over the loudspeaker. I thought at first that they
would snag the runt as soon as they started using the radio direction-finder-pick
up his power hum, maybe, even if he didn't say anything-but no such luck; they
didn't get anything with it. And the searchers didn't find anything either.
A thing that made it worse was that Mother
and Dad didn't even try to blame me. Mother was crying quietly and Dad was
consoling her, when he looked over at me with an odd expression. I guess he
didn't really see me at all, but I thought he was thinking that if I hadn't
insisted on going out on the surface this wouldn't have happened. I said, "Don't
go looking at me, Dad. Nobody told me to keep an eye on him. I thought he was
with Mother."
Dad just shook his head without answering.
He was looking tired and sort of shrunk up. But Mother, instead of laying in to
me and yelling, stopped her crying and managed to smile. "Come here,
Dickie," she said, and put her other arm around me. "Nobody blames
you, Dickie. Whatever happens, you weren't at fault. Remember that,
Dickie."
So I let her kiss me and then sat with
them for a while, but I felt worse than before. I kept thinking about the runt,
somewhere out there, and his oxygen running out. Maybe it wasn't my fault, but
I could have prevented it and I knew it. I shouldn't have depended on Mother to
look out for him; she's no good at that sort of thing. She's the kind of person
that would mislay her head if it wasn't knotted on tight - the ornamental sort.
Mother's good, you understand, but she's not practical. She would take it
pretty hard if the runt didn't come back. And so would Dad-and so would I. The
runt is an awful nuisance, but it was going to seem strange not to have him
around underfoot. I got to thinking about that remark, "Like a fish out of
water." I accidentally busted an aquarium once; I remember yet how they
looked. Not pretty. If the runt was going to die like that - I shut myself up
and decided I just had to figure out some way to help find him.
After a while I had myself convinced that
I could find him if they would just let me help look. But they wouldn't of
course.
Dr. Evans the Director showed up
again-he'd met us when we first came in - and asked if there was anything he
could do for us and how was Mrs. Logan feeling? "You know I wouldn't have
had this happen for the world," he added. "We're doing all we can.
I'm having some ore-detectors shot over from Luna City. We might be able to
spot the child by the metal in his suit."
Mother asked how about bloodhounds and Dr.
Evans didn't even laugh at her. Dad suggested helicopters, then corrected
himself and made it rockets. Dr. Evans pointed out that it was impossible to
examine the ground closely from a rocket.
I got him aside presently and braced him
to let me join the hunt. He was polite but unimpressed, so I insisted.
"What makes you think you can find him?", he asked me. "We've got
the most experienced Moon men available out there now. I'm afraid, son, that
you would get yourself lost or hurt if you tried to keep up with them. In this
country, if you once lose sight of landmarks, you can get hopelessly
lost."
"But look, Doctor," I told him,
"I know the runt-I mean my kid brother, better than anyone else in the
world. I won't get lost-I mean I will get lost but just the way he did. You can
send somebody to follow me."
He thought about it. "It's worth
trying," he said suddenly. "I'll go with you. Let's suit up."
We made a fast trip out, taking
thirty-foot strides-the best I could manage even with Dr. Evans hanging on to
my belt to keep me from stumbling. Mr. Perrin was expecting us. He seemed
dubious about my scheme. "Maybe the old 'lost mule' dodge will work,"
he admitted, "but I'll keep the regular search going just the same. Here,
Shorty, take this flashlight. You'll need it in the shadows."
I stood on the edge of the crater and
tried to imagine I was the runt, feeling bored and maybe a little bit griped at
the lack of attention. What would I do next?
I went skipping down the slope, not going
anywhere in particular, the way the runt would have done. Then I stopped and
looked back, to see if Mother and Daddy and Dickie had noticed me. I was being
followed all right; Dr. Evans and Mr. Perrin were close behind me. I pretended
that no one was looking and went on. I was pretty close to the first rock
outcroppings by now and I ducked behind the first one I came to. It wasn't high
enough to hide me but it would have covered the runt. It felt like what he
would do; he loved to play hide-and-go-seek - it made him the center of
attention.
I thought about it. When the runt played
that game, his notion of hiding was always to crawl under something, a bed, or
a sofa, or an automobile, or even under the sink. I looked around. There were a
lot of good places; the rocks were filled with blow holes and overhangs. I
started working them over. It seemed hopeless; there must have been a hundred
such places right around close.
Mr. Perrin came up to me as I was crawling
out of the fourth tight spot. "The men have shined flashlights around in
every one of these places," he told me. "I don't think it's much use,
Shorty."
"Okay," I said, but I kept at
it. I knew I could get at spots a grown man couldn't reach; I just hoped the
runt hadn't picked a spot I couldn't reach.
It went on and on and I was getting cold
and stiff and terribly tired. The direct sunlight is hot on the Moon, but the
second you get in the shade, it's cold. Down inside those rocks it never got
warm at all. The suits they gave us tourists are well enough insulated, but the
extra insulation is in the gloves and the boots and the seats of the pants-and
I had been spending most of my time down on my stomach, wiggling into tight
places.
I was so numb I could hardly move and my
whole front felt icy. Besides, it gave me one more thing to worry about - how
about the runt? Was he cold, too?
If it hadn't been for thinking how those
fish looked and how, maybe, the runt would be frozen stiff before I could get
to him, I would have quit. I was about beat. Besides, it's rather scary down
inside those holes-you don't know what you'll come to next.
Dr. Evans took me by the arm as I came out
of one of them, and touched his helmet to mine, so that I got his voice
directly. "Might as well give up, son. You're knocking your self out and
you haven't covered an acre." I pulled away from him.
The next place was a little overhang, not
a foot off the ground. I flashed a light into it. It was empty and didn't seem
to go anywhere. Then I saw there was a turn in it. I got down flat and wiggled
in. The turn opened out a little and dropped off. I didn't think it was
worthwhile to go any deeper as the runt wouldn't have crawled very far in the
dark, but I scrunched ahead a little farther and flashed the light down.
I saw a boot sticking out.
That's about all there is to it. I nearly
bashed in my helmet getting out of there, but I was dragging the runt after me.
He was limp as a cat and his face was funny. Mr. Perrin and Dr. Evans were all
over me as I came out, pounding me on the back and shouting. "Is he dead,
Mr. Perrin?" I asked, when I could get my breath. "He looks awful
bad."
Mr. Perrin looked him over. "No . . .
I can see a pulse in his throat. Shock and exposure, but this suit was
specially built-we'll get him back fast." He picked the runt up in his
arms and I took out after him.
Ten minutes later the runt was wrapped in
blankets and drinking hot cocoa. I had some, too. Everybody was talking at once
and Mother was crying again, but she looked normal and Dad had filled out.
He tried to write out a check for Mr.
Perrin, but he brushed it off. "I don't need any reward; your boy found
him.
"You can do me just one favor-"
"Yes?" Dad was all honey.
"Stay off the Moon. You don't belong
here; you're not the pioneer type."
Dad took it. "I've already promised
my wife that," he said without batting an eye. "You needn't
worry."
I followed Mr. Perrin as he left and said
to him privately, "Mr. Perrin-I just wanted to tell you that I'll be back,
if you don't mind."
He shook hands with me and said, "I
know you will, Shorty."
"It's Great to Be Back!"
"HURRY
UP, ALLAN!" Home-back to Earth again! Her heart was pounding.
"Just a second." She fidgeted
while her husband checked over a bare apartment. Earth-Moon freight rates made
it silly to ship their belongings; except for the bag he carried, they had
converted everything to cash. Satisfied, he joined her at the lift; they went
on up to the administration level and there to a door marked: LUNA CITY
COMMUNITY ASSOCIATION-Anna Stone, Service Manager.
Miss Stone accepted their apartment keys
grimly. "Mr. and Mrs. MacRae. So you're actually leaving us?"
Josephine bristled. "Think we'd
change our minds?"
The manager shrugged. "No. I knew
nearly three years ago that you would go back-from your complaints."
"From my comp- Miss Stone, I've been
as patient about the incredible inconveniences of this, this pressurized rabbit
warren as anyone. I don't blame you personally, but-"
"Take it easy, Jo!" her husband
cautioned her.
Josephine flushed. "Sorry, Miss
Stone."
"Never mind. We just see things
differently. I was here when Luna City was three air-sealed Quonset huts
connected by tunnels you crawled through, on your knees." She stuck out a
square hand. "I hope you enjoy being groundhogs again, I honestly do. Hot
jets, good luck, and a safe landing."
Back in the lift, Josephine sputtered.
"'Groundhogs' indeed! Just because we prefer our native planet, where a
person can draw a breath of fresh air-"
"You use the term," Allan
pointed out.
"But I use it about people who've
never been off Terra."
"We've both said more than once that
we wished we had had sense enough never to have left Earth. We're groundhogs at
heart, Jo."
"Yes, but- Oh, Allan, you're being
obnoxious. This is the happiest day of my life. Aren't you glad to be going
home? Aren't you?"
"Of course I am. It'll be great to be
back. Horseback riding. Skiing."
"And opera. Real, live grand opera.
Allan, we've simply got to have a week or two in Manhattan before we go to the
country."
"I thought you wanted to feel rain on
your face."
"I want that, too. I want it all at
once and I can't wait. Oh, darling, it's like getting out of jail." She
clung to him.
He unwound her as the lift stopped.
"Don't blubber."
"Allan, you're a beast," she
said dreamily. "I'm so happy." They stopped again, in bankers' row.
The clerk in the National City Bank office had their transfer of account ready.
"Going home, eh? Just sign there, and your print. I envy you. Hunting,
fishing."
"Surf bathing is more my style. And
sailing."
"I," said Jo, "simply want
to see green trees and blue sky." The clerk nodded. "I know what you
mean. It's long ago and far away. Well, have fun. Are you taking three months
or six?"
"We're not coming back," Allan
stated flatly. "Three years of living like a fish in an aquarium is
enough."
"So?" The clerk shoved the
papers toward him and added without expression, "Well-hot jets."
"Thanks." They went on up to the
subsurface level and took the cross-town slidewalk out to the rocket port. The
slidewalk tunnel broke the surface at one point, becoming a pressurized shed; a
view window on the west looked out on the surface of the Moon-and, beyond the
hills, the Earth.
The sight of it, great and green and
bountiful, against, the black lunar sky and harsh, unwinking stars, brought
quick tears to Jo's eyes. Home-that lovely planet was hers! Allan looked at it
more casually, noting the Greenwich. The sunrise Line had just touched South
America-must be about eight twenty; better hurry.
They stepped off the slidewalk into the
arms of some of their friends, waiting to see them off. "Hey-where have
you Lugs been? The Gremlin blasts off in seven minutes."
"But we aren't going in it,"
MacRae answered. "No, siree."
"What? Not going? Did you change your
minds?"
Josephine laughed. "Pay no attention
to him, Jack. We're going in the express instead; we swapped reservations. So
we've got twenty minutes yet."
"Well! A couple of rich tourists,
eh?"
"Oh, the extra fare isn't so much and
I didn't want to make two changes and spend a week in space when we could be
home in two days." She rubbed her bare middle significantly.
"She can't take free flight,
Jack," her husband explained.
"Well, neither can I - I was sick the
whole trip out. Still, I don't think you'll be sick, Jo; you're used to Moon
weight now."
"Maybe," she agreed, "but
there is a lot of difference between one-sixth gravity and no gravity."
Jack Crail's wife cut in. "Josephine
MacRae, are you going to risk your life in an atomic-powered ship?"
"Why not, darling? You work in an
atomics laboratory."
"Hummph! In the laboratory we take
precautions. The Commerce Commission should never have licensed the expresses.
I may be old-fashioned, but I'll go back the way I came, via Terminal and
Supra-New York, in good old reliable fuel-rockets."
"Don't try to scare her, Emma,"
Crail objected. "They've worked the bugs out of those ships."
"Not to my satisfaction. I-"
"Never mind," Allan interrupted
her. "The matter is settled, and we've still got to get over to the
express launching site. Good-by, everybody! Thanks for the send-off. It's been
grand knowing you. If you come back to God's country, look us up."
"Good-by, kids!" "Good-by,
Jo-good-by, Allan." "Give my regards to Broadway!" "So
long-be sure to write." "Good-by." "Aloha-hot jets!"
They showed their tickets, entered the air lock, and climbed into the
pressurized shuttle between Leyport proper and the express launching site.
"Hang on, 'folks," the shuttle operator called back over his
shoulder; Jo and Allan hurriedly settled into the cushions. The lock opened;
the tunnel ahead was airless. Five minutes later they were climbing out twenty
miles away, beyond the hills that shielded the lid of Luna City from the
radioactive splash of the express ships.
In the Sparrowhawk they shared a
compartment with a missionary family. The Reverend Doctor Simmons felt obliged
to explain why he was traveling in luxury. "It's for the child," he
told them, as his wife strapped the baby girl into a small acceleration couch
rigged stretcher-fashion between her parents' couches. "Since she's never
been in space, we daren't take a chance of her being sick for days on
end." They all strapped down at the warning siren. Jo felt her heart begin
to pound. At last ... at long last!
The jets took hold, mashing them into the cushions.
Jo had not known she could feel so heavy. This was worse, much worse, than the
trip out. The baby cried as long as acceleration lasted, in wordless terror and
discomfort.
After an interminable time they were
suddenly weightless, as the ship went into free flight. When the terrible
binding weight was free of her chest, Jo's heart felt as light as her body.
Allan threw off his upper strap and sat up. "How do you feel, kid?"
"Oh, I feel fine!" Jo unstrapped
and faced him. Then she hiccoughed. "That is, I think I do."
Five minutes later she was not in doubt;
she merely wished to die. Allan swam out of the compartment and located the
ship's surgeon, who gave her an injection. Allan waited until she had succumbed
to the drug, then left for the lounge to try his own cure for spacesickness -
Mothersill's Seasick Remedy washed down with champagne. Presently he had to
admit that these two sovereign remedies did not work for him-or perhaps he
should not have mixed them.
Little Gloria Simmons was not spacesick.
She thought being weightless was fun, and went bouncing off floorplate,
overhead, and bulkhead like a dimpled balloon. Jo feebly considered strangling
the child, if she floated within reach-but it was too much effort.
Deceleration, logy as it made them feel,
was welcome relief after nausea-except to little Gloria. She cried again, in
fear and hurt, while her mother tried to explain. Her father prayed.
After a long, long time came a slight jar
and the sound of the siren. Jo managed to raise her head. "What's the
matter? Is there an accident?"
"I don't think so. I think we've
landed."
'We can't have! We're still braking-I'm
heavy as lead."
Allan grinned feebly. "So am I. Earth
gravity-remember?"
The baby continued to cry.
They said good-by to the missionary
family, as Mrs. Simmons decided to wait for a stewardess from the skyport. The
MacRaes staggered out of the ship, supporting each other. "It can't be
just the gravity," Jo protested, her feet caught in invisible quicksand.
"I've taken Earth-normal acceleration in the centrifuge at the 'Y', back
home-I mean back in Luna City. We're weak from spacesickness."
Allan steadied himself. "That's it.
We haven't eaten anything for two days."
"Allan-didn't you eat anything
either?'
"No. Not permanently, so tospy. Are
you hungry?"
"Starving."
"How about dinner at Kean's
Chophouse?"
"Wonderful. Oh, Allan, we're
back!" Her tears started again.
They glimpsed the Simmonses once more,
after chuting down the Hudson Valley and into Grand Central Station. While they
were waiting at the tube dock for their bag, Jo saw the Reverend Doctor climb
heavily out of the next tube capsule, carrying his daughter and followed by his
wife. He set the child down carefully. Gloria stood for a moment, trembling on
her pudgy legs, then collapsed to the dock. She lay there, crying thinly.
A spaceman-pilot, by his uniform-stopped
and looked pityingly at the child. "Born in the Moon?" he asked.
"Why yes, she was, sir."
Simmons' courtesy transcended his troubles.
"Pick her up and carry her. She'll
have to learn to walk all over again." The spaceman shook his head sadly
and glided away. Simmons looked still more troubled, then sat down on the dock
beside his child, careless of the dirt.
Jo felt too weak to help. She looked
around for Allan, but he was busy; their bag had arrived. It was placed at his
feet and he started to pick it up, and then felt suddenly silly. It seemed
nailed to the dock. He knew what was in it, rolls of microfilm and colorfilm, a
few souvenirs, toilet articles, various irreplaceables-fifty pounds of mass. It
couldn't weigh what it seemed to.
But it did. He had forgotten what fifty
pounds weigh on Earth.
"Porter, mister?' The speaker was
grey-haired and thin, but he scooped up the bag quite casually. Allan called
out, "Come along, Jo." and followed him, feeling foolish. The porter
slowed to match Allan's labored steps.
"Just down from the Moon?" he
asked.
"Why, yes."
"Got a reservation?"
"No."
"You stick with me. I've got a friend
on the desk at the Commodore." He led them to the Concourse slidewalk and
thence to the hotel.
They were too weary to dine out; Allan had
dinner sent to their room. Afterward, Jo fell asleep in a hot tub and he had
trouble getting her out-she liked the support the water gave her. But he
persuaded her that a rubber-foam mattress was nearly as good. They got to sleep
very early.
She woke up, struggling, about four in the
morning. "Allan. Allan!"
"Huh? What's the matter?" His
hand fumbled at the light switch.
"Uh . . . nothing I guess. I dreamed
I was back in the ship. The jets had run away with her. Allan, what makes it so
stuffy in here? I've got a splitting headache."
"Huh? It can't be stuffy. This joint
is air-conditioned." He sniffed the air. "I've got a headache,
too," he admitted.
"Well, do something. Open a
window."
He stumbled out of bed, shivered when the
outer air hit him, and hurried back under the covers. He was wondering whether
he could get to sleep with the roar of the city pouring in through the window
when his wife spoke again. "Allan?"
"Yes. What is it?"
"Honey, I'm cold. May I crawl in with
you?"
"Sure."
The sunlight streamed in the window, warm
and mellow. When it touched his eyes, he woke and found his wife awake beside
him. She sighed and snuggled. "Oh, darling, look! Blue sky-we're home. I'd
forgotten how lovely it is."
"It's great to be back, all right.
How do you feel?"
"Much better. How are you?"
"Okay, I guess." He pushed off
the covers.
Jo squealed and jerked them back.
"Don't do that!"
"Huh?"
"Mama's great big boy is going to
climb out and close that window while mamma stays here under the covers."
"Well-all right." He could walk
more easily than the night before-but it was good to get back into bed. Once
there, he faced the telephone and shouted, at it, "Service!"
"Order, please," it answered in
a sweet contralto.
"Orange juice and coffee for
two-extra coffee-six eggs, scrambled medium, and whole-wheat toast. And send up
a Times, and the Saturday Evening Post."
"Ten minutes."
"Thank you." The delivery
cupboard buzzed while he was shaving. He answered it and served Jo breakfast in
bed. Breakfast over, he laid down his newspaper and said, "Can you pull
your nose out of that magazine?"
"Glad to. The darn thing is too big
and heavy to hold."
"Why don't you have the stat edition
mailed to you from Luna City? Wouldn't cost more than eight or nine times as
much."
"Don't be silly. What's on your
mind?"
"How about climbing out of that frosty
little nest and going with me to shop for clothes?"
"Uh-uh. No, I am not going outdoors
in a moonsuit."
"'Fraid of being stared at? Getting
prudish in your old age?"
"No, me lord, I simply refuse to
expose myself to the outer air in six ounces of nylon and a pair of sandals. I
want some warm clothes first." She squirmed further down under the covers.
"The Perfect Pioneer Woman. Going to
have fitters sent up?"
"We can't afford that. Look - you're
going anyway. Buy me just any old rag so long as it's warm."
MacRae looked stubborn. "I've tried
shopping for you before."
"Just this once - please. Run over to
Saks and pick out a street dress in a blue wool jersey, size ten. And a pair of
nylons."
"Well-all right."
"That's a lamb. I won't be loafing.
I've a list as long as your arm of people I've promised to call up, look 'up,
have lunch with."
He attended to his own shopping first; his
sensible shorts and singlet seemed as warm as a straw hat in a snowstorm. It
was not really cold and was quite balmy in the sun, but it seemed cold to a man
used to a never-failing seventy-two degrees. He tried to stay underground, or
stuck to the roofed-over section of Fifth Avenue.
He suspected that the salesmen had
outfitted him in clothes that made him look like a yokel But they were warm.
They were also heavy; they added to the pain across his chest and made him walk
even more unsteadily. He wondered how long it would be before he got his
ground-legs.
A motherly saleswoman took care of Jo's
order and sold him a warm cape for her as well. He headed back, stumbling under
his packages, and trying futilely to flag a ground-taxi. Everyone seemed in
such a hurry! Once he was nearly knocked down by a teen-aged boy who said,
"Watch it, Gramps!" and rushed off, before he could answer.
He got back, aching all over and thinking
about a hot bath. He did not get it; Jo had a visitor. "Mrs. Appleby, my
husband-Allan, this is Emma Crail's mother."
"Oh, how do you do, Doctor-or should
it be 'Professor'?"
"Mister-"
"-when I heard you were in town I
just couldn't wait to hear all about my poor darling. How is she? Is she thin?
Does she look well? These modern girls-I've told her time and again that she
must get out of doors-I walk in the Park every day-and look at me. She sent me
a picture-I have it here somewhere; at least I think I have-and she doesn't
look a bit well, undernourished. Those synthetic foods-"
"She doesn't eat synthetic foods,
Mrs. Appleby."
"-must be quite impossible, I'm sure,
not to mention the taste. What were you saying?'
"Your daughter doesn't live on
synthetic foods," Allan repeated. "Fresh fruits and vegetables are
one thing we have almost too much of in Luna City. The air-conditioning plant,
you know."
"That's just what I was saying. I
confess I don't see just how you get food out of air-conditioning machinery on
the Moon-"
"In the Moon, Mrs. Appleby."
"-but it can't be healthy. Our
air-conditioner at home is always breaking down and making the most horrible
smells - simply unbearable, my dears-you'd think they could build a simple
little thing like an air-conditioner so that-though of course if you expect
them to manufacture synthetic foods as well-" "Mm. Appleby-"
"Yes, Doctor? What were you saying?
Don't let me-"
"Mrs. Appleby," MacRae said
desperately, "the airconditioning plant in Luna City is a hydroponic farm,
tanks of growing plants, green things. The plants take the carbon dioxide out
of the air and put oxygen back in."
"But- Are you quite sure, Doctor? I'm
sure Emma said-"
"Quite sure."
"Well . . . I don't pretend to
understand these things, I'm the artistic type. Poor Herbert often said-Herbert
was Emma's father; simply wrapped up in his engineering though I always saw to
it that he heard good music and saw the reviews of the best books. Emma takes
after her father, I'm afraid-I do wish she would give up that silly work she is
in. Hardly the sort of work for a woman, do you think, Mrs. MacRae? All those
atoms and neuters and things floating around in the air. I read all about it in
the Science Made Simple column in the-"
"She's quite good at it and she seems
to like it."
"Well, yes, I suppose. That's the
important thing, to be happy at what you are doing no matter how silly it is.
But I worry about the child-buried away from civilization, no one of her own
sort to talk to, no theaters, no cultural life, no society-"
"Luna City has stereo transcriptions
of every successful Broadway play." Jo's voice had a slight edge.
"Oh! Really? But it's not just going
to the theater, my dear; it's the society of gentlefolk. Now when I was a girl,
my parents-"
Allan butted in, loudly. "One
o'clock. Have you had lunch, my dear?'
Mrs. Appleby sat up with a jerk. "Oh,
heavenly days - I simply must fly. My dress designer-such a tyrant, but a
genius; I must give you her address. It's been charming, my dears, and I can't
thank you too much for telling me all about my poor darling. I do wish she
would be sensible like you two; she knows I'm always ready to make a home for
her-and her husband, for that matter. Now do come and see me, often. I love to
talk to people who've been on the Moon-"
"In the Moon."
"It makes me feel closer to my
darling. Good-by, then."
With the door locked behind her, Jo said,
"Allan, I need a drink."
"I'll join you."
Jo cut her shopping short; it was too
tiring. By four o'clock they were driving in Central Park, enjoying fall
scenery to the lazy clop-clop of home's hoofs. The helicopters, the pigeons,
the streak in the sky where the Antipodes rocket had passed, made a scene
idyllic in beauty and serenity. Jo swallowed a lump in her throat and
whispered, "Allan, isn't it beautiful?"
"Sure is. It's great to be back. Say,
did you notice they've torn up 42nd Street again?"
Back in their room, Jo collapsed on her
bed, while Allan took off his shoes. He sat, rubbing his feet, and remarked,
"I'm going barefooted all evening. Golly, how my feet hurt!"
"So do mine. But we're going to your
father's, my sweet."
"Huh? Oh, damn, I forgot. Jo, whatever
possessed you? Call him up and postpone it. We're still half dead from the
trip."
"But, Allan, he's invited a lot of
your friends."
"Balls of fire and cold mush! I
haven't any real friends in New York. Make it next week."
"'Next week' . . . hmm . . . look,
Allan, let's go out to the country right away." Jo's parents had left her
a tiny place in Connecticut, a worn-out farm.
"I thought you wanted a couple of
weeks of plays and music first. Why the sudden change?"
"I'll show you." She went to the
window, open since noon. "Look at that window sill." She drew their
initials in the grime. "Allan, this city is filthy."
"You can't expect ten million people
not to kick up dust."
"But we're breathing that stuff into
our lungs. What's happened to the smog-control laws?'
"That's not smog; that's normal city
dirt."
"Luna City was never like this. I
could wear a white outfit there till I got tired of it. One wouldn't last a day
here."
"Manhattan doesn't have a roof-and
precipitrons in every air duct."
"Well, it should have. I either
freeze or suffocate."
"I thought you were anxious to feel
rain on your face?'
"Don't be tiresome. I want it out in
the clean, green country."
"Okay. I want to start my book
anyhow. I'll call your real estate agent."
"I called him this morning. We can
move in anytime; he started fixing up the place when he got my letter."
It was a stand-up supper at his father's
home though Jo sat down at once and let food be fetched. Allan wanted to sit
down, but his status as guest of honor forced him to stay on his aching feet.
His father buttonholed him at the buffet. "Here, son, try this goose
liver. It ought to go well after a diet of green cheese."
Allan agreed that it was good.
"See here, son, you really ought to
tell these folks about your trip."
"No speeches, Dad. Let 'em read the
National Geographic."
"Nonsense!" He turned around.
"Quiet, everybody! Allan is going to tell us how the Lunatics live."
Allan bit his lip. To be sure, the
citizens of Luna City used the term to each other, but it did not sound the
same here. "Well, really, I haven't anything to say. Go on and eat."
"You talk and we'll eat."
"Tell us about Looney City." "Did you see the
Man-in-the-Moon?" "Go on, Allan, what's it like to live on the Moon?"
"Not 'on the Moon'-in the Moon."
"What's the difference?"
"Why, none, I guess." He
hesitated; there was really no way to explain why the Moon colonists emphasized
that they lived under the surface of the satellite planet-but it irritated him
the way "Frisco" irritates a San Franciscan. "'In the Moon' is
the way we say it. We don't spend much time on the surface, except for the
staff at Richardson Observatory, and the prospectors, and so forth. The living
quarters are underground, naturally."
"Why 'naturally'? Afraid of
meteors?"
"No more than you are afraid of
lightning. We go underground for insulation against heat and cold and as
support for pressure sealing. Both are cheaper and easier underground. The soil
is easy to work and the interstices act like vacuum in a thermos bottle. It is
vacuum."
"But Mr. MacRae," a
serious-looking lady inquired, "doesn't it hurt your ears to live under
pressure?'
Allan fanned the air. "It's the same
pressure here-fifteen pounds."
She looked puzzled, then said, "Yes,
I suppose so, but it is a little hard to imagine. I think it would terrify me
to be sealed up in a cave. Suppose you had a blow-out?"
"Holding fifteen pounds pressure is
no problem; engineers work in thousands of pounds per square inch. Anyhow, Luna
City is compartmented like a ship. It's safe enough. The Dutch live behind
dikes; down in Mississippi they have levees. Subways, ocean liners,
aircraft-they're all artificial ways of living. Luna City seems strange just
because it's far away."
She shivered. "It scares me."
A pretentious little man pushed his way
forward. "Mr. MacRae-granted that it is nice for science and all that, why
should taxpayers' money be wasted on a colony on the Moon?"
"You seem to have answered
yourself," Allan told him slowly.
"Then how do you justify it? Tell me
that, sir."
"It isn't necessary to justify it;
the Lunar colony has paid for itself several times over. The Lunar corporations
are all paying propositions. Artemis Mines, Spaceways, Spaceways Provisioning
Corporation, Diana Recreations, Electronics Research Company, Lunar Biological
Labs, not to mention all of Rutherford - look 'em up. I'll admit the Cosmic
Research Project nicks the taxpayer a little, since it's a joint enterprise of
the Harriman Foundation and the government."
"Then you admit it. It's the
principle of the thing."
Allan's feet were hurting him very badly
indeed. "What principle? Historically, research has always paid off."
He turned his back and looked for some more goose liver.
A man touched him on the arm; Allan
recognized an old schoolmate. "Allan, old boy, congratulations on the way
you ticked off old Beetle. He's been needing it-I think he's some sort of a
radical."
Allan grinned. "I shouldn't have lost
my temper."
"A good job you did. Say, Allan, I'm
going to take a couple of out-of-town buyers around to the hot spots tomorrow
night. Come along."
"Thanks a lot, but we're going out in
the country."
"Oh, you can't afford to miss this
party. After all, you've been buried on the Moon; you owe yourself some
relaxation after that deadly monotony."
Allan felt his cheeks getting warm.
"Thanks just the same, but-ever seen the Earth View Room in Hotel Moon
Haven?'
"No. Plan to take the trip when I've
made my pile, of course."'
"Well, there's a night club for you.
Ever see a dancer leap thirty feet into the air and do slow rolls, on the way
down? Ever try a lunacy cocktail? Ever see a juggler work in low gravity?"
Jo caught his eye across the room. "Er . . . excuse me, old man. My wife
wants me." He turned away, then flung back over his shoulder, "Moon
Haven itself isn't just a spaceman's dive, by the way-it's recommended by the
Duncan Hines Association."
Jo was very pale. "Darling, you've
got to get me out of here. I'm suffocating. I'm really ill."
"Suits." They made their
excuses.
Jo woke up with a stuffy cold, so they
took a cab directly to her country place. There were low-lying clouds under
them, but the weather was fine above. The sunshine and the drowsy beat of the
rotors regained for them the joy of homecoming,
Allan broke the lazy reverie. "Here's
a funny thing, Jo. You couldn't hire me to go back to the Moon-but last night I
found myself defending the Loonies every time I opened my mouth."
She nodded. "I know. Honest to
Heaven, Allan, some people act as if the Earth were flat. Some of them don't
really believe in anything, and some of them are so matter-of-fact that you
know they don't really understand-and I don't know which sort annoys me the
more."
It was foggy when they landed, but the
house was clean, the agent had laid a fire and had stocked the refrigerator.
They were sipping hot punch and baking the weariness out of their bones' within
ten minutes after the copter grounded. "This," said Allan, stretching,
"is all right. It really is great to be back."
"Uh-huh. All except the
highway." A new express and freight superhighway now ran not fifty yards
from the house. They could hear the big diesels growling as they struck the
grade.
"Forget the highway. Turn your back
and you stare straight into the woods."
They regained their ground-legs well
enough to enjoy short walks in the woods; they were favored with a long, warm
Indian summer; the cleaning woman was efficient and taciturn. Allan worked on
the results of three years research preparatory to starting his book. Jo helped
him with the statistical work, got reacquainted with the delights of cooking,
dreamed, and rested.
It was the day of the first frost that the
toilet stopped up.
The village plumber was persuaded to show
up the next day. Meanwhile they resorted to a homely little building, left over
from another era and still standing out beyond the woodpile. It was
spider-infested and entirely too well ventilated.
The plumber was not encouraging. "New
septic tank. New sewer pipe. Pay you to get new fixtures at the same time.
Fifteen, sixteen hundred dollars. Have to do some calculating."
"That's all right," Allan told
him. "Can you start today?'
The man laughed. "I can see plainly,
Mister, that you don't know what it is to get materials and labor these days.
Next spring--soon as the frost is out of the ground."
"That's impossible, man. Never mind
the cost. Get it done."
The native shrugged. "Sorry not to
oblige you. Good day." When he left, Jo exploded. "Allan, he doesn't
want to help us."
"Well-maybe. I'll try to get someone
from Norwalk, or even from the City. You can't trudge through the snow out to
that Iron Maiden all winter."
"I hope not."
"You must not. You've already had one
cold." He stared morosely at the fire. "I suppose I brought it on by
my misplaced sense of humor."
"How?"
"Well, you know how we've been
subjected to steady kidding ever since it got noised around that we were
colonials. I haven't minded much, but some of it rankled. You remember I went
into the village by myself last Saturday?"
"Yes. What happened?"
"They started in on me in the
barbershop. I let it ride at first, then the worm turned. I started talking
about the Moon, sheer double-talk--corny old stuff like the vacuum worms and
the petrified air. It was some time before they realized I was ribbing them-and
when they did, nobody laughed. Our friend the rustic sanitary engineer was one
of the group. I'm sorry."
"Don't be." She kissed him.
"If I have to tramp through the snow, it will cheer me that you gave them
back some of their sass."
The plumber from Norwalk was more helpful,
but rain, and then sleet, slowed down the work. They both caught colds. On the
ninth miserable day Allan was working at his desk when he heard Jo come in the
back door, returning from a shopping trip. He turned back to his work, then
presently became aware that she had not come in to say "hello." He
went to investigate.
He found her collapsed on a kitchen chair,
crying quietly. "Darling," he said urgently, "honey baby,
whatever is the matter?"
She looked up. "I didn't bead to led
you doe."
"Blow your nose. Then wipe your eyes.
What do you mean, 'you didn't mean to let me know'. What happened?"
She let it out, punctuated with her
handkerchief. First, the grocer had said he had no cleansing tissues; then,
when she pointed to them, had stated that they were "sold". Finally,
he had mentioned "bringing outside labor into town and taking the bread
out of the mouths of honest folk".
Jo had blown up and had rehashed the
incident of Allan and the barbershop wits. The grocer had simply grown more
stiff. "'Lady,' he said to me, 'I don't know whether you and your husband
have been to the Moon or not, and I don't care. I don't take much stock in such
things. In any case, I don't need your trade.' Oh, Allan, I'm so unhappy."
"Not as unhappy as he's going to be!
Where's my hat?"
"Allan! You're not leaving this
house. I won't have you fighting."
"I won't have him bullying you."
"He won't again. Oh my dear, I've
tried so hard, but I can't stay here any longer. It's not just the villagers;
it's the cold and the cockroaches and always having, a runny nose. I'm tired
out and my feet hurt all the time." She started to cry again.
"There, there! We'll leave,
honey. We'll go to Florida. I'll finish my book while you lie in the sun."
"Oh, I don't want to go to Florida. I
want to go home."
"Huh? You mean-back to Luna
City?"
"Yes. Oh, dearest, I know you don't
want to, but I can't stand it any longer. It's not just the dirt and the cold
and the comic-strip plumbing-it's not being understood. It wasn't any better in
New York. These groundhogs don't know anything."
He grinned at her. "Keep sending,
kid; I'm on your frequency."
"Allan!"
He nodded. "I found out I was a Loony
at heart quite a while ago-but I was afraid to tell you. My feet hurt, too- and
I'm damn sick of being treated like a freak. I've tried to be tolerant, but I
can't stand groundhogs. I miss the folks in dear old Luna. They're
civilized."
She nodded. "I guess it's prejudice,
but I feel the same way."
"It's not prejudice. Let's be honest.
What does it take to get to Lana City?"
"A ticket."
"Smarty pants. I don't mean as a
tourist; I mean to get a job there. You know the answer: Intelligence. It costs
a lot to send a man to the Moon and more to keep him there. To pay off, he has
to be worth a lot. High I.Q., good compatibility index, superior
education-everything that makes a person pleasant and easy and interesting to
have around. We've been spoiled; the ordinary human cussedness that groundhogs
take for granted, we now find intolerable, because Loonies are different. The
fact that Luna City is the most comfortable environment man ever built for
himself is beside the point-it's the people who count. Let's go home."
He went to the telephone-an old-fashioned,
speech-only rig-and called the Foundation's New York office. While he was
waiting, truncheon-like "receiver" to his ear, she said,
"Suppose they won't have us?"
"That's what worries me." They
knew that the Lunar companies rarely rehired personnel who had once quit; the
physical examination was reputed to be much harder the second time.
"Hello . . . hello. Foundation? May I
speak to the recruiting office? . . . hello-I can't turn on my view plate; this
instrument is a hangover from the dark ages. This is Allan MacRae, physical
chemist, contract number 1340729. And my wife, Josephine MacRae, 1340730. We
want to sign up again. I said we wanted to sign up again . . . okay, I'll
wait."
"Pray, darling, pray!"
"I'm praying- How's that! My
appointment's still vacant? Fine, fine! How about my wife?" He listened
with a worried look; Jo held her breath. Then he cupped the speaker. "Hey,
Jo-your job's filled. They want to know if you'll take an interim job as a
junior accountant?"
"Tell 'em 'yes!'"
"That'll be fine. When can we take
our exams? That's fine, thanks. Good-by." He hung up and turned to his
wife. "Physical and psycho as soon as we like; professional exams
waived."
"What are we waiting for?"
"Nothing." He dialed the Norwalk
Copter Service. "Can you run us into Manhattan? Well, good grief, don't
you have radar? All right, all right, g'by!" He snorted. "Cabs all
grounded by the weather. I'll call New York and try to get a modern cab."
Ninety minutes later they landed on top of
Harriman Tower.
The psychologist was very cordial.
"Might as well get this over before you have your chests thumped. Sit
down. Tell me about yourselves." He drew them out, nodding from time to
time. "I see. Did you ever get the plumbing repaired?"
"Well, it was being fixed."
"I can sympathize with your foot
trouble, Mrs. MacRae; my arches always bother me here. That's your real reason,
isn't it?"
"Oh, no!"
"Now, Mrs. MacRae-"
"Really it's not---truly. I want
people to talk to who know what I mean. All that's really wrong with me is that
I'm homesick for my own sort. I want to go home-and I've got to have this job
to get there. - I'll steady down, I know I will."
The doctor looked grave. "How about
you, Mr. MacRae?"
"Well-it's about the same story. I've
been trying to write a book, but I can't work. I'm homesick. I want to go
back."
Feldman suddenly smiled. "It won't be
too difficult."
"You mean we're in? If we pass the
physical?"
"Never mind the physical-your
discharge examinations are recent enough. Of course you'll have to go out to
Arizona for reconditioning and quarantine. You're probably wondering why it
seems so easy when it is supposed to be so hard. It's really simple: We don't
want people lured back by the high pay. We do want people who will be happy and
as permanent as possible-in short, we want people who think of Luna City as
'home.' Now that you're 'Moonstruck,' we want you back." He stood up and
shoved out his hand.
Back in the Commodore that night, Jo was
struck by a thought. "Allan-do you suppose we could get our own apartment
back?"
"Why, I don't know. We could send old
lady Stone a radio."
"Call her up instead, Allan. We can
afford it."
"All right! I will!"
It took about ten minutes to get the
circuit through. Miss Stone's face looked a trifle less grim when she
recognized them.
"Miss Stone, we're coming home!"
There was the usual three-second lag,
then-"Yes, I know. It came over the tape about twenty minutes ago."
"Oh. Say, Miss Stone, is our old
apartment vacant?" They waited.
"I've held it; I knew you'd come
back-after a bit. Welcome home, Loonies."
When the screen cleared, Jo said,
"What did she mean, Allan?"
"Looks like we're in, kid. Members of
the Lodge."
"I guess so-oh, Allan, look!"
She had stepped to the window; scudding clouds had just uncovered the Moon. It
was three days old and Mare Fecunditatis-the roll of hair at the back of the
Lady-in-the-Moon's head-was cleared by the Sunrise line. Near the right-hand
edge of that great, dark "sea" was a tiny spot, visible only to their
inner eyes-Luna City.
The crescent hung, serene and silvery,
over the tall buildings. "Darling, isn't it beautiful?"
"Certainly is. It'll be great to be
back. Don't get your nose all runny."
We Also
Walk Dogs
"General services -- Miss Cormet
speaking!" She addressed the view screen with just the right balance
between warm hospitable friendliness and impersonal efficiency. The screen
flickered momentarily, then built up a stereo-picture of a dowager, fat and
fretful, overdressed and underexercised.
"Oh, my dear," said the image,
"I'm so upset. I wonder if you can help me."
"I'm sure we can," Miss Cormet purred
as she quickly estimated the cost of the woman's gown and jewels (if real --
she made a mental reservation) and decided that here was a client that could be
profitable. "Now tell me your trouble. Your name first, if you
please." She touched a button on the horseshoe desk which enclosed her, a
button marked CREDIT DEPARTMENT.
"But it's all so _involved_,"
the image insisted. "Peter _would_ go and break his hip." Miss Cormet
immediately pressed the button marked MEDICAL. "I've _told_ him that polo
is dangerous. You've no idea, my dear, how a mother suffers. And just at this
time, too. It's so inconvenient--"
"You wish us to attend him? Where is
he now?"
"Attend him? Why, how silly! The
Memorial Hospital will do that. We've endowed them enough, I'm sure. It's my
dinner party I'm worried about. The Principessa will be so annoyed."
The answer light from the Credit
Department was blinking angrily. Miss Cormet headed her off. "Oh, I see.
We'll arrange it for you. Now, your name, please, and your address and present
location."
"But don't you _know_ my name?"
"One might guess," Miss Cormet
diplomatically evaded, "but General Services always respects the privacy
of its clients."
"Oh, yes, of course. How considerate.
I am Mrs. Peter van Hogbein Johnson." Miss Cormet controlled her reaction.
No need to consult the Credit Department for this one. But its transparency
flashed at once, rating AAA -- unlimited. "But I don't see what you can
do," Mrs Johnson continued. "I can't be two places at once."
"General Services likes difficult
assignments," Miss Cormet assured her. "Now -- if you will let me
have the details. . ."
She wheedled and nudged the woman into
giving a fairly coherent story. Her son, Peter III, a slightly shopworn Peter
Pan, whose features were familiar to Grace Gormet through years of
stereogravure, dressed in every conceivable costume affected by the richly idle
in their pastimes, had been so thoughtless as to pick the afternoon before his
mother's most important social function to bung himself up -- seriously.
Furthermore, he had been so thoughtless as to do so half a continent away from
his mater.
Miss Cormet gathered that Mrs. Johnson's
technique for keeping her son safely under thumb required that she rush to his
bedside at once, and, incidentally, to select his nurses. But her dinner party
that evening represented the culmination of months of careful maneuvering. What
was she to do?
Miss Cormet reflected to herself that the
prosperity of General Services and her own very substantial income was based
largely on the stupidity, lack of resourcefulness, and laziness of persons like
this silly parasite, as she explained that General Services would see that her
party was a smooth, social success while arranging for a portable full-length
stereo screen to be installed in her drawing room in order that she might greet
her guests and make her explanations while hurrying to her son's side. Miss
Cormet would see that a most adept social manager was placed in charge, one
whose own position in society was irreproachable and whose connection with
General Services was known to no one. With proper handling the disaster could
be turned into a social triumph, enhancing Mrs. Johnson's reputation as a
clever hostess and as a devoted mother.
"A sky car will be at your door in
twenty minutes," she added, as she cut in the circuit marked
TRANSPORTATION, "to take you to the rocket port. One of our young men will
be with it to get additional details from you on the way to the port. A
compartment for yourself and a berth for your maid will be reserved on the
16:45 rocket for Newark. You may rest easy now. General Services will do your
worrying."
"Oh, thank you, my dear. You've been
such a help. You've no idea of the _responsibilities_ a person in my position
has.'
Miss Cormet cluck-clucked in professional
sympathy while deciding that this particular girl was good for still more fees.
"You _do_ look exhausted, madame," she said anxiously. "Should I
not have a masseuse accompany you on the trip? Is your health at all delicate?
Perhaps a physician would be still better."
"How thoughtful you are!"
"I'll send both," Miss Cormet
decided, and switched off, with a faint regret that she had not suggested a
specially chartered rocket. Special service, not listed in the master price
schedule, was supplied on a cost-plus basis. In cases like this
"plus" meant all the traffic would bear.
She switched to EXECUTIVE; an alert-eyed
young man filled the screen. "Stand by for transcript, Steve," she
said. "Special service, triple-A. I've started the immediate
service."
His eyebrows lifted. "Triple-A --
bonuses?"
"Undoubtedly. Give this old battleaxe
the works -- smoothly. And look -- the client's son is laid up in a hospital.
Check on his nurses. If any one of them has even a shred of sex-appeal, fire
her out and put a zombie in."
"Gotcha, kid. Start the
transcript."
She cleared her screen again; the
"available-for-service" light in her booth turned automatically to
green, then almost at once turned red again and a new figure built up in her
screen.
No stupid waster this. Grace Cormet saw a
well-kempt man in his middle forties, flat-waisted, shrewd-eyed, hard but
urbane. The cape of his formal morning clothes was thrown back with careful
casualness. "General Services," she said. "Miss Cormet
speaking."
"Ah, Miss Cormet," he began,
"I wish to see your chief."
"Chief of switchboard?"
"No, I wish to see the President of
General Services."
"Will you tell me what it is you
wish? Perhaps I can help you."
"Sorry, but I can't make
explanations. I must see him, at once."
"And General Services is sorry. Mr.
Clare is a very busy man; it is impossible to see him without appointment and
without explanation."
"Are you recording?"
"Certainly."
"Then please cease doing so."
Above the console, in sight of the client,
she switched off the recorder. Underneath the desk she switched it back on
again. General Services was sometimes asked to perform illegal acts; its
confidential employees took no chances. He fished something out from the folds
of his chemise and held it out to her. The stereo effect made it appear as if
he were reaching right out through the screen.
Trained features masked her surprise -- it
was the sigil of a planetary official, and the color of the badge was green.
"I will arrange it," she said.
"Very good. Can you meet me and
conduct me in from the waiting room? In ten minutes?"
"I will be there, Mister . . .
Mister--" But he had cut off.
Grace Cormet switched to the switchboard
chief and called for relief. Then, with her board cut out of service, she
removed the spool bearing the clandestine record of the interview, stared at it
as if undecided, and after a moment, dipped it into an opening in the top of
the desk where a strong magnetic field wiped the unfixed patterns from the soft
metal.
A girl entered the booth from the rear.
She was blond, decorative, and looked slow and a little dull. She was neither.
"Okay, Grace," she said. "Anything to turn over?"
"No. Clear board."
"'S matter? Sick?"
"No." With no further
explanation Grace left the booth, went on out past the other booths housing
operators who handled unlisted services and into the large hail where the
hundreds of catalogue operators worked. These had no such complex equipment as
the booth which Grace had quitted. One enormous volume, a copy of the current
price list of all of General Services' regular price-marked functions, and an
ordinary look-and-listen enabled a catalogue operator to provide for the public
almost anything the ordinary customer could wish for. If a call was beyond the
scope of the catalogue it was transferred to the aristocrats of
resourcefulness, such as Grace.
She took a short cut through the master
files room, walked down an alleyway between dozens of chattering punched-card
machines, and entered the foyer of that level. A pneumatic lift bounced her up
to the level of the President's office. The President's receptionist did not
stop her, nor, apparently, announce her. But Grace noted that the girl's hands
were busy at the keys of her voder.
Switchboard operators do not walk into the
offices of the president of a billion-credit corporation. But General Services
was not organized like any other business on the planet. It was a _sui generis_
business in which special training was a commodity to be listed, bought, and
sold, but general resourcefulness and a ready wit were all important. In its
hierarchy Jay Clare, the president, came first, his handyman, Saunders Francis,
stood second, and the couple of dozen operators, of which Grace was one, who
took calls on the unlimited switchboard came immediately after. They, and the
field operators who handled the most difficult unclassified commissions -- one
group in fact, for the unlimited switchboard operators and the unlimited field
operators swapped places indiscriminately.
After them came the tens of thousands of
other employees spread over the planet, from the chief accountant, the head of
the legal department, the chief clerk of the master files on down through the
local managers. the catalogue operators to the last classified part time
employee -- stenographers prepared to take dictation when and where ordered,
gigolos ready to fill an empty place at a dinner, the man who rented both
armadillos and trained fleas.
Grace Cormet walked into Mr. Clare's
office. It was the only room in the building not cluttered up with
electromechanical recording and communicating equipment. It contained nothing
but his desk (bare), a couple of chairs, and a stereo screen, which, when not
in use, seemed to be Krantz' famous painting "The Weeping Buddha".
The original was in fact in the sub-basement, a thousand feet below.
"Hello, Grace," he greeted her,
and shoved a piece of paper at her. "Tell me what you think of that. Sance
says it's lousy." Saunders Francis turned his mild pop eyes from his chief
to Grace Cormet, but neither confirmed nor denied the statement.
Miss Cormet read:
CAN
YOU AFFORD IT?
Can You Afford GENERAL SERVICES?
Can
You Afford NOT to have General Services ? ? ? ? ?
In this jet-speed age can you afford to go on wasting
time doing your own shopping, paying bills yourself,
taking care of your living compartment?
We'll
spank the baby and feed the cat.
We'll
rent you a house and buy your shoes.
We'll write to your mother-in-law and add up your check stubs.
No job too large; No job too small --
and all amazingly Cheap!
GENERAL
SERVICES
Dial
H-U-R-R-Y -- U-P
P.S.
WE ALSO WALK DOGS
"Well?" said Clare.
"Sance is right. It smells."
"Why?"
"Too logical. Too verbose. No
drive."
"What's your idea of an ad to catch
the marginal market?"
She thought a moment, then borrowed his
stylus and wrote:
DO
YOU WANT SOMEBODY MURDERED?
(Then
_don't_ call GENERAL SERVICES)
But
for _any_ other job dial HURRY-UP - _It pays_!
P.S.
We also walk dogs.
"Mmmm . . . well, maybe," Mr.
Clare said cautiously. "We'll try it. Sance, give this a type B coverage,
two weeks, North America, and let me know how it takes." Francis put it
away in his kit, still with no change in his mild expression. "Now as I
was saying--"
"Chief," broke in Grace Cormet.
"I made an appointment for you in--"
She glanced at her watchfinger. "--exactly two minutes and forty
seconds. Government man."
"Make him happy and send him away.
I'm busy."
"Green Badge."
He looked up sharply. Even Francis looked
interested. "So?" Clare remarked. "Got the interview transcript
with you?"
"I wiped it."
"You did? Well, perhaps you know
best. I like your hunches. Bring him in."
She nodded thoughtfully and left.
She found her man just entering the public
reception room and escorted him past half a dozen gates whose guardians would
otherwise have demanded his identity and the nature of his business. When he
was seated in Clare's office, he looked around. "May I speak with you in
private, Mr. Clare?"
"Mr. Francis is my right leg. You've
already spoken to Miss Cormet."
"Very well." He produced the
green sigil again and held it out. "No names are necessary just yet. I am
sure of your discretion."
The President of General Services sat up
impatiently. "Let's get down to business. You are Pierre Beaumont, Chief
of Protocol. Does the administration want a job done?"
Beaumont was unperturbed by the change in
pace. "You know me. Very well. We'll get down to business. The government
may want a job done. In any case our discussion must not be permitted to leak
out--"
"All of General Services relations
are confidential."
"This is not confidential; this is
secret." He paused.
"I understand you," agreed
Clare. "Go on."
"You have an interesting organization
here, Mr. Clare. I believe it is your boast that you will undertake any
commission whatsoever -- for a price."
"If it is legal."
"Ah, yes, of course. But legal is a
word capable of interpretation. I admired the way your company handled the
outfitting of the Second Plutonian Expedition. Some of your methods were, ah,
ingenious."
"If you have any criticism of our actions
in that case they are best made to our legal department through the usual
channels."
Beaumont pushed a palm in his direction.
"Oh, no, Mr. Clare -- please! You misunderstand me. I was not criticising;
I was admiring. Such resource! What a diplomat you would have made!"
"Let's quit fencing. What do you
want?"
Mr. Beaumont pursed his lips. "Let us
suppose that you had to entertain a dozen representatives of each intelligent
race in this planetary system and you wanted to make each one of them completely
comfortable and happy. Could you do it?"
Clare thought aloud. "Air pressure,
humidity, radiation densities, atmosphere, chemistry, temperatures, cultural
conditions -- those things are all simple. But how about acceleration? We could
use a centrifuge for the Jovians, but Martians and Titans -- that's another
matter. There is no way to reduce earth-normal gravity. No, you would have to
entertain them out in space, or on Luna. That makes it not our pigeon; we never
give service beyond the stratosphere."
Beaumont shook his head. "It won't be
beyond the stratosphere. You may take it as an absolute condition that you are
to accomplish your results on the surface of the Earth."
"Why?"
"Is it the custom of General Services
to inquire why a client wants a particular type of service?"
"No. Sorry."
"Quite all right. But you do need
more information in order to understand what must be accomplished and why it
must be secret. There will be a conference, held on this planet, in the near
future -- ninety days at the outside. Until the conference is called no
suspicion that it is to be held must be allowed to leak out. If the plans for
it were to be anticipated in certain quarters, it would be useless to hold the
conference at all. I suggest that you think of this conference as a roundtable
of leading, ah, scientists of the system, about of the same size and makeup as
the session of the Academy held on Mars last spring. You are to make all
preparations for the entertainments of the delegates, but you are to conceal
these preparations in the ramifications of your organization until needed. As
for the details--"
But Clare interrupted him. "You
appear to have assumed that we will take on this commission. As you have
explained it, it would involve us in a ridiculous failure. General Services
does not like failures. You know and I know that low-gravity people cannot
spend more than a few hours in high gravity without seriously endangering their
health. Interplanetary get-togethers are always held on a low-gravity planet
and always will be."
"Yes," answered Beaumont
patiently, "they always have been. Do you realize the tremendous
diplomatic handicap which Earth and Venus labor under in consequence?"
"I don't get it."
"It isn't necessary that you should.
Political psychology is not your concern. Take it for granted that it does and
that the Administration is determined that this conference shall take place on
Earth."
"Why not Luna?"
Beaumont shook his head. "Not the
same thing at all. Even though we administer it, Luna City is a treaty port.
Not the same thing, psychologically."
Clare shook his head. "Mr. Beaumont,
I don't believe that you understand the nature of General Services, even as I
fail to appreciate the subtle requirements of diplomacy. We don't work miracles
and we don't promise to. We are just the handy-man of the last century, gone
speed-lined and corporate. We are the latter day equivalent of the old servant
class, but we are not Aladdin's genie. We don't even maintain research
laboratories in the scientific sense. We simply make the best possible use of
modern advances in communications and organization to do what already can be
done." He waved a hand at the far wall, on which there was cut in intaglio
the time-honored trademark of the business -- a Scottie dog, pulling against a
leash and sniffing at a post. "_There_ is the spirit of the sort of work
we do. We walk dogs for people who are too busy to walk 'em themselves. My
grandfather worked his way through college walking dogs. I'm still walking
them. I don't promise miracles, nor monkey with politics."
Beaumont fitted his fingertips carefully
together. "You walk dogs for a fee. But of course you do -- you walk my
pair. Five minim-credits seems rather cheap."
"It is. But a hundred thousand dogs,
twice a day, soon runs up the gross take."
"The 'take' for walking this 'dog'
would be considerable."
"How much?" asked Francis. It
was his first sign of interest. Beaumont turned his eyes on him. "My dear
sir, the outcome of this, ah, roundtable should make a difference of literally
hundreds of billions of credits to this planet. We will not bind the mouth of
the kine that treads the corn, if you pardon the figure of speech."
"How much?"
"Would thirty percent over cost be
reasonable?"
Francis shook his head. "Might not
come to much."
"Well, I certainly won't haggle.
Suppose we leave it up to you gentlemen -- your pardon, Miss Cormet! -- to
decide what the service is worth. I think I can rely on your planetary and
racial patriotism to make it reasonable and proper."
Francis sat back, said nothing, but looked
pleased.
"Wait a minute," protested
Clare. "We haven't taken this job."
"We have discussed the fee,"
observed Beaumont.
Clare looked from Francis to Grace Cormet,
then examined his fingernails. "Give me twenty-four hours to find out
whether or not it is possible," he said finally, "and I'll tell you
whether or not we will walk your dog."
"I feel sure," answered
Beaumont, "that you will." He gathered his cape about him.
"Okay, masterminds," said Clare
bitterly, "you've bought it."
"I've been wanting to get back to
field work," said Grace.
"Put a crew on everything but the
gravity problem," suggested Francis. "It's the only catch. The rest
is routine."
"Certainly," agreed Clare,
"but you had better deliver on that. If you can't, we are out some mighty
expensive preparations that we will never be paid for. Who do you want?
Grace?"
"I suppose so," answered
Francis. "She can count up to ten."
Grace Cormet looked at him coldly.
"There are times, Sance Francis, when I regret having married you."
"Keep your domestic affairs out of
the office," warned Clare. "Where do you start?"
"Let's find out who knows most about
gravitation," decided Francis. "Grace, better get Doctor Krathwohl on
the screen."
"Right," she acknowledged, as
she stepped to the stereo controls. "That's the beauty about this
business. You don't have to know anything; you just have to know where to find
out."
Dr. Krathwohl was a part of the permanent
staff of General Services. He had no assigned duties. The company found it
worthwhile to support him in comfort while providing him with an unlimited
drawing account for scientific journals and for attendance at the meetings
which the learned hold from time to time. Dr Krathwohl lacked the single-minded
drive of the research scientist; he was a dilettante by nature.
Occasionally they asked him a question. It
paid.
"Oh, hello, my dear!" Doctor
Krathwohl's gentle face smiled out at her from the screen. "Look -- I've
just come across the most amusing fact in the latest issue of _Nature_. It
throws a most interesting sidelight on Brownlee's theory of--"
"Just a second, Doc," she
interrupted. "I'm kinda in a hurry."
"Yes, my dear?"
"Who knows the most about
gravitation?"
"In what way do you mean that? Do you
want an astrophysicist, or do you want to deal with the subject from a
standpoint of theoretical mechanics? Farquarson would be the man in the first
instance, I suppose."
"I want to know what makes it
tick."
"Field theory, eh? In that case you
don't want Farquarson. He is a descriptive ballistician, primarily. Dr.
Julian's work in that subject is authoritative, possibly definitive."
"Where can we get hold of him?"
"Oh, but you can't. He died last
year, poor fellow. A great loss."
Grace refrained from telling him how great
a loss and asked, "Who stepped into his shoes?"
"Who what? Oh, you were jesting! I
see. You want the name of the present top man in field theory. I would say
O'Neil."
"Where is he?"
"I'll have to find out. I know him
slightly -- a difficult man."
"Do, please. In the meantime who
could coach us a bit on what it's all about?"
"Why don't you try young Carson, in
our engineering department? He was interested in such things before he took a
job with us. Intelligent chap -- I've had many an interesting talk with
him."
"I'll do that. Thanks, Doc. Call the
Chief's office as soon as you have located O'Neil. Speed." She cut off.
Carson agreed with Krathwohl's opinion,
but looked dubious. "O'Neil is arrogant and non-cooperative. I've worked
under him. But he undoubtedly knows more about field theory and space structure
than any other living man."
Carson had been taken into the inner
circle, the problem explained to him. He had admitted that he saw no solution.
"Maybe we are making something hard out of this," Clare suggested.
"I've got some ideas. Check me if I'm wrong, Carson."
"Go ahead, Chief."
"Well, the acceleration of gravity is
produced by the proximity of a mass -- right? Earth-normal gravity being
produced by the proximity of the Earth. Well, what would be the effect of
placing a large mass just over a particular point on the Earth's surface. Would
not that serve to counteract the pull of the Earth?"
"Theoretically, yes. But it would
have to be a damn big mass."
"No matter."
"You don't understand, Chief. To
offset fully the pull of the Earth at a given point would require another
planet the size of the Earth in contact with the Earth at that point. Of course
since you don't want to cancel the pull completely, but simply to reduce it,
you gain a certain advantage through using a smaller mass which would have its
center of gravity closer to the point in question than would be the center of
gravity of the Earth. Not enough, though. While the attraction builds up
inversely as the square of the distance -- in this case the half-diameter --
the mass and the consequent attraction drops off directly as the cube of the
diameter."
"What does that give us?"
Carson produced a slide rule and figured
for a few moments. He looked up. "I'm almost afraid to answer. You would
need a good-sized asteroid, of lead, to get anywhere at all."
"Asteroids have been moved before
this."
"Yes, but what is to hold it up? No, Chief,
there is no conceivable source of power, or means of applying it, that would
enable you to hang a big planetoid over a particular spot on the Earth's
surface and keep it there."
"Well, it was a good idea while it
lasted," Clare said pensively. Grace's smooth brow had been wrinkled as
she followed the discussion. Now she put in, "I gathered that you could
use an extremely heavy small mass more effectively. I seem to have read
somewhere about some stuff that weighs tons per cubic inch."
"The core of dwarf stars,"
agreed Carson. "All we would need for that would be a ship capable of
going light-years in a few days, some way to mine the interior of a star, and a
new space-time theory."
"Oh, well, skip it."
"Wait a minute," Francis
observed. "Magnetism is a lot like gravity, isn't it?"
"Well -- yes."
"Could there be some way to maqnetize
these gazebos from the little planets? Maybe something odd about their body
chemistry?"
"Nice idea," agreed Carson,
"but while their internal economy is odd, it's not that odd. They are
still organic."
"I suppose not. If pigs had wings
they'd be pigeons."
The stereo annunciator blinked. Doctor
Krathwohl announced that O'Neil could be found at his summer home in Portage,
Wisconsin. He had not screened him and would prefer not to do so, unless the
Chief insisted.
Clare thanked him and turned back to the
others. "We are wasting time," he announced. "After years in
this business we should know better than to try to decide technical questions.
I'm not a physicist and I don't give a damn how gravitation works. That's
O'Neil's business. And Carson's. Carson, shoot up to Wisconsin and get O'Neil
on the job."
"Me?"
"You. You're an operator for this job
-- with pay to match. Bounce over to the port -- there will be a rocket and a
credit facsimile waiting for you. You ought to be able to raise ground in seven
or eight minutes."
Carson blinked. "How about my job
here?"
"The engineering department will be
told, likewise the accounting. Get going."
Without replying Carson headed for the
door. By the time he reached it he was hurrying.
Carson's departure left them with nothing
to do until he reported back -- nothing to do, that is, but to start action on
the manifold details of reproducing the physical and cultural details of three
other planets and four major satellites, exclusive of their characteristic
surface-normal gravitational accelerations. The assignment, although new,
presented no real difficulties -- to General Services. Somewhere there were
persons who knew all the answers to these matters. The vast loose organization
called General Services was geared to find them, hire them, put them to work.
Any of the unlimited operators and a considerable percent of the catalogue
operators could take such an assignment and handle it without excitement nor
hurry.
Francis called in one unlimited operator.
He did not even bother to select him, but took the first available on the ready
panel -- they were all "Can do!" people. He explained in detail the
assignment, then promptly forgot about it. It would be done, and on time. The
punched-card machines would chatter a bit louder, stereo screens would flash,
and bright young people in all parts of the Earth would drop what they were
doing and dig out the specialists who would do the actual work.
He turned back to Clare, who said, "I
wish I knew what Beaumont is up to. Conference of scientists -- phooey!"
"I thought you weren't interested in
politics, Jay."
"I'm not. I don't give a hoot in hell
about politics, interplanetary or otherwise, except as it affects this
business. But if I knew what was being planned, we might be able to squeeze a
bigger cut out of it."
"Well," put in Grace, "I
think you can take it for granted that the real heavy-weights from all the planets
are about to meet and divide Gaul into three parts."
"Yes, but who gets cut out?"
"Mars, I suppose."
"Seems likely. With a bone tossed to
the Venerians. In that case we might speculate a little in Pan-Jovian Trading
Corp."
"Easy, son, easy," Francis
warned. "Do that, and you might get people interested. This is a hush-hush
job."
"I guess you're right. Still, keep
your eyes open. There ought to be some way to cut a slice of pie before this is
over."
Grace Cormet's telephone buzzed. She took
it out of her pocket and said, "Yes?"
"A Mrs. Hogbein Johnson wants to
speak to you."
"You handle her. I'm off the
board."
"She won't talk to anyone but
you."
"All right. Put her on the Chief's
stereo, but stay in parallel yourself. You'll handle it after I've talked to
her."
The screen came to life, showing Mrs.
Johnson's fleshy face alone, framed in the middle of the screen in flat
picture. "Oh, Miss Cormet," she moaned, "some dreadful mistake
has been made. There is no stereo on this ship."
"It will be installed in Cincinnati.
That will be in about twenty minutes."
"You are sure?"
"Quite sure."
"Oh, thank you! It's such a relief to
talk with you. Do you know, I'm thinking of making you my social
secretary."
"Thank you,' Grace said evenly; `but
I am under contract."
"But how stupidly tiresome! You can
break it."
"No, I'm sorry Mrs. Johnson.
Good-bye." She switched off the screen and spoke again into her telephone.
"Tell Accounting to double her fee. And I won't speak with her again."
She cut off and shoved the little instrument savagely back into her pocket.
"Social secretary!"
It was after dinner and Clare had retired
to his living apartment before Carson called back. Francis took the call in his
own office.
"Any luck?" he asked, when
Carson's image had built up.
"Quite a bit. I've seen O'Neil."
"Well? Will he do it?"
"You mean can he do it, don't
you?"
"Well -- can he?"
"Now that is a funny thing -- I
didn't think it was theoretically possible. But after talking with him, I'm
convinced that it is. O'Neil has a new outlook on field theory -- stuff he's
never published. The man is a genius."
"I don't care," said Francis,
"whether he's a genius or a Mongolian idiot -- can he build some sort of a
gravity thinner-outer?"
"I believe he can. I really do
believe he can."
"Fine. You hired him?"
"No. That's the hitch. That's why I
called back. It's like this: I happened to catch him in a mellow mood, and
because we had worked together once before and because I had not aroused his
ire quite as frequently as his other assistants he invited me to stay for
dinner. We talked about a lot of things (you can't hurry him) and I broached
the proposition. It interested him mildly -- the idea, I mean; not the
proposition -- and he discussed the theory with me, or, rather, at me. But he
won't work on it."
"Why not? You didn't offer him enough
money. I guess I'd better tackle him."
"No, Mr. Francis, no. You don't
understand. He's not interested in money. He's independently wealthy and has
more than he needs for his research, or anything else he wants. But just at
present he is busy on wave mechanics theory and he just won't be bothered with
anything else."
"Did you make him realize it was
important?"
"Yes and no. Mostly no. I tried to,
but there isn't anything important to him but what he wants. It's a sort of
intellectual snobbishness. Other people simply don't count."
"All right," said Francis.
"You've done well so far. Here's what you do: After I switch off, you call
EXECUTIVE and make a transcript of everything you can remember of what he said
about gravitational theory. We'll hire the next best men, feed it to them, and
see if it gives them any ideas to work on. In the meantime I'll put a crew to
work on the details of Dr O'Neil's background. He'll have a weak point
somewhere; it's just a matter of finding it. Maybe he's keeping a woman
somewhere--"
"He's long past that."
"--or maybe he has a by-blow stashed
away somewhere. We'll see. I want you to stay there in Portage. Since you can't
hire him, maybe you can persuade him to hire you. You're our pipeline, I want
it kept open. We've got to find something he wants, or something he is afraid
of."
"He's not afraid of _anything_. I'm
positive about that."
"Then he wants something. If it's not
money, or women, it's something else. It's a law of nature."
"I doubt it," Carson replied
slowly. "Say! Did I tell you about his hobby?"
"No. What is it?"
"It's china. In particular, Ming
china. He has the best collection in the world, I'd guess. But I know what he
wants!"
"Well, spill it, man, spill it. Don't
be dramatic."
"It's a little china dish, or bowl,
about four inches across and two inches high. It's got a Chinese name that
means 'Flower of Forgetfulness.'"
"Hmmm -- doesn't seem significant.
You think he wants it pretty bad?"
"I know he does. He has a solid
colorgraph of it in his study, where he can look at it. But it hurts him to
talk about it."
"Find out who owns it and where it
is."
"I know. British Museum. That's why
he can't buy it."
"So?" mused Francis. "Well,
you can forget it. Carry on."
Clare came down to Francis' office and the
three talked it over. "I guess we'll need Beaumont on this," was his
comment when he had heard the report. "It will take the Government to get
anything loose from the British Museum." Francis looked morose. "Well
-- what's eating you? What's wrong with that?"
"I know," offered Grace.
"You remember the treaty under which Great Britain entered the planetary
confederation?"
"I was never much good at
history."
"It comes to this: I doubt if the
planetary government can touch anything that belongs to the Museum without
asking the British Parliament."
"Why not? Treaty or no treaty, the
planetary government is sovereign. That was established in the Brazilian
Incident."
"Yeah, sure. But it could cause
questions to be asked in the House of Commons and that would lead to the one
thing Beaumont wants to avoid at all costs -- publicity."
"Okay. What do you propose?"
"I'd say that Sance and I had better
slide over to England and find out just how tight they have the 'Flower of
Forgetfulness' nailed down -- and who does the nailing and what his weaknesses
are."
Clare's eyes travelled past her to
Francis, who was looking blank in the fashion that indicated assent to his
intimates. "Okay," agreed Clare, "it's your baby. Taking a
special?"
"No, we've got time to get the
midnight out of New York. Bye-bye."
"Bye. Call me tomorrow."
When Grace screened the Chief the next day
he took one look at her and exclaimed, "Good Grief, kid! What have you
done to your hair?"
"We located the guy," she
explained succinctly. "His weakness is blondes."
"You've had your skin bleached,
too."
"Of course. How do you like it?"
"It's stupendous -- though I
preferred you the way you were. But what does Sance think of it?"
"He doesn't mind -- it's business.
But to get down to cases, Chief, there isn't much to report. This will have to
be a lefthanded job. In the ordinary way, it would take an earthquake to get
anything out of that tomb."
"Don't do anything that can't be
fixed!"
"You know me, Chief. I won't get you
in trouble. But it will be expensive."
"Of course."
"That's all for now. I'll screen
tomorrow."
She was a brunette again the next day.
"What is this?" asked Clare. "A masquerade?"
"I wasn't the blonde he was weak
for," she explained, "but I found the one he was interested in."
"Did it work out?"
"I think it will. Sance is having a
facsimile integrated now. With luck, we'll see you tomorrow."
They showed up the next day, apparently
empty handed. "Well?" said Clare, "well?"
"Seal the place up, Jay,"
suggested Francis. "Then we'll talk." Clare flipped a switch
controlling an interference shield which rendered his office somewhat more
private than a coffin. "How about it?" he demanded. "Did you get
it?"
"Show it to him, Grace."
Grace turned her back, fumbled at her
clothing for a moment, then turned around and placed it gently on the Chief's
desk.
It was not that it was beautiful -- it was
beauty. Its subtle simple curve had no ornamentation, decoration would have
sullied it. One spoke softly in its presence, for fear a sudden noise would
shatter it.
Clare reached out to touch it, then
thought better of it and drew his hand back. But he bent his head over it and
stared down into it. It was strangely hard to focus -- to allocate -- the
bottom of the bowl. It seemed as if his sight sank deeper and ever deeper into
it, as if he were drowning in a pool of light.
He jerked up his head and blinked.
"God," he whispered, "God -- I didn't know such things
existed."
He looked at Grace and looked away to
Francis. Francis had tears in his eyes, or perhaps his own were blurred.
"Look, Chief," said Francis.
"Look -- couldn't we just keep it and call the whole thing off?"
"There's no use talking about it any
longer," said Francis wearily. "We can't keep it, Chief. I shouldn't
have suggested it and you shouldn't have listened to me. Let's screen
O'Neil."
"We might just wait another day
before we do anything about it," Clare ventured. His eyes returned yet
again to the "Flower of Forgetfulness."
Grace shook her head. "No good. It
will just be harder tomorrow. I _know_." She walked decisively over to the
stereo and manipulated the controls.
O'Neil was annoyed at being disturbed and
twice annoyed that they had used the emergency signal to call him to his
disconnected screen.
"What is this?" he demanded.
"What do you mean by disturbing a private citizen when he has disconnected?
Speak up and it had better be good, or, so help me, I'll sue you!"
"We want you to do a little job of
work for us, Doctor," Clare began evenly.
"What!" O'Neil seemed almost too
surprised to be angry. "Do you mean to stand there, sir, and tell me that
you have invaded the privacy of my home to ask me to work for you?"
"The pay will be satisfactory to
you."
O'Neil seemed to be counting up to ten
before answering. "Sir," he said carefully, "there are men in
the world who seem to think they can buy anything, or anybody. I grant you that
they have much to go on in that belief. But I am not for sale. Since you seem
to be one of those persons, I will do my best to make this interview expensive
for you. You will hear from my attorneys. Good night!"
"Wait a moment," Clare said
urgently. "I believe that you are interested in china--"
"What if I am?"
"Show it to him, Grace." Grace
brought the "Flower of Forgetfulness" up near the screen, handling it
carefully, reverently. O'Neil said nothing. He leaned forward and stared. He
seemed to be about to climb through the screen. "Where did you get
it?" he said at last.
"That doesn't matter."
"I'll buy it from you - at your own
price."
"It's not for sale. But you may have
it -- if we can reach an agreement."
O'Neil eyed him. "It's stolen
property."
"You're mistaken. Nor will you find
anyone to take an interest in such a charge. Now about this job--"
O'Neil pulled his eyes away from the bowl.
"What is it you wish me to do?"
Clare explained the problem to him. When
he had concluded O'Neil shook his head. "That's ridiculous," he said.
"We have reason to feel that is
theoretically possible."
"Oh, certainly! It's theoretically
possible to live forever, too. But no one has ever managed it."
"We think you can do it."
"Thank you for nothing. Say!"
O'Neil stabbed a finger at him out of the screen. "You set that young pup
Carson on me!"
"He was acting under my orders."
"Then, sir, I do not like your
manners."
"How about the job? And this?"
Clare indicated the bowl. O'Neil gazed at it and chewed his whiskers.
"Suppose," he said, at last, "I make an honest attempt, to the
full extent of my ability, to supply what you want -- and I fail."
Clare shook his head. "We pay only
for results. Oh, your salary, of course, but not _this_. This is a bonus in
addition to your salary, _if_ you are successful."
O'Neil seemed about to agree, then said
suddenly, "You may be fooling me with a colorgraph. I can't tell through
this damned screen."
Clare shrugged. "Come and see for
yourself."
"I shall. I will. Stay where you are.
Where are you? Damn it, sir, what's your name?"
He came storming in two hours later.
"You've tricked me! The 'Flower' is still in England. I've investigated.
I'll . . . I'll punish you, sir, with my own two hands."
"See for yourself," answered
Clare. He stepped aside, so that his body no longer obscured O'Neil's view of
Clare's desk top.
They let him look. They respected his need
for quiet and let him look. After a long time he turned to them, but did not
speak.
"Well?" asked Clare.
"I'll build your damned gadget,"
he said huskily. "I figured out an approach on the way here."
Beaumont came in person to call the day
before the first session of the conference. "Just a social call, Mr.
Clare," he stated. "I simply wanted to express to you my personal
appreciation for the work you have done. And to deliver this."
"This" turned out to be a draft on the Bank Central for the agreed
fee. Clare accepted it, glanced at it, nodded, and placed it on his desk.
"I take it, then," he remarked,
"that the Government is satisfied with the service rendered."
"That is putting it
conservatively," Beaumont assured him. "To be perfectly truthful, I
did not think you could do so much. You seem to have thought of everything. The
Callistan delegation is out now, riding around and seeing the sights in one of
the little tanks you had prepared. They are delighted. Confidentially, I think
we can depend on their vote in the coming sessions."
"Gravity shields working all right,
eh?"
"Perfectly. I stepped into their
sightseeing tank before we turned it over to them. I was as light as the
proverbial feather. Too light -- I was very nearly spacesick." He smiled
in wry amusement. "I entered the Jovian apartments, too. That was quite
another matter."
"Yes, it would be," Clare
agreed. "Two and a half times normal weight is oppressive to say the
least."
"It's a happy ending to a difficult
task. I must be going. Oh, yes, one other little matter -- I've discussed with
Doctor O'Neil the possibility that the Administration may be interested in
other uses for his new development. In order to simplify the matter it seems
desirable that you provide me with a quit-claim to the O'Neil effect from
General Services."
Clare gazed thoughtfully at the
"Weeping Buddha" and chewed his thumb. "No," he said
slowly, "no. I'm afraid that would be difficult."
"Why not?" asked Beaumont.
"It avoids the necessity of adjudication and attendant waste of time. We
are prepared to recognize your service and recompense you."
"Hmmm. I don't believe you fully
understand the situation, Mr. Beaumont. There is a certain amount of open
territory between our contract with Doctor O'Neil and your contract with us.
You asked of us certain services and certain chattels with which to achieve
that service. We provided them -- for a fee. All done. But our contract with
Doctor O'Neil made him a full-time employee for the period of his employment.
His research results and the patents embodying them are the property of General
Services."
"Really?" said Beaumont.
"Doctor O'Neil has a different impression."
"Doctor O'Neil is mistaken.
Seriously, Mr. Beaumont -- you asked us to develop a siege gun, figuratively
speaking, to shoot a gnat. Did you expect us, as businessmen, to throw away the
siege gun after one shot?"
"No, I suppose not. What do you
propose to do?"
"We expect to exploit the gravity
modulator commercially. I fancy we could get quite a good price for certain
adaptations of it on Mars."
"Yes. Yes, I suppose you could. But
to be brutally frank, Mr. Clare, I am afraid that is impossible. it is a matter
of imperative public policy that this development be limited to terrestrials.
In fact, the administration would find it necessary to intervene and make it
government monopoly."
"Have you considered how to keep
O'Neil quiet?"
"In view of the change in
circumstances, no. What is your thought?"
"A corporation, in which he would
hold a block of stock and be president. One of our bright young men would be
chairman of the board." Clare thought of Carson. "There would be
stock enough to go around," he added, and watched Beaumont's face.
Beaumont ignored the bait. "I suppose
that this corporation would be under contract to the Government -- its sole
customer?"
"That is the idea."
"Hmmm . . . yes, it seems feasible.
Perhaps I had better speak with Doctor O'Neil."
"Help yourself."
Beaumont got O'Neil on the screen and
talked with him in low tones. Or, more properly, Beaumont's tones were low.
O'Neil displayed a tendency to blast the microphone. Clare sent for Francis and
Grace and explained to them what had taken place.
Beaumont turned away from the screen.
"The Doctor wishes to speak with you, Mr. Clare."
O'Neil looked at him frigidly. "What
is this claptrap I've had to listen to, sir? What's this about the O'Neil
effect being your property?"
"It was in your contract, Doctor.
Don't you recall?"
"Contract! I never read the damned
thing. But I can tell you this: I'll take you to court. I'll tie you in knots
before I'll let you make a fool of me that way."
"Just a moment, Doctor, please!"
Clare soothed. "We have no desire to take advantage of a mere legal
technicality, and no one disputes your interest. Let me outline what I had in
mind--" He ran rapidly over the plan. O'Neil listened, but his expression
was still unmollified at the conclusion.
"I'm not interested," he said
gruffly. "So far as I am concerned the Government can have the whole
thing. And I'll see to it."
"I had not mentioned one other
condition," added Clare.
"Don't bother."
"I must. This will be just a matter
of agreement between gentlemen, but it is essential. You have custody of the
'Flower of Forgetfulness.'"
O'Neil was at once on guard. "What do
you mean, 'custody.' I own it. Understand me -- own it."
"'Own it,'" repeated Clare.
"Nevertheless, in return for the concessions we are making you with
respect to your contract, we want something in return."
"What?" asked O'Neil. The
mention of the bowl had upset his confidence.
"You own it and you retain possession
of it. But I want your word that I, or Mr. Francis, or Miss Cormet, may come
look at it from time to time -- frequently."
O'Neil looked unbelieving. "You mean
that you simply want to come to _look_ at it?"
"That's all."
"Simply to _enjoy_ it?"
"That's right."
O'Neil looked at him with new respect.
"I did not understand you before, Mr Clare. I apologize. As for the
corporation nonsense -- do as you like. I don't care. You and Mr Francis and
Miss Cormet may come to see the 'Flower' whenever you like. You have my
word."
"Thank you, Doctor O'Neil -- for all
of us." He switched off as quickly as could be managed gracefully.
Beaumont was looking at Clare with added
respect, too. "I think," he said, "that the next time I shall
not interfere with your handling of the details. I'll take my leave. Adieu,
gentlemen - and Miss Cormet."
When the door had rolled down behind him
Grace remarked, "That seems to polish it off."
"Yes," said Clare. "We've
'walked his dog' for him; O'Neil has what he wants; Beaumont got what he
wanted, and more besides."
"Just what is he after?"
"I don't know, but I suspect that he
would like to be first president of the Solar System Federation, if and when there
is such a thing. With the aces we have dumped in his lap, he might make it. Do
you realize the potentialities of the O'Neil effect?"
"Vaguely," said Francis.
"Have you thought about what it will
do to space navigation? Or the possibilities it adds in the way of
colonization? Or its recreational uses? There's a fortune in that alone."
"What do we get out of it?"
"What do we get out of it? Money, old
son. Gobs and gobs of money. There's always money in giving people what they
want." He glanced up at the Scottie dog trademark.
"Money," repeated Francis.
"Yeah, I suppose so."
"Anyhow," added Grace, "we
can always go look at the 'Flower.'"
Searchlight
'Will
she hear you?'
'If she's on this face of the Moon. If she
was able to get out of the ship. If her suit radio wasn't damaged. If she has
it turned on. If she is alive. Since the ship is silent and no radar beacon has
been spotted, it is unlikely that she or the pilot lived through it.'
'She's got to be found! Stand by, Space
Station. Tycho Base, acknowledge.'
Reply lagged about three seconds,
Washington to Moon and back. 'Lunar Base, Commanding General.'
'General, put every man on the Moon out
searching for Betsy!'
Speed-of-light lag made the answer sound
grudging. 'Sir, do you know how big the Moon is?'
~No matter! Betsy Barnes is there
somewhere - so every man is to search until she is found. If she's dead, your
precious pilot would be better off dead, too!'
'Sir, the Moon is almost fifteen million
square miles. If I used every man I have, each would have over a thousand
square miles to search. I gave Betsy my best pilot. I won't listen to threats
against him when he can't answer back. Not from anyone, sir! I'm sick of being
told what to do by people who don't know Lunar conditions. My advice - my
official advice sir is to let Meridian Station try. Maybe they can Work a
miracle.'
The answer rapped back, 'Very well,
General! I'll speak to you later. Meridian Station! Report your plans.'
Elizabeth Barnes, 'Blind Betsy', child genius of the piano, had been making a
USO tour of the Moon. She 'wowed 'em' at Tycho Base, then lifted by jeep rocket
for Farside Hardbase, to entertain our lonely missilemen behind the Moon. She
should have been there in an hour. Her pilot was a safety pilot; such ships
shuttled unpiloted between Tycho and Farside daily.
After lift-off her ship departed from its
programming, was lost by Tycho's radars. It was.. . somewhere.
Not in space, else it would be radioing
for help and its radar beacon would be seen by other ships, space stations,
surface bases. It had crashed - or made emergency landing - somewhere on the
vastness of Luna.
'Meridian
Space Station, Director speaking - ' Lag was unnoticeable; radio bounce between
Washington and the station only 22,300 miles up was only a quarter second.
'We've patched Earthside stations to blanket the Moon with our call. Another
broadcast blankets the far side from Station Newton at the three-body stable
position. Ships from Tycho are orbiting the Moon's rim - that band around the
edge which is in radio shadow from us and from the Newton. If we hear-'
'Yes, yes! How about radar search?'
'Sir, a rocket on the surface looks to
radar like a million other features the same size. Our one chance is to get
them to answer . . . if they can. Ultrahigh-resolution radar might spot them in
months - but suits worn in those little rockets carry only six hours air. We
are praying they will hear and answer.'
'When they answer, you'll slap a radio
direction finder on them. Eh?'
'No, sir.'
'In God's name, why not?'
'Sir, a direction finder is useless for
this job. It would tell us only that the signal came from the Moon - which
doesn't help.'
'Doctor, you're saying that you might hear
Betsy - and not know where she is?'
'We're as blind as she is. We hope that
she will be able to lead us to her. . . if she hears us.'
'How?'
'With a Laser. An intense, very tight beam
of light. She'll hear it-'
'Hear a beam of light?'
'Yes, sir. We are jury-rigging to scan
like radar - that won't show anything. But we are modulating it to give a
carrier wave in radio frequency, then modulating that into audio frequency-and
controlling that by a piano. If she hears us, we'll tell her to listen while we
scan the Moon and run the scale on the piano -,
'All this while a little girl is dying?'
'Mister President - shut up!'
'Who was THAT?'
'I'm Betsy's father. They've patched me
from Omaha. Please, Mr President, keep quiet and let them work. I want my
daughter back.'
The President answered tightly, 'Yes, Mr
Barnes. Go ahead, Director. Order anything you need.'
In
Station Meridian the director wiped his face. 'Getting anything?'
'No. Boss, can't something be done about
that Rio station? It's sitting right on the frequency!'
'We'll drop a brick on them. Or a bomb.
Joe, tell the President'
'I heard, Director. They'll be silenced!'
'Sh!
Quiet! Betsy - do you hear me?' The operator looked intent, made an adjustment.
From a speaker came a girl's light, sweet
voice: ' - to hear somebody! Gee, I'm glad! Better come quick - the Major is
hurt.'
The Director jumped to the microphone.
'Yes, Betsy, we'll hurry. You've got to help us. Do you know where you are?'
'Somewhere on the Moon, I guess. We bumped
hard and I was going to kid him about it when the ship fell over. I got
unstrapped and found Major Peters and he isn't moving. Not dead - I don't think
so; his suits puffs out like mine and I hear something when I push my helmet
against him. I just now managed to get the door open.' She added, 'This can't
be Farside; it's supposed to be night there. I'm in sunshine, I'm sure. This
suit is pretty hot.'
'Betsy, you must stay outside. You've got
to be where you can see us.'
She chuckled. 'That's a good one. I see
with my ears.'
Yes. You'll see us, with your ears.
Listen, Betsy. We're going to scan the Moon with a beam of light. You'll hear
it as a piano note. We've got the Moon split into the eighty-eight piano notes.
When you hear one, yell, "Now!" Then tell us what note you heard. Can
you do that?'
'Of course,' she said confidently, 'if the
piano is in tune.'
'It is. All right, we're starting -'
'Now!'
'What note, Betsy?'
'E flat, the first octave above middle C.'
'This note, Betsy?'
'That's what I said.'
The Director called out, 'Where's that on
the grid? In Mare Nubium? Tell the General!' He said to the microphone, 'We're
finding you, Betsy honey! Now we scan just that part you're on.
We change setup. Want to talk to your
Daddy meanwhile?'
'Gosh! Could I?'
'Yes indeed!'
Twenty minutes later he cut' in and heard:
'- of course not, Daddy. Oh, a teensy bit scared when the ship fell. But people
take care of me, always have.'
'Betsy?'
'Yes, sir?'
'Be ready to tell us again.'
'Now!' She
added, 'That's a bullfrog G, three octaves down.'
'This note?'
'That's right.'
'Get that on the grid and tell the General
to get his ships up! That cuts it to a square ten miles on a side! Now, Betsy -
we know almost where you are. We are going to focus still closer. Want to go
inside and cool off?'
'I'm not too hot. Just sweaty.'
Forty
minutes later the General's voice rang out: 'They've spotted the ship! They see
her waving!'
Ordeal
in Space
Maybe we should never have ventured out
into space. Our race has but two basic, innate fears; noise and the fear of
falling. Those terrible heights - Why should any man in his right mind let
himself be placed where he could fall . . . and fall . . . and fall - But all
spacemen are crazy. Everybody knows that.
The medicos had been very kind, he
supposed. 'You're lucky. You want to remember that, old fellow. You're still
young and your retired pay relieves you of all worry about your future. You've
got both arms and legs and are in fine shape.'
'Fine shape!' His voice was
unintentionally contemptuous.
'No, I mean it,' the chief psychiatrist
had persisted gently. 'The little quirk you have does you no harm at all -
except that you can't go into space again. I can't honestly call acrophobia a
neurosis; fear of falling is normal and sane. You've just got it a little more
strongly than most - but that is not abnormal, in view of what you have been
through.'
The reminder set him to shaking again. He
closed his eyes and saw the stars wheeling below him again. He was falling,
falling endlessly. The psychiatrist's voice came through to him and pulled him
back. 'Steady, old man! Look around you.'
'Sorry.'
'Not at all. Now tell me, what do you plan
to do?'
'I don't know. Get a job, I suppose.'
'The Company will give you a job, you
know.'
He shook his head. 'I don't want to hang
around a spaceport.' Wear a little button in his shirt to show that he was once
a man, be addressed by a courtesy title of captain, claim the privileges of the
pilots' lounge on the basis of what he used to be, hear the shop talk die down
whenever he approached a group, wonder what they were saying behind his back -
no, thank you!
'I think you're wise. Best to make a clean
break, for a while at least, until you are feeling better.'
'You think I'll get over it?'
The psychiatrist pursed his lips.
'Possible. It's functional, you know. No trauma.'
'But you don't think so?'
'I didn't say that. I honestly don't know.
We still know very little about what makes a man tick.'
'I see. Well, I might as well be leaving.'
The psychiatrist stood up and shoved out
his hand. 'Holler if you want anything. And come back to see us in any case.'
'Thanks.'
'You're going to be all right. I know it.'
But the psychiatrist shook his head as his
patient walked out. The man did not walk like a spaceman; the easy, animal
self-confidence was gone.
Only a small part of Great New York was
roofed over in those days; he stayed underground until he was in that section,
then sought out a passageway lined with bachelor rooms. He stuck a coin in the
slot of the first one which displayed a lighted 'vacant' sign, chucked his jump
bag inside, and left. The monitor at the intersection gave him the address of
the nearest placement office. He went there, seated himself at an interview
desk, stamped in his finger prints, and started filling out forms. It gave him
a curious back-to-the-beginning feeling; he had not looked for a job since
pre-cadet days.
He left filling in his name to the last
and hesitated even then. He had had more than his bellyful of publicity; he did
not want to be recognized; he certainly did not want to be throbbed over - and
most of all he did not want anyone telling him he was a hero. Presently he
printed in the name 'William Saunders' and dropped the forms in the slot.
He was well into his third cigarette and
getting ready to strike another when the screen in front of him at last lighted
up. He found himself staring at a nice-looking brunette. 'Mr. Saunders,' the
image said, will you come inside, please? Door seventeen.'
The brunette in person was there to offer
him a seat and a cigarette. 'Make yourself comfortable, Mr. Saunders. I'm Miss
Joyce. I'd like to talk with you about your application.' He settled himself
and waited, without speaking.
When she saw that he did not intend to
speak, she added, 'Now take this name "William Saunders" which you
have given us - we know who you are, of course, from your prints.
'I suppose so.'
'Of course I know what everybody knows
about you, but your action in calling yourself "William Saunders",
Mr. -'
'Saunders.'
'- Mr. Saunders, caused me to query the
files.' She held up a microfilm spool, turned so that he might read his own
name on it. 'I know quite a lot about you now - more than the public knows and
more than you saw fit to put into your application. It's a good record, Mr.
Saunders.'
'Thank you.'
'But I can't use it in placing you in a
job. I can't even refer to it if you insist on designating yourself as
"Saunders".'
'The name is Saunders.' His voice was
flat, rather than emphatic.
'Don't be hasty, Mr. Saunders. There are
many positions in which the factor of prestige can be used quite legitimately
to obtain for a client a much higher beginning of pay than-'
'I'm not interested.'
She looked at him and decided not to
insist. 'As you wish. If you will go to reception room B, you can start your
classification and skill tests.'
'Thank you.'
'If you should change your mind later, Mr.
Saunders, we will be glad to reopen the case. Through that door, please.'
Three days later found him at work for a
small firm specializing in custom-built communication systems. His job was
calibrating electronic equipment. It was soothing work, demanding enough to occupy
his mind, yet easy for a man of his training and experience. At the end of his
three months' probation he was promoted out of the helper category.
He was building himself a well-insulated
rut, working, sleeping, eating, spending an occasional evening at the public
library or working out at the YMCA - and never, under any circumstances, going
out under the open sky nor up to any height, not even a theater balcony.
He tried to keep his past life shut out of
his mind, but his memory of it was still fresh; he would find himself
daydreaming - the star-sharp, frozen sky of Mars, or the roaring night life of
Venusburg. He would see again the swollen, ruddy bulk of Jupiter hanging over
the port on Ganymede, its oblate bloated shape impossibly huge and crowding the
sky.
Or he might, for a time, feel again the
sweet quiet of the long watches on the lonely reaches between the planets. But
such reveries were dangerous; they cut close to the edge of his new peace of
mind. It was easy to slide over and find himself clinging for life to his last
handhold on the steel sides of the Valkyrie, fingers numb and failing, and
nothing below him but the bottomless well of space.
Then he would come back to Earth, shaking
uncontrollably and gripping his chair or the workbench.
The first time it had happened at work he
had found one of his benchmates, Joe Tully, staring at him curiously. 'What's
the trouble, Bill?' he had asked. 'Hangover?'
'Nothing,' he had managed to say. 'Just a
chill.'
'You better take a pill. Come on - let's
go to lunch.'
Tully led the way to the elevator; they
crowded in. Most of the employees - even the women - preferred to go down via
the drop chute, but Tully always used the elevator. 'Saunders', of course,
never used the drop chute; this had eased them into the habit of lunching
together. He knew that the chute was safe, that, even if the power should fail,
safety nets would snap across at each floor level - but he could not force
himself to step off the edge.
Tully said publicly that a drop-chute
landing hurt his arches, but he confided privately to Saunders that he did not
trust automatic machinery. Saunders nodded understandingly but said nothing. It
warmed him toward Tully. He began feeling friendly and not on the defensive
with another human being for the first time since the start of his new life. He
began to want to tell Tully the truth about himself. If he could be sure that
Joe would not insist on treating him as a hero - not that he really objected to
the role of hero. As a kid, hanging around spaceports, trying to wangle chances
to go inside the ships, cutting classes to watch take-offs, he had dreamed of
being a 'hero' someday, a hero of the spaceways, returning in triumph from some
incredible and dangerous piece of exploration. But he was troubled by the fact
that he still had the same picture of what a hero should look like and how he
should behave; it did not include shying away from open windows, being fearful
of walking across an open square, and growing too upset to speak at the mere
thought of boundless depths of space.
Tully invited him home for dinner. He
wanted to go, but fended off the invitation while he inquired where Tully
lived. The Shelton Homes, Tully told him, naming one of those great, boxlike
warrens that used to disfigure the Jersey flats. 'It's a long way to come
back,' Saunders said doubtfully, while turning over in his mind ways to get
there without exposing himself to the things he feared.
'You won't have to come back,' Tully
assured him. 'We've got a spare room. Come on. My old lady does her own cooking
- that's why I keep her.'
'Well, all right,' he conceded. 'Thanks,
Joe.' The La Guardia Tube would take him within a quarter of a mile; if he
could not find a covered way he would take a ground cab and close the shades.
Tully met him in the hail and apologized
in a whisper. 'Meant to have a young lady for you, Bill. Instead we've got my
brother-in-law. He's a louse. Sorry.'
'Forget it, Joe. I'm glad to be here.' He
was indeed. The discovery that Bill's flat was on the thirty-fifth floor had
dismayed him at first, but he was delighted to find that he had no feeling of
height. The lights were on, the windows occulted, the floor under him was rock
solid; he felt warm and safe. Mrs. Tully turned out in fact to be a good cook,
to his surprise - he had the bachelor's usual distrust of amateur cooking. He
let himself go to the pleasure of feeling at home and safe and wanted; he
managed not even to hear most of the aggressive and opinionated remarks of
Joe's in-law.
After dinner he relaxed in an easy chair,
glass of beer in hand, and watched the video screen. It was a musical comedy;
he laughed more heartily than he had in months. Presently the comedy gave way
to a religious program, the National Cathedral Choir; he let it be, listening
with one ear and giving some attention to the conversation with the other.
The choir was more than half way through
Prayer for Travelers before he became fully aware of what they were singing:
Hear us
when we pray to Thee
For
those in peril on the sea.
'Almighty
Ruler of them all
Whose
power extends to great and small,
Who
guides the stars and steadfast law,
Whose
least creation fills with awe;
Oh,
grant Thy mercy and Thy grace
To
those who venture into space.'
He wanted to switch it off, but he had to
hear it out, he could not stop listening to it, though it hurt him in his heart
with the unbearable homesickness of the hopelessly exiled. Even as a cadet this
one hymn could fill his eyes with tears; now he kept his face turned away from
the others to try to hide from them the drops wetting his cheeks.
When the choir's 'amen' let him do so he
switched quickly to some other - any other - program and remained bent over the
instrument, pretending to fiddle with it, while he composed his features. Then
he turned back to the company, outwardly serene, though it seemed to him that
anyone could see the hard, aching knot in his middle.
The brother-in-law was still sounding off.
'We ought to annex 'em,' he was saying.
'That's what we ought to do. Three-Planets Treaty - what a lot of ruddy rot!
What right have they got to tell us what we can and can't do on Mars?'
'Well, Ed,' Tully said mildly, 'it's their
planet, isn't it? They were there first.'
Ed brushed it aside. 'Did we ask the
Indians whether or not they wanted us in North America? Nobody has any right to
hang on to something he doesn't know how to use. With proper exploitation -'
'You been speculating, Ed?'
'Huh? It wouldn't be speculation if the
government wasn't made up of a bunch of weak-spined old women. "Rights of
Natives", indeed. What rights do a bunch of degenerates have?'
Saunders found himself contrasting Ed
Schultz with Knath Sooth, the only Martian he himself had ever known well.
Gentle Knath, who had been old before Ed was born, and yet was rated as young
among his own kind. Knath... why, Knath could sit for hours with a friend or
trusted acquaintance, saying nothing, needing to say nothing. 'Growing
together' they called it - his entire race had so grown together that they had
needed no government, until the Earthman came.
Saunders had once asked his friend why he
exerted himself so little, was satisfied with so little. More than an hour
passed and Saunders was beginning to regret his inquisitiveness when Knath
replied, 'My fathers have labored and I am weary.'
Saunders sat up and faced the
brother-in-law. 'They are not degenerate.'
'Huh? I suppose you are an expert!'
'The Martians aren't degenerate, they're
just tired,' Saunders persisted.
Tully grinned. His brother-in-law saw it
and became surly. 'What gives you the right to an opinion? Have you ever been
to Mars?'
Saunders realized suddenly that he had let
his censors down. 'Have you?' he answered cautiously.
'That's beside the point. The best minds
all agree -' Bill let him go on and did not contradict him again. It was a
relief when Tully suggested that, since they all had to be up early, maybe it
was about time to think about beginning to get ready to go to bed.
He said goodnight to Mrs. Tully and
thanked her for a wonderful dinner, then followed Tully into the guest room.
'Only way to get rid of that family curse we're saddled with, Bill,' he
apologized. 'Stay up as long as you like.' Tully stepped to the window and
opened it. 'You'll sleep well here. We're up high enough to get
honest-to-goodness fresh air.' He stuck his head out and took a couple of big
breaths. 'Nothing like the real article,' he continued as he withdrew from the
window. 'I'm a country boy at heart. What's the matter, Bill?'
'Nothing. Nothing at all.'
'I thought you looked a little pale. Well,
sleep tight. I've already set your bed for seven; that'll give us plenty of
time.'
'Thanks, Joe. Goodnight.' As soon as Tully
was out of the room he braced himself, then went over and closed the window.
Sweating, he turned away and switched the ventilation back on. That done, he
sank down on the edge of the bed.
He sat there for a long time, striking one
cigarette after another. He knew too well that the peace of mind he thought he
had regained was unreal. There was nothing left to him but shame and a long,
long hurt. To have reached the point where he had to knuckle under to a
tenth-rate knothead like Ed Schultz - it would have been better if he had never
come out of the Valkyrie business.
Presently he took five grains of
'Fly-Rite' from his pouch, swallowed it, and went to bed. He got up almost at
once, forced himself to open the window a trifle, then compromised by changing
the setting of the bed so that it would not turn out the lights after he got to
sleep.
He had been asleep and dreaming for an
indefinitely long time. He was back in space again - indeed, he had never been
away from it. He was happy, with the full happiness of a man who has awakened
to find it was only a bad dream.
The crying disturbed his serenity. At
first it made him only vaguely uneasy, then he began to feel in some way
responsible - he must do something about it. The transition to falling had only
dream logic behind it, but it was real to him. He was grasping, his hands were
slipping, had slipped - and there was nothing under him but the black emptiness
of space - He was awake and gasping, on Joe Tully's guest-room bed; the lights
burned bright around him.
But the crying persisted.
He shook his head, then listened. It was
real all right. Now he had it identified - a cat, a kitten by the sound of it.
He sat up. Even if he had not had the
spaceman's traditional fondness for cats, he would have investigated. However,
he liked cats for themselves, quite aside from their neat shipboard habits,
their ready adaptability to changing accelerations, and their usefulness in
keeping the ship free of those other creatures that go wherever man goes. So he
got up at once and looked for this one.
A quick look around showed him that the
kitten was not in the room, and his ear led him to the correct spot; the sound
came in through the slightly opened window. He shied off, stopped, and tried to
collect his thoughts.
He told himself that it was unnecessary to
do anything more; if the sound came in through the window, then it must be
because it came out of some nearby window. But he knew that he was lying to
himself; the sound was close by. In some impossible way the cat was just
outside his window, thirty-five stories above the street.
He sat down and tried to strike a
cigarette, but the tube broke in his fingers. He let the fragments fall to the
floor, got up and took six nervous steps toward the window, as if he were being
jerked along. He sank down to his knees, grasped the window and threw it wide
open, then clung to the windowsill, his eyes tight shut.
After a time the sill seemed to steady a
bit. He opened his eyes, gasped, and shut them again. Finally he opened them
again, being very careful not to look out at the stars, not to look down at the
street. He had half expected to find the cat on a balcony outside his room - it
seemed the only reasonable explanation. But there was no balcony, no place at
all where a cat could reasonably be.
However, the mewing was louder than ever.
It seemed to come from directly under him. Slowly he forced his head out, still
clinging to the sill, and made himself look down. Under him, about four feet
lower than the edge of the window, a narrow ledge ran around the side of the
building. Seated on it was a woe-begone ratty-looking kitten. It stared up at
him and meowed again.
It was barely possible that, by clinging
to the sill with one hand and making a long arm with the other, he could reach
it without actually going out the window, he thought - if he could bring
himself to do it. He considered calling Tully, then thought better of it. Tully
was shorter than he was, had less reach. And the kitten had to be rescued now,
before the fluff-brained idiot jumped or fell.
He tried for it. He shoved his shoulders
out, clung with his left arm and reached down with his right. Then he opened
his eyes and saw that he was a foot or ten inches away from the kitten still.
It sniffed curiously in the direction of his hand.
He stretched till his bones cracked. The
kitten promptly skittered away from his clutching fingers, stopping a good six
feet down the ledge. There it settled down and commenced washing its face.
He inched back inside and collapsed,
sobbing, on the floor underneath the window. 'I can't do it,' he whispered. 'I
can't do it. Not again -'
The Rocket Ship Valkyrie was two hundred
and forty-nine days out from Earth-Luna Space Terminal and approaching Mars
Terminal on Deimos, outer Martian satellite. William Cole, Chief Communications
Officer and relief pilot, was sleeping sweetly when his assistant shook him.
'Hey! Bill! Wake up - we're in a jam.'
'Huh? Wazzat?' But he was already reaching
for his socks. 'What's the trouble, Tom?'
Fifteen minutes later he knew that his
junior officer had not exaggerated; he was reporting the facts to the Old Man -
the primary piloting radar was out of whack. Tom Sandburg had discovered it
during a routine check, made as soon as Mars was inside the maximum range of the
radar pilot. The captain had shrugged. 'Fix it, Mister - and be quick about it.
We need it.'
Bill Cole shook his head. 'There's nothing
wrong with it, Captain - inside. She acts as if the antenna were gone
completely.'
'That's impossible. We haven't even had a
meteor alarm.'
'Might be anything, Captain. Might be
metal fatigue and it just fell off. But we've got to replace that antenna. Stop
the spin on the ship and I'll go out and fix it. I can jury-rig a replacement
while she loses her spin.'
The Valkyrie was a luxury ship, of her
day. She was assembled long before anyone had any idea of how to produce an
artificial gravity field. Nevertheless she had pseudogravity for the comfort of
her passengers. She spun endlessly around her main axis, like a shell from a
rifled gun; the resulting angular acceleration - miscalled 'centrifugal force'
- kept her passengers firm in their beds, or steady on their feet. The spin was
started as soon as her rockets stopped blasting at the beginning of a trip and
was stopped only when it was necessary to maneuver into a landing. It was
accomplished, not by magic, but by reaction against the contrary spin of a
flywheel located on her centerline.
The captain looked annoyed. 'I've started
to take the spin off, but I can't wait that long. Jury-rig the astrogational
radar for piloting.'
Cole started to explain why the
astrogational radar could not be adapted to short-range work, then decided not
to try. 'It can't be done, sir. It's a technical impossibility.'
'When I was your age I could jury-rig
anything! Well, find me an answer, Mister. I can't take this ship down blind.
Not even for the Harriman Medal.'
Bill Cole hesitated for a moment before
replying. 'I'll have to go out while she's still got spin on her, Captain, and
make the replacement. There isn't any other way to do it.'
The captain looked away from him, his jaw
muscles flexed. 'Get the replacement ready. Hurry up about it.'
Cole found the captain already at the
airlock when he arrived with the gear he needed for the repair. To his surprise
the Old Man was suited up. 'Explain to me what I'm to do,' he ordered Bill.
'You're not going out, sir?' The captain
simply nodded.
Bill took a look at his captain's waist
line, or where his waist line used to be. Why, the Old Man must be thirty-five
if he was a day! 'I'm afraid I can't explain too clearly. I had expected to
make the repair myself.'
'I've never asked a man to do a job I
wouldn't do myself. Explain it to me.'
'Excuse me, sir - but can you chin yourself
with one hand?'
'What's that got to do with it?'
'Well, we've got forty-eight passengers,
sir, and -' 'Shut up!'
Sandburg and he, both in space suits,
helped the Old Man down the hole after the inner door of the lock was closed
and the air exhausted. The space beyond the lock was a vast, starflecked
emptiness. With spin still on the ship, every direction outward was 'down',
down for millions of uncounted miles. They put a safety line on him, of course
- nevertheless it gave him a sinking feeling to see the captain's head
disappear in the bottomless, black hole.
The line paid out steadily for several
feet, then stopped. When it had been stopped for several minutes, Bill leaned
over and touched his helmet against Sandburg's. 'Hang on to my feet. I'm going
to take a look.'
He hung head down out the lock and looked
around. The captain was stopped, hanging by both hands, nowhere near the
antenna fixture. He scrambled back up and reversed himself. 'I'm going out.'
It was no great trick, he found, to hang
by his hands and swing himself along to where the captain was stalled. The
Valkyrie was a space-to-space ship, not like the sleek-sided jobs we see around
earthports; she was covered with handholds for the convenience of repairmen at
the terminals. Once he reached him, it was possible, by grasping the safe steel
rung that the captain clung to, to aid him in swinging back to the last one he
had quitted. Five minutes later Sandburg was pulling the Old Man up through the
hole and Bill was scrambling after him.
He began at once to unbuckle the repair
gear from the captain's suit and transfer it to his own. He lowered himself
back down the hole and was on his way before the older man had recovered enough
to object, if he still intended to.
Swinging out to where the antenna must be
replaced was not too hard, though he had all eternity under his toes. The suit
impeded him a little - the gloves were clumsy - but he was used to spacesuits.
He was a little winded from helping the captain, but he could not stop to think
about that. The increased spin bothered him somewhat; the airlock was nearer
the axis of spin than was the antenna - he felt heavier as he moved out.
Getting the replacement antenna shipped
was another matter. It was neither large nor heavy, but he found it impossible
to fasten it into place. He needed one hand to cling by, one to hold the
antenna, and one to handle the wrench. That left him shy one hand, no matter
how he tried it.
Finally he jerked his safety line to
signal Sandburg for more slack. Then he unshackled it from his waist, working
with one hand, passed the end twice through a handhold and knotted it; he left
about six feet of it hanging free. The shackle on the free end he fastened to
another handhold. The result was a loop, a bight, an improvised bosun's chair,
which would support his weight while he man-handled the antenna into place. The
job went fairly quickly then.
He was almost through. There remained one
bolt to fasten on the far side, away from where he swung. The antenna was
already secured at two points and its circuit connection made. He decided he
could manage it with one hand. He left his perch and swung over, monkey
fashion.
The wrench slipped as he finished
tightening the bolt; it slipped from his grasp, fell free. He watched it go,
out and out and out, down and down and down, until it was so small he could no
longer see it. It made him dizzy to watch it, bright in the sunlight against
the deep black of space. He had been too busy to look down, up to now.
He shivered. 'Good thing I was through
with it,' he said. 'It would be a long walk to fetch it.' He started to make
his way back.
He found that he could not.
He had swung past the antenna to reach his
present position, using a grip on his safety-line swing to give him a few
inches more reach. Now the loop of line hung quietly, just out of reach. There
was no way to reverse the process.
He hung by both hands and told himself not
to get panicky - he must think his way out. Around the other side? No, the
steel skin of the Valkyrie was smooth there - no handhold for more than six
feet. Even if he were not tired - and he had to admit that he was, tired and
getting a little cold - even if he were fresh, it was an impossible swing for
anyone not a chimpanzee.
He looked down - and regretted it.
There was nothing below him but stars,
down and down, endlessly. Stars, swinging past as the ship spun with him,
emptiness of all time and blackness and cold.
He found himself trying to hoist himself
bodily onto the single narrow rung he clung to, trying to reach it with his
toes. It was a futile, strength-wasting excess. He quieted his panic
sufficiently to stop it, then hung limp.
It was easier if he kept his eyes closed.
But after a while he always had to open them and look. The Big Dipper would
swing past and then, presently, Orion. He tried to compute the passing minutes
in terms of the number of rotations the ship made, but his mind would not work
clearly, and, after a while, he would have to shut his eyes.
His hands were becoming stiff - and cold.
He tried to rest them by hanging by one hand at a time. He let go with his left
hand, felt pins-and-needles course through it, and beat it against his side.
Presently it seemed time to spell his right hand.
He could no longer reach up to the rung
with his left hand. He did not have the power left in him to make the extra
pull; he was fully extended and could not shorten himself enough to get his
left hand up.
He could no longer feel his right hand at
all.
He could see it slip. It was slipping -
The sudden release in tension let him know that he was falling falling. The
ship dropped away from him.
He came to with the captain bending over
him. 'Just keep quiet, Bill.'
'Where -,
'Take it easy. The patrol from Deimos was
already close by when you let go. They tracked you on the 'scope, matched
orbits with you, and picked you up. First time in history, I guess. Now keep
quiet. You're a sick man - you hung there more than two hours, Bill.'
The meowing started up again, louder than
ever. He got up on his knees and looked out over the windowsill. The kitten was
still away to the left on the ledge. He thrust his head cautiously out a little
further, remembering not to look at anything but the kitten and the ledge. 'Here,
kitty!' he called. 'Here, kit-kit-kitty! Here, kitty, come kitty!'
The kitten stopped washing and managed to
look puzzled.
'Come, kitty,' he repeated softly. He let
go the windowsill with his right hand and gestured toward it invitingly. The kitten
approached about three inches, then sat down. 'Here, kitty,' he pleaded and
stretched his arm as far as possible.
The fluff ball promptly backed away again.
He withdrew his arm and thought about it.
This was getting nowhere, he decided. If he were to slide over the edge and
stand on the ledge, he could hang on with one arm and be perfectly safe. He
knew that, he knew it would be safe - he needn't look down!
He drew himself back inside, reversed
himself, and, with great caution, gripping the sill with both arms, let his
legs slide down the face of the building. He focused his eyes carefully on the
corner of the bed.
The ledge seemed to have been moved. He
could not find it, and was beginning to be sure that he had reached past it,
when he touched it with one toe - then he had both feet firmly planted on it.
It seemed about six inches wide. He took a deep breath.
Letting go with his right arm, he turned
and faced the kitten. It seemed interested in the procedure but not disposed to
investigate more closely. If he were to creep along the ledge, holding on with
his left hand, he could just about reach it from the corner of the window - He
moved his feet one at a time, baby fashion, rather than pass one past the
other. By bending his knees a trifle, and leaning, he could just manage to
reach it. The kitten sniffed his groping fingers, then leaped backward. One
tiny paw missed the edge; it scrambled and regained its footing. 'You little
idiot!' he said indignantly, 'do you want to bash your brains out?'
'If any,' he added. The situation looked
hopeless now; the baby cat was too far away to be reached from his anchorage at
the window, no matter how he stretched. He called 'Kitty, kitty' rather
hopelessly, then stopped to consider the matter.
He could give it up.
He could prepare himself to wait all night
in the hope that the kitten would decide to come closer. Or he could go get it.
The ledge was wide enough to take his
weight. If he made himself small, flat to the wall, no weight rested on his left
arm. He moved slowly forward, retaining the grip on the window as long as
possible, inching so gradually that he hardly seemed to move. When the window
frame was finally out of reach, when his left hand was flat to smooth wall, he
made the mistake of looking down, down, past the sheer wall at the glowing
pavement far below.
He pulled his eyes back and fastened them
on a spot on the wall, level with his eyes and only a few feet away. He was
still there!
And so was the kitten. Slowly he separated
his feet, moving his right foot forward, and bent his knees. He stretched his
right hand along the wall, until he was over and a little beyond the kitten.
He brought it down in a sudden swipe, as
if to swat a fly. He found himself with a handful of scratching, biting fur.
He held perfectly still then, and made no
attempt to check the minor outrages the kitten was giving him. Arms still
outstretched, body flat to the wall, he started his return. He could not see
where he was going and could not turn his head without losing some little of
his margin of balance. It seemed a long way back, longer than he had come, when
at last the fingertips of his left hand slipped into the window opening.
He backed up the rest of the way in a
matter of seconds, slid both arms over the sill, then got his right knee over.
He rested himself on the sill and took a deep breath. 'Man!' he said aloud.
'That was a tight squeeze. You're a menace to traffic, little cat.'
He glanced down at the pavement. It was
certainly a long way down - looked hard, too.
He looked up at the stars. Mighty nice
they looked and mighty bright. He braced himself in the window frame, back
against one side, foot pushed against the other, and looked at them. The kitten
settled down in the cradle of his stomach and began to buzz. He stroked it
absent-mindedly and reached for a cigarette. He would go out to the port and
take his physical and his psycho tomorrow, he decided. He scratched the
kitten's ears. 'Little fluff head,' he said, 'how would you like to take a
long, long ride with me?'
The
Green Hills of Earth
This is the story of Rhysling, the Blind
Singer of the Spaceways -- but not the official version. You sang his words in
school:
"I
pray for one last landing
On
the globe that gave me birth;
Let
me rest my eyes on the fleecy skies
And
the cool, green hills of Earth."
Or perhaps you sang in French, or German.
Or it might have been Esperanto, while Terra's rainbow banner rippled over your
head.
The language does not matter -- it was
certainly an Earth tongue. No one has ever translated "Green Hills"
into the lisping Venerian speech; no Martian ever croaked and whispered it in
the dry corridors. This is ours. We of Earth have exported everything from Hollywood
crawlies to synthetic radioactives, but this belongs solely to Terra, and to
her sons and daughters wherever they may be.
We have all heard many stories of
Rhysling. You may even be one of the many who have sought degrees, or acclaim,
by scholarly evaluations of his published works - _Songs of the Spaceways_,
_The Grand Canal and other Poems_, _High and Far_, and _"UP SHIP!"_
Nevertheless, although you have sung his
songs and read his verses, in school and out your whole life, it is at least an
even money bet -- unless you are a spaceman yourself -- that you have never
even heard of most of Rhysling's unpublished songs, such items as _Since the
Pusher Met My Cousin_, _That Red-Headed Venusburg Gal_, _Keep Your Pants On,
Skipper_, or _A Space Suit Built for Two_.
Nor can we quote them in a family
magazine.
Rhysling's reputation was protected by a
careful literary executor and by the happy chance that he was never
interviewed. _Songs of the Spaceways_ appeared the week he died; when it became
a best seller, the publicity stories about him were pieced together from what
people remembered about him plus the highly colored handouts from his
publishers.
The resulting traditional picture of
Rhysling is about as authentic as George Washington's hatchet or King Alfred's
cakes.
In truth you would not have wanted him in
your parlor; he was not socially acceptable. He had a permanent case of sun
itch, which he scratched continually, adding nothing to his negligible beauty.
Van der Voort's portrait of him for the
Harriman Centennial edition of his works shows a figure of high tragedy, a
solemn mouth, sightless eyes concealed by black silk bandage. He was never
solemn! His mouth was always open, singing, grinning, drinking, or eating. The
bandage was any rag, usually dirty. After he lost his sight he became less and
less neat about his person.
"Noisy" Rhysling was a jetman,
second class, with eyes as good as yours, when he signed on for a ioop trip to
the Jovian asteroids in the RS _Goshawk_. The crew signed releases for
everything in those days; a Lloyd's associate would have laughed in your face
at the notion of insuring a spaceman. The Space Precautionary Act had never
been heard of, and the Company was responsible only for wages, if and when.
Half the ships that went further than Luna City never came back. Spacemen did
not care; by preference they signed for shares, and any one of them would have
bet you that he could jump from the 200th floor of Harriman Tower and ground
safely, if you offered him three to two and allowed him rubber heels for the
landing.
Jetmen were the most carefree of the lot,
and the meanest. Compared with them the masters, the radarmen, and the
astrogators (there were no supers nor stewards in those days) were gentle
vegetarians. Jetmen knew too much. The others trusted the skill of the captain
to get them down safely; jetmen knew that skill was useless against the blind
and fitful devils chained inside their rocket motors.
The _Goshawk_ was the first of Harriman's
ships to be converted from chemical fuel to atomic power-piles -- or rather the
first that did not blow up. Rhysling knew her well; she was an old tub that had
plied the Luna City run, Supra-New York space station to Leyport and back,
before she was converted for deep space. He had worked the Luna run in her and
had been along on the first deep space trip, Drywater on Mars -- and back, to
everyone's surprise.
He should have made chief engineer by the
time he signed for the Jovian loop trip, but, after the Drywater pioneer trip,
he had been fired, blacklisted, and grounded at Luna City for having spent his
time writing a chorus and several verses at a time when he should have been
watching his gauges. The song was the infamous _The Skipper is a Father to his
Crew_, with the uproariously unprintable final couplet.
The blacklist did not bother him. He won
an accordion from a Chinese barkeep in Luna City by cheating at onethumb and
thereafter kept going by singing to the miners for drinks and tips until the
rapid attrition in spacemen caused the Company agent there to give him another
chance. He kept his nose clean on the Luna run for a year or two, got back into
deep space, helped give Venusburg its original ripe reputation, strolled the
banks of the Grand Canal when a second colony was established at the ancient
Martian capital, and froze his toes and ears on the second trip to Titan.
Things moved fast in those days. Once the
power-pile drive was accepted the number of ships that put out from the
LunaTerra system was limited only by the availability of crews. Jetmen were
scarce; the shielding was cut to a minimum to save weight and few married men
cared to risk possible exposure to radioactivity. Rhysling did not want to be a
father, so jobs were always open to him during the golden days of the claiming
boom. He crossed and recrossed the system, singing the doggerel that boiled up
in his head and chording it out on his accordion.
The master of the _Goshawk_ knew him;
Captain Hicks had been astrogator on Rhysling's first trip in her.
"Welcome home, Noisy," Hicks had greeted him. "Are you sober, or
shall I sign the book for you?"
"You can't get drunk on the bug juice
they sell here, Skipper." He signed and went below, lugging his accordion.
Ten minutes later he was back. "Captain,"
he stated darkly, "that number two jet ain't fit. The cadmium dampers are
warped."
"Why tell me? Tell the Chief."
"I did, but he says they will do.
He's wrong."
The captain gestured at the book.
"Scratch out your name and scram. We raise ship in thirty minutes."
Rhysling looked at him, shrugged, and went
below again.
It is a long climb to the Jovian
planetoids; a Hawk-class clunker had to blast for three watches before going
into free flight. Rhysling had the second watch. Damping was done by hand then,
with a multiplying vernier and a danger gauge. When the gauge showed red, he
tried to correct it -- no luck.
Jetmen don't wait; that's why they are
jetmen. He slapped the emergency discover and fished at the hot stuff with the
tongs. The lights went out, he went right ahead. A jetman has to know his power
room the way your tongue knows the inside of your mouth.
He sneaked a quick look over the top of
the lead baffle when the lights went out. The blue radioactive glow did not
help him any; he jerked his head back and went on fishing by touch.
When he was done he called over the tube,
"Number two jet out. And for crissake get me some light down here!"
There was light -- the emergency circuit
-- but not for him. The blue radioactive glow was the last thing his optic
nerve ever responded to.
2
"As
Time and Space come bending back to shape this starspecked scene,
The
tranquil tears of tragic joy still spread their silver sheen;
Along
the Grand Canal still soar the fragile Towers of Truth;
Their
fairy grace defends this place of Beauty, calm and couth.
"Bone-tired
the race that raised the Towers, forgotten are their lores,
Long
gone the gods who shed the tears that lap these crystal shores.
Slow
heats the time-worn heart of Mars beneath this icy sky;
The
thin air whispers voicelessly that all who live must die --
"Yet
still the lacy Spires of Truth sing Beauty's madrigal
And she
herself will ever dwell along the Grand Canal!"
-- from The Grand Canal, by permission of
Lux Transcriptions, Ltd., London and Luna City
On the swing back they set Rhysling down
on Mars at Drywater; the boys passed the hat and the skipper kicked in a half
month's pay. That was all -- finish -- just another space bum who had not had
the good fortune to finish it off when his luck ran out. He holed up with the
prospectors and archeologists at How-Far? for a month or so, and could probably
have stayed forever in exchange for his songs and his accordion playing. But
spacemen die if they stay in one place; he hooked a crawler over to Drywater
again and thence to Marsopolis.
The capital was well into its boom; the
processing plants lined the Grand Canal on both sides and roiled the ancient
waters with the filth of the runoff. This was before the TriPlanet Treaty
forbade disturbing cultural relics for commerce; half the slender, fairylike
towers had been torn down, and others were disfigured to adapt them as
pressurized buildings for Earthmen.
Now Rhysling had never seen any of these
changes and no one described them to him; when he "saw" Marsopolis
again, he visualized it as it had been, before it was rationalized for trade.
His memory was good. He stood on the riparian esplanade where the ancient great
of Mars had taken their ease and saw its beauty spreading out before his
blinded eyes -- ice blue plain of water unmoved by tide, untouched by breeze,
and reflecting serenely the sharp, bright stars of the Martian sky, and beyond
the water the lacy buttresses and flying towers of an architecture too delicate
for our rumbling, heavy planet.
The result was _Grand Canal_.
The subtle change in his orientation which
enabled him to see beauty at Marsopolis where beauty was not now began to
affect his whole life. All women became beautiful to him. He knew them by their
voices and fitted their appearances to the sounds. It is a mean spirit indeed
who will speak to a blind man other than in gentle friendliness; scolds who had
given their husbands no peace sweetened their voices to Rhysling.
It populated his world with beautiful
women and gracious men. _Dark Star Passing_, _Berenice's Hair_, _Death Song of
a Wood's Colt_, and his other love songs of the wanderers, the womenless men of
space, were the direct result of the fact that his conceptions were unsullied
by tawdry truths. It mellowed his approach, changed his doggerel to verse, and
sometimes even to poetry.
He had plenty of time to think now, time
to get all the lovely words just so, and to worry a verse until it sang true in
his head. The monotonous beat of _Jet Song_ --
When the field is clear, the reports all
seen,
When the lock sighs shut, when the lights
wink green,
When the check-off's done, when it's time
to pray,
When the Captain nods, when she blasts
away --
Hear
the jets!
Hear
them snarl at your back
When
you're stretched on the rack;
Feel
your ribs clamp your chest,
Feel
your neck grind its rest.
Feel
the pain in your ship,
Feel
her strain in their grip.
Feel
her rise! Feel her drive!
Straining
steel, come alive,
On
her jets!
--came
to him not while he himself was a jetman but later while he was hitch-hiking
from Mars to Venus and sitting out a watch with an old shipmate.
At Venusburg he sang his new songs and
some of the old, in the bars. Someone would start a hat around for him; it
would come back with a minstrel's usual take doubled or tripled in recognition
of the gallant spirit behind the bandaged eyes.
It was an easy life. Any space port was
his home and any ship his private carriage. No skipper cared to refuse to lift
the extra mass of blind Rhysling and his squeeze box; he shuttled from
Venusburg to Leyport to Drywater to New Shanghai, or back again, as the whim
took him.
He never went closer to Earth than
Supra-New York Space Station. Even when signing the contract for _Songs of the
Spaceways_ he made his mark in a cabin-class liner somewhere between Luna City
and Ganymede. Horowitz, the original publisher, was aboard for a second
honeymoon and heard Rhysling sing at a ship's party. Horowitz knew a good thing
for the publishing trade when he heard it; the entire contents of _Songs_ were
sung directly into the tape in the communications room of that ship before he
let Rhysling out of his sight. The next three volumes were squeezed out of
Rhysling at Venusburg, where Horowitz had sent an agent to keep him liquored up
until he had sung all he could remember.
_UP SHIP!_ is not certainly authentic
Rhysling throughout. Much of it is Rhysling's, no doubt, and _Jet Song_ is
unquestionably his, but most of the verses were collected after his death from
people who had known him during his wanderings.
_The Green Hills of Earth_ grew through
twenty years. The earliest form we know about was composed before Rhysling was
blinded, during a drinking bout with some of the indentured men on Venus. The
verses were concerned mostly with the things the labor clients intended to do
back on Earth if and when they ever managed to pay their bounties and thereby
be allowed to go home. Some of the stanzas were vulgar, some were not, but the
chorus was recognizably that of _Green Hills_.
We know exactly where the final form of
_Green Hills_ came from, and when.
There was a ship in at Venus Ellis Isle
which was scheduled for the direct jump from there to Great Lakes, Illinois.
She was the old _Falcon_, youngest of the Hawk class and the first ship to
apply the Harriman Trust's new policy of extra-fare express service between
Earth cities and any colony with scheduled stops.
Rhysling decided to ride her back to
Earth. Perhaps his own song had gotten under his skin -- or perhaps he just
hankered to see his native Ozark's one more time.
The Company no longer permitted deadheads:
Rhysling knew this but it never occurred to him that the ruling might apply to
him. He was getting old, for a spaceman, and just a little matter of fact about
his privileges. Not senile -- he simply knew that he was one of the landmarks
in space, along with Halley's Comet, the Rings, and Brewster's Ridge. He walked
in the crew's port, went below, and made himself at home in the first empty
acceleration couch.
The Captain found him there while making a
last minute tour of his ship. "What are you doing here?" he demanded.
"Dragging it back to Earth,
Captain." Rhysling needed no eyes to see a skipper's four stripes.
"You can't drag in this ship; you
know the rules. Shake a leg and get out of here. We raise ship at once."
The Captain was young; he had come up after Rhysling's active time, but
Rhysling knew the type -- five years at Harriman Hall with only cadet practice
trips instead of solid, deep space experience. The two men did not touch in
background nor spirit; space was changing.
"Now, Captain, you wouldn't begrudge
an old man a trip home."
The officer hesitated -- several of the
crew had stopped to listen. "I can't do it. 'Space Precautionary Act,
Clause Six: No one shall enter space save as a licensed member of a crew of a
chartered vessel, or as a paying passenger of such a vessel under such
regulations as may be issued pursuant to this act.' Up you get and out you
go."
Rhysling lolled back, his hands under his
head. "If I've got to go, I'm damned if I'll walk. Carry me."
The Captain bit his lip and said,
"Master-at-Arms! Have this man removed."
The ship's policeman fixed his eyes on the
overhead struts. "Can't rightly do it, Captain. I've sprained my
shoulder." The other crew members, present a moment before, had faded into
the bulkhead paint.
"Well, get a working party!"
"Aye, aye, sir." He, too, went
away.
Rhysling spoke again. "Now look,
Skipper -- let's not have any hard feelings about this. You've got an out to
carry me if you want to -- the 'Distressed Spaceman' clause."
"'Distressed Spaceman', my eye!
You're no distressed spaceman; you're a space-lawyer. I know who you are;
you've been bumming around the system for years. Well, you won't do it in my
ship. That clause was intended to succor men who had missed their ships, not to
let a man drag free all over space."
"Well, now, Captain, can you properly
say I haven't missed my ship? I've never been back home since my last trip as a
signed-on crew member. The law says I can have a trip back."
"But that was years ago. You've used
up your chance."
"Have I now? The clause doesn't say a
word about how soon a man has to take his trip back; it just says he's got it
coming to him. Go look it up. Skipper. If I'm wrong, I'll not only walk out on
my two legs, I'll beg your humble pardon in front of your crew. Go on -- look
it up. Be a sport."
Rhysling could feel the man's glare, but
he turned and stomped out of the compartment. Rhysling knew that he had used
his blindness to place the Captain in an impossible position, but this did not
embarrass Rhysling -- he rather enjoyed it.
Ten minutes later the siren sounded, he
heard the orders on the bull horn for Up-Stations. When the soft sighing of the
locks and the slight pressure change in his ears let him know that take-off was
imminent he got up and shuffled down to the power room, as he wanted to be near
the jets when they blasted off. He needed no one to guide him in any ship of
the Hawk class.
Trouble started during the first watch.
Rhysling had been lounging in the inspector's chair, fiddling with the keys of
his accordion and trying out a new version of _Green Hills_.
"Let
me breathe unrationed air again
Where
there's no lack nor dearth"
And "something, something, something
'Earth'" -- it would not come out right. He tried again.
"Let
the sweet fresh breezes heal me
As
they rove around the girth
Of
our lovely mother planet,
Of
the cool green hills of Earth."
That was better, he thought. "How do
you like that, Archie?" he asked over the muted roar.
"Pretty good. Give out with the whole
thing." Archie Macdougal, Chief Jetman, was an old friend, both spaceside
and in bars; he had been an apprentice under Rhysling many years and millions
of miles back.
Rhysling obliged, then said, "You
youngsters have got it soft. Everything automatic. When I was twisting her tail
you had to stay awake."
"You still have to stay awake."
They fell to talking shop and Macdougal showed him the direct response damping
rig which had replaced the manual vernier control which Rhysling had used.
Rhysling felt out the controls and asked questions until he was familiar with
the new installation. It was his conceit that he was still a jetman and that
his present occupation as a troubadour was simply an expedient during one of
the fusses with the company that any man could get into.
"I see you still have the old hand
damping plates installed," he remarked, his agile fingers flitting over
the equipment.
"All except the links. I unshipped
them because they obscure the dials."
"You ought to have them shipped. You
might need them."
"Oh, I don't know. I think--"
Rhysling never did find out what Macdougal thought for it was at that moment
the trouble tore loose. Macdougal caught it square, a blast of radioactivity
that burned him down where he stood.
Rhysling sensed what had happened.
Automatic reflexes of old habit came out. He slapped the discover and rang the
alarm to the control room simultaneously. Then he remembered the unshipped
links. He had to grope until he found them, while trying to keep as low as he
could to get maximum benefit from the baffles. Nothing but the links bothered
him as to location. The place was as light to him as any place could be; he
knew every spot, every control, the way he knew the keys of his accordion.
"Power room! Power room! What's the
alarm?"
"Stay out!" Rhysling shouted.
"The place is 'hot.'" He could feel it on his face and in his bones,
like desert sunshine.
The links he got into place, after cursing
someone, anyone, for having failed to rack the wrench he needed. Then he
commenced trying to reduce the trouble by hand. It was a long job and ticklish.
Presently he decided that the jet would have to be spilled, pile and all.
First he reported. "Control!"
"Control aye aye!"
"Spilling jet three --
emergency."
"Is this Macdougal?"
"Macdougal is dead. This is Rhysling,
on watch. Stand by to record."
There was no answer; dumbfounded the
Skipper may have been, but he could not interfere in a power room emergency. He
had the ship to consider, and the passengers and crew. The doors had to stay
closed.
The Captain must have been still more
surprised at what Rhysling sent for record. It was:
We
rot in the molds of Venus,
We
retch at her tainted breath.
Foul
are her flooded jungles,
Crawling
with unclean death."
Rhysling went on cataloguing the Solar
System as he worked, "--harsh bright soil of Luna--","--Saturn's
rainbow rings--","--the frozen night of Titan--", all the while
opening and spilling the jet and fishing it clean. He finished with an
alternate chorus --
"We've
tried each spinning space mote
And
reckoned its true worth:
Take
us back again to the homes of men
On
the cool, green hills of Earth."
--then,
almost absentmindedly remembered to tack on his revised first verse:
"The
arching sky is calling
Spacemen
back to their trade.
All
hands! Stand by! Free falling!
And
the lights below us fade.
Out
ride the sons of Terra,
Far
drives the thundering jet,
Up
leaps the race of Earthmen,
Out,
far, and onward yet--"
The ship was safe now and ready to limp
home shy one jet. As for himself, Rhysling was not so sure. That
"sunburn" seemed sharp, he thought. He was unable to see the bright,
rosy fog in which he worked but he knew it was there. He went on with the
business of flushing the air out through the outer valve, repeating it several
times to permit the level of radioaction to drop to something a man might stand
under suitable armor. While he did this he sent one more chorus, the last bit
of authentic Rhysling that ever could be:
"We
pray for one last landing
On
the globe that gave us birth;
Let
us rest our eyes on fleecy skies
And
the cool, green hills of Earth."
Logic
of Empire
'Don't
be a sentimental fool, Sam!'
'Sentimental, or not,' Jones persisted, 'I
know human slavery when I see it. That's what you've got on Venus.'
Humphrey Wingate snorted. 'That's utterly
ridiculous. The company's labor clients are employees, working under legal
contracts, freely entered into.'
Jones' eyebrows raised slightly. 'So? What
kind of a contract is it that throws a man into jail if he quits his job?'
'That's not the case. Any client can quit
his job on the usual two weeks notice-I ought to know; I -'
'Yes, I know,' agreed Jones in a tired
voice. 'You're a lawyer. You know all about contracts. But the trouble with
you, you dunderheaded fool, is that all you understand is legal phrases. Free
contract-nuts! What I'm talking about is facts, not legalisms. I don't care
what the contract says-those people are slaves!'
Wingate emptied his glass and set it down.
'So I'm a dunderheaded fool, am I? Well, I'll tell you what you are, Sam
Houston Jones-you are a half-baked parlor pink. You've never had to work for a
living in your life and you think it's just too dreadful that anyone else
should have to. No, wait a minute,' he continued, as Jones opened his mouth,
'listen to me. The company's clients on Venus are a damn sight better off than
most people of their own class here on Earth. They are certain of a job, of
food, and a place to sleep. If they get sick, they're certain of medical
attention. The trouble with people of that class is that they don't want to
work -,
'Who does?'
'Don't be funny. The trouble is, if they
weren't under a fairly tight contract, they'd throw up a good job the minute
they got bored with it and expect the company to give 'em a free ride back to
Earth. Now it may not have occurred to your fine, free charitable mind, but the
company has obligations to its stockholders-you, for instance!-and it can't afford
to run an interplanetary ferry for the benefit of a class of people that feel
that the world owes them a living.'
'You got me that time, pal,' Jones
acknowledged with a wry face, '-that crack about me being a stockholder. I'm
ashamed of it.'
'Then why don't you sell?'
Jones looked disgusted. 'What kind of a
solution is that? Do you think I can avoid the responsibility of knowing about
it just unloading my stock?'
'Oh, the devil with it,' said Wingate.
'Drink up.'
'Righto,' agreed Jones. It was his first
night aground after a practice cruise as a reserve officer; he needed to catch
up on his drinking. Too bad, thought Wingate, that the cruise should have
touched at Venus-'All out! All out! Up aaaall you idlers! Show a leg there!
Show a leg and grab a sock!' The raucous voice sawed its way through Wingate's
aching head. He opened his eyes, was blinded by raw white light, and shut them
hastily. But the voice would not let him alone. 'Ten minutes till breakfast,'
it rasped. 'Come and get it, or we'll throw it out!'
He opened his eyes again, and with
trembling willpower forced them to track. Legs moved past his eyes, denim clad
legs mostly, though some were bare-repulsive hairy nakedness. A confusion of
male voices, from which he could catch words but not sentences, was accompanied
by an obbligato of metallic sounds, muffled but pervasive-shrrg, shrrg, thump!
Shrrg, shrrg, thump! The thump with which the cycle was completed hurt his
aching head but was not as nerve stretching as another noise, a toneless
whirring sibilance which he could neither locate nor escape.
The air was full of the odor of human
beings, too many of them in too small a space. There was nothing so distinct as
to be fairly termed a stench, nor was the supply of oxygen inadequate. But the
room was filled with the warm, slightly musky smell of bodies still heated by
bedclothes, bodies not dirty but not freshly washed. It was oppressive and
unappetizing-in his present state almost nauseating.
He began to have some appreciation of the
nature of his surroundings; he was in a bunkroom of some sort. It was crowded
with men, men getting up, shuffling about, pulling on clothes. He lay on the
bottom-most of a tier of four narrow bunks. Through the interstices between the
legs which crowded around him and moved past his face he could see other such
tiers around the walls and away from the walls, stacked floor to ceiling and
supported by stanchions.
Someone sat down on the foot of Wingate's
bunk, crowding his broad fundamental against Wingate's ankles while he drew on
his socks. Wingate squirmed his feet away from the intrusion. The stranger
turned his face toward him. 'Did I crowd 'ja, bud? Sorry.' Then he added, not
unkindly, 'Better rustle out of there. The Master-at-Arms'll be riding you to
get them bunks up.' He yawned hugely, and started to get up, quite evidently
having dismissed Wingate and Wingate's affairs from his mind.
'Wait a minute!' Wingate demanded hastily.
'Huh?'
'Where am I? In jail?'
The stranger studied Wingate's bloodshot
eyes and puffy, unwashed face with detached but unmalicious interest. 'Boy, oh
boy, you must 'a' done a good job of drinking up your bounty money.'
'Bounty money? What the hell are you
talking about?'
'Honest to God, don't you know where you
are?'
'No.'
'Well . . . ' The other seemed reluctant
to proclaim a truth made silly by its self-evidence until Wingate's expression
convinced him that he really wanted to know. 'Well, you're in the Evening Star,
headed for Venus.'
A
couple of minutes later the stranger touched him on the arm. 'Don't take it so
hard, bud. There's nothing to get excited about.'
Wingate took his hands from his face and
pressed them against his temples. 'It's not real,' he said, speaking more to
himself than to the other. 'It can't be real -,
'Stow it. Come and get your breakfast.'
'I couldn't eat anything.'
'Nuts. Know how you feel . . . felt that
way sometimes myself. Food is just the ticket.' The Master-at-Arms settled the
issue by coming up and prodding Wingate in the ribs with his truncheon.
'What d'yuh think this is-sickbay, or
first class? Get those bunks hooked up.'
'Easy, mate, easy,' Wingate's new
acquaintance conciliated, 'our pal's not himself this morning.' As he spoke he
dragged Wingate to his feet with one massive hand, then with the other shoved
the tier of bunks up and against the wall. Hooks clicked into their sockets,
and the tier stayed up, flat to the wall.
'He'll be a damn sight less himself if he
interferes with my routine,' the petty officer predicted. But he moved on.
Wingate stood barefooted on the floorplates, immobile and overcome by a feeling
of helpless indecision which was re-inforced by the fact that he was dressed
only in his underwear. His champion studied him.
'You forgot your pillow. Here-' He reached
down into the pocket formed by the lowest bunk and the wall and hauled out a
flat package covered with transparent plastic. He broke the seal and shook out
the contents, a single coverall garment of heavy denim. Wingate put it on
gratefully. 'You can get the squeezer to issue you a pair of slippers after
breakfast,' his friend added. 'Right now we gotta eat.'
The last of the queue had left the galley
window by the time they reached it and the window was closed. Wingate's companion
pounded on it. 'Open up in there!'
It slammed open. 'No seconds,' a face
announced.
The stranger prevented the descent of the
window with his hand. 'We don't want seconds, shipmate, we want firsts.'
'Why the devil can't you show up on time?'
the galley functionary groused. But he slapped two ration cartons down on the
broad sill of the issuing window. The big fellow handed one to Wingate, and sat
down on the floor-plates, his back supported by the galley bulkhead.
'What's your name, bud?' he enquired, as
he skinned the cover off his ration. 'Mine's Hartley-"Satchel"
Hartley.'
'Mine is Humphrey Wingate.'
'Okay, Hump. Pleased to meet 'cha. Now
what's all this song and dance you been giving me?' He spooned up an impossible
bite of baked eggs and sucked coffee from the end of his carton.
'Well,' said Wingate, his face twisted
with worry, 'I guess I've been shanghaied.' He tried to emulate Hartley's
method of drinking, and got the brown liquid over his face.
'Here-that's no way to do,' Hartley said
hastily. 'Put the nipple in your mouth, then don't squeeze any harder than you
suck. Like this.' He illustrated. 'Your theory don't seem very sound to me. The
company don't need crimps when there's plenty of guys standing in line for a
chance to sign up. What happened? Can't you remember?'
Wingate tried. 'The last thing I recall,'
he said, 'is arguing with a gyro driver over his fare.'
Hartley nodded. 'They'll gyp you every
time. D'you think he put the slug on you?'
'Well . . . no, I guess not. I seem to be
all right, except for the damndest hangover you can imagine.'
'You'll feel better. You ought to be glad
the Evening Star is a high-gravity ship instead of a trajectory job. Then you'd
really be sick, and no foolin'.'
'How's that?'
'I mean that she accelerates or
decelerates her whole run. Has to, because she carries cabin passengers. If we
had been sent by a freighter, it'd be a different story. They gun 'em into the
right trajectory, then go weightless for the rest of the trip. Man, how the new
chums do suffer!' He chuckled.
Wingate was in no condition to dwell on
the hardships of space sickness. 'What T can't figure out,' he said, 'is how I
landed here. Do you suppose they could have brought me aboard by mistake,
thinking I was somebody else?'
'Can't say. Say, aren't you going to
finish your breakfast?'
'I've had all I want.' Hartley took his
statement as an invitation and quickly finished off Wingate's ration. Then he
stood up, crumpled the two cartons into a ball, stuffed them down a disposal
chute, and said,
'What are you going to do about it?'
'What am I going to do about it?' A look
of decision came over Wingate's face. 'I'm going to march right straight up to
the Captain and demand an explanation, that's what I'm going to do!'
'I'd take that by easy stages, Hump,'
Hartley commented doubtfully.
'Easy stages, hell!' He stood up quickly.
'Ow! My head!'
The Master-at-Arms referred them to the
Chief Master-at-Arms in order to get rid of them. Hartley waited with Wingate outside
the stateroom of the Chief Master-at-Arms to keep him company. 'Better sell 'em
your bill of goods pretty pronto,' he advised.
'Why?'
'We'll ground on. the Moon in a few hours.
The stop to refuel at Luna City for deep space will be your last chance to get
out, unless you want to walk back.'
'I hadn't thought of that,' Wingate agreed
delightedly. 'I thought I'd have to make the round trip in any case.'
'Shouldn't be surprised but what you could
pick up the Morning Star in a week or two. If it's their mistake, they'll have
to return you.'
'I can beat that,' said Wingate eagerly.
'I'll go right straight to the bank at Luna City, have them arrange a letter of
credit with my bank, and buy a ticket on the Earth-Moon shuttle.'
Hartley's manner underwent a subtle
change. He had never in his life 'arranged a letter of credit'. Perhaps such a
man could walk up to the Captain and lay down the law.
The Chief Master-at-Arms listened to
Wingate's story with obvious impatience, and interrupted him in the middle of
it to consult his roster of emigrants. He thumbed through it to the Ws, and
pointed to a line. Wingate read it with a sinking feeling. There was his own
name, correctly spelled. 'Now get out,' ordered the official, 'and quit wasting
my time.'
But Wingate stood up to him. 'You have no
authority in this matter-none whatsoever. I insist that you take me to the
Captain.'
'Why, you-' Wingate thought momentarily
that the man was going to strike him. He interrupted.
'Be careful what you do. You are
apparently the victim of an honest mistake-but your legal position will be very
shaky indeed, if you disregard the requirements of spacewise law under which
this vessel is licensed. I don't think your Captain would be pleased to have to
explain such actions on your part in federal court.'
That he had gotten the man angry was
evident. But a man does not get to be chief police officer of a major transport
by jeopardizing his superior officers. His jaw muscles twitched but he pressed
a button, saying nothing. A junior master-at-arms appeared. 'Take this man to
the Purser.' He turned his back in dismissal and dialed a number on the ship's
intercommunication system.
Wingate was let in to see the Purser,
ex-officio company business agent, after only a short wait. 'What's this all
about?' that officer demanded. 'If you have a complaint, why can't you present
it at the morning hearings in the regular order?'
Wingate explained his predicament as
clearly, convincingly, and persuasively as he knew how. 'And so you see,' he
concluded, 'I want to be put aground at Luna City. I've no desire to cause the
company any embarrassment over what was undoubtedly an unintentional
mishap-particularly as I am forced to admit that I had been celebrating rather
freely and, perhaps, in some manner, contributed to the mistake.'
The Purser, who had listened
noncommittally to his recital, made no answer. He shuffled through a high stack
of file folders which rested on one corner of his deck, selected one, and
opened it. It contained a sheaf of legal-size papers clipped together at the
top. These he studied leisurely for several minutes, while Wingate stood
waiting.
The Purser breathed with an asthmatic
noisiness while he read, and, from time to time, drummed on his bared teeth with
his fingernails. Wingate had about decided, in his none too steady nervous
condition, that if the man approached his hand to his mouth just once more that
he, Wingate, would scream and start throwing things. At this point the Purser
chucked the dossier across the desk toward Wingate. 'Better have a look at
these,' he said.
Wingate did so. The main exhibit he found
to be a contract, duly entered into, between Humphrey Wingate and the Venus
Development Company for six years of indentured labor on the planet Venus.
'That your signature?' asked the Purser.
Wingate's professional caution stood him
in good stead. He studied the signature closely in order to gain time while he
tried to collect his wits. 'Well,' he said at last, 'I will stipulate that it
looks very much like my signature, but I will not concede that it is my
signature-I'm not a handwriting expert.' The Purser brushed aside the objection
with an air of annoyance. 'I haven't time to quibble with you. Let's check the
thumbprint. Here.' He shoved an impression pad across his desk. For a moment
Wingate considered standing on his legal rights by refusing, but no, that would
prejudice his case. He had nothing to lose; it couldn't be his thumbprint on
the contract. Unless-But it was. Even his untrained eye could see that the two
prints matched. He fought back a surge of panic. This was probably a nightmare,
inspired by his argument last night with Jones. Or, if by some wild chance it
were real, it was a frame-up in which he must find the flaw. Men of his sort
were not framed; the whole thing was ridiculous. He marshaled his words
carefully.
'I won't dispute your position, my dear
sir. In some fashion both you and I have been made the victims of a rather
sorry joke. It seems hardly necessary to point out that a man who is
unconscious, as I must have been last night, may have his thumbprint taken
without his knowledge. Superficially this contract is valid and I assume
naturally your good faith in the matter. But, in fact, the instrument lacks one
necessary element of a contract.'
'Which is?'
'The intention on the part of both parties
to enter into a contractual relationship. Notwithstanding signature and
thumbprint I had no intention of contracting which can easily be shown by other
factors. I am a successful lawyer with a good practice, as my tax returns will
show. It is not reasonable to believe-and no court will believe-that I
voluntarily gave up my accustomed life for six years of indenture at a much
lower income.'
'So you're a lawyer, eh? Perhaps there has
been chicanery-on your part. How does it happen that you represent yourself
here as a radio technician?'
Wingate again had to steady himself at
this unexpected flank attack. He was in truth a radio expert-it was his
cherished hobby-but how had they known? Shut up, he told himself. Don't admit
anything. 'The whole thing is ridiculous,' he protested. 'I insist that 1 be
taken to see the Captain-I can break that contract in ten minutes time.'
The Purser waited before replying. 'Are
you through speaking your piece?'
'Yes.'
'Very well. You've had your say, now I'll
have mine. You listen to me, Mister Spacelawyer. That contract was drawn up by
some of the shrewdest legal minds in two planets. They had specifically in mind
that worthless bums would sign it, drink up their bounty money, and then decide
that they didn't want to go to work after all. That contract has been subjected
to every sort of attack possible and revised so that it can't be broken by the
devil himself.
'You're not peddling your curbstone law to
another stumblebum in this case; you are talking to a man who knows just where
he stands, legally. As for seeing the Captain-if you think the commanding
officer of a major vessel has nothing more to do than listen to the rhira-dreams
of a self-appointed word artist, you've got another think coming! Return to
your quarters!'
Wingate started to speak, thought better
of it, and turned to go. This would require some thought. The Purser stopped
him. 'Wait. Here's your copy of the contract.' He chucked it, the flimsy white
sheets riffled to the deck. Wingate picked them up and left silently.
Hartley
was waiting for him in the passageway. 'How d'ja make out, Hump?'
'Not so well. No, I don't want to talk
about it. I've got to think.' They walked silently back the way they had come
toward the ladder which gave access to the lower decks. A figure ascended from
the ladder and, came toward them. Wingate noted it without interest.
He looked again. Suddenly the whole
preposterous chain of events fell into place; he shouted in relief. 'Sam!' he
called out. 'Sam-you cockeyed old so-and-so. I should have spotted your
handiwork.' It was all clear now; Sam had framed him with a phony shanghai.
Probably the skipper was a pal of Sam's-a reserve officer, maybe-and they had
cooked it up between them. It was a rough sort of a joke, but he was too
relieved to be angry. Just the same he would make Jones pay for his fun,
somehow, on the jump back from Luna City.
It was then that he noticed that Jones was
not laughing.
Furthermore he was dressed-most
unreasonably-in the same blue denim that the contract laborers were. 'Hump,' he
was saying, 'are you still drunk?'
'Me? No. What's the-'
'Don't you realize we're in a jam?'
'Oh hell, Sam, a joke's a joke, but don't
keep it up any longer. I've caught on, I tell you. I don't mind-it was a good
gag.'
'Gag, eh?' said Jones bitterly. 'I suppose
it was just a gag when you talked me into signing up.'
'I persuaded you to sign up?'
'You certainly did. You were so damn sure
you knew what you were talking about. You claimed that we could sign up, spend
a month or so, on Venus, and come home. You wanted to bet on it. So we went
around to the docks and signed up. It seemed like a good idea then-the only way
to settle the argument.'
Wingate whistled softly. 'Well, I'll
be-Sam, I haven't the slightest recollection of it. I must have drawn a blank
before I passed out.'
'Yeah, I guess so. Too bad you didn't pass
out sooner. Not that I'm blaming you; you didn't drag me. Anyhow, I'm on my way
up to try to straighten it out.'
'Better wait a minute till you hear what
happened to me. Oh yes-Sam, this is, uh, Satchel Hartley. Good sort.' Hartley
had been waiting uncertainly near them; he stepped forward and shook hands.
Wingate brought Jones up to date, and
added, 'So you see your reception isn't likely to be too friendly. I guess I
muffed it. But we are sure to break the contract as soon as we can get a
hearing on time alone.'
'How do you mean?'
'We were signed up less than twelve hours
before ship lifting. That's contrary to the Space Precautionary Act.'
'Yes-yes, I see what you mean. The Moon's
in her last quarter; they would lift ship some time after midnight to take
advantage of favorable earthswing. I wonder what time it was when we signed
on?'
Wingate took out his contract copy. The
notary's stamp showed a time of eleven thirty-two. 'Great Day!' he shouted. 'I
knew there would be a flaw in it somewhere. This contract is invalid on its
face. The ship's log will prove it.'
Jones studied it. 'Look again,' he said.
Wingate did so. The stamp showed eleven thirty-two, but A.M., not P.M.
'But that's impossible,' he protested.
'Of course it is. But it's official. I
think we will find that the story is that we were signed on in the morning,
paid our bounty money, and had one last glorious luau before we were carried
aboard. I seem to recollect some trouble in getting the recruiter to sign us
up. Maybe we convinced, him by kicking in our bounty money.'
'But we didn't sign up in the morning.
It's not true and I can prove it.'
'Sure you can prove it-but how can you
prove it without going back to Earth first!'
'So you
see it's this way,' Jones decided after some minutes of somewhat fruitless
discussion, 'there is no sense in trying to break our contracts here and now;
they'll laugh at us. The thing to do is to make money talk, and talk loud. The
only way I can see to get us off at Luna City is to post non-performance bonds
with the company bank there-cash, and damn big ones too.'
'How big?'
'Twenty thousand credits, at least, I
should guess.'
'But that's not equitable-it's all out of
proportion.'
'Quit worrying about equity, will you?
Can't you realize that they've got us where the hair is short? This won't be a
bond set by a court ruling; it's got to be big enough to make a minor company
official take a chance on doing something that's not in the book.'
'I can't raise such a bond.'
'Don't worry about that. I'll take care of
it.'
Wingate wanted to argue the point, but did
not. There are times when it is very convenient to have a wealthy friend.
'I've got to get a radiogram off to my
sister,' Jones went on, 'to get this done -,
'Why your sister? Why not your family
firm?'
'Because we need fast action, that's why.
The lawyers that handle our family finances would fiddle and fume around trying
to confirm the message. They'd send a message back to the Captain, asking if
Sam Houston Jones were really aboard, and he would answer "No", as
I'm signed up as Sam Jones. I had some silly idea of staying out of the news
broadcasts, on account of the family.'
'You can't blame them,' protested Wingate,
feeling an obscure clannish loyalty to his colleague in law, 'they're handling
other people's money.'
'I'm not blaming them. But I've got to
have fast action and Sis'll do what I ask her. I'll phrase the message so
she'll know it's me. The only hurdle now is to persuade the Purser to let me
send a message on tick.'
He was gone for a long time on this mission.
Hartley waited with Wingate, both to keep him company and because of a strong
human interest in unusual events. When Jones finally appeared he wore a look of
tight-lipped annoyance. Wingate, seeing the expression, felt a sudden, chilling
apprehension. 'Couldn't you send it? Wouldn't he let you?'
'Oh, he let me-finally,' Jones admitted,
'but that Purser-man, is he tight!'
Even without the alarm gongs Wingate would
have been acutely aware of the grounding at Luna City. The sudden change from
the high gravity deceleration of their approach to the weak surface
gravity-one-sixth earth normal-of the Moon took immediate toll on his abused
stomach. It was well that he had not eaten much. Both Hartley and Jones were
deep-space men and regarded enough acceleration to permit normal swallowing as
adequate for any purpose. There is a curious lack of sympathy between those who
are subject to space sickness and those who are immune to it. Why the spectacle
of a man regurgitating, choked, eyes streaming with tears, stomach knotted with
pain, should seem funny is difficult to see, but there it is. It divides the
human race into two distinct and antipathetic groups-amused contempt on one
side, helpless murderous hatred on the other.
Neither Hartley nor Jones had the inherent
sadism which is too frequently evident on such occasions-for example the great
wit who suggests salt pork as a remedy-but, feeling no discomfort themselves,
they were simply unable to comprehend (having forgotten the soul-twisting
intensity of their own experience as new chums) that Wingate was literally
suffering 'a fate worse than death'-much worse, for it was stretched into a
sensible eternity by a distortion of the time sense known only to sufferers
from space sickness, seasickness, and (we are told) smokers of hashish.
As a matter of fact, the stop on the Moon
was less than four hours long. Toward the end of the wait Wingate had quieted
down sufficiently again to take an interest in the expected reply to Jones'
message, particularly after Jones had assured him that he would be able to
spend the expected lay-over under bond at Luna City in a hotel equipped with a
centrifuge.
But the answer was delayed. Jones had
expected to hear from his sister within an hour, perhaps before the Evening
Star grounded at the Luna City docks. As the hours stretched out he managed to
make himself very unpopular at the radio room by his repeated inquiries. An
over-worked clerk had sent him brusquely about his business for the seventeenth
time when he heard the alarm sound preparatory to raising ship; he went back
and admitted to Wingate that his scheme had apparently failed.
'Of course, we've got ten minutes yet,' he
finished unhopefully, 'if the message should arrive before they raise ship, the
Captain could still put us aground at the last minute. We'll go back and haunt
'em some more right up to the last. But it looks like a thin chance.'
'Ten minutes-'said Wingate, 'couldn't we
manage somehow to slip outside and run for it?'
Jones looked exasperated. 'Have you ever
tried running in a total vacuum?'
Wingate had very little time in which to
fret on the passage from Luna City to Venus. He learned a great deal about the
care and cleaning of washrooms, and spent ten hours a day perfecting his new
skill. Masters-at-Arms have long memories.
The Evening Star passed beyond the limits
of ship-to-Terra radio communication shortly after leaving Luna City; there was
nothing to do but wait until arrival at Adonis, port of the north polar colony.
The company radio there was strong enough to remain in communication at all
times except for the sixty days bracketing superior conjunction and a shorter
period of solar interference at inferior conjunction. 'They will probably be
waiting for us with a release order when we ground,' Jones assured Wingate,
'and we'll go back on the return trip of the Evening Star-first class, this
time. Or, at the very Worst, we'll have to wait over for the Morning Star. That
wouldn't be so bad, once I get some credit transferred; we could spend it at
Venusburg.'
'I suppose you went there on your cruise,'
Wingate said, curiosity showing in his voice. He was no Sybarite, but the lurid
reputation of the most infamous, or famous-depending on one's
evaluations-pleasure city of three planets was enough to stir the imagination
of the least hedonistic.
'No-worse luck!' Jones denied. 'I was on a
hull inspection board the whole time. Some of my messmates went, though boy!'
He whistled softly and shook his head.
But there was no one awaiting their arrival,
nor was there any message. Again they stood around the communication office
until told sharply and officially to get on back to their quarters and stand by
to disembark, '- and be quick about it!'
'I'll see you in the receiving barracks,
Hump,' were Jones' last words before he hurried off to his own compartment.
The Master-at-Arms responsible for the
compartment in which Hartley and Wingate were billeted lined his charges up in
a rough column of two's and, when ordered to do so by the metallic bray of the
ship's loudspeaker, conducted them through the central passageway and down four
decks to the lower passenger port. It stood open; they shuffled through the
lock and out of the ship-not into the free air of Venus, but into a sheet metal
tunnel which joined it, after some fifty yards, to a building.
The air within the tunnel was still acrid
from the atomized antiseptic with which it had been flushed out, but to Wingate
it was nevertheless fresh and stimulating after the stale flatness of the
repeatedly reconditioned air of the transport. That, plus the surface gravity
of Venus, five-sixths of earth-normal, strong enough to prevent nausea yet low
enough to produce a feeling of lightness and strength-these things combined to
give him an irrational optimism, an up-and-at-'em frame of mind.
The exit from the tunnel gave into a
moderately large room, windowless but brilliantly and glarelessly lighted from
concealed sources. It contained no furniture.
'Squaaad-HALT!' called out the
Master-at-Arms, and handed papers to a slight, clerkish-appearing man who stood
near an inner doorway. The man glanced at the papers, counted the detachment,
then signed one sheet, which he handed back to the ship's petty officer who
accepted it and returned through the tunnel.
The clerkish man turned to the immigrants.
He was dressed, Wingate noted, in nothing but the briefest of shorts, hardly
more than a strap, and his entire body, even his feet, was a smooth mellow tan.
'Now men,' he said in a mild voice, 'strip off your clothes and put them in the
hopper.' He indicated a fixture set in one wall.
'Why?' asked Wingate. His manner was
uncontentious but he made no move to comply.
'Come now,' he was answered, still mildly
but with a note of annoyance, 'don't argue. It's for your own protection. We
can't afford to import disease.'
Wingate checked a reply and unzipped his
coverall. Several who had paused to hear the outcome followed his example.
Suits, shoes, underclothing, socks, they all went into the hopper. 'Follow me,'
said their guide.
In the next room the naked herd were
confronted by four 'barbers' armed with electric clippers and rubber gloves who
proceeded to clip them smooth. Again Wingate felt disposed to argue, but
decided the issue was not worth it. But he wondered if the female labor clients
were required to submit to such drastic quarantine precautions. It would be a
shame, it seemed to him, to sacrifice a beautiful head of hair that had been
twenty years in growing.
The succeeding room was a shower room. A
curtain of warm spray completely blocked passage through the room. Wingate
entered it unreluctantly, even eagerly, and fairly wallowed in the first decent
bath he had been able to take since leaving Earth. They were plentifully
supplied with liquid green soap, strong and smelly, but which lathered freely.
Half a dozen attendants, dressed as skimpily as their guide, stood on the far
side of the wall of water and saw to it that the squad remained under the
shower a fixed time and scrubbed. In some cases they made highly personal
suggestions to insure thoroughness. Each of them wore a red cross on a white
field affixed to his belt which lent justification to their officiousness.
Blasts of warm air in the exit passageway
dried them quickly and completely.
'Hold still.' Wingate complied, the bored
hospital orderly who had spoken dabbed at Wingate's upper arm with a swab which
felt cold to touch, then scratched the spot. 'That's all, move on.' Wingate
added himself to the queue at the next table. The experience was repeated on
the other arm. By the time he had worked down to the far end of the room the
outer sides of each arm were covered with little red scratches, more than
twenty of them.
'What's this all about?' he asked the
hospital clerk at the end of the line, who had counted his scratches and
checked his name off a list.
'Skin tests.. . to check your resistances
and immunities.'
'Resistance to what?'
'Anything. Both terrestrial and Venerian
diseases. Fungoids, the Venus ones are, mostly. Move on, you're holding up the
line.' He heard more about it later. It took from two to three weeks to
recondition the ordinary terrestrial to Venus conditions. Until that
reconditioning was complete and immunity was established to the new hazards of
another planet it was literally death to an Earth man to expose his skin and
particularly his mucous membranes to the ravenous invisible parasites of the
surface of Venus.
The ceaseless fight of life against life
which is the dominant characteristic of life anywhere proceeds with special
intensity, under conditions of high metabolism, in the steamy jungles of Venus.
The general bacteriophage which has so nearly eliminated disease caused by
pathogenic micro-organisms on Earth was found capable of a subtle modification which
made it potent against the analogous but different diseases of Venus. The
hungry fungi were another matter.
Imagine the worst of the fungoid-type skin
diseases you have ever encountered-ringworm, dhobie itch, athlete's foot,
Chinese rot, saltwater itch, seven year itch. Add to that your conception of
mold of damp rot, of scale, of toadstools feeding on decay. Then conceive them
speeded up in their processes, visibly crawling as you watch-picture them
attacking your eyeballs, your armpits, the soft wet tissues inside your mouth,
working down into your lungs.
The first Venus expedition was lost
entirely. The second had a surgeon with sufficient imagination to provide what
seemed a liberal supply of salicylic acid and mercury salicylate as well as a small
ultraviolet radiator. Three of them returned.
But permanent colonization depends on
adaptation to environment, not insulating against it. Luna City might be cited
as a case which denies this proposition but it is only superficially so. While
it is true that the 'lunatics' are absolutely dependent on their citywide
hermetically-sealed air bubble, Luna City is not a self-sustaining colony; it
is an outpost, useful as a mining station, as an observatory, as a refueling
stop beyond the densest portion of Terra's gravitational field.
Venus is a colony. The colonists breathe
the air of Venus, eat its food, and expose their skins to its climate and
natural hazards. Only the cold polar regions-approximately equivalent in
weather conditions to an Amazonian jungle on a hot day in the rainy season-are
tenable by terrestrials, but here they slop barefooted on the marshy soil in a
true ecological balance.
Wingate
ate the meal that was offered him-satisfactory but roughly served and dull,
except for Venus sweet-sour melon, the portion of which he ate would have
fetched a price in a Chicago gourmets' restaurant equivalent to the food budget
for a week of a middle-class family-and located his assigned sleeping billet.
Thereafter he attempted to locate Sam Houston Jones. He could find no sign of
him among the other labor clients, nor any one who remembered having seen him.
He was advised by one of the permanent staff of the conditioning station to
enquire of the factor's clerk. This he did, in the ingratiating manner he had
learned it was wise to use in dealing with minor functionaries.
'Come back in the morning. The lists will
be posted.'
'Thank you, sir. Sorry to have bothered
you, but I can't find him and I was afraid he might have taken sick or
something. Could you tell me if he is on the sick list.'
'Oh, well-Wait a minute.' The clerk
thumbed through his records. 'Hmmm.. . you say he was in the Evening Star?'
'Yes, sir.'
'Well, he's not. . . Mmmm, no-Oh, yes,
here he is. He didn't disembark here.'
'What did you say!?'
'He went on with the Evening Star to New
Auckland, South Pole. He's stamped in as a machinist's helper. If you had told
me that, I'd 'a' known. All the metal workers in this consignment were sent to
work on the new South Power Station.'
After a moment Wingate pulled himself
together enough to murmur, 'Thanks for your trouble.'
''S all right. Don't ~mention it.' The
clerk turned away.
South Pole Colony! He muttered it to
himself. South Pole Colony, his only friend twelve thousand miles away. At last
Wingate felt alone, alone and trapped, abandoned. During the short interval
between waking up aboard the transport and finding Jones also aboard he had not
had time fully to appreciate his predicament, nor had he, then, lost his upper
class arrogance, the innate conviction that it could not be serious-such things
just don't' happen to people, not to people one knows!
But in the meantime he had suffered such
assaults to his human dignity (the Chief Master-at-Arms had seen to some of it)
that he was no longer certain of his essential inviolability from unjust or
arbitrary treatment. But now, shaved and bathed without his consent, stripped
of his clothing and attired in a harness like breechclout, transported millions
of miles from his social matrix, subject to the orders of persons indifferent
to his feelings and who claimed legal control over his person and actions, and
now, most bitterly, cut off from the one human contact which had given him
support and courage and hope, he realized at last with chilling thoroughness
that anything could happen to him, to him, Humphrey Belmont Wingate, successful
attorney-at-law and member of all the night clubs.
'Wingate!'
'That's you, Jack. Go on in, don't keep
them waiting.' Wingate pushed through the doorway and found himself in a fairly
crowded room. Thirty-odd men were seated around the sides of the room. Near the
door a clerk sat at a desk, busy with papers. One brisk-mannered individual
stood in the cleared space between the chairs near a low platform on which all
the illumination of the room was concentrated. The clerk at the door looked up
to say, 'Step up where they can see you.' He pointed a stylus at the platform.
Wingate moved forward and did as he was
bade, blinking at the brilliant light. 'Contract number 482-23-06,' read the
clerk, 'client Humphrey Wingate, six years, radio technician non-certified, pay
grade six-D, contract now available for assignment.' Three weeks it had taken
them to condition him, three weeks with no word from Jones. He had passed his
exposure test without infection; he was about to enter the active period of his
indenture. The brisk man spoke up close on the last words of the clerk:
'Now here, patrons, if you please-we have
an exceptionally promising man. I hardly dare tell you the ratings he received
on his intelligence, adaptability, and general information tests. In fact I
won't, except to tell you that Administration has put in a protective offer of
a thousand credits. But it would be a shame to use any such client for the
routine work of administration when we need good men so badly to wrest wealth
from the wilderness. I venture to predict that the lucky bidder who obtains the
services of this client will be using him as a foreman within a month. But look
him over for yourselves, talk to him, and see for yourselves.'
The clerk whispered something to the
speaker. He nodded and added, 'I am required to notify you, gentlemen and
patrons, that this client has given the usual legal notice of two weeks,
subject of course to liens of record.' He laughed jovially, and cocked one
eyebrow as if there were some huge joke behind his remarks. No one paid
attention to the announcement; to a limited extent Wingate appreciated wryly
the nature of the jest. He had given notice the day after he found out that
Jones had been sent to South Pole Colony, and had discovered that while he was
free theoretically to quit, it was freedom to starve on Venus, unless he first
worked out his bounty, and his. passage both ways.
Several of the patrons gathered around the
platform and looked him over, discussing him as they did so. 'Not too well
muscled.' 'I'm not over-eager to bid on these smart boys; they're
trouble-makers.' 'No, but a stupid client isn't worth his keep.' 'What can he
do? I'm going to have a look at his record.' They drifted over to the clerk's
desk and scrutinized the results of the many tests and examinations that
Wingate had undergone during his period of quarantine. All but one beady-eyed
individual who sidled up closer to Wingate, and, resting one foot on the
platform so that he could bring his face nearer, spoke in confidential tones.
'I'm not interested in those phony
puff-sheets, bub. Tell me about yourself.'
'There's not much to tell.'
'Loosen up. You'll like my place. Just
like a home - I run a free crock to Venusburg for my boys. Had any experience
handling niggers?'
'No.'
'Well, the natives ain't niggers anyhow,
except in a manner of speaking. You look like you could boss a gang. Had any
experience?'
'Not much.'
'Well . . . maybe you're modest. I like a
man who keeps his mouth shut. And my boys like me. I never let my pusher take
kickbacks.'
'No,' put in another patron who had
returned to the side of the platform, 'you save that for yourself, Rigsbee.'
'You stay out o' this, Van Huysen!'
The newcomer, a heavy-set, middle-aged
man, ignored the other and addressed Wingate himself. 'You have given notice.
Why?'
'The whole thing was a mistake. I was
drunk.'
'Will you do honest work in the meantime?'
Wingate considered this. 'Yes,' he said
finally. The heavy-set man nodded and walked heavily back to his chair,
settling his broad girth with care and giving his harness a hitch.
When the others were seated the spokesman
announced cheerfully, 'Now, gentlemen, if you are quite through-Let's hear an
opening offer for this contract. I wish I could afford to bid him in as my
assistant, by George, I do! Now . . . do I hear an offer?'
'Six hundred.'
'Please, patrons! Did you not hear me
mention a protection of one thousand?'
'1 don't think you mean it. He's a
sleeper.'
The company agent raised his eyebrows.
'I'm sorry. I'll have to ask the client to step down from the platform.'
But before Wingate could do so another
voice said, 'One thousand.'
'Now that's better!' exclaimed the agent.
'I should have known that you gentlemen wouldn't let a real opportunity escape
you. But a ship can't fly on one jet. Do I hear eleven hundred? Come, patrons,
you can't make your fortunes without clients. Do I hear -'
'Eleven hundred.'
'Eleven hundred from Patron Rigsbee! And a
bargain it would be at that price. But I doubt if you will get it. Do I hear
twelve?'
The heavy-set man flicked a thumb upward.
'Twelve hundred from Patron van Huysen. I see I've made a mistake and am
wasting your time; the intervals should be not less than two hundred. Do I hear
fourteen? Do I hear fourteen? Going once for twelve.. . going twi-'
'Fourteen,' Rigsbee said suddenly.
'Seventeen,' Van Huysen added at once.
'Eighteen,' snapped Rigsbee.
'Nooo,' said the agent, 'no interval of
less than two, please.'
'All right, dammit, nineteen!'
'Nineteen I hear. It's a hard number to
write; who'll make it twenty-one?' Van Huysen's thumb flicked again. 'Twentyone
it is. It takes money to make money. What do I hear? What do I hear?' He
paused. 'Going once for twenty-one going twice for twenty-one. Are you giving
up so easily, Patron Rigsbee?'
'Van Huysen is a-' The rest was muttered
too indistinctly to hear.
'One more chance, gentlemen. Going, going
. . . GONE!-He smacked his palms sharply together. '-and sold to Patron van
Huysen for twenty-one hundred credits. My congratulations, sir, on a shrewd
deal.'
Wingate followed his new master out the
far door. They were stopped in the passageway by Rigsbee. 'All right, Van,
you've had your fun. I'll cut your loses for two thousand.'
'Out of my way.'
'Don't be a fool. He's no bargain. You
don't know how to sweat a man-I do.' Van Huysen ignored him, pushing on past.
Wingate followed him out into warm winter drizzle to the parking lot where
steel crocodiles were drawn up in parallel rows. Van Huysen paused beside a
thirty-foot Remington. 'Get in.'
The long boxlike body of the crock was
stowed to its load line with supplies Van Huysen had purchased at the base.
Sprawled on the tarpaulin which covered the cargo were half a dozen men. One of
them stirred as Wingate climbed over the side. 'Hump! Oh, Hump!'
It was Hartley. Wingate was surprised at
his own surge of emotion. He gripped Hartley's hand and exchanged friendly
insults. 'Chums,' said Hartley, 'meet Hump Wingate. He's a right guy. Hump,
meet the gang. That's Jimmie right behind you. He rassles this velocipede.'
The man designated gave Wingate a bright
nod and moved forward into the operator's seat. At a wave from Van Huysen, who
had seated his bulk in the little sheltered cabin aft, he pulled back on both
control levers and the crocodile crawled away, its caterpillar treads clanking
and chunking through the mud.
Three of the six were old-timers,
including Jimmie, the driver. They had come along to handle cargo, the ranch
products which the patron had brought in to market and the supplies he had
purchased to take back. Van Huysen had bought the contracts of two other
clients in addition to Wingate and Satchel Hartley. Wingate recognized them as
men he had known casually in the Evening Star and at the assignment and
conditioning station. They looked a little woebegone, which Wingate could
thoroughly understand, but the men from the ranch seemed to be enjoying
themselves. They appeared to regard the opportunity to ride a load to and from
town as an outing. They sprawled on the tarpaulin and passed the time gossiping
and getting acquainted with the new chums.
But they asked no personal questions. No
labor client on Venus ever asked anything about what he had been before he
shipped with the company unless he first volunteered information. It 'wasn't
done'.
Shortly after leaving the outskirts of
Adonis the car slithered down a sloping piece of ground, teetered over a low
bank, and splashed logily into water. Van Huysen threw up a window in the
bulkhead which separated the cabin from the hold and shouted, 'Dumkopf! How
many times do I tell you to take those launchings slowly?'
'Sorry, Boss,' Jimmie answered. 'I missed
it.'
'You keep your eyes peeled, or I get me a
new crocker!' He slammed the port. Jimmie glanced around and gave the other
clients a sly wink. He had his hands full; the marsh they were traversing
looked like solid ground, so heavily was it overgrown with rank vegetation. The
crocodile now functioned as a boat, the broad flanges of the treads acting as
paddle wheels. The wedge-shaped prow pushed shrubs and marsh grass aside, air
struck and ground down small trees. Occasionally the lugs would bite into the
mud of a shoal bottom, and, crawling over a bar, return temporarily to the
status of a land vehicle. Jimmie's slender, nervous hands moved constantly over
the controls, avoiding large trees and continually seeking the easiest, most
nearly direct route, while he split his attention between the terrain and the
craft's compass.
Presently the conversation lagged and one
of the ranch hands started to sing. He had a passable tenor voice and was soon
joined by others. Wingate found himself singing the choruses as fast as he
learned them. They sang Pay Book and Since the Pusher Met My Cousin and a
mournful thing called They Found Him in the Bush. But this was followed by a
light number, The Night the Rain Stopped, which seemed to have an endless
string of verses recounting various unlikely happenings which occurred on that
occasion. ('The Squeezer bought a round-a-drinks -')
Jimmie drew applause and enthusiastic
support in the choruses with a ditty entitled That Redheaded Venusburg Gal, but
Wingate considered it inexcusably vulgar. He did not have time to dwell on the
matter; it was followed by a song which drove it out of his mind.
The tenor started it, slowly and softly.
The others sang the refrains while he rested-all but Wingate; he was silent and
thoughtful throughout. In the triplet of the second verse the tenor dropped out
and the others sang in his place.
'Oh,
you stamp your paper and you sign your name, ('Come away! Come away!)
'They
pay your bounty and you drown your shame.
('Rue
the day! Rue the day!)
'They
land you down at Ellis Isle and put you in a pen;
'There
you see what happens to the Six-Year men-'They haven't paid their bounty and
they sign 'em up again!
('Here
to stay! Here to stay!)
'But me
I'll save my bounty and a ticket on the ship, ('So you say! So you say!)
'And
then you'll see me leavin' on the very next trip. ('Come the day! Come the
day!)
'Oh,
we've heard that kinda story just a thousand times and one.
'Now we
wouldn't say you're lyin' but we'd like to see it done.
'We'll
see you next at Venusburg apayin' for your fun! And you'll never meet your
bounty on this hitch!
('Come
away!')
It left Wingate with a feeling of
depression not entirely accounted for by the tepid drizzle, the unappetizing
landscape, nor by the blanket of pale mist which is the invariable Venerian
substitute for the open sky. He withdrew to one corner of the hold and kept to
himself, until, much later, Jimmie shouted, 'Lights ahead!'
Wingate leaned out and peered eagerly
towards his new home.
Four
weeks and no word from Sam Houston Jones. Venus had turned once on its axis,
the fortnight long Venerian 'winter' had given way to an equally short
'summer'-indistinguishable from 'winter' except that the rain was a trifle
heavier and a little hotter-and now it was 'winter' again. Van Huysen's ranch,
being near the pole, was, like most of the tenable area of Venus, never in
darkness. The miles-thick, ever present layer of clouds tempered the light of
the low-hanging sun during the long day, and, equally, held the heat and
diffused the light from a sun just below the horizon to produce a continuing
twilight during the two-week periods which were officially 'night', or
'winter'.
Four weeks and no word. Four weeks and no
sun, no moon, no stars, no dawn. No clean crisp breath of morning air, no
life-quickening beat of noonday sun, no welcome evening shadows, nothing,
nothing at all to distinguish one sultry, sticky hour from the next but the
treadmill routine of sleep and work and food and sleep again-nothing but the
gathering ache in his heart for the cool blue skies of Terra.
He had acceded to the invariable custom
that new men should provide a celebration for the other clients and had signed
the Squeezer's chits to obtain happywater-rhira-for the purpose-to discover,
when first he signed the pay book, that his gesture of fellowship had cost him
another four months of delay before he could legally quit his 'job'. Thereupon
he had resolved never again to sign a chit, had foresworn the prospect of brief
holidays at Venusburg, had promised himself to save every possible credit
against his bounty and transportation liens.
Whereupon he discovered that the mild
alcoholoid drink was neither a vice nor a luxury, but a necessity, as necessary
to human life on Venus as the ultraviolet factor present in all colonial
illuminating systems. it produces, not drunkenness, but lightness of heart,
freedom from worry, and without it he could not get to sleep. Three nights of
self-recrimination and fretting, three days of fatigue-drugged uselessness
under the unfriendly eye of the Pusher, and he had signed for his bottle with
the rest, even though dully aware that the price of the bottle had washed out
more than half of the day's microscopic progress toward freedom.
Nor had he been assigned to radio
operation. Van Huysen had an operator. Wingate, although listed on the books as
standby operator, went to the swamps with the rest. He discovered on rereading
his contract a clause which permitted his patron to do this, and he admitted
with half his mind-the detached judicial and legalistic half-that the clause
was reasonable and proper, not inequitable.
He went to the swamps. He learned to
wheedle and bully the little, mild amphibian people into harvesting the bulbous
underwater growth of Hyacinthus veneris johnsoni-Venus swamproot-and to bribe
the co-operation of their matriarchs with promises of bonuses in the form of
'thigarek', a term which meant not only cigarette, but tobacco in any form, the
staple medium in trade when dealing with the natives.
He took his turn in the chopping sheds and
learned, clumsily and slowly, to cut and strip the spongy outer husk from the
pea-sized kernel which alone had commercial value and which must be removed intact,
without scratch or bruise. The juice from the pods made his hands raw and the
odor made him cough and stung his eyes, but he enjoyed it more than the work in
the marshes, for it threw him into the company of the female labor clients.
Women were quicker at the work than men and their smaller fingers more dextrous
in removing the valuable, easily damaged capsule. Men were used for such work
only when accumulated crops required extra help.
He learned his new trade from a motherly
old person whom the other women addressed as Hazel. She talked as she worked,
her gnarled old hands moving steadily and without apparent direction or skill.
He could close his eyes and imagine that he was back on Earth and a boy again,
hanging around his grandmother's kitchen while she shelled peas and rambled on.
'Don't you fret yourself, boy,' Hazel told him. 'Do your work and shame the
devil. There's a great day coming.'
'What kind of great day, Hazel?'
'The day when the Angels of the Lord will
rise up and smite the powers of evil. The day when the Prince of Darkness will
be cast down into the pit and the Prophet shall reign over the children of
Heaven. So don't you worry; it doesn't matter whether you are here or back home
when the great day comes; the only thing that matters is your state of grace.'
'Are you sure we will live long enough to
see the day?'
She glanced around, then leaned over
confidentially. 'The day is almost upon us. Even now the Prophet moves up and
down the land gathering his forces. Out of the clean farm country of the
Mississippi Valley there comes the Man, known in this world'-she lowered her
voice still more-'as Nehemiah Scudder!'
Wingate hoped that his start of surprise
and amusement did not show externally. He recalled the name. It was that of a
pipsqueak, backwoods evangelist, an unimportant nuisance back on Earth, but the
butt of an occasional guying news story, but a man of no possible consequence.
The chopping shed Pusher moved up to their
bench. 'Keep your eyes on your work, you! You're way behind now.' Wingate
hastened to comply, but Hazel came to his aid.
'You leave him be, Joe Tompson. It takes
time to learn chopping.'
'Okay, Mom,' answered the Pusher with a
grin, 'but keep him pluggin'. See?'
'I will. You worry about the rest of the
shed. This bench'll have its quota.' Wingate had been docked two days running
for spoilage. Hazel was lending him poundage now and the Pusher knew it, but
everybody liked her, even pushers, who are reputed to like no one, not even
themselves.
Wingate
stood just outside the gate of the bachelors' compound. There was yet fifteen
minutes before lock-up roll call; he had walked out in a subconscious attempt
to rid himself of the pervading feeling of claustrophobia which he had had
throughout his stay. The attempt was futile; there was no 'outdoorness' about
the outdoors on Venus, the bush crowded the clearing in on itself, the leaden
misty sky pressed down on his head, and the steamy heat sat on his bare chest.
Still, it was better than the bunkroom in spite of the dehydrators.
He had not yet obtained his evening ration
of rhira and felt, consequently, nervous and despondent, yet residual
self-respect caused him to cherish a few minutes clear thinking before he gave
in to cheerful soporific. It's getting me, he thought, in a few more months
I'll be taking every chance to get to Venusburg, or worse yet, signing a chit
for married quarters and condemning myself and my kids to a life-sentence. When
he first arrived the women clients, with their uniformly dull minds and usually
commonplace faces, had seemed entirely unattractive. Now, he realized with
dismay, he was no longer so fussy. Why, he was even beginning to lisp, as the
other clients did, in unconscious imitation of the amphibians.
Early, he had observed that the clients
could be divided roughly into two categories, the child of nature and the
broken men. The first were those of little imagination and simple standards. In
all probability they had known nothing better back on Earth; they saw in the colonial
culture, not slavery, but freedom from responsibility, security, and an
occasional spree. The others were the broken men, the outcasts, they who had
once been somebody, but, through some defect of character, or some accident,
had lost their places in society. Perhaps the judge had said, 'Sentence
suspended if you ship for the colonies.'
He realized with sudden panic that his own
status was crystallizing; he was becoming one of the broken men. His background
on Earth was becoming dim in his mind; he had put off for the last three days
the labor of writing another letter to Jones; he had spent all the last shift
rationalizing the necessity for taking a couple of days holiday at Venusburg.
Face it, son, face it, he told himself. You're slipping, you're letting your
mind relax into slave psychology. You've unloaded the problem of getting out of
this mess onto Jones - how do you know he can help you? For all you know he may
be dead. Out of the dimness of his memory he recaptured a phrase which he had read
somewhere, some philosopher of history: 'No slave is ever freed, save he free
himself.'
All right, all right-pull up your socks,
old son. Take a brace. No more rhira-no, that wasn't practical; a man had to
have sleep. Very well, then, no rhira until lights-out, keep your mind clear in
the evenings and plan. Keep your eyes open, find out all you can, cultivate
friendships, and watch for a chance.
Through the gloom he saw a human figure
approaching the gate of the compound. As it approached he saw that it was a
woman and supposed it to be one of the female clients. She came closer, he saw
that he was mistaken. It was Annek van Huysen, daughter of the patron.
She was a husky, overgrown blond girl with
unhappy eyes. He had seen her many times, watching the clients as they returned
from their labor, or wandering alone around the ranch clearing. She was neither
unsightly, nor in anywise attractive; her heavy adolescent figure needed more
to flatter it than the harness which all colonists wore as the maximum
tolerable garment.
She stopped before him, and, unzipping the
pouch at her waist which served in lieu of pockets, took out a package of
cigarettes. 'I found this back there. Did you lose it?'
He knew that she lied; she had picked up
nothing since she had come into sight. And the brand was one smoked on Earth
and by patrons; no client could afford such. What was she up to?
He noted the eagerness in her face and the
rapidity of her breathing, and realized, with confusion, that this girl was
trying indirectly to make him a present. Why?
Wingate was not particularly conceited
about his own physical beauty, or charm, nor had he any reason to be. But what
he had not realized was that among the common run of the clients he stood out
like a cock pheasant in a barnyard. But that Annek found him pleasing he was
forced to admit; there could be no other explanation for her trumped-up story
and her pathetic little present.
His first impulse was to snub her. He
wanted nothing of her and resented the invasion of his privacy, and he was
vaguely aware that the situation could be awkward, even dangerous to him,
involving, as it did, violations of custom which jeopardized the whole social
and economic structure. From the viewpoint of the patrons, labor clients were almost
as much beyond the pale as the amphibians. A liaison between a labor client and
one of the womenfolk of the patrons could easily wake up old Judge Lynch.
But he had not the heart to be brusque
with her. He could see the dumb adoration in her eyes; it would have required
cold, heartlessness to have repulsed her. Besides, there was nothing coy or
provocative in her attitude; her manner was naive, almost childlike in its
unsophistication. He recalled his determination to make friends; here was
friendship offered, a dangerous friendship, but one which might prove useful in
Winning free.
He felt a momentary wave of shame that he
should be weighing the potential usefulness of this defenseless child, but he
suppressed it by affirming to himself that he would do her no harm, and,
anyhow, there was the old saw about the vindictiveness of a woman scorned.
'Why, perhaps I did lose it,' he evaded,
then added, 'It's my favorite brand.'
'Is it?' she said happily. 'Then do take
it, in any case.'
'Thank you. Will you smoke one with me?
No, I guess that wouldn't do; your father would not want you to stay here that
long.'
'Oh, he's busy with his accounts. I saw
that before I came out,' she answered, and seemed unaware that she had given
away her pitiful little deception. 'But go ahead, I-I hardly ever smoke.'
'Perhaps you prefer a meerschaum pipe,
like your father.'
She laughed more than the poor witticism
deserved. After that they talked aimlessly, both agreeing that the crop was
coming in nicely, that the weather seemed a little cooler than last week, and
that there was nothing like a little fresh air after supper.
'Do you ever walk for exercise after
supper?' she asked.
He did not say that a long day in the
swamps offered more than enough exercise, but agreed that he did.
'So do I,' she blurted out. 'Lots of times
up near the water tower.'
He looked at her. 'Is that so? I'll
remember that.' The signal for roll call gave him a welcome excuse to get away;
three more minutes, he thought, and I would have had to make a date with her.
Wingate found himself called for swamp
work the next day, the rush in the chopping sheds having abated. The crock
lumbered and splashed its way around the long, meandering circuit, leaving one
or more Earthmen at each supervision station. The car was down to four
occupants, Wingate, Satchel, the Pusher, and Jimmie the Crocker, when the
Pusher signaled for another stop. The flat, bright-eyed heads of amphibian
natives broke water on three sides as soon as they were halted. 'All right,
Satchel,' ordered the Pusher, 'this is your billet. Over the side.'
Satchel looked around. 'Where's my skiff?'
The ranchers used small flat-bottomed duralumin skiffs in which to collect
their day's harvest. There was not one left in the crock.
'You won't need one. You goin' to clean
this field for planting.'
'That's okay. Still-I don't see nobody
around, and I don't see no solid ground.' The skiffs had a double purpose; if a
man were working out of contact with other Earthmen and at some distance from
safe dry ground, the skiff became his life boat. If the crocodile which was
supposed to collect him broke down, or if for any other reason he had need to
sit down or lie down while on station, the skiff gave him a place to do so. The
older clients told grim stories of men who had stood in eighteen inches of
water for twenty-four, forty-eight, seventy-two hours, and then drowned
horribly, out of their heads from sheer fatigue.
'There's dry ground right over there.' The
Pusher waved his hand in the general direction of a clump of trees which lay
perhaps a quarter of a mile away.
'Maybe so,' answered Satchel equably.
'Let's go see.' He grinned at Jimmie, who turned to the Pusher for
instructions.
'Damnation! Don't argue with me! Get over
the side!'
'Not,' said Satchel, 'until I've seen
something better than two feet of slime to squat on in a pinch.'
The little water people had been following
the argument with acute interest. They clucked and lisped in their own
language; those who knew some pidgin English appeared to be giving newsy and
undoubtedly distorted explanations of the events to their less sophisticated
brethren. Fuming as he was, this seemed to add to the Pusher's anger.
'For the last time-get out there!'
'Well,' said Satchel, settling his gross
frame more comfortably on the floorplates, 'I'm glad we've finished with that
subject.'
Wingate was behind the Pusher. This
circumstance probably saved Satchel Hartley at least a scalp wound, for he
caught the arm of the Pusher as he struck. Hartley closed in at once; the three
wrestled for a few seconds on the bottom of the craft.
Hartley sat on the Pusher's chest while
Wingate pried a blackjack away from the clenched fingers of the Pusher's right
fist. 'Glad you saw him reach for that, Hump,' Satchel acknowledged, 'or I'd be
needin' an aspirin about now.'
'Yeah, I guess so,' Wingate answered, and
threw the weapon as far as he could out into the marshy waste. Several of the
amphibians streaked after it and dived. 'I guess you can let him up now.'
The Pusher said nothing to them as he
brushed himself off, but he turned to the Crocker who had remained quietly in
his saddle at the controls the whole time. 'Why the hell didn't you help me?'
'I supposed you could take care of
yourself, Boss,' Jimmie answered noncommittally.
Wingate and Hartley finished that 'work
period as helpers to labor clients already stationed. The Pusher had completely
ignored them except for curt orders necessary to station them. But while they
were washing up for supper back at the compound they received word to report to
the Big House.
When they were ushered into the Patron's
office they found the Pusher already there with his employer and wearing a
self-satisfied smirk while Van Huysen's expression was black indeed.
'What's this I hear about you two?' he
burst out. 'Refusing work. Jumping my foreman. By Joe, I show you a thing or
two!'
'Just a moment, Patron van Huysen,' began
Wingate quietly, suddenly at home in the atmosphere of a trial court, 'no one
refused duty. Hartley simply protested doing dangerous work without reasonable
safeguards. As for the fracas, your foreman attacked us; we acted simply in
self-defense, and desisted as soon as we had disarmed him.'
The Pusher leaned over Van Huysen and whispered
in his ear. The Patron looked more angry than before. 'You did this with
natives watching. Natives! You know colonial law? I could send you to the mines
for this.'
'No,' Wingate denied, 'your foreman did it
in the presence of natives. Our role was passive and defensive throughout -'
'You call jumping my foreman peaceful? Now
you listen to me-Your job here is to work. My foreman's job is to tell you
where and how to work. He's not such a dummy as to lose me my investment in a
man. He judges what work is dangerous, not you.' The Pusher whispered again to
his chief. Van Huysen shook his head. The other persisted, but the Patron cut
him off with a gesture, and turned back to the two labor clients.
'See here-I give every dog one bite, but
not two. For you, no supper tonight and no rhira. Tomorrow we see how you
behave.'
'But Patron van Huys -'
'That's all. Get to your quarters.'
At lights out Wingate found, on crawling
into his bunk, that someone had hidden therein a food bar. He munched it gratefully
in the dark and wondered who his friend could be. The food stayed the
complaints of his stomach but was not sufficient, in the absence of rhira, to
permit him to go to sleep. He lay there, staring into the oppressive blackness
of the bunkroom and listening to the assorted irritating noises that men can
make while sleeping, and considered his position. It had been bad enough but
barely tolerable before; now, he was logically certain, it would be as near
hell as a vindictive overseer could make it. He was prepared to believe, from
what he had seen and the tales he had heard, that it would be very near indeed!
He had been nursing his troubles for
perhaps an hour when he felt a hand touch his side. 'Hump! Hump!' came a
whisper, 'come outside. Something's up.' It was Jimmie.
He felt his way cautiously through the
stacks of bunks and slipped out the door after Jimmie. Satchel was already
outside and with him a fourth figure.
It was Annek van Huysen. He wondered how
she had been able to get into the locked compound. Her eyes were puffy, as if
she had been crying.
Jimmie started to speak at once, in
cautious, low tones. 'The kid tells us that I am scheduled to haul you two lugs
back into Adonis tomorrow.'
'What for?'
'She doesn't know. But she's afraid it's
to sell you South. That doesn't seem likely. The Old Man has never sold anyone
South-but then nobody ever jumped his pusher before. I don't know.'
They wasted some minutes in fruitless
discussion, then, after a bemused silence, Wingate asked Jimmie, 'Do you know
where they keep the keys to the crock?'
'No. Why do y-'
'I could get them for you,' offered Annek
eagerly.
'You can't drive a crock.'
'I've watched you for some weeks.'
'Well, suppose you can,' Jimmie continued
to protest, 'suppose you run for it in the crock. You'd be lost in ten miles.
If you weren't caught, you'd starve.'
Wingate shrugged. 'I'm not going to be
sold South.'
'Nor am I,' Hartley added.
'Wait a minute.'
'Well, I don't see any bet-'
'Wait a minute,' Jimmie reiterated
snappishly. 'Can't you see I'm trying to think'?'
The other three kept silent for several
long moments. At last Jimmie said, 'Okay. Kid, you'd better run along and let
us talk. The less you know about this the better for you.' Annek looked hurt,
but complied docilely to the extent of withdrawing out of earshot. The three
men conferred for some minutes. At last Wingate motioned for her to rejoin
them.
'That's all, Annek,' he told her. 'Thanks
a lot for everything you've done. We've figured a way out.' He stopped, and
then said awkwardly, 'Well, good night.'
She looked up at him.
Wingate wondered what to do or say next.
Finally he led her around the corner of the barracks and bade her good night
again. He returned very quickly, looking shame-faced. They re-entered the
barracks.
Patron van Huysen also was having trouble
getting to sleep. He hated having to discipline his people. By damn, why
couldn't they all be good boys and leave him in peace? Not but what there was
precious little peace for a rancher these days. It cost more to make a crop
than the crop fetched in Adonis-at least it did after the interest was paid.
He had turned his attention to his
accounts after dinner that night to try to get the unpleasantness out of his
mind, but he found it hard to concentrate on his figures. That man Wingate, now
. . . he had bought him as much to keep him away from that slave driver Rigsbee
as to get another hand. He had too much money invested in hands as it was in
spite of his foreman always complaining about being short of labor. He would
either have to sell some, or ask the bank to refinance the mortgage again.
Hands weren't worth their keep any more.
You didn't get the kind of men on Venus that used to come when he was a boy. He
bent over his books again. If the market went up even a little, the bank should
be willing to discount his paper for a little more than last season. Maybe that
would do it.
He had been interrupted by a visit from
his daughter. Annek he was always glad to see, but this time what she had to
say, what she finally blurted out. had only served to make him angry. She,
preoccupied with her own thoughts, could not know that she hurt her father's
heart, with a pain that was actually physical.
But that had settled the matter insofar as
Wingate was concerned. He would get rid of the trouble-maker. Van Huysen
ordered his daughter to bed with a roughness he had never before used on her.
Of course it was all his own fault, he
told himself after he had gone to bed. A ranch on Venus was no place to raise a
motherless girl. His Annekchen was almost a woman grown now; how was she to
find a husband here in these outlands? What would she do if he should die? She
did not know it, but there would be nothing left, nothing, not even a ticket to
Terra. No, she would not become a labor client's vrouw; no, not while there was
a breath left in his old tired body.
Well, Wingate would have to go, and the
one they called Satchel, too. But he would not sell them South. No, he had
never done that to one of his people. He thought with distaste of the great,
factory like plantations a few hundred miles further from the pole, where the
temperature was always twenty to thirty degrees higher than it was in his
marshes and mortality among labor clients was a standard item in cost
accounting. No, he would take them in and trade them at the assignment station;
what happened to them at auction there would be none of his business. But he
would not sell them directly South.
That gave him an idea; he did a little
computing in his head and estimated that he might be able to get enough credit
on the two unexpired labor contracts to buy Annek a ticket to Earth. He was
quite sure that his sister would take her in, reasonably sure anyway, even
though she had quarreled with him over marrying Annek's mother. He could send
her a little money from time to time. And perhaps she could learn to be a
secretary, or one of those other fine jobs a girl could get on Earth.
But what would the ranch be like without
Annekchen?
He was so immersed in his own troubles
that he did not hear his daughter slip out of her room and go outside.
Wingate and Hartley tried to appear
surprised when they were left behind at muster for work. Jimmie was told to
report to the Big House; they saw him a few minutes later, backing the big
Remington out of its shed. He picked them up, then trundled back to the Big
House and waited for the Patron to appear. Van Huysen came out shortly and
climbed into his cabin with neither word nor look for anyone.
The, crocodile started toward Adonis,
lumbering a steady ten miles an hour. Wingate and Satchel conversed in subdued
voices, waited, and wondered. After an interminable time the crock stopped. The
cabin window flew open. 'What's the matter?' Van Huysen demanded. 'Your engine
acting up?'
Jimmie grinned at him. 'No, I stopped it.'
'For what?'
'Better come up here and find out.'
'By damn, I do!' The window slammed;
presently Van Huysen reappeared, warping his ponderous bulk around the side of the
little cabin. 'Now what this monkeyshines?'
'Better get out and walk, Patron. This is
the end of the line.' Van Huysen seemed to have no remark suitable in answer,
but his expression spoke for him.
'No, I mean it,' Jimmie went on. 'This is
the end 'of the line for you. I've stuck to solid ground the whole way, so you
could walk back. You'll be able to follow the trail I broke; you ought to be
able to make it in three or four hours, fat as you are.'
The Patron looked from Jimmie to the
others. Wingate and Satchel closed in slightly, eyes unfriendly. 'Better get
goin', Fatty,' Satchel said softly, 'before you get chucked out headfirst.'
Van Huysen pressed back against the rail
of the crock, his hands gripping it. 'I won't get out of my own crock,' he said
tightly.
Satchel spat in the palm of one hand, then
rubbed the two together. 'Okay, Hump. He asked for it -'
'Just a second.' Wingate addressed Van
Huysen, 'See here, Patron van Huysen-we don't want to rough you up unless we
have to. But there are three of us and we are determined. Better climb out
quietly.'
The older man's face was dripping with
sweat which was not entirely due to the muggy heat. His chest heaved, he seemed
about to defy them. Then something went out inside him. His figure sagged, the
defiant lines in his face gave way to a whipped expression which was not good
to see.
A moment later he climbed quietly,
listlessly, over the side into the ankle-deep mud and stood there, stooped, his
legs slightly bent at the knees.
When they
were out of sight of the place where they had dropped their patron Jimmie
turned the crock off in a new direction. 'Do you suppose he'll make it?' asked
Wingate.
'Who?' asked Jimmie. 'Van Huysen? Oh,
sure, he'll make it-probably.' He was very busy now with his driving; the crock
crawled down a slope and lunged into navigable water. In a few minutes the
marsh grass gave way to open water. Wingate saw that they were in a broad lake
whose further shores were lost in the mist. Jimmie set a compass course.
The far shore was no more than a
strand; it concealed an overgrown bayou. Jimmie followed it a short distance,
stopped the crock, and said, 'This must be just about the place,' in an
uncertain voice. He dug under the tarpaulin folded up in one corner of the
empty hold and drew out a broad flat paddle. He took this to the rail, and,
leaning out, he smacked the water loudly with the blade: Slap! . . . slap,
slap. . . . Slap!
He waited.
The flat head of an amphibian broke water
near the side; it studied Jimmie with bright, merry eyes. 'Hello,' said Jimmie.
it answered in its own language. Jimmie
replied in the same tongue, stretching his mouth to reproduce the uncouth
clucking syllables. The native listened, then slid underwater again.
He-or, more probably, she-was back in a
few minutes, another with her. 'Thigarek?' the newcomer said hopefully.
'Thigarek when we get there, old girl,'
Jimmie temporized. 'Here . . . climb aboard.' He held out a hand, which the
native accepted and wriggled gracefully inboard. It perched its unhuman, yet
oddly pleasing, little figure on the rail near the driver's seat. Jimmie got
the car underway.
How long they were guided by their little
pilot Wingate did not know, as the timepiece on the control panel was out of
order, but his stomach informed him that it was too long. He rummaged through
the cabin and dug out an iron ration which he shared with Satchel and Jimmie.
He offered some to the native, but she smelled at it and drew her head away.
Shortly after that there was a sharp
hissing noise and a column of steam rose up ten yards ahead of them. Jimmie
halted the crock at once. 'Cease firing!' he called out. 'It's just us
chickens.'
'Who are you?' came a disembodied voice.
'Fellow travelers.'
'Climb out where we can see you.'
'Okay.'
The native poked Jimmie in the ribs.
'Thigarek,' she stated positively.
'Huh? Oh, sure.' He parceled out trade
tobacco until she acknowledged the total, then added one more package for good
will. She withdrew a piece of string from her left cheek pouch, tied up her
pay, and slid over the side. They saw her swimming away, her prize carried high
out of the water.
'Hurry up and show yourself!'
'Coming!' They climbed out into waist-deep
water and advanced holding their hands overhead. A squad of four broke cover
and looked them over, their weapons lowered but ready. The leader searched
their harness pouches and sent one of his men on to look over the crocodile.
'You keep a close watch,' remarked
Wingate.
The leader glanced at him. 'Yes,' he said,
'and no. The little people told us you were coming. They're worth all the watch
dogs that were ever littered.'
They got underway again with one of the
scouting party driving. Their captors were not unfriendly but not disposed to
talk. 'Wait till you see the Governor,' they said.
Their destination turned out to be a wide
stretch of moderately high ground. Wingate was amazed at the number of
buildings and the numerous population. 'How in the world can they keep a place
like this a secret?' he asked Jimmie.
'If the state of Texas were covered with
fog and had only the population of Waukegan, Illinois, you could hide quite a
lot of things.'
'But wouldn't it show on a map?'
'How well mapped do you think Venus is?
Don't be a dope.' On the basis of the few words he had had with Jimmie
beforehand Wingate had expected no more than a camp where fugitive clients
lurked in the bush while squeezing a precarious living from the country. What
he found was a culture and a government. True, it was a rough frontier culture
and a simple government with few laws and an unwritten constitution, but a
framework of customs was in actual operation and its gross offenders were
punished-with no higher degree of injustice than one finds anywhere.
It surprised Humphrey Wingate that
fugitive slaves, the scum of Earth, were able to develop an integrated society.
It had surprised his ancestors that the transported criminals of Botany Bay
should develop a high civilization in Australia. Not that Wingate found the
phenomenon of Botany Bay surprising-that was history, and history is never
surprising-after it happens.
The success of the colony was more
credible to Wingate when he came to know more of the character of the Governor,
who was also generalissimo, and administrator of the low and middle justice.
(High justice was voted on by the whole community, a procedure that Wingate
considered outrageously sloppy, but which seemed to satisfy the community.) As
magistrate the Governor handed out decisions with a casual contempt for rules
of evidence and legal theory that reminded Wingate of stories 'he had heard of
the apocryphal Old Judge Bean. 'The Law West of Pecos', but again the people
seemed to like it.
The great shortage of women in the
community (men outnumbered them three to one) caused incidents which more than
anything else required the decisions of the Governor. Here, Wingate was forced
to admit, was a situation in which traditional custom would have been nothing
but a source of trouble; 'he admired the shrewd common sense and understanding
of human nature with which the Governor sorted out conflicting strong human
passions and suggested modus operandi for getting along together. A man who
could maintain a working degree of peace in such matters did not need a legal
education.
The Governor held office by election and
was advised by an elected council. It was Wingate's private opinion that the
Governor would have risen to the top in any society. The man had boundless
energy, great gusto for living, a ready thunderous laugh-and the courage and
capacity for making decisions. He was a 'natural'.
The three runaways were given a couple of
weeks in which to get their bearings and find some job in which they could make
themselves useful and self-supporting. Jimmie stayed with his crock, now
confiscated for the community, but which still required a driver. There were
other crockers available who probably would have liked the job, but there was
tacit consent that the man who brought it in should drive it, if he wished.
Satchel found a billet in the fields, doing much the same work he had done for
Van Huysen. He told Wingate that he was 'actually having to work harder;
nevertheless he liked it better because the conditions were, as he put it.
'looser'.
Wingate detested the idea of going back to
agricultural work. He had no rational excuse, it was simply that he hated it.
His radio experience at last stood him in good stead. The community had a
jury-rigged, low-power radio on which a constant listening watch was kept, but
which was rarely used for transmission because of the danger of detection.
Earlier runaway slave camps had been wiped out by the company police through
careless use of radio. Nowadays they hardly dared use it, except in extreme
emergency.
But they needed radio. The grapevine
telegraph maintained through the somewhat slap-happy help of the little people
enabled them to keep some contact with the other fugitive communities with
which they were loosely confederated, but it was not really fast, and. any but
the simplest of messages were distorted out of recognition.
Wingate was assigned to the community
radio when it was discovered that he had appropriate technical knowledge. The
previous operator had been lost in the bush. His opposite number was a pleasant
old codger, known as Doc, who could listen for signals but who knew nothing of
upkeep and repair.
Wingate threw himself into the job of
overhauling the antiquated installation. The problems presented by lack of
equipment, the necessity of 'making do', gave him a degree of happiness he had
not known since he was a boy, but was not aware of it.
He was intrigued by the problem of safety
in radio communication. An idea, derived from some account of the pioneer days
in radio, gave him a lead. His installation, like all others, communicated by
frequency modulation. Somewhere he had seen a diagram for a totally obsolete
type of transmitter, an amplitude modulator. He did not have much to go on, but
he worked out a circuit which he believed would oscillate in that fashion and
which could be hooked up from the gear at hand.
He asked the Governor for permission to
attempt to build it. 'Why not? Why not?' the Governor roared at him. 'I haven't
the slightest idea what you are talking about son, but if you think you can
build a radio that the company can't detect, go right ahead. You don't have to
ask me; it's your pigeon.'
'I'll have to put the station out of
commission for sending.'
'Why not?'
The problem had more knots in it than he
had thought. But he labored at it with the clumsy but willing assistance of
Doc. His first hookup failed; his forty-third attempt five weeks later worked.
Doc, stationed some miles out in the bush, reported himself able to hear the
broadcast via a small receiver constructed for the purpose, whereas Wingate
picked up nothing whatsoever on the conventional receiver located in the same
room with the experimental transmitter.
In the meantime he worked on his book.
Why he was writing a book he could not
have told you. Back on Earth it could have been termed a political pamphlet
against the colonial system. Here there was no one to convince of his thesis,
nor had he any expectation of ever being able to present it to a reading
public. Venus was his home. He knew that there was no chance for him ever to
return: the only way lay through Adonis, and there, waiting for him, were
warrants for half the crimes in the calendar, contract-jumping, theft,
kidnapping, criminal abandonment, conspiracy, subverting government. If the
company police ever laid hands on him, they would jail him and lose the key.
No, the book arose, not from any
expectation of publication, but from a half-subconscious need to arrange his
thoughts. He had suffered a complete upsetting of all the evaluations by which
he had lived; for his mental health it was necessary that he formulate new
ones. It was natural to his orderly, if somewhat unimaginative, mind that he
set his reasons and conclusions forth in writing.
Somewhat diffidently he offered the
manuscript to Doc. He had learned that the nickname title had derived from the
man's former occupation on Earth; he had been a professor of economics and
philosophy in one of the smaller universities. Doc had even offered a partial
explanation of his presence on Venus. 'A little matter involving one of my
women students,' he confided. 'My wife took an unsympathetic view of the matter
and so did the board of regents. The board had long considered my opinions a
little too radical.'
'Were they?'
'Heavens, no! I was a rockbound
conservative. But I had an unfortunate tendency to express conservative
principles in realistic rather than allegorical language.'
'I suppose you're a radical now.'
Doc's eyebrows lifted slightly. 'Not at
all. Radical and conservative are terms of emotional attitudes, not
sociological opinions.'
Doc accepted the manuscript, read it
through, and returned it without comment. But Wingate pressed him for an
opinion. 'Well, my boy, if you insist-'
'I do.'
'I would say that you have fallen into the
commonest fallacy of all in dealing with social and economic subjects-the
"devil theory".'
'Huh?'
'You have attributed conditions of
villainy that simply result from stupidity. Colonial slavery is nothing new; it
is the inevitable result of imperial expansion, the automatic result of an
antiquated financial structure -,
'I pointed out the part the banks played
in my book.'
'No, no, no! You think bankers are
scoundrels. They are not. Nor are company officials, nor patrons, nor the
governing classes back on Earth. Men are constrained by necessity and build up
rationalizations to account for their acts. It is not even cupidity. Slavery is
economically unsound, nonproductive, but men drift into it whenever the
circumstances compel it. A different financial system-but that's another
story.'
'I still think it's rooted in human
cussedness,' Wingate said stubbornly.
'Not cussedness-simply stupidity. I can't
prove it to you, but you will learn.'
The
success of the 'silent radio' caused the Governor to send Wingate on a long
swing around the other camps of the free federation to help them rig new
equipment and to teach them how to use it. He spent four hard-working and
soul-satisfying weeks, and finished with the warm knowledge that he had done more
to consolidate the position of the free men against their enemies than could be
done by winning a pitched battle.
When he returned to his home community, he
found Sam Houston Jones waiting there.
Wingate
broke into a run. 'Sam!' he shouted. 'Sam! Sam!' He grabbed his hand, pounded
him on the back, and yelled at him the affectionate insults that sentimental
men use in attempting to cover up their weakness. 'Sam, you old scoundrel! When
did you get here? How did you escape? And how the devil did you manage to come
all the way from South Pole? Were you transferred before you escaped?'
'Howdy, Hump,' said Sam. 'Now one at a
time, and not so fast.'
But Wingate bubbled on. 'My, but it's good
to see your ugly face, fellow. And am 1 glad you came here-this is a great
place. We've got the most up-and-coming little state in the Whole federation.
You'll like it. They're a great bunch -'
'What are you?' Jones asked, eyeing him.
'President of the local chamber of commerce?'
Wingate looked at him, and then laughed.
'I get it. But seriously, you will like it. Of course, it's a lot different
from what you were used to back on Earth-but that's all past and done with. No
use crying over spilt milk, eh?'
'Wait a minute. You are under a
misapprehension, Hump. Listen. I'm not an escaped slave. I'm here to take you
back.'
Wingate opened his mouth, closed it, then
opened it again. 'But Sam,' he said, 'that's impossible. You don't know.'
'I think I do.'
'But you don't. There's no going back for
me. If I did, I'd have to face trial, and they've got me dead to rights. Even
if I threw myself on the mercy of the court and managed to get off with a light
sentence, it would be twenty years before I'd be a free man. No, Sam, it's
impossible. You don't know the things I'm charged with.'
'I don't, eh? It's cost me a nice piece of
change to clear them up.'
'Huh?'
'I know how you escaped. I know you stole
a crock and kidnapped your patron and got two other clients to run with you. It
took my best blarney and plenty of folding money to fix it. So help me,
Hump-Why didn't you pull something mild, like murder, or rape, or robbing a
post office?'
'Well, now, Sam-I didn't do any of those
things to cause you trouble. I had counted you out of my calculations. I was on
my own. I'm sorry about the money.'
'Forget it. Money isn't an item with me.
I'm filthy with the stuff. You know that. It comes from exercising care in the
choice of parents. I was just pulling your leg and it came off in my hand.'
'Okay. Sorry.' Wingate's grin was a little
forced. Nobody likes charity. 'But tell me what happened. I'm still in the
dark.'
'Right.' Jones had been as much surprised
and distressed at being separated from Wingate on grounding as Wingate had
been. But there had been nothing for him to do about it until he received
assistance from Earth. He had spent long weeks as a metal worker at South Pole,
waiting and wondering why 'his sister did not answer his call for help. He had
written letters to her to supplement his first radiogram, that being the only
type of communication he could afford, but the days crept past with no answer.
When a message did arrive from her the
mystery was cleared up. She had not received his radio to Earth promptly,
because she, too, was aboard the Evening Star-in the first class cabin,
traveling, as was her custom, in a stateroom listed under her maid's name. 'It
was the family habit of avoiding publicity that stymied us,' Jones explained.
'If I hadn't sent the radio to her rather than the family lawyers, or if she
had been known by name to the purser, we would have gotten together the first
day.' The message had not been relayed to her on Venus because the bright
planet had by that time crawled to superior opposition on the far side of the
sun from the Earth. For a matter of sixty earth days there was no
communication, Earth to Venus. The message had rested, recorded but still
scrambled, in the hands of the family firm, until she could be reached.
When she received it, she started a small
tornado. Jones had been released, the liens against his contract paid, and
ample credit posted to his name on Venus, in less than twenty-four hours. 'So
that was that,' concluded Jones, 'except that I've got to explain to big sister
when I get home just how I got into this mess. She'll burn my ears.'
Jones had charted a rocket for North Pole
and had gotten on Wingate's trail at once. 'If you had held on one more day, I
would have picked you up. We retrieved your ex-patron about a mile from his
gates.'
'So the old villain made it. I'm glad of
that.'
'And a good job, too. If he hadn't I might
never have been able ~o square you. He was pretty well done in, and his heart
was kicking up plenty. Do you know that abandonment is a capital offence on
this planet-with a mandatory death sentence if the victim dies?'
Wingate nodded. 'Yeah, I know. Not that I
ever heard of a patron being gassed for it, if the corpse was a client. But
that's beside the point. Go ahead.'
'Well, he was plenty sore. I don't blame
him, though I don't blame you, either. Nobody wants to be sold South, and I
gather that was what you expected. Well, I paid him for his crock, and I paid
him for your contract-take a look at me, I'm your new owner!-and I paid for the
contracts of your two friends as well. Still he wasn't satisfied. I finally had
to throw in a first-class passage for his daughter back to Earth, and promise
to find her a job. She's a big dumb ox, but I guess the family can stand
another retainer. Anyhow, old son, you're a free man. The only remaining
question is whether or not the Governor will let us leave here. It seems it's
not done.'
'No, that's a point. Which reminds me-how
did you locate the place?'
'A spot of detective work too long to go
into now. That's what took me so long. Slaves don't like to talk. Anyhow, we've
a date to talk to the Governor tomorrow.'
Wingate took a long time to get to sleep.
After his first burst of jubilation he began to wonder. Did he want to go back?
To return to the law, to citing technicalities in the interest of whichever
side employed him, to meaningless social engagements, to the empty, sterile,
bunkum-fed life of the fat and prosperous class he had moved among and
served-did he want that, he, who had fought and worked with men? It seemed to
him that his anachronistic little 'invention' in radio had been of more worth
than all he had ever done on Earth.
Then he recalled his book.
Perhaps he could get it published. Perhaps
he could expose this disgraceful, inhuman system which sold men into legal
slavery. He was really wide awake now. There was a thing to do! That was his
job-to go back to Earth and plead the cause of the colonists. Maybe there was
destiny that shapes men's lives after all. He was just the man to do it, the
right social background, the proper training. He could make himself heard.
He fell asleep, and dreamt of cool, dry
breezes, of clear blue sky. Of moonlight...
Satchel
and Jimmie decided to stay, even though Jones had been able to fix it up with
the Governor. 'It's like this,' said Satchel. 'There's nothing for us back on
Earth, or we wouldn't have shipped in the first place. And you can't undertake
to support a couple of deadheads. And this isn't such a bad place. It's going
to be something someday. We'll stay and grow up with it.'
They handled the crock which carried Jones
and Wingate to Adonis. There was no hazard in it, as Jones was now officially
their patron. What the authorities did not know they could not act on. The
crock returned to the refugee community loaded with a cargo which Jones
insisted on calling their ransom. As a matter of fact, the opportunity to send
an agent to obtain badly needed supplies-one who could do so safely and without
arousing the suspicions of the company authorities-had been the determining
factor in the Governor's unprecedented decision to risk compromising the
secrets of his constituency. He had been frankly not interested in Wingate's
plans to agitate for the abolishment of the slave trade.
Saying good-bye to Satchel and Jimmie was
something Wingate found embarrassing and unexpectedly depressing.
For the
first two weeks after grounding on Earth both Wingate and Jones were too busy
to see much of each other. Wingate had gotten his manuscript in shape on the
return trip and had spent the time getting acquainted with the waiting rooms of
publishers. Only one had shown any interest beyond a form letter of rejection.
'I'm sorry, old man,' that one had told
him. 'I'd like to publish your book, in spite of its controversial nature, if
it stood any chance at all of success. But it doesn't. Frankly, it has no
literary merit whatsoever. I would as soon read a brief.'
'I think I understand,' Wingate answered
sullenly. 'A big publishing house can't afford to print anything which might
offend the powers-that-be.'
The publisher took his cigar from his
mouth and looked at the younger man before replying. 'I suppose I should resent
that,' he said quietly, 'but I won't. That's a popular misconception. The
powers-that-be, as you call them, do not resort to suppression in this country.
We publish what the public will buy. We're in business for that purpose.
'I was about to suggest, if you will
listen, a means of making your book saleable. You need a collaborator, somebody
that knows the writing game and can put some guts in it.'
Jones called the day that Wingate got his
revised manuscript back from his ghost writer. 'Listen to this, Sam,' he
pleaded. 'Look, what the dirty so-and-so has done to my book. Look.
- I heard again the crack of the
overseer's whip. The frail body of my mate shook under the lash. He gave one
cough and slid slowly under the waist-deep water, dragged down by his
chains." Honest, Sam, did you ever see such drivel? And look at the new
title: "I Was a Slave on Venus". It sounds like a confession
magazine.'
Jones nodded without replying. 'And listen
to this,' Wingate went on, '"-crowded like cattle in the enclosure, their
naked bodies gleaming with sweat, the women slaves shrank from the-"Oh,
hell, I can't go on!'
'Well, they did wear nothing but harness.'
'Yes, yes-but that has nothing to do with
the case. Venus costume is a necessary concomitant of the weather. There's no
excuse to leer about it. He's turned my book into a damned sex show. And he had
the nerve to defend his actions. He claimed that social pamphleteering is
dependent on extravagant language.'
'Well, maybe he's got something.
Gulliver's Travels certainly has some racy passages, and the whipping scenes in
Uncle Tom's Cabin aren't anything to hand a kid to read. Not to mention Grapes
of Wrath.'
'Well, I'm damned if I'll resort to that
kind of cheap sensationalism. I've got a perfectly straightforward case that
anyone can understand.'
'Have you now?' Jones took his pipe out of
his mouth. 'I've been wondering how long it would take you to get your eyes
opened. What is your case? It's nothing new; it happened in the Old South, it
happened again in California, in Mexico, in Australia, in South Africa. Why?
Because in any expanding free-enterprise economy which does not have a money
system designed to fit its requirements the use of mother-country capital to
develop the colony inevitably results in subsistence level wages at home and
slave labor in the colonies. The rich get richer and the poor get poorer, and
all the good will in the world on the part of the so-called ruling classes
won't change it, because the basic problem is one requiring scientific analysis
and a mathematical mind. Do you think you can explain those issues to the
general public?'
'I can try.'
'How far did I get when I tried to explain
them to you-before you had seen the results? And you are a smart hombre. No,
Hump, these things are too difficult to explain to people and too abstract to
interest them. You spoke before a women's club the other day, didn't you?'
'Yes.'
'How did you make out?'
'Well. . . the chairwoman called me up
beforehand and asked me to hold my talk down to ten minutes, as their national
president was to be there and they would be crowded for time.'
'Hmm . . . you see where your great social
message rates in competition. But never mind. Ten minutes is long enough to
explain the issue to a person if they have the capacity to understand it. Did
you sell anybody?'
'Well.. . I'm not sure.'
'You're darn tootin' you're not sure.
Maybe they clapped for you but how many of them came up afterwards and wanted
to sign checks? No, Hump, sweet reasonableness won't get you anywhere in this
racket. To make yourself 'heard you have to be a demagogue, or a rabble-rousing
political preacher like this fellow Nehemiah Scudder. We're going merrily to
hell and it won't stop until it winds up in a crash.'
'But-Oh, the devil! What can we do about
it?'
'Nothing. Things are bound to get a whole
lot worse before they can get any better. Let's have a drink.'
The
Menace from Earth
My name is Holly Jones and I'm fifteen.
I'm very intelligent but it doesn't show, because I look like an underdone
angel. Insipid.
I was born right here in Luna City, which
seems to surprise Earthside types. Actually, I'm third generation; my
grandparents pioneered in Site One, where the Memorial is. I live with my
parents in Artemis Apartments, the new co-op in Pressure Five, eight hundred
feet down near City Hall. But I'm not there much; I'm too busy.
Mornings I attend Tech High and afternoons
I study or go flying with Jeff Hardesty -- he's my partner -- or whenever a
tourist ship is in I guide groundhogs. This day the Gripsholm grounded at noon
so I went straight from school to American Express.
The first gaggle of tourists was trickling
in from Quarantine but I didn't push forward as Mr. Dorcas, the manager, knows
I'm the best. Guiding is just temporary (I'm really a spaceship designer), but
if you're doing a job you ought to do it well.
Mr. Dorcas spotted me. "Holly! Here,
please. Miss Brentwood, Holly Jones will be your guide."
"'Holly,'" she repeated.
"What a quaint name. Are you really a guide, dear?"
I'm tolerant of groundhogs -- some of my
best friends are from Earth. As Daddy says, being born on Luna is luck, not
judgment, and most people Earthside are stuck there. After all, Jesus and
Gautama Buddha and Dr. Einstein were all groundhogs.
But they can be irritating. If high school
kids weren't guides, whom could they hire? "My license says so," I
said briskly and looked her over the way she was looking me over.
Her face was sort of familiar and I
thought perhaps I had seen her picture in those society things you see in
Earthside magazines -- one of the rich playgirls we get too many of. She was
almost loathsomely lovely. . . nylon skin, soft, wavy, silverblond hair, basic
specs about 35-24-34 and enough this and that to make me feel like a matchstick
drawing, a low intimate voice and everything necessary to make plainer females think
about pacts with the Devil. But I did not feel apprehensive; she was a
groundhog and groundhogs don't count.
"All city guides are girls," Mr.
Dorcas explained. "Holly is very competent."
"Oh, I'm sure," she answered
quickly and went into tourist routine number one: surprise that a guide was
needed just to find her hotel, amazement at no taxicabs, same for no porters,
and raised eyebrows at the prospect of two girls walking alone through "an
underground city."
Mr. Dorcas was patient, ending with:
"Miss Brentwood, Luna City is the only metropolis in the Solar System
where a woman is really safe -- no dark alleys, no deserted neighborhoods, no
criminal element."
I didn't listen; I just held out my tariff
card for Mr. Dorcas to stamp and picked up her bags. Guides shouldn't carry
bags and most tourists are delighted to experience the fact that their
thirty-pound allowance weighs only five pounds. But I wanted to get her moving.
We were in the tunnel outside and me with
a foot on the slidebelt when she stopped. "I forgot! I want a city
map."
"None available."
"Really?"
"There's only one. That's why you
need a guide."
"But why don't they supply them? Or
would that throw you guides out of work?"
See? "You think guiding is makework?
Miss Brentwood, labor is so scarce they'd hire monkeys if they could."
"Then why not print maps?"
"Because Luna City isn't flat
like--" I almost said, "--groundhog cities," but I caught
myself.
"--like Earthside cities," I
went on. "All you saw from space was the meteor shield. Underneath it
spreads out and goes down for miles in a dozen pressure zones."
"Yes, I know, but why not a map for
each level?"
Groundhogs always say, "Yes, I know,
but--"
"I can show you the one city map.
It's a stereo tank twenty feet high and even so all you see clearly are big
things like the Hall of the Mountain King and hydroponics farms and the Bats'
Cave."
"'The Bats' Cave,'" she
repeated. "That's where they fly, isn't it?"
"Yes, that's where we fly."
"Oh, I want to see it!"
"OK. It first. . . or the city
map?"
She decided to go to her hotel first. The
regular route to the Zurich is to slide up the west through Gray's Tunnel past
the Martian Embassy, get off at the Mormon Temple, and take a pressure lock
down to Diana Boulevard. But I know all the shortcuts; we got off at
Macy-Gimbel Upper to go down their personnel hoist. I thought she would enjoy
it.
But when I told her to grab a hand grip as
it dropped past her, she peered down the shaft and edged back. "You're joking."
I was about to take her back the regular
way when a neighbor of ours came down the hoist. I said, "Hello, Mrs.
Greenberg," and she called back, "Hi, Holly. How are your
folks?"
Susie Greenberg is more than plump. She
was hanging by one hand with young David tucked in her other arm and holding
the _Daily Lunatic_, reading as she dropped. Miss Brentwood stared, bit her
lip, and said, "How do I do it?"
I said, "Oh, use both hands; I'll
take the bags." I tied the handles together with my hanky and went first.
She was shaking when we got to the bottom.
"Goodness, Holly, how do you stand it? Don't you get homesick?"
Tourist question number six . . . I said,
"I've been to Earth," and let it drop. Two years ago Mother made me
visit my aunt in Omaha and I was _miserable_ -- hot and cold and dirty and
beset by creepy-crawlies. I weighed a ton and I ached and my aunt was always
chivvying me to go outdoors and exercise when all I wanted was to crawl into a
tub and be quietly wretched. And I had hay fever. Probably you've never heard
of hay fever -- you don't die but you wish you could.
I was supposed to go to a girls' boarding
school but I phoned Daddy and told him I was desperate and he let me come home.
What groundhogs can't understand is that they live in savagery. But groundhogs
are groundhogs and loonies are loonies and never the twain shall meet.
Like all the best hotels the Zurich is in
Pressure One on the west side so that it can have a view of Earth. I helped
Miss Brentwood register with the roboclerk and found her room; it had its own
port. She went straight to it, began staring at Earth and going _ooh!_ and
_ahh!_
I glanced past her and saw that it was a
few minutes past thirteen; sunset sliced straight down the tip of India --
early enough to snag another client. "Will that be all, Miss
Brentwood?"
Instead of answering she said in an awed
voice, "Holly, isn't that the most beautiful sight you ever saw?"
"It's nice," I agreed. The view
on that side is monotonous except for Earth hanging in the sky -- but Earth is
what tourists always look at even though they've just left it. Still, Earth is
pretty. The changing weather is interesting if you don't have to be in it. Did
you ever endure a summer in Omaha?
"It's gorgeous," she whispered.
"Sure," I agreed.
"Do you want to go somewhere? Or will you sign my card?"
"What? Excuse me, I was daydreaming.
No, not right now -- yes, I do! Holly, I want to go out _there_! I must! Is
there time? How much longer will it be light?"
"Huh? It's two days to sunset."
She looked startled. "How quaint.
Holly, can you get us space suits? I've got to go outside."
I didn't wince -- I'm used to tourist
talk. I suppose a pressure suit looked like a space suit to them. I simply
said, "We girls aren't licensed outside. But I can phone a friend."
Jeff Hardesty is my partner in spaceship
designing, so I throw business his way. Jeff is eighteen and already in Goddard
Institute, but I'm pushing hard to catch up so that we can set up offices for
our firm: "Jones & Hardesty, Spaceship Engineers." I'm very
bright in mathematics, which is everything in space engineering, so I'll get my
degree pretty fast. Meanwhile we design ships anyhow.
I didn't tell Miss Brentwood this, as
tourists think that a girl my age can't possibly be a spaceship designer.
Jeff has arranged his class to let him
guide on Tuesdays and Thursdays; he waits at West City Lock and studies between
clients. I reached him on the lockmaster's phone. Jeff grinned and said,
"Hi, Scale Model."
"Hi, Penalty Weight. Free to take a
client?"
"Well, I was supposed to guide a
family party, but they're late."
"Cancel them; Miss Brentwood . . .
step into pickup, please. This is Mr. Hardesty."
Jeff's eyes widened and I felt uneasy. But
it did not occur to me that Jeff could be attracted by a groundhog. . . even
though it is conceded that men are robot slaves of their body chemistry in such
matters. I knew she was exceptionally decorative, but it was unthinkable that
Jeff could be captivated by any groundhog, no matter how well designed. They
don't speak our language!
I am not romantic about Jeff; we are
simply partners. But anything that affects Jones & Hardesty affects me.
When we joined him at West Lock he almost
stepped on his tongue in a disgusting display of adolescent rut. I was ashamed
of him and, for the first time, apprehensive. Why are males so childish?
Miss Brentwood didn't seem to mind his
behavior. Jeff is a big hulk; suited up for outside he looks like a Frost Giant
from _Das Rheingold_; she smiled up at him and thanked him for changing his
schedule. He looked even sillier and told her it was a pleasure.
I keep my pressure suit at West Lock so
that when I switch a client to Jeff he can invite me to come along for the
walk. This time he hardly spoke to me after that platinum menace was in sight.
But I helped her pick out a suit and took her into the dressing room and fitted
it. Those rental suits take careful adjusting or they will pinch you in tender
places once out in vacuum. . . besides there are things about them that one
girl ought to explain to another.
When I came out with her, not wearing my
own, Jeff didn't even ask why I hadn't suited up -- he took her arm and started
toward the lock. I had to butt in to get her to sign my tariff card.
The days that followed were the longest of
my life. I saw Jeff only once . . . on the slidebelt in Diana Boulevard, going
the other way. She was with him.
Though I saw him but once, I knew what was
going on. He was cutting classes and three nights running he took her to the
Earthview Room of the Duncan Hines. None of my business! -- I hope she had more
luck teaching him to dance than I had. Jeff is a free citizen and if he wanted
to make an utter fool of himself neglecting school and losing sleep over an
upholstered groundhog that was his business.
But he should not have neglected the
firm's business!
Jones & Hardesty had a tremendous
backlog, because we were designing Starship _Prometheus_. This project we had
been slaving over for a year, flying not more than twice a week in order to
devote time to it -- and that's a sacrifice.
Of course you can't build a starship
today, because of the power plant. But Daddy thinks that there will soon be a
technological break-through and mass-conversion power plants will be built --
which means starships. Daddy ought to know -- he's Luna Chief Engineer for
Space Lanes and Fermi Lecturer at Goddard Institute. So Jeff and I are
designing a self-supporting interstellar ship on that assumption: quarters, auxiliaries,
surgery, labs -- everything.
Daddy thinks it's just practice but Mother
knows better -- Mother is a mathematical chemist for General Synthetics of Luna
and is nearly as smart as I am. She realizes that Jones & Hardesty plans to
be ready with a finished proposal while other designers are still floundering.
Which was why I was furious with Jeff for
wasting time over this creature. We had been working every possible chance.
Jeff would show up after dinner, we would finish our homework, then get down to
real work, the _Prometheus_. . . checking each other's computations, fighting
bitterly over details, and having a wonderful time. But the very day I
introduced him to Ariel Brentwood, he failed to appear. I had finished my
lessons and was wondering whether to start or wait for him -- we were making a
radical change in power plant shielding -- when his mother phoned me.
"Jeff asked me to call you, dear. He's having dinner with a tourist client
and can't come over."
Mrs. Hardesty was watching me so I looked
puzzled and said, "Jeff thought I was expecting him? He has his dates
mixed." I don't think she believed me; she agreed too quickly.
All that week I was slowly convinced
against my will that Jones & Hardesty was being liquidated. Jeff didn't break
any more dates -- how can you break a date that hasn't been made? -- but we
always went flying Thursday afternoons unless one of us was guiding. He didn't
call. Oh, I know where he was; he took her iceskating in Fingal's Cave.
I stayed home and worked on the
_Prometheus_, recalculating masses and moment arms for hydroponics and stores
on the basis of the shielding change. But I made mistakes and twice I had to
look up logarithms instead of remembering . . . I was so used to wrangling with
Jeff over everything that I just couldn't function.
Presently I looked at the name place of
the sheet I was revising. "Jones & Hardesty" it read, like all
the rest. I said to myself, "Holly Jones, quit bluffing; this may be The
End. You know that someday Jeff would fall for somebody."
"Of course. . . but not a
_groundhog_."
"But he _did_. What kind of an
engineer are you if you can't face facts? She's beautiful and rich -- she'll
get her father to give him a job Earthside. You hear me? _Earthside!_ So you
look for another partner. . . or go into business on your own."
I erased "Jones & Hardesty"
and lettered "Jones & Company" and stared at it. Then I started
to erase that, too -- but it smeared; I had dripped a tear on it. Which was
ridiculous!
The following Tuesday both Daddy and
Mother were home for lunch which was unusual as Daddy lunches at the spaceport.
Now Daddy can't even see you unless you're a spaceship but that day he picked
to notice that I had dialed only a salad and hadn't finished it. "That plate
is about eight hundred calories short," he said, peering at it. "You
can't boost without fuel -- aren't you well?"
"Quite well, thank you," I
answered with dignity.
"Mmm . . . now that I think back,
you've been moping for several days. Maybe you need a checkup." He looked
at Mother.
"I do not either need a
checkup!" I had _not_ been moping -- doesn't a woman have a right not to
chatter?
But I hate to have doctors poking at me so
I added, "It happens I'm eating lightly because I'm going flying this
afternoon. But if you insist, I'll order pot roast and potatoes and sleep
insead!"
"Easy, punkin'," he answered
gently. "I didn't mean to intrude. Get yourself a snack when you're
through . . . and say hello to Jeff for me."
I simply answered, "OK," and
asked to be excused; I was humiliated by the assumption that I couldn't fly
without Mr. Jefferson Hardesty but did not wish to discuss it.
Daddy called after me, "Don't be late
for dinner," and Mother said, "Now, Jacob--" and to me,
"Fly until you're tired, dear; you haven't been getting much exercise.
I'll leave your dinner in the warmer. Anything you'd like?"
"No, whatever you dial for
yourself." I just wasn't interested in food, which isn't like me. As I
headed for Bats' Cave I wondered if I had caught something. But my cheeks
didn't feel warm and my stomach wasn't upset even if I wasn't hungry.
Then I had a horrible thought. Could it be
that I was jealous? _Me?_
It was unthinkable. I am not romantic; I
am a career woman. Jeff had been my partner and pal, and under my guidance he
could have become a great spaceship designer, but our relationship was
straightforward . . . a mutual respect for each other's abilities, with never
any of that lovey-dovey stuff. A career woman can't afford such things -- why
look at all the professional time Mother had lost over having me!
No, I couldn't be jealous; I was simply
worried sick because my partner had become involved with a groundhog. Jeff
isn't bright about women and, besides, he's never been to Earth and has
illusions about it. If she lured him Earthside, Jones & Hardesty was
finished.
And somehow, "Jones &
Company" wasn't a substitute: the _Prometheus_ might never be built.
I was at Bats' Cave when I reached this
dismal conclusion. I didn't feel like flying but I went to the locker room and
got my wings anyhow.
Most of the stuff written about Bats' Cave
gives a wrong impression. It's the air storage tank for the city, just like all
the colonies have -- the place where the scavenger pumps, deep down, deliver
the air until it's needed. We just happen to be lucky enough to have one big
enough to fly in. But it never was built, or anything like that; it's just a
big volcanic bubble, two miles across, and if it had broken through, way back
when, it would have been a crater.
Tourists sometimes pity us loonies because
we have no chance to swim. Well, I tried it in Omaha and got water up my nose
and scared myself silly. Water is for drinking, not playing in; I'll take
flying. I've heard groundhogs say, oh yes, they had "flown" many
times. But that's not _flying_. I did what they talk about, between White Sands
and Omaha. I felt awful and got sick. Those things aren't safe.
I left my shoes and skirt in the locker
room and slipped my tail surfaces on my feet, then zipped into my wings and got
someone to tighten the shoulder straps. My wings aren't readymade condors; they
are Storer-Gulls, custom-made for my weight distribution and dimensions. I've
cost Daddy a pretty penny in wings, outgrowing them so often, but these latest
I bought myself with guide fees.
They're lovely -- titanalloy struts as
light and strong as bird bones, tension-compensated wrist-pinion and shoulder
joints, natural action in the alula slots, and automatic flap action in
stalling. The wing skeleton is dressed in styrene feather-foils with individual
quilling of scapulars and primaries. They almost fly themselves.
I folded my wings and went into the lock.
While it was cycling I opened my left wing and thumbed the alula control -- I had
noticed a tendency to sideslip the last time I was airborne. But the alula
opened properly and I decided I must have been overcontrolling, easy to do with
Storer-Gulls; they're extremely maneuverable. Then the door showed green and I
folded the wing and hurried out, while glancing at the barometer. Seventeen
pounds -- two more than Earth sea-level and nearly twice what we use in the
city; even an ostrich could fly in that. I perked up and felt sorry for all
groundhogs, tied down by six times proper weight, who never, never, never could
fly.
Not even I could, on Earth. My wing
loading is less than a pound per square foot, as wings and all I weigh less
than twenty pounds. Earthside that would be over a hundred pounds and I could
flap forever and never get off the ground.
I felt so good that I forgot about Jeff
and his weakness. I spread my wings, ran a few steps, warped for lift and
grabbed air -- lifted my feet and was airborne.
I sculled gently and let myself glide
towards the air intake at the middle of the floor -- the Baby's Ladder, we call
it, because you can ride the updraft clear to the roof, half a mile above, and
never move a wing. When I felt it I leaned right, spoiling with right
primaries, corrected, and settled in a counterclockwise soaring glide and let
it carry me toward the roof.
A couple of hundred feet up, I looked
around. The cave was almost empty, not more than two hundred in the air and
half that number perched or on the ground -- room enough for didoes. So as soon
as I was up five hundred feet I leaned out of the updraft and began to beat.
Gliding is no effort but flying is as hard work as you care to make it. In
gliding I support a mere ten pounds on each arm -- shucks, on Earth you work
harder than that lying in bed. The lift that keeps you in the air doesn't take
any work; you get it free from the shape of your wings just as long as there is
air pouring past them.
Even without an updraft all a level glide
takes is gentle sculling with your finger tips to maintain air speed; a feeble
old lady could do it. The lift comes from differential air pressures but you
don't have to understand it; you just scull a little and the air supports you,
as if you were lying in an utterly perfect bed. Sculling keeps you moving
forward just like sculling a rowboat. . . or so I'm told; I've never been in a
rowboat. I had a chance to in Nebraska but I'm not that foolhardy.
But when you're really flying, you scull
with forearms as well as hands and add power with your shoulder muscles.
Instead of only the outer quills of your primaries changing pitch (as in
gliding), now your primaries and secondaries clear back to the joint warp
sharply on each downbeat and recovery; they no longer lift, they force you
forward -- while your weight is carried by your scapulars, up under your
armpits.
So you fly faster, or climb, or both,
through controlling the angle of attack with your feet -- with the tail
surfaces you wear on your feet, I mean.
Oh dear, this sounds complicated and isn't
-- you just do it. You fly exactly as a bird flies. Baby birds can learn it and
they aren't very bright. Anyhow, it's easy as breathing after you learn.. . and
more fun than you can imagine!
I climbed to the roof with powerful beats,
increasing my angle of attack and slotting my alulae for lift without burble --
climbing at an angle that would stall most fliers. I'm little but it's all
muscle and I've been flying since I was six. Once up there I glided and looked
around. Down at the floor near the south wall tourists were trying glide wings
-- if you call those things "wings." Along the west wall the
visitors' gallery was loaded with goggling tourists. I wondered if Jeff and his
Circe character were there and decided to go down and find out.
So I went into a steep dive and swooped
toward the gallery, leveled off and flew very fast along it. I didn't spot Jeff
and his groundhoggess but I wasn't watching where I was going and overtook
another flier, almost collided. I glimpsed him just in time to stall and drop
under, and fell fifty feet before I got control. Neither of us was in danger as
the gallery is two hundred feet up, but I looked silly and it was my own fault;
I had violated a safety rule.
There aren't many rules but they are
necessary; the first is that orange wings always have the right of way --
they're beginners. This flier did not have orange wings but I was overtaking.
The flier underneath -- or being overtaken -- or nearer to wall -- or turning
counterclockwise, in that order, has the right of way.
I felt foolish and wondered who had seen
me, so I went all the way back up, made sure I had clear air, then stooped like
a hawk toward the gallery, spilling wings, lifting tail, and letting myself
fall like a rock.
I completed my stoop in front of the
gallery, lowering and spreading my tail so hard I could feel leg muscles knot
and grabbing air with both wings, alulae slotted. I pulled level in an
extremely fast glide along the gallery. I could see their eyes pop and thought
smugly, "There! That'll show 'em!"
When darn if somebody didn't stoop on me!
The blast from a flier braking right over me almost knocked me out of control.
I grabbed air and stopped a sideslip, used some shipyard words and looked
around to see who had blitzed me. I knew the black-and-gold wing pattern --
Mary Muhlenburg, my best girl friend. She swung toward me, pivoting on a wing
tip. "Hi, Holly! Scared you, didn't I?"
"You did not! You better be careful;
the flightmaster'll ground you for a month."
"Slim chance! He's down for
coffee."
I flew away, still annoyed, and started to
climb. Mary called after me, but I ignored her, thinking, "Mary my girl,
I'm going to get over you and fly you right out of the air."
That was a foolish thought as Mary flies
every day and has shoulders and pectoral muscles like Mrs. Hercules. By the
time she caught up with me I had cooled off and we flew side by side, still
climbing. "Perch?" she called out.
"Perch," I agreed. Mary has
lovely gossip and I could use a breather. We turned toward our usual perch, a
ceiling brace for flood lamps -- it isn't supposed to be a perch but the
flightmaster hardly ever comes up there.
Mary flew in ahead of me, braked and
stalled dead to a perfect landing. I skidded a little but Mary stuck out a wing
and steadied me. It isn't easy to come into a perch, especially when you have
to approach level. Two years ago a boy who had just graduated from orange wings
tried it . . . knocked off his left alula and primaries on a strut -- went
fluttering and spinning down two thousand feet and crashed. He could have saved
himself -- you can come in safely with a badly damaged wing if you spill air
with the other and accept the steeper glide, then stall as you land. But this
poor kid didn't know how; he broke his neck, dead as Icarus. I haven't used
that perch since.
We folded our wings and Mary sidled over.
"Jeff is looking for you," she said with a sly grin.
My insides jumped but I answered coolly,
"So? I didn't know he was here."
"Sure. Down there," she added,
pointing with her left wing. "Spot him?"
Jeff wears striped red and silver, but she
was pointing at the tourist guide slope, a mile away. "No."
"He's there all right." She
looked at me sidewise. "But I wouldn't look him up if I were you."
"Why not? Or for that matter, why should
I?" Mary can be exasperating.
"Huh? You always run when he
whistles. But he has that Earthside siren in tow again today; you might find it
embarrasing?"
"Mary, whatever are you talking
about?"
"Huh? Don't kid me, Holly Jones; you
know what I mean."
"I'm sure I don't," I answered
with cold dignity.
"Humph! Then you're the only person
in Luna City who doesn't. Everybody knows you're crazy about Jeff; everybody
knows she's cut you out. . . and that you are simply simmering with
jealousy."
Mary is my dearest friend but someday I'm
going to skin her for a rug. "Mary, that's preposterously ridiculous! How
can you even think such a thing?"
"Look, darling, you don't have to
pretend. I'm for you." She patted my shoulders with her secondaries.
So I pushed her over backwards. She fell a
hundred feet, straightened out, circled and climbed, and came in beside me,
still grinning. It gave me time to decide what to say.
"Mary Muhlenburg, in the first place
I am not crazy about anyone, least of all Jeff Hardesty. He and I are simply
friends. So it's utterly nonsensical to talk about me being 'jealous.' In the
second place Miss Brentwood is a lady and doesn't go around 'cutting out'
anyone, least of all me. In the third place she is simply a tourist Jeff is
guiding -- business, nothing more."
"Sure, sure," Mary agreed
placidly. "I was wrong. Still--" She shrugged her wings and shut up.
"'Still' what? Mary, dont be
mealy-mouthed."
"Mmm. . . I was wondering how you
knew I was talking about Ariel Brentwood -- since there isn't anything to
it."
"Why, you mentioned her name."
"I did not."
I thought frantically. "Uh, maybe
not. But it's perfectly simple. Miss Brentwood is a client I turned over to
Jeff myself, so I assumed that she must be the tourist you meant."
"So? I don't recall even saying she
was a tourist. But since she is just a tourist you two are splitting, why
aren't you doing the inside guiding while Jeff sticks to outside work? I
thought you guides had an agreement?"
"Huh? If he has been guiding her
inside the city, I'm not aware of it--"
"You're the only one who isn't."
"--and I'm not interested; that's up
to the grievance committee. But Jeff wouldn't take a fee for inside guiding in
any case."
"Oh, sure! -- not one he could _bank_.
Well, Holly, seeing I was wrong, why don't you give him a hand with her? She
wants to learn to glide."
Butting in on that pair was farthest from
my mind. "If Mr. Hardesty wants my help, he will ask me. In the meantime I
shall mind my own business . . . a practice I recommend to you!"
"Relax, shipmate," she answered,
unruffled. "I was doing you a favor."
"Thank you, I don't need one."
"So I'll be on my way -- got to
practice for the gymkhana." She leaned forward and dropped off. But she
didn't practice aerobatics; she dived straight for the tourist slope.
I watched her out of sight, then sneaked
my left hand out the hand slit and got at my hanky -- awkward when you are
wearing wings but the floodlights had made my eyes water. I wiped them and blew
my nose and put my hanky away and wiggled my hand back into place, then checked
everything thumbs, toes, and fingers, preparatory to dropping off.
But I didn't. I just sat there, wings
drooping, and thought. I had to admit that Mary was partly right; Jeff's head
was turned completely. . . over a _groundhog_. So sooner or later he would go
Earthside and Jones & Hardesty was finished.
Then I reminded myself that I had been
planning to be a spaceship designer like Daddy long before Jeff and I teamed
up. I wasn't dependent on anyone; I could stand alone, like Joan of Arc, or
Lise Meitner.
I felt better. . . a cold, stern pride,
like Lucifer in _Paradise Lost_.
I recognized the red and silver of Jeff's
wings while he was far off and I thought about slipping quietly away. But Jeff
can overtake me if he tries, so I decided, "Holly, don't be a fool! You've
no reason to run. . . just be coolly polite."
He landed by me but didn't sidle up.
"Hi, Decimal Point."
"Hi, Zero. Uh, stolen much
lately?"
"Just the City Bank but they made me
put it back." He frowned and added, "Holly, are you mad at me."
"Why, Jeff, whatever gave you such a
silly notion?"
"Uh. . . something Mary the Mouth
said."
"Her? Don't pay any attention to what
she says. Half of it's always wrong and she doesn't mean the rest."
"Yeah, a short circuit between her
ears. Then you aren't mad?"
"Of _course_ not. Why should I
be?"
"No reason I know of. I haven't been
around to work on the ship for a few days.. . but I've been awfully busy."
"Think nothing of it. I've been
terribly busy myself."
"Uh, that's fine. Look, Test Sample,
do me a favor. Help me out with a friend -- a client, that is -- we'll she's a
friend, too. She wants to learn to use glide wings."
I pretended to consider it. "Anyone I
know?"
"Oh, yes. Fact is, you introduced us.
Ariel Brentwood."
"'Brentwood?' Jeff, there are so many
tourists. Let me think. Tall girl? Blonde? Extremely pretty?"
He grinned like a goof and I almost pushed
him off. "That's Ariel!"
"I recall her . . . she expected me
to carry her bags. But you don't need help, Jeff. She seemed very clever. Good
sense of balance."
"Oh, yes, sure, all of that. Well,
the fact is, I want you two to know each other. She's. . . well, she's just
wonderful, Holly. A real person all the way through. You'll love her when you
know her better. Uh... this seemed like a good chance."
I felt dizzy. "Why, that's very
thoughtful, Jeff, but I doubt if she wants to know me better. I'm just a
servant she hired -- you know groundhogs."
"But she's not at all like the
ordinary groundhog. And she does want to know you better -- she _told_ me
so!"
_After you told her to think so!_ I
muttered. But I had talked myself into a corner. If I had not been hampered by
polite upbringing I would have said, "On your way, vacuum skull! I'm not
interested in your groundhog friends" -- but what I did say was, "OK,
Jeff," then gathered the fox to my bosom and dropped off into a glide.
So I taught Ariel Brentwood to
"fly." Look, those so-called wings they let tourists wear have fifty
square feet of lift surface, no controls except warp in the primaries, a
built-in dihedral to make them stable as a table, and a few meaningless degrees
of hinging to let the wearer think that he is "flying" by waving his
arms. The tail is rigid, and canted so that if you stall (almost impossible)
you land on your feet. All a tourist does is run a few yards, lift up his feet
(he can't avoid it) and slide down a blanket of air. Then he can tell his grandchildren
how he flew, really _flew_, "just like a bird."
An ape could learn to "fly" that
much.
I put myself to the humiliation of
strapping on a set of the silly things and had Ariel watch while I swung into
the Baby's Ladder and let it carry me up a hundred feet to show her that you
really and truly could "fly" with them. Then I thankfully got rid of
them, strapped her into a larger set, and put on my beautiful Storer-Gulls. I
had chased Jeff away (two instructors is too many), but when he saw her wing up,
he swooped down and landed by us.
I looked up. "You again."
"Hello, Ariel. Hi, Blip. Say, you've
got her shoulder straps too tight."
"Tut, tut," I said. "One
coach at a time, remember? If you want to help, shuck those gaudy fins and put
on some gliders then I'll use you to show how not to. Otherwise get above two
hundred feet and stay there; we don't need any dining lounge pilots."
Jeff pouted like a brat but Ariel backed
me up. "Do what teacher says, Jeff. That's a good boy."
He wouldn't put on gliders but he didn't
stay clear, either. He circled around us, watching, and got bawled out by the
flightmaster for cluttering the tourist area.
I admit Ariel was a good pupil. She didn't
even get sore when I suggested that she was rather mature across the hips to
balance well; she just said that she had noticed that I had the slimmest behind
around there and she envied me. So I quit trying to get her goat, and found
myself almost liking her as long as I kept my mind firmly on teaching. She
tried hard and learned fast -- good reflexes and (despite my dirty crack) good
balance. I remarked on it and she admitted diffidently that she had had ballet
training.
About mid-afternoon she said, "Could
I possibly try real wings?"
"Huh? Gee, Ariel, I don't think
so."
"Why not?"
There she had me. She had already done all
that could be done with those atrocious gliders. If she was to learn more, she
had to have real wings. "Ariel, it's dangerous. It's not what you've been
doing, believe me. You might get hurt, even killed."
"Would you be held responsible?"
"No. You signed a release when you
came in."
"Then I'd like to try it."
I bit my lip. If she had cracked up
without my help, I wouldn't have shed a tear -- but to let her do something too
dangerous while she was my pupil. . . well, it smacked of David and Uriah.
"Ariel, I can't stop you . . . but I should put my wings away and not have
anything to do with it."
It was her turn to bite her lip. "If
you feel that way, I can't ask you to coach me. But I still want to. Perhaps
Jeff will help me."
"He probably will," I blurted
out, "if he is as big a fool as I think he is!"
Her company face slipped but she didn't
say anything because just then Jeff stalled in beside us. "What's the
discussion?"
We both tried to tell him and confused him
for he got the idea I had suggested it, and started bawling me out. Was I
crazy? Was I trying to get Ariel hurt? Didn't I have any sense?
"_Shut up!_" I yelled, then
added quietly but firmly, "Jefferson Hardesty, you wanted me to teach your
girl friend, so I agreed. But don't butt in and don't think you can get away
with talking to me like that. Now beat it! Take wing. Grab air!"
He swelled up and said slowly, "I
absolutely forbid it."
Silence for five long counts. Then Ariel
said quietly, "Come, Holly. Let's get me some wings."
"Right, Ariel."
But they don't rent real wings. Fliers
have their own; they have to. However, there are second-hand ones for sale
because kids outgrow them, or people shift to custom-made ones, or something. I
found Mr. Schultz who keeps the key, and said that Ariel was thinking of buying
but I wouldn't let her without a tryout. After picking over forty-odd pairs I
found a set which Johnny Queveras had outgrown but which I knew were all right.
Nevertheless I inspected them carefully. I could hardly reach the finger
controls but they fitted Ariel.
While I was helping her into the tail
surfaces I said, "Ariel? This is still a bad idea."
"I know. But we can't let men think
they own us."
"I suppose not."
"They do own us, of course. But we
shouldn't let them know it." She was feeling out the tail controls.
"The big toes spread them?"
"Yes. But don't do it. Just keep your
feet together and toes pointed. Look, Ariel, you really aren't ready. Today all
you will do is glide, just as you've been doing. Promise?"
She looked me in the eye. "I'll do
exactly what you say. not even take wing unless you OK it."
"OK. Ready?"
"I'm ready."
"All right. Wups! I goofed. They
aren't orange."
"Does it matter?"
"It sure does." There followed a
weary argument because Mr. Schultz didn't want to spray them orange for a
tryout. Ariel settled it by buying them, then we had to wait a bit while the
solvent dried.
We went back to the tourist slope and I
let her glide, cautioning her to hold both alulae open with her thumbs for more
lift at slow speeds, while barely sculling with her fingers. She did fine, and
stumbled in landing only once. Jeff stuck around, cutting figure eights above
us, but we ignored him. Presently I taught her to turn in a wide, gentle bank
-- you can turn those awful glider things but it takes skill; they're only
meant for straight glide.
Finally I landed by her and said,
"Had enough?"
"I'll never have enough! But I'll
unwing if you say."
"Tired?"
"No." She glanced over her wing
at the Baby's Ladder; a dozen fliers were going up it, wings motionless,
soaring lazily. "I wish I could do that just once. It must be
heaven."
I chewed it over. "Actually, the
higher you are, the safer you are."
"Then why not?"
"Mmm . . . safer _provided_ you know
what you're doing. Going up that draft is just gliding like you've been doing.
You lie still and let it lift you half a mile high. Then you come down the same
way, circling the wall in a gentle glide. But you're going to be tempted to do
something you don't understand yet -- flap your wings, or cut some caper."
She shook her head solemnly. "I won't
do anything you haven't taught me."
I was still worried. "Look, it's only
half a mile up but you cover five miles going there and more getting down. Half
an hour at least. Will your arms take it?"
"I'm sure they will."
"Well. . . you can start down
anytime; you don't have to go all the way. Flex your arms a little now and
then, so they won't cramp. Just don't flap your wings."
"I won't."
"OK." I spread my wings.
"Follow me."
I led her into the updraft, leaned gently
right, then back left to start the counterclockwise climb, all the while
sculling very slowly so that she could keep up. Once we were in the groove I
called out, "Steady as you are!" and cut out suddenly, climbed and
took station thirty feet over and behind her. "Ariel?"
"Yes, Holly?"
"I'll stay over you. Don't crane your
neck; you don't have to watch me, I have to watch you. You're doing fine."
"I feel fine!"
"Wiggle a little. Don't stiffen up.
It's a long way to the roof. You can scull harder if you want to."
"Aye aye, Cap'n!"
"Not tired?"
"Heavens, no! Girl, I'm living!"
She giggled. "And mama said I'd never be an angel!"
I didn't answer because red-and-silver
wings came charging at me, braked suddenly and settled into the circle between
me and Ariel. Jeff's face was almost as red as his wings. "What the devil
do you think you are doing?"
"Orange wings!" I yelled.
"Keep clear!"
"Get down out of here! Both of
you!"
"Get out from between me and my
pupil. You know the rules."
"Ariel!" Jeff shouted.
"Lean out of the circle and glide down. I'll stay with you."
"Jeff Hardesty," I said
savagely, "I give you three seconds to get out from between us -- then I'm
going to report you for violation of Rule One. For the third time -- Orange
Wings!"
Jeff growled something, dipped his right
wing and dropped out of formation. The idiot sideslipped within five feet of
Ariel's wing tip. I should have reported him for that; all the room you can
give a beginner is none too much.
I said, "OK, Ariel?"
"OK, Holly. I'm sorry Jeff is
angry."
"He'll get over it. Tell me if you
feel tired."
"I'm not. I want to go all the way
up. How high are we?"
"Four hundred feet, maybe."
Jeff flew below us a while, then climbed
and flew over us. . . probably for the same reason I did: to see better. It
suited me to have two of us watching her as long as he didn't interfere; I was
beginning to fret that Ariel might not realize that the way down was going to
be as long and tiring as the way up. I was hoping she would cry uncle. I knew I
could glide until forced down by starvation. But a beginner gets tense.
Jeff stayed generally over us, sweeping
back and forth -- he's too active to glide very long -- while Ariel and I
continued to soar, winding slowly up toward the roof. It finally occurred to me
when we were about halfway up that I could cry uncle myself; I didn't have to wait
for Ariel to weaken. So I called out, "Ariel? Tired now?"
"No."
"Well, I am. Could we go down,
please?"
She didn't argue, she just said, "All
right. What am I to do?"
"Lean right and get out of the
circle." I intended to have her move out five or six hundred feet, get
into the return down draft, and circle the cave down instead of up. I glanced
up, looking for Jeff. I finally spotted him some distance away and much higher
but coming toward us. I called out, "Jeff! See you on the ground." He
might not have heard me but he would see if he didn't hear; I glanced back at
Ariel.
I couldn't find her.
Then I saw her, a hundred feet below --
flailing her wings and falling, out of control.
I didn't know how it happened. Maybe she
leaned too far, went into a sideslip and started to struggle. But I didn't try
to figure it out; I was simply filled with horror. I seemed to hang there
frozen for an hour while I watched her.
But the fact appears to be that I screamed
"Jeff!" and broke into a stoop.
But I didn't seem to fall, couldn't
overtake her. I spilled my wings completely -- but couldn't manage to fall; she
was as far away as ever.
You do start slowly, of course; our low
gravity is the only thing that makes human flying possible. Even a stone falls
a scant three feet in the first second. But the first second seemed endless.
Then I knew I was falling. I could feel
rushing air -- but I still didn't seem to close on her. Her struggles must have
slowed her somewhat, while I was in an intentional stoop, wings spilled and
raised over my head, falling as fast as possible. I had a wild notion that if I
could pull even with her, I could shout sense into her head, get her to dive,
then straighten out in a glide. But I couldn't _reach_ her.
This nightmare dragged on for hours.
Actually we didn't have room to fall for
more than twenty seconds; that's all it takes to stoop a thousand feet. But
twenty seconds can be horribly long . . . long enough to regret every foolish
thing I had ever done or said, long enough to say a prayer for us both.. . and
to say good-bye to Jeff in my heart. Long enough to see the floor rushing
toward us and know that we were both going to crash if I didn't overtake her
mighty quick.
I glanced up and Jeff was stooping right
over us but a long way up. I looked down at once.. . and I was overtaking
her... I was passing her -- _I was under her!_
Then I was braking with everything I had,
almost pulling my wings off. I grabbed air, held it, and started to beat
without ever going to level flight. I beat once, twice, three times. . . and
hit her from below, jarring us both.
Then the floor hit us.
I felt feeble and dreamily contented. I
was on my back in a dim room. I think Mother was with me and I know Daddy was.
My nose itched and I tried to scratch it, but my arms wouldn't work. I fell
asleep again.
I woke up hungry and wide awake. I was in
a hospital bed and my arms still wouldn't work, which wasn't surprising as they
were both in casts. A nurse came in with a tray. "Hungry?" she asked.
"Starved," I admitted.
"We'll fix that." She started
feeding me like a baby.
I dodged the third spoonful and demanded,
"What happened to my arms?"
"Hush," she said and gagged me
with a spoon.
But a nice doctor came in later and
answered my question. "Nothing much. Three simple fractures. At your age
you'll heal in no time. But we like your company so I'm holding you for
observation of possible internal injury."
"I'm not hurt inside," I told
him. "At least, I don't hurt."
"I told you it was just an
excuse."
"Uh, Doctor?"
"Well?"
"Will I be able to fly again?" I
waited, scared.
"Certainly. I've seen men hurt worse
get up and go three rounds."
"Oh. Well, thanks. Doctor? What
happened to the other girl? Is she. . . did she...?"
"Brentwood? She's here."
"She's right here," Ariel agreed
from the door. "May I come in?"
My jaw dropped, then I said, "Yeah.
Sure. Come in."
The doctor said, "Don't stay
long," and left. I said, "Well, sit down."
"Thanks." She hopped instead of
walked and I saw that one foot was bandaged. She got on the end of the bed.
"You hurt your foot."
She shrugged. "Nothing. A sprain and
a torn ligament. Two cracked ribs. But I would have been dead. You know why I'm
not?"
I didn't answer. She touched one of my
casts. "That's why. You broke my fall and I landed on top of you. You
saved my life and I broke both your arms."
"You don't have to thank me. I would
have done it for anybody."
"I believe you and I wasn't thanking
you. You can't thank a person for saving your life. I just wanted to make sure
you knew that I knew it."
I didn't have an answer so I said,
"Where's Jeff? Is he all right?"
"He'll be along soon. Jeff's not hurt
. . . though I'm surprised he didn't break both ankles. He stalled in beside us
so hard that he should have. But Holly . . . Holly my very dear . . . I slipped
in so that you and I could talk about him before he got here."
I changed the subject quickly. Whatever
they had given me made me feel dreamy and good, but not beyond being
embarrassed. "Ariel, what happened? You were getting along fine -- then
suddenly you were in trouble."
She looked sheepish. "My own fault.
You said we were going down, so I looked down. Really looked, I mean. Before
that, all my thoughts had been about climbing to the roof; I hadn't thought
about how far down the floor was. Then I looked down and got dizzy and panicky
and went all to pieces." She shrugged. "You were right. I wasn't
ready."
I thought about it and nodded. "I
see. But don't worry -- when my arms are well, I'll take you up again."
She touched my foot. "Dear Holly. But
I won't be flying again; I'm going back where I belong."
"Earthside?"
"Yes. I'm taking the _Billy Mitchell_
on Wednesday."
"Oh. I'm sorry."
She frowned slightly. "Are you?
Holly, you don't like me, do you?"
I was startled silly. What can you say?
Especially when it's true? "Well," I said slowly, "I don't
dislike you. I just don't know you very well."
She nodded. "And I don't know you
very well . . . even though I got to know you a lot better in a very few
seconds. But Holly listen please and don't get angry. It's about Jeff. He
hasn't treated you very well the last few days -- while I've been here, I mean.
But don't be angry with him. I'm leaving and everything will be the same."
That ripped it open and I couldn't ignore
it, because if I did, she would assume all sorts of things that weren't so. So
I had to explain. . . about me being a career woman.. . how, if I had seemed
upset, it was simply distress at breaking up the firm of Jones & Hardesty
before it even finished its first starship . how I was not in love with Jeff
but simply valued him as a friend and associate. . . but if Jones &
Hardesty couldn't carry on, then Jones & Company would. "So you see,
Ariel, it isn't necessary for you to give up Jeff. If you feel you owe me
something, just forget it. It isn't necessary."
She blinked and I saw with amazement that
she was holding back tears. "Holly, Holly. . . you don't understand at
all."
"I understand all right. I'm not a
child."
"No, you're a grown woman. . . but
you haven't found it out." She held up a finger. "One -- Jeff doesn't
love me."
"I don't believe it."
"Two. . . I don't love him."
"I don't believe that, either."
"Three . . . you say you don't love
him -- but we'll take that up when we come to it. Holly, am I beautiful?"
Changing the subject is a female trait but
I'll never learn to do it that fast. "Huh?"
"I said, 'Am I beautiful?'"
"You know darn well you are!"
"Yes. I can sing a bit and dance, but
I would get few parts if I were not, because I'm no better than a third-rate
actress. So I have to be beautiful. How old am I?"
I managed not to boggle. "Huh? Older
than Jeff thinks you are. Twenty-one, at least. Maybe twenty-two."
She sighed. "Holly, I'm old enough to
be your mother."
"Huh? I don't believe that,
either."
"I'm glad it doesn't show. But that's
why, though Jeff is a dear, there never was a chance that I could fall in love
with him. But how I feel about him doesn't matter; the important thing is that
he loves you."
"What? That's the silliest thing
you've said yet! Oh, he likes me -- or did. But that's all." I gulped.
"And it's all I want. Why, you should hear the way he talks to me."
"I have. But boys that age can't say
what they mean; they get embarrassed."
"But--"
"Wait, Holly. I saw something you
didn't because you were knocked cold. When you and I bumped, do you know what
happened?"
"Uh, no."
"Jeff arrived like an avenging angel,
a split second behind us. He was ripping his wings off as he hit, getting his
arms free. He didn't even look at me. He just stepped across me and picked you
up and cradled you in his arms, all the while bawling his eyes out."
"He did?"
"He did."
I mulled it over. Maybe the big lunk did
kind of like me, after all.
Ariel went on, "So you see, Holly,
even if you don't love him, you must be very gentle with him, because he loves
you and you can hurt him terribly."
I tried to think. Romance was still
something that a career woman should shun . . . but if Jeff really did feel
that way -- well. . . would it be compromising my ideals to marry him just to
keep him happy? To keep the firm together? Eventually, that is?
But if I did, it wouldn't be Jones &
Hardesty; it would be Hardesty & Hardesty.
Ariel was still talking: "--you might
even fall in love with him. It does happen, hon, and if it did, you'd be sorry
if you had chased him away. Some other girl would grab him; he's awfully
nice."
"But," I shut up for I heard
Jeff's step -- I can always tell it. He stopped in the door and looked at us,
frowning.
"Hi, Ariel."
"Hi, Jeff."
"Hi, Fraction." He looked me
over. "My, but you're a mess."
"You aren't pretty yourself. I hear
you have flat feet."
"Permanently. How do you brush your
teeth with those things on your arms?"
"I don't."
Ariel slid off the bed, balanced on one
foot. "Must run. See you later, kids."
"So long, Ariel."
"Good-bye, Ariel. Uh. . .
thanks."
Jeff closed the door after she hopped away,
came to the bed and said gruffly, "Hold still."
Then he put his arms around me and kissed
me.
Well, I couldn't stop him, could I? With
both arms broken? Besides, it was consonant with the new policy of the firm. I
was startled speechless because Jeff never kisses me, except birthday kisses,
which don't count. But I tried to kiss back and show that I appreciated it.
I don't know what the stuff was they had
been giving me but my ears began to ring and I felt dizzy again.
Then he was leaning over me.
"Runt," he said mournfully, "you sure give me a lot of
grief."
"You're no bargain yourself,
flathead," I answered with dignity.
"I suppose not." He looked me
over sadly. "What are you crying for?"
I didn't know that I had been. Then I
remembered why. "Oh, Jeff -- I busted my pretty wings!"
"We'll get you more. Uh, brace
yourself. I'm going to do it again."
"All right." He did.
I suppose Hardesty & Hardesty has more
rhythm than Jones & Hardesty.
It really sounds better.
'If
This Goes On-'
It was
cold on the rampart. I slapped my numbed hands together, then stopped hastily
for fear of disturbing the Prophet. My post that night was just outside his
personal apartments-a post that I had won by taking more than usual care to be
neat and smart at guard mount...but I had no wish to call attention to myself
now.
I was young then and not too bright-a
legate fresh out of West Point, and a guardsman in the Angels of the Lord, the
personal guard of the Prophet Incarnate. At birth my mother had consecrated me
to the Church and at eighteen my Uncle Absolom, a senior lay censor, had prayed
an appointment to the Military Academy for me from the Council of Elders.
West Point had suited me. Oh, I had joined
in the usual griping among classmates, the almost ritualistic complaining
common to all military life, but truthfully I enjoyed the monastic routine-up
at five, two hours of prayers and meditation, then classes and lectures in the
endless subjects of a military education, strategy and tactics, theology, mob
psychology, basic miracles. In. the afternoons we practiced with vortex guns
and blasters, drilled with tanks, and hardened our bodies with exercise.
I did not stand very high on graduation
and had not really expected to be assigned to the Angels of the Lord, even
though I had put in for it. But I had always gotten top marks in piety and
stood well enough in most of the practical subjects; I was chosen. It made me
almost sinfully proud-the holiest regiment of the Prophet's hosts, even the
privates of which were commissioned officers and whose Colonel-in-Chief was the
Prophet's Sword Triumphant, marshal of all the hosts. The day I was invested in
the shining buckler and spear worn only by the Angels I vowed to petition to
study for the priesthood as soon as promotion to captain made me eligible.
But this night, months later, though my
buckler was still shining bright, there was a spot of tarnish in my heart.
Somehow, life at New Jerusalem was not as I had imagined it while at West
Point. The Palace and Temple were shot through with intrigue and politics;
priests and deacons, ministers of state, and Palace functionaries all seemed
engaged in a scramble for power and favor at the hand of the Prophet. Even the
officers of my own corps seemed corrupted by it. Our proud motto 'Non Sihi, Sed
Dei' now had a wry flavor in my mouth.
Not that I was without sin myself. While I
had not joined in the struggle for worldly preference, I had done something
which I knew in my heart to be worse: 1 had looked with longing on a
consecrated female.
Please understand me better than I
understood myself. I was a grown man in body, an infant in experience. My own
mother was the only woman I had ever known well. As a kid in junior seminary
before going to the Point I was almost afraid of girls; my interests were
divided between my lessons, my mother, and our parish's troop of Cherubim, in
which I was a patrol leader and an assiduous winner of merit badges in
everything from woodcraft to memorizing scripture. If there had been a merit
badge to be won in the subject of girls-but of course there was not.
At the Military Academy 1 simply saw no
females, nor did I have much to confess in the way of evil thoughts. My human
feelings were pretty much still in freeze, and my occasional uneasy dreams I
regarded as temptations sent by Old Nick. But New Jerusalem is not West Point
and the Angels were neither forbidden to marry nor were we forbidden proper and
sedate association with women. True, most of my fellows did not ask permission
to marry, as it would have meant transferring to one of the regular regiments
and many of them cherished ambitions for the military priesthood-but it was not
forbidden.
Nor were the lay deaconesses who kept
house around the Temple and the Palace forbidden to marry. But most of them
were dowdy old creatures who reminded me of my aunts, hardly subjects for
romantic thoughts. I used to chat with them occasionally around the corridors,
no harm in that. Nor was I attracted especially by any of the few younger
sisters-until I met Sister Judith.
I had been on watch in this very spot more
than a month earlier. It was the first time I had stood guard outside the
Prophet's apartments and, while I was nervous when first posted, at that moment
I had been no more than alert against the possibility of the
warden-of-the-watch making his rounds.
That night a light had shone brightly far
down the inner corridor opposite my post and I had heard a sound of people
moving; I had glanced at my wrist chrono-yes, that would be the Virgins
ministering to the Prophet... - no business of mine. Each night at ten o'clock
their watch changed-their 'guard mount' I called it, though I had never seen
the ceremony and never would. All that I actually knew about it was that those
coming on duty for the next twenty-four hours drew lots at that time for the
privilege of personal attendance in the sacred presence of the Prophet
Incarnate.
I had listened briefly and had turned
away. Perhaps a quarter of an hour later a slight form engulfed in a dark cloak
had slipped past me to the parapet, there to stand and look at the stars. I had
had my blaster out at once, then had returned it sheepishly, seeing that it was
a deaconess.
I had assumed that she was a lay
deaconess; I swear that it did not occur to me that she might be a holy
deaconess. There was no rule in my order book telling me to forbid them to come
outside, but I had never heard of one doing so.
I do not think that she had seen me before
I spoke to her. 'Peace be unto you, sister.'
She had jumped and suppressed a squeal,
then had gathered her dignity to answer, "And to you, little brother.'
It was then that I had seen on her
forehead the Seal of Solomon, the mark of the personal family of the Prophet.
'Your pardon, Elder Sister. I did not see.'
'I am not annoyed.' It had seemed to me
that she invited conversation. I knew that it was not proper for us to converse
privately; her mortal being was dedicated to the Prophet just as her soul was
the Lord's, but I was young and lonely-and she was young and very pretty.
'Do you attend the Holy One this night,
Elder Sister?'
She had shaken her head at that. 'No, the
honor passed me by. My lot was not drawn.'
'It must be a great and wonderful
privilege to serve him directly.'
'No doubt, though I cannot say of my own
knowledge. My lot has never yet been drawn.' She had added impulsively, 'I'm a
little nervous about it. You see, I haven't been here long.'
Even though she .was my senior in rank,
her display of feminine weakness had touched me. 'I am sure that you will
deport yourself with credit.'
'Thank you.'
We had gone on chatting. She had been in
New Jerusalem, it developed, even less time than had I. She had been reared on
a farm in upper New York State and there she had been sealed to the Prophet at
the Albany Seminary. In turn I had told her that 1 had been born in the middle
west, not fifty miles from the Well of Truth, where the First Prophet was
incarnated. I then told her that my name was John Lyle and she had answered
that she was called Sister Judith.
I had forgotten all about the
warden-of-the-watch and his pesky rounds and was ready to chat all night, when
my chrono had chimed the quarter hour. 'Oh, dear!' Sister Judith had exclaimed.
'I should have gone straight back to my cell.' She had started to hurry away,
then had checked herself. 'You wouldn't tell on me, John Lyle?'
'Me? Oh, never!'
I had continued to think about her the
rest of the watch. When the warden did make rounds I was a shade less than
alert.
A mighty little on which to found a course
of folly, eh? A single drink is a great amount to a teetotaler; I was not able
to get Sister Judith out of my mind. In the month that followed I saw her half
a dozen times. Once I passed her on an escalator; she was going down as I was
going up. We did not even speak, but she had recognized me and smiled. I rode
that escalator all night that night in my dreams, hut I could never get off and
speak to her. The other encounters were just as trivial. Another time I heard
her voice call out to me quietly, 'Hello, John Lyle,' and I turned just in time
to see a hooded figure go past my elbow through a door. Once I watched her
feeding the swans in the moat; I did not dare approach her but I think that she
saw me.
The Temple Herald printed the duty lists
of both my service and hers. I was standing a watch in five; the Virgins drew
lots once a week. So it was just over a month later that our watches again
matched. I saw her name-and vowed that I would win the guard mount that evening
and again be posted at the post of honor before the Prophet's own apartments. I
had no reason to think that Judith would seek me out on the rampart-but I was
sure in my heart that she would. Never at West Point had I ever expended more
spit-and-polish; I could have used my buckler for a shaving mirror.
But here it was nearly half past ten and
no sign of Judith, although I had heard the Virgins gather down the corridor
promptly at ten. All I had to show for my efforts was the poor privilege of
standing watch at the coldest post in the Palace.
Probably, I thought glumly, she comes out
to flirt with the guardsmen on watch every time she has a chance. I recalled
bitterly that all women were vessels of iniquity and had always been so since
the Fall of Man. Who was I to think that she had singled me out for special
friendship? She had probably considered the night too cold to bother.
I heard a footstep and my heart leaped
with joy. But it was only the warden making his rounds. I brought my pistol to
the ready and challenged him; his voice came back, 'Watchman, what of the
night?'
I answered mechanically, 'Peace on Earth,'
and added, 'It is cold, Elder Brother.'
'Autumn in the air,' he agreed. 'Chilly
even in the Temple.' He passed on by with his pistol and his bandolier of
paralysis bombs slapping his armor to his steps. He was a nice old duffer and
usually stopped for a few friendly words; tonight he was probably eager to get
back to the warmth of the guardroom. I went back to my sour thoughts.
'Good evening, John Lyle.'
I almost jumped out of my boots. Standing
in the darkness just inside the archway was Sister Judith. I managed to
splutter, 'Good evening, Sister Judith,' as she moved toward me.
'Ssh!' she cautioned me. 'Someone might
hear us. John Lyle-it finally happened. My lot was drawn!'
I said, 'Huh?' then added lamely,
'Felicitations, Elder Sister. May God make his face to shine on your holy
service.'
'Yes, yes, thanks,' she answered quickly,
'but John . . . I had intended to steal a few moments to chat with you. Now I
can't-I must be at the robing room for indoctrination and prayer almost at
once. I must run.'
'You'd better hurry,' I agreed. I was
disappointed that she could not stay, happy for her that she was honored, and
exultant that she had not forgotten me. 'God go with you.'
'But I just had to tell you that I had
been chosen.' Her eyes were shining with what I took to be holy joy; her next
words startled me. 'I'm scared, John Lyle.'
'Eh? Frightened?' .1 suddenly recalled how
I had felt, how my voice had cracked, the first time I ever drilled a platoon.
'Do not be. You will be sustained.'
'Oh, I hope so! Pray for me, John.' And
she was gone, lost in the dark corridor.
I did pray for her and I tried to imagine
where she was, what she was doing. But since I knew as little about what went
on inside the Prophet's private chambers as a cow knows about courts-martial, I
soon gave it up and simply thought about Judith. Later, an hour or more, my
reverie was broken by a high scream inside the Palace, followed by a commotion,
and running footsteps. I dashed down the inner corridor and found a knot of
women gathered around the portal to the Prophet's apartments. Two or three
others were carrying someone out the portal; they stopped when the reached the
corridor and eased their burden to the floor.
'What's the trouble?' I demanded and drew
my side arm clear.
An elderly Sister stepped in front of me.
'It is nothing. Return to your post, legate.'
'I heard a scream.'
'No business of yours. One of the Sisters
fainted when the Holy One required service of her.'
'Who was it?'
'You are rather nosy, little brother.' She
shrugged. 'Sister Judith, if it matters.'
I did not stop to think but snapped, 'Let
me help her!' and started forward. She barred my way.
'Are you out of your mind? Her sisters
will return her to her cell. Since when do the Angels minister to nervous
Virgins?'
I could easily have pushed her aside with
one finger, but she was right. I backed down and went unwillingly back to my
post.
For the next few days I could not get
Sister Judith out of my mind. Off watch, I prowled the parts of the Palace I
was free to visit, hoping to catch sight of her. She might be ill, or she might
be confined to her cell for what must certainly have been a major breach of
discipline. But I never saw her.
My roommate, Zebadiah Jones, noticed my
moodiness and tried to rouse me out of it. Zeb was three classes senior to me
and I had been one of his plebes at the Point; now he was my closest friend and
my only confidant. 'Johnnie old son, you look like a corpse at your own wake.
What's eating on you?'
'Huh? Nothing at all. Touch of
indigestion, maybe.'
'So? Come on, let's go for a walk. The air
will do you good.' I let him herd me outside. He said nothing but banalities
until we were on the broad terrace surrounding the south turret and free of the
danger of eye and ear devices. When we were well away from anyone else he said
softly, 'Come on. Spill it.'
'Shucks, Zeb, I can't burden anybody else
with it.'
'Why not? What's a friend for?'
'Uh, you'd be shocked.'
'I doubt it. The last time I was shocked
was when I drew four of a kind to an ace kicker. It restored my faith in
miracles and I've been relatively immune ever since. Come on-we'll call this a
privileged communication-elder adviser and all that sort of rot.'
I let him persuade me. To my surprise Zeb
was not shocked to find that I let myself become interested in a holy
deaconess. So I told him the whole story and added to it my doubts and
troubles, the misgivings that had been growing in me since the day I reported
for duty at New Jerusalem.
He nodded casually. 'I can see how it
would affect you that way, knowing you. See here, you haven't admitted any of
this at confession, have you?'
'No,' I admitted with embarrassment.
'Then don't. Nurse your own fox. Major
Bagby is broadminded, you wouldn't shock him-but he might find it necessary to
pass it on to his superiors. You wouldn't want to face Inquisition even if you
were alabaster innocent. In fact, especially since you are innocent-and you
are, you know; everybody has impious thoughts at times. But the Inquisitor
expects to find sin; if he doesn't find it, he keeps on digging.'
At the suggestion that I might be put to
the Question my stomach almost turned over. I tried not to show it for Zeb went
on calmly, 'Johnnie my lad, I admire your piety and~ your innocence, but I
don't envy it. Sometimes too much piety is more of a handicap than too little.
You find yourself shocked at the idea that it takes politics as well as psalm
singing to run a big country. Now take me; I noticed the same things when I was
new here, but I hadn't expected anything different and wasn't shocked.'
'But-'I shut up. His remarks sounded
painfully like heresy; I changed the subject. 'Zeb, what do you suppose it
could have been that upset Judith so and caused her to faint the night she
served the Prophet?'
'Eh? How should I know?' He glanced at me
and looked away.
'Well, I just thought you might. You
generally have all the gossip around the Palace.'
'Well . . . oh, forget it, old son. It's
really not important.'
'Then you do know?'
'I didn't say that. Maybe I could make a
close guess, but you don't want guesses. So forget it.'
I stopped strolling, stepped in front of
him and faced him. 'Zeb, anything you know about it-or can guess-I want to
hear. It's important to me.'
'Easy now! You were afraid of shocking me;
it could be that I don't want to shock you.'
'What do you mean? Tell me!'
'Easy, I said. We're out strolling,
remember, without a care in the world, talking about our butterfly collections
and wondering if we'll have stewed beef again for dinner tonight.'
Still fuming, I let him take me along with
him. He went on more quietly, 'John, you obviously aren't the type to learn
things just by keeping your ear to the ground-and you've not yet studied any of
the Inner Mysteries, now have you?'
'You know I haven't. The psych
classification officer hasn't cleared me for the course. I don't know why.'
'I should have let you read some of the
installments while I was boning it. No, that was before you graduated. Too bad,
for they explain things in much more delicate language than I know how to
use-and justify every bit of it thoroughly, if you care for the dialectics of
religious theory. John, what is your notion of the duties of the Virgins?'
'Why, they wait on him, and cook his food,
and so forth.'
'They surely do. And so forth. This Sister
Judith-an innocent little country girl the way you describe her. Pretty devout,
do you think?'
I answered somewhat stiffly that her
devoutness had first attracted me to her. Perhaps I believed it.
'Well, it could be that she simply became
shocked at overhearing a rather worldly and cynical discussion between the Holy
One and, oh, say the High Bursar-taxes and tithes and the best way to squeeze
them out of the peasants. It might be something like that, although the scribe
for such a conference would hardly be a grass-green Virgin on her first
service. No, it was almost certainly the "And so forth."'
'Huh? I don't follow you.'
Zeb sighed. 'You really are one of God's
innocents, aren't you? Holy Name, I thought you knew and were just to
stubbornly straight-laced to admit it. Why, even the Angels carry on with the
Virgins at times, after the Prophet is through with them. Not to mention the
priests and the deacons. I remember a time when-'He broke off suddenly,
catching sight of my face. 'Wipe that look off your face! Do you want somebody
to notice us?'
I tried to do so, with terrible thoughts
jangling around inside my head. Zeb went on quietly, 'It's my guess, if it
matters that much to you, that your friend Judith still merits the title
"Virgin" in the purely physical sense as well as the spiritual. She
might even stay that way, if the Holy One is as angry with her as he probably
was. She is probably as dense as you are and failed to understand the symbolic
explanations given her-then blew her top when it came to the point where she
couldn't fail to understand, so he kicked her out. Small wonder!'
I stopped again, muttering to myself
biblical expressions I hardly thought I knew. Zeb stopped, too, and stood
looking at me with a smile of cynical tolerance. 'Zeb,' I said, almost pleading
with him, 'these are terrible things. Terrible! Don't tell me that you
approve?'
'Approve? Man, it's all part of the Plan.
I'm sorry you haven't been cleared for higher study. See here, I'll give you a
rough briefing. God wastes not. Right?'
'That's sound doctrine.'
'God requires nothing of man beyond his
strength. Right?'
'Yes, but-'
'Shut up. God commands man to be fruitful.
The Prophet Incarnate, being especially holy, is required to be especially
fruitful. That's the gist of it; you can pick up the fine points when you study
it. In the meantime, if the Prophet can humble himself to the flesh in order to
do his plain duty, who are you to raise a ruction? Answer me that.'
I could not answer, of course, and we
continued our walk in silence. I had to admit the logic of what he had said and
that the conclusions were built up from the revealed doctrines. The trouble was
that I wanted to eject the conclusions, throw them up as if they had been
something poisonous I had swallowed.
Presently I was consoling myself with the
thought that Zeb felt sure that Judith had not been harmed. I began to feel
better, telling myself that Zeb was right, that it was not my place, most
decidedly not my place, to sit in moral judgment on the Holy Prophet Incarnate.
My mind was just getting round to worrying
the thought that my relief over Judith arose solely from the fact that I had
looked on her sinfully, that there could not possibly be one rule for one holy
deaconess, another rule for all the rest, and I was beginning to be unhappy
again-when Zeb stopped suddenly. 'What was that?'
We hurried to the parapet of the terrace
and looked down the wall. The south wall lies close to the city proper. A crowd
of fifty or sixty people was charging up the slope that led to the Palace
walls. Ahead of them, running with head averted, was a man dressed in a long
gabardine. He was headed for the Sanctuary gate.
Zebadiah looked down and answered himself.
'That's what the racket is-some of the rabble stoning a pariah. He probably was
careless enough to be caught outside the ghetto after five.' He stared down and
shook his head. 'I don't think he is going to make it.'
Zeb's prediction was realized at once, a
large rock caught the man between the shoulder blades, he stumbled and went
down. They were on him at once. He struggled to his knees, was struck by a
dozen stones, went down in a heap. He gave a broken high-pitched wail, then
drew a fold of the gabardine across his dark eyes and strong Roman nose.
A moment later there was nothing to be
seen but a pile of rocks and a protruding slippered foot. It jerked and was
still.
I turned away, nauseated. Zebediah caught
my expression.
'Why,' I said defensively, 'do these
pariahs persist in their heresy? They seem such harmless fellows otherwise.'
He cocked a brow at me. 'Perhaps it's not
heresy to them. Didn't you see that fellow resign himself to his God?'
'But that is not the true God.'
'He must have thought otherwise.'
'But they all know better; we've told them
often enough.'
He smiled in so irritating a fashion that
I blurted out, 'I don't understand you, Zeb-blessed if I do! Ten minutes ago
you were introducing me in correct doctrine; now you seem to be defending
heresy. Reconcile that.'
He shrugged. 'Oh, I can play the Devil's
advocate. I made the debate team at the Point, remember? I'll be a famous
theologian someday-if the Grand Inquisitor doesn't get me first.'
'Well . . . Look-you do think it's right
to stone the ungodly? Don't you?'
He changed the subject abruptly. 'Did you
notice who cast the first stone?' I hadn't and told him so; all I remembered
was that it was a man in country clothes, rather than a woman or a child.
'It was Snotty Fasset.' Zeb's lip curled.
I recalled Fassett too well; he was two
classes senior to me and had made my plebe year something I want to forget. 'So
that's how it was,' I answered slowly. 'Zeb, I don't think I could stomach
intelligence work.'
'Certainly not as an agent provocateur,'
he agreed. 'Still, I suppose the Council needs these incidents occasionally.
These rumors about the Cabal and all...'
I caught up this last remark. 'Zeb, do you
really think there is anything to this Cabal? I can't believe that there is any
organized disloyalty to the Prophet.'
'Well-there has certainly been some
trouble out on the West Coast. Oh, forget it; our job is to keep the watch
here.'
Chapter
2
But we
were not allowed to forget it; two days later the inner guard was doubled. I
did not see how there could be any real danger, as the Palace was as strong a
fortress as ever was built, with its lower recesses immune even to fission
bombs. Besides that, a person entering the Palace, even from the Temple
grounds, would be challenged and identified a dozen times before he reached the
Angel on guard outside the Prophet's own quarters. Nevertheless people in high
places were getting jumpy; there must be something to it.
But I was delighted to find that I had
been assigned as Zebadiah's partner. Standing twice as many hours of guard was
almost offset by having him to talk with-for me at least. As for poor Zeb, I
banged his ear endlessly through the long night watches, talking about Judith
and how unhappy I was with the way things were at New Jerusalem. Finally he turned
on me.
'See here, Mr. Dumbjohn,' he snapped,
reverting to my plebe year designation, 'are you in love with her?'
I tried to hedge. I had not yet admitted
to myself that my interest was more than in her welfare. He cut me short.
'You do or you don't. Make up your mind.
If you do, we'll talk practical matters. If you don't, then shut up about her.'
I took a deep breath and took the plunge.
'I guess I do, Zeb. It seems impossible and I know it's a sin, but there it
is.'
'All of that and folly, too. But there is
no talking sense to you. Okay, so you are in love with her. What next?'
'Eh?'
'What do you want to do? Marry her?'
I thought about it with such distress that
I covered my face with my hands. 'Of course I do,' I admitted. 'But how can I?'
'Precisely. You can't. You can't marry
without transferring away from here; her service can't marry at all. Nor is
there any way for her to break her vows, since she is already sealed. But if
you can face up to bare facts without blushing, there is plenty you can do. You
two could be very cozy-if you could get over being such an infernal bluenose.'
A week earlier I would not have understood
what he was driving at. But now I knew. I could not even really be angry with
him at making such a dishonorable and sinful suggestion; he meant well-and some
of the tarnish was now in my own soul. I shook my head. 'You shouldn't have
said that, Zeb. Judith is not that sort of a woman.'
'Okay. Then forget it. And her. And shut
up about her.'
I sighed wearily. 'Don't be rough on me,
Zeb. This is more than I know how to manage.' I glanced up and down, then took
a chance and sat down on the parapet. We were not on watch near the Holy One's
quarters but at the east wall; our warden, Captain Peter van Eyck, was too fat
to get that far oftener than once a watch, so I took a chance. I was bone tired
from not having slept much lately.
'Sorry.'
'Don't be angry, Zeb. That sort of thing
isn't for me and it certainly isn't for Judith-for Sister Judith.' I knew what
I wanted for us: a little farm, about a hundred. and sixty acres, like the one
I had been born on. Pigs and chickens and barefooted kids with happy dirty
faces and Judith to have her face light up when I came in from the fields and
then wipe the perspiration from her face with her apron so that I could kiss
her
no more connection with the Church and the
Prophet than Sunday meeting and tithes.
But it could not be, it could never be. I
put it out of my mind. 'Zeb,' I went on, 'just as a matter of curiosity-You have
intimated that these things go on all the time. How? We live in a goldfish bowl
here. It doesn't seem possible.'
He grinned at me so cynically that I
wanted to slap him, but his voice had no leer in it. 'Well, just for example,
take your own case -'
'Out of the question!'
'Just for example, I said. Sister Judith
isn't available right now; she is confined to her cell. But -'
'Huh? She's been arrested?' I thought
wildly of the Question and what Zeb had said about the inquisitors.
'No, no, no! She isn't even locked in.
She's been told to stay there, that's all, with prayer and bread-and-water as
company. They are purifying her heart and instructing her in her spiritual
duties. When she sees things in their true light, her lot will be drawn again-and
this time she won't faint and make an adolescent fool of herself.'
I pushed back my first reaction and tried
to think about it calmly. 'No,' I said. 'Judith will never do it. Not if she
stays in her cell forever.'
'So? I wouldn't be too sure. They can be
very persuasive. How would you like to be prayed over in relays? But assume
that she does see the light, just so that I can finish my story.'
'Zeb, how do you know about this?'
'Sheol, man! I've been here going on three
years. Do you think I wouldn't be hooked into the grapevine? You were worried
about her-and making yourself a tiresome nuisance if I may say so. So I asked
the birdies. But to continue. She sees the light, her lot is drawn, she
performs her holy service to the Prophet. After that she is called once a week
like the rest and her lot is drawn maybe once a month or less. Inside of a
year-unless the Prophet finds some very exceptional beauty in her soul-they
stop putting her name among the lots entirely. But it isn't necessary to wait that
long, although it is more discreet.'
'The whole thing is shameful!'
'Really? I imagine King Solomon had to use
some such system; he had even more women on his neck than the Holy One has.
Thereafter, if you can come to some mutual understanding with the Virgin
involved, it is just a case of following well known customs. There is a present
to be made to the Eldest Sister, and to be renewed as circumstances dictate.
There are some palms to be brushed-I can tell you which ones. And this great
pile of masonry has lots of dark back stairs in it. With all customs duly
observed, there is no reason why, almost any night I have the watch and you
don't, you should not find something warm and cuddly in your bed.'
I was about to explode at the calloused
way he put it when my mind went off at a tangent. 'Zeb-now I know you are
telling an untruth. You were just pulling my leg, admit it. There is an eye and
an ear somewhere in our room. Why, even if I tried to find them and cut them
out, I'd simply have the security watch banging on the door in three minutes.'
'So what? There is an eye and an ear in
every room in the place. You ignore them.'
I simply let my mouth sag open.
'Ignore them,' he went on. 'Look, John, a
little casual fornication is no threat to the Church-treason and heresy are. It
will simply be entered in your dossier and nothing will be said about it-
unless they catch you in something really important later, in which case they
might use it to hang you instead of preferring the real charges. Old son, they
like to have such peccadilloes in the files; it increases security. They are
probably uneasy about you; you are too perfect; such men are dangerous. Which
is probably why you've never been cleared for higher study.'
I tried to straighten out in my mind the
implied cross purposes, the wheels within wheels, and gave up. 'I just don't
get it. Look, Zeb, all this doesn't have anything to do with me or with Judith.
But I know what I've got to do. Somehow I've got to get her out of here.'
'Hmm. . . a mighty strait gate, old son.'
'I've got to.'
'Well . . . I'd like to help you. I
suppose I could get a message to her,' he added doubtfully.
I caught his arm. 'Would you, Zeb?'
He sighed. 'I wish you would wait. No,
that wouldn't help, seeing the romantic notions in your mind. But it is risky
now. Plenty risky, seeing that she is under discipline by order of the Prophet.
You'd look funny staring down the table of a court-martial board, looking at
your own spear.'
'I'll risk even that. Or even the Question.'
He did not remind me that he himself was
taking even more of a risk than I was; he simply said, 'Very well, what is the
message?'
I thought for a moment. It would have to
be short. 'Tell her that the legate she talked to the night her lot was drawn
is worried about her.'
'Anything else?'
'Yes! Tell her that I am hers to command!'
It seems flamboyant in recollection. No
doubt it was-but it was exactly the way I felt.
At luncheon the next day I found a scrap
of paper folded into my napkin. I hurried through the meal and slipped out to
read it.
I need your help, it read, and am so very
grateful. Will you meet me tonight? It was unsigned and had been typed in the
script of a common voicewriter, used anywhere in the Palace, or out. When Zeb
returned to our room, I showed it to him; he glanced at it and remarked in idle
tones:
'Let's get some air. I ate too much, I'm
about to fall asleep.' Once we hit the open terrace and were free of the hazard
of eye and ear he cursed me out in low, dispassionate tones. 'You'll never make
a conspirator. Half the mess must know that you found something in your napkin.
Why in God's name did you gulp your food and rush off? Then to top it off you
handed it to me upstairs. For all you know the eye read it and photostated it
for evidence. Where in the world were you when they were passing out brains?'
I protested but he cut me off. 'Forget it!
I know you didn't mean to put both of our necks in a bight-but good intentions
are no good when the trial judge-advocate reads the charges. Now get this
through your head: the first principle of intrigue is never to be seen doing
anything unusual, no matter how harmless it may seem. You wouldn't believe how
small a deviation from pattern looks significant to a trained analyst. You
should have stayed in the refectory the usual time, hung around and gossiped as
usual afterwards, then waited until you were safe to read it. Now where is it?'
'In the pocket of my corselet,' I answered
humbly. 'Don't worry, I'll chew it up and swallow it.'
'Not so fast. Wait here.' Zeb left and was
back in a few minutes. 'I have a piece of paper the same size and shape; I'll
pass it to you quietly. Swap the two, and then you can eat the real note-but
don't be seen making the swap or chewing up the real one.'
'All right. But what is the second sheet
of paper?'
'Some notes on a system for winning at
dice.'
'Huh? But that's non-reg, too!'
'Of course, you hammer head. If they catch
you with evidence of gambling, they won't suspect you of a much more serious
sin. At worst, the skipper will eat you out and fine you a few days pay and a
few hours contrition. Get this, John: if you are ever suspected of something,
try to make the evidence point to a lesser offence. Never try to prove lily-white
innocence. Human nature being what it is, your chances are better.'
I guess Zeb was right; my pockets must
have been searched and the evidence photographed right after I changed uniforms
for parade, for half an hour afterwards I was called into the Executive
Officer's office. He asked me to keep my eyes open for indications of gambling
among the junior officers. It was a sin, he said, that he hated to have his
younger officers fall into. He clapped me on the shoulder as I was leaving.
'You're a good boy, John Lyle. A word to the wise, eh?'
Zeb and
I had the midwatch at the south Palace portal that night. Half the watch passed
with no sign of Judith and I was as nervous as a cat in a strange house, though
Zeb tried to keep me calmed down by keeping me strictly to routine. At long
last there were soft footfalls in the inner corridor and a shape appeared in
the doorway. Zebadiah motioned me to remain on tour and went to check. He
returned almost at once and motioned me to join him, while putting a finger to
his lips. Trembling, I went in. It was not Judith but some woman strange to me
who waited there in the darkness. I started to speak but Zeb put his hand over
my mouth.
The woman took my arm and urged me down
the corridor. I glanced back and saw Zeb silhouetted in the portal, covering
our rear. My guide paused and pushed me into an almost pitch-black alcove, then
she took from the folds of her robes a small object which I took to be a pocket
ferretscope, from the small dial that glowed faintly on its side. She ran it up
and down and around, snapped it off and returned it to her person. 'Now you can
talk,' she said softly. 'It's safe.' She slipped away.
I felt a gentle touch at my sleeve.
'Judith?' I whispered.
'Yes,' she answered, so softly that I could
hardly hear her.
Then my arms were around her. She gave a
little startled cry, then her own arms went around my neck and I could feel her
breath against my face. We kissed clumsily but with almost frantic eagerness.
It is no one's business what we talked
about then, nor could I give a coherent account if I tried. Call our behavior
romantic nonsense, call it delayed puppy love touched off by ignorance and
unnatural lives-do puppies hurt less than grown dogs? Call it what you like and
laugh at us, but at that moment we were engulfed in that dear madness more
precious than rubies and fine gold, more to be desired than sanity. If you have
never experienced it and do not know what I am talking about, I am sorry for
you.
Presently we quieted down somewhat and
talked more reasonably. When she tried to tell me about the night her lot had
been drawn she began to cry. I shook her and said, 'Stop it, my darling. You
don't have to tell me about it. I know.'
She gulped and said, 'But you don't know.
You can't know. I...he...'
I shook her again. 'Stop it. Stop it at
once. No more tears. I do know, exactly. And I know what you are in for
still-unless we get you out of here. So there is no time for tears or nerves;
we have to make plans.'
She was dead silent for a long moment,
then she said slowly, 'You mean for me to . . . desert? I've thought of that.
Merciful God, how I've thought about it! But how can I?'
'I don't know-yet. But we will figure out
a way. We've got to.' We discussed possibilities. Canada was a bare three
hundred miles away and she knew the upstate New York country; in fact it was
the only area she did know. But the border there was more tightly closed than
it was anywhere else, patrol boats and radar walls by water, barbed wire and
sentries by land . and sentry dogs. I had trained with such dogs; I wouldn't
urge my worst enemy to go up against them.
But Mexico was simply impossibly far away.
If she headed south she would probably be arrested in twenty-four hours. No one
would knowingly give shelter to an unveiled Virgin; under the inexorable rule
of associative guilt any such good Samaritan would be as guilty as she of the
same personal treason against the Prophet and would die the same death. Going
north would be shorter at least, though it meant the same business of traveling
by night, hiding by day, stealing food or going hungry. Near Albany lived an
aunt of Judith's; she felt sure that her aunt would risk hiding her until some
way could be worked out to cross the border. 'She'll keep us safe. I know it.'
'Us?' I must have sounded stupid. Until
she spoke I had had my nose so close to the single problem of how she was to
escape that it had not yet occurred to me that she would expect both of us to
go.
'Did you mean to send me alone?'
'Why. . . I guess I hadn't thought about
it any other way.'
'No!'
'But-look, Judith, the urgent thing, the
thing that must be done at once, is to get you out of here. Two people trying
to travel and hide are many times more likely to be spotted than one. It just
doesn't make sense to -'
'No! I won't go.'
I thought about it, hurriedly. I still
hadn't realized that 'A' implies 'B' and that I myself in urging her to desert
her service was as much a deserter in my heart as she was. I said, 'We'll get
you out first, that's the important thing. You tell me where your aunt
lives-then wait for me.'
'Not without you.'
'But you must. The Prophet,'
'Better that than to lose you now!'
I did not then understand women-and I
still don't. Two minutes before she had been quietly planning to risk death by
ordeal rather than submit her body to the Holy One. Now she was almost casually
willing to accept it rather than put up with even a temporary separation. I
don't understand women; I sometimes think there is no logic in them at all.
I said, 'Look, my dear one, we have not
yet even figured out how we are to get you out of the Palace. It's likely to be
utterly impossible for us both to escape the same instant. You see that, don't
you?'
She answered stubbornly, 'Maybe. But I
don't like it. Well, how do I get out? And when?'
I had to admit again that I did not know.
I intended to consult Zeb as soon as possible, but I had no other notion.
But Judith had a suggestion. 'John, you
know the Virgin who guided you here? No? Sister Magdalene. I know it is safe to
tell her and she might be willing to help us. She's very clever.'
I started to comment doubtfully but we
were interrupted by Sister Magdalene herself. 'Quick!'
she snapped at me as she slipped in beside us. 'Back to the rampart!'
I rushed out and was barely in time to
avoid being caught by the warden, making his rounds. He exchanged challenges
with Zeb and myself-and then the old fool wanted to chat. He settled himself
down on the steps of the portal and started recalling boastfully a picayune
fencing victory of the week before. I tried dismally to help Zeb with chit-chat
in a fashion normal for a man bored by a night watch.
At last he got to his feet. 'I'm past
forty and getting a little heavier, maybe. I'll admit frankly it warms me to
know that I still have a wrist and eye as fast as you young blades.' He
straightened his scabbard and added, 'I suppose I had better take a turn
through the Palace. Can't take too many precautions these days. They do say the
Cabal has been active again.' He took out his torch light and flashed it down
the corridor.
I froze solid. If he inspected that
corridor, it was beyond hope that he would miss two women crouching in an
alcove.
But Zebadiah spoke up calmly, casually.
'Just a moment, Elder Brother. Would you show me that time riposte you used to
win that last match? It was too fast for me to follow it.'
He took the bait. 'Why, glad to, son!' He
moved off the steps, came out to where there was room. 'Draw your sword. En
garde! Cross blades in line of sixte. Disengage and attack me. There! Hold the
lunge and I'll demonstrate it slowly. As your point approaches my chest -,
(Chest indeed! Captain van Eyck was as pot-bellied as a kangaroo!) '- I catch
it with the forte of my blade and force it over yours in riposte seconde. Just
like the book, so far. But I do not complete the riposte. Strong as it is, you
might parry or counter. Instead, as my point comes down, I beat your blade out
of line-' He illustrated and the steel sang. '-and attack you anywhere, from
chin to ankle. Come now, try it on me.'
Zeb did so and they ran through the
phrase; the warden retreated a step. Zeb asked to do it again to get it down
pat. They ran through it repeatedly, faster each time, with the warden
retreating each time to avoid by a hair Zeb's unbated point. It was strictly
against regulations to fence with real swords and without mask and plastron,
but the warden really was good . . . a swordsman so precise that he was
confident of his own skill not to blind one of Zeb's eyes, not to let Zeb hurt
him. In spite of my own galloping jitters I watched it closely; it was a
beautiful demonstration of a once-useful military art. Zeb pressed him hard.
They finished up fifty yards away from the
portal and that much closer to the guardroom. I could hear the warden puffing
from the exercise. 'That was fine, Jones,' he gasped. 'You caught on
handsomely.' He puffed again and added, 'Lucky for me a real bout does not go
on as long. I think I'll let you inspect the corridor.' He turned away toward
the guardroom, adding cheerfully, 'God keep you.'
'God go with you, sir,' Zeb responded
properly and brought his hilt to his chin in salute.
As soon as the warden turned the corner
Zeb stood by again and I hurried back to the alcove. The women were still
there, making themselves small against the back wall. 'He's gone,' I reassured
them. 'Nothing to fear for a while.'
Judith had told Sister Magdalene of our
dilemma and we discussed it in whispers. She advised us strongly not to try to
reach any decisions just then. 'I'm in charge of Judith's purification; I can
stretch it out for another week, perhaps, before she has to draw lots again.'
I said, 'We've got to act before then!'
Judith seemed over her fears, now that she
had laid her troubles in Sister Magdalene's lap. 'Don't worry, John,' she said
softly, 'the chances are my lot won't be drawn soon again in any case. We must
do what she advises.'
Sister Magdalene sniffed contemptuously.
'You're wrong about that, Judy, when you are returned to duty, your lot will be
drawn, you can be sure ahead of time. Not,' she added, 'but what you could live
through it-the rest of us have. If it seems safer to-' She stopped suddenly and
listened. 'Sssh! Quiet as death.' She slipped silently out of our circle.
A thin pencil of light flashed out and
splashed on a figure crouching outside the alcove. I dived and was on him
before he could get to his feet. Fast as I had been, Sister Magdalene was just
as fast; she landed on his shoulders as he went down. He jerked and was still.
Zebadiah came running in, checked himself
at our sides. 'John! Maggie!' came his tense whisper. 'What is it?'
'We've caught a spy, Zeb,' I answered
hurriedly. 'What'll we do with him?'
Zeb flashed his light. 'You've knocked him
out?'
'He won't come to,' answered Magdalene's
calm voice out of the darkness. 'I slipped a vibroblade in his ribs.'
'Sheol!'
'Zeb, I had to do it. Be glad I didn't use
steel and mess up the floor with blood. But what do we do now?'
Zeb cursed her softly, she took it. 'Turn
him over, John. Let's take a look.' I did so and his light flashed again. 'Hey,
Johnnie-it's Snotty Fassett.' He paused and I could almost hear him think.
'Well, we'll waste no tears on him. John!'
'Yeah, Zeb?'
'Keep the watch outside. If anyone comes,
I am inspecting the corridor. I've got to dump this carcass somewhere.'
Judith broke the silence. 'There's an
incinerator chute on the floor above. I'll help you.'
'Stout girl. Get going, John.'
I wanted to object that it was no work for
a woman, but I shut up and turned away. Zeb took his shoulders, the women a leg
apiece and managed well enough. They were back in minutes, though it seemed
endless to me. No doubt Snotty's body was reduced to atoms before they were
back-we might get away with it. It did not seem like murder to me then, and
still does not; we did what we had to do, rushed along by events.
Zeb was curt. 'This tears it. Our reliefs
will be along in ten minutes; we've got to figure this out in less time than
that. Well?'
Our suggestions were all impractical to
the point of being ridiculous, but Zeb let us make them-then spoke straight to
the point. 'Listen to me, it's no longer just a case of trying to help Judith
and you out of your predicament. As soon as Snotty is missed, we-all four of
us-are in mortal danger of the Question. Right?'
'Right,' I agreed unwillingly.
'But nobody has a plan?'
None of us answered. Zeb went on, 'Then
we've got to have help . . . and there is only one place we can get it. The
Cabal.'
Chapter
3
'The
Cabal?' I repeated stupidly. Judith gave a horrified gasp. 'Why . . . why, that
would mean our immortal souls! They worship Satan!'
Zeb turned to her. 'I don't believe so.'
She stared at him. 'Are you a Cabalist?'
'No.'
'Then how do you know?'
'And how,' I insisted, 'can you ask them
for help?'
Magdalene answered. 'I am a member-as
Zebadiah knows.' Judith shrank away from her, but Magdalene pressed her with
words. 'Listen to me, Judith. I know how you feel-and once I was as horrified
as you are at the idea of anyone opposing the Church. Then I learned-as you are
learning-what really lies behind this sham we were brought up to believe in.'
She put an arm around the younger girl. 'We aren't devil worshipers, dear, nor
do we fight against God. We fight only against this self-styled Prophet who
pretends to be the voice of God. Come with us, help us fight him-and we will
help you. Otherwise we can't risk it.'
Judith searched her face by the faint
light from the portal. 'You swear that this is true? The Cabal fights only
against the Prophet and not against the Lord Himself?'
'I swear, Judith.'
Judith took a deep shuddering breath. 'God
guide me,' she whispered. 'I go with the Cabal.'
Magdalene kissed her quickly, then faced
us men. 'Well?'
I answered at once, 'I'm in it if Judith
is,' then whispered to myself, 'Dear Lord, forgive me my oath-I must!'
Magdalene was staring at Zeb. He shifted
uneasily and said angrily, 'I suggested it, didn't I? But we are all damned
fools and the Inquisitor will break our bones.'
There was no more chance to talk until the
next day. I woke from bad dreams of the Question and worse, and heard Zeb's
shaver buzzing merrily in the bath. He came in and pulled the covers off me,
all the while running off at the mouth with cheerful nonsense. I hate having
bed clothes dragged off me even when feeling well and I can't stand
cheerfulness before breakfast; I dragged them back and tried to ignore him, but
he grabbed my wrist. 'Up you come, old son! God's sunshine is wasting. It's a
beautiful day. How about two fast laps around the Palace and in for a cold
shower?'
I tried to shake his hand loose and called
him something that would lower my mark in piety if the ear picked it up. He
still hung on and his forefinger was twitching against my wrist in a nervous
fashion; I began to wonder if Zeb were cracking under the strain. Then I
realized that he was tapping out code.
'B-E-N-A-T-U-R-A-L,' the dots and dashes
said, 'S-H-O-W - N-O - S-U-R-P-R-I-S-E - W-E - W-I-L-L - B-E -C-A-L-L-E-D -
F-O-R - E-X-A-M-I-N-A-T-I-O-N - D-U-RI-N-G - T-H-E - R-E-C-R-E-A-T-I-O-N -
P-E-R-I-O-D - T-H-I-S -
A-F-T-E-R-N-O-O-N'
I hoped I showed no surprise. I made surly
answers to the stream of silly chatter he had kept up all through it, and got
up and went about the mournful tasks of putting the body back in shape for
another day. After a bit 1 found excuse to lay a hand on his shoulder and
twitched out an answer: '0-K -I- U-N-D-E-R-S-T-A-N-D'
The day was a misery of nervous monotony.
I made a mistake at dress parade, a thing I haven't done since beast barracks.
When the day's duty was finally over I went back to our room and found Zeb
there with his feet on the air conditioner, working an acrostic in the New York
Times. 'Johnnie my lamb,' he asked, looking up, 'what is a six-letter word
meaning "Pure in Heart"?'
'You'll never need to know,' I grunted and
sat down to remove my armor.
'Why, John, don't you think I will reach
the Heavenly City?'
'Maybe-after ten thousand years penance.'
There came a brisk knock at our door, it
was shoved open, and Timothy Klyce, senior legate in the mess and brevet
captain, stuck his head in. He sniffed and said in nasal Cape Cod accents,
'Hello, you chaps want to take a walk?'
It seemed to me that he could not have
picked a worse time. Tim was a hard man to shake and the most punctiliously
devout man in the corps. I was still trying to think of an excuse when Zeb
spoke up. 'Don't mind if we do, provided we walk toward town. I've got some
shopping to do.'
I was confused by Zeb's answer and still
tried to hang back, pleading paper work to do, but Zeb cut me short. 'Pfui with
paper work. I'll help you with it tonight. Come on.' So I went, wondering if he
had gotten cold feet about going through with it.
We went out through the lower tunnels. I
walked along silently, wondering if possibly Zeb meant to try to shake Klyce in
town and then hurry back. We had just entered a little jog in the passageway
when Tim raised his hand in a gesture to emphasize some point in what he was
saying to Zeb. His hand passed near my face, I felt a slight spray on my
eyes-and I was blind.
Before I could cry out, even as I
suppressed the impulse to do so, he grasped my upper arm hard, while continuing
his sentence without a break. His grip on my arm guided me to the left, whereas
my memory of the jog convinced me that the turn should have been to the right.
But we did not bump into the wall and after a few moments the blindness wore
off. We seemed to be walking in the same tunnel with Tim in the middle and
holding each of us by an arm. He did not say anything and neither did we;
presently he stopped us in front of a door. Klyce knocked once, then listened.
I could not make out an answer but he
replied. 'Two pilgrims, duly guided.'
The door opened. He led us in, it closed
silently behind us, and we were facing a masked and armored guard, with his
blast pistol leveled on us. Reaching behind him, he rapped once on an inner
door; immediately another man, armed and masked like the first, came out and
faced us. He asked Zeb and myself separately:
'Do you seriously declare, upon your
honor, that, unbiased by friends and uninfluenced by mercenary motives, you
freely and voluntarily offer yourself to the service of this order?'
We each answered, 'I do.'
'Hoodwink and prepare them.'
Leather helmets that covered everything
but our mouths and noses were slipped over our heads and fastened under our
chins. Then we were ordered to strip off all our clothing. I did so while the
goose pumps popped out on me. I was losing my enthusiasm rapidly-there is
nothing that makes a man feel as helpless as taking his pants away from him.
Then I felt the sharp prick of a hypodermic in my forearm and shortly, though I
was awake, things got dreamy and I was no longer jittery. Something cold was
pressed against my ribs on the left side of my back and I realized that it was
almost certainly the hilt of a vibroblade, needing only the touch, of the stud
to make me as dead as Snotty Fassett-but it did not alarm me. Then there were
questions, many questions, which I answered automatically, unable to lie or
hedge if I had wanted to. I remember them in snatches: of your own free will
and accord?' '-conform to the ancient established usages-a man, free born, of
good repute, and well recommended.'
Then, for a long time I stood shivering on
the cold tile floor while a spirited discussion went on around me; it had to do
with my motives in seeking admission. I could hear it all and I knew that my
life hung on it, with only a word needed to cause a blade of cold energy to
spring into my heart. And I knew that the argument was going against me.
Then a contralto voice joined the debate.
I recognized Sister Magdalene and knew that she was vouching for me, but doped
as I was I did not care; I simply welcomed her voice as a friendly sound. But
presently the hilt relaxed from my ribs and I again felt the prick of a
hypodermic. It brought me quickly out of my dazed state and I heard a strong
bass voice intoning a prayer:
'Vouchsafe thine aid, Almighty Father of
the Universe: love, relief, and truth to the honor of Thy Holy Name. Amen.' And
the answering chorus, 'So mote it be!'
Then I was conducted around the room,
still hoodwinked, while questions were again put to me. They were symbolic in
nature and were answered for me by my guide. Then I was stopped and was asked
if I were willing to take a solemn oath pertaining to this degree, being
assured that it would in no material way interfere with duty that I owed to
God, myself, family, country, or neighbor.
I answered, 'I am.'
I was then required to kneel on my left
knee, with my left hand supporting the Book, my right hand steadying certain
instruments thereon.
The oath and charge was enough to freeze
the blood of anyone foolish enough to take it under false pretenses. Then I was
asked what, in my present condition, I most desired. I answered as I had been
coached to answer: 'Light!'
And the hoodwink was stripped from my
head.
It is not necessary and not proper to
record the rest of my instruction as a newly entered brother. it was long and
of solemn beauty and there was nowhere in it any trace of the blasphemy or
devil worship that common gossip attributed to us; quite the contrary it was
filled with reverence for God, brotherly love, and uprightness, and it included
instruction in the principles of an ancient and honorable profession and the
symbolic meaning of the working tools thereof.
But I must mention one detail that
surprised me almost out of the shoes I was not wearing. When they took the
hoodwink off me, the first man I saw, standing in front of me dressed in the
symbols of his office and wearing an expression of almost inhuman dignity, was
Captain Peter van Eyck, the fat ubiquitous warden of my watch-Master of this
lodge!
The ritual was long and time was short.
When the lodge was closed we gathered in a council of war. I was told that the
senior brethren had already decided not to admit Judith to the sister order of
our lodge at this time even though the lodge would reach out to protect her.
She was to be spirited away to Mexico and it was better, that being the case,
for her not to know any secrets she did not need to know. But Zeb and I, being
of the Palace guard, could be of real use; therefore we were admitted.
Judith had already been given hypnotic
instructions which-it was hoped-would enable her to keep from telling what
little she already new if she should be put to the Question. I was told to wait
and not to worry; the senior brothers would arrange to get Judith out of danger
before she next was required to draw lots. I had to be satisfied with that.
For three days running Zebadiah and I
reported during the afternoon recreation period for instruction, each time
being taken by a different route and with different precautions. It was clear
that the architect who had designed the Palace had been one of us; the enormous
building had hidden in it traps and passages and doors which certainly did not
appear in the official plans.
At the end of the third day we were fully
accredited senior brethren, qualified with a speed possible only in time of
crisis. The effort almost sprained my brain; I had to bone harder than I ever
had needed to in school. Utter letter-perfection was required and there was an
amazing lot to memorize-which was perhaps just as well, for it helped to keep
me from worrying. We had not heard so much as a rumor of a kick-back from the
disappearance of Snotty Fassett, a fact much more ominous than would have been
a formal investigation.
A security officer can't just drop out of
sight without his passing being noticed. It was remotely possible that Snotty
had been on a roving assignment and was not expected to check in daily with his
boss, but it was much more likely that he had been where we had found him and
killed him because some one of us was suspected and he had been ordered to
shadow. If that was the case, the calm silence could only mean that the chief
security officer was letting us have more rope, while his psychotechnicians
analyzed our behavior-in which case the absence of Zeb and myself from any
known location during our free time for several days running was almost
certainly a datum entered on a chart. If the entire regiment started out
equally suspect, then our personal indices each gained a fractional point each
of those days.
I never boned savvy in such matters and
would undoubtedly have simply felt relieved as the days passed with no overt
trouble had it not been that the matter was discussed and worried over in the
lodge room. I did not even know the name of the Guardian of Morals, nor even
the location of his security office-we weren't supposed to know. I knew that he
existed and that he reported to the Grand Inquisitor and perhaps to the Prophet
himself but that was all. I discovered that my lodge brothers, despite the
almost incredible penetration of the Cabal throughout the Temple and Palace,
knew hardly more than I did-for the reason that we had no brothers, not one, in
the staff of the Guardian of Morals. The reason was simple; the Cabal was every
bit as careful in evaluating the character, persona, and psychological
potentialities of a prospective brother as the service was in measuring a
prospective intelligence officer-and the two types were as unlike as geese and
goats. The Guardian would never accept the type of personality who would be
attracted by the ideals of the Cabal; my brothers would never pass a-well, a
man like Fassett.
I understand that, in the days before
psychological measurement had become a mathematical science, an espionage
apparatus could break down through a change in heart on the part of a key
man-well, the Guardian of Morals had no such worry; his men never suffered a
change in heart. I understand, too, that our own fraternity, in the early days
when it was being purged and tempered for the ordeal to come, many times had
blood on the floors of lodge rooms-I don't know; such records were destroyed.
On the fourth day we were not scheduled to
go to the lodge room, having been told to show our faces where they would be
noticed to offset our unwonted absences. I was spending my free time in the
lounge off the mess room, leafing through magazines, when Timothy Klyce came
in. He glanced at me, nodded, then started thumbing through a stack of
magazines himself. Presently he said, 'These antiques belong in a dentist's
office. Have any of you chaps seen this week's Time?'
His complaint was addressed to the room as
a whole; no one answered. But he turned to me. 'Jack, I think you are sitting
on it. Raise up a minute.'
I grunted and did so. As he reached for
the magazine his head came close to mine and he whispered, 'Report to the
Master.'
I had learned a little at least so I went
on reading. After a bit I put my magazine aside, stretched and yawned, then got
up and ambled out toward the washroom. But I walked on past and a few minutes
later entered the lodge room. I found that Zeb was already there, as were
several other brothers; they were gathered around Master Peter and Magdalene. I
could feel the tension in the room.
I said, 'You sent for me, Worshipful
Master?'
He glanced at me, looked back at
Magdalene. She said slowly, 'Judith has been arrested.'
I felt my knees go soft and I had trouble
standing. I am not unusually timid and physical bravery is certainly
commonplace, but if you hit a man through his family or his loved ones you
almost always get him where he is unprotected. 'The Inquisition?' I managed to
gasp.
Her eyes were soft with pity. 'We think
so. They took her away this morning and she has been incommunicado ever since.'
'Has any charge been filed?' asked Zeb.
'Not publicly.'
'Hm-m-m-That looks bad.'
'And good as well,' Master Peter
disagreed. 'If it is the matter we think it is-Fassett, I mean-and had they had
any evidence pointing to the rest of you, all four of you would have been
arrested at once. At least, that is in accordance with their methods.'
'But what can we do?' I demanded.
Van Eyck did not answer. Magdelene said
soothingly, 'There is nothing for you to do, John. You couldn't get within
several guarded doors of her.'
'But we can't just do nothing!'
The lodge Master said, 'Easy, son. Maggie
is the only one of us with access to that part of the inner Palace. We must
leave it in her hands.'
I turned again to her; she sighed and
said, 'Yes, but there is probably little I can do.' Then she left.
We waited. Zeb suggested that he and I
should leave the lodge room and continue with being seen in our usual haunts;
to my relief van Eyck vetoed it. 'No. We can't be sure that Sister Judith's
hypnotic protection is enough to see her through the ordeal. Fortunately you
two and Sister Magdalene are the only ones she can jeopardize-but I want you here,
safe, until Magdalene finds out what she can. Or fails to return,' he added
thoughtfully.
I blurted out, 'Oh, Judith will never
betray us!'
He shook his head sadly. 'Son, anyone will
betray anything under the Question-unless adequately guarded by hypno
compulsion. We'll see.'
I had paid no attention to Zeb, being busy
with my own very self-centred thoughts. He now surprised me by saying angrily,
'Master, you are keeping us here like pet hens-but you have just sent Maggie
back to stick her head in a trap. Suppose Judith has cracked? They'll grab
Maggie at once.'
Van Eyck nodded. 'Of course. That is the
chance we must take since she is the only spy we have. But don't you worry
about her. They'll never arrest her-she'll suicide first.'
The statement did not shock me; I was too
numbed by the danger to Judith. But Zeb burst out with, 'The swine! Master, you
shouldn't have sent her.'
Van Eyck answered mildly, 'Discipline,
son. Control yourself. This is war and she is a soldier.' He turned away.
So we waited . . . and waited . . . and
waited. It is hard to tell anyone who has not lived in the shadow of the
Inquisition how we felt about it. We knew no details but we sometimes saw those
unlucky enough to live through it. Even if the inquisitors did not require the
auto da fé, the mind of the victim was usually damaged, often shattered.
Presently Master Peter mercifully ordered
the Junior Warden to examine both of us as to our progress in memorizing
ritual. Zeb and I sullenly did as we were told and were forced with relentless
kindness to concentrate on the intricate rhetoric. Somehow nearly two hours
passed.
At last came three raps at the door and
the Tyler admitted Magdalene. I jumped out of my chair and rushed to her.
'Well?' I demanded. 'Well?'
'Peace, John,' she answered wearily. 'I've
seen her.'
'How is she? Is she all right?'
'Better than we have any right to expect.
Her mind is still intact and she hasn't betrayed us, apparently. As for the
rest, she may keep a scar or two-but she's young and healthy; she'll recover.'
I started to demand more facts but the
Master cut me off. Then they've already put her to the Question. In that case,
how did you get in to see her?'
'Oh, that!' Magdalene shrugged it off as
something hardly worth mentioning. 'The inquisitor prosecuting her case proved
to be an old acquaintance of mine; we arranged an exchange of favors.'
Zeb started to interrupt; the Master
snapped, 'Quiet!' then added sharply, 'The Grand Inquisitor isn't handling it
himself? In that case I take it they don't suspect that it could be a Cabal
matter?'
Maggie frowned. 'I don't know. Apparently
Judith fainted rather early in the proceedings; they may not have had time to
dig into that possibility. In any case I begged a respite for her until
tomorrow. The excuse is to let her recover strength for more questioning, of
course. They will start in on her again early tomorrow morning.'
Van Eyck pounded a fist into a palm. 'They
must not start again-we can't risk it! Senior Warden, attend me! The rest of
you get out! Except you, Maggie.'
I left with something unsaid. I had wanted
to tell Maggie that she could have my hide for a door mat any time she lifted
her finger.
Dinner that night was a trial. After the
chaplain droned through his blessing I tried to eat and join in the chatter but
there seemed to be a hard ring in my throat that kept me from swallowing.
Seated next to me was Grace-of-God Bearpaw, half Scottish, half Cherokee. Grace
was a classmate but no friend of mine; we hardly ever talked and tonight he was
as taciturn as ever.
During the meal he rested his boot on
mine; I impatiently moved my foot away. But shortly his foot was touching mine
again and he started to tap against my boot: -
hold still, you idiot-' he spelled out- 'You have been chosen-it will be on
your watch tonight-details later-eat and start talking-take a strip of adhesive
tape on watch with you-six inches by a foot-repeat message back.'
I managed somehow to tap out my
confirmation while continuing to pretend to eat.
Chapter
4
We
relieved the watch at midnight. As soon as the watch section had marched away
from our post I told Zeb what Grace had passed on to me at chow and asked him
if he had the rest of my instructions. He had not. I wanted to talk but he cut
me short; he seemed even more edgy than I was.
So I walked my post and tried to look
alert. We were posted that night at the north end of the west rampart; our tour
covered one of the Palace entrances. About an hour had passed when I heard a
hiss from the dark doorway. I approached cautiously and made out a female form.
She was too short to be Magdalene and I never knew who she was, for she shoved
a piece of paper in my hand and faded back into the dark corridor.
I rejoined Zeb. 'What shall I do? Read it
with my flash? That seems risky.'
'Open it up.'
I did and found that it was covered with
fine script that glowed in the darkness. I could read it but it was too dim to
be picked up by any electronic eye. I read it:
At the middle of the watch exactly on the
bell you will enter the Palace by the door where you received this. Forty paces
inside, take the stair on your left; climb two flights. Proceed north fifty
paces. The lighted doorway on your right leads to the Virgins' quarters, there
will be a guard at this door. He will not resist you but you must use a
paralysis bomb on him to give him an alibi. The cell you seek is at the far end
of the central east & west corridor of the quarters. There will be a light
over the door and a Virgin on guard. She is not one of us. You must disable her
completely but you are forbidden to injure or kill her. Use the adhesive tape
as gag and blindfold and tie her up with her clothes. Take her keys, enter the
cell, and remove Sister Judith. She will probably be unconscious. Bring her to
your post and hind her over to the warden of your watch.
You must make all haste from the time you
paralyze the guard, as an eye may see you when you pass the lighted doorway and
the alarm may sound at once.
Do not swallow this note; the ink is
poisonous. Drop it in the incinerator chute at the head of the stairs.
Go with God.
Zeb read it over my shoulder. 'All you
need,' he said grimly, 'is the ability to pass miracles at will. Scared?'
'Yes.'
'Want me to go along?'
'No. I guess we had better carry out the
orders as given.'
'Yes, we had-if I know the Lodge Master.
Besides, it just might happen that I might need to kill somebody rather
suddenly while you are gone. I'll be covering your rear.'
'I suppose so.'
'Now let's shut up and bone military.' We
went back to walking our post.
At the two muted strokes of the middle of
the watch I propped my spear against the wall, took off my sword and corselet
and helmet and the rest of the ceremonial junk we were required to carry but
which would hamper me on this job. Zeb shoved a gauntleted hand in mine and
squeezed. Then I was off.
Two-four-six-forty paces. I groped in the
dark along the left wall and found the opening, felt around with my foot. Ah,
there were the steps! I was already in a part of the Palace I had never been
in; I moved by dead reckoning in the dark and hoped the person who had written
my orders understood that. One flight, two flights-I almost fell on my face
when I stepped on a 'top' step that wasn't there.
Where was the refuse chute? It should be
at hand level and the instructions said 'head of the stairs'. I was debating
frantically whether to show a light or chance keeping it when my left hand
touched its latch; with a sigh of relief I chucked away the evidence that could
have incriminated so many others. I started to turn away, then was immediately
filled with panic. Was that really an incinerator chute? Could -it have been
the panel for a delivery lift instead? I groped for it in the dark again, opened
it and shoved my hand in.
My hand was scorched even through my
gauntlet; I jerked it back with relief and decided to trust my instructions,
have no more doubts. But forty paces north the passageway jogged and that was
not mentioned in my orders; I stopped and reconnoitered very cautiously,
peering around the jog at floor level.
Twenty-five feet away the guard and the
doorway. He was supposed to be one of us but I took no chances. I slipped a
bomb from my belt, set it by touch to minimum intensity, pulled the primer and
counted off five seconds to allow for point blank range. Then I threw it and
ducked back into the jog to protect myself from the rays.
I waited another five seconds and stuck my
head around. The guard was slumped down on the floor, with his forehead
bleeding slightly where it had struck a fragment of the bomb case. I hurried
out and stepped over him, trying to run and keep quiet at the same time. The
central passage of the Virgins' quarters was dim, with only blue night lights
burning, but I could see and I reached the end of the passage quickly-then
jammed on the brakes. The female guard at the cell there, instead of walking a
post, was seated on the floor with her back to the door.
Probably she was dozing, for she did not
look up at once. Then she did so, saw me, and I had no time to make plans; I
dove for her. My left hand muffled her scream; with the edge of my left hand I
chopped the side of her neck-not a killing stroke but I had no time to be
gentle; she went limp.
Half the tape across her mouth first, then
the other half across her eyes, then tear clothing from her to bind her-and
hurry, hurry, hurry all the way, for a security man might already have
monitored the eye that was certainly at the main doorway and have seen the
unconscious guard. I found her keys on a chain around her waist and
straightened up with a silent apology for what I had done to her. Her little
body was almost childlike; she seemed even more helpless than Judith.
But I had no time for soft misgivings; I
found the right key, got the door open-and then my darling was in my arms.
She was deep in a troubled sleep and
probably drugged. She moaned as I picked her up but did not wake. But her gown
slipped and I saw some of what they had done to her - I made a life vow, even
as I ran, to pay it back seven times, if the man who did it could live that
long.
The guard was still where 1 had left him.
I thought I had gotten away with it without being monitored or waking anyone
and was just stepping over him, when I heard a gasp from the corridor behind
me. Why are women restless at night? If this woman hadn't gotten out of bed, no
doubt to attend to something she should have taken care of before retiring, 1
might never have been seen at all.
It
was too late to silence her, I simply ran. Once around the jog I was in welcome
darkness but I overran the stair head, had to come back, and feel for it-then
had to grope my way down step by step. I could hear shouts and high-pitched
voices somewhere behind me.
Just as I reached ground level, turned and
saw the portal outlined against the night sky before me, all the lights came on
and the alarms began to clang. I ran the last few paces headlong and almost
fell into the arms of Captain van Eyck. He scooped her out of my arms without a
word and trotted away toward the corner of the building.
I stood staring after them half-wittedly
when Zeb brought me to my senses by picking up my corselet and shoving it out
for me to put in my arms. 'Snap out of it, man!' he hissed. 'That general alarm
is for us. You're supposed to be on guard duty.'
He strapped on my sword as I buckled the
corselet, then slapped my helmet on my head and shoved my spear into my left
hand. Then we stood back to back in front of the portal, pistols drawn,
safeties off, in drill-manual full alert. Pending further orders, we were not
expected nor permitted to do anything else, since the alarm had not taken place
on our post.
We stood like statues for several minutes.
We could hear sounds of running feet and of challenges. The Officer of the Day
ran past us into the Palace, buckling his corselet over his night clothes as he
ran. I almost blasted him out of existence before he answered my challenge.
Then the relief watch section swung past at double time with the relief warden
at its head.
Gradually the excitement died away; the
lights remained on but someone thought to shut off the alarm. Zeb ventured a
whisper. 'What in Sheol happened? Did you muff it?'
'Yes and no.' I told him about the
restless Sister.
Hmmph! Well, son, this ought to teach you
not to fool around with women when you are on duty.'
'Confound it, 1 wasn't fooling with her.
She just popped out of her cell.'
'I didn't mean tonight,' he said bleakly.
I shut up.
About half an hour later, long before the
end of the watch, the relief section tramped back. Their warden halted them,
our two reliefs fell out and we fell in the empty places. We marched back to
the guardroom, stopping twice more on the way to drop reliefs and pick up men from
our own section.
Chapter
5
We were
halted in the inner parade facing the guardroom door and left at attention.
There we stood for fifty mortal minutes while the officer of the Day strolled
around and looked us over. Once a man in the rear rank shifted his weight. It
would have gone unnoticed at dress parade, even in the presence of the Prophet,
but tonight the Officer of the Day bawled him out at once and Captain van Eyck
noted down his name.
Master Peter looked just as angry as his
superior undoubtedly was. He passed out several more gigs, even stopped in
front of me and told the guardroom orderly to put me down for 'boots not
properly shined'-which was a libel, unless I had scuffed them in my efforts. I
dared not look down to see but stared him in the eye and said nothing, while he
stared back coldly.
But his manner recalled to me Zeb's
lecture about intrigue. Van Eyck's manner was perfectly that of a subordinate
officer let down and shamed by his own men; how should I feel if I were in fact
new-born innocent?
Angry, I decided-angry and self-righteous.
Interested and stimulated by the excitement at first, then angry at being kept
standing at attention like a plebe. They were trying to soften us up by the
strained wait; how would I have felt about it, say two months ago? Smugly sure
of my own virtue, it would have offended me and humiliated me-to be kept
standing like a pariah waiting to whine for the privilege of a ration card-to
be placed on the report like a cadet with soup on his jacket.
By the time the Commander of the Guard
arrived almost an hour later I was white-lipped with anger. The process was
synthetic but the emotion was real. I had never really liked our Commander
anyway. He was a short, supercilious little man with a cold eye and a way of
looking through his junior officers instead of at them. Now he stood in front
of us with his priest's robes thrown back over his shoulders and his thumbs
caught in his sword belt.
He glared at us. 'Heaven help me, Angels
of the Lord indeed,' he said softly into the dead silence-then barked, 'Well?'
No one answered.
'Speak up!' he shouted. 'Some one of you
knows about this. Answer me! Or would you all rather face the Question?'
A murmur ran down our ranks-but no one
spoke.
He ran his eyes over us again. His eye
caught mine and I stared back truculently. 'Lyle!'
'Yes, reverend sir?'
'What do you know of this?'
'I know that I would like to sit down,
reverend sir!'
He scowled at me, then his eye got a gleam
of cold amusement. 'Better to stand before me, my son, than to sit before the
Inquisitor.' But he passed on and heckled the man next to me.
He badgered us endlessly, but Zeb and I
seemed to receive neither more nor less attention than the others. At last he
seemed to give up and directed the Officer of the Day to dismiss us. I was not
fooled; it was a certainty that every word spoken had been recorded, every
expression cinemographed, and that analysts were plotting the data against each
of our past behavior patterns before we reached our quarters.
But Zeb is a wonder. He was gossiping
about the night's events, speculating innocently about what could have caused
the hurrah, even before we reached our room. I tried to answer in what I had
decided was my own 'proper' reaction and groused about the way we had been
treated. 'We're officers and gentlemen,' I complained. 'If he thinks we are
guilty of something, he should prefer formal charges.'
I went to bed still griping, then lay
awake and worried. I tried to tell myself that Judith must have reached a safe
place, or else the brass would not be in the dark about it. But I dropped off
to sleep still fretting.
I felt someone touch me and I woke
instantly. Then I relaxed when I realized that my hand was being gripped in the
recognition grip of the lodge. 'Quiet,' a voice I did not recognize whispered
in my ear. 'I must give you certain treatment to protect you.' I felt the bite
of a hypodermic in my arm; in a few seconds I was relaxed and dreamy. The voice
whispered, 'You saw nothing unusual on watch tonight. Until the alarm was
sounded your watch was quite without incident -' I don't know how long the
voice droned on.
I was awakened a second time by someone
shaking me roughly. I burrowed into my pillow and said, 'Go 'way! I'm going to
skip breakfast.'
Somebody struck me between my shoulder
blades; I turned and sat up, blinking. There were four armed men in the room,
blasters drawn and pointed at me. 'Come along!' ordered the one nearest to me.
They were wearing the uniform of Angels
but without unit insignia. Each head was covered by a black mask that exposed
only the eyes-and by these masks I knew them: proctors of the Grand Inquisitor.
I hadn't really believed it could happen to me. Not to me not to Johnnie Lyle
who had always behaved himself, been a credit to his parish and a pride to his
mother. No! The Inquisition was a boogieman, but a boogieman for sinners-not
for John Lyle.
But I knew with sick horror when I saw
those masks that I was already a dead man, that my time had come and here at
last was the nightmare that 1 could not wake up from.
But I was not dead yet. From somewhere I
got the courage to pretend anger. 'What are you doing here?'
'Come along,' the faceless voice repeated.
'Show me your order. You can't just drag
an officer out of his bed any time you feel -'
The leader gestured with his pistol; two
of them grabbed my arms and hustled me toward the door, while the fourth fell
in behind. But I am fairly strong; I made it hard for them while protesting, 'You've
got to let me get dressed at least. You've no right to haul me away half naked,
no matter what the emergency is. I've a right to appear in the uniform of my
rank.
Surprisingly the appeal worked. The leader
stopped. 'Okay. But snap into it!'
I stalled as much as I dared while going
through the motions of hurrying-jamming a zipper on my boot, fumbling clumsily
with all my dressing. How could I leave some sort of a message for Zeb? Any
sort of a sign that would show the brethren what had happened to me?
At last I got a notion, not a good one but
the best I could manage. I dragged clothing out of my wardrobe, some that I
would need, some that I did not, and with the bunch a sweater. In the course of
picking out what I must wear I managed to arrange the sleeves of the sweater in
the position taken by a lodge brother in giving the Grand Hailing Sign of
Distress. Then 1 picked up loose clothing and started to put some of it back in
the wardrobe; the leader immediately shoved his blaster in my ribs and said,
'Never mind that. You're dressed.'
I gave in, dropping the meaningless
clothing on the floor. The sweater remained spread out as a symbol to him who
could read it. As they led me away I prayed that our room servant would not
arrive and 'tidy' it out of meaning before Zeb spotted it.
They blindfolded me as soon as we reached
the inner Palace. We went down six flights, four below ground level as I
figured it, and reached a compartment filled with the breathless silence of a
vault. The hoodwink was stripped from my eyes. I blinked.
'Sit down, my boy, sit down and make
yourself comfortable.' I found myself looking into the face of the Grand
Inquisitor himself, saw his warm friendly smile and his collie-dog eyes.
His gentle voice continued, 'I'm sorry to
get you so rudely out of a warm bed, but there is certain information needed by
our Holy Church. Tell me, my son, do you fear the Lord? Oh, of course you do;
your piety is well known. So you won't mind helping me with this little matter
even though it makes you late for breakfast. It's to the greater glory of God.'
He turned to his masked and black-robed assistant questioner, hovering behind
him. 'Make him ready-and pray be gentle.'
I was handled quickly and roughly, but not
painfully. They touched me as if they regarded me as so much lifeless matter to
be manipulated as impersonally as machinery. They stripped me to the waist and
fastened things to me, a rubber bandage tight around my right arm, electrodes
in my fists which they taped closed, another pair of electrodes to my wrists, a
third pair at my temples, a tiny mirror to the pulse in my throat. At a control
board on the left wall one of them made some adjustments, then threw a switch
and on the opposite wall a shadow show of my inner workings sprang into being.
A little light danced to my heart beat, a
wiggly line on an iconoscope display showed my blood pressure's rise and fall,
another like it moved with my breathing, and there were several others that I
did not understand. I turned my head away and concentrated on remembering the
natural logarithms from one to ten.
'You see our methods, son. Efficiency and
kindness, those are our watch words. Now tell me-Where did you put her?'
I broke off with the logarithm of eight.
'Put who?'
'Why did you do it?'
'I am sorry. Most Reverend Sir. I don't
know what it is I am supposed to have done.'
Someone slapped me hard, from behind. The
lights on the wall jiggled and the Inquisitor studied them thoughtfully, then
spoke to an assistant. 'Inject him.'
Again my skin was pricked by a hypodermic.
They let me rest while the drug took hold; I spent the time continuing with the
effort of recalling logarithms. But that soon became too difficult; I grew
drowsy and lackadaisical, nothing seemed to matter. I felt a mild and childish
curiosity about my surroundings but no fear. Then the soft voice of the
Inquisitor broke into my reverie with a question. I can't remember what it was
but I am sure I answered with the first thing that came into my head.
I have no way of telling how long this
went on. In time they brought me back to sharp reality with another injection.
The Inquisitor was examining a slight bruise and a little purple dot on my
right forearm. He glanced up. 'What caused this, my boy?'
'I don't know, Most Reverend Sir.' At the
instant it was truth.
He shook his head regretfully. 'Don't be
naïve, my son-and don't assume that I am. Let me explain something to you. What
you sinners never realize is that the Lord always prevails. Always. Our methods
are based in loving-kindness but they proceed with the absolute certainty of a
falling stone, and with the result equally preordained.
'First we ask the sinner to surrender
himself to the Lord and answer from the goodness that remains in his heart. When
that loving appeal fails-as it did with you-then we use the skills God has
given us to open the unconscious mind. That is usually as far as the Question
need go-unless some agent of Satan has been there before us and has tampered
with the sacred tabernacle of the mind.
'Now, my son, I have just returned from a
walk through your mind. I found much there that was commendable, but I found
also, a murky darkness, a wall that had been erected by some other sinner, and
what I want-what the Church needs-is behind that wall.'
Perhaps I showed a trace of satisfaction
or perhaps the lights gave me away, for he smiled sadly and added, 'No wall of
Satan can stop the Lord. When we find such an obstacle, there are two things to
do: given time enough I could remove that wall gently, delicately, stone by
stone, without any damage to your mind. I wish I had time to, I really do, for
you are a good boy at heart, John Lyle, and you do not belong with the sinners.
'But while eternity is long, time is
short; there is the second way. We can disregard the false barrier in the
unconscious mind and make a straightforward assault on the conscious mind, with
the Lord's banners leading us.' He glanced away from me. 'Prepare him.'
His faceless crew strapped a metal helmet
on my head, some other arrangements were made at the control board. 'Now look
here, John Lyle.' He pointed to a diagram on the wall. 'No doubt you know that
the human nervous system is partly electrical in nature. There is a schematic
representation of a brain, that lower part is the thalamus; covering it is the
cortex. Each of the sensory centers is marked as you can see. Your own
electrodynamic characteristics have been analyzed; I am sorry to say that it
will now be necessary to heterodyne your normal senses.'
He started to turn away, turned back. 'By
the way, John Lyle, I have taken the trouble to minister to you myself because,
at this stage, my assistants through less experience in the Lord's work than my
humble self sometimes mistake zeal for skill and transport the sinner
unexpectedly to his reward. I don't want that to happen to you. You are merely
a strayed lamb and I purpose saving you.'
'I said, 'Thank you, Most Reverend Sir.'
'Don't thank me, thank the Lord I serve.
However,' he went on, frowning slightly, 'this frontal assault on the mind,
while necessary, is unavoidably painful. You will forgive me?'
I hesitated only an instant. 'I forgive
you, holy sir.'
He glanced at the lights and said wryly,
'A falsehood. But you are forgiven that falsehood; it was well intended.' He
nodded at his silent helpers. 'Commence.'
A light blinded me, an explosion crashed
in my ears. My right leg jerked with pain, then knotted in an endless cramp. My
throat contracted; I choked and tried to throw up. Something struck me in the
solar plexus; I doubled up and could not catch my breath. 'Where did you put
her?' A noise started low and soft, climbed higher and higher, increasing in
pitch and decibels, until it was a thousand dull saws, a million squeaking
slate pencils, then wavered in a screeching ululation that tore at the thin
wall of reason. 'Who helped you?' Agonizing heat was at my crotch; I could not
get away from it. 'Why did you do it?' I itched all over, intolerably, and
tried to tear at my skin-but my arms would not work. The itching was worse than
pain; I would have welcomed pain in lieu of scratching. 'Where is she?'
Light...sound...pain...heat...convulsions...cold...falling...light
and pain...cold and falling...nausea and sound. 'Do you love the Lord?' Searing
heat and shocking cold...pain and a pounding in my head that made me
scream-'Where did you take her? Who else was in it? Give up and save your
immortal soul.' Pain and an endless nakedness to the outer darkness.
I suppose I fainted.
Some one was slapping me across the mouth.
'Wake up, John Lyle, and confess! Zebadiah Jones has given you away.'
I blinked and said nothing. It was not
necessary to simulate a dazed condition, nor could I have managed it. But the
words had been a tremendous shock and my brain was racing, trying to get into
gear. Zeb? Old Zeb? Poor old Zeb! Hadn't they had time to give him hypnotic
treatment, too? It did not occur to me even then to suspect that Zeb had broken
under torture alone; I simply assumed that they had been able to tap his
unconscious mind. I wondered if he were already dead and remembered that I had
gotten him into this, against his good sense. I prayed for his soul and prayed
that he would forgive me.
My head jerked to another roundhouse slap.
'Wake up! You can hear me-Jones has revealed your sins.'
'Revealed what?' I mumbled.
The Grand Inquisitor motioned his
assistants aside and leaned over me, his kindly face full of concern. 'Please,
my son, do this for the Lord-and for me. You have been brave in trying to
protect your fellow sinners from the fruits of their folly, but they failed you
and your stiff-necked courage no longer means anything. But don't go to
judgment with this on your soul. Confess, and let death come with your sins
forgiven.'
'So you mean to kill me?'
He looked faintly annoyed. 'I did not say
that. I know that you do not fear death. What you should fear is to meet your
Maker with your sins still on your soul. Open your heart and confess.'
'Most Reverend Sir. I have nothing to confess.'
He turned away from me and gave orders in
low, gentle tones. 'Continue. The mechanicals this time; I don't wish to burn
out his brain.'
There is no point in describing what he
meant by 'the mechanicals' and no sense in making this account needlessly
grisly. His methods differed in no important way from torture techniques used
in the Middle Ages and even more recently-except that his knowledge of the
human nervous system was incomparably greater and his knowledge of behavior
psychology made his operations more adroit. In addition, he and his assistants
behaved as if they were completely free of any sadistic pleasure in their work;
it made them coolly efficient.
But let's skip the details.
I have no notion of how long it took. I
must have passed out repeatedly, for my clearest memory is of catching a bucket
of ice water in the face not once but over and over again, like a repeating
nightmare-each time followed by the inevitable hypo. I don't think I told them
anything of any importance while I was awake and the hypno instructions to my
unconscious may have protected me while I was out of my head. I seem to
remember trying to make up a lie about sins I had never committed; I don't
remember what came of it.
I recall vaguely coming semi-awake once
and hearing a voice say, 'He can take more. His heart is strong.'
I was
pleasantly dead for a long time, but finally woke up as if from a long sleep. I
was stiff and when I tried to shift in bed my side hurt me. I opened my eyes
and looked around; I was in bed in a small, windowless but cheerful room. A
sweet-faced young woman in a nurse's uniform came quickly to my side and felt
my pulse.
'Hello.'
'Hello,' she answered. 'How are we now?
Better?'
'What happened?' I asked. 'Is it over? Or
is this just a rest?'
'Quiet,' she admonished. 'You are still
too weak to talk. But it's over-you are safe among the brethren.'
'I was rescued?'
'Yes. Now be quiet.' She held up my head
and gave me something to drink. I went back to sleep.
It took me days to convalesce and catch up
with events. The infirmary in which I woke up was part of a series of
subbasements under the basement proper of a department store in New Jerusalem;
there was some sort of underground connection between it and the lodge room under
the Palace-just where and how I could not say; I was never in it. While
conscious, I mean.
Zeb came to see me as soon as I was
allowed to have visitors. I tried to raise up in bed. 'Zeb! Zeb boy-I thought
you were dead!'
'Who? Me?' He came over and shook my left
hand. 'What made you think that?'
I told him about the dodge the Inquisitor
had tried to pull on me. He shook his head. 'I wasn't even arrested. Thanks to
you, pal. Johnnie, I'll never call you stupid again. If you hadn't had that
flash of genius to rig your sweater so that I could read the sign in it, they
might have pulled us both in and neither one of us have gotten out of it alive.
As it was, I went straight to Captain van Eyck. He told me to lie doggo in the
lodge room and then planned your rescue.'
I wanted to ask how that had been pulled
off but my mind jumped to a more important subject. 'Zeb, where is Judith?
Can't you find her and bring her to see me? My nurse just smiles and tells me
to rest.'
He looked surprised. 'Didn't they tell
you?'
'Tell me what? No, I haven't seen anybody
but the nurse and the doctor and they treat me like an idiot. Don't keep me in
suspense, Zeb. Did anything go wrong? She's all right-isn't she?'
'Oh, sure! But she's in Mexico by now-we
got a report by sensitive circuit two days ago.'
In my physical weakness I almost wept.
'Gone! Why, what a dirty, scabby trick! Why couldn't they have waited until I
was well enough to tell her good-by?'
Zeb said quickly, 'Hey, look, stupid-no,
forget that "stupid"; you aren't. Look, old man, your calendar is
mixed up. She was on her way before you were rescued, before we were even sure
you could be rescued. You don't think the brethren could bring her back just to
let you two bill and coo, do you?'
I thought about it and calmed down. It
made sense, even though I was bitterly disappointed. He changed the subject.
'How do you feel?'
'Oh, pretty good.'
'They tell me you get that cast off your
leg tomorrow.'
'So? They haven't told me.' I twisted,
trying to get comfortable. 'I'm almost more anxious to get shot of this corset,
but the doc says I'll have to wear it for several weeks yet.'
'How about your hand? Can you bend your
fingers?'
I tried it. 'Fairly well. I may have to
write left-handed for a while.'
'All in all, it looks like you're too mean
to die, old son. By the way, if it's any consolation to you, the laddy boy who
worked on Judith got slightly dead in the raid in which you were rescued.'
'He was? Well, I'm sorry. I had planned to
save him for myself.'
'No doubt, but you would have had to take
your place in line, if he had lived. Lots of people wanted him. Me, for
example.'
'But I had thought of something special
for him-I was going to make him bite his nails.'
'Bite his nails?' Zeb looked puzzled.
'Until he reached his elbows. Follow me?'
'Oh.' Zeb grinned sourly. 'Not nearly
imaginative enough, boy. But he's dead, we can't touch him.'
'He's infernally lucky. Zeb, why didn't
you arrange to get him yourself? Or did you, and things were just too hurried
to let you do a proper job?'
'Me? Why, I wasn't on the rescue raid. I
haven't been back in the Palace at all.'
'Huh?'
'You didn't think I was still on duty, did
you?'
'I haven't had time to think about it.'
'Well, naturally I couldn't go back after
I ducked out to avoid arrest; I was through. No, my fine fellow, you and I are
both deserters from the United States Army-with every cop and every postmaster
in the country anxious to earn a deserter's reward by turning us in.'
I whistled softly and let the implications
of his remark sink in.
Chapter
6
I had
joined the Cabal on impulse. Certainly, under the stress of falling in love
with Judith and in the excitement of the events that had come rushing over me
as a result of meeting her, I had no time for calm consideration. I had not
broken with the Church as a result of philosophical decision.
Of course I had known logically that to
join the Cabal was to break with all my past ties, but it had not yet hit me
emotionally. What was it going to be like never again to wear the uniform of an
officer and a gentleman? I had been proud to walk down the street, to enter a
public place, aware that all eyes were on me.
I put it out of my mind. The share was in
the furrow, my hand was on the plow; there could be no turning back. I was in
this until we won or until we were burned for treason.
I found Zeb looking at me quizzically.
'Cold feet, Johnnie?'
'No. But I'm still getting adjusted.
Things have moved fast.'
'I know. Well, we can forget about retired
pay, and our class numbers at the Point no longer matter.' He took off his
Academy ring, chucked it in the air, caught it and shoved it into his pocket.
'But there is work to be done, old lad, and you will find that this is a military
outfit, too-a real one. Personally, I've had my fill of spit-and-polish and I
don't care if I never again hear that "Sound off" and "Officers,
center!" and "Watchman, what of the night?" manure again. The
brethren will make full use of our best talents-and the fight really matters.'
Master Peter van Eyck came to see me a
couple of days later. He sat on the edge of my bed and folded his hands over
his paunch and looked at me. 'Feeling better, son?'
'I could get up if the doctor would let
me.'
'Good. We're shorthanded; the less time a
trained officer spends on the sick list the better.' He paused and chewed his
lip. 'But, son, I don't know just what to do with you.'
'Eh? Sir?'
'Frankly, you should never have been
admitted to the Order in the first place-a military command should not mess
around with affairs of the heart. It confuses motivations, causes false
decisions. Twice, because we took you in, we have had to show our strength in
sorties that-from a strictly military standpoint-should never have happened.'
I did not answer, there was no answer-he
was right. My face was hot with embarrassment.
'Don't blush about it,' he added kindly.
'Contrariwise, it is good for the morale of the brethren to strike back
occasionally. The point is, what to do with you? You are a stout fellow, you
stood up well-but do you really understand the ideals of freedom and human
dignity we are fighting for?'
I barely hesitated. 'Master-I may not be
much of a brain, and the Lord knows it's true that I've never thought much
about politics. But I know which side I'm on!'
He nodded. 'That's enough. We can't expect
each man to be his own Tom Paine.'
'His own what?'
'Thomas Paine. But then you've never heard
of him, of course. Look him up in our library when you get a chance. Very
inspiring stuff. Now about your assignment. It would be easy enough to put you
on a desk job here-your friend Zebadiah has been working sixteen hours a day
trying to straighten out our filing system. But I can't waste you two on
clerical jobs. What is your savvy subject, your specialty?'
'Why, I haven't had any P.G. work yet,
sir.'
'I know. But what did you stand high in?
How were you in applied miracles, and mob psychology?'
'I was fairly good in miracles, but I
guess I'm too wooden for psychodynamics. Ballistics was my best subject.'
'Well, we can't have everything. I could
use a technician in morale and propaganda, but if you can't, you can't.'
'Zeb stood one in his class in mob
psychology, Master. The Commandant urged him to aim for the priesthood.'
'I know and we'll use him, but not here.
He is too much interested in Sister Magdalene; I don't believe in letting
couples work together. It might distort their judgments in a pinch. Now about
you. I wonder if you wouldn't make a good assassin?'
He asked the question seriously but almost
casually; I had trouble believing it. I had been taught-I had always taken it
for granted that assassination was one of the unspeakable sins, like incest, or
blasphemy. I blurted out. 'The brethren use assassination?'
'Eh? Why not?' Van Eyck studied my face.
'I keep forgetting. John, would you kill the Grand Inquisitor if you got a
chance?'
'Well-yes, of course. But I'd want to do
it in a fair fight.'
'Do you think you will ever be given that chance?
Now let's suppose we are back at the day Sister Judith was arrested by him.
Suppose you could stop him by killing him-but only by poisoning him, or knifing
him in the back. What would you do?'
I answered savagely, 'I would have killed
him!'
'Would you have felt any shame, any
guilt?'
'None!'
'So. But he is only one of many in this
foulness. The man who eats meat cannot sneer at the butcher-and every bishop,
every minister of state, every man who benefits from this tyranny, right up to
the Prophet himself, is an accomplice before the fact in every murder committed
by the inquisitors. The man who condones a sin because he enjoys the result of
the sin is equally guilty of the sin. Do you see that?'
Oddly enough, I did see it, for it was
orthodox doctrine as I had learned it. I had choked over its new application.
But Master Peter was still talking: 'But we don't indulge in
vengeance-vengeance still belongs to the Lord. I would never send you against
the Inquisitor because you might be tempted to exult in it personally. We don't
tempt a man with sin as a bait. What we do do, what we are doing, is engaging
in a calculated military operation in a war already commenced. One key man is
often worth a regiment; we pick out that key man and kill him. The bishop in
one diocese may be such a man; the bishop in the next state may be just a
bungler, propped up by the system. We kill the first, let the second stay where
he is. Gradually we are eliminating their best brains. Now-'He leaned toward
me. '- do you want a job picking off those key men? It's very important work.'
It seemed to me that, in this business,
someone was continually making me face up to facts, instead of letting me dodge
unpleasant facts the way most people manage to do throughout their lives. Could
I stomach such an assignment? Could I refuse it-since Master Peter had implied
at least that assassins were volunteers-refuse it and try to ignore in my heart
that it was going on and that I was condoning it?
Master Peter was right; the man who buys
the meat is brother to the butcher. It was squeamishness, not morals-like the
man who favors capital punishment but is himself too 'good' to fit the noose or
swing the axe. Like the person who regards war as inevitable and in some
circumstances moral, but who avoids military service because he doesn't like
the thought of killing.
Emotional infants, ethical morons-the left
hand must know what the right hand doeth, and the heart is responsible for
both. I answered almost at once, 'Master Peter, I am ready to serve . . . that
way or whatever the brethren decide I can do best.'
'Good man!' He relaxed a bit and went on,
'Between ourselves, it's the job I offer to every new recruit when I'm not sure
that he understands that this is not a ball game, but a cause to which he must
commit himself without any reservation-his life, his fortune, his sacred honor.
We have no place for the man who wants to give orders but who won't clean the
privy.'
I felt relieved. 'Then you weren't
seriously picking me out for assassination work?'
'Eh? Usually I am not; few men are fitted
for it. But in your case I am quite serious, because we already know that you
have an indispensable and not very common qualification.'
I tried to think what was so special about
me and could not. 'Sir?'
'Well you'll get caught eventually, of
course. Three point seven accomplished missions per assassin is what we are
running now-a good score, but we ought to do better as suitable men are so
scarce. But with you we know already that when they do catch you and put you to
the Question, you won't crack.'
My face must have shown my feelings. The
Question? Again? I was still half dead from the first time. Master Peter said
kindly, 'Of course you won't have to go up against it again to the fullest. We
always protect assassins; we fix it so that they can suicide easily. You don't
need to worry.'
Believe me, having once suffered the
Question, his assurance to me did not seem calloused: it was a real comfort.
'How, sir?'
'Eh? A dozen different ways. Our surgeons
can booby-trap you so that you can die at will in the tightest bonds anyone can
put on you. There is the old hollow tooth, of course, with cyanide or such-but
the proctors are getting wise to that; sometimes they gag a man's mouth open.
But there are many ways. For example-' He stretched his arms wide and bent them
back, but not far. '-if I were to cramp my arms backward in a position a man
never assumes without very considerable conscious effort, a little capsule
between my shoulder blades would rupture and I would make my last report. Yet
you could pound me on the back all day and never break it.'
'Uh. . . were you an assassin, sir?'
'Me? How could I be, in my job? But all of
our people in positions of maximum exposure are loaded-it's the least we can do
for them. Besides that, I've got a bomb in my belly-He patted his paunch.
'-that will take a roomful of people with me if it seems desirable.'
'I could have used one of those last
week,' I said emphatically.
'You're here, aren't you? Don't despise
your luck. If you need one, you'll have one.' He stood up and prepared to
leave. 'In the meantime, don't give any special thought to being selected as an
executioner. The psychological evaluation group will still have to pass on you
and they are hard men to convince.'
Despite his words, I did think about it,
of course, though it ceased to worry me. I was put on light duty shortly
thereafter and spent several days reading proof on the Iconoclast, a smug,
mildly critical, little reform-from-within paper which the Cabal used to pave
the way for its field missionaries. It was a 'Yes, but-' paper, overtly loyal
to the Prophet but just the sort of thing to arouse doubt in the minds of the
stiff-necked and intolerant. Its acid lay in how a thing was said, not what was
said. I had even seen copies of it around the Palace.
I also got acquainted with some of the
ramifications of the amazing underground headquarters at New Jerusalem. The
department store above us was owned by a Past Grand Master and was an extremely
important means of liaison with the outside world. The shelves of the store fed
us and clothed us; through taps into the visiphone circuits serving the store
commercially we had connection with the outside and could even put in transcontinental
calls if the message could be phrased or coded to allow for the likelihood that
it would be monitored. The owner's delivery trucks could be used to spirit
fugitives to or from our clandestine quarters-I learned that Judith started her
flight that way, with a bill of lading that described her as gum boots. The
store's manifold commercial operations were a complete and plausible blind for
our extensive operations.
Successful revolution is Big Business-make
no mistake about that. In a modern, complex, and highly industrialized state,
revolution is not accomplished by a handful of conspirators whispering around a
guttering candle in a deserted ruin. It requires countless personnel, supplies,
modern machinery and modern weapons. And to handle these factors successfully
there must be loyalty, secrecy, and superlative staff organization.
I was kept busy but my work was fill-in
work, since I was awaiting assignment. I had time to dig into the library and I
looked up Tom Paine, which led me to Patrick Henry and Thomas Jefferson and
others-a whole new world was opened up to me. I had trouble at first in
admitting the possibility of what I read; I think perhaps of all the things a
police state can do to its citizens, distorting history is possibly the most pernicious.
For example, I learned for the first time that the United States had not been
ruled by a bloodthirsty emissary of Satan before the First Prophet arose in his
wrath and cast him out-but had been a community of free men, deciding their own
affairs by peaceful consent. I don't mean that the first republic had been a
scriptural paradise, but it hadn't been anything like what I had learned in
school.
For the first time in my life I was
reading things which had not been approved by the Prophet's censors, and the
impact on my mind was devastating. Sometimes I would glance over my shoulder to
see who was watching me, frightened in spite of myself. I began to sense
faintly that secrecy is the keystone of all tyranny. Not force, but secrecy . .
. censorship. When any government, or any church for that matter, undertakes to
say to its subjects, 'This you may not read, this you must not see, this you
are forbidden to know', the end result is tyranny and oppression, no matter how
holy the motives. Mighty little force is needed to control a man whose mind has
been hoodwinked; contrariwise, no amount of force can control a free man, a man
whose mind is free. No, not the rack, not fission bombs, not anything-you can't
conquer a free man; the most you can do is kill him.
My thoughts did not then fall into
syllogisms; my head was filled with an inchoate spate of new ideas, each more
exciting than the last. I discovered that travel between the planets, almost a
myth in my world, had not stopped because the First Prophet had forbidden it as
a sin against the omnipotence of God; it had ceased because it had gone into
the red financially and the Prophet's government would not subsidize it. There
was even an implied statement that the 'infidels' (I still used that word in my
mind) still sent out an occasional research ship and that there were human
beings even now on Mars and Venus.
I grew so excited at that notion that I
almost forgot the plight we were all in. If I had not been chosen for the
Angels of the Lord, I would probably have gone into rocketry. I was good at
anything of that sort, the things that called for quick reflexes combined with
knowledge of the mathematical and mechanical arts. Maybe someday the United
States would have space ships again. Perhaps I
But the thought was crowded out by a dozen
new ones. Foreign newspapers-why, I had not even been sure the infidels could
read and write. The London Times made unbelievable and exciting reading. I
gradually got it through my head that the Britishers apparently did not now eat
human flesh, if indeed they ever had. They seemed remarkably like us, except
that they were shockingly prone to do as they pleased-there were even letters
in the Times criticizing the government. And there was another letter signed by
a bishop of their infidel church, criticizing the people for not attending
services. I don't know which one puzzled me the more; both of them seemed to
indicate a situation of open anarchy.
Master Peter informed me that the psych
board had turned me down for assassination duty. I found myself both relieved
and indignant. What was wrong with me that they would not trust me with the
job? It seemed like a slur on my character-by then.
'Take it easy,' Van Eyck advised dryly.
'They made a dummy run based on your personality profile and it figured almost
an even chance that you would be caught your first time out. We don't like to
expend men that fast.'
'But -'
'Peace, lad. I'm sending you out to
General Headquarters for assignment.'
'General Headquarters? Where is that?'
'You'll know when you get there. Report to
the staff metamorphist.'
Dr Mueller was the staff face-changer; I
asked him what he had in mind for me. 'How do I know until I find out what you
are?' He had me measured and photographed, recorded my voice, analyzed my walk,
and had a punched card made up of my physical characteristics. 'Now we'll find
your twin brother.' I watched the card sorter go through several thousand cards
and I was beginning to think I was a unique individual, resembling no one else
sufficiently to permit me to be disguised successfully, when two cards popped
out almost together. Before the machine whirred to a stop there were five cards
in the basket.
'A nice assortment,' Dr Mueller mused as
he looked them over, 'one synthetic, two live ones, a deader, and one female.
We can't use the woman for this job, but we'll keep it in mind; it might come
in very handy someday to know that there is a female citizen you could
impersonate successfully.'
'What's a synthetic?' I enquired.
'Eh? Oh, it's a composite personality,
very carefully built from faked records and faked backgrounds. A risky
business-it involves tampering with the national archives. I don't like to use
a synthetic, for there really isn't any way to fill in completely the
background of a man who doesn't exist. I'd much rather patch into the real
background of a real person.'
'Then why use synthetics at all?'
'Sometimes we have to. When we have to
move a refugee in a hurry, for example, and there is no real person we can
match him with. So we try to keep a fairly broad assortment of synthetics built
up. Now let me see,' he added, shuffling the cards, 'we have two to choose from
-'
'Just a second, Doctor,' I interrupted,
'why do you keep dead men in the file?'
'Oh, they aren't legally dead. When one of
the brethren dies and it is possible to conceal the fact, we maintain his
public personality for possible future use. Now then,' he continued, 'can you
sing?'
'Not very well.'
'This one is out, then. He's a concert
baritone. I can make a lot of changes in you, but I can't make a trained singer
of you. It's Hobson's choice. How would you like to be Adam Reeves, commercial
traveler in textiles?' He held up a card.
'Do you think I could get away with it?'
'Certainly-when I get through with you.'
A fortnight later my own mother wouldn't
have known me. Nor, I believe, could Reeves's mother have told me from her son.
The second week Reeves himself was available to work with me. I grew to like
him very much while I was studying him. He was a mild, quiet man with a
retiring disposition, which always made me think of him as small although he
was of course, my height, weight, and bony structure. We resembled each other
only superficially in the face.
At first, that is. A simple operation made
my ears stand out a little more than nature intended; at the same time they
trimmed my ear lobes. Reeves's nose was slightly aquiline; a little wax under
the skin at the bridge caused mine to match. It was necessary to cap several of
my teeth to make mine match his dental repair work; that was the only part I
really minded. My complexion had to be bleached a shade or two; Reeves's work
did not take him out into the sun much.
But the most difficult part of the
physical match was artificial fingerprints. An opaque, flesh-colored flexible
plastic was painted on my finger pads, then my fingers were sealed into molds
made from Reeves's fingertips. It was touchy work; one finger was done over
seven times before Dr Mueller would pass it.
That was only the beginning; now I had to
learn to act like Reeves-his walk, his gestures, the way he laughed, his table
manners. I doubt if I could ever make a living as an actor-my coach certainly
agreed and said so.
'Confound it, Lyle, won't you ever get it?
Your life will depend on it. You've got to learn!'
~But I thought I was acting just like
Reeves,' I objected feebly.
'Acting! That's just the trouble-you were
acting like Reeves. And it was as phony as a false leg. You've got to be
Reeves. Try it. Worry about your sales record, think about your last trip,
think about commissions and discounts and quotas. Go on. Try it.'
Every spare minute I studied the current
details of Reeves's business affairs, for I would actually have to sell
textiles in his place. I had to learn a whole trade and I discovered that there
was more to it than carrying around samples and letting a retailer make his
choice-and I didn't know a denier from a continuous fibre. Before I finished I
acquired a new respect for businessmen. I had always thought that buying and
selling was simple; I was wrong again. I had to use the old phonographic tutor
stunt and wear earphones to bed. I never sleep well that way and would wake up
each morning with a splitting head and with my ears, still tender from the
operations, sore as two boils.
But it worked, all of it. In two short
weeks I was Adam Reeves, commercial traveler, right down to my thoughts.
Chapter
7
'Lyle,'
Master Peter van Eyck said to me, 'Reeves is due to catch the Comet for
Cincinnati this afternoon. Are you ready?'
'Yes, sir.'
'Good. Repeat your orders.'
'Sir, I am to carry out my-I mean
his-selling schedule from here to the coast. I check in at the San Francisco
office of United Textiles, then proceed on his vacation. In Phoenix, Arizona, I
am to attend church services at the South Side Tabernacle. I am to hang around
afterwards and thank the priest for the inspiration of his sermon; in the
course of which I am to reveal myself to him by means of the accustomed usages
of our order. He will enable me to reach General Headquarters.'
'All correct. In addition to transferring
you for duty, I am going to make use of you as a messenger. Report to the
psychodynamics laboratory at once. The chief technician will instruct you.'
'Very well, sir.'
The lodge Master got up and came around
his desk to me. 'Good-by, John. Watch yourself, and may the Great Architect
help you.'
'Thank you, sir. Uh, is this message I am
to carry important?'
'Quite important.'
He let it go at that and I was a bit
irked; it seemed silly to be mysterious about it when I would find out 5ust
what it was in a few minutes. But I was mistaken. At the laboratory I was told
to sit down, relax, and prepare myself for hypnosis.
I came out of it with the pleasant glow
that usually follows hypnosis. 'That's all,' I was told. 'Carry out your
orders.'
'But how about the message I was to
carry?'
'You have it.'
'Hypnotically? But if I'm arrested, I'll
be at the mercy of any psychoinvestigator who examines me!'
'No, you won't. It's keyed to a pair of
signal words; you can't possibly remember until they are spoken to you. The
chance that an examiner would hit on both words and in the right order is
negligible. You can't give the message away, awake or asleep.'
I had rather expected to be 'loaded' for
suicide, if I was to carry an important message-though I hadn't seen how they
could do it at the last minute, other than supplying me with a pill, I mean, a
method almost useless if the policeman knows his business. But if I couldn't
give away the message I carried, then I preferred to take my chances; I didn't
ask for poison. I'm not the suiciding type anyhow-when Satan comes for me,
he'll have to drag me...
The rocket port serving New Jerusalem is
easier to get to than is the case at most of the older cities. There was a tube
station right across from the department store that hid our headquarters. I
simply walked out of the store, took the bridge across the street, found the
tube stall marked 'Rocket Port', waited for an empty cartridge, and strapped
myself and my luggage in. The attendant sealed me and almost at once I was at
the port.
I bought my ticket and took my place at
the end of the queue outside the port police station. I'll admit I was nervous;
while I didn't anticipate having any trouble getting my travel pass validated,
the police officers who must handle it were no doubt on the lookout for John
Lyle, renegade army officer. But they were always looking for someone and I hoped
the list of wanted faces was too long to make the search for me anything other
than routine.
The line moved slowly and that looked like
a bad sign-especially so when I noticed that several people had been thumbed
out of line and sent to wait behind the station railing. I got downright
jittery. But the wait itself gave me time to get myself in hand. I shoved my
papers at the sergeant, glanced at my chrono, up at the station clock, and back
at my wrist.
The sergeant had been going through my
papers in a leisurely, thorough manner. He looked up. 'Don't worry about
catching your ship,' he said not unkindly. 'They can't leave until we clear
their passenger list.' He pushed a pad across the counter. 'Your fingerprints,
please.'
I gave them without comment. 1-le compared
them with the prints on my travel pass and then with the prints Reeves had left
there on his arrival a week earlier. 'That's all, Mr. Reeves. A pleasant trip.'
I thanked him and left.
The Comet was not too crowded. I picked a
seat by a window, well forward, and had just settled down and was unfolding a
late-afternoon copy of the Holy City, when I felt a touch on my arm.
It was a policeman.
'Will you step outside, please?'
I was herded outside with four other male
passengers. The sergeant was quite decent about it. 'I'm afraid I'll have to
ask you four to return to the station for further identification. I'll order
your baggage removed and have the passenger list changed. Your tickets will be
honored on the next flight.'
I let out a yelp. 'But I've got to be in
Cincinnati tonight!'
'I'm sorry.' He turned to me. 'You're
Reeves, aren't you? Hmm . . . you are the right size and build. Still-let me
see your pass again. Didn't you arrive in town just last week?'
'That's right.'
He went through my papers again. 'Uh, yes,
I remember now; you came in Tuesday morning on the Pilgrim. Well, you can't be
in two places at once, so I guess that clears you.' He handed my papers back to
me. 'Go aboard again. Sorry we bothered you. The rest of you come along.'
I returned to my seat and picked up my
newspaper. A few minutes later the first heavy surge of the rockets threw us to
the west. I continued reading the paper to cover up my agitation and relief,
but soon got interested. I had been reading a Toronto paper only that morning,
underground; the contrast was startling. I was back in a world for which the
outside world hardly existed; the 'foreign affairs' news, if you could call it
that, consisted of glowing reports of our foreign missions and some accounts of
atrocities among the infidels. I began to wonder where all that money went that
was contributed each year for missionary work; the rest of the world, if you
could believe their newspapers, didn't seem much aware that our missions existed.
Then I began going through the paper,
picking out items that I knew to be false. By the time I was through we were
down out of the ionosphere and gliding into Cincy. We had overtaken the sun and
had sunset all over again.
There must be a peddler's pack in my
family tree. I not only covered Reeves's territory in Cincinnati, but bettered
his quota. I found that I got as much pleasure out of persuading some
hard-boiled retailer that he should increase his line of yard goods as I ever
had from military work. I stopped worrying about my disguise and thought only
about textiles. Selling isn't just a way to eat; it's a game, it's fun.
I left for Kansas City on schedule and had
no trouble with the police in getting a visa for my travel pass. I decided that
New Jerusalem had been the only ticklish check point; from here west nobody
would expect to pick up John Lyle, formerly officer and gentleman; he would be
one of thousands of wanted men, lost in the files.
The rocket to K.C. was well filled; I had
to sit beside another passenger, a well-built chap in his middle thirties. We
looked each other over as I sat down, then each busied himself with his own
affairs. I called for a lap table and started straightening out the order
blanks and other papers I had accumulated during busy, useful days in
Cincinnati. He lounged back and watched the news broadcast in the TV tank at
the forward end of the car.
I felt a nudge about ten minutes later and
looked around. My seatmate flicked a thumb toward the television tank; in it
there was displayed a large public square filled with a mob. It was surging
toward the steps of a massive temple, over which floated the Prophet's
gold-and-crimson banner and the pennant of a bishopric. As I watched, the first
wave of the crowd broke against the temple steps.
A squad of temple guards trotted out a
side door near the giant front doors and set up their tripods on the terrace at
the head of the wide stairs. The scene cut to another viewpoint; we were
looking down right into the faces of the mob hurrying toward us-apparently from
a telephoto pick-up somewhere on the temple roof.
What followed made me ashamed of the
uniform I had once worn. Instead of killing them quickly, the guards aimed low
and burned off their legs. One instant the first wave was running towards me up
the steps-then they fell, the cauterized stumps of their legs jerking
convulsively. I had been watching a youngish couple right in the center of the
pick-up; they had been running hand in hand. As the beam swept across them they
went down together.
She stayed down. He managed to lift
himself on what had been his knees, took two awkward dying steps toward her and
fell across her. He pulled her head to his, then the scene cut away from them
to the wide view of the square.
I snatched the earphones hanging on the
back of the seat in front of me and listened: '-apolis, Minnesota. The
situation is well in hand and no additional troops will be needed. Bishop
Jennings has declared martial law while the agents of Satan are rounded up and
order restored: A period of prayer and fasting will commence at once.
'The Minnesota ghettos have been closed
and all local pariahs will be relocated in the reservations in Wyoming and
Montana in order to prevent future outbreaks. Let this be a warning to the
ungodly everywhere who might presume to dispute the divine rule of the Prophet
Incarnate.
'This on-the-spot cast by the
No-Sparrow-Shall-Fall News Service is coming to you under the sponsorship of
the Associated Merchants of the Kingdom, dealers in the finest of household
aids toward grace. Be the first in your parish to possess a statuette of the
Prophet that miraculously glows in the dark! Send one dollar, care of this
station -,
I switched off the phones and hung them
up. Why blame the pariahs? That mob wasn't made up of pariahs.
But I kept my lip zipped and let my
companion speak first-which he did, with vehemence. 'Serves them right, the
bloody fools! Imagine charging against a fortified position with your bare
hands.' He kept his voice down and spoke almost in my ear.
'I wonder why they rioted?' was all that I
answered.
'Eh? No accounting for the actions of an
heretic. They aren't sane.'
'You can sing that in church,' I agreed
firmly. 'Besides, even a sane heretic-if there could be such a thing, I
mean-could see that the government is doing a good job of running the country.
Business is good.' I patted my brief case happily. 'For me, at least, praise
the Lord.'
We talked business conditions and the like
for some time. As we talked I looked him over. He seemed to be the usual
leading-citizen type, conventional and conservative, yet something about him
made me uneasy. Was it just my guilty nerves? Or some sixth sense of the
hunted?
My eyes came back to his hands and I had a
vague feeling that I should be noticing something. But there was nothing
unusual about them. Then I finally noticed a very minor thing, a calloused
ridge on the bottom joint of the third finger of his left hand, the sort of a
mark left by wearing a heavy ring for years and just the sort I carried myself
from wearing my West Point class ring. It meant nothing, of course, since lots
of men wear heavy seal rings on that finger. I was wearing one myself-not my
West Point ring naturally, but one belonging to Reeves.
But why would this conventional-minded oaf
wear such a ring habitually, then stop? A trifling thing, but it worried me; a
hunted animal lives by noticing trifles. At the Point I had never been
considered bright in psychology; I had missed cadet chevrons on that issue
alone. But now seemed a good time to use what little I had learned . . . so I
ran over iii my mind all I had noticed about him.
The first thing he had noticed, the one
thing he had commented on, was the foolhardiness of charging into a fortified
position. That smacked of military orientation in his thinking. But that did
not prove he was a Pointer. On the contrary, an Academy man wears his ring at
all times, even into his grave, even on leave and wearing mufti . . . unless
for some good reason he does not wish to be recognized.
We were still chatting sociably and I was
worrying over how to evaluate insufficient data when the stewardess served tea.
The ship was just beginning to bite air as we came down out of the fringes of
space and entered the long glide into Kansas City; it was somewhat bumpy and
she slopped a little hot tea on his thigh. He yelped and uttered an expletive
under his breath. I doubt if she caught what he said.
But I did catch it-and I thought about it
furiously while I dabbed at him with a handkerchief. 'B. J. idiot!' was the
term he used and it was strictly West Point slang.
Ergo, the ring callus was no coincidence;
he was a West Pointer, an army officer, pretending to be a civilian. Corollary:
he was almost certainly on a secret service assignment. Was I his assignment?
Oh, come now, John! His ring might be at a
jeweler's, being repaired; he might be going home on thirty days. But in the
course of a long talk he had let me think that he was a business man. No, he
was an undercover agent.
But even if he was not after me, he had
made two bad breaks in my presence. But even the clumsiest tyro (like myself,
say) does not make two such slips in maintaining an assumed identity-and the
army secret service was not clumsy; it was run by some of the most subtle
brains in the country. Very well, then-they were not accidental slips but
calculated acts; I was intended to notice them and think that they were
accidents. Why?
It could not be simply that he was not
sure I was the man he wanted. In such case, under the old and tested principle
that a man was sinful until proved innocent, he would simply have arrested me
and I would have been put to the Question.
Then why?
It could only be that they wanted me to
run free for a while yet-but to be scared out of my wits and run for cover . .
. and thereby lead them to my fellow conspirators It was a far fetched
hypothesis, but the only one that seemed to cover all the facts.
When I first concluded that my companion
must be an agent on my trail I was filled with that cold, stomach-twisting fear
that can be compared only with seasickness. But when I thought I had figured
out their motives I calmed down. What would Zebadiah do? 'The first principle
of intrigue is not to be stampeded into any unusual act-'Sit tight and play
dumb. If this cop wanted to follow me, I'd lead him into every department store
in K C-and let him watch while I peddled yard goods.
Nevertheless my stomach felt tight as we
got off the ship in Kansas City. I expected that gentle touch on the shoulder
which is more frightening than a fist in the face. But nothing ~ happened. He
tossed me a perfunctory God-keep-you, pushed ahead of me and headed for the
lift to the taxicab platform while I was still getting my pass stamped. It did
not reassure me as he could have pointed me out half a dozen ways to a relief.
But I went on over to the New Muehlbach by tube as casually as I could manage.
I had a fair week in K.C., met my quota
and picked up one new account of pretty good size. I tried to spot any shadow
that might have been placed on me, but I don't know to this day whether or not
I was being trailed. If I was, somebody spent an awfully dull week. But,
although I had about concluded that the incident had been nothing but
imagination and my jumpy nerves, I was happy at last to be aboard the ship for
Denver and to note that my companion of the week before was not a passenger.
We landed at the new field just east of
Aurora, many miles from downtown Denver. The police checked my papers and
fingerprinted me in the routine fashion and I was about to shove my wallet back
into my pocket when the desk sergeant said, 'Bare your left arm, please, Mr.
Reeves.'
I rolled up my sleeve while trying to show
the right amount of fretful annoyance. A white-coated orderly took a blood
sample. 'Just a normal precaution,' the sergeant explained. 'The Department of
Public Health is trying to stamp out spotted fever.'
It was a thin excuse, as I knew from my
own training in PH.-but Reeves, textiles salesman, might not realize it. But
the excuse got thinner yet when I was asked to wait in a side room of the
station while my blood sample was run. I sat there fretting, trying to figure
out what harm they could do me with ten c.c. of my blood-and what I could do
about it even if I did know.
I had plenty of time to think. The
situation looked anything but bright. My time was probably running out as I sat
there-yet the excuse on which they were holding me was just plausible enough
that I didn't dare cut and run; that might be what they wanted. So I sat tight
and sweated.
The building was a temporary structure and
the wall between me and the sergeant's office was a thin laminate; I could hear
voices through it without being able to make out the words. I did not dare
press my ear to it for fear of being caught doing so. On the other hand I felt
that I just had to do it. So I moved my chair over to the wall, sat down again,
leaned back on two legs of the chair so that my shoulders and the back of my
neck were against the wall. Then I held a newspaper I had found there up in
front of my face and pressed my ear against the wall.
I could hear every word then. The sergeant
told a story to his clerk which would have fetched him a month's penance if a
morals proctor had been listening-still, I had heard the same story, only
slightly cleaned up, right in the Palace, so I wasn't really shocked, nor was I
in any mood to worry about other people's morals. I listened to several routine
reports and an inquiry from some semi-moron who couldn't find the men's
washroom, but not a word about myself. I got a crick in my neck from the
position.
Just opposite me was an open window
looking out over the rocket field. A small ship appeared in the sky, braked
with nose units, and came in to a beautiful landing about a quarter of a mile
away. The pilot taxied toward the administration building and parked outside
the window, not twenty-five yards away.
It was the courier version of the Sparrow
Hawk, ram jet with rocket take-off and booster, as sweet a little ship as was
ever built. I knew her well; I had pushed one just like her, playing number-two
position for Army in sky polo-that was the year we had licked both Navy and
Princeton.
The pilot got out and walked away. I eyed
the distance to the ship. If the ignition were not locked-Sheol! What if it
was? Maybe I could short around it, I looked at the open window. It might be
equipped with vibrobolts; if so, I would never know what hit me. But I could
not spot any power leads or trigger connections and the flimsy construction of
the building would make it hard to hide them. Probably there was nothing but
contact alarms; there might not be so much as a selenium circuit.
While I was thinking about it I again
heard voices next door; I flattened my ear and strained to listen.
'What's the blood type?'
'Type one, sergeant.'
'Does it check?'
'No, Reeves is type three.'
'Oho! Phone the main lab. We'll take him
into town for a retinal.'
I was caught cold and knew it. They knew
positively that I wasn't Reeves. Once they photographed the pattern of blood
vessels in the retina of either eye they would know just as certainly who I
really was, in no longer time than it took to radio the picture to the Bureau
of Morals & Investigation-less, if copies had been sent out to Denver and
elsewhere with the tab on me.
I dove out the window.
I lit on my hands, rolled over in a ball,
was flung to my feet as I unwound. If I set off an alarm I was too busy to hear
it. The ship's door was open and the ignition was not locked -there was help
indeed for the Son of a Widow! I didn't bother to taxi clear, but blasted at
once, not caring if my rocket flame scorched my pursuers. We bounced along -the
ground, the little darling and I, then I lifted her nose by gyro and scooted
away to the west.
Chapter
8
I let
her reach for the sky, seeking altitude and speed where the ram jets would work
properly. I felt exulted to have a good ship under me and those cops far
behind. But I snapped out of that silly optimism as I leveled off for jet
flight.
If a cat escapes up a tree, he must stay
there until the dog goes away. That was the fix I was in and in my case the dog
would not go away, nor could I stay up indefinitely. The alarm would be out by
now; behind me, on all sides of me, police pilots would be raising ship in a
matter of minutes, even seconds. I was being tracked, that was sure, and the
blip of my craft on several screens was being fed as data into a computer that
would vector them in on me no matter where I turned. After that-well, it was
land on command or be shot down.
The miracle of my escape began to seem a
little less miraculous. Or too miraculous, perhaps? Since when were the police
so sloppy that they would leave a prisoner in a room with an unguarded window?
Wasn't it just a little too much of a coincidence that a ship I knew how to
herd should come to that window and be left there-with the ignition
unlocked-just as the sergeant said loudly the one thing that would be sure to
make me try for it?
Maybe this was a second, and successful,
attempt to panic me. Maybe somebody else knew my liking for the Sparrow Hawk
courier, knew it because he had my dossier spread out in front of him and was
as familiar with my sky polo record as I was. In which case they might not
shoot me down just yet; they might be counting on me to lead them straight to
my comrades.
Or perhaps, just possibly, it was a real
escape-if I could exploit it. Either way, I was neither ready to be caught again,
nor to lead them to my brethren-nor to die. I had an important message (I told
myself); I was too busy to oblige them by dying just now.
I flipped the ship's commer to the police
& traffic frequency and listened. There was some argument going on between
the Denver port and a transport in the air but no one as yet was shouting for
me to ground or get my pants shot off. Later perhaps-I left it switched on and
thought.
The dead-reckoner showed me some
seventy-five miles from Denver and headed north of west; I was surprised to see
that I had been in the air less then ten minutes - . . so hopped up with
adrenalin, no doubt, that my time sense was distorted. The ram-jet tanks were
nearly full; I had nearly ten hours and six thousand miles at economy cruising-but
of course at that speed they could almost throw rocks at me.
A plan, silly and perhaps impossible and
certainly born of desperation but even so better than no plan at all, was
beginning to form in my brain. I consulted the great circle indicator and set a
course for the Republic of Hawaii; my baby nosed herself slightly south of
west. Then I turned to the fuel-speed-distance gnomograph and roughed a
problem-3100 miles about, at around 800 m.p.h., ending with dry tanks and
depending on rocket juice and the nose units to cushion a cold-jet landing.
Risky.
Not that I cared. Somewhere below me,
shortly after I set the autopilot on the indicated course and speed, analyzers
in the cybernetwork would be telling their human operators that I was attempting
to escape to the Free State of Hawaii, on such a course, such an altitude, and
at max speed for that range- and that I would pass over the Pacific coast
between San Francisco and Monterey in sixty-odd minutes unless intercepted. But
the interception was certain. Even if they were still playing with me, cat and
mouse, ground-to-air snarlers would rise up from the Sacramento Valley. If they
missed (most unlikely!), manned ships as fast or faster than my baby, with full
tanks and no need to conserve radius, would be waiting, at altitude at the
coast. I had no hope of running that gauntlet.
Nor did I intend to. I wanted them to
destroy the little honey I was pushing, destroy her completely and in the
air-because I had no intention of being aboard when it happened.
Operation Chucklehead, phase two: how to
get out of the durn thing! Leaving a jet plane in powered flight has all been
figured out by careful engineers; you slap the jetison lever and pray; the rest
is done for you. The survival capsule closes down on you and seals, then the
capsule with you in it is shot clear of the ship. In due course, at proper
pressure and terminal air speed, the drogue is fired; it pulls your chute open,
and there you are, floating comfortably toward God's good earth, with your
emergency oxygen bottle for company.
There is only one hitch: both the capsule
and the abandoned ship start sending out radio signals, dots for the capsule,
dashes for the ship, and, for good measure, the capsule has a built-in
radar-beacon.
The whole thing is about as inconspicuous
as a cow in church.
I sat there chewing my thumb and staring
out ahead. It seemed to me that the yonder was looking even wilder and bluer
than usual -- my own mood, no doubt, for I knew that thirteen ground miles were
slipping out from under me each minute and that it was high time for me to find
my hat and go home. Of course, there was a door right alongside me; I could
strap on a chute and leave. But you can't open a door in a ram-jet plane in
powered flight; nor do you jettison it-to do so will cause the plane to behave
like a kicked pup. Nor is an eight-hundred-mile-an-hour breeze to be ignored
even at 60,000 feet; I'd be sliced like butter on the door frame.
The answer depended on how good an
autopilot this buggy had. The better robopilots could do everything but sing
hymns; some of the cheaper ones could hold course, speed, and altitude but
there their talents ended. In particular I wanted to know whether or not this
autopilot had an emergency circuit to deal with a case of 'fire out', for I
intended to stop the ship, step out, and let the ship continue on in the
direction of Hawaii by itself-if it could.
A ram jet won't operate at all except at
high speed; that's why ram ships have rocket power as well, else they could
never take off. If you drop below the critical speed of your jet engines your
fire goes out, then you must start it again, either by rocket power or by
diving to gain speed. It is a touchy business and a number of ram-jet pilots
have been gathered to their heavenly reward through an unexpected case of 'fire
out'.
My earlier experience with the courier
Sparrow Hawk told me nothing, as you don't use autopilots in sky polo. Believe
me, you don't. So I looked for the instruction manual in the glove compartment,
failed to find it, then looked over the pilot itself. The data plate failed to
say. No doubt, with a screwdriver and plenty of time, I could have opened it,
worried out the circuits and determined the fact-say in about a day and a half;
those autopilots are a mass of transistors and spaghetti.
So I pulled the personal chute out of its
breakaway clips and started shrugging my way into it while sighing, 'Pal, I
hope you have the necessary gimmick built into your circuits.' The autopilot
didn't answer, though I wouldn't have been much surprised if it had. Then I
squeezed back into place and proceeded to override the autopilot manually. I
didn't have too much time; I was already over the Deseret basin and I could see
the setting sun glinting on the waters of the Great Salt Lake ahead and to the
right.
First I took her down some, because 60,000
feet is thin and chilly-too little partial pressure of oxygen for the human
lung. Then I started up in a gentle curving climb that would neither tear her
wings off nor gee me into a blackout. I had to take her fairly high, because I
intended to cut out the rocket motors entirely and force my best girl to light
her stovepipes by diving for speed, it being my intention to go into a vertical
stall, which would create 'fire out'-and get off in a hurry at that point. For
obvious reasons I did not want the rocket motors to cut loose just as I was
trying to say good-by.
I kept curving her up until 1 was lying on
my back with the earth behind me and sky ahead. I nursed it along, throttling
her down, with the intention of stalling with the fire dead at thirty thousand
feet-still thin but within jumping distance of breathable air and still high
enough to give my lady a chance to go into her dive without cracking up on the
Utah plateau. At about 28,000 1 got that silly, helpless feeling you get when
the controls go mushy and won't bite. Suddenly a light flashed red on the
instrument board and both fires were out. It was time to leave.
I almost forgot the seat bottle. I was
still stuffing the mouthpiece between my teeth and snapping the nosepiece over
my nose while I was trying with the other hand to get the door open-all of this
greatly impeded by the fact that the ship and I together were effectively in
free fall; the slight air drag at the top of the stall trajectory made me weigh
a few ounces, no more.
The door would not open. I finally
remembered to slap the spill valve, then it came open and I was almost snatched
outside. I hung there for a second or two, while the ground spun crazily
overhead, then the door slammed shut and latched-and I shoved myself away from
the plane. I didn't jump-we were falling together, I shoved.
I may have banged my head against a wing.
In any case there is a short blank in my memory before I found myself sitting
on space about twenty-five yards from the ship. She was spinning slowly and
earth and sky were revolving lazily around me. There was a thin cold wind as I
fell but I was not yet aware of the cold. We stayed pretty well together for a
few moments-or hours; time had stopped-then the ship straightened out into a
dive and pulled away from me.
I tried to follow her down by eye and
became aware of the icy wind of my fall. My eyes hurt and I remembered
something I had read about frozen eyeballs; I covered them with both hands. It
helped a lot.
Suddenly I became frightened, panicky at
the thought I had delayed the jump too long and was about to smash into the
desert floor. I uncovered my eyes and sneaked a look.
No, the ground was still a long way off,
two or three miles perhaps. My guess was not worth much as it was already dark
down there. I tried to catch sight of the ship, could not see it, then suddenly
spotted it as her fires came on. I risked frozen eyes and watched, exultation
in my heart. The autopilot did indeed have built into it the emergency circuit
for 'fire out' and everything was proceeding according to plan. The little
sweetheart leveled off, headed west on course, and began to climb for the
altitude she had been told to use. I sent a prayer after her that she would win
through and end up in the clean Pacific, rather than be shot down.
I watched her glowing tailpipes out of
sight while I continued to fall.
The triumph of my little ship had made me
forget to be scared, I had known when I bailed out that it would have to be a
delayed jump. My own body, in leaving the ship, would make a secondary blip on
the screen of anything tracking the ship; my only hope of convincing the
trackers that what they had witnessed was a real emergency-'fire out'-lay in
getting away from the ship quickly and then in not being spotted on the way
down. That meant that I must fall rapidly right out of the picture and not pull
the rip cord until I was close to the ground, in visual darkness and in ground
radar shadow.
But I had never made a delayed jump
before; in fact I had jumped only twice, the two easy practice jumps under a
jumpmaster which are required of every cadet in order to graduate. I wasn't
especially uncomfortable as long as I kept my eyes closed, but I began to get a
truly overpowering urge to pull that rip cord. My hand went to the handle and
gripped it. I told myself to let go but I couldn't make myself do it. I was
still much too high, dead sure to be spotted if I broke out that great
conspicuous bumbershoot and floated down the rest of the way.
I had intended to rip the chute out
somewhere between one thousand and five hundred feet above ground, but my nerve
played out and I couldn't wait that long. There was a large town almost under
me-Provo, Utah, by what I remembered of the situation from higher up. I
convinced myself that I had to pull the rip cord to keep from landing right in
the city.
I remembered just in time to remove the
oxygen face piece, thereby avoiding a mouthful of broken teeth most likely, for
I had never gotten around to strapping the bottle to me; I had been holding it
in my left hand all the way down. I suppose I could have taken time even then
to secure it, but what I did was to throw it in the general direction of a
farm, hoping that it would land on plowed ground rather than on some honest
citizen's skull. Then I pulled the handle.
For the horrible split second I thought
that I had a faultily packed chute. Then it opened and knocked me out-or I
fainted with fright. I came to, hanging in the harness with the ground swinging
and turning slowly beneath me. I was still too high up and I seemed to be
floating toward the lights of Provo. So I took a deep breath-real air tasted
good after the canned stuff-gathered a double handful of shrouds and spilled
some wind.
I came down fast then and managed to let
go just in time to get full support for the landing. I couldn't see the ground
well in the evening darkness but I knew it was close; I gathered up my knees
just as it says in the manual, then took it rather unexpectedly, stumbling,
falling, and getting tangled in the chute. It is supposed to be equal to a
fourteen-foot free jump; all I can say is it seems like more.
Then I was sitting on my tail in a field
of sugar beets, and rubbing my left ankle.
Spies always bury their parachutes so I
suppose I should have buried mine. But I didn't feel up to it and I didn't have
any tools; I stuffed it into a culvert I found running under the road that
edged the field, then started slogging that road toward the lights of Provo. My
nose and right ear had been bleeding and the blood was dry on my face. I was
covered with dirt, I had split my trousers, my hat was the Lord knows
where-Denver, maybe, or over Nevada-my left ankle seemed slightly sprained, my
right hand was badly skinned, and I had had a childish accident. I felt swell.
I could hardly keep from whistling as I
walked, I felt so good. Sure, I was still hunted, but the Prophet's proctors
thought I was still high in the sky and headed for Hawaii. At least I hoped
they believed that and, in any case, I was still free, alive, and reasonably
intact. If one has to be hunted, Utah was a better place for it than most; it
had been a center of heresy and schism ever since the suppression of the Mormon
church, back in the days of the First Prophet. If I could keep out of the
direct sight of the Prophet's police, it was unlikely that any of the natives
would turn me in.
Nevertheless I lay flat in the ditch every
time a truck or a ground car came along and I left the road and took to the
fields again before it entered the city proper. I swung wide and entered by a
dimly lighted side street. It lacked two hours of curfew; I needed to carry out
the first part of my plan before the night patrol took to the streets.
I wandered around dark residential streets
and avoided any direct encounters with people for most of an hour before
finding what I wanted-some sort of a flier I could steal. It turned out to be a
Ford family skycar, parked in a vacant lot. The house next to it was dark.
I sneaked up to it, keeping to the
shadows, and broke my penknife jimmying the door-but I got it open. The
ignition was locked, but I had not expected that sort of luck twice. I had had
an extremely practical education at taxpayers' expense which included detailed
knowledge of I.C. engines, and this time there was no hurry; it took me twenty
minutes, working in the dark, to short around the lock.
After a quick reconnoitre of the street I
got in and started the electric auxiliary and glided quietly into the street,
then rounded a corner before turning on the car's lights. Then I drove away as
openly as a farmer returning from prayer meeting in town. Nevertheless I was
afraid of running into a police check point at the city limits, so as soon as
the houses thinned out I ran the car into the first open field and went on well
away from the road-then unexpectedly dropped a front wheel into an irrigation
ditch. That determined my take-off point.
The main engine coughed and took hold; the
rotor unfolded its airfoils with a loud creak. She was sloppy on the take-off,
being canted over into the ditch, but she made it. The ground dropped away.
Chapter
9
The car
I had stolen was a jalopy, old, not properly kept up, a bad valve knock in the
engine, and a vibration in the rotor that I didn't like at all. But she would
run and she had better than half a tank of fuel, enough to get me to Phoenix. I
couldn't complain.
Worst was a complete lack of any navigating
equipment other than an old-style uncompensated Sperry robot and a bundle of
last year's strip maps of the sort the major oil companies give away. There was
radio, but it was out of order.
Well, Columbus got by with less. Phoenix
was almost due south and almost five hundred miles away. I estimated my drift
by crossing my eyes and praying, set the robot on course and set her to hold
real altitude of five hundred feet. Any more might get me into the
cybernetwork; any less might get some local constable annoyed with me. I
decided that running lights were safer than no running lights, this being no
time to pick up a ticket, so I switched them on to 'dim'. After that I took a
look around.
No sign of pursuit to the north-apparently
my latest theft had not been noticed as yet. As for my first-well, the sweet
darling was either shot down by now or far out over the Pacific. It occurred to
me that I was hanging up quite a record for a mother's boy-accessory before and
after the fact in murder, perjury before the Grand Inquisitor, treason,
impersonation, grand larceny twice. There was still arson, and barratry,
whatever that was, and rape. I decided I could avoid rape, but barratry I might
manage, if I could find out what it meant. I still felt swell even though my
nose was bleeding again.
It occurred to me that marrying a holy
deaconess might be considered statutory rape under the law and that made me
feel better; by then I didn't want to miss anything.
I stayed at the controls, overriding the
pilot and avoiding towns, until we were better than a hundred miles south Of
Provo. From there south, past the Grand Canyon and almost to the ruins of the
old '66' roadcity, people are awfully scarce; I decided that I could risk some
sleep. So I set the pilot on eight hundred feet, ground altitude, told it
firmly to watch out for trees and bluffs, went back to the after passenger
bench and went at once to sleep.
I dreamt that the Grand Inquisitor was
trying to break my nerve by eating juicy roast beef in my presence. 'Confess!'
he said, as he stabbed a bite and chewed. 'Make it easy on yourself. Will you
have some rare, or the slice off the end?' I was about to confess, too, when I
woke up.
It was bright moonlight and we were just
approaching the Grand Canyon. I went quickly to the controls and overrode the
order about altitude-I was afraid that the simple little robot might have a
nervous breakdown and start shedding capacitances in lieu of tears if it tried
to hold the ship just eight hundred feet away from that Gargantuan series of
ups and downs and pinnacles.
In the meantime I was enjoying the view so
much that I forgot that I was starving. If a person hasn't seen the Canyon,
there is no point in describing it-but I strongly recommend seeing it by
moonlight from the air.
We sliced across it in about twenty
minutes and I turned the ship back to automatic and started to forage,
rummaging through the instrument panel compartment and the lockers. I turned up
a chocolate almond bar and a few peanuts, which was a feast as I was ready for
raw skunk- I had eaten last in Kansas City. 1 polished them off and went back
to sleep.
I don't recall setting the pilot alarm but
must have done so for it woke me up just before dawn. Dawn over the desert was
another high-priced tourist item but 1 had navigating to do and could not spare
it more than a glance. I turned the crate at right angles for a few minutes to
check drift and speed made good over ground to south, then figured a bit on the
edge of a strip map. With luck and assuming that my guesses about wind were
about right, Phoenix should show up in about half an hour.
My luck held. I passed over some mighty
rough country, then suddenly, spread out to the right, was a wide flat desert
valley, green with irrigated crops and with a large city in it-the Valley of
the Sun and Phoenix. I made a poor landing in a boxed-in, little dry arroyo
leading into the Salt River Canyon; I tore off one wheel and smashed the rotor
but I didn't care-the important thing was that it wasn't likely to be found
there very soon, it and my fingerprints . . . Reeves's prints, I mean. Half an
hour later, after picking my way around enormous cacti and still bigger red
boulders, I came out on the highway that leads down the canyon and into
Phoenix.
It was going to be a long walk into
Phoenix, especially with one sore ankle, but I decided not to risk hitching a
ride. Traffic was light and I managed to get off the road and hide each time
for the first hour. Then I was caught on a straight up-and-down piece by a
freighter; there was nothing to do but give the driver a casual wave as I
flattened myself to the rock wall and pretended to be nonchalant. He brought
his heavy vehicle to a quick, smooth stop. 'Want a lift, bud?'
I made up my mind in a hurry. 'Yes,
thanks!'
He swung a dural ladder down over the wide
tread and I climbed into the cab. He looked me over. 'Brother!' he said
admiringly. 'Was it a mountain lion, or a bear?'
I had forgotten how I looked. I glanced
down at myself. 'Both,' I answered solemnly. 'Strangled one in each hand.'
'I believe it.'
'Fact is,' I added, 'I was riding a
unicycle and bounced it off the road. On the high side, luckily, but I wrecked
it.'
'A unicycle? On this road? Not all the way
from Globe?'
'Well, I had to get off and push at times.
It was the down grade that got me, though.'
He shook his head. 'Let's go back to the
lion-and-bear theory. I like it better.' He didn't question me further, which
suited me. I was beginning to realize that off-hand fictions led to unsuspected
ramifications; I had never been over the road from Globe.
Nor had I ever been inside a big freighter
before and I was interested to see how much it resembled, inside, the control
room of an Army surface cruiser-the same port and starboard universal oleo
speed gears controlling the traction treads, much the same instrument board
giving engine speed, port and starboard motor speeds, torque ratios, and so
forth. I could have herded it myself.
Instead I played dumb and encouraged him
to talk. 'I've never been in one of these big babies before. Tell me how it
works, will you?'
That set him off and I listened with half
an ear while thinking about how I should tackle Phoenix. He demonstrated how he
applied both power and steering to the treads simply by tilting the two speed
bars, one in each fist, and then discussed the economy of letting the diesel
run at constant speed while he fed power as needed to the two sides. I let him
talk-my first need was a bath and a shave and a change of clothes, that was
sure; else I'd be picked up on sight for suspected vagrancy.
Presently I realized he had asked a
question. 'I think I see,' I answered. 'The Waterburies drive the treads.'
'Yes and no,' he went on. 'It's a
diesel-electric hook up. The Waterburies just act like a gear system, although
there aren't any gears in them; they're hydraulic. Follow me?'
I said I thought so (I could have sketched
them)-and filed away in my mind the idea that, if the Cabal should ever need
cruiser pilots in a hurry, freighter jacks could be trained for the job in
short order.
We were going downhill slightly even after
we left the canyon; the miles flowed past. My host pulled off the road and
ground to a stop by a roadside restaurant and oil station. 'All out,' he grunted.
'Breakfast for us and go-juice for the gobuggy.'
'Sounds good.' We each consumed a tall
stack with eggs and bacon and big, sweet Arizona grapefruit. He wouldn't let me
pay for his and tried to pay for mine. As we went back to the freighter he
stopped at the ladder and looked me over.
'The police gate is about three-quarters
of a mile on in,' he said softly. 'I suppose that's as good a spot to check in
as any.' He looked at me and glanced away.
'Mmm . . . 'I said. 'I think I could stand
to walk the rest of the way, to settle my breakfast. Thanks a lot for the
lift.'
'Don't mention it. Uh, there's a side road
about two hundred yards back. It swings south and then west again, into town.
Better for walking. Less traffic.'
'Uh, thanks.'
I walked back to the side road, wondering
if my criminal career was that plain to everyone. One thing sure, I had to
improve my appearance before tackling the city. The side road led through
ranches and I passed several ranch houses without having the nerve to stop. But
I came presently to a little house occupied by a Spanish-Indian family with the
usual assortment of children and dogs. I took a chance; many of these people
were clandestine Catholics, I knew, and probably hated the proctors as much as
I did.
The Senora was home. She was fat and
kindly and mostly Indian by her appearance. We couldn't talk much as my Spanish
is strictly classroom quality, but I could ask for agua, and agua I got, both
to drink and to wash myself. She sewed up the rip in my trousers while I stood
foolishly in my shorts with the children making comments; she brushed me off
and she even let me use her husband's razor. She protested over letting me pay
her but I was firm about it. I left there looking passable.
The road swung back into town as the
freighter jack had said-and without benefit of police. Eventually I found a
neighborhood shopping center and in it a little tailor shop. There I waited
while the rest of my transformation back to respectability was completed. With
my clothes freshly pressed, the spots removed, a brand-new shirt and hat I was
then able to walk down the street and exchange a blessing with any proctor I
might meet while looking him calmly in the eye. A phone book gave me the
address of the South Side Tabernacle; a map on the wall of the tailor shop got
me oriented without asking questions. It was within walking distance.
I hurried down the street and reached the
church just as eleven o'clock services were starting. Sighing with relief I
slipped into a back pew and actually enjoyed the services, just as I had as a
boy, before I had learned what was back of them. I felt peaceful and secure; in
spite of everything I had made it safely. I let the familiar music soak into my
soul while I looked forward to revealing myself to the priest afterwards and
then let him do the worrying for a while.
To tell the truth I went to sleep during
the sermon. But I woke up in time and I doubt if anyone noticed. Afterwards I
hung around, waited for a chance to speak to the priest, and told him how much
I had enjoyed his sermon. He shook hands and I gave him the recognition grip of
the brethren.
But he did not return it. I was so upset
by that that I almost missed what he was saying. 'Thank you, my boy. It's
always good news to a new pastor to hear that his ministrations are
appreciated.' I guess my face gave me away. He added, 'Something wrong?'
I stammered, 'Oh, no, reverend sir. You
see, I'm a stranger myself. Then you aren't the Reverend Baird?' I was in cold
panic. Baird was my only contact with the brethren short of New Jerusalem;
without someone to hide me I would be picked up in a matter of hours. Even as I
answered I was making wild plans to steal another ship that night and then try
to run the border patrol into Mexico.
His voice cut into my thoughts as if from
a great distance. 'No, I'm afraid not, my son. Did you wish to see the Reverend
Baird?'
'Well, it wasn't terribly important, sir.
He is an old friend of my uncle. I was to look him up while I was here and pay
my respects.' Maybe that nice Indian woman would hide me until dark?
'That won't be difficult. He's here in
town. I'm just supplying his pulpit while he is laid up.'
My heart made a full turn at about twelve
gee; I tried to keep it out of my face. 'Perhaps if he is sick I had better not
disturb him.'
'Oh, not at all. A broken bone in his
foot-he'll enjoy a bit of company. Here.' The priest fumbled under his robes,
found a piece of paper and a pencil and wrote out the address. 'Two streets
over and half a block down. You can't miss it.'
Of course I did miss it, but I doubled
back and found it, an old vine-grown house with a suggestion of New England
about it. It was set well back in a large, untidy garden-eucalyptus, palms,
shrubs, and flowers, all in pleasant confusion. I pressed the announcer and
heard the whine of an old-style scanner; a speaker inquired: 'Yes?'
'A visitor to see the Reverend Baird, if
he so pleases.'
There was a short silence while he looked
me over, then: 'You'll have to let yourself in. My housekeeper has gone to the
market. Straight through and out into the back garden.' The door clicked and
swung itself open.
I blinked at the darkness, then went down
a central hallway and out through the back door. An old man was lying in a
swing there, with one foot propped up on pillows. He lowered his book and
peered at me over his glasses.
'What do you want of me, son?'
'Light.'
An hour
later I was washing down the last of some superb enchiladas with cold, sweet
milk. As I reached for a cluster of muscatel grapes Father Baird concluded his
instructions to me. 'Nothing to do until dark, then. Any questions?'
'I don't think so, sir. Sanchez takes me
out of town and delivers me to certain others of the brethren who will see to
it that I get to General Headquarters. My end of it is simple enough.'
'True. You won't be comfortable however.'
I left Phoenix concealed in a false bottom
of a little vegetable truck. 1 was stowed like cargo, with my nose pressed
against the floor boards. We were stopped at a police gate at the edge of town;
I could hear brusque voices with that note of authority, and Sanchez's
impassioned Spanish in reply. Someone rummaged around over my head and the
cracks in the false bottom gleamed with light.
Finally a voice said, 'It's O.K., Ezra.
That's Father Baird's handyman. Makes a trip out to the Father's ranch every
night or so.'
'Well, why didn't he say so?'
'He gets excited and loses his English.
O.K. Get going, chico. Vaya usted con Dios.'
'Gracias, senores. Buenas noches.'
At the Reverend Baird's ranch I was
transferred to a helicopter, no rickety heap this time, but a new job, silent
and well equipped. She was manned by a crew of two, who exchanged pass grips
with me but said nothing other than to tell me to get into the passenger
compartment and stay there. We took off at once.
The windows of the passenger space had
been covered; I don't know which way we went, nor how far, it was a rough ride,
as the pilot seemed dead set on clipping daisies the whole way. It was a
reasonable precaution to avoid being spotted in a scope, but I hoped he knew
what he was doing-I wouldn't want to herd a heli that way in broad daylight. He
must have scared a lot of coyotes-I know he frightened me.
At last I heard the squeal of a landing
beam. We slid along it, hovered, and bumped gently to a stop. When I got out I
found myself staring into the maw of a tripod-mounted blaster backed up by two
alert and suspicious men.
But my escort gave the password, each of
the guards questioned me separately, and we exchanged recognition signals. I
got the impression that they were a little disappointed that they couldn't let
me have it; they seemed awfully eager. When they were satisfied, a hoodwink was
slipped over my head and I was led away. We went through a door, walked maybe
fifty yards, and crowded into a compartment. The floor dropped away.
My stomach caught up with me and I groused
to myself because I hadn't been warned that it was an elevator, but I kept my
mouth shut. We left the lift, walked a way, and I was nudged onto a platform of
some sort, told to sit down and hang on-whereupon we lurched away at breakneck
speed. It felt like a roller coaster-not a good thing to ride blindfolded. Up
to then I hadn't really been scared. I began to think that the hazing was
intentional, for they could have warned me.
We made another elevator descent, walked
several hundred paces, and my hoodwink was removed. I caught my first sight of
General Headquarters.
I didn't recognize it as such; I simply
let out a gasp. One of my guards smiled. 'They all do that,' he said dryly.
It was a limestone cavern so big that one
felt outdoors rather than underground and so magnificently lavish in its
formations as to make one think of fairyland, or the Gnome King's palace. I had
assumed that we were underground from the descents we had made, but nothing had
prepared me for what I saw.
I have seen photographs of what the
Carlsbad Caverns used to be, before the earthquake of '96 destroyed them;
General Headquarters was something like that, although I can't believe that the
Carlsbad Caverns were as big or half as magnificent. I could not at first grasp
the immensity of the room I was in; underground there is nothing to judge size
by and the built-in range-finder of a human's two-eyed vision is worthless
beyond about fifty feet without something in the distance to give him scale-a
house, a man, a tree, even the horizon itself. Since a natural cave contains
nothing at all that is well known, customary, the human eye can't size it.
So, while I realized that the room I stood
in was big, I could not guess just how big; my brain scaled it down to fit my
prejudices. We were standing higher than the main floor and at one end of the
room; the whole thing was softly floodlighted. I got through craning my neck
and ohing and ahing, looked down and saw a toy village some distance away below
us. The little buildings seemed to be about a foot high.
Then I saw tiny people walking around
among the buildings-and the whole thing suddenly snapped into scale. The toy
village was at least a quarter of a mile away; the whole room was not less than
a mile long and many hundreds of feet high. Instead of the fear of being shut
in that people normally experience in caves I was suddenly hit by the other
fear, the fear of open spaces, agoraphobia. I wanted to slink along close to
the walls, like a timid mouse.
The guide who had spoken touched my arm.
'You'll have plenty of time for rubbernecking later. Let's get going.' They led
me down a path which meandered between stalagmites, from baby-finger size to
Egyptian pyramids, around black pools of water with lilypads of living stone
growing on them, past dark wet domes that were old when man was new, under
creamy translucent curtains of onyx and sharp rosy-red and dark green
stalactites. My capacity to wonder began to be overloaded and presently I quit
trying.
We came out on a fairly level floor of bat
droppings and made good time to the village. The buildings, I saw as I got
closer, were not buildings in the outdoors sense, but were mere partitions of
that honeycomb plastic used for sound-deadening-space separators for efficiency
and convenience. Most of them were not roofed. We stopped in front of the
largest of these pens; the sign over its door read ADMINISTRATION. We entered
and I was taken into the personnel office. This room almost made me homesick,
so matter of fact, so professionally military was it in its ugly, efficient
appointments. There was even the elderly staff clerk with the nervous sniff who
seems to be general issue for such an office since the time of Caesar. The sign
on his desk had described him as Warrant Officer R. E. Giles and he had quite
evidently come back to his office after working hours to check me in.
'Pleased to meet you, Mr. Lyle,' he said,
shaking hands and exchanging recognition. Then he scratched his nose and
sniffed. 'You're a week or so early and your quarters aren't ready. Suppose we
billet you tonight with a blanket roll in the lounge of B.O.Q. and get you
squared away in the morning?'
I said that would be perfectly
satisfactory and he seemed relieved.
Chapter
10
I guess
I had been expecting to be treated as some sort of a conquering hero on my
arrival-you know, my new comrades hanging breathlessly on every word of my
modest account of my adventures and hairbreadth escapes and giving thanks to
the Great Architect that I had been allowed to win through with my
all-important message.
I was wrong. The personnel adjutant sent
for me before I had properly finished breakfast, but I didn't even see him; I
saw Mr. Giles. I was a trifle miffed and interrupted him to ask how soon it
would be convenient for me to pay my formal call on the commanding officer.
He sniffed. 'Oh, yes. Well, Mr. Lyle, the
C.G. sends his compliments to you and asks you to consider that courtesy calls
have been made, not only on him but on department heads. We're rather pushed
for time right now. He'll send for you the first spare moment he has.'
I know quite well that the general had not
sent me any such message and that the personnel clerk was simply following a
previously established doctrine. It didn't make me feel better.
But there was nothing I could do about it;
the system took me in hand. By noon I had been permanently billeted, had had my
chest thumped and so forth, and had made my reports. Yes, I got a chance to
tell my story-to a recording machine. Flesh-and-blood men did receive the
message I carried, but I got no fun out of that; I was under hypnosis at the
time, just as I had been when it was given to me.
This was too much for me; I asked the
psychotechnician who operated me what the message was I carried. He answered
stiffly, 'We aren't permitted to tell couriers what they carry.' His manner
suggested that my question was highly improper.
I lost my temper a bit. I didn't know
whether he was senior to me or not as he was not in uniform, but I didn't care.
'For pity's sake! What is this? Don't the brethren trust me? Here I risk my
neck -'
He cut in on me in a much more
conciliatory manner. 'No, no, it's not that at all. It's for your protection.'
'Huh?'
'Doctrine. The less you know that you
don't need to know the less you can spill if you are ever captured-and the
safer it is for you and for everybody. For example, do you know where you are
now? Could you point it out on a map?'
'No.'
'Neither do I. We don't need to know so we
weren't told. However,' he went on, '1 don't mind telling you, in a general
way, what you were carrying-just routine reports, confirming stuff we already
had by sensitive circuits mostly. You were coming this way, so they dumped a
lot of such stuff into you. I took three spools from you.'
'Just routine stuff? Why, the Lodge Master
told me I was carrying a message of vital importance. That fat old joker!'
The technician grudged a smile. 'I'm
afraid he was pulling-Oh!'
'Eh?'
'I know what he meant. You were carrying a
message of vital importance-to you. You carried your own credentials
hypnotically. If you had not been, you would never have been allowed to wake
up.'
I had nothing to say. I left quietly.
My rounds of the medical office, psych
office, quartermaster, and so forth had begun to give me a notion of the size
of the place. The 'toy village' I had first seen was merely the administrative
group. The power plant, a packaged pile, was in a separate cavern with many
yards of rock wall as secondary shielding. Married couples were quartered where
they pleased-about a third of us were female-and usually chose to set up their
houses (or pens) well away from the central grouping. The armory and ammo dump
were located in a side passage, a safe distance from offices and quarters.
There was fresh water in abundance, though
quite hard, and the same passages that carried the underground streams appeared
to supply ventilation-at least the air was never stale. It stayed at a
temperature of 69.6 Fahrenheit and a relative humidity of 32%, winter and
summer, night and day.
By lunchtime I was hooked into the
organization, and found myself already hard at work at a temporary job
immediately after lunch-in the armory, repairing and adjusting blasters,
pistols, squad guns, and assault guns. I could have been annoyed at being
asked, or ordered, to do what was really gunnery sergeant work, but the whole
place seemed to be run with a minimum of protocol-we cleared our own dishes
away at mess, for example. And truthfully it felt good to sit at a bench in the
armory, safe and snug, and handle calipers and feather gauges and drifts again-good,
useful work.
Just before dinner that first day I
wandered into the B.O.Q. lounge and looked around for an unoccupied chair. I
heard a familiar baritone voice behind me: 'Johnnie! John Lyle!' I whirled
around and there, hurrying toward me, was Zebadiah Jones-good old Zeb, large as
life and his ugly face split with a grin.
We pounded each other on the back and
swapped insults. 'When did you get here?' I finally asked him.
'Oh, about two weeks ago.'
'You did? You were still at New Jerusalem
when I left. How did you do it?'
'Nothing to it. I was shipped as a
corpse-in a deep trance. Sealed up in a coffin and marked
"contagious".'
I told him about my own mixed-up trip and
Zeb seemed impressed, which helped my morale. Then I asked him what he was doing.
'I'm in the Psych & Propaganda
Bureau,' he told me, 'under Colonel Novak. Just now I'm writing a series of
oh-so-respectful articles about the private life of the Prophet and his
acolytes and attending priests, how many servants they have, how much it costs
to run the Palace, all about the fancy ceremonies and rituals, and such junk.
All of it perfectly true, of course, and told with unctuous approval. But I lay
it on a shade too thick. The emphasis is on the jewels and the solid gold
trappings and how much it all costs, and keep telling the yokels what a
privilege it is for them to be permitted to pay for such frippery and how
flattered they should feel that God's representative on earth lets them take
care of him.'
'I guess I don't get it,' I said,
frowning. 'People like that circusy stuff. Look at the way the tourists to New
Jerusalem scramble for tickets to a Temple ceremony.'
'Sure, sure-but we don't peddle this stuff
to people on a holiday to New Jerusalem; we syndicate it to little local papers
in poor farming communities in the Mississippi Valley, and in the Deep South,
and in the back country of New England. That is to say, we spread it among some
of the poorest and most puritanical elements of the population, people who are
emotionally convinced that poverty and virtue are the same thing. It grates on
their nerves; in time it should soften them up and make doubters of them.'
'Do you seriously expect to start a
rebellion with picayune stuff like that?'
'It's not picayune stuff, because it acts
directly on their emotions, below the logical level. You can sway a thousand
men by appealing to their prejudices quicker than you can convince one man by
logic. It doesn't have to be a prejudice about an important matter either.
Johnnie, you savvy how to use connotation indices, don't you?'
'Well, yes and no. I know what they are;
they are supposed to measure the emotional effects of words.'
'That's true, as far as it goes. But the
index of a word isn't fixed like the twelve inches in a foot; it is a complex
variable function depending on context, age and sex and occupation of the
listener, the locale and a dozen other things. An index is a particular
solution of the variable that tells you whether a particular word is used in a
particular fashion to a particular reader or type of reader will affect that
person favorably, unfavorably, or simply leave him cold. Given proper
measurements of the group addressed it can be as mathematically exact as any
branch of engineering. We never have all the data we need so it remains an
art-but a very precise art, especially as we employ "feedback"
through field sampling. Each article I do is a little more annoying than the
last-and the reader never knows why.'
'It sounds good, but I don't see quite how
it's done.'
'I'll give you a gross case. Which would
you rather have? A nice, thick, juicy, tender steak-or a segment of muscle
tissue from the corpse of an immature castrated bull?'
I grinned at him. 'You can't upset me.
I'll take it by either name . . . not too well done. I wished they would
announce chow around here; I'm starved.'
'You think you aren't affected because you
were braced for it. But how long would a restaurant stay in business if it used
that sort of terminology? Take another gross case, the Anglo-Saxon
monosyllables that naughty little boys write on fences. You can't use them in
polite company without offending, yet there are circumlocutions or synonyms for
every one of them which may be used in any company.'
I nodded agreement. 'I suppose so. I
certainly see how it could work on other people. But personally, I guess I'm
immune to it. Those taboo words don't mean a thing to me-except that I'm
reasonably careful not to offend other people. I'm an educated man,
Zeb-"Sticks and stones may break my bones, et cetera." But I see how
you could work on the ignorant.'
Now I should know better than to drop my
guard with Zeb. The good Lord knows he's tripped me up enough times. He smiled
at me quietly and made a short statement involving some of those taboo words.
'You leave my mother out of this!'
I was the one doing the shouting and I
came up out of my chair like a dog charging into battle. Zeb must have
anticipated me exactly and shifted his weight before he spoke, for, instead of
hanging one on his chin, I found my wrist seized in his fist and his other arm
around me, holding me in a clinch that stopped the fight before it started.
'Easy, Johnnie,' he breathed in my ear. 'I apologize. I most humbly apologize
and ask your forgiveness. Believe me, I wasn't insulting you.'
'So you say!'
'So I say, most humbly. Forgive me?'
As I simmered down I realized that my
outbreak had been very conspicuous. Although we had picked a quiet corner to
talk, there were already a dozen or more others in the lounge, waiting for
dinner to be announced. I could feel the dead silence and sense the question in
the minds of others as to whether or not it was going to be necessary to
intervene. I started to turn red with embarrassment rather than anger. 'Okay.
Let me go.'
He did so and we sat down again. I was
still sore and not at all inclined to forget Zeb's unpardonable breach of good
manners, but the crisis was past. But he spoke quietly, 'Johnnie, believe me, I
was not insulting you nor any member of your family. That was a scientific
demonstration of the dynamics of connotational indices, and that is all it
was.'
'Well-you didn't have to make it so
personal.'
'Ah, but I did have to. We were speaking
of the psychodynamics of emotion, and emotions are personal, subjective things
which must be experienced to be understood. You were of the belief that you, as
an educated man, were immune to this form of attack-so I ran a lab test to show
you that no one is immune. Now just what did I say to you?'
'You said-Never mind. Okay, so it was a
test. But I don't care to repeat it. You've made your point: I don't like it.'
'But what did I say? All I said, in fact,
was that you were the legitimate offspring of a legal marriage. Right? What is
insulting about that?'
'But'-I stopped and ran over in my mind
the infuriating, insulting, and degrading things he had said-and, do you know,
that is absolutely all they added up to. I grinned sheepishly. 'It was the way
you said it.'
'Exactly, exactly! To put it technically,
I selected terms with high negative indices, for this situation and for this
listener. Which is precisely what we do with this propaganda, except that the
emotional indices are lesser quantitatively to avoid arousing suspicion and to
evade the censors-slow poison, rather than a kick in the belly. The stuff we
write is all about the Prophet, lauding him to the skies. . . so the irritation
produced in the reader is transferred to him. The method cuts below the
reader's conscious thought and acts on the taboos and fetishes that infest his
subconscious.'
I remembered sourly my own unreasoned
anger. 'I'm convinced. It sounds like heap big medicine.'
'It is, chum, it is. There is magic in
words, black magic-if you know how to invoke it.'
After dinner Zeb and I went to his cubicle
and continued to bat the breeze. I felt warm and comfortable and very, very
contented. The fact that we were part of a revolutionary plot, a project most
unlikely to succeed and which would most probably end with us both dead in battle
or burned for treason, affected me not at all. Good old Zeb! What if he did get
under my guard and hit me where it hurt? He was my 'family'-all the family that
I had. To be with him now made me feel the way I used to feel when my mother
would sit me down in the kitchen and feed me cookies and milk.
We talked about this and that, in the
course of which I learned more about the organization and discovered-was very
surprised to discover-that not all of our comrades were brethren. Lodge
Brothers, I mean. 'But isn't that dangerous?'
'What isn't? And what did you expect, old
son? Some of our most valuable comrades can't join the Lodge; their own
religious faith forbids it. But we don't have any monopoly on hating tyranny
and loving freedom and we need all the help we can get. Anybody going our
direction is a fellow traveler. Anybody.'
I thought it over. The idea was logical,
though somehow vaguely distasteful. I decided to gulp it down quickly. 'I
suppose so. I imagine even the pariahs will be of some use to us, when it comes
to the fighting, even if they aren't eligible for membership.'
Zeb gave me a look I knew too well. 'Oh,
for Pete's sake, John! When are you going to give up wearing diapers?'
'Huh?'
'Haven't you gotten it through your head
yet that the whole "pariah" notion is this tyranny's scapegoat
mechanism that every tyranny requires?'
'Yes, but-'
'Shut up. Take sex away from people. Make
it forbidden, evil, limit it to ritualistic breeding. Force it to back up into
suppressed sadism. Then hand the people a scapegoat to hate. Let them kill a
scapegoat occasionally for cathartic, release. The mechanism is ages old.
Tyrants used it centuries before the word "psychology" was ever
invented. It works, too. Look at yourself.'
'Look, Zeb, I don't have anything against
the pariahs.'
'You had better not have. You'll find a
few dozen of them in the Grand Lodge here. And by the way, forget that word
"pariah". It has, shall we say, a very high negative index.'
He shut up and so did I; again I needed
time to get my thoughts straight. Please understand me-it is easy to be free
when you have been brought up in freedom, it is not easy otherwise. A zoo
tiger, escaped, will often slink back into the peace and security of his bars.
If he can't get back, they tell me he will pace back and forth within the
limits of bars that are no longer there. I suppose I was still pacing in my
conditioned pattern.
The human mind is a tremendously complex
thing; it has compartments in it that its owner himself does not suspect. I had
thought that I had given my mind a thorough housecleaning already and had rid
it of all the dirty superstitions I had been brought up to believe. I was
learning that the 'housecleaning' had been no more than a matter of sweeping
the dirt under the rugs-it would be years before the cleansing would be
complete, before the clean air of reason blew through every room.
All right, I told myself, if I meet one of
these par-no, 'comrades', I'll exchange recognition with him and be polite-as
long as he is polite to me! At the time I saw nothing hypocritical in the
mental reservation.
Zeb lay back, smoking, and let me stew. I
knew that he smoked and he knew that I disapproved. But it was a minor sin and,
when we were rooming together in the Palace barracks, I would never have
thought of reporting him. I even knew which room servant was his bootlegger.
'Who is sneaking your smokes in now?' I asked, wishing to change the subject.
'Eh? Why, you buy them at the P.X., of
course.' He held the dirty thing out and looked at it. 'These Mexican
cigarettes are stronger than I like. I suspect that they use real tobacco in
them, instead of the bridge sweepings I'm used to. Want one?'
'Huh? Oh, no, thanks!'
He grinned wryly. 'Go ahead, give me your
usual lecture. It'll make you feel better.'
'Now look here, Zeb, I wasn't criticizing.
I suppose it's just one of the many things I've been wrong about.'
'Oh, no. It's a dirty, filthy habit that
ruins my wind and stains my teeth and may eventually kill me off with lung
cancer.' He took a deep inhalation, let the smoke trickle out of the corners of
his mouth, and looked profoundly contented. 'But it just happens that I like
dirty, filthy habits.'
He took another puff. 'But it's not a sin
and my punishment for it is here and now, in the way my mouth tastes each
morning. The Great Architect doesn't give a shout in Sheol about it. Catch on,
old son? He isn't even watching.'
'There is no need to be sacrilegious.'
'I wasn't being so.'
'You weren't, eh? You were scoffing at one
of the most fundamental-perhaps the one fundamental-proposition in religion:
the certainty that God is watching!'
'Who told you?'
For a moment all I could do was to
sputter. 'Why, it isn't necessary. It's an axiomatic certainty. It's -,
'I repeat, who told you? See here,
I retract what I said. Perhaps the Almighty is watching me smoke. Perhaps it is
a mortal sin and I will burn for it for eons. Perhaps. But who told you?
Johnnie, you've reached the point where you are willing to kick the Prophet out
and hang him to a tall, tall tree. Yet you are willing to assert your own
religious convictions and to use them as a touchstone to judge my conduct. So I
repeat: who told you? What hill were you standing on when the lightning came
down from Heaven and illuminated you? Which archangel carried the message?'
I did not answer at once. I could not.
When I did it was with a feeling of shock and cold loneliness. 'Zeb . . . I
think I understand you at last. You are an-atheist. Aren't you?'
Zeb looked at me bleakly. 'Don't call me
an atheist,' he said slowly, 'unless you are really looking for trouble.'
'Then you aren't one?' I felt a wave of
relief, although I still didn't understand him.
'No, I am not. Not that it is any of your
business. My religious faith is a private matter between me and my God. What my
inner beliefs are you will have to judge by my actions . . . for you are not
invited to question me about them. I decline to explain them nor to justify
them to you. Nor to anyone. . - not the Lodge Master. . . nor the Grand
Inquisitor, if it comes to that.'
'But you do believe in God?'
'I told you so, didn't I? Not that you had
any business asking me.'
'Then you must believe in other things?'
'Of course I do! I believe that a man has
an obligation to be merciful to the weak - . . patient with the stupid . . .
generous with the poor. I think he is obliged to lay down his life for his
brothers, should it be required of him. But I don't propose to prove any of
those things; they are beyond proof. And I don't demand that you believe as I
do.'
I let out my breath. 'I'm satisfied, Zeb.'
Instead of looking pleased he answered,
'That's mighty kind of you, brother, mighty kind! Sorry-I shouldn't be
sarcastic. But I had no intention of asking for your approval. You goaded
me-accidentally, I'm sure-into discussing matters that I never intend to
discuss.' He stopped to light up another of those stinking cigarettes and went
on more quietly. 'John, I suppose that I am, in my own cantankerous way, a very
narrow man myself. I believe very strongly in freedom of religion-but I think
that that freedom is best expressed as freedom to keep quiet. From my point of
view, a great deal of openly expressed piety is insufferable conceit.'
'Huh?'
'Not every case-I've known the good and
the humble and the devout. But how about the man who claims to know what the
Great Architect is thinking? The man who claims to be privy to His Inner Plans?
It strikes me as sacrilegious conceit of the worst sort-this character probably
has never been any closer to His Trestle Board than you or I. But it makes him
feel good to claim to be on chummy terms with the Almighty, it builds his ego,
and lets him lay down the law to you and me. Pfui! Along comes a knothead with
a loud voice, an I.Q. around 90, hair in his ears, dirty underwear, and a lot
of ambition. He's too lazy to be a farmer, too stupid to be an engineer, too
unreliable to be a banker-but, brother, can he pray! After a while he has
gathered around him other knotheads who don't have his vivid imagination and
self-assurance but like the idea of having a direct line of Omnipotence. Then
this character is no longer Nehemiah Scudder but the First Prophet'
I was going along with him, feeling
shocked but rather pleasantly so, until he named the First Prophet. Perhaps my
own spiritual state at that time could have been described as that of a
'primitive' follower of the First Prophet-that is to say, I had decided that
the Prophet Incarnate was the devil himself and that all of his works were bad,
but that belief did not affect the basics of the faith I had learned from my
mother. The thing to do was to purge and reform the Church, not to destroy it.
I mention this because my own case paralleled a very serious military problem
that was to develop later.
I found that Zeb was studying my face.
'Did I get you on the raw again, Old fellow? I didn't mean to.'
'Not at all,' I answered stiffly, and went
on to explain that, in my opinion, the sinfulness of the present gang of devils
that had taken over the Church in no way invalidated the true faith. 'After
all, no matter what you think nor how much you may like to show off your
cynicism, the doctrines are a matter of logical necessity. The Prophet
Incarnate and his cohorts can pervert them, but they can't destroy them-and it
doesn't matter whether the real Prophet had dirty underwear or not.'
Zeb sighed as if he were very tired.
'Johnnie, I certainly did not intend to get into an argument about religion
with you. I'm not the aggressive type-you know that. I had to be pushed into
the Cabal.' He paused. 'You say the doctrines are a matter of logic?'
'You've explained the logic to me
yourself. It's a perfect consistent structure.'
'So it is. Johnnie, the nice thing about
citing God as an authority is that you can prove anything you set out to prove.
It's just a matter of selecting the proper postulates, then insisting that your
postulates are "inspired". Then no one can possibly prove that you
are wrong.'
'You are asserting that the First Prophet
was not inspired?'
'I am asserting nothing. For all you know,
1 am the First Prophet, come back to kick out the defilers of my temple.'
'Don't be-I was all wound up to kick it
around further when there came a knock at Zeb's door. I stopped and he called
out, 'Come in!'
It was Sister Magdalene.
She nodded at Zeb, smiled sweetly at my
open-mouthed surprise and said, 'Hello, John Lyle. Welcome.' It was the first
time I had ever seen her other than in the robes of a holy deaconess. She
seemed awfully pretty and much younger.
'Sister Magdalene!'
'No. Staff Sergeant Andrews.
"Maggie", to my friends.'
'But what happened? Why are you here?'
'Right at the moment I'm here because I
heard at dinner that you had arrived. When I didn't find you in your own
quarters I concluded that you would be with Zeb. As for the rest, I couldn't go
back, any more than you or Zeb-and our hideout back in New Jerusalem was
getting overcrowded, so they transferred me.'
'Well, it's good to see you!'
'It's good to see you, John.' She patted
me on the cheek and smiled again. Then she climbed on Zeb's bed and squatted
tailor-fashion, showing a rather immodest amount of limb in the process. Zeb
lit another cigarette and handed it to her; she accepted it, drew smoke deep
into her lungs, and let it go as if she had been smoking all her life.
I had never seen a woman smoke-never. I
could see Zeb watching me, confound him!-and I most carefully ignored it.
Instead I grinned and said, 'This is a wonderful reunion! If only -,
'I know,' agreed Maggie. 'If only Judith
were here. Have you heard from her yet, John?'
'Heard from her? How could I?'
'That's right, you couldn't-not yet. But
you can write to her now.'
'Huh? How?'
'I don't know the code number off hand,
but you can drop it at my desk-I'm in G-2. Don't bother to seal it; all
personal mail has to be censored and paraphrased. I wrote to her last week but
I haven't had an answer yet.'
I thought about excusing myself at once
and writing a letter, but I didn't. It was wonderful to be with both of them
and I didn't want to cut the evening short. I decided to write before I went to
bed-while realizing, with surprise, that I had been so much on the go that, so
far as I could remember, I hadn't even had time to think about Judith since . .
. well, since Denver, at least.
But I did not get to write to her even
later that night. It was past eleven o'clock and Maggie was saying something
about reveille coming early when an orderly showed up: 'The Commanding General's
compliments and will Legate Lyle see him at once, sir.'
I gave my hair a quick brush with Zeb's
gear and hurried away, while wishing mightily that I had something fit to
report in, rather than a civilian suit much the worse for wear.
The inner sanctum was deserted and dark
except for a light that I could see in the far inner office-even Mr. Giles was
not at his desk. I found my way in, knocked on the door frame, stepped inside,
clicked my heels and saluted. 'Legate Lyle reports to the Commanding General as
ordered, sir.'
An elderly man seated at a big desk with
his back to me turned and looked up, and I got another surprise. 'Ah, yes, John
Lyle,' he said gently. He got up and came toward me, with his hand out. 'It's
been a long time, hasn't it?'
It was Colonel Huxley, head of the
Department of Applied Miracles when I was a cadet-and almost my only friend
among the officers at that time. Many was the Sunday afternoon that I had
relaxed in his quarters, my stock unhooked, free for the moment from the
pressure of discipline.
I took his hand. 'Colonel-I mean
"General", sir . I thought you were dead!'
'Dead colonel into live general, eh! No,
Lyle, though I was listed as dead when I went underground. They usually do that
when an officer disappears; it looks better. You're dead, too-did you know?'
'Uh, no, I didn't, sir. Not that it
matters. This is wonderful, sir!'
'Good.'
'But-I mean, how did you ever-well-' I
shut up.
'How did I land here and in charge at
that? I've been a Brother since I was your age, Lyle. But I didn't go
underground until I had to-none of us do. In my case the pressure for me to
join the priesthood became a bit too strong; the Superintendent was quite
restless about having a lay officer know too much about the more abstruse
branches of physics and chemistry. So I took a short leave and died. Very sad.'
He smiled. 'But sit down. I've been meaning to send for you all day, but it's
been a busy day. They all are. It wasn't until now that I've had time to listen
to the record of your report.'
We sat down and chatted, and I felt that
my cup runneth over. Huxley I respected more than any officer I had ever served
under. His very presence resolved any residual doubts I might have-if the Cabal
was right for him, it was right for me, and never mind the subtleties of
doctrine.
At last he said, 'I didn't call you in at
this late hour just to chat, Lyle. I've a job for you.'
'Yes, sir?'
'No doubt you've already noticed what a
raw militia we have here. This is between ourselves and I'm not criticizing our
comrades-every one of them has pledged his life to our cause, a harder thing
for them to do than for you and me, and they have all placed themselves under
military discipline, a thing still harder. But I haven't enough trained soldiers
to handle things properly. They mean well but I am tremendously handicapped in
trying to turn the organization into an efficient fighting machine. I'm swamped
with administrative details. Will you help me?'
I stood up. '1 shall be honored to serve
with the General to the best of my ability.'
'Fine! We'll call you my personal aide for
the time being. That's all for tonight, Captain. I'll see you in the morning.'
I was halfway out the door before his
parting designation sunk in-then I decided that it was a slip of the tongue.
But it was not. I found my own office the
next morning by the fact that a sign had been placed on it reading: 'CAPTAIN
LYLE'. From the standpoint of a professional military man there is one good
thing about revolutions: the opportunities for swift promotion are excellent .
. . even if the pay is inclined to be irregular.
My office adjoined General Huxley's and
from then on I almost lived in it-eventually I had a cot installed back of my
desk. The very first day I was still fighting my way down a stack of papers in
my incoming basket at ten at night. I had promised myself that I would find the
bottom, then write a long letter to Judith. But it turned out to be a very
short note, as there was a memorandum addressed to me personally, rather than
to the General, at the bottom.
It was addressed to 'Legate J. Lyle,' then
someone had scratched out 'Legate' and written 'Captain'. It went on:
MEMORANDUM
FOR ALL PERSONNEL NEWLY REPORTED
SUBJECT: Personal Conversion Report
1. You
are requested and directed to write out, as fully as possible, all of the
events, thoughts, considerations, and incidents which led up to your decision
to join our fight for freedom. This account should be as detailed as possible
and as subjective as possible. A report written hastily, too briefly, or to
superficially will be returned to be expanded and corrected and may be
supplemented by hypno examination.
2. This
report will be treated as confidential as a whole and any portion of it may be
classified secret by the writer. You may substitute letters or numbers for
proper names if this will help you to speak freely, but the report must be
complete.
3. No
time off from regular duties is allotted for this purpose, but this report must
be treated as extra-duty of highest priority. A draft of your report will be
expected by (here some one had written in a date and hour less than forty-eight
hours away; I used some profane expressions under my breath.)
BY
ORDER OF THE COMMANDING GENERAL
(s) M. Novak, Col, F.U.S.A. Chief of Psychology
I was considerably annoyed by this demand
and decided to write to Judith first anyway. The note didn't go very well-how
can one write a love letter when you know that one or more strangers will read
it and that one of them will rephrase your tenderest words? Besides that, while
writing to Judith, my thoughts kept coming back to that night on the rampart of
the Palace when I had first met her. It seemed to me that my own personal
conversion, as the nosy Colonel Novak called it, started then. . . although I
had begun to have doubts before then. Finally I finished the note, decided not
to go to bed at once but to tackle that blasted report.
After a while I noticed that it was one
o'clock in the morning and I still hadn't carried my account up to the point
where I was admitted to the Brotherhood. I stopped writing rather reluctantly
(I found that I had grown interested) and locked it in my desk.
At breakfast the next morning I got
Zebadiah aside, showed him the memorandum, and asked him about it. 'What's the
big idea?' I asked. 'You work for this particular brass. Are they still
suspicious of us, even after letting us in here?'
Zeb barely glanced at it. 'Oh,
that-Shucks, no. Although I might add that a spy, supposing one could get this
far, would be bound to be caught when his personal story went through semantic
analysis. Nobody can tell a lie that long and that complicated.'
'But what's it for?'
'What do you care? Write it out-and be
sure you do a thorough job. Then turn it in.'
I felt myself grow warm. 'I don't know as
I will. I rather think I'll ask the General about it first.'
'Do so, if you want to make a ruddy fool
of yourself. But look, John, the psychomathematicians who will read that mess
of bilge you will write, won't have the slightest interest in you as an
individual. They don't even want to know who you are-a girl goes through your
report and deletes all personal names, including your own, if you haven't done
so yourself, and substitutes numbers. . . all this before an analyst sees it.
You're just data, that's all; the Chief has some heap big project on the fire-I
don't know what it is myself-and he is trying to gather together a large enough
statistical universe to be significant.'
I was mollified. 'Well, why don't they say
so, then? This memo is just a bald order-irritating.'
Zeb shrugged. 'That is because it was
prepared by the semantics division. If the propaganda division had written it,
you would have gotten up early and finished the job before breakfast.' He
added, 'By the way, I hear you've been promoted. Congratulations.'
'Thanks.' I grinned at him slyly. 'How
does it feel to be junior to me, Zeb?'
'Huh? Did they bump you that far? I
thought you were a captain.'
'I am.'
'Well, excuse me for breathing-but I'm a
major.'
'Oh. Congratulations.'
'Think nothing of it. You have to be at
least a colonel around here, or you make your own bed.'
I was too busy to make my bed very often.
More than half the time I slept on the couch in my office and once I went a
week without bathing. It was evident at once that the Cabal was bigger and had
more complicated ramifications to it than I had ever dreamed and furthermore
that it was building to a crescendo. I was too close to the trees to see the woods,
even though everything but the utter top-secret, burn-after-reading items
passed across my desk.
I simply endeavored to keep General Huxley
from being smothered in pieces of paper-and found myself smothered instead. The
idea was to figure out what he would do, if he had time, and then do it for
him. A person who has been trained in the principles of staff or doctrinal
command can do this; the trick is to make your mind work like your boss's mind
in all routine matters, and to be able to recognize what is routine and what he
must pass on himself. I made my share of mistakes, but apparently not too many
for he didn't fire me, and three months later I was a major with the fancy
title of assistant chief of staff. Chalk most of it up to the West Point ring, of
course-a professional has a great advantage.
I should add that Zeb was a short-tailed
colonel by then and acting chief of propaganda, his section chief having been
transferred to a regional headquarters I knew only by the code name JERICHO.
But I am getting ahead of my story. I
heard from Judith about two weeks later-a pleasant enough note but with the
juice pressed out of it through rephrasing. I meant to answer her at once but
actually delayed a week-it was so pesky hard to know what to say. I could not
possibly tell her any news except that 1 was well and busy. If I had told her I
loved her three times in one letter some idiot in cryptography would have
examined it for 'pattern' and rejected it completely when he failed to find
one.
The mail went to Mexico through a long
tunnel, partly artificial but mostly natural, which led right under the
international border. A little electric railroad of the sort used in mines ran
through this tunnel and carried not only my daily headaches in the way of official
mail but also a great deal of freight to supply our fair-sized town. There were
a dozen other entrances to G.H.Q. on the Arizona side of the border, but I
never knew where any of them were-it was not my pidgin. The whole area overlay
a deep layer of Paleozoic limestone and it may well be honeycombed from
California to Texas. The area known as G.H.Q. had been in use for more than
twenty years as a hideout for refugee brethren. Nobody knew the extent of the
caverns we were in; we simply lighted and used what we needed. It was a
favorite sport of us troglodytes-permanent residents were 'trogs'; transients
were 'bats' because they flew by night-we trogs liked to go on 'spelling bees',
picnics which included a little amateur speleology in the unexplored parts.
It was permitted by regulations, but just
barely and subject to stringent safety precautions, for you could break a leg
awfully easily in those holes. But the General permitted it because it was
necessary; we had only such recreations as we could make ourselves and some of
us had not seen daylight in years.
Zeb and Maggie and I went on a number of
such outings when I could get away. Maggie always brought another woman along.
I protested at first but she pointed out to me that it was necessary in order
to avoid gossip . . . mutual chaperonage. She assured me that she was certain
that Judith would not mind, under the circumstances. It was a different girl
each time and it seemed to work out that Zeb always paid a lot of attention to
the other girl while I talked with Maggie. I had thought once that Maggie and
Zeb would marry, but now I began to wonder. They seemed to suit each other like
ham and eggs, but Maggie did not seem jealous and I can only describe Zeb, in
honesty, as shameless-that is, if he thought Maggie would care.
One Saturday morning Zeb stuck his head in
my sweat box and said, 'Spelling bee. Two o'clock. Bring a towel.'
I looked up from a mound of papers. 'I
doubt if I can make it,' I answered. 'And why a towel?'
But he was gone. Maggie came through my
office later to take the weekly consolidated intelligence report in to the Old
Man, but I did not attempt to question her, as Maggie was all business during
working hours-the perfect office sergeant. I had lunch at my desk, hoping to finish
up, but knowing it was impossible. About a quarter of two I went in to get
General Huxley's signature on an item that was to go out that night by hypnoed
courier and therefore had to go at once to psycho in order that the courier
might be operated. He glanced at it and signed it, then said, 'Sergeant Andy
tells me you have a date.'
,'Sergeant Andrews is mistaken,' I said
stiffly. 'There are still the weekly reports from Jericho, Nod, and Egypt to be
gone over.'
'Place them on my desk and get out. That's
an order. I can't have you going stale from overwork.'
I did not tell him that he had not even
been to lodge himself in more than a month; I got out.
I dropped the message with Colonel Novak
and hurried to where we always met near the women's mess. Maggie was there with
the other girl-a blonde named Miriam Booth who was a clerk in Quartermaster's
store. I knew her by sight but had never spoken to her. They had our picnic
lunch and Zeb arrived while I was being introduced. He was carrying, as usual, the
portable flood we would use when we picked out a spot and a blanket to sit on
and use as a table. 'Where's your ç
towel?' he demanded.
'Were you serious? I forgot it.'
'Run get it. We'll start off along Appian
Way. You can catch up. Come on, kids.'
They started off, which left me with
nothing but to do as I was told. After grabbing a towel from my room I
dogtrotted until I had them in sight, then slowed to a walk, puffing. Desk work
had ruined my wind. They heard me and waited.
We were all dressed alike, with the women
in trousers and each with a safety line wrapped around the waist and torch
clipped to the belt. I had gotten used to women in men's clothes, much as I
disliked it-and, after all, it is impractical and quite immodest to climb around
in caves wearing skirts.
We left the lighted area by taking a turn
that appeared to lead into a blind wall; instead it led into a completely
concealed but easily negotiated tunnel. Zeb tied our labyrinth string and
started paying it out as soon as we left permanent and marked paths, as
required by the standing order; Zeb was always careful about things that
mattered.
For perhaps a thousand paces we could see
blazes and other indications that others had been this way before, such as a
place where someone had worked a narrow squeeze wider with a sledge. Then we
left the obvious path and turned into a blind wall. Zeb put down the flood and
turned it on. 'Sling your torches. We climb this one.'
'Where are we going?'
'A place Miriam knows about. Give me a leg
up, Johnnie.' The climb wasn't much. I got Zeb up all right and the girls could
have helped each other up, but we took them up roped, for safety's sake. We
picked up our gear and Miriam led us away, each of us using his torch.
We went down the other side and there was
another passage so well hidden that it could have been missed for ten thousand
years. We stopped once while Zeb tied on another ball of string. Shortly Miriam
said, 'Slow up, everybody. I think we're there.'
Zeb flashed his torch around, then set up
the portable flood and switched it on. He whistled. 'Whew! This is all right!'
Maggie said softly, 'It's lovely.' Miriam
just grinned triumphantly.
I agreed with them all. It was a perfect
small domed cavern, perhaps eighty feet wide and much longer. How long, I could
not tell, as it curved gently away in a gloom-filled turn. But the feature of
the place was a quiet, inky-black pool that filled most of the floor. In front
of us was a tiny beach of real sand that might have been laid down a million
years ago for all I know.
Our voice echoed pleasantly and a little
bit spookily in the chamber, being broken up and distorted by stalactites and
curtains hanging from the roof. Zeb walked down to the water's edge, squatted
and tested it with his hand. 'Not too cold,' he announced. 'Well, the last one
in is a proctor's nark.'
I recognized the old swimming hole call,
even though the last time I had heard it, as a boy, it had been 'last one in is
a dirty pariah'. But here I could not believe it.
Zeb was already unbuttoning his shirt. I
stepped up to him quickly and said privately, 'Zeb! Mixed bathing? You must be
joking?'
'Not a bit of it.' He searched my face.
'Why not? What's the matter with you, boy? Afraid someone will make you do
penance? They won't, you know. That's all over with.'
'But -'
'But what?'
I could not answer. The only way I could
make the words come out would have been in the terms we had been taught in the
Church, and I knew that Zeb would laugh at me-in front of the women. Probably
they would laugh, too, since they had known and I hadn't. 'But Zeb,' I
insisted, 'I can't. You didn't tell me . . . and I don't even have a bathing
outfit.'
'Neither do I. Didn't you ever go in raw
as a kid-and get paddled for it?' He turned away without waiting for me to
answer this enormity and said, 'Are you frail vessels waiting on something?'
'Just for you two to finish your debate,'
Maggie answered, coming closer. 'Zeb, I think Mimi and I will use the other
side of that boulder. All right?'
'Okay. But wait a second. No diving, you
both understand. And a safety man on the bank at all times-John and I will take
turns.'
'Pooh!' said Miriam. '1 dove the last time
I was here.'
'You weren't with me, that's sure. No
diving-or I'll warm your pants where they are tightest.'
She shrugged. 'All right, Colonel
Crosspatch. Come on, Mag.' They went on past us and around a boulder half as
big as a house. Miriam stopped, looked right at me, and waggled a finger. 'No
peeking, now!' I blushed to my ears.
They disappeared and we heard no more of
them, except for giggles. I said hurriedly, 'Look. You do as you please-and on
your own head be it. But I'm not going in. I'll sit here on the bank and be
safety man.'
'Suit yourself. I was going to match you
for first duty, but nobody is twisting your arm. Pay out a line, though, and
have it ready for heaving. Not that we'll need it; both the girls are strong
swimmers.'
I said desperately, 'Zeb, I'm sure the
General would forbid swimming in these underground pools.'
'That's why we don't mention it.
"Never worry the C.O. unnecessarily"-standing orders in Joshua's
Army, circa 1400 B.C.' He went right on peeling off his clothes.
I don't know why Miriam warned me not to
peek-not that I would!-for when she was undressed she came straight out from
behind that boulder, not toward us but toward the water. But the flood light
was full on her and she even turned toward us for an instant, then shouted,
'Come on, Maggie! Zeb is going to be last if you hurry.'
I did not want to look and I could not
take my eyes off her. I had never seen anything remotely resembling the sight
she was in my life-and only once a picture, one in the possession of a boy in
my parish school and on that occasion I had gotten only a glimpse and then had
promptly reported him.
But I could not stop looking, burning with
shame as I was.
Zeb beat Maggie into the water-I don't
think she cared. He went into the water quickly, almost breaking his own
injunction against diving. Sort of a surface dive I would call it, running into
the water and then breaking into a racing start. His powerful crawl was soon
overtaking Miriam, who had started to swim toward the far end.
Then Maggie came out from behind the
boulder and went into the water. She did not make a major evolution of it, the
way Miriam had, but simply walked quickly and with quiet grace into the water.
When she was waist deep, she let herself sink forward and struck out in a
strong breast stroke, then shifted to a crawl and followed the others, when I
could hear but hardly see in the distance.
Again I could not take my eyes away if my
eternal soul had depended on it. What is it about the body of a human woman
that makes it the most terribly beautiful sight on earth? Is it, as some claim,
simply a necessary instinct to make sure that we comply with God's will and
replenish the earth? Or is it some stranger, more wonderful thing?
I found myself quoting: 'How fair and how
pleasant art thou, 0 love, for delights!
'This thy stature is like to a palm tree,
and thy breasts to clusters of grapes.'
Then I broke off, ashamed, remembering
that the Song of Songs which is Solomon's was a chaste and holy allegory having
nothing to do with such things.
I sat down on the sand and tried to compose
my soul. After a while I felt better and my heart stopped pounding so hard.
When they all came swimming back with Zeb in the lead, racing Miriam, I even
managed to throw them a smile. It no longer seemed quite so terrible and as
long as they stayed in the water the women were not shockingly exposed. Perhaps
evil was truly in the eyes of the beholder-in which case the idea was to keep
it out of mine.
Zeb called out, 'Ready to be relieved?'
I answered firmly, 'No. Go ahead and have
your fun.'
'Okay.' He turned like a dolphin and
started back the other way. Miriam followed him. Maggie came in to where it was
shallow, rested her finger tips on the bottom, and held facing me, with just
her head and her ivory shoulders out of the inky water, while her waist-length
mane of hair floated around her.
'Poor John,' she said softly. 'I'll come
out and spell you.'
'Oh, no, really!'
'Are you sure?'
'Quite sure.'
'All right.' She turned, flipped herself
over, and started after the others. For one ghostly, magic instant she was
partly out of the water.
Maggie came back to my end of the cavern
about ten minutes later. 'I'm cold,' she said briefly, climbed out and strode
quickly to the protection of the boulder. Somehow she was not naked, but merely
unclothed, like Mother Eve. There is a difference-Miriam had been naked.
With Maggie out of the water and neither
one of us speaking I noticed for the first time that there was no other sound.
Now there is nothing so quiet as a cave; anywhere else at all there is noise,
but the complete zero decibel which obtains underground if one holds still and
says nothing is very different.
The point is that I should have been able
to hear Zeb and Miriam swimming. Swimming need not be noisy but it can't be as
quiet as a cave. I sat up suddenly and started forward-then stopped with equal
suddenness as I did not want to invade Maggie's dressing room, which another
dozen steps would have accomplished.
But I was really worried and did not know
what to do. Throw a line? Where? Peel down and search for them? If necessary. I
called out softly, 'Maggie!'
'What is it, John?'
'Maggie, I'm worried.'
She came at once from behind the rock. She
had already pulled on her trousers, but held her towel so that it covered her
from the waist up; I had the impression she had been drying her hair. 'Why,
John?'
'Keep very quiet and listen.'
She did so. 'I don't hear anything.'
'That's just it. We should. I could hear
you all swimming even when you were down at the far end, out of my sight. Now
there isn't a sound, not a splash. Do you suppose they possibly could both have
hit their heads on the bottom at the same time?'
'Oh. Stop worrying, John. They're all
right.'
'But I am worried.'
'They're just resting, I'm sure. There is
another little beach down there, about half as big as this. That's where they
are. I climbed up on it with them, then I came back. I was cold.'
I made up my mind, realizing that I had
let my modesty hold me back from my plain duty. 'Turn your back. No, go behind
the boulder-I want to undress.'
'What? I tell you it's not necessary.' She
did not budge.
I opened my mouth to shout. Before I got
it out Maggie had a hand over my mouth, which caused her towel to be
disarranged and flustered us both. 'Oh, heavens!' she said sharply. 'Keep your
big mouth shut.' She turned suddenly and flipped the towel; when she turned
back she had it about her like a stole, covering her front well enough, I
suppose, without the need to hold it.
'John Lyle, come here and sit down. Sit
down by me.' She sat on the sand and patted the place by her-and such was the
firmness with which she spoke that I did as I was told.
'By me,' she insisted. 'Come closer. I
don't want to shout.' I inched gingerly closer until my sleeve brushed her bare
arm. 'That's better,' she agreed, keeping her voice low so that it did not
resound around the cavern. 'Now listen to me. There are two people down there,
of their own free will. They are entirely safe-I saw them. And they are both
excellent swimmers. The thing for you to do, John Lyle, is to mind your own
business and restrain that nasty itch to interfere.'
'I'm afraid I don't understand you.'
Truthfully, I was afraid I did.
'Oh, goodness me! See here, does Miriam
mean anything to you?'
'Why, no, not especially.'
'I should think not, since you haven't
addressed six words to her since we started out. Very well, then-since you have
no cause to be jealous, if two people choose to be alone, why should you stick
your nose in? Understand me now?'
'Uh, I guess so.'
'Then just be quiet.'
I was quiet. She didn't move. I was
actually aware of her nakedness-for now she was naked, though covered-and I
hoped that she was not aware that I was aware. Besides that I was acutely aware
of being almost a participant in-well, I don't know what. I told myself angrily
that I had no right to assume the worst, like a morals proctor.
Presently I said, 'Maggie. .
'Yes, John?'
'I don't understand you.'
'Why not, John? Not that it is really
needful.'
'Uh, you don't seem to give a hoot that
Zeb is down there, with Miriam-alone.'
'Should I give a hoot?'
Confound the woman! She was deliberately
misunderstanding me. 'Well . . . look, somehow I had gotten the impression that
you and Zeb-I mean.. . well, I suppose I sort of expected that you two meant to
get married, when you could.'
She laughed a low chuckle that had little
mirth in it. 'I suppose you could have gotten that impression. But, believe me,
the matter is all settled and for the best.'
'Huh?'
'Don't misunderstand me. I am very fond of
Zebadiah and I know he is equally fond of me. But we are both dominant types
psychologically-you should see my profile chart; it looks like the Rocky
Mountains! Two such people should not marry. Such marriages are not made in
Heaven, believe me! Fortunately we found it out in time.'
'Oh.'
'Oh, indeed.'
Now I don't know just how the next thing
happened. I was thinking that she seemed rather forlorn-and the next thing I
knew I was kissing her. She lay back in my arms and returned the kiss with a
fervor I would not have believed possible. As for me, my head was buzzing and
my eyeballs were knocking together and I couldn't have told you whether I was a
thousand feet underground or on dress parade.
Then it was over. She looked up for a bare
moment into my eyes and whispered, 'Dear John . . . ' Then she got suddenly to
her feet, leaned over me, careless of the towel, and patted my cheek. 'Judith
is a very lucky girl. I wonder if she knows it.'
'Maggie!' I said.
She turned away and said, without looking
back. 'I really must finish dressing. I'm cold.'
She had not felt cold to me.
She
came out shortly, fully dressed and toweling her hair vigorously. I got my dry
towel and helped her. I don't believe I suggested it; the idea just took care
of itself. Her hair was thick and lovely and I enjoyed doing it. It sent goose
pimples over me.
Zeb and Miriam came back while I was doing
so, not racing but swimming slowly; we could hear them laughing long before
they were in sight. Miriam climbed out of the water as shamelessly as any
harlot of Gomorrah, but I hardly noticed her. Zeb looked me in the eye and said
aggressively, 'Ready for your swim, chum?'
I started to say that I did not believe
that I would bother and was going to make some excuse about my towel already
being wet-when I noticed Maggie watching me. . . not saying anything but
watching. I answered, 'Why, surely! You two took long enough.' I called out,
'Miriam! Get out from behind that rock! I want to use it.'
She squealed and giggled and came out,
still arranging her clothes. I went behind it with quiet dignity.
I hope I still had quiet dignity when I
came out. In any case I set my teeth, walked out and straight into the water.
It was bitingly cold at first, but only for a moment. I was never varsity but I
swam on my class team and I've even been in the Hudson on New Year's Day. I
liked that black pool, once I was in.
I just had to swim down to the other end.
Sure enough, there was a little beach there. I did not go up on it.
On the way back I tried to swim down to
the bottom. I could not find it, but it must have been over twenty feet down. I
liked it down there-black and utterly still. Had I the breath for it, or gills,
it seemed to me that it would have been a good place to stay, away from
Prophets, away from Cabals, and paperwork, and worries, and problems too subtle
for me.
I came up gasping, then struck out hard
for our picnic beach. The girls already had the food laid out and Zeb shouted for
me to hurry. Zeb and Maggie did not look up as I got out of the water, but I
caught Miriam eyeing me. I don't think I blushed. I never did like blondes
anyhow. I think Lilith must have been a blonde.
Chapter
11
The
Supreme Council, consisting of heads of departments, General Huxley, and a few
others, met weekly or oftener to advise the General, exchange views, and
consider the field reports. About a month after our rather silly escapade in
the underground pool they were in session and I was with them, not as a member
but as a recorder. My own girl was ill and I had borrowed Maggie from G-2 to
operate the voicewriter, since she was cleared for top secret. We were always
terribly shorthanded of competent personnel. My nominal boss, for example, was
Wing General Penoyer, who carried the title of Chief of Staff. But I hardly
ever saw him, as he was also Chief of Ordnance. Huxley was his own chief of
staff and I was sort of a glorified aide-'midshipmite, and bosun tite, and crew
of the captain's gig'. I even tried to see to it that Huxley took his stomach
medicine regularly.
This meeting was bigger than usual. The
regional commanders of Gath, Canaan, Jericho, Babylon, and Egypt were present
in person; Nod and Damascus were represented by deputies-every Cabal district
of the United States except Eden and we were holding a sensitive hook-up to
Louisville for that command, using idea code that the sensitives themselves
would not understand. I could feel the pressure of something big coming up,
although Huxley had not taken me into his confidence. The place was tyled so
that a mouse couldn't have got in.
We droned through the usual routine
reports. It was duly recorded that we now had eighty-seven hundred and nine
accepted members, either lodge brethren or tested and bound members of the
parallel military organization. There were listed as recruited and instructed
more than ten times that number of fellow travelers who could be counted on to
rise against the Prophet, but who had not been entrusted with knowledge of the
actual conspiracy.
The figures themselves were not
encouraging. We were always in the jaws of a dilemma; a hundred thousand men
was a handful to conquer a continent-wide country whereas the less than nine
thousand party to the conspiracy itself were 'way too many to keep a secret. We
necessarily relied on the ancient cell system wherein no man knew more than he
had to know and could not give away too much no matter what an inquisitor did
to him-no, not even if he had been a spy. But we had our weekly losses even at
this passive stage.
One entire lodge had been surprised in
session and arrested in Seattle four days earlier; it was a serious loss but
only three of the chairs had possessed critical knowledge and all three had
suicided successfully. Prayers would be said for all of them at a grand session
that night, but here it was a routine report. We had lost four hatchet men that
week but twenty-three assassinations had been accomplished-one of them the
Elder Inquisitor for the entire lower Mississippi Valley.
The Chief of Communications reported that
the brethren were prepared to disable 91% (figured on population coverage) of
the radio & TV stations in the country, and that with the aid of assault
groups we could reasonably hope to account for the rest-with the exception of
the Voice of God station at New Jerusalem, which was a special problem.
The Chief of Combat Engineering reported
readiness to sabotage the power supply of the forty-six largest cities, again
with the exception of New Jerusalem, the supply of which was self-contained
with the pile located under the Temple. Even there major interruption could be
accomplished at distribution stations if the operation warranted the
expenditure of sufficient men. Major surface transportation and freight routes
could be sabotaged sufficiently with present plans and personnel to reduce
traffic to 12% of normal.
The reports went on and on-newspapers,
student action groups, rocket field seizure or sabotage, miracles, rumor
propagation, water supply, incident incitement, counter-espionage, long-range
weather prediction, weapons distribution. War is a simple matter compared with
revolution. War is an applied science, with well-defined principles tested in
history; analogous solutions may be found from ballista to H-bomb. But every
revolution is a freak, a mutant, a monstrosity, its conditions never to be
repeated and its operations carried out by amateurs and individualists.
While Maggie recorded the data I was
arranging it and transmitting it to the calculator room for analysis. I was
much too busy even to attempt a horse-back evaluation in my head. There was a
short wait while the analysts finished programming and let the 'brain' have
it-then the remote-printer in front of me chattered briefly and stopped. Huxley
leaned across me and tore off the tape before I could reach it.
He glanced at it, then cleared his throat
and waited for dead silence. 'Brethren,' he began, 'comrades-we agreed long ago
on our doctrine of procedure. When every predictable factor, calculated,
discounted for probable error, weighted and correlated with all other
significant factors, gave a calculated risk of two to one in our favor, we
would strike. Today's solution of the probability equation, substituting this
week's data for the variables, gives an answer of two point one three. I
propose to set the hour of execution. How say you?'
It was a delayed shock; no one said
anything. Hope delayed too long makes reality hard to believe-and all of these
men had waited for years, some for most of a lifetime. Then they were on their
feet, shouting, sobbing, cursing, pounding each others' backs.
Huxley sat still until they quieted, an
odd little smile on his face. Then he stood up and said quietly, 'I don't think
we need poll the sentiment. I will set the hour after I have-'General! If you
please. I do not agree.' It was Zeb's boss, Sector General Novak, Chief of
Psych. Huxley stopped speaking and the silence fairly ached. I was as stunned
as the rest.
Then Huxley said quietly, 'This council
usually acts by unanimous consent. We have long since arrived at the method for
setting the date. . . but I know that you would not disagree without good
reason. We will listen now to Brother Novak.'
Novak came slowly forward and faced them.
'Brethren,' he began, running his eyes over bewildered and hostile faces, 'you
know me, and you know I want this thing as much as you do. I have devoted the
last seventeen years to it-it has cost me my family and my home. But I can't
let you go ahead without warning you, when I am sure that the time is not yet.
I think-no, I know with mathematical certainty that we are not ready for
revolution.' He had to wait and hold up both hands for silence; they did not
want to hear him. 'Hear me out! I concede that all military plans are ready. I
admit that if we strike now we have a strong probability of being able to seize
the country. Nevertheless we are not ready -,
'Why not?'
'- because a majority of the people still
believe in the established religion, they believe in the Divine authority of
the Prophet. We can seize power but we can't hold it.'
'The Devil we won't!'
'Listen to me! No people was ever held in
subjection long except through their own consent. For three generations the
American people have been conditioned from cradle to grave by the cleverest and
most thorough psychotechnicians in the world. They believe! If you turn them
loose now, without adequate psychological preparation, they will go back to
their chains . . . like a horse returning to a burning barn. We can win the
revolution but it will be followed by a long and bloody civil war-which we will
lose!'
He stopped, ran a trembling hand across
his eyes, then said to Huxley, 'That's all.'
Several were on their feet at once. Huxley
pounded for order, then recognized Wing General Penoyer.
Penoyer said, 'I'd like to ask Brother
Novak a few questions.'
'Go ahead.'
'Can his department tell us what
percentage of the population is sincerely devout?'
Zebadiah, present to assist his chief,
looked up; Novak nodded and he answered, 'Sixty-two percent, plus-or-minus
three percent.'
'And the percentage who secretly oppose
the government whether we have enlisted them or not?'
'Twenty-one percent plus, proportional
error. The balance can be classed as conformists, not devout but reasonably
contented.'
'By what means were the data obtained?'
'Surprise hypnosis of representative
types.'
'Can you state the trend?'
'Yes, sir. The government lost ground
rapidly during the first years of the present depression, then the curve
flattened out. The new tithing law and to some extent the vagrancy decrees were
unpopular and the government again lost ground before the curve again flattened
at a lower level. About that time business picked up a little but we
simultaneously started our present intensified propaganda campaign; the
government has been losing ground slowly but steadily the past fifteen months.'
'And what does the first derivative show?'
Zeb hesitated and Novak took over. 'You
have to figure the second derivative,' he answered in a strained voice; 'the
rate is accelerating.'
'Well?'
The Psych Chief answered firmly but
reluctantly, 'On extrapolation, it will be three years and eight months before
we can risk striking.'
Penoyer turned back to Huxley. 'I have my
answer, sir. With deep respect to General Novak and his careful scientific
work, I say-win while we can! We may never have another chance.'
He had the crowd with him. 'Penoyer is
right! If we wait, we'll be betrayed.'-'You can't hold a thing like this
together forever.'-'I've been underground ten years; I don't want to be buried
here.'-'Win - . . and worry about making converts when we control
communications.'-'Strike now! Strike now!'
Huxley let them carry on, his own face
expressionless, until they had it out of their systems. I kept quiet myself,
since I was too junior to be entitled to a voice here, but I went along with
Penoyer; I couldn't see waiting nearly four years.
I saw Zeb talking earnestly with Novak.
They seemed to be arguing about something and were paying no attention to the
racket. But when Huxley at last held up a hand for silence Novak left his place
and hurried up to Huxley's elbow. The General listened for a moment, seemed
almost annoyed, then undecided. Novak crooked a finger at Zeb, who came running
up. The three whispered together for several moments while the council waited.
Finally Huxley faced them again. 'General
Novak has proposed a scheme which may change the whole situation. The Council is
recessed until tomorrow.'
Novak's plan (or Zeb's, though he never
admitted authorship) required a delay of nearly two months, to the date of the
annual Miracle of the Incarnation. For what was contemplated was no less than
tampering with the Miracle itself. In hindsight it was an obvious and probably
essential strategem; the psych boss was right. In essence, a dictator's
strength depends not upon guns but on the faith his people place in him. This
had been true of Caesar, of Napoleon, of Hitler, of Stalin. It was necessary to
strike first at the foundation of the Prophet's power: the popular belief that
he ruled by direct authority of God.
Future generations will undoubtedly find
it impossible to believe the importance, the extreme importance both to religious
faith and political power, of the Miracle of Incarnation. To comprehend it even
intellectually it is necessary to realize that the people literally believed
that the First Prophet actually and physically returned from Heaven once each
year to judge the stewardship of his Divinely appointed successor and to
confirm him in his office. The people believed this-the minority of doubters
dared not open their faces to dispute it for fear of being torn limb from limb.
. . and I am speaking of a rending that leaves blood on the pavement, not some
figure of speech. Spitting on the Flag would have been much safer.
I had believed it myself, all my life; it
would never have occurred to me to doubt such a basic article of faith-and I
was what is called an educated man, one who had been let into the secrets of
and trained in the production of lesser miracles. I believed it.
The ensuing two months had all the endless
time-stretching tension of the waiting period while coming into range and
before 'Commence firing!'-yet we were so busy that each day and each hour was
too short. In addition to preparing the still more-miraculous intervention in
the Miracle we used the time to whet our usual weapons to greater fineness. Zeb
and his boss, Sector General Novak, were detached almost at once. Novak's
orders read '- proceed to BEULAHLAND and take charge of OPERATION BEDROCK.' I
cut the orders myself, not trusting them to a clerk, but no one told me where
Beulahland might be found on a map.
Huxley himself left when they did and was
gone for more than a week, leaving Penoyer as acting C-in-C. He did not tell me
why he was leaving, of course, nor where he was going, but I could fill in.
Operation Bedrock was a psychological maneuver but the means must be
physical-and my boss had once been head of the Department of Applied Miracles
at the Point. He may have been the best physicist in the entire Cabal; in any
case I could guess with certainty that he intended at the very least to see for
himself that the means were adequate and the techniques foolproof. For all I
know he may actually have used soldering iron and screwdriver and electronic
micrometer himself that week-the General did not mind getting his hands dirty.
I missed Huxley personally. Penoyer was
inclined to reverse my decisions on minor matters and waste my time and his on
details a top C.O. can't and should not cope with. But he was gone part of the
time, too. There was much coming and going and more than once I had to chase
down the senior department head present, tell him that he was acting, and get
him to sign where I had initialed. I took to scrawling 'I. M. Dumbjohn, Wing
General F.U.S.A., Acting' as indecipherably as possible on all routine internal
papers-I don't think anybody ever noticed.
Before Zeb left another thing happened
which really has nothing to do with the people of the United States and the
struggle to regain their freedoms-but my own personal affairs are so tied into
this account that I mention it. Perhaps the personal angle really is important;
certainly the order under which this journal was started called for it to be
'personal' and 'subjective'-however I had retained a copy and added to it
because I found it helped me to get my own confused thoughts straight while
going through a metamorphosis as drastic as that from caterpillar into moth. I
am typical, perhaps, of the vast majority, the sort of person who has to have
his nose rubbed in a thing before he recognizes it, while Zeb and Maggie and
General Huxley were of the elite minority of naturally free souls . . . the
original thinkers, the leaders.
I was at my desk, trying to cope with the
usual spate of papers, when I received a call to see Zeb's boss at my earliest
convenience. Since he already had his orders, I left word with Huxley's orderly
and hurried over.
He cut short the formalities. 'Major, I
have a letter for you which Communications sent over for analysis to determine
whether it should be rephrased or simply destroyed. However, on the urgent
recommendation of one of my division heads I am taking the responsibility of
letting you read it without paraphrasing. You will have to read it here.'
I said, 'Yes, sir,' feeling quite puzzled.
He handed it to me. It was fairly long and
I suppose it could have held half a dozen coded messages, even idea codes that
could come through paraphrasing. I don't remember much of it-just the impact it
had on me. It was from Judith.
'My dear John . . . I shall always think
of you fondly and I shall never forget what you have done for me.. . never meant
for each other . . . Mr. Mendoza has been most considerate. I know you will
forgive me.. . he needs me; it must have been fate that brought us together . .
. if you ever visit Mexico City, you must think of our home as yours . . . I
will always think of you as my strong and wise older brother and I will always
be a sister-' There was more, lots more, all of the same sort-I think the
process is known as 'breaking it gently'.
Novak reached out and took the letter from
me. 'I didn't intend for you to have time to memorize it,' he said dryly, then
dropped it at once into his desk incinerator. He glanced back at me. 'Maybe you
had better sit down, Major. Do you smoke?'
I did not sit down, but I was spinning so
fast that I accepted the cigarette and let him light it for me. Then I choked
on tobacco smoke and the sheer physical discomfort helped to bring me back to
reality. I thanked him and got out-went straight to my room, called my office
and left word where I could be found if the General really wanted me. But I
told my secretary that I was suddenly quite ill and not to disturb me if it
could possibly be helped.
I may have been there about an hour-I
wouldn't know-lying face down and doing nothing, not even thinking. There came
a gentle tap at the door, then it was pushed open; it was Zeb. 'How do you
feel?' he said.
'Numb,' I answered. It did not occur to me
to wonder how he knew and at the time I had forgotten the 'division head' who
had prevailed upon Novak to let me see it in the clear.
He came on in, sprawled in a chair, and
looked at me. I rolled over and sat on the edge of the bed. 'Don't let it throw
you, Johnnie,' he said quietly. '"Men have died and worms have eaten
them-but not for love."'
'You don't know!'
'No, I don't,' he agreed. 'Each man is his
own prisoner, in solitary confinement for life. Nevertheless on this particular
point the statistics are fairly reliable. Try something for me. Visualize
Judith in your mind. See her features. Listen to her voice.'
'Huh?'
'Do it.'
I tried, I really tried-and, do you know,
I couldn't. I had never had a picture of her; her face now eluded me.
Zeb was watching me. 'You'll get well,' he
said firmly. 'Now look here, Johnnie. . . I could have told you. Judith is a
very female sort of woman, all gonads and no brain. And she's quite attractive.
Turned loose, she was bound to find a man, as sure as nascent oxygen will
recombine. But there is no use in talking to a man in love.'
He stood up. 'Johnnie, I've got to go. I
hate like the mischief to walk out and leave you in the shape you are in, but
I've already checked out and Grandfather Novak is ready to leave. He'll eat me
out as it is, for holding him up this long. But one more word of advice before
I go -,
I waited. 'I suggest,' he continued, 'that
you see a lot of Maggie while I'm away. She's good medicine.'
He started to leave; I said sharply,
'Zeb-what happened to you and Maggie? Something like this?'
He looked back at me sharply. 'Huh? No.
Not at all the same thing. It wasn't. . . well, it wasn't similar.'
'I don't understand you-I guess I just
don't understand people. You're urging me to see a lot of Maggie-and I thought
she was your girl. Uh, wouldn't you be jealous?'
He stared at me, laughed, and clapped me
on the shoulder. 'She's a free citizen, Johnnie, believe me. If you ever did
anything to hurt Maggie, I'd tear off your head and beat you to death with it.
Not that you ever would. But jealous of her? No. It doesn't enter the picture.
I think she's the greatest gal that ever trod shoe leather-but I would rather
marry a mountain lioness.'
He left on that, leaving me again with my
mouth open. But I took his advice, or Maggie took it for me. Maggie knew all
about it-Judith, I mean-and I assumed that Zeb had told her. He hadn't; it
seemed that Judith had written to her first. In any case I didn't have to look
her up; she looked me up right after dinner that night. I talked with her a
while and felt much better, so much so that I went back to my office and made
up for time lost that afternoon.
Maggie and I made a habit thereafter of
taking a walk together after dinner. We went on no more spelling bees; not only
was there no time for such during those last days but also neither one of us
felt like trying to work up another foursome with Zeb away. Sometimes I could
spare only twenty minutes or even less before I would have to be back at my
desk-but it was the high point of the day; I looked forward to it.
Even without leaving the floodlighted main
cavern, without leaving the marked paths, there were plenty of wonderfully
beautiful walks to take. If I could afford to be away as much as an hour, there
was one place in particular we liked to go-north in the big room, a good half
mile from the buildings. The path meandered among frozen limestone mushrooms,
great columns, domes, and fantastic shapes that have no names and looked
equally like souls in torment or great exotic flowers, depending on the mood
one was in. At a spot nearly a hundred feet higher than the main floor we had
found a place only a few feet off the authorized path where nature had
contrived a natural stone bench. We could sit there and stare down at the toy
village, talk, and Maggie would smoke. I had taken to lighting her cigarettes
for her, as I had seen Zeb do. It was a little attention she liked and I had
learned to avoid getting smoke caught in my throat.
About six weeks after Zeb had left and
only days before M-Hour we were doing this and were talking about what it would
be like after the revolution and what we would do with ourselves. I said that I
supposed I would stay in the regular army, assuming that there was such and
that I was eligible for it. 'What will you do, Maggie?'
She exhaled smoke slowly. 'I haven't
thought that far, John. I haven't any profession-that is to say, we are trying
our best to make the one I did have obsolete.' She smiled wryly. 'I'm not
educated in anything useful. I can cook and I can sew and I can keep house; I
suppose I should try to find a job as a housekeeper-competent servants are
always scarce, they say.'
The idea of the courageous and resourceful
Sister Magdalene, so quick with a vibroblade when the need arose, tramping from
one employment bureau to another in search of menial work to keep her body fed
was an idea at once distasteful to me-'General Housework & Cooking, live
in, Thursday evenings & alternate Sundays off; references required.'
Maggie? Maggie who had saved my own probably worthless life at least twice and
never hesitated nor counted the cost. Not Maggie!
I blurted out, 'Look, you don't have to do
that.'
'It's what I know.'
'Yes, but-well, why don't you cook and
keep house for me? I'll be drawing enough to support both of us, even if I have
to go back to my permanent rank. Maybe it isn't much but-shucks! you're welcome
to it.'
She looked up. 'Why, John, how very
generous!' She crushed out the cigarette and threw it aside. 'I do appreciate
it-but it wouldn't work. I imagine there will be just as many gossips after we
have won as before. Your colonel would not like it.'
I blushed red and almost shouted, 'That
wasn't what I meant at all!'
'What? Then what did you mean?'
I had not really known until the words
came out. Now I knew but not how to express it. 'I meant-Look, Maggie, you seem
to like me well enough . . . and we get along well together. That is, why don't
we-' I halted, hung up.
She stood up and faced me. 'John, are you
proposing marriage-to me?'
I said gruffly, 'Uh, that was the general
idea.' It bothered me to have her standing in front of me, so I stood up, too.
She looked at me gravely, searching my
face, then said humbly, 'I'm honored . . - and grateful . . . and I am deeply
touched. But-oh, no, John!' The tears started out of her eyes and she started
to bawl. She stopped as quickly, wiping her face with her sleeve, and said
brokenly, 'Now you've made me cry. I haven't cried in years.'
I started to put my arms around her; she
pushed me back. 'No, John! Listen to me first. I'll accept that job as your
housekeeper, but I won't marry you.'
'Why not?'
'"Why not?" Oh, my dear, my very
dear-Because I am an old, tired woman, that's why.'
'Old? You can't be more than a year or two
older than I am-three, at the outside. It doesn't matter.'
'I'm a thousand years older than you are.
Think who I am where I've been-what I've known. First I was "bride",
if you care to call it that, to the Prophet.'
'Not your fault!'
'Perhaps. Then I was mistress to your
friend Zebadiah. You knew that?'
'Well . . . I was pretty sure of it.'
'That isn't all. There were other men.
Some because it was needful and a woman has few bribes to offer. Some from
loneliness, or even boredom. After the Prophet has tired of her, a woman
doesn't seem very valuable, even to herself.'
'I don't care. I don't care! It doesn't
matter!'
'You say that now. Later it would matter
to you, dreadfully. I think I know you, my dear.'
'Then you don't know me. We'll start
fresh.'
She sighed deeply. 'You think that you
love me, John?'
'Uh? Yes, I guess that's it.'
'You loved Judith. Now you are hurt-so you
think you love me.'
'But-Oh, I don't know what love is! I know
I want you to marry me and live with me.'
'Neither do I know,' she said so softly
that I almost missed it. Then she moved into my arms as easily and naturally as
if she had always lived there.
When we had finished kissing each other I
said, 'You will marry me, then?'
She threw her head back and stared as if
she were frightened. 'Oh, no!'
'Huh? But I thought -'
'No, dear, no! I'll keep your house and cook
your food and make your bed-and sleep in it, if you want me to. But you don't
need to marry me.'
'But-Sheol! Maggie, I won't have it that
way.'
'You won't? We'll see.' She was out of my
arms although I had not let go. 'I'll see you tonight. About one-after everyone
is asleep. Leave your door unlatched.'
'Maggie!' I shouted.
She was headed down the path, running as
if she were flying.
I tried to catch up, tripped on a
stalagmite and fell. When I picked myself up she was out of sight.
Here is an odd thing-I had always thought
of Maggie as quite tall, stately, almost as tall as I was. But when I held her
in my arms, she was short. I had to lean way over to kiss her.
Chapter
12
On the
night of the Miracle all that were left of us gathered in the main
communications room-my boss and myself, the chief of communications and his
technical crew, a few staff officers. A handful of men and a few dozen women,
too many to crowd into the comm shack, were in the main mess-hall where a relay
screen had been rigged for them. Our underground city was a ghost town now,
with only a skeleton crew to maintain communications for the commanding
general; all the rest had gone to battle stations. We few who were left had no
combat stations in this phase. Strategy had been settled; the hour of execution
was set for us by the Miracle. Tactical decisions for a continent could not be
made from headquarters and Huxley was too good a general to try. His troops had
been disposed and his subordinate commanders were now on their own; all he
could do was wait and pray.
All that we could do, too-I didn't have
any fingernails left to bite.
The main screen in front of us showed, in
brilliant color and perfect perspective, the interior of the Temple. The
services had been going on all day-processional, hymns, prayers and more
prayers, sacrifice, genuflexion, chanting, endless monotony of colorful ritual.
My old regiment was drawn up in two frozen ranks, helmets shining, spears
aligned like the teeth of a comb, I made out Peter van Eyck, Master of my home
lodge, his belly corseted up, motionless before his platoon.
I knew, from having handled the despatch,
that Master Peter had stolen a print of the film we had to have. His presence
in the ceremonies was reassuring; had his theft even been suspected our plans
could not possibly succeed. But there he was.
Around the other three walls of the comm
room were a dozen smaller screens, scenes from as many major cities-crowds in
Rittenhouse Square, the Hollywood Bowl jam-packed, throngs in local temples. In
each case the eyes of all were riveted on a giant television screen showing the
same scene in the Great Temple that we were watching. Throughout all America it
would be the same-every mortal soul who could possibly manage it was watching
some television screen somewhere-waiting, waiting, waiting for the Miracle of
the Incarnation.
Behind us a psychoperator bent over a
sensitive who worked under hypnosis. The sensitive, a girl about nineteen,
stirred and muttered; the operator bent closer.
Then he turned to Huxley and the
communications chief. 'The Voice of God Station has been secured, sir.'
Huxley merely nodded; I felt like turning
handsprings, if my knees had not been so weak. This was the key tactic and one
that could not possibly be executed until minutes before the Miracle. Since
television moves only on line-of-sight or in its own special cable the only
possible way to tamper with this nationwide broadcast was at the station of
origin. I felt a wild burst of exultation at their success-followed by an
equally sudden burst of sorrow, knowing that not one of them could hope to live
out the night.
Never mind-if they could hold out for a
few more minutes their lives would have counted. I commended their souls to the
Great Architect. We had men for such jobs where needed, mostly brethren whose
wives had faced an inquisitor.
The comm chief touched Huxley's sleeve.
'It's coming, sir.' The scene panned slowly up to the far end of the Temple,
passed over the altar, and settled in close-up on an ivory archway above and
behind the altar-the entrance to the Sanctum Sanctorum. It was closed with
heavy cloth-of-gold drapes.
The pick-up camera held steady with the
curtained entranceway exactly filling the screen. 'They can take over any time
now, sir.'
Huxley turned his head to the
psychoperator. 'Is that ours yet? See if you can get a report from the Voice of
God.'
'Nothing, sir. I'll let you know.'
I could not take my eyes off the screen.
After an interminable wait, the curtains stirred and slowly parted, drawn up
and out on each side-and there, standing before us almost life size and so real
that I felt he could step out of the screen, was the Prophet Incarnate!
He turned his head, letting his gaze rove
from side to side, then looked right at me, his eyes staring right into mine. I
wanted to hide. I gasped and said involuntarily, 'You mean we can duplicate
that?'
The comm chief nodded. 'To the millimeter,
or I'll eat the difference. Our best impersonator, prepared by our best plastic
surgeons. That may be our film already.'
'But it's real.'
Huxley glanced at me. 'A little less talk,
please, Lyle.' It was the nearest he had ever come to bawling me out; I shut up
and studied the screen. That powerful, totally unscrupulous face, that burning
gaze-an actor? No! I knew that face; I had seen it too many times in too many
ceremonies. Something had gone wrong and this was the Prophet Incarnate
himself. I began to sweat that stinking sweat of fear. I very much believe that
had he called me by name out of that screen I would have confessed my treasons
and thrown myself on his mercy.
Huxley said crossly, 'Can't you raise New
Jerusalem?'
The psychoperator answered, 'No, sir. I'm
sorry, sir.'
The Prophet started his invocation.
His compelling, organlike voice rolled
through magnificent periods. Then he asked the blessing of Eternal God for the
people this coming year. He paused, looked at me again, then rolled his eyes up
to Heaven, lifted his hands and commenced his petition to the First Prophet,
asking him to confer on his people the priceless bounty of seeing and hearing
him in the flesh, and offering for that purpose the flesh of the present
prophet as an instrument. He waited.
The transformation started-and my hackles
stood up. I knew now that we had lost; something had gone wrong. . - and God
alone knew how many men had died through the error.
The features of the Prophet began to
change; he stretched an inch or two in height; his rich robes darkened-and
there standing in his place, dressed in a frock coat of a bygone era, was the
Reverend Nehemiah Scudder, First Prophet and founder of the New Crusade. I felt
my stomach tighten with fear and dread and I was a little boy again, watching
it for the first time in my parish church.
He spoke to us first with his usual yearly
greeting of love and concern for his people. Gradually he worked himself up,
his face sweating and his hand clutching in the style that had called down the
Spirit in a thousand Mississippi Valley camp meetings: my heart began to beat
faster. He was preaching against sin in all its forms-the harlot whose mouth is
like honey, the sins of the flesh, the sins of the spirit, the money changers.
At the height of his passion he led into a
new subject in a fashion that caught me by surprise: 'But I did not return to
you this day to speak to you of the little sins of little people. No! I come to
tell you of a truly hellish thing and to bid you to gird on your armor and
fight. Armageddon is upon you! Rise up, mine hosts, and fight you the Battle of
the Lord! For Satan is upon you! He is here! Here among you! Here tonight in
the flesh! With the guile of the serpent he has come among you, taking on the
form of the Vicar of the Lord! Yea! He has disguised himself falsely, taken on
the shape of the Prophet Incarnate!
'Smite him! Smite his hirelings! In the
Name of God destroy them all!'
Chapter
13
'Bruehler
from voice of God,' the psychoperator said quietly. 'The station is now off the
air and demolition will take place in approximately thirty seconds. An attempt
will be made to beat a retreat before the building goes up. Good luck. Message
ends.'
Huxley muttered something and left the
now-dark big screen. The smaller screens, monitoring scenes around the country,
were confusing but heartening. There was fighting and rioting everywhere. 1
watched it, still stunned, and tried to figure out which was friend and which
was foe. In the Hollywood Bowl the crowd boiled up over the stage and by sheer
numbers overran and trampled the officials and clergy seated there. There were
plenty of guards stationed around the edges of the howl and it should not have
happened that way. But instead of the murderous enfilading fire one would have
expected, there was one short blast from a tripod mounted or~ the hillside
northeast of the stage, then the guard was shot-apparently by another of the
guards.
Apparently the chancy tour de force
against the Prophet himself was succeeding beyond all expectations. If
government forces were everywhere as disorganized as they were at the Hollywood
Bowl, the job would not be one of fighting but of consolidating an accomplished
fact.
The monitor from Hollywood went dead and I
shifted to another screen, Portland, Oregon. More fighting. I could see men
with white armbands, the only uniform we had allowed ourselves for M-Hour-but
not all the violence came from our brethren in the armbands. 1 saw an armed
proctor go down before bare fists and not get up.
Testing messages and early reports were
beginning to come in, now that it was feasible to use our own radio-now that we
had at long, long last shown our hand. I stopped looking and went back to help
my boss keep track of them. I was still dazed and could still see in my mind
the incredible face of the Prophet-both Prophets. If I had been emotionally
battered by it, what did the people think? The devout, the believers?
The first clear-cut report other than
contact messages was from Lucas in New Orleans:
HAVE
TAKEN CONTROL OF CITY CENTER, POWER
AND
COMM STATIONS. MOP-UP SQUADS SEIZING
WARD
POLICE STAT1ONS. FEDERAL GUARDS HERE
DEMORALIZED
BY STEREOCAST. SPORADIC FIGHTING
BROKE
OUT AMONG GUARDS THEMSELVES.
LITTLE
ORGANI ZED RESISTANCE. ESTABLISHING
ORDER
UNDER MARTIAL LAW. SO MOTE IT BE!
LUCAS.
Then reports started pouring in: Kansas
City, Detroit, Philadelphia, Denver, Boston, Minneapolis-all the major cities.
They varied but told the same story; our synthetic Prophet's call to arms,
followed at once by a cutting of all regular methods of communication, had made
of the government forces a body without a head, flopping around and fighting
itself. The power of the Prophet was founded on superstition and fraud; we had
turned superstition back on him to destroy him.
Lodge that night was the grandest I have
ever attended. We tyled the communications room itself, with the comm chief
sitting as secretary and passing incoming messages to General Huxley, sitting
as Master in the east, as fast as they came in. I was called on to take a chair
myself, Junior Warden, an honor I had never had before. The General had to
borrow a hat and it was ridiculously too small for him, but it didn't matter-I
have never seen ritual so grand, before or since. We all spoke the ancient
words from our hearts, as if we were saying them for the first time. If the
stately progress was interrupted to hear that Louisville was ours, what better
interruption? We were building anew; after an endless time of building in
speculation we were at last building operatively.
Chapter
14
Temporary
capital was set up at St Louis, for its central location. I piloted Huxley
there myself. We took over the Prophet's proctor base there, restoring to it
its old name of Jefferson Barracks. We took over the buildings of the University,
too, and handed back to it the name of Washington. If the people no longer
recalled the true significance of those names, they soon would and here was a
good place to start. (I learned for the first time that Washington had been one
of us.)
However, one of Huxley's first acts as
military governor-he would not let himself be called even 'Provisional
President'-was to divorce all official connection between the Lodge and the
Free United States Army. The Brotherhood had served its purpose, had kept alive
the hopes of free men; now it was time to go back to its ancient ways and let
public affairs be handled publicly. The order was not made public, since the
public had no real knowledge of us, always a secret society and for three
generations a completely clandestine one. But it was read and recorded in all
lodges and, so far as I know, honored.
There was one necessary exception: my home
lodge at New Jerusalem and the cooperating sister order there of which Maggie
had been a member. For we did not yet hold New Jerusalem although the country
as a whole was ours.
This was more serious than it sounds.
While we had the country under military control, with all communication centers
in our hands, with the Federal Forces demoralized, routed, and largely dispersed
or disarmed and captured, we did not hold the country's heart in our hands.
More than half of the population were not with us; they were simply stunned,
confused, and unorganized. As long as the Prophet was still alive, as long as
the Temple was still a rallying point, it was still conceivably possible for
him to snatch back the victory from us.
A fraud, such as we had used, has only a
temporary effect; people revert to their old thinking habits. The Prophet and
his cohorts were not fools; they included some of the shrewdest applied
psychologists this tired planet has ever seen. Our own counterespionage became
disturbingly aware that they were rapidly perfecting their own underground,
using the still devout and that numerous minority, devout or not, who had waxed
fat under the old regime and saw themselves growing leaner under the new. We
could not stop this counterrevolution-Sheol! the Prophet had not been able to
stop us and we had worked under much greater handicaps. The Prophet's spies
could work almost openly in the smaller towns and the country; we had barely
enough men to guard the television stations-we could not possibly put a snooper
under every table.
Soon it was an open secret that we had
faked the call to Armageddon. One would think that this fact in itself would
show to anyone who knew it that all of the Miracles of Incarnation had been
frauds-trick television and nothing more. I mentioned this to Zebadiah and got
laughed at for being naïve. People believe what they want to believe and logic
has no bearing on it, he assured me. In this case they wanted to believe in
their old time religion as they learned it at their mothers' knees; it restored
security to their hearts. I could sympathize with that, I understood it.
In any case, New Jerusalem must fall-and
time was against us.
While we were worrying over this, a
provisional constitutional convention was being held in the great auditorium of
the university. Huxley opened it, refused again the title, offered by
acclamation, of president-then told them bluntly that all laws since the
inauguration of President Nehemiah Scudder were of no force, void, and that the
old constitution and bill of rights were effective as of now, subject to the
exigencies of temporary military control. Their single purpose, he said, was to
work out orderly methods of restoring the old free democratic processes; any
permanent changes in the constitution, if needed, would have to wait until
after free elections.
Then he turned the gavel over to Novak and
left.
I did not have time for politics, but I
hid out from work and caught most of one afternoon session because Zebadiah had
tipped me off that significant fireworks were coming up. I slipped into a back
seat and listened. One of Novak's bright young men was presenting a film. I saw
the tail end of it only, but it seemed to be more or less a standard
instruction film, reviewing the history of the United States, discussing civil
liberty, explaining the duties of a citizen in a free democracy-not the sort of
thing ever seen in the Prophet's schools but making use of the same techniques
which had long been used in every school in the country. The film ended and the
bright young man-I could never remember his name, perhaps because I disliked
him. Stokes? Call him Stokes, anyway, Stokes began to speak.
'This reorientation film,' he began, 'is
of course utterly useless in recanalizing an adult. His habits of thought are
much too set to be affected by anything as simple as this.'
'Then why waste our time with it?' someone
called out.
'Please! Nevertheless this film was
prepared for adults-provided the adult has been placed in a receptive frame of
mind. Here is the prologue-' the screen lighted up again. It was a simple and
beautiful pastoral scene with very restful music. I could not figure what he
was getting at, but it was soothing; I remembered that I had not had much sleep
the past four nights-come to think about it, I couldn't remember when I had had
a good night's sleep. I slouched back and relaxed.
I didn't notice the change from scenery to
abstract patterns. I think the music continued but it was joined by a voice,
warm, soothing, monotonous. The patterns were going round and around and I was
beginning to bore. . . right. . - into . . . the...screen...
Then Novak had left his chair and switched
off the projector with a curse. I jerked awake with that horrid shocked feeling
that makes one almost ready to cry. Novak was speaking sharply but quietly to
Stokes-then Novak faced the rest of us. 'Up on your feet!' he ordered. 'Seventh
inning stretch. Take a deep breath. Shake hands with the man next to you. Slap
him on the back, hard!'
We did so and I felt foolish. Also
irritated. I had felt so good just a moment before and now I was reminded of
the mountain of work I must move if I were to have ten minutes with Maggie that
evening. I thought about leaving but the b. y. m. had started talking again.
'As Dr. Novak has pointed out,' he went
on, not sounding quite so sure of himself, 'it is not necessary to use the prologue
on this audience, since you don't need reorientation. But this film, used with
the preparatory technique and possibly in some cases with a light dose of one
of the hypnotic drugs, can be depended on to produce an optimum political
temperament in 83% of the populace. This has been demonstrated on a
satisfactory test group. The film itself represents several years of work
analyzing the personal conversion reports of almost everyone-surely everyone in
this audience!-who joined our organization while it was still underground. The
irrelevant has been eliminated; the essential has been abstracted. What remains
will convert a devout follower of the Prophet to free manhood-provided he is in
a state receptive to suggestion when he is exposed to it.'
So that was why we had each been required
to bare our souls. It seemed logical to me. God knew that we were sitting on a
time bomb, and we couldn't wait for every lunk to fall in love with a holy
deaconess and thereby be shocked out of his groove; there wasn't time. But an
elderly man whom I did not know was on his feet on the other side of the
hall-he looked like the picture of Mark Twain, an angry Mark Twain. 'Mr.
Chairman!'
'Yes, comrade? State your name and
district.'
'You know what my name is, Novak-Winters,
from Vermont. Did you okay this scheme?'
'No.' It was a simple declarative.
'He's one of your boys.'
'He's a free citizen. I supervised the
preparation of the film itself and the research which preceded it. The use of
null-vol suggestion techniques came from the research group he headed. I
disapproved the proposal, but agreed to schedule time to present it. I repeat,
he is a free citizen, free to speak, just as you are.'
'May I speak now?'
'You have the floor.'
The old man drew himself up and seemed to
swell up. 'I shall! Gentlemen . . . ladies - . . comrades! I have been in this
for more than forty years-more years than that young pup has been alive. I have
a brother, as good a man as 1 am, but we haven't spoken in many years-because
he is honestly devout in the established faith and he suspects me of heresy.
Now this cub, .with his bulging forehead and his whirling lights, would
"condition" my brother to make him "politically reliable".'
He stopped to gasp asthmatically and went
on. 'Free men aren't "conditioned!" Free men are free because they
are ornery and cussed and prefer to arrive at their own prejudices in their own
way-not have them spoon-fed by a self-appointed mind tinkerer! We haven't
fought, our brethren haven't bled and died, just to change bosses, no matter
how sweet their motives. I tell you, we got into the mess we are in through the
efforts of those same mind tinkerers. They've studied for years how to saddle a
man and ride him. They started with advertising and propaganda and things like
that, and they perfected it to the point where what used to be simple, honest
swindling such as any salesman might use became a mathematical science that
left the ordinary man helpless.' He pointed his finger at Stokes. 'I tell you
that the American citizen needs no protection from anything-except the likes of
him.'
'This is ridiculous,' Stokes snapped, his
voice rather high. 'You wouldn't turn high explosives over to children. That is
what the franchise would be now.'
'The American people are not children.'
'They might as well be!-most of them.'
Winters turned his eyes around the hall.
'You see what I mean, friends? He's as ready to play God as the Prophet was. I
say give 'em their freedom, give 'em their clear rights as men and free men and
children under God. If they mess it up again, that's their doing-but we have no
right to operate on their minds.' He stopped and labored again to catch his
breath; Stokes looked contemptuous. 'We can't make the world safe for children,
nor for men either-and God didn't appoint us to do it.'
Novak said gently, 'Are you through, Mr.
Winters?'
'I'm through.'
'And you've had your say, too, Stokes. Sit
down.'
Then I had to leave, so I slipped out-and
missed what must have been a really dramatic event if you care for that sort of
thing; I don't. Old Mr. Winters dropped dead about the time I must have been
reaching the outer steps.
Novak did not let them recess on that
account. They passed two resolutions; that no citizen should be subjected to
hypnosis or other psychomanipulative technique without his written consent, and
that no religious or political test should be used for franchise in the first
elections.
I don't know who was right. It certainly
would have made life easier in the next few weeks if we had known that the
people were solidly behind us. Temporarily rulers we might be, but we hardly
dared go down a street in uniform at night in groups of less than six.
Oh yes, we had uniforms now-almost enough
for one for each of us, of the cheapest materials possible and in the standard
army sizes, either too large or too small. Mine was too tight. They had been
stockpiled across the Canadian border and we got our own people into uniform as
quickly as possible. A handkerchief tied around the arm is not enough.
Besides our own simple powder-blue
dungarees there were several other uniforms around, volunteer brigades from
outside the country and some native American outfits. The Mormon Battalions had
their own togs and they were all growing beards as well-they went into action
singing the long forbidden 'Come, Come, Ye Saints!' Utah was one state we
didn't have to worry about, now that the Saints had their beloved temple back.
The Catholic Legion had its distinctive uniform, which was just as well since
hardly any of them spoke English. The Onward Christian Soldiers dressed
differently from us because they were a rival underground and rather resented
our coup d'etat-we should have waited. Joshua's Army from the pariah
reservations in the northwest (plus volunteers from all over the world) had a
get-up that can only be described as outlandish.
Huxley was in tactical command of them
all. But it wasn't an army; it was a rabble.
The only thing that was hopeful about it
was that the Prophet's army had not been large, less than two hundred thousand,
more of an internal police than an army, and of that number only a few had
managed to make their way back to New Jerusalem to augment the Palace garrison.
Besides that, since the United States had not had an external war for more than
a century, the Prophet could not recruit veteran soldiers from the remaining
devout.
Neither could we. Most of our effectives
were fit only to guard communication stations and other key installations
around the country and we were hard put to find enough of them to do that.
Mounting an assault on New Jerusalem called for scraping the bottom of the
barrel.
Which we did, while smothering under a
load of paperwork that made the days in the old G.H.Q. seem quiet and
untroubled. I had thirty clerks under me now and I don't know what half of them
did. I spend a lot of my time just keeping Very Important Citizens who Wanted
to Help from getting in to see Huxley.
I recall one incident which, while not
important, was not exactly routine and was important to me. My chief secretary
came in with a very odd look on her face. 'Colonel,' she said, 'your twin
brother is out there.'
'Eh? I have no brothers.'
'A Sergeant Reeves,' she amplified.
He came in, we shook hands, and exchanged
inanities. I really was glad to see him and told him about all the orders I had
sold and then lost for him. I apologized, pled exigency of war and added, 'I
landed one new account in K.C.-Emery, Bird, Thayer. You might pick it up some
day.'
'I will. Thanks.'
'I didn't know you were a soldier.'
'I'm not, really. But I've been practicing
at it ever since my travel permit, uh-got itself lost.'
'I'm sorry about that.'
'Don't be. I've learned to handle a
blaster and I'm pretty good with a grenade now. I've been okayed for Operation
Strikeout.'
'Eh? That code word is supposed to be
confo.'
'It is? Better tell the boys; they don't
seem to realize it. Anyhow, I'm in. Are you? Or shouldn't I ask that?'
I changed the subject. 'How do you like
soldering? Planning to make a career of it?'
'Oh, it's all right-but not that all
right. But what I came in to ask you, Colonel, are you?'
'Are you staying in the army afterwards? I
suppose you can make a good thing out of it, with your background-whereas they
wouldn't let me shine brightwork, once the fun is over. But if by any chance
you aren't, what do you think of the textile business?'
I was startled but I answered, 'Well, to
tell the truth I rather enjoyed it-the selling end, at least.'
'Good. I'm out of a job where I was, of
course-and I've been seriously considering going in on my own, a jobbing
business and manufacturers' representative. I'll need a partner. Eh?'
I thought it over. 'I don't know,' I said
slowly. 'I haven't thought ahead any further than Operation Strikeout. I might
stay in the army-though soldiering does not have the appeal for me it once had
. . . too many copies to make out and certify. But I don't know. I think what I
really want is simply to sit under my own vine and my own fig tree.'
'"- and none shall make you
afraid",' he finished. 'A good thought. But there is no reason why you
shouldn't unroll a few bolts of cloth while you are sitting there. The fig crop
might fail. Think it over.'
'I will. I surely will.'
Chapter
15
Maggie
and I were married the day before the assault on New Jerusalem. We had a
twenty-minute honeymoon, holding hands on the fire escape outside my office,
then I flew Huxley to the jump-off area. I was in the flagship during the
attack. I had asked permission to pilot a rocket-jet as my combat assignment
but he had turned me down.
'What for, John?' he had asked. 'This
isn't going to be won in the air; it will be settled on the ground.'
He was right, as usual. We had few ships
and still fewer pilots who could be trusted. Some of the Prophet's air force
had been sabotaged on the ground; a goodly number had escaped to Canada and
elsewhere and been interned. With what planes we had we had been bombing the
Palace and Temple regularly, just to make them keep their heads down.
But we could not hurt them seriously that
way and both sides knew it. The Palace, ornate as it was above ground, was
probably the strongest bomb-proof ever built. It had been designed to stand
direct impact of a fission bomb without damage to personnel in its deepest
tunnels-and that was where the Prophet was spending his days, one could be
sure. Even the part above ground was relatively immune to ordinary H.E. bombs
such as we were using.
We weren't using atomic bombs for three reasons:
we didn't have any; the United States was not known to have had any since the
Johannesburg Treaty after World War III. We could not get any. We might have
negotiated a couple of bombs from the Federation had we been conceded to be the
legal government of the United States, but, while Canada had recognized us,
Great Britain had not and neither had the North African Confederacy. Brazil was
teetering; she had sent a chargé d'affaires to St Louis. But even if we had
actually been admitted to the Federation, it is most unlikely that a mass
weapon would have been granted for an internal disorder.
Lastly, we would not have used one if it
had been laid in our laps. No, we weren't chicken hearted. But an atom bomb,
laid directly on the Palace, would certainly have killed around a hundred
thousand or more of our fellow citizens in the surrounding city-and almost as
certainly would not have killed the Prophet.
It was going to be necessary to go in and
dig him out, like a holed-up badger.
Rendezvous was made on the east shore of
the Delaware River. At one minute after midnight we moved east, thirty-four
land cruisers, thirteen of them modern battlewagons, the rest light cruisers
and obsolescent craft-all that remained of the Prophet's mighty East Mississippi
fleet; the rest had been blown up by their former commanders. The heavy ships
would be used to breach the walls; the light craft were escort to ten armored
transports carrying the shock troops-five thousand fighting men hand-picked
from the whole country. Some of them had had some military training in addition
to what we had been able to give them in the past few weeks; all of them had
taken part in the street fighting.
We could hear the bombing at New Jerusalem
as we started out, the dull Crrump!' the gooseflesh shiver of the concussion
wave, the bass rumble of the ground sonic. The bombing had been continuous the
last thirty-six hours; we hoped that no one in the Palace had had any sleep
lately, whereas our troops had just finished twelve hours impressed sleep.
None of the battlewagons had been designed
as a flagship, so we had improvised a flag plot just abaft the conning tower,
tearing out the long-range televisor to make room for the battle tracker and
concentration plot. I was sweating over my jury-rigged tracker, hoping to
Heaven that the makeshift shock absorbers would be good enough when we opened
up. Crowded in behind me was a psychoperator and his crew of sensitives, eight
women and a neurotic fourteen-year-old boy. In a pinch, each would have to
handle four circuits. I wondered if they could do it. One thin blonde girl had
a dry, chronic cough and a big thyroid patch on her throat.
We lumbered along in approach zigzag.
Huxley wandered from comm to plot and back again, calm as a snail, looking over
my shoulder, reading despatches casually, watching the progress of the approach
on the screens.
The pile of despatches at my elbow grew.
The Cherub had fouled her starboard tread; she had dropped out of formation but
would rejoin in thirty minutes. Penoyer reported his columns extended and ready
to deploy. Because of the acute shortage of command talent, we were using
broad-command organization; Penoyer commanded the left wing and his own
battlewagon; Huxley was force commander, right wing commander, and skipper of
his own flagship.
At 12:32 the televisors went out. The
enemy had analyzed our frequency variation pattern, matched us and blown every
tube in the circuits. It is theoretically impossible; they did it. At 12:37
radio went out.
Huxley seemed unperturbed. 'Shift to
light-phone circuits,' was all he said.
The communications officer had anticipated
him; our audio circuits were now on infra-red beams, ship to ship. Huxley hung
over my shoulder most of the next hour, watching the position plot lines grow.
Presently he said, 'I think we will deploy now, John. Some of those pilots
aren't any too steady; I think we will give them time to settle down in their
positions before anything more happens.'
I passed the order and cut my tracker out
of circuit for fifteen minutes; it wasn't built for so many variables at such
high speeds and there was no sense in overloading it. Nineteen minutes later
the last transport had checked in by phone, I made a preliminary set up, threw
the starting switch and let the correction data feed in. For a couple of
minutes I was very busy balancing data, my hands moving among knobs and keys;
then the machine was satisfied with its own predictions and I reported,
'Tracking, sir.'
Huxley leaned over my shoulder. The line
was a little ragged but I was proud of them-some of those pilots had been
freighter jacks not four weeks earlier.
At three a.m. we made the precautionary
signal, 'Coming on the range,' and our own turret rumbled as they loaded it.
At 3:31 Huxley gave the command,
'Concentration Plan III, open fire.'
Our own big fellow let go. The first shot
shook loose a lot of dust and made my eyes water. The craft rolled back on her
treads to the recoil and I nearly fell out of my saddle. I had never ridden one
of the big booster guns before and I hadn't expected the long recoil. Our big
rifle had secondary firing chambers up the barrel, electronically synchronized
with the progress of the shell; it maintained max pressure all the way up and
gave a much higher muzzle velocity and striking power. It also gave a
bone-shaking recoil. But the second time I was ready for it.
Huxley was at the periscope between shots,
trying to observe the effects of our fire. New Jerusalem had answered our fire
but did not yet have us ranged. We had the advantage of firing at a stationary
target whose range we knew to the meter; on the other hand even a heavy land
cruiser could not show the weight of armor that underlay the Palace's
ginger-bread.
Huxley turned from the scope and remarked,
'Smoke, John.' I turned to the communications officer. 'Stand by, sensitives;
all craft!'
The order never got through. Even as I
gave it the comm officer reported loss of contact. But the psychoperator was
already busy and I knew the same thing was happening in all the ships; it was
normal casualty routine.
Of our nine sensitives, three-the boy and
two women-were wide-awakes; the other six were hypnos. The technician hooked
the boy first to one in Penoyer's craft. The kid established rapport almost at
once and Penoyer got through a report:
'BLANKETED BY SMOKE. HAVE SHIFTED LEFT
WING TO PSYCHO. WHAT HOOK-UP? - PENOYER.'
I answered, 'Pass down the line.' Doctrine
permitted two types of telepathic hook-up: relay, in which a message would be
passed along until it reached its destination; and command mesh, in which there
was direct hook-up from flag to each ship under that flag, plus ship-to-ship
for adjacent units. In the first case each sensitive carries just one circuit,
that is, is in rapport with just one other telepath; in the second they might
have to handle as many as four circuits. I wanted to hold off overloading them
as long as possible.
The technician tied the other two
wide-awakes into our flanking craft in the battle line, then turned his
attention to the hypnos. Four of them required hypodermics; the other two went
under in response to suggestion. Shortly we were hooked up with the transports
and second-line craft, as well as with the bombers and the rocket-jet spotting
the fall of shot. The jet reported visibility zero and complained that he
wasn't getting anything intelligible by radar. I told him to stand by; the
morning breeze might clear the smoke away presently.
We weren't dependent on him anyway; we
knew our positions almost to the inch. We had taken departure from a benchmark
and our dead reckoning was checked for the whole battle line every time any
skipper identified a map-shown landmark. In addition, the dead reckoners of a
tread-driven cruiser are surprisingly accurate; the treads literally measure
every yard of ground as they pass over it and a little differential gadget
compares the treads and keeps just as careful track of direction. The smoke did
not really bother us and we could keep on firing accurately even if radar failed.
On the other hand, if the Palace commander kept us in smoke he himself was
entirely dependent on radar.
His radar was apparently working; shot was
falling all around us. We hadn't been hit yet but we could feel the concussions
when shells struck near us and some of the reports were not cheerful. Penoyer
reported the Martyr hit; the shell had ruptured her starboard engine room. The
skipper had tried to cross connect and proceed at half-speed, but the gear
train was jammed; she was definitely out of action. The Archangel had
overheated her gun. She was in formation but would be harmless until the turret
captain got her straightened out.
Huxley ordered them to shift to Formation
E, a plan which used changing speeds and apparently random courses-carefully
planned to avoid collision between ships, however. It was intended to confuse
the fire control of the enemy.
At 4:11 Huxley sent the bombers back to
base. We were inside the city now and the walls of the Palace lay just
beyond-too close to target for comfort; we didn't want to lose ships to our own
bombs.
At 4:17 we were struck. The port upper
tread casing was split, the barbette was damaged so that the gun would no
longer .train, and the conning tower was cracked along its after surface. The
pilot was killed at his controls.
I helped the psychoperator get gas helmets
over the heads. of the hypnos. Huxley picked himself up off the floor plates,
put on his own helmet, and studied the set-up on my battle tracker, frozen at
the instant the shell hit us.
'The Benison should pass by this point in
three minutes,. John. Tell them to proceed dead slow, come along starboard
side, and pick us up. Tell Penoyer I am shifting my flag.'
We made the transfer without mishap,
Huxley, myself, the psychoperator, and his sensitives. One sensitive was dead,
killed by a flying splinter. One went into a deep trance and we could not rouse
her. We left her in the disabled battlewagon; she was as safe there as she
could be.
I had torn the current plot from my
tracker and brought it along. It had the time-predicted plots for Formation E.
We would have to struggle along with those, as the tracker could not be moved
and was probably beyond casual repair in any case. Huxley studied the chart.
'Shift to full communication mesh, John. I
plan to assault shortly.'
I helped the psychoperator get his
circuits straightened out. By dropping the Martyr out entirely and by using
'Pass down the line' on Penoyer's auxiliaries, we made up for the loss of two
sensitives. All carried four circuits now, except the boy who had five, and
the. girl with the cough, who was managing six. The psychoperator was worried
but there was nothing to do about it.
I turned back to General Huxley. He. had
seated himself, and at first I thought he was in deep thought; then I saw that
he was unconscious. It was not until I tried to rouse him and failed that I saw
the blood seeping down the support column of his chair and wetting floor
plates. I moved him gently and found, sticking out from between his ribs near
his spine, a steel splinter.
I felt a touch at my elbow, it was the
psychoperator. 'Penoyer reports that he will be within assault radius in four
minutes. Requests permission to change formation and asks time of execution.'
Huxley was out. Dead or wounded, he would
fight no more this battle. By all rules, command devolved on Penoyer, and I
should tell him so at once. But time was pressing hard, it would involve a
drastic change of set-up, and we had been forced to send Penoyer into battle
with only three sensitives. It was a physical impossibility.
What should I do? Turn the flag over to
the skipper of the Benison? I knew the man, stolid, unimaginative, a gunner by
disposition. He was not even in his conning tower but had been fighting his
ship from the fire control station in the turret. If I called him down here, he
would take many minutes to comprehend the situation-and then give the wrong
orders.
With Huxley out I had not an ounce of real
authority. I was a brevet short-tailed colonel, only days up from major and a
legate by rights; I was what I was as Huxley's flunky. Should I turn command
over to Penoyer-and lose the battle with proper military protocol? What would
Huxley have me do, if he could make the decision?
It seemed to me that I worried that
problem for an hour. The chronograph showed thirteen seconds between reception
of Penoyer's despatch and my answer:
'Change formation at will. Stand by for
execution signal in six minutes.' The order given, I sent word to the forward
dressing station to attend to the General.
I shifted the right wing to assault
echelon, then called the transport Sweet Chariot: 'Sub-plan D; leave formation
and proceed on duty assigned.' The psychoperator eyed me but transmitted my
orders. Sub-plan D called for five hundred light infantry to enter the Palace
through the basement of the department store that was connected with the lodge
room. From the lodge room they would split into squads and proceed on assigned
tasks. All of our shock troops had all the plans of the Palace graven into
their brains; these five hundred had had additional drill as to just where they
were to go, what they were to do.
Most of them would be killed, but they
should be able to create confusion during the assault. Zeb had trained them and
now commanded them.
We were ready. 'All units, stand by to
assault. Right wing, outer flank of right bastion; left wing, outer flank of
left bastion. Zigzag emergency full speed until within assault distance. Deploy
for full concentration fire, one salvo, and assault. Stand by to execute.
Acknowledge.'
The acknowledgments were coming in and I
was watching my chronometer preparatory to giving the command of execution when
the boy sensitive broke off in the middle of a report and shook himself. The
technician grabbed the kid's wrist and felt for his pulse; the boy shook him
off.
'Somebody new,' he said. 'I don't quite
get it.' Then he commenced in a sing-song, 'To commanding general from Lodge
Master Peter van Eyck: assault center bastion with full force. I will create a
diversion.'
'Why the center?' I asked.
'It is much more damaged.'
If this were authentic, it was crucially
important. But I was suspicious. If Master Peter had been detected, it was a
trap. And I didn't see how he, in his position, had been able to set up a
sensitive circuit in the midst of battle.
'Give me the word,' I said.
'Nay, you give me.'
'Nay, I will not.'
'I will spell it, or halve it.'
'Spell it, then.'
We did so. I was satisfied. 'Cancel last
signal. Heavy cruisers assault center bastion, left wing to left flank, right
wing to right flank. Odd numbered auxiliaries make diversion assaults on right
and left bastions. Even numbers remain with transports. Acknowledge.'
Ninteen seconds later I gave the command
to execute, then we were off. It was like riding a rocket plane with a dirty,
overheated firing chamber. We crashed through walls of masonry, lurched
sickeningly on turns, almost overturned when we crashed into the basement of
some large demolished building and lumbered out again. It was out of my hands
now, up to each skipper.
As we slewed into firing position, I saw
the psychoperator peeling back the boy's eyelids. 'I'm afraid he's gone,' he
said tonelessly. 'I had to overload him too much on that last hookup.' Two more
of the women had collapsed.
Our big gun cut loose for the final salvo;
we waited for an interminable period-all of ten seconds. Then we were moving,
gathering speed as we rolled. The Benison hit the Palace wall with a blow that
I thought would wreck her, but she did not mount. But the pilot had his forward
hydraulic jacks down as soon as we hit; her bow reared slowly up. We reached an
angle so steep that it seemed she must turn turtle, then the treads took hold,
we ground forward and slid through the breach in the wall.
Our gun spoke again, at point-blank range,
right into the inner Palace. A thought flashed through my head-this was the
exact spot where I had first laid eyes on Judith. I had come full circle.
The Benison was rampaging around,
destroying by her very weight. I waited until the last cruiser had had time to
enter, then gave the order, 'Transports, assault.' That done, I called Penoyer,
informed him that Huxley was wounded and that he was now in command.
I was all through. I did not even have a
job, a battle station. The battle surged around me, but I was not part of it-I,
who two minutes ago had been in usurped full command.
I stopped to light a cigarette and
wondered what to do with myself. I put it out after one soul-satisfying drag
and scrambled up into the fire control tower of the turret and peered out the
after slits. A breeze had come up and the smoke was clearing; the transport
Jacob's Ladder I could see just pulling out of the breach. Her sides fell away
and ranks of infantry sprang out, blasters ready. A sporadic fire met them;
some fell but most returned the fire and charged the inner Palace. The Jacob's
Ladder cleared the breach and the Ark took her place.
The troops commander in the Ark had orders
to take the Prophet alive. I hurried down ladders from the turret, ran down the
passageway between the engine rooms, and located the escape hatch in the floor
plates, clear at the stern of the Benison. Somehow I got it unclamped, swung up
the hatch cover, and stuck my head down. I could see men running, out beyond
the treads. I drew my blaster, dropped to the ground, and tried to catch up
with them, running out the stern between the big treads.
They were men from the Ark, right enough.
I attached myself to a platoon and trotted along with them. We swarmed into the
inner Palace.
But the battle was over; we encountered no
organized resistance. We went on down and down and down and found the Prophet's
bombproof. The door was open and he was there.
But we did not arrest him. The Virgins had
gotten to him first; he no longer looked imperious. They had left him barely
something to identify at an inquest.
Coventry
'Have
you anything to say before sentence is pronounced on you?' The mild eyes of the
Senior Judge studied the face of the accused. His question was answered by a
sullen silence.
'Very well-the jury has determined that
you have violated a basic custom agreed to under the Covenant, and that through
this act did damage another free citizen. It is the opinion of the jury and of
the court that you did so knowingly, and aware of the probability of damage to
a free citizen. Therefore, you are sentenced to choose between the Two
Alternatives.'
A trained observer might have detected a
trace of dismay breaking through the mask of indifference with which the young
man had faced his trial. Dismay was unreasonable; in view of his offence, the
sentence was inevitable-but reasonable men do not receive the sentence.
After waiting a decent interval, the judge
turned to the bailiff. 'Take him away.'
The prisoner stood up suddenly, knocking
over his chair. He glared wildly around at the company assembled and burst into
speech.
'Hold on!' he yelled. 'I've got something
to say first!' In spite of his rough manner there was about him the noble
dignity of a wild animal at bay. He stared at those around him, breathing
heavily, as if they were dogs waiting to drag him down.
'Well?' he demanded, 'Well? Do I get to
talk, or don't I? It 'ud be the best joke of this whole comedy, if a condemned
man couldn't speak his mind at the last!'
'You may speak,' the Senior Judge told
him, in the same unhurried tones with which he had pronounced sentence, 'David
MacKinnon, as long as you like, and in any manner that you like. There is no
limit to that freedom, even for those who have broken the Covenant. Please
speak into the recorder.'
MacKinnon glanced with distaste at the
microphone near his face. The knowledge that any word he spoke would be
recorded and analyzed inhibited him. 'I don't ask for records,' he snapped.
'But we must have them,' the judge replied
patiently, 'in order that others may determine whether, or not, we have dealt
with you fairly, and according to the Covenant. Oblige us, please.'
'Oh-very well!' He ungraciously conceded
the requirement and directed his voice toward the instrument. 'There's no sense
in me talking at all-but, just the same, I'm going to talk and you're going to
listen . . . You talk about your precious "Covenant" as if it were
something holy. I don't agree to it and I don't accept it. You act as if it had
been sent down from Heaven in a burst of light. My grandfathers fought in the
Second Revolution-but they fought to abolish superstition. . . not to let
sheep-minded fools set up new ones.
'There were men in those days!' He looked
contemptuously around him. 'What is there left today? Cautious, compromising
"safe" weaklings with water in their veins. You've planned your whole
world so carefully that you've planned the fun and zest right out of it. Nobody
is ever hungry, nobody ever gets hurt. Your ships can't crack up and your crops
can't fail. You even have the weather tamed so it rains politely after
midnight. Why wait till midnight, I don't know . . . you all go to bed at nine
o'clock!
'If one of you safe little people should
have an unpleasant emotion-perish the thought! -You'd trot right over to the
nearest psychodynamics clinic and get your soft little minds readjusted. Thank
God I never succumbed to that dope habit. I'll keep my own feelings, thanks, no
matter how bad they taste.
'You won't even make love without
consulting a psychotechnician-Is her mind as flat and insipid as mine? Is there
any emotional instability in her family? It's enough to make a man gag. As for
fighting over a woman-if any one had the guts to do that, he'd find a proctor
at his elbow in two minutes, looking for the most convenient place to paralyze
him, and inquiring with sickening humility, "May I do you a service,
sir?"
The bailiff edged closer to MacKinnon. He
turned on him. 'Stand back, you. I'm not through yet.' He turned and added,
'You've told me to choose between the Two Alternatives. Well, it's no hard
choice for me. Before I'd submit to treatment, before I'd enter one of your little,
safe little, pleasant little reorientation homes and let my mind be pried into
by a lot of soft-fingered doctors-before I did anything like that, I'd choose a
nice, clean death. Oh, no-there is just one choice for me, not two. I take the
choice of going to Coventry-and glad of it, too . . . I hope I never hear of
the United States again!
'But there is just one thing I want to ask
you before I go-Why do you bother to live anyhow? I would think that anyone of
you would welcome an end to your silly, futile lives just from sheer boredom.
That's all.' He turned back to the bailiff. 'Come on, you.'
'One moment, David MacKinnon.' The Senior
Judge held up a restraining hand. 'We have listened to you. Although custom
does not compel it, I am minded to answer some of your statements. Will you
listen?'
Unwilling, but less willing to appear
loutish in the face of a request so obviously reasonable, the younger man
consented.
The judge commenced to speak in gentle,
scholarly words appropriate to a lecture room. 'David MacKinnon, you have
spoken in a fashion that doubtless seems wise to you. Nevertheless, your words
were wild, and spoken in haste. I am moved to correct your obvious
misstatements of fact. The Covenant is not a superstition, but a simple
temporal contract entered into by those same revolutionists for pragmatic
reasons. They wished to insure the maximum possible liberty for every person.
'You yourself have enjoyed that liberty.
No possible act, nor mode of conduct, was forbidden to you, as long as your
action did not damage another. Even an act specifically prohibited by law could
not be held against you, unless the state was able to prove that your
particular act damaged, or caused evident danger of damage, to a particular
individual.
'Even if one should willfully and
knowingly damage another-as you have done-the state does not attempt to sit in
moral judgment, nor to punish. We have not the wisdom to do that, and the chain
of injustices that have always followed such moralistic coercion endanger the
liberty of all. Instead, the convicted is given the choice of submitting to
psychological readjustment to correct his tendency to wish to damage others, or
of having the state withdraw itself from him-of sending him to Coventry.
'You complain that our way of living is
dull and unromantic, and imply that we have deprived you of excitement to which
you feel entitled. You are free to hold and express your esthetic opinion of
our way of living, but you must not expect us to live to suit your tastes. You
are free to seek danger and adventure if you wish-there is danger still in
experimental laboratories; there is hardship in the mountains of the Moon, and
death in the jungles of Venus-but you are not free to expose us to the violence
of your nature.'
'Why make so much of it?' MacKinnon
protested contemptuously. 'You talk as if I had committed a murder-I simply
punched a man in the nose for offending me outrageously!'
'I agree with your esthetic judgment of
that individual,' the judge continued calmly, 'and am personally rather
gratified that you took a punch at him-but your psychometrical tests show that
you believe yourself capable of judging morally your fellow citizens and feel
justified in personally correcting and punishing their lapses. You are a dangerous
individual, David MacKinnon, a danger to all of us, for we can not predict whet
damage you may do next. From a social standpoint, your delusion makes you as
mad as the March Hare.
'You refuse treatment-therefore we
withdraw our society from you, we cast you out, we divorce you. To Coventry
with you.' He turned to the bailiff. 'Take him away.'
MacKinnon
peered out of a forward port of the big transport helicopter with repressed
excitement in his heart. There! That must be it-that black band in the
distance. The helicopter drew closer, and he became certain that he was seeing
the Barrier-the mysterious, impenetrable wall that divided the United States
from the reservation known as Coventry.
His guard looked up from the magazine he
was reading and followed his gaze. 'Nearly there, I see,' he said pleasantly.
'Well, it won't be long now.'
'It can't be any too soon for me!'
The guard looked at him quizzically, but
with tolerance. 'Pretty anxious to get on with it, eh?'
MacKinnon held his head high. 'You've
never brought a man to the Gateway who was more anxious to pass through!'
'Mmm-maybe. They all say that, you know.
Nobody goes through the Gate against his own will.'
'I mean it!'
'They all do. Some of them come back, just
the same.'
'Say-maybe you can give me some dope as to
conditions inside?'
'Sorry,' the guard said, shaking his head,
'but that is no concern of the United States, nor of any of its employees.
You'll know soon enough.'
MacKinnon frowned a little. 'It seems
strange-I tried inquiring, but found no one who would admit that they had any
notion about the inside. And yet you say that some come out. Surely some of
them must talk...'
'That's simple,' smiled the guard, 'part
of their reorientation is a subconscious compulsion not to discuss their
experiences.'
'That's a pretty scabby trick. Why should
the government deliberately conspire to prevent me, and the people like me,
from knowing what we are going up against?'
'Listen, buddy,' the guard answered, with
mild exasperation, 'you've told the rest of us to go to the devil. You've told
us that you could get along without us. You are being given plenty of living
room in some of the best land on this continent, and you are being allowed to
take with you everything that you own, or your credit could buy. What the deuce
else do you expect?'
MacKinnon's face settled in obstinate
lines. 'What assurance have I that there will be any land left for me?'
'That's your problem. The government sees
to it that there is plenty of land for the population. The divvy-up is
something you rugged individualists have to settle among yourselves. You've
turned down our type of social co-operation; why should you expect the
safeguards of our organization?' The guard turned back to his reading and
ignored him.
They landed on a small field which lay
close under the blank black wall. No gate was apparent, but a guardhouse was
located at the side of the field. MacKinnon was the only passenger. While his
escort went over to the guardhouse, he descended from the passenger compartment
and went around to the freight hold. Two members of the crew were letting down
a ramp from the cargo port. When he appeared, one of them eyed him, and said,
'O.K., there's your stuff. Help yourself.'
He sized up the job, and said, 'It's quite
a lot, isn't it? I'll need some help. Will you give me a hand with it?'
The crew member addressed paused to light
a cigarette before replying, 'It's your stuff. If you want it, get it out. We
take off in ten minutes.' The two walked around him and reentered the ship.
'Why, you-' MacKinnon shut up and kept the
rest of his anger to himself. The surly louts! Gone was the faintest trace of
regret at leaving civilization. He'd show them! He could get along without
them.
But it was twenty minutes and more before
he stood beside his heaped up belongings and watched the ship rise. Fortunately
the skipper had not been adamant about the time limit. He turned and commenced
loading his steel tortoise. Under the romantic influence of the classic
literature of a bygone day he had considered using a string of burros, but had
been unable to find a zoo that would sell them to him. It was just as well-he
was completely ignorant of the limits, foibles, habits, vices, illnesses, and
care of those useful little beasts, and unaware of his own ignorance. Master
and servant would have vied in making each other unhappy.
The vehicle he had chosen was not an
unreasonable substitute for burros. It was extremely rugged, easy to operate,
and almost foolproof. It drew its power from six square yards of sunpower
screens on its low curved roof. These drove a constant-load motor, or, when
halted, replenished the storage battery against cloudy weather, or night
travel. The bearings were 'everlasting', and every moving part, other than the
caterpillar treads and the controls, were sealed up, secure from inexpert
tinkering.
It could maintain a steady six miles per
hour on smooth, level pavement. When confronted by hills, or rough terrain, it
did not stop, but simply slowed until the task demanded equaled its steady
power output.
The steel tortoise gave MacKinnon a
feeling of Crusoe-like independence. It did not occur to him his chattel was
the end product of the cumulative effort and intelligent co-operation of
hundreds of thousands of men, living and dead. He had been used all his life to
the unfailing service of much more intricate machinery, and honestly regarded
the tortoise as a piece of equipment of the same primitive level as a
wood-man's axe, or a hunting knife. His talents had been devoted in the past to
literary criticism rather than engineering, but that did not prevent him from
believing that his native intelligence and the aid of a few reference books
would be all that he would really need to duplicate the tortoise, if necessary.
Metal ores were necessary, he knew, but
saw no obstacle in that, his knowledge of the difficulties of prospecting,
mining, and metallurgy being as sketchy as his knowledge of burros.
His goods filled every compartment of the
compact little freighter. He checked the last item from his inventory and ran a
satisfied eye down the list. Any explorer or adventurer of the past might well
be pleased with such equipment, he thought. He could imagine showing Jack
London his knockdown cabin. See, Jack, he would say, it's proof against any
kind of weather-perfectly insulated walls and floor-and can't rust. It's so
light that you can set it up in five minutes by yourself, yet it's so strong
that you can sleep sound with the biggest grizzly in the world snuffling right
outside your door.
And London would scratch his head, and
say, Dave, you're a wonder. If I'd had that in the Yukon, it would have been a
cinch!
He checked over the list again. Enough
concentrated and desiccated food and vitamin concentrate to last six months.
That would give him time enough to build hothouses for hydroponics, and get his
seeds started. Medical supplies-he did not expect to need those, but foresight
was always best. Reference books of all sorts. A light sporting rifle-vintage:
last century. His face clouded a little at this. The War Department had
positively refused to sell him a portable blaster. When he had claimed the
right of common social heritage, they had grudgingly provided him with the
plans and specifications, and told him to build his own. Well, he would, the
first spare time he got.
Everything else was in order. MacKinnon
climbed into the cockpit, grasped the two hand controls, and swung the nose of
the tortoise toward the guardhouse. He had been ignored since the ship had
landed; he wanted to have the gate opened and to leave.
Several soldiers were gathered around the
guardhouse. He picked out a legate by the silver stripe down the side of his
kilt and spoke to him. 'I'm ready to leave. Will you kindly open the Gate?'
'O.K.,' the officer answered him, and
turned to a soldier who wore the plain gray kilt of a private's field uniform.
'Jenkins, tell the power house to dilate-about a number three opening, tell
them,' he added, sizing up the dimensions of the tortoise.
He turned to MacKinnon. 'It is my duty to
tell you that you may return to civilization, even now, by agreeing to be
hospitalized for your neurosis.'
'I have no neurosis!'
'Very well. If you change your mind at any
future time, return to the place where you entered. There is an alarm there
with which you may signal to the guard that you wish the gate opened.'
'I can't imagine needing to know that.'
The legate shrugged. 'Perhaps not-but we
send refugees to quarantine all the time. If I were making the rules, it might
be harder to get out again.' He was cut off by the ringing of an alarm. The
soldiers near them moved smartly away, drawing their blasters from their belts
as they ran. The ugly snout of a fixed blaster poked out over the top of the
guardhouse and pointed toward the Barrier.
The legate answered the question on
MacKinnon's face. 'The power house is ready to open up.' He waved smartly
toward that building, then turned back. 'Drive straight through the center of the
opening. It takes a lot of power to suspend the stasis; if you touch the edge,
we'll have to pick up the pieces.'
A tiny, bright dot appeared in the foot of
the barrier opposite where they waited. It spread into a half circle across the
lampblack nothingness. Now it was large enough for MacKinnon to see the
countryside beyond through the arch it had formed. He peered eagerly.
The opening grew until it was twenty feet
wide, then stopped. It framed a scene of rugged, barren hills. He took this in,
and turned angrily on the legate. 'I've been tricked!' he exclaimed. 'That's
not fit land to support a man.'
'Don't be hasty,' he told MacKinnon.
'There's good land beyond. Besides-you don't have to enter. But if you are
going, go!'
MacKinnon flushed, and pulled back on both
hand controls. The treads bit in and the tortoise lumbered away, straight for
the Gateway to Coventry.
When he was several yards beyond the Gate,
he glanced back. The Barrier loomed behind him, with nothing to show where the
opening had been. There was a little sheet metal shed adjacent to the point
where he had passed through. He supposed that it contained the alarm the legate
had mentioned, but he was not interested and turned his eyes back to his
driving.
Stretching before him, twisting between
rocky hills, was a road of sorts. It was not paved and the surface had not been
repaired recently, but the grade averaged downhill and the tortoise was able to
maintain a respectable speed. He continued down it, not because he fancied it,
but because it was the only road which led out of surroundings obviously
unsuited to his needs.
The road was untraveled. This suited him;
he had no wish to encounter other human beings until he had located desirable
land to settle on, and had staked out his claim. But the hills were not devoid
of life; several times he caught glimpses of little dark shapes scurrying among
the rocks, and occasionally bright, beady eyes stared back into his.
It did not occur to him at first that
these timid little animals, streaking for cover at his coming, could replenish
his larder-he was simply amused and warmed by their presence. When he did
happen to consider that they might be used as food, the thought was at first
repugnant to him-the custom of killing for 'sport' had ceased to be customary
long before his time; and inasmuch as the development of cheap synthetic
proteins in the latter half of the preceding century had spelled the economic
ruin of the business of breeding animals for slaughter, it is doubtful if he had
ever tasted animal tissue in his life.
But once considered, it was logical to
act. He expected to live off the country; although he had plenty of food on
hand for the immediate future, it would be wise to conserve it by using what
the country offered. He suppressed his esthetic distaste and ethical
misgivings, and determined to shoot one of the little animals at the first
opportunity.
Accordingly, he dug out the rifle, loaded
it, and placed it handy. With the usual perversity of the world-as-it-is, no game
was evident for the next half hour. He was passing a little shoulder of rocky
outcropping when he saw his prey. It peeked at him from behind a small boulder,
its sober eyes wary but unperturbed. He stopped the tortoise and took careful
aim, resting and steadying the rifle on the side of the cockpit. His quarry
accommodated him by hopping out into full view.
He pulled the trigger, involuntarily
tensing his muscles and squinting his eyes as he did so. Naturally, the shot
went high and to the right.
But he was much too busy just then to be
aware of it. It seemed that the whole world had exploded. His right shoulder
was numb, his mouth stung as if he had been kicked there, and his ears rang in
a strange and unpleasant fashion. He was surprised to find the gun still intact
in his hands and apparently none the worse for the incident.
He put it down, clambered out of the car,
and rushed up to where the small creature had been. There was no sign of it
anywhere. He searched the immediate neighborhood, but did not find it.
Mystified, he returned to his conveyance, having decided that the rifle was in
some way defective, and that he should inspect it carefully before attempting
to fire it again.
His recent target watched his actions
cautiously from a vantage point yards away, to which it had stampeded at the
sound of the shot. It was equally mystified by the startling events, being no
more used to firearms than was MacKinnon.
Before he started the tortoise again,
MacKinnon had to see to his upper lip, which was swollen and tender and
bleeding from a deep scratch. This increased his conviction that the gun was
defective. Nowhere in the romantic literature of the nineteenth and twentieth
centuries, to which he was addicted, had there been a warning that, when firing
a gun heavy enough to drop a man in his tracks, it is well not to hold the
right hand in such ~ manner that the recoil will cause the right thumb and
thumb nail to strike the mouth.
He applied an antiseptic and a dressing of
sorts, and went on his way, somewhat subdued. The arroyo by which he had
entered the hills had widened out, and the hills were greener. He passed around
one sharp turn in the road, and found a broad fertile valley spread out before
him. It stretched away until it was lost in the warm day's haze.
Much of the valley was cultivated, and he
could make out human habitations. He continued toward it with mixed feelings.
People meant fewer hardships, but it did not look as if staking out a claim
would be as simple as he had hoped. However-Coventry was a big place.
He had reached the point where the road
gave onto the floor of the valley, when two men stepped out into his path. They
were carrying weapons of some sort at the ready. One of them called out to him:
'Halt!'
MacKinnon did so, and answered him as they
came abreast. 'What do you want?'
'Customs inspection. Pull over there by
the office.' He indicated a small building set back a few feet from the road,
which MacKinnon had not previously noticed. He looked from it back to the
spokesman, and felt a slow, unreasoning heat spread up from his viscera. It
rendered his none too stable judgment still more unsound.
'What the deuce are you talking about?' he
snapped. 'Stand aside and let me pass.'
The one who had remained silent raised his
weapon and aimed it at MacKinnon's chest. The other grabbed his arm and pulled
the weapon out of line. 'Don't shoot the dumb fool, Joe,' he said testily.
'You're always too anxious.' Then to MacKinnon, 'You're resisting the law. Come
on-be quick about it!'
'The law?' MacKinnon gave a bitter laugh
and snatched his rifle from the seat. It never reached his shoulder-the man who
had done all the talking fired casually, without apparently taking time to aim.
MacKinnon's rifle was smacked from his grasp and flew into the air, landing in
the roadside ditch behind the tortoise.
The man who had remained silent followed
the flight of the gun with detached interest, and remarked, 'Nice shot,
Blackie. Never touched him.'
'Oh, just luck,' the other demurred, but
grinned his pleasure at the compliment. 'Glad I didn't nick him, though-saves
writing out a report.' He reassumed an official manner, spoke again to
MacKinnon, who had been sitting dumbfounded, rubbing his smarting hands. 'Well,
tough guy? Do you behave, or do we come up there and get you?'
MacKinnon gave in. He drove the tortoise
to the designated spot, and waited sullenly for orders. 'Get out and start
unloading,' he was told. He obeyed, under compulsion. As he piled his precious
possessions on the ground, the one addressed as Blackie separated the things
into two piles, while Joe listed them on a printed form. He noticed presently
that Joe listed only the items that went into the first pile. He understood
this when Blackie told him to reload the tortoise with the items from that
pile, and commenced himself to carry goods from the other pile into the
building. He started to protest-Joe punched him in the mouth, coolly and
without rancor. MacKinnon went down, but got up again, fighting. He was in such
a blind rage that he would have tackled a charging rhino. Joe timed his rush,
and clipped him again. This time he could not get up at once.
Blackie stepped over to a washstand in one
corner of the office. He came back with a wet towel and chucked it at
MacKinnon. 'Wipe your face on that, bud, and get back in the buggy. We got to
get going.'
MacKinnon had time to do a lot of serious
thinking as he drove Blackie into town. Beyond a terse answer of 'Prize court'
to MacKinnon's inquiry as to their destination, Blackie did not converse, nor
did MacKinnon press him, anxious as he was to have information. His mouth
pained him from repeated punishment, his head ached, and he was no longer
tempted to precipitate action by hasty speech.
Evidently Coventry was not quite the
frontier anarchy he had expected it to be. There was a government of sorts,
apparently, but it resembled nothing that he had ever been used to. He had
visualized a land of noble, independent spirits who gave each other wide berth
and practiced mutual respect. There would be villains, of course, but they
would be treated to summary, and probably lethal, justice as quickly as they
demonstrated their ugly natures. He had a strong, though subconscious,
assumption that virtue is necessarily triumphant.
But having found government, he expected
it to follow the general pattern that he had been used to all his life-honest,
conscientious, reasonably efficient, and invariably careful of a citizen's
rights and liberties. He was aware that government had not always been like
that, but he had never experienced it-the idea was as remote and implausible as
cannibalism, or chattel slavery.
Had he stopped to think about it, he might
have realized that public servants in Coventry would never have been examined
psychologically to determine their temperamental fitness for their duties, and,
since every inhabitant of Coventry was there-as he was-for violating a basic
custom and ref using treatment thereafter, it was a foregone conclusion that
most of them would be erratic and arbitrary.
He pinned his hope on the knowledge that
they were going to court. All he asked was a chance to tell his story to the
judge.
His dependence on judicial procedure may
appear inconsistent in view of how recently he had renounced all reliance on
organized government, but while he could renounce government verbally, but he
could not do away with a lifetime of environmental conditioning. He could curse
the court that had humiliated him by condemning him to the Two Alternatives, but
he expected courts to dispense justice. He could assert his own rugged
independence, but he expected persons he encountered to behave as if they were
bound by the Covenant-he had met no other sort. He was no more able to discard
his past history than he would have been to discard his accustomed body.
But he did not know it yet.
MacKinnon failed to stand up when the
judge entered the court room. Court attendants quickly set him right, but not
before he had provoked a glare from the bench. The judge's appearance and
manner were not reassuring. He was a well-fed man, of ruddy complexion, whose
sadistic temper was evident in face and mien. They waited while he dealt
drastically with several petty offenders. It seemed to MacKinnon, as he
listened, that almost everything was against the law.
Nevertheless, he was relieved when his
name was called. He stepped up and undertook at once to tell his story. The
judge's gavel cut him short.
'What is this case?' the judge demanded,
his face set in grim lines. 'Drunk and disorderly, apparently. I shall put a
stop to this slackness among the young if it takes the last ounce of strength
in my body!' He turned to the clerk. 'Any previous offences?'
The clerk whispered in his ear. The judge
threw MacKinnon a look of mixed annoyance and suspicion, then told the customs'
guard to come forward. Blackie told a clear, straightforward tale with the ease
of a man used to giving testimony. MacKinnon's condition was attributed to
resisting an officer in the execution of his duty. He submitted the inventory
his colleague had prepared, but failed to mention the large quantity of goods
which had been abstracted before the inventory was made.
The judge turned to MacKinnon. 'Do you
have anything to say for yourself?'
'I certainly have, Doctor,' he began
eagerly. 'There isn't a word of -,
Bang! The gavel cut him short. A court
attendant hurried to MacKinnon's side and attempted to explain to him the
proper form to use in addressing the court. The explanation confused him. In
his experience, 'judge' naturally implied a medical man-a psychiatrist skilled
in social problems. Nor had he heard of any special speech forms appropriate to
a courtroom. But he amended his language as instructed.
'May it please the Honorable Court, this man
is lying. He and his companion assaulted and robbed me. I was simply-'Smugglers
generally think they are being robbed when customs officials catch them,' the
judge sneered. 'Do you deny that you attempted to resist inspection?'
'No, Your Honor, but -'
'That will do. Penalty of fifty percent is
added to the established scale of duty. Pay the clerk.'
'But, Your Honor, I can't -'
'Can't you pay it?'
'I haven't any money. I have only my
possessions.'
'So?' He turned to the clerk.
'Condemnation proceedings. Impound his goods. Ten days for vagrancy. The
community can't have these immigrant paupers roaming at large, and preying on
law-abiding citizens. Next case!'
They hustled him away. It took the sound
of a key grating in a barred door behind him to make him realize his
predicament.
'Hi, pal, how's the weather outside?' The
detention cell had a prior inmate, a small, well-knit man who looked up from a
game of solitaire to address MacKinnon. He sat astraddle a bench on which he
had spread his cards, and studied the newcomer with unworried, bright, beady
eyes.
'Clear enough outside-but stormy in the
courtroom,' MacKinnon answered, trying to adopt the same bantering tone and not
succeeding very well. His mouth hurt him and spoiled his grin.
The other swung a leg over the bench and
approached him with a light, silent step. 'Say, pal, you must 'a' caught that
in a gear box,' he commented, inspecting MacKinnon's mouth. 'Does it hurt?'
'Like the devil,' MacKinnon admitted.
'We'll have to do something about that.'
He went to the cell door and rattled it. 'Hey! Lefty! The house is on fire!
Come arunnin'!'
The guard sauntered down and stood
opposite their cell door. 'Wha' d'yuh want, Fader?' he said noncommittally.
'My old school chum has been slapped in
the face with a wrench, and the pain is inordinate. Here's a chance for you to
get right with Heaven by oozing down to the dispensary, snagging a dressing and
about five grains of neoanodyne.'
The guard's expression was not
encouraging. The prisoner looked grieved. 'Why, Lefty,' he said, 'I thought you
would jump at a chance to do a little pure charity like that.' He waited for a
moment, then added, 'Tell you what-you do it, and I'll show you how to work
that puzzle about "How old is Ann?" Is it a go?'
'Show me first.'
'It would take too long. I'll write it out
and give it to you.'
When the guard returned, MacKinnon's
cellmate dressed his wounds with gentle deftness, talking the while. 'They call
me Fader Magee. What's your name, pal?'
'David MacKinnon. I'm sorry, but I didn't
quite catch your first name.'
'Fader. It isn't,' he explained with a
grin, 'the name my mother gave me. It's more a professional tribute to my shy
and unobtrusive nature.'
MacKinnon looked puzzled. 'Professional tribute?
What is your profession?'
Magee looked pained. 'Why, Dave,' he said,
'I didn't ask you that. However,' he went on, 'it's probably the same as
yours-self-preservation.'
Magee was a sympathetic listener, and
MacKinnon welcomed the chance to tell someone about his troubles. He related
the story of how he had decided to enter Coventry rather than submit to the
sentence of the court, and how he had hardly arrived when he was hijacked and
hauled into court. Magee nodded. 'I'm not surprised,' he observed. 'A man has
to have larceny in his heart, or he wouldn't be a customs guard.'
'But what happens to my belongings?'
'They auction them off to pay the duty.'
'I wonder how much there will be left for
me?'
Magee stared at him. 'Left over? There won't
be anything left over. You'll probably have to pay a deficiency judgment.'
'Huh? What's that?'
'It's a device whereby the condemned pays
for the execution,' Magee explained succinctly, if somewhat obscurely. 'What it
means to you is that when your ten days is up, you'll still be in debt to the
court. Then it's the chain gang for you, my lad-you'll work it off at a dollar
a day.'
'Fader-you're kidding me.'
'Wait and see. You've got a lot to learn,
Dave.'
Coventry was an even more complex place than
MacKinnon had gathered up to this time. Magee explained to him that there were
actually three sovereign, independent jurisdictions. The jail where they were
prisoners lay in the so-called New America. It had the forms of democratic
government, but the treatment he had already received was a fair sample of the
fashion in which it was administered.
'This place is heaven itself compared with
the Free State,' Magee maintained. 'I've been there-' The Free State was an
absolute dictatorship; the head man of the ruling clique was designated the
'Liberator'. Their watchwords were Duty and Obedience; an arbitrary discipline
was enforced with a severity that left no room for any freedom of opinion.
Governmental theory was vaguely derived from the old functionalist doctrines.
The state was thought of as a single organism with a single head, a single
brain, and a single purpose. Anything not compulsory was forbidden. 'Honest so
help me,' claimed Magee, 'you can't go to bed in that place without finding one
of their damned secret police between the sheets.'
'But at that,' he continued, 'it's an
easier place to live than with the Angels.'
'The Angels?'
'Sure. We still got 'em. Must have been
two or three thousand die-hards that chose to go to Coventry after the Revolution-you
know that. There's still a colony up in the hills to the north, complete with
Prophet Incarnate and the works. They aren't bad hombres, but they'll pray you
into heaven even if it kills you.'
All three states had one curious
characteristic in common-each one claimed to be the only legal government of
the entire United States, and each looked forward to some future day when they
would reclaim the 'unredeemed' portion; i.e., outside Coventry. To the Angels,
this was an event which would occur when the First Prophet returned to earth to
lead them again. In New America it was hardly more than a convenient campaign
plank, to be forgotten after each election. But in the Free State it was a
fixed policy.
Pursuant to this purpose there had been a whole
series of wars between the Free State and New America. The Liberator held,
quite logically, that New America was an unredeemed section, and that is was
necessary to bring it under the rule of the Free State before the advantages of
their culture could be extended to the outside.
Magee's words demolished MacKinnon's dream
of finding an anarchistic utopia within the barrier, but he could not let his
fond illusion die without a protest. 'But see here, Fader,' he persisted,
'isn't there some place where a man can live quietly by himself without all
this insufferable interference?'
'No-'considered Fader, 'no . . . not
unless you took to the hills and hid. Then you 'ud be all right, as long as you
steered clear of the Angels. But it would be pretty slim pickin's, living off
the country. Ever tried it?'
'No . . . not exactly-but I've read all
the classics: Zane Grey, and Emerson Hough, and so forth.'
'Well . . . maybe you could do it. But if
you really want to go off and be a hermit, you 'ud do better to try it on the
Outside, where there aren't so many objections to it.'
'No'-MacKinnon's backbone stiffened at
once-'no, I'll never do that. I'll never submit to psychological reorientation
just to have a chance to be let alone. If I could go back to where I was before
a couple of months ago, before I was arrested, it might be all right to go off
to the Rockies, or look up an abandoned farm somewhere. . . But with that
diagnosis staring me in the face . . . after being told I wasn't fit for human
society until I had had my emotions re-tailored to fit a cautious little
pattern, I couldn't face it. Not if it meant going to a sanitarium'
'I see,' agreed Fader, nodding, 'you want
to go to Coventry, but you don't want the Barrier to shut you off from the rest
of the world.'
'No, that's not quite fair . . . Well,
maybe, in a way. Say, you don't think I'm not fit to associate with, do you?'
'You look all right to me,' Magee
reassured him, with a grin, 'but I'm in Coventry too, remember. Maybe I'm no
judge.'
'You don't talk as if you liked it
much. Why are you here?'
Magee held up a gently admonishing finger.
'Tut! Tut! That is the one question you must never ask a man here. You must
assume that he came here because he knew how swell everything is here.'
'Still . . . you don't seem to like it.'
'I didn't say I didn't like it. I do like
it; it has flavor. Its little incongruities are a source of innocent merriment.
And anytime they turn on the heat I can always go back through the Gate and
rest up for a while in a nice quiet hospital, until things quiet down.'
MacKinnon was puzzled again. 'Turn on the
heat? Do they supply too hot weather here?'
'Huh? Oh. I didn't mean weather
control-there isn't any of that here, except what leaks over from outside. I
was just using an old figure of speech.'
'What does it mean?'
Magee smiled to himself. 'You'll find
out.'
After supper-bread, stew in a metal dish,
a small apple-Magee introduced MacKinnon to the mysteries of cribbage.
Fortunately, MacKinnon had no cash to lose. Presently Magee put the cards down
without shuffling them. 'Dave,' he said, 'are you enjoying the hospitality
offered by this institution?'
'Hardly-Why?'
'I suggest that we check out.'
'A good idea, but how?'
'That's what I've been thinking about. Do
you suppose you could take another poke on that battered phiz of yours, in a
good cause?'
MacKinnon cautiously fingered his face. 'I
suppose so-if necessary. It can't do me much more harm, anyhow.'
'That's mother's little man! Now listen-this
guard, Lefty, in addition to being kind o' unbright, is sensitive about his
appearance. When they turn out the lights, you -'
'Let me out of here! Let me out of here!'
MacKinnon beat on the bars and screamed. No answer came. He renewed the racket,
his voice an hysterical falsetto. Lefty arrived to investigate, grumbling.
'What the hell's eating on you?' he
demanded, peering through the bars.
MacKinnon changed to tearful petition.
'Oh, Lefty, please let me out of here. Please! I can't stand the dark. It's
dark in here-please don't leave me alone.' He flung himself, sobbing, on the
bars.
The guard cursed to himself. 'Another
slugnutty. Listen, you-shut up, and go to sleep, or I'll come in there, and
give you something to yelp for!' He started to leave.
MacKinnon changed instantly to the
vindictive, unpredictable anger of the irresponsible. 'You big ugly baboon! You
rat-faced idiot! Where'd you get that nose?'
Lefty turned back, fury in his face. He
started to speak. MacKinnon cut him short. 'Yah! Yah! Yah!' he gloated, like a nasty little boy, 'Lefty's mother was
scared by a warthog-The guard swung at the spot where MacKinnon's face was
pressed between the bars of the door. MacKinnon ducked and grabbed
simultaneously. Off balance at meeting no resistance, the guard rocked forward,
thrusting his forearm between the bars. MacKinnon's fingers slid along his arm,
and got a firm purchase on Lefty's wrist.
He threw himself backwards, dragging the
guard with him, until Lefty was jammed up against the outside of the barred
door, with one arm inside, to the wrist of which MacKinnon clung as if welded.
The yell which formed in Lefty's throat
miscarried; Magee had already acted. Out of the darkness, silent as death, his
slim hands had snaked between the bars and imbedded themselves in the guard's
fleshy neck. Lefty heaved, and almost broke free, but MacKinnon threw his
weight to the right and twisted the arm he gripped in an agonizing,
bone-breaking leverage.
It seemed to MacKinnon that they remained
thus, like some grotesque game of statues, for an endless period. His pulse
pounded in his ears until he feared that it must be heard by others, and bring
rescue to Lefty. Magee spoke at last:
'That's enough,' he whispered. 'Go through
his pockets.'
He made an awkward job if it, for his
hands were numb and trembling from the strain, and it was anything but
convenient to work between the bars. But the keys were there, in the last
pocket he tried. He passed them to Magee, who let the guard slip to the floor,
and accepted them.
Magee made a quick job of it. The door
swung open with a distressing creak. Dave stepped over Lefty's body, but Magee
kneeled down, unhooked a truncheon from the guard's belt, and cracked him
behind the ear with it. MacKinnon paused.
'Did you kill him?' he asked.
'Cripes, no,' Magee answered softly,
'Lefty is a friend of mine. Let's go.'
They hurried down the dimly lighted
passageway between cells toward the door leading to the administrative
offices-their only outlet. Lefty had carelessly left it ajar, and light shone
through the crack, but as they silently approached it, they heard ponderous
footsteps from the far side. Dave looked hurriedly for cover, but the best he
could manage was to slink back into the corner formed by the cell block and the
wall. He glanced around for Magee, but he had disappeared.
The door swung open; a man stepped
through, paused, and looked around. MacKinnon saw that he was carrying a
blacklight, and wearing its complement-rectifying spectacles. He realized then
that the darkness gave him no cover. The blacklight swung his way; he tensed to
spring-He heard a dull 'clunk!' The guard sighed, swayed gently, then collapsed
into a loose pile. Magee stood over him, poised on the balls of his feet, and surveyed
his work, while caressing the business end of the truncheon with the cupped
fingers of his left hand.
'That will do,' he decided. 'Shall we go,
Dave?'
He eased through the door without waiting
for an answer; MacKinnon was close behind him. The lighted corridor led away to
the right and ended in a large double door to the street. On the left wall,
near the street door, a smaller office door stood open.
Magee drew MacKinnon to him. 'It's a
cinch,' he whispered. 'There'll be nobody in there now but the desk sergeant.
We get past him, then out that door, and into the ozone-' He motioned Dave to
keep behind him, and crept silently up to the office door. After drawing a
small mirror from a pocket in his belt, he lay down on the floor, placed his
head near the doorframe, and cautiously extended the tiny mirror an inch or two
past the edge.
Apparently he was satisfied with the
reconnaissance the improvised periscope afforded, for he drew himself back onto
his knees and turned his head so that MacKinnon could see the words shaped by
his silent lips. 'It's all right,' he breathed, 'there is only-Two hundred
pounds of uniformed nemesis landed on his shoulders. A clanging alarm sounded
through the corridor. Magee went down fighting, but he was outclassed and
caught off guard. He jerked his head free and shouted, 'Run for it, kid!'
MacKinnon could hear running feet
somewhere, but could see nothing but the struggling figures before him. He
shook his head and shoulders like a dazed animal, then kicked the larger of the
two contestants in the face. The man screamed and let go his hold. MacKinnon
grasped his small companion by the scruff of the neck and hauled him roughly to
his feet.
Magee's eyes were still merry. 'Well
played, my lad,' he commended in clipped syllables, as they burst out the
street door, '- if hardly cricket! Where did you learn La Savate?'
MacKinnon had no time to answer, being
fully occupied in keeping up with Magee's weaving, deceptively rapid progress.
They ducked across the street, down an alley, and between two buildings.
The succeeding minutes, or hours, were
confusion to MacKinnon. He remembered afterwards crawling along a roof top and
letting himself down to crouch in the blackness of an interior court, but he
could not remember how they had gotten on the roof. He also recalled spending
an interminable period alone, compressed inside a most unsavory refuse bin, and
his terror when footsteps approached the bin and a light flashed through a
crack.
A crash and the sound of footsteps in
flight immediately thereafter led him to guess that Fader had drawn the pursuit
away from him. But when Fader did return, and open the top of the bin,
MacKinnon almost throttled him before identification was established.
When the active pursuit had been shaken
off, Magee guided him across town, showing a sophisticated knowledge of back
ways and shortcuts, and a genius for taking full advantage of cover. They
reached the outskirts of the town in a dilapidated quarter, far from the civic
center. Magee stopped. 'I guess this is the end of the line,' kid,' he told
Dave. 'If you follow this street, you'll come to open country shortly. That's
what you wanted, wasn't it?'
'I suppose so,' MacKinnon replied
uneasily, and peered down the street. Then he turned back to speak again to
Magee.
But Magee was gone. He had faded away into
the shadows. There was neither sight nor sound of him.
MacKinnon started in the suggested
direction with a heavy heart. There was no possible reason to expect Magee to
stay with him; the service Dave had done him with a lucky kick had been repaid
with interest-yet he had lost the only friendly companionship he had found in a
strange place. He felt lonely and depressed.
He continued along, keeping to the
shadows, and watching carefully for shapes that might be patrolmen. He had gone
a few hundred yards, and was beginning to worry about how far it might be to
open countryside, when he was startled into gooseflesh by a hiss from a dark
doorway.
He did his best to repress the panic that
beset him, and was telling himself that policemen never hiss, when a shadow
detached itself from the blackness and touched him on the arm.
'Dave,' it said softly.
MacKinnon felt a childlike sense of relief
and well-being. 'Fader!'
'I changed my mind, Dave. The gendarmes
would have you in tow before morning. You don't know the ropes . . . so I came
back.'
Dave was both pleased and crestfallen.
'Hell's bells, Fader,' he protested, 'you shouldn't worry about me. I'll get
along.'
Magee shook him roughly by the arm. 'Don't
be a chump. Green as you are, you'd start to holler about your civil rights, or
something, and get clipped in the mouth again.
'Now see here,' he went on, 'I'm going to
take you to some friends of mine who will hide you until you're smartened up to
the tricks around here. But they're on the wrong side of the law, see? You'll
have to be all three of the three sacred monkeys-see no evil, hear no evil,
tell no evil. Think you can do it?'
'Yes, but -'
'No "buts" about it. Come along!'
The entrance was in the rear of an old
warehouse. Steps led down into a little sunken pit. From this open areaway-foul
with accumulated refuse-a door let into the back wall of the building. Magee
tapped lightly but systematically, waited and listened. Presently he whispered,
'Psst! It's the Fader.'
The door opened quickly, and Magee was
encircled by two great, fat arms. He was lifted off his feet, while the owner
of those arms planted a resounding buss on his cheek. 'Fader!' she exclaimed,
'are you all right, lad? We've missed you.'
'Now that's a proper welcome, Mother,' he
answered, when he was back on his own feet, 'but I want you to meet a friend of
mine. Mother Johnston, this is David MacKinnon.'
'May I do you a service?' David
acknowledged, with automatic formality, but Mother Johnston's eyes tightened
with instant suspicion.
'Is he stooled?' she snapped.
'No, Mother, he's a new immigrant-but I
vouch for him. He's on the dodge, and I've brought him here to cool.'
She softened a little under his sweetly
persuasive tones. 'Well -'
Magee pinched her cheek. 'That's a good
girl! When are you going to marry me?'
She slapped his hand away. 'Even if I were
forty years younger, I'd not marry such a scamp as you! Come along then,' she
continued to MacKinnon, 'as long as you're a friend of the Fader-though it's no
credit to you!' She waddled quickly ahead of them, down a flight of stairs,
while calling out for someone to open the door at its foot.
The room was poorly lighted and was
furnished principally with a long table and some chairs, at which an odd dozen
people were seated, drinking and talking. It reminded MacKinnon of prints he
had seen of old English pubs in the days before the Collapse.
Magee was greeted with a babble of
boisterous welcome. 'Fader!'-'It's the kid himself!'-'How d'ja do it this time,
Fader? Crawl down the drains?'-'Set 'em up, Mother-the Fader's back!'
He accepted the ovation with a wave of his
hand and a shout of inclusive greeting, then turned to MacKinnon. 'Folks,' he
said, his voice cutting through the confusion, 'I want you to know Dave-the
best pal that ever kicked a jailer at the right moment. If it hadn't been for
Dave, I wouldn't be here.'
Dave found himself seated between two
others at the table and a stein of beer thrust into his hand by a not uncomely
young woman. He started to thank her, but she had hurried off to help Mother
Johnston take care of the sudden influx of orders. Seated opposite him was a
rather surly young man who had taken little part in the greeting to Magee. He
looked MacKinnon over with a face expressionless except for a recurrent tic
which caused his right eye to wink spasmodically every few seconds.
'What's your line?' he demanded.
'Leave him alone, Alec,' Magee cut in
swiftly, but in a friendly tone. 'He's just arrived inside; I told you that.
But he's all right,' he continued, raising his voice to include the others
present, 'he's been here less than twenty-four hours, but he's broken jail,
beat up two customs busies, and sassed old Judge Fleishacker right to his face.
How's that for a busy day?'
Dave was the center of approving interest,
but the party with the tic persisted. 'That's all very well, but I asked him a
fair question: What's his line? If it's the same as mine, I won't stand for
it-it's too crowded now.'
'That cheap racket you're in is always
crowded, but he's not in it. Forget about his line.'
'Why don't he answer for himself,' Alec
countered suspiciously. He half stood up. 'I don't believe he's stooled -'
It appeared that Magee was cleaning his
nails with the point of a slender knife. 'Put your nose back in your glass,
Alec,' he remarked in a conversational tone, without looking up, '-or must I
cut it off and put it there?'
The other fingered something nervously in
his hand. Magee seemed not to notice it, but nevertheless told him, 'If you
think you can use a vibrator on me faster than I use steel, go ahead-it will be
an interesting experiment.'
The man facing him stood uncertainly for a
moment longer, his tic working incessantly. Mother Johnston came up behind him
and pushed him down by the shoulders, saying, 'Boys! Boys! Is that any way to
behave?-and in front of a guest, too! Fader, put that toad sticker away-I'm
ashamed of you.'
The knife was gone from his hands. 'You're
right as always, Mother,' he grinned. 'Ask Molly to fill up my glass again.'
An old chap sitting on MacKinnon's right
had followed these events with alcoholic uncertainty, but he seemed to have
gathered something of the gist of it, for now he fixed Dave with serum-filled
eye, and enquired, 'Boy, are you stooled to the rogue?' His sweetly sour breath
reached MacKinnon as the old man leaned toward him and emphasized his question
with a trembling, joint-swollen finger.
Dave looked to Magee for advice and
enlightenment. Magee answered for him. 'No, he's not-Mother Johnston knew that
when she let him in. He's here for sanctuary-as our customs provide!'
An uneasy stir ran around the room. Molly
paused in her serving and listened openly. But the old man seemed satisfied.
'True . . . true enough,' he agreed, and took another pull at his drink,
'sanctuary may be given when needed, if-'His words were lost in a mumble.
The nervous tension slackened. Most of
those present were subconsciously glad to follow the lead of the old man, and
excuse the intrusion on the score of necessity. Magee turned back to Dave. 'I
thought that what you didn't know couldn't hurt you-or us-but the matter has
been opened.'
'But what did he mean?'
'Gramps asked you if you had been stooled
to the rogue-whether or not you were a member of the ancient and honorable
fraternity of thieves, cutthroats, and pickpockets!'
Magee stared into Dave's face with a look
of sardonic amusement. Dave looked uncertainly from Magee to the others, saw
them exchange glances, and wondered what answer was expected of him. Alec broke
the pause. 'Well,' he sneered, 'what are you waiting for? Go ahead and put the
question to him-or are the great Fader's friends free to use this club without
so much as a by-your-leave?'
'I thought I told you to quiet down,
Alec,' the Fader replied evenly. 'Besides-you're skipping a requirement. All
the comrades present must first decide whether or not to put the question at
all.'
A quiet little man with a chronic worried
look in his eyes answered him. 'I don't think that quite applies, Fader. If he
had come himself, or fallen into our hands-in that case, yes. But you brought
him here. I think I speak for all when I say he should answer the question. Unless
someone objects, I will ask him myself.' He allowed an interval to pass. No one
spoke up. 'Very well then . . . Dave, you have seen too much and heard too
much. Will you leave us now-or will you stay and take the oath of our guild? I
must warn you that once stooled you are stooled for life-and there is but one
punishment for betraying the rogue.'
He drew his thumb across his throat in an
age-old deadly gesture. Gramps made an appropriate sound effect by sucking air
wetly through his teeth, and chuckled.
Dave looked around. Magee's face gave him
no help. 'What is it that I have to swear to?' he temporized.
The parley was brought to an abrupt ending
by the sound of pounding outside. There was a shout, muffled by two closed
doors and a stairway, of 'Open up down there!' Magee got lightly to his feet
and beckoned to Dave.
'That's for us, kid,' he said. 'Come
along.'
He stepped over to a ponderous,
old-fashioned radiophonograph which stood against the wall, reached under it,
fiddled for a moment, then swung out one side panel of it. Dave saw that the
mechanism had been cunningly rearranged in such a fashion that a man could
squeeze inside it. Magee urged him into it, slammed the panel closed, and left
him.
His face was pressed up close to the
slotted grill which was intended to cover the sound box. Molly had cleared off
the two extra glasses from the table, and was dumping one drink so that it
spread along the table top and erased the rings their glasses had made.
MacKinnon saw the Fader slide under the
table, and reached up. Then he was gone. Apparently he had, in some fashion,
attached himself to the underside of the table.
Mother Johnston made a great-to-do of
opening up. The lower door she opened at once, with much noise. Then she
clumped slowly up the steps, pausing, wheezing, and complaining aloud. He heard
her unlock the outer door.
'A fine time to be waking honest people
up!' she protested. 'It's hard enough to get the work done and make both ends
meet, without dropping what I'm doing every five minutes, and -'
'Enough of that, old girl,' a man's voice
answered, 'just get along downstairs. We have business with you.'
'What sort of business?' she demanded.
'It might be selling liquor without a
license, but it's not-this time.'
'I don't-this is a private club. The
members own the liquor; I simply serve it to them.'
'That's as may be. It's those members I
want to talk to. Get out of the way now, and be spry about it.'
They came pushing into the room with
Mother Johnston, still voluble, carried along in by the van. The speaker was a
sergeant of police; he was accompanied by a patrolman. Following them were two
other uniformed men, but they were soldiers. MacKinnon judged by the markings
on their kilts that they were corporal and private-provided the insignia in New
America were similar to those used by the United States Army.
The sergeant paid no attention to Mother
Johnston. 'All right, you men,' he called out, 'line up!'
They did so, ungraciously but promptly.
Molly and Mother Johnston watched them, and moved closer to each other. The
police sergeant called out, 'All right, corporal-take charge!'
The boy who washed up in the kitchen had
been staring round-eyed. He dropped a glass. It bounced around on the hard
floor, giving out bell-like sounds in the silence.
The man who had questioned Dave spoke up.
'What's all this?'
The sergeant answered with a pleased grin.
'Conscription-that's what it is. You are all enlisted in the army for the
duration.'
'Press gang!' It was an involuntary gasp
that came from no particular source.
The corporal stepped briskly forward.
'Form a column of twos,' he directed. But the little man with the worried eyes
was not done.
'I don't understand this,' he objected.
'We signed an armistice with the Free State three weeks ago.'
'That's not your worry,' countered the
sergeant, 'nor mine. We are picking up every able-bodied man not in essential
industry. Come along.'
'Then you can't take me.'
'Why not?'
He held up the stump of a missing hand. The
sergeant glanced from it to the corporal, who nodded grudgingly, and said,
'Okay-but report to the office in the morning, and register.'
He started to march them out when Alec
broke ranks and backed up to the wall, screaming, 'You can't do this to me! I
won't go!' His deadly little vibrator was exposed in his hand, and the right
side of his face was drawn up in a spastic wink that left his teeth bare.
'Get him, Steeves,' ordered the corporal.
The private stepped forward, but stopped when Alec brandished the vibrator at
him. He had no desire to have a vibroblade between his ribs, and there was no
doubt as to the uncontrolled dangerousness of his hysterical opponent.
The corporal, looking phlegmatic, almost
bored, levelled a small tube at a spot on the wall over Alec's head. Dave heard
a soft pop!, and a thin tinkle. Alec stood motionless for a few seconds, his
face even more strained, as if he were exerting the limit of his will against
some unseen force, then slid quietly to the floor. The tonic spasm in his face
relaxed, and his features smoothed into those of a tired and petulant, and very
bewildered, little boy.
'Two of you birds carry him,' directed the
corporal. 'Let's get going.'
The sergeant was the last to leave. He
turned at the door and spoke to Mother Johnston. 'Have you seen the Fader
lately?'
'The Fader?' She seemed puzzled. 'Why,
he's in jail.'
'Ah, yes.. . so he is.' He went out.
Magee
refused the drink that Mother Johnston offered him.
Dave was surprised to see that he appeared
worried for the first time. 'I don't understand it,' Magee muttered, half to
himself, then addressed the one-handed man. 'Ed-bring me up to date.'
'Not much news since they tagged you,
Fader. The armistice was before that. I thought from the papers that things
were going to be straightened out for once.'
'So did I. But the government must expect
war if they are going in for general conscription.' He stood up. 'I've got to
have more data. Al!' The kitchen boy stuck his head into the room.
'What 'cha want, Fader?'
'Go out and make palaver with five or six
of the beggars. Look up their "king". You know where he makes his
pitch?'
'Sure-over by the auditorium.'
'Find out what's stirring, but don't let
them know I sent you.,
'Right, Fader. It's in the bag.' The boy
swaggered out.
'Molly.'
'Yes, Fader?'
'Will you go out, and do the same thing
with some of the business girls? I want to know what they hear from their
customers.' She nodded agreement. He went on, 'Better look up that little redhead
that has her beat up on Union Square. She can get secrets out of a dead man.
Here-' He pulled a wad of bills out of his pocket and handed her several. 'You
better take this grease . . . You might have to pay off a cop to get back out
of the district.'
Magee was not disposed to talk, and
insisted that Dave get some sleep. He was easily persuaded, not having slept
since he entered Coventry. That seemed like a lifetime past; he was exhausted.
Mother Johnston fixed him a shakedown in a dark, stuffy room on the same
underground level. It had none of the hygienic comforts to which he was
accustomed-air-conditioning, restful music, hydraulic mattress, nor
soundproofing-and he missed his usual relaxing soak and auto-massage, but he
was too tired to care. He slept in clothing and under covers for the first time
in his life.
He woke up with a headache, a taste in his
mouth like tired sin, and a sense of impending disaster. At first he could not
remember where he was-he thought he was still in detention Outside. His
surrounds were inexplicably sordid; he was about to ring for the attendant and
complain, when his memory pieced in the events of the day before. Then he got
up and discovered that his bones and muscles were painfully sore, and-which was
worse-that he was, by his standards, filthy dirty. He itched.
He entered the common room, and found
Magee sitting at the table. He greeted Dave. 'Hi, kid. I was about to wake you.
You've slept almost all day. We've got a lot to talk about.'
'Okay-shortly. Where's the 'fresher?'
'Over there.'
It was not Dave's idea of a refreshing
chamber, but he managed to take a sketchy shower in spite of the slimy floor.
Then he discovered that there was no air blast installed, and he was forced to
dry himself unsatisfactorily with his handkerchief. He had no choice in
clothes. He must put back on the ones he had taken off, or go naked. He
recalled that he had seen no nudity anywhere in Coventry, even at sports-a
difference in customs, no doubt.
He put his clothes back on, though his
skin crawled at the touch of the once-used linen.
But Mother Johnston had thrown together an
appetizing breakfast for him. He let coffee restore his courage as Magee
talked. It was, according to Fader, a serious situation. New America and the Free
State had compromised their differences and had formed an alliance. They quite
seriously proposed to break out of Coventry and attack the United States.
MacKinnon looked up at this. 'That's
ridiculous, isn't it? They would be outnumbered enormously. Besides, how about
the Barrier?'
'I don't know-yet. But they have some
reason to think that they can break through the Barrier . . . and there are
rumors that whatever it is can be used as a weapon, too, so that a small army
might be able to whip the whole United States.'
MacKinnon looked puzzled. 'Well,' he
observed, 'I haven't any opinion of a weapon I know nothing about, but as to
the Barrier . . . I'm not a mathematical physicist, but I was always told that
it was theoretically impossible to break the Barrier-that it was just a
nothingness that there was no way to touch. Of course, you can fly over it, but
even that is supposed to be deadly to life.'
'Suppose they had found some way to shield
from the effects of the Barrier's field?' suggested Magee. 'Anyhow, that's not
the point, for us. The point is: they've made this combine; the Free State
supplies the techniques and most of the officers; and New America, with its
bigger population, supplies most of the men. And that means to us that we don't
dare show our faces any place, or we are in the army before you can blink.
'Which brings me to what I was going to
suggest. I'm going to duck out of here as soon as it gets dark, and light out
for the Gateway, before they send somebody after me who is bright enough to
look under a table. I thought maybe you might want to come along.'
'Back to the psychologists?' MacKinnon was
honestly aghast.
'Sure-why not? What have you got to lose?
This whole damn place is going to be just like the Free State in a couple of
days-and a Joe of your temperament would be in hot water all the time. What's
so bad about a nice, quiet hospital room as a place to hide out until things
quiet down? You don't have to pay any attention to the psych boys-just make
animal noises at 'em every time one sticks his nose into your room, until they
get discouraged.'
Dave shook his head. 'No,' he said slowly,
'I can't do that.'
'Then what will you do?'
'I don't know yet. Take to the hills I
guess. Go to live with the Angels if it comes to a showdown. I wouldn't mind
them praying for my soul as long as they left my mind alone.'
They were each silent for a while. Magee
was mildly annoyed at MacKinnon's bullheaded stubbornness in the face of what
seemed to him a reasonable offer. Dave continued busily to stow away grilled
ham, while considering his position. He cut off another bite. 'My, but this is
good,' he remarked, to break the awkward silence, 'I don't know when I've had
anything taste so good-Say!'-
'What?' inquired Magee, looking up, and
seeing the concern written on MacKinnon's face.
'This ham-is it synthetic, or is it real
meat?'
'Why, it's real. What about it?'
Dave did not answer. He managed to reach
the refreshing room before that which he had eaten departed from him.
Before he left, Magee gave Dave some money
with which he could have purchased for him things that he would need in order
to take to the hills. MacKinnon protested, but the Fader cut him short. 'Quit
being a damn fool, Dave. I can't use New American money on the Outside, and you
can't stay alive in the hills without proper equipment. You lie doggo here for
a few days while Al, or Molly, picks up what you need, and you'll stand a
chance-unless you'll change your mind and come with me?'
Dave shook his head at this, and accepted
the money.
It was lonely after Magee left. Mother
Johnston and Dave were alone in the club, and the empty chairs reminded him
depressingly of the men who had been impressed. He wished that Gramps or the
one-handed man would show up. Even Alec, with his nasty temper, would have been
company-he wondered if Alec had been punished for resisting the draft.
Mother Johnston inveigled him into playing
checkers in an attempt to relieve his evident low spirits. He felt obliged to
agree to her gentle conspiracy, but his mind wandered. It was all very well for
the Senior Judge to tell him to seek adventure in interplanetary exploration,
but only engineers and technicians were eligible for such billets. Perhaps he
should have gone in for science, or engineering, instead of literature; then he
might now be on Venus, contending against the forces of nature in high
adventure, instead of hiding from uniformed bullies. It wasn't fair. No-he must
not kid himself; there was no room for an expert in literary history in the raw
frontier of the planets; that was not human injustice, that was a hard fact of
nature, and he might as well face it.
He thought bitterly of the man whose nose
he had broken, and thereby landed himself in Coventry. Maybe he was an 'upholstered
parasite' after all-but the recollection of the phrase brought back the same
unreasoning anger that had gotten him into trouble. He was glad that he had
socked that so-and-so! What right had he to go around sneering and calling
people things like that?
He found himself thinking in the same
vindictive spirit of his father, although he would have been at a loss to
explain the connection. The connection was not superficially evident, for his
father would never have stooped to name-calling. Instead, he would have offered
the sweetest of smiles, and quoted something nauseating in the way of
sweetness-and light. Dave's father was one of the nastiest little tyrants that
ever dominated a household under the guise of loving-kindness. He was of the more-in-sorrow-than-in-anger,
this-hurts-me-more-than-it-does-you school, and all his life had invariably
been able to find an altruistic rationalization for always having his own way.
Convinced of his own infallible righteousness, he had never valued his son's
point of view on anything, but had dominated him in everything-always from the
highest moralistic motives.
He had had two main bad effects on his
son: the boy's natural independence, crushed at home, rebelled blindly at every
sort of discipline, authority, or criticism which he encountered elsewhere and
subconsciously identified with the not-to-be-criticized paternal authority.
Secondly, through years of association Dave imitated his father's most
dangerous social vice-that of passing unselfcritical moral judgments on the
actions of others.
When Dave was arrested for breaking a
basic custom; to wit, atavistic violence; his father washed his hands of him
with the statement that he had tried his best to 'make a man of him', and could
not be blamed for his son's failure to profit by his instruction.
A faint knock caused them to put away the
checker board in a hurry. Mother Johnston paused before answering. 'That's not
our knock,' she considered, 'but it's not loud enough to be the noises. Be
ready to hide.'
MacKinnon waited by the fox hole where he
had hidden the night before, while Mother Johnston went to investigate. He
heard her unbar and unlock the upper door, then she called out to him in a low
but urgent voice, 'Dave! Come here, Dave-hurry!'
It was Fader, unconscious, with his own
bloody trail behind him.
Mother Johnston was attempting to pick up
the limp form. MacKinnon crowded in, and between the two of them they managed
to get him downstairs and to lay him on the long table. He came to for a moment
as they straightened his limbs. 'Hi, Dave,' he whispered, managing to achieve
the ghost of his debonair grin. 'Somebody trumped my ace.'
'You keep quiet!' Mother Johnston snapped
at him, then in a lower voice to Dave, 'Oh, the poor darling-Dave, we must get
him to the Doctor.'
'Can't . . . do . . . that,' muttered the
Fader. 'Got . . . to get to the . . . Gate-' His voice trailed off. Mother
Johnston's fingers had been busy all the while, as if activated by some
separate intelligence. A small pair of scissors, drawn from some hiding place
about her large person, clipped away at his clothing, exposing the superficial
extent of the damage. She examined the trauma critically.
'This is no job for me,' she decided, 'and
he must sleep while we move him. Dave, get that hypodermic kit out of the
medicine chest in the 'fresher.'
'No, Mother!' It was Magee, his voice
strong and vibrant.
'Get me a pepper pill,' he went on.
'There's -, 'But Fader -'
He cut her short. 'I've got to get to the
Doctor all right, but how the devil will I get there if I don't walk?'
'We would carry you.'
'Thanks, Mother,' he told her, his voice
softened. 'I know you would-but the police would be curious. Get me that pill.'
Dave followed her into the 'fresher, and
questioned her while she rummaged through the medicine chest. 'Why don't we
just send for a doctor?'
'There is only one doctor we can trust,
and that's the Doctor. Besides, none of the others are worth the powder to
blast them.'
Magee was out again when they came back
into the room. Mother Johnston slapped his face until he came around, blinking
and cursing. Then she fed him the pill.
The powerful stimulant, improbable
offspring of common coal tar, took hold almost at once. To all surface
appearance Magee was a well man. He sat up and tried his own pulse, searching
it out in his left wrist with steady, sensitive fingers. 'Regular as a
metronome,' he announced, 'the old ticker can stand that dosage all right.'
He waited while Mother Johnston applied
sterile packs to his wounds, then said good-bye. MacKinnon looked at Mother
Johnston. She nodded.
'I'm going with you,' he told the Fader.
'What for? It will just double the risk.'
'You're in no fit shape to travel
alone-stimulant, or no stimulant.'
'Nuts. I'd have to look after you.'
'I'm going with you.'
Magee shrugged his shoulders and
capitulated.
Mother Johnston wiped her perspiring face,
and kissed both of them.
Until they were well out of town their
progress reminded MacKinnon of their nightmare flight of the previous evening.
Thereafter they continued to the north-northwest by a highway which ran toward
the foothills, and they left the highway only when necessary to avoid the
sparse traffic. Once they were almost surprised by a police patrol car,
equipped with blacklight and almost invisible, but the Fader sensed it in time
and they crouched behind a low wall which separated the adjacent field from the
road.
Dave inquired how he had known the patrol
was near. Magee chuckled. 'Damned if I know,' he said, 'but I believe I could
smell a cop staked out in a herd of goats.'
The Fader talked less and less as the
night progressed. His usually untroubled countenance became lined and old as
the effect of the drug wore off. It seemed to Dave as if this unaccustomed
expression gave him a clearer insight into the man's character-that the mask of
pain was his true face rather than the unworried features Magee habitually
showed the world. He wondered for the ninth time what the Fader had done to
cause a court to adjudge him socially insane.
This question was uppermost in his mind
with respect to every person he met in Coventry. The answer was obvious in most
cases; their types of instability were gross and showed up at once. Mother
Johnston had been an enigma until she had explained it herself. She had
followed her husband into Coventry. Now that she was a widow, she preferred to
remain with the friends she knew and the customs and conditions she was
adjusted to, rather than change for -another and possibly less pleasing
environment.
Magee sat down beside the road. 'It's no
use, kid,' he admitted, 'I can't make it.'
'The hell we can't. I'll carry you.'
Magee grinned faintly. 'No, I mean it.'
Dave persisted. 'How much farther is it?'
'Matter of two or three miles, maybe.'
'Climb aboard.' He took Magee pickaback
and started on. The first few hundred yards were not too difficult; Magee was
forty pounds lighter than Dave. After that the strain of the additional load
began to tell. His arms cramped from supporting Magee's knees; his arches
complained at the weight and the unnatural load distribution; and his breathing
was made difficult by the clasp of Magee's arms around his neck.
Two miles to go-maybe more. Let your
weight fall forward, and your foot must follow it, else you fall to the ground.
It's automatic-as automatic as pulling teeth. How long is a mile? Nothing in a
rocket ship, thirty seconds in a pleasure car, a ten minute crawl in a steel
snail, fifteen minutes to trained troops in good condition. How far is it with
a man on your back, on a rough road, when you are tired to start with?
Five thousand, two hundred, and eighty
feet-a meaningless figure. But every step takes twenty-four inches off the
total. The remainder is still incomprehensible-an infinity. Count them. Count
them till you go crazy-till the figures speak themselves outside your head, and
the jar! . . . jar! ...jar! . . . of your enormous, benumbed feet beats in your
brain. Count them backwards, subtracting two each time-no, that's worse; each
remainder is still an unattainable, inconceivable figure.
His world closed in, lost its history and
held no future. There was nothing, nothing at all, but the torturing necessity
of picking up his foot again and placing it forward. No feeling but the
heartbreaking expenditure of will necessary to achieve that meaningless act.
He was brought suddenly to awareness when
Magee's arms relaxed from around his neck. He leaned forward, and dropped to
one knee to keep from spilling his burden, then eased it slowly to the ground.
He thought for a moment that the Fader was dead-he could not locate his pulse,
and the slack face and limp body were sufficiently corpse-like, but he pressed
an ear to Magee's chest, and heard with relief the steady flub-dub of his
heart.
He tied Magee's wrists together with his
handkerchief, and forced his own head through the encircled arms. But he was
unable, in his exhausted condition, to wrestle the slack weight into position
on his back. Fader regained consciousness while MacKinnon was struggling. His
first words were, 'Take it easy, Dave. What's the trouble?'
Dave explained. 'Better untie my wrists,'
advised the Fader, 'I think I can walk for a while.'
And walk he did, for nearly three hundred
yards, before he was forced to give up again. 'Look, Dave,' he said, after he
had partially recovered, 'did you bring along any more of those pepper pills?'
'Yes-but you can't take any more dosage.
It would kill you.'
'Yeah, I know-so they say. But that isn't
the idea-yet. I was going to suggest that you might take one.'
'Why, of course! Good grief, Fader, but
I'm dumb.'
Magee seemed no heavier than a light coat,
the morning star shone brighter, and his strength seemed inexhaustible. Even
when they left the highway and started up the cart trail that led to the
Doctor's home in the foothills, the going was tolerable and the burden not too
great. MacKinnon knew that the drugs burned the working tissue of his body long
after his proper reserves were gone, and that it would take him days to recover
from the reckless expenditure, but he did not mind. No price was too high to
pay for the moment when he at last arrived at the gate of the Doctor's home-on
his own two feet, his charge alive and conscious.
MacKinnon
was not allowed to see Magee for four days. In the meantime, he was encouraged
to keep the routine of a semi-invalid himself in order to recover the
twenty-five pounds he had lost in two days and two nights, and to make up for
the heavy strain on his heart during the last night. A high-caloric diet, sun
baths, rest, and peaceful surroundings plus his natural good health caused him
to regain weight and strength rapidly, but he 'enjoyed ill health"
exceedingly because of the companionship of the Doctor himself-and Persephone.
Persephone's calendar age was fifteen.
Dave never knew whether to think of her as much older, or much younger. She had
been born in Coventry, and had lived her short life in the house of the Doctor,
her mother having died in childbirth in that same house. She was completely
childlike in many respects, being without experience in the civilized world
Outside, and having had very little contact with the inhabitants of Coventry,
except when she saw them as patients of the Doctor. But she had been allowed to
read unchecked from the library of a sophisticated and protean-minded man of
science. MacKinnon was continually being surprised at the extent of her
academic and scientific knowledge-much greater than his own. She made him feel
as if he were conversing with some aged and omniscient matriarch, then she
would come out with some naive concept of the outer world, and he would be
brought up sharply with the realization that she was, in fact, an inexperienced
child.
He was mildly romantic about her, not
seriously, of course, in view of her barely nubile age, but she was pleasant to
see, and he was hungry for feminine companionship. He was quite young enough
himself to feel continual interest in the delightful differences, mental and
physical, between male and female.
Consequently, it was a blow to his pride
as sharp as had been the sentence to Coventry to discover that she classed him
with the other inhabitants of Coventry as a poor unfortunate who needed help
and sympathy because he was not quite right in his head.
He was furious and for one whole day he
sulked alone, but the human necessity for self-justification and approval
forced him to seek her out and attempt to reason with her. He explained
carefully and with emotional candor the circumstances leading up to his trial
and conviction, and embellished the account with his own philosophy and
evaluations, then confidently awaited her approval.
It was not forthcoming. 'I don't
understand your viewpoint,' she said. 'You broke his nose, yet he had done you
no harm of any sort. You expect me to approve that?'
'But Persephone,' he protested, 'you
ignore the fact that he called me a most insulting name.'
'I don't see the connection,' she said.
'He made a noise with his mouth-a verbal label. If the label does not fit you,
the noise is meaningless. If the label is true in your case-if you are the
thing that the noise refers to, you are neither more, nor less, that thing by
reason of some one uttering the verbal label. In short, he did not damage you.
'But what you did to him was
another matter entirely. You broke his nose. That is damage. In self-protection
the rest of society must seek you out, and determine whether or not you are so
unstable as to be likely to damage some one else in the future. If you are, you
must be quarantined for treatment, or leave society-whichever you prefer.'
'You think I'm crazy, don't you?' he
accused.
'Crazy? Not the way you mean it. You
haven't paresis, or a brain tumor, or any other lesion that the Doctor could
find. But from the viewpoint of your semantic reactions you are as socially
unsane as any fanatic witch burner.'
'Come now-that's not just!'
'What is justice?' She picked up the
kitten she had been playing with. 'I'm going in-it's getting chilly.' Off she
went into the house, her bare feet noiseless in the grass.
Had the
science of semantics developed as rapidly as psychodynamics and its
implementing arts of propaganda and mob psychology, the United States might
never have fallen into dictatorship, then been forced to undergo the Second
Revolution. All of the scientific principles embodied in the Covenant which
marked the end of the revolution were formulated as far back as the first
quarter of the twentieth century.
But the work of the pioneer semanticists,
C. K. Ogden, Alfred Korzybski, and others, were known to but a handful of
students, whereas psycho-dynamics, under the impetus of repeated wars and the
frenzy of high-pressure merchandising, progressed by leaps and bounds.
Semantics, 'the meaning of meaning', gave
a method for the first time of applying the scientific method to every act of
everyday life. Because semantics dealt with spoken and written words as a
determining aspect of human behavior it was at first mistakenly thought by many
to be concerned only with words and of interest only to professional word
manipulators, such as advertising copy writers and professors of etymology. A
handful of unorthodox psychiatrists attempted to apply it to personal human
problems, but their work was swept away by the epidemic mass psychoses that
destroyed Europe and returned the United States to the Dark Ages.
The Covenant was the first scientific
social document ever drawn up by man, and due credit must be given to its
principal author, Dr Micah Novak, the same Novak who served as staff
psychologist in the revolution. The revolutionists wished to establish maximum
personal liberty. How could they accomplish that to a degree of high
mathematical probability? First they junked the concept of 'justice'. Examined
semantically 'justice' has no referent-there is no observable phenomenon in the
space-time-matter continuum to which one can point, and say, 'This is justice.'
Science can deal only with that which can be observed and measured. Justice is
not such a matter; therefore it can never have the same meaning to one as to
another; any 'noises' said about it will only add to confusion.
But damage, physical or economic, can be
pointed to and measured. Citizens were forbidden by the Covenant to damage
another. Any act not leading to damage, physical or economic, to some
particular person, they declared to be lawful.
Since they had abandoned the concept of
'justice', there could be no rational standards of punishment. Penology took
its place with lycanthropy and other forgotten witchcrafts. Yet, since it was
not practical to permit a source of danger to remain in the community, social
offenders were examined and potential repeaters were given their choice of
psychological readjustment, or of having society withdraw itself from
them-Coventry.
Early drafts of the Covenant contained the
assumption that the socially unsane would naturally be hospitalized and
readjusted, particularly since current psychiatry was quite competent to cure
all non-lesional psychoses and cure or alleviate lesional psychoses, but Novak
set his face against this.
'No!' he protested. 'The government must
never again be permitted to tamper with the mind of any citizen without his
consent, or else we set up a greater tyranny than we had before. Every man must
be free to accept, or reject, the Covenant, even though we think him insane!'
The
next time David MacKinnon looked up Persephone he found her in a state of
extreme agitation. His own wounded pride was forgotten at once. 'Why, my dear,'
he said, 'whatever in the world is the matter?'
Gradually he gathered that she had been
present at a conversation between Magee and the Doctor, and had heard, for the
first time, of the impending military operation against the United States. He
patted her hand. 'So that's all it is,' he observed in a relieved voice. 'I
thought something was wrong with you yourself.'
'"That's all-" David MacKinnon,
do you mean to stand there and tell me that you knew about this, and don't
consider it worth worrying about?'
'Me? Why should I? And for that matter,
what could I do?'
'What could you do? You could go outside
and warn them-that's what you could do . . . As to why you should-Dave, you're
impossible!' She burst into tears and ran from the room.
He stared after her, mouth open, then
borrowed from his remotest ancestor by observing to himself that women are hard
to figure out.
Persephone did not appear at lunch.
MacKinnon asked the Doctor where she was.
'Had her lunch,' the Doctor told him,
between mouthfuls. 'Started for the Gateway.'
'What! Why did you let her do that?'
'Free agent. Wouldn't have obeyed me
anyway. She'll be all right.'
Dave did not hear the last, being already
out of the room and running out of the house. He found her just backing her
little motorcycle runabout out of its shed. 'Persephone!'
'What do you want?' she asked with frozen
dignity beyond her years.
'You mustn't do this! That's where the
Fader got hurt!'
'I am going. Please stand aside.'
'Then I'm going with you.'
'Why should you?'
'To take care of you.'
She sniffed. 'As if anyone would dare to
touch me.'
There was a measure of truth in what she
said. The Doctor, and every member of his household, enjoyed a personal
immunity unlike that of anyone else in Coventry. As a natural consequence of
the set-up, Coventry had almost no competent medical men. The number of
physicians who committed social damage was small. The proportion of such who
declined psychiatric treatment was negligible, and this negligible remainder
were almost sure to be unreliable bunglers in their profession. The Doctor was
a natural healer, in voluntary exile in order that he might enjoy the
opportunity to practice his art in the richest available field. He cared
nothing for dry research; what he wanted was patients, the sicker the better,
that he might make them well again.
He was above custom and above law. In the
Free State the Liberator depended on him for insulin to hold his own death from
diabetes at arm's length. In New America his beneficiaries were equally
powerful. Even among the Angels of the Lord the Prophet himself accepted the
dicta of the Doctor without question.
But MacKinnon was not satisfied. Some
ignorant fool, he was afraid, might do the child some harm without realizing
her protected status. He got no further chance to protest; she started the
little runabout suddenly, and forced him to jump out of its path. When he had
recovered his balance, she was far down the lane. He could not catch her.
She was back in less than four hours. He
had expected that; if a person as elusive as Fader had not been able to reach
the Gate at night, it was not likely that a young girl could do so in daylight.
His first feeling was one of simple
relief, then he eagerly awaited an opportunity to speak to her. During her
absence he had been turning over the situation in his mind. It was a foregone
conclusion that she would fail; he wished to rehabilitate himself in her eyes;
therefore, he would help her in the project nearest her heart-he himself would
carry the warning to the Outside!
Perhaps she would ask for such help. In
fact, it seemed likely. But the time she returned he had convinced himself that
she was certain to ask his help. He would agree-with simple dignity-and off he
would go, perhaps to be wounded, or killed, but an heroic figure, even if he
failed.
He pictured himself subconsciously as a
blend of Sydney Carton, the White Knight, the man who carried the message to
Garcia and just a dash of d'Artagnan.
But she did not ask him-she would not even
give him a chance to talk with her.
She did not appear at dinner. After dinner
she was closeted with the Doctor in his study. When she reappeared she went
directly to her room. He finally concluded that he might as well go to bed himself.
To bed, and then to sleep, and take it up
again in the morning-But it's not as simple as that. The unfriendly walls
stared back at him, and the other, critical half of his mind decided to make a
night of it. Fool! She doesn't want your help. Why should she? What have you
got that Fader hasn't got?-and better. To her, you are just one of the
screwloose multitude you've seen all around you in this place.
But I'm not crazy!-just because I choose
not to submit to the dictation of others doesn't make me crazy. Doesn't it,
though? All the rest of them in here are lamebrains, what's so fancy about you?
Not all of them-how about the Doctor, and-don't kid yourself, chump, the Doctor
and Mother Johnston are here for their own reasons; they weren't sentenced. And
Persephone was born here.
How about Magee?-He was certainly
rational-or seemed so. He found himself resenting, with illogical bitterness,
Magee's apparent stability. Why should he be any different from the rest of us?
The rest of us? He had classed himself
with the other inhabitants of Coventry. All right, all right, admit it, you
fool-you're just like the rest of them; turned out because the decent people
won't have you-and too damned stubborn to admit that you need treatment. But
the thought of treatment turned him cold, and made him think of his father
again. Why should that be? He recalled something the Doctor had said to him a
couple of days before:
'What you need, son, is to stand up to
your father and tell him off. Pity more children don't tell their parents to go
to hell!'
He turned on the light and tried to read.
But it was no use. Why should Persephonie care what happened to the people
Outside?-She didn't know them; she had no friends there. If he had no
obligations to them, how could she possibly care? No obligations? You had a
soft, easy life for many years-all they asked was that you behave yourself. For
that matter, where would you be now, if the Doctor had stopped to ask whether
or not he owed you anything?
He was still wearily chewing the bitter
cud of self-examination when the first cold and colorless light of morning
filtered in. He got up, threw a robe around him, and tiptoed down the hall to
Magee's room. The door was ajar. He stuck his head in, and whispered,
'Fader-Are you awake?'
'Come in, kid,' Magee answered quietly.
'What's the trouble? No can sleep?'
'No -, 'Neither can I. Sit down, and we'll
carry the banner together.'
'Fader, I'm going to make a break for it.
I'm going Outside.'
'Huh? When?'
'Right away.'
'Risky business, kid. Wait a few days, and
I'll try it with you.'
'No, I can't wait for you to get well. I'm
going out to warn the United States!'
Magee's eyed widened a little, but his
voice was unchanged. 'You haven't let that spindly kid sell you a bill of
goods, Dave?'
'No. Not exactly. I'm doing this for
myself-It's something I need to do. See here, Fader, what about this weapon?
Have they really got something that could threaten the United States?'
'I'm afraid so,' Magee admitted. 'I don't
know much about it, but it makes blasters look sick. More range-I don't know
what they expect to do about the Barrier, but I saw 'em stringing heavy power
lines before I got winged. Say, if you do get outside, here's a chap you might
look up; in fact, be sure to. He's got influence.' Magee scrawled something on
a scrap of paper, folded the scrap, and handed it to MacKinnon, who pocketed it
absent-mindedly and went on:
'How closely is the Gate guarded, Fader?'
'You can't get out the Gate; that's out of
the question. Here's what you will have to do-' He tore off another piece of
paper and commenced sketching and explaining.
Dave shook hands with Magee before he
left. 'You'll say goodbye for me, won't you? And thank the Doctor? I'd rather
just slide out before anyone is up.'
'Of course, kid,' the Fader assured him.
MacKinnon
crouched behind bushes and peered cautiously at the little band of Angels
filing into the bleak, ugly church. He shivered, both from fear and from the
icy morning air. But his need was greater than his fear. Those zealots had
food-and he must have it.
The first two days after he left the house
of the Doctor had been easy enough. True, he had caught cold from sleeping on
the ground; it had settled in his lungs and slowed him down. But he did not
mind that now if only he could refrain from sneezing or coughing until the
little band of faithful were safe inside the temple. He watched them
pass-dour-looking men, women and skirts that dragged the ground and whose work
lined faces were framed in shawls-sallow drudges with too many children. The
light had gone out of their faces. Even the children were sober.
The last of them filed inside, leaving
only the sexton in the churchyard, busy with some obscure duty. After an
interminable time, during which MacKinnon pressed a finger against his upper
lip in a frantic attempt to forestall a sneeze, the sexton entered the grim
building and closed the doors.
McKinnon crept out of his hiding place and
hurried to the house he had previously selected, on the edge of the clearing,
farthest from the church.
The dog was suspicious, but he quieted
him. The house was locked, but the rear door could be forced. He was a little
giddy at the sight of food when he found it-hard bread, and strong, unsalted
butter made from goat's milk. A misstep two days before had landed him in a
mountain stream. The mishap had not seemed important until he discovered that
his food tablets were a pulpy mess. He had eaten them the rest of the day, then
mold had taken them, and he had thrown the remainder away.
The bread lasted him through three more
sleeps, but the butter melted and he was unable to carry it. He soaked as much
of it as he could into the bread, then licked up the rest, after which he was
very thirsty.
Some hours after the last of the bread was
gone, he reached his first objective-the main river to which all other streams
in Coventry were tributary. Some place, down stream, it dived under the black
curtain of the Barrier, and continued seaward. With the gateway closed and
guarded, its outlet constituted the only possible egress to a man unassisted.
In the meantime it was water, and thirst
was upon him again, and his cold was worse. But he would have to wait until
dark to drink; there were figures down there by the bank-some in uniform, he
thought. One of them made fast a little skiff to a landing. He marked it for
his own and watched it with jealous eyes. It was still there when the sun went
down.
The early morning sun struck his nose and
he sneezed. He came wide awake, raised his head, and looked around. The little
skiff he had appropriated floated in midstream. There were no oars. He could
not remember whether or not there had been any oars. The current was fairly
strong; it seemed as if he should have drifted clear to the Barrier in the
night. Perhaps he had passed under it-no, that was ridiculous.
Then he saw it, less than a mile away,
black and ominous-but the most welcome sight he had seen in days. He was too
weak and feverish to enjoy it, but it renewed the determination that kept him
going.
The little boat scraped against bottom. He
saw that the current at a bend had brought him to the bank. He hopped awkwardly
out, his congealed joints complaining, and drew the bow of the skiff up onto
the sand. Then he thought better of it, pushed it out once more, shoved as hard
as he was able and watched it disappear around the meander. No need to
advertise where he had landed.
He slept most of that day, rousing himself
once to move out of the sun when it grew too hot. But the sun had cooked much
of the cold out of his bones, and he felt much better by nightfall.
Although the Barrier was only a mile or so
away, it took most of the night to reach it by following the river bank. He
knew when he had reached it by the clouds of steam that rose from the water.
When the sun came up, he considered the situation. The Barrier stretched across
the water, but the juncture between it and the surface of the stream was hidden
by billowing clouds. Someplace, down under the surface of the water-how far
down he did not know-somewhere down there, the Barrier ceased, and its raw edge
turned the water it touched to steam.
Slowly, reluctantly and most unheroically,
he commenced to strip off his clothes. The time had come and he did not relish
it. He came across the scrap of paper that Magee had handed him, and attempted
to examine it. But it had been pulped by his involuntary dip in the mountain
stream and was quite illegible. He chucked it away. It did not seem to matter.
He shivered as he stood hesitating on the
bank, although the sun was warm. Then his mind was made up for him; he spied a
patrol on the far bank.
Perhaps they had seen him, perhaps not. He
dived.
Down, down, as far as his strength would
take him. Down and try to touch bottom, to be sure of avoiding that searing,
deadly base. He felt mud with his hands. Now to swim under it. Perhaps it was
death to pass under it, as well as over it; he would soon know. But which way
was it? There was no direction down here.
He stayed down until his congested lungs
refused. Then he rose part way, and felt scalding water on his face. For a
timeless interval of unutterable sorrow and loneliness he realized that he was
trapped between heat and water-trapped under the Barrier.
Two private soldiers gossiped idly on a
small dock which lay under the face of the Barrier. The river which poured out
from beneath it held no interest for them, they had watched it for many dull
tours of guard duty. An alarm clanged behind them and brought them to
alertness. 'What sector, Jack?'
'This bank. There he is now-see!'
They fished him out and had him spread out
on the dock by the time the sergeant of the guard arrived. 'Alive, or dead?' he
enquired.
'Dead, I think,' answered the one who was
not busy giving artificial resuscitation.
The sergeant clucked in a manner
incongruous to his battered face, and said, 'Too bad. I've ordered the
ambulance; send him up to the infirmary anyhow.'
The
nurse tried to keep him quiet, but MacKinnon made such an uproar that she was
forced to get the ward surgeon. 'Here! Here! What's all this nonsense?' the
medico rebuked him, while reaching for his pulse. Dave managed to convince him
that he would not quiet down, not accept a soporific until he had told his story.
They struck a working agreement that MacKinnon was to be allowed to talk-'But
keep it short, mind you!'-and the doctor would pass the word along to his next
superior, and in return Dave would submit to a hypodermic.
The next morning two other men, unidentified,
were brought to MacKinnon by the surgeon. They listened to his full story and
questioned him in detail. He was transferred to corps area headquarters that
afternoon by ambulance. There he was questioned again. He was regaining his
strength rapidly, but he was growing quite tired of the whole rigmarole, and
wanted assurance that his warning was being taken seriously. The latest of his
interrogators reassured him. 'Compose yourself,' he told Dave, 'you are to see
the commanding officer this afternoon.'
The corps area commander, a nice little
chap with a quick, birdlike manner and a most unmilitary appearance, listened
gravely while MacKinnon recited his story for what seemed to him the fiftieth
time. He nodded agreement when David finished. 'Rest assured, David MacKinnon,
that all necessary steps are being taken.'
'But how about their weapon?'
'That is taken care of-and as for the
Barrier, it may not be as easy to break as our neighbors think. But your
efforts are appreciated. May I do you some service?'
'Well, no-not for myself, but there are
two of my friends in there-'He asked that something be done to rescue Magee,
and that Persephone be enabled to come out, if she wished.
'I know of that girl,' the general
remarked. 'We will get in touch with her. If at any time she wishes to become a
citizen, it can be arranged. As for Magee, that is another matter-'He touched
the stud of his desk visiphone. 'Send Captain Randall in.'
A neat, trim figure in the uniform of a
captain of the United States Army entered with a light step. MacKinnon glanced
at him with casual, polite interest, then his expression went to pieces.
'Fader!' he yelled.
Their mutual greeting was hardly
sufficiently decorous for the private office of a commanding general, but the
general did not seem to mind. When they had calmed down, MacKinnon had to ask
the question uppermost in his mind. 'But see here, Fader, all this doesn't make
sense-'He paused, staring, then pointed a finger accusingly, 'I know! You're in
the secret service!'
The Fader grinned cheerfully. 'Did you
think,' he observed, 'that the United States Army would leave a plague spot
like that unwatched?'
The general cleared his throat. 'What do
you plan to do now, David MacKinnon?'
'Eh! Me? Why, I don't have any plans-'He
thought for a moment, then turned to his friend. 'Do you know, Fader, I believe
I'll turn in for psychological treatment after all. You're on the Outside -'
'I don't believe that will be necessary,'
interrupted the general gently.
'No? Why not, sir?'
'You have cured yourself. You may not be
aware of it, but four psychotechnicians have interviewed you. Their reports
agree. I am authorized to tell you that your status as a free citizen has been
restored, if you wish it.'
The general and Captain 'the Fader'
Randall managed tactfully between them to terminate the interview. Randall
walked back to the infirmary with his friend. Dave wanted a thousand questions
answered at once. 'But Fader,' he demanded, 'you must have gotten out before I
did.'
'A day or two.'
'Then my job was unnecessary!'
'I wouldn't say that,' Randall
contradicted. 'I might not have gotten through. As a matter of fact, they had
all the details even before I reported. There are others-Anyhow,' he continued,
to change the subject, 'now that you are here, what will you do?'
'Me? It's too soon to say . . . It won't
be classical literature, that's a cinch. If I wasn't such a dummy in maths, I
might still try for interplanetary.'
'Well, we can talk about it tonight,' suggested
Fader, glancing at his chrono. 'I've got to run along, but I'll stop by later,
and we'll go over to the mess for dinner.'
He was out the door with speed reminiscent
of the thieves' kitchen. Dave watched him, then said suddenly, 'Hey! Fader! Why
couldn't I get into the secret ser -,
But the Fader was gone-he must ask
himself.
Misfit
"...
for the purpose of conserving and improving our
interplanetary
resources, and providing useful, healthful
occupations
for the youth of this planet."
Excerpt
from the enabling act, H.R. 7118, setting up the
Cosmic
Construction Corps.
"Attention to muster!" The
parade ground voice of a First Sergeant of Space Marines cut through the fog
and drizzle of a nasty New Jersey morning. "As your names are called,
answer 'Here', step forward with your baggage, and embark.
"Atkins!"
"Here!"
"Austin!"
"Hyar!"
"Ayres!"
"Here!"
One by one they fell out of ranks,
shouldered the hundred and thirty pounds of personal possessions allowed them,
and trudged up the gangway. They were young -- none more than twenty-two -- in
some cases luggage outweighed the owner.
"Kaplan!"
"Here!"
"Keith!"
"Heah!"
"Libby!"
"Here!" A thin gangling blonde
had detached himself from the line, hastily wiped his nose, and grabbed his
belongings. He slung a fat canvas bag over his shoulder, steadied it, and
lifted a suitcase with his free hand. He started for the companionway in an
unsteady dogtrot. As he stepped on the gangway his suitcase swung against his
knees. He staggered against a short wiry form dressed in the powder-blue of the
Space Navy. Strong fingers grasped his arm and checked his fall.
"Steady, son. Easy does it."
Another hand readjusted the canvas bag.
"Oh, excuse me, uh" -- the
embarrassed youngster automatically counted the four bands of silver braid
below the shooting star -- "Captain. I didn't--"
"Bear a hand and get aboard,
son."
"Yes, sir."
The passage into the bowels of the
transport was gloomy. When the lad's eyes adjusted he saw a gunners mate
wearing the brassard of a Master-at-Arms, who hooked a thumb toward an open
airtight door.
"In there. Find your locker and wait
by it." Libby hurried to obey. Inside he found a jumble of baggage and men
in a wide low-ceilinged compartment. A line of glow-tubes ran around the
junction of bulkhead and ceiling and trisected the overhead: the 50ft roar of
blowers made a background to the voices of his shipmates. He picked his way
through heaped luggage and located his locker, seven-ten, on the far wall
outboard. He broke the seal on the combination lock, glanced at the
combination, and opened it. The locker was very small, the middle of a tier of
three. He considered what he should keep in it. A loudspeaker drowned out the
surrounding voices and demanded his attention:
"Attention! Man all space details;
first section. Raise ship in twelve minutes. Close air-tight doors. Stop
blowers at minus two minutes. Special orders for passengers; place all gear on
deck, and tie down on red signal light. Remain down until release is sounded.
Masters-at-Arms check compliance."
The gunner's mate popped in, glanced
around and immediately commenced supervising rearrangement of the baggage.
Heavy items were lashed down. Locker doors were closed. By the time each boy
had found a place on the deck and the Master-at-Arms had okayed the pad under
his head, the glowtubes turned red and the loudspeaker brayed out.
"All hands. Up Ship! Stand by for
acceleration." The Master-at-Arms hastily reclined against two cruise
bags, and watched the room. The blowers sighed to a stop. There followed two
minutes of dead silence. Libby felt his heart commence to pound. The two
minutes stretched interminably. Then the deck quivered and a roar like escaping
high pressure steam beat at his ear drums. He was suddenly very heavy and a
weight lay across his chest and heart. An indefinite time later the glow-tubes
flashed white, and the announcer bellowed: "Secure all getting underway
details; regular watch, first section." The blowers droned into life. The
Master-at-Arms stood up, rubbed his buttocks and pounded his arms, then said:
"Okay, boys." He stepped over
and undogged the airtight door to the passageway. Libby got up and blundered
into a bulkhead, nearly falling. His legs and arms had gone to sleep, besides
which he felt alarmingly light, as if he had sloughed off at least half of his
inconsiderable mass.
For the next two hours he was too busy to
think, or to be homesick. Suitcases, boxes, and bags had to be passed down into
the lower hold and lashed against angular acceleration. He located and learned
how to use a waterless water closet. He found his assigned bunk and learned
that it was his only eight hours in twenty-four; two other boys had the use of
it too. The three sections ate in three shifts, nine shifts in all --
twenty-four youths and a master-at-arms at one long table which jam-filled a
narrow compartment off the galley.
After lunch Libby restowed his locker. He
was standing before it, gazing at a photograph which he intended to mount on
the inside of the locker door, when a command filled the compartment:
"Attention!"
Standing inside the door was the Captain
flanked by the Master-at-Arms. The Captain commenced to speak. "At rest,
men. Sit down. McCoy, tell control to shift this compartment to smoke
filter." The gunner's mate hurried to the communicator on the bulkhead and
spoke into it in a low tone. Almost at once the hum of the blowers climbed a
half-octave and stayed there. "Now light up if you like. I'm going to talk
to you.
"You boys are headed out on the
biggest thing so far in your lives. From now on you're men, with one of the
hardest jobs ahead of you that men have ever tackled. What we have to do is
part of a bigger scheme. You, and hundreds of thousands of others like you, are
going out as pioneers to fix up the solar system so that human beings can make
better use of it.
"Equally important, you are being
given a chance to build yourselves into useful and happy citizens of the
Federation. For one reason or another you weren't happily adjusted back on
Earth. Some of you saw the jobs you were trained for abolished by new
inventions. Some of you got into trouble from not knowing what to do with the
modern leisure. In any case you were misfits. Maybe you were called bad boys
and had a lot of black marks chalked up against you.
"But everyone of you starts even
today. The only record you have in this ship is your name at the top of a blank
sheet of paper. It's up to you what goes on that page.
"Now about our job -- We didn't get
one of the easy repair-and-recondition jobs on the Moon, with week-ends at Luna
City, and all the comforts of home. Nor did we draw a high gravity planet where
a man can eat a full meal and expect to keep it down. Instead we've got to go
out to Asteroid HS-5388 and turn it into Space Station E-M3. She has no
atmosphere at all, and only about two per cent Earth-surface gravity. We've got
to play human fly on her for at least six months, no girls to date, no
television, no recreation that you don't devise yourselves, and hard work every
day. You'll get space sick, and so homesick you can taste it, and agoraphobia.
If you aren't careful you'll get ray-burnt. Your stomach will act up, and
you'll wish to God you'd never enrolled.
"But if you behave yourself, and
listen to the advice of the old spacemen, you'll come out of it strong and
healthy, with a little credit stored up in the bank, and a lot of knowledge and
experience that you wouldn't get in forty years on Earth. You'll be men, and
you'll know it.
"One last word. It will be pretty
uncomfortable to those that aren't used to it. Just give the other fellow a
little consideration, and you'll get along all right. If you have any complaint
and can't get satisfaction any other way, come see me. Otherwise, that's all.
Any questions?"
One of the boys put up his hand.
"Captain?" he enquired timidly.
"Speak up, lad, and give your
name."
"Rogers, sir. Will we be able to get
letters from home?"
"Yes, but not very often. Maybe every
month or so. The chaplain will carry mail, and any inspection and supply
ships."
The ship's loudspeaker blatted out,
"All hands! Free flight in ten minutes. Stand by to lose weight." The
Master-at-Arms supervised the rigging of grab-lines. All loose gear was made
fast, and little cellulose bags were issued to each man. Hardly was this done
when Libby felt himself get light on his feet -- a sensation exactly like that
experienced when an express elevator makes a quick stop on an upward trip, except
that the sensation continued and became more intense. At first it was a
pleasant novelty, then it rapidly became distressing. The blood pounded in his
ears, and his feet were clammy and cold. His saliva secreted at an abnormal
rate. He tried to swallow, choked, and coughed. Then his stomach shuddered and
contracted with a violent, painful, convulsive reflex and he was suddenly,
disastrously nauseated. After the first excruciating spasm, he heard McCoy's
voice shouting.
"Hey! Use your sick-kits like I told
you. Don't let that stuff get in the blowers." Dimly Libby realized that
the admonishment included him. He fumbled for his cellulose bag just as a
second temblor shook him, but he managed to fit the bag over his mouth before
the eruption occurred. When it subsided, he became aware that he was floating
near the overhead and facing the door. The chief Master-at-Arms slithered in
the door and spoke to McCoy.
"How are you making out?"
"Well enough. Some of the boys missed
their kits."
"Okay. Mop it up. You can use the
starboard lock." He swam out.
McCoy touched Libby's arm. "Here,
Pinkie, start catching them butterflies." He handed him a handful of
cotton waste, then took another handful himself and neatly dabbed up a globule
of the slimy filth that floated about the compartment. "Be sure your
sick-kit is on tight. When you get sick, just stop and wait until it's
over." Libby imitated him as best as he could. In a few minutes the room
was free of the worst of the sickening debris. McCoy looked it over, and spoke:
"Now peel off them dirty duds, and
change your kits. Three or four of you bring everything along to the starboard
lock."
At the starboard spacelock, the kits were
put in first, the inner door closed, and the outer opened. When the inner door
was opened again the kits were gone -- blown out into space by the escaping
air. Pinkie addressed McCoy.
"Do we have to throw away our dirty
clothes too?"
"Huh uh, we'll just give them a dose
of vacuum. Take 'em into the lock and stop 'em to those hooks on the bulkheads.
Tie 'em tight."
This time the lock was left closed for
about five minutes. When the lock was opened the garments were bone dry -- all
the moisture boiled out by the vacuum of space. All that remained of the
unpleasant rejecta was a sterile powdery residue. McCoy viewed them with
approval. "They'll do. Take them back to the compartment. Then brush them
-- hard -- in front of the exhaust blowers."
The next few days were an eternity of
misery. Homesickness was forgotten in the all-engrossing wretchedness of space
sickness. The Captain granted fifteen minutes of mild acceleration for each of
the nine meal periods, but the respite accentuated the agony. Libby would go to
a meal, weak and ravenously hungry. The meal would stay down until free flight
was resumed, then the sickness would hit him all over again.
On the fourth day he was seated against a
bulkhead, enjoying the luxury of a few remaining minutes of weight while the
last shift ate, when McCoy walked in and sat down beside him. The gunner's mate
fitted a smoke filter over his face and lit a cigarette. He inhaled deeply and
started to chat.
"How's it going, bud?"
"All right, I guess. This space
sickness -- Say, McCoy, how do you ever get used to it?"
"You get over it in time. Your body
acquires new reflexes, so they tell me. Once you learn to swallow without
choking, you'll be all right. You even get so you like it. It's restful and
relaxing. Four hours sleep is as good as ten."
Libby shook his head dolefully. "I
don't think I'll ever get used to it."
"Yes, you will. You'd better anyway.
This here asteroid won't have any surface gravity to speak of; the Chief
Quartermaster says it won't run over two percent Earth normal. That ain't
enough to cure space sickness. And there won't be any way to accelerate for
meals either."
Libby shivered and held his head between
his hands.
Locating one asteroid among a couple of
thousand is not as easy as finding Trafalgar Square in London -- especially
against the star-crowded backdrop of the galaxy. You take off from Terra with
its orbital speed of about nineteen miles per second. You attempt to settle
into a composite conoid curve that will not only intersect the orbit of the
tiny fast-moving body, but also accomplish an exact rendezvous. Asteroid
HS-5388, "Eighty-eight", lay about two and two-tenths astronomical
units out from the sun, a little more than two hundred million miles; when the
transport took off it lay beyond the sun better than three hundred million
miles. Captain Doyle instructed the navigator to plot the basic ellipsoid to
tack in free flight around the sun through an elapsed distance of some three
hundred and forty million miles. The principle involved is the same as used by
a hunter to wing a duck in flight by "leading" the bird in flight.
But suppose that you face directly into the sun as you shoot; suppose the bird
can not be seen from where you stand, and you have nothing to aim by but some
old reports as to how it was flying when last seen?
On the ninth day of the passage Captain
Doyle betook himself to the chart room and commenced punching keys on the
ponderous integral calculator. Then he sent his orderly to present his
compliments to the navigator and to ask him to come to the chartroom. A few
minutes later a tall heavyset form swam through the door, steadied himself with
a grabline and greeted the captain.
"Good morning, Skipper."
"Hello, Blackie." The Old Man
looked up from where he was strapped into the integrator's saddle. "I've
been checking your corrections for the meal time accelerations."
"It's a nuisance to have a bunch of
ground-lubbers on board, sir."
"Yes, it is, but we have to give
those boys a chance to eat, or they couldn't work when we got there. Now I want
to decelerate starting about ten o'clock, ship's time. What's our eight o'clock
speed and co-ordinates?"
The Navigator slipped a notebook out of
his tunic. "Three hundred fifty-eight miles per second; course is right
ascension fifteen hours, eight minutes, twenty-seven seconds, declination minus
seven degrees, three minutes; solar distance one hundred and ninety-two million
four hundred eighty thousand miles. Our radial position is twelve degrees above
course, and almost dead on course in R.A. Do you want Sol's co-ordinates?"
"No, not now." The captain bent
over the calculator, frowned and chewed the tip of his tongue as he worked the
controls. "I want you to kill the acceleration about one million miles
inside Eighty-eight's orbit. I hate to waste the fuel, but the belt is full of junk
and this damned rock is so small that we will probably have to run a search
curve. Use twenty hours on deceleration and commence changing course to port
after eight hours. Use normal asymptotic approach. You should have her in a
circular trajectory abreast of Eighty-eight, and paralleling her orbit by six
o'clock tomorrow morning. I shall want to be called at three."
"Aye aye, sir."
"Let me see your figures when you get
'em. I'll send up the order book later."
The transport accelerated on schedule.
Shortly after three the Captain entered the control room and blinked his eyes
at the darkness. The sun was still concealed by the hull of the transport and
the midnight blackness was broken only by the dim blue glow of the instrument
dials, and the crack of light from under the chart hood. The Navigator turned
at the familiar tread.
"Good morning, Captain."
"Morning, Blackie. In sight
yet?"
"Not yet. We've picked out half a
dozen rocks, but none of them checked."
"Any of them close?"
"Not uncomfortably. We've overtaken a
little sand from time to time."
"That can't hurt us -- not on a stern
chase like this. If pilots would only realize that the asteroids flow in fixed
directions at computable speeds nobody would come to grief out here." He
stopped to light a cigarette. "People talk about space being dangerous.
Sure, it used to be; but I don't know of a case in the past twenty years that
couldn't be charged up to some fool's recklessness."
"You're right, Skipper. By the way,
there's coffee under the chart hood."
"Thanks; I had a cup down
below." He walked over by the lookouts at stereoscopes and radar tanks and
peered up at the star-flecked blackness. Three cigarettes later the lookout
nearest him called out.
"Light ho!"
"Where away?"
His mate read the exterior dials of the
stereoscope. "Plus point two, abaft one point three, slight drift
astern." He shifted to radar and added, "Range seven nine oh four
three."
"Does that check?"
"Could be, Captain. What is her
disk?" came the Navigator's muffled voice from under the hood. The first
lookout hurriedly twisted the knobs of his instrument, but the Captain nudged
him aside.
"I'll do this, son." He fitted
his face to the double eye guards and surveyed a little silvery sphere, a tiny
moon. Carefully he brought two illuminated cross-hairs up until they were
exactly tangent to the upper and lower limbs of the disk. "Mark!"
The reading was noted and passed to the
Navigator, who shortly ducked out from under the hood.
"That's our baby, Captain."
"Good."
"Shall I make a visual
triangulation?"
"Let the watch officer do that. You
go down and get some sleep. I'll ease her over until we get close enough to use
the optical range finder."
"Thanks, I will."
Within a few minutes the word had spread
around the ship that Eighty-eight had been sighted. Libby crowded into the
starboard troop deck with a throng of excited mess mates and attempted to make
out their future home from the view port. McCoy poured cold water on their
excitement.
"By the time that rock shows up big
enough to tell anything about it with your naked eye we'll be at our grounding
stations. She's only about a hundred miles thick, yuh know."
And so it was. Many hours later the ship's
announcer shouted:
"All hands! Man your grounding
stations. Close all airtight doors. Stand by to cut blowers on signal."
McCoy forced them to lie down throughout
the ensuing two hours. Short shocks of rocket blasts alternated with nauseating
weightlessness. Then the blowers stopped and check valves clicked into their
seats. The ship dropped free for a few moments -- a final quick blast -- five
seconds of falling, and a short, light, grinding bump. A single bugle note came
over the announcer, and the blowers took up their hum.
McCoy floated lightly to his feet and
poised, swaying, on his toes. "All out, troops -- this is the end of the
line."
A short chunky lad, a little younger than
most of them, awkwardly emulated him, and bounded toward the door, shouting as
he went, "Come on, fellows! Let's go outside and explore!"
The Master-at-Arms squelched him.
"Not so fast, kid. Aside from the fact that there is no air out there, go
right ahead. You'll freeze to death, burn to death, and explode like a ripe
tomato. Squad leader, detail six men to break out spacesuits. The rest of you
stay here and stand by."
The working party returned shortly loaded
down with a couple of dozen bulky packages. Libby let go the four he carried
and watched them float gently to the deck. McCoy unzipped the envelope from one
suit, and lectured them about it,
"This is a standard service type,
general issue, Mark IV, Modification 2." He grasped the suit by the
shoulders and shook it out so that it hung like a suit of long winter underwear
with the helmet lolling helplessly between the shoulders of the garment.
"It's self-sustaining for eight hours, having an oxygen supply for that
period. It also has a nitrogen trim tank and a carbon dioxide water-vapor
cartridge filter."
He droned on, repeating practically verbatim
the description and instructions given in training regulations. McCoy knew
these suits like his tongue knew the roof of his mouth; the knowledge had meant
his life on more than one occasion.
"The suit is woven from glass fibre
laminated with nonvolatile asbesto-cellutite. The resulting fabric is flexible,
very durable; and will turn all rays normal to solar space outside the orbit of
Mercury. It is worn over your regular clothing, but notice the wire-braced
accordion pleats at the major joints. They are so designed as to keep the
internal volume of the suit nearly constant when the arms or legs are bent.
Otherwise the gas pressure inside would tend to keep the suit blown up in an
erect position and movement while wearing the suit would be very fatiguing.
"The helmet is moulded from a
transparent silicone, leaded and polarized against too great ray penetration.
It may be equipped with external visors of any needed type. Orders are to wear
not less than a number-two amber on this body. In addition, a lead plate covers
the cranium and extends on down the back of the suit, completely covering the
spinal column.
"The suit is equipped with two-way
telephony. If your radio quits, as these have a habit of doing, you can talk by
putting your helmets in contact. Any questions?"
"How do you eat and drink during the
eight hours?"
"You don't stay in 'em any eight
hours. You can carry sugar balls in a gadget in the helmet, but you boys will
always eat at the base. As for water, there's a nipple in the helmet near your
mouth which you can reach by turning your head to the left. It's hooked to a
built-in canteen. But don't drink any more water when you're wearing a suit
than you have to. These suits ain't got any plumbing."
Suits were passed out to each lad, and McCoy
illustrated how to don one. A suit was spread supine on the deck, the front
zipper that stretched from neck to crotch was spread wide and one sat down
inside this opening, whereupon the lower part was drawn on like long stockings.
Then a wiggle into each sleeve and the heavy flexible gauntlets were smoothed
and patted into place. Finally an awkward backward stretch of the neck with
shoulders hunched enabled the helmet to be placed over the head.
Libby followed the motions of McCoy and
stood up in his suit. He examined the zipper which controlled the suit's only
opening. It was backed by two soft gaskets which would be pressed together by
the zipper and sealed by internal air pressure. Inside the helmet a composition
mouthpiece for exhalation led to the filter.
McCoy bustled around, inspecting them,
tightening a belt here and there, instructing them in the use of the external
controls. Satisfied, he reported to the conning room that his section had
received basic instruction and was ready to disembark. Permission was received
to take them out for thirty minutes acclimatization.
Six at a time, he escorted them through
the air-lock, and out on the surface of the planetoid. Libby blinked his eyes
at the unaccustomed luster of sunshine on rock. Although the sun lay more than
two hundred million miles away and bathed the little planet with radiation only
one fifth as strong as that lavished on mother Earth, nevertheless the lack of
atmosphere resulted in a glare that made him squint. He was glad to have the
protection of his amber visor. Overhead the sun, shrunk to penny size, shone
down from a dead black sky in which unwinking stars crowded each other and the
very sun itself.
The voice of a mess mate sounded in
Libby's earphones. "Jeepers! That horizon looks close. I'll bet it ain't
more'n a mile away."
Libby looked out over the flat bare plain
and subconsciously considered the matter. "It's less," he commented,
"than a third of a mile away."
"What the hell do you know about it,
Pinkie? And who asked you, anyhow?"
Libby answered defensively, "As a
matter of fact, it's one thousand six hundred and seventy feet, figuring that
my eyes are five feet three inches above ground level."
"Nuts. Pinkie, you are always trying
to show off how much you think you know."
"Why, I am not," Libby
protested. "If this body is a hundred miles thick and as round as it
looks: why, naturally the horizon has to be just that far away."
"Says who?"
McCoy interrupted.
"Pipe down! Libby is a lot nearer
right than you were."
"He is exactly right," put in a
strange voice. "I had to look it up for the navigator before I left
control."
"Is that so?" -- McCoy's voice
again -- "If the Chief Quartermaster says you're right, Libby, you're
right. How did you know?"
Libby flushed miserably. "I -- I
don't know. That's the only way it could be."
The gunner's mate and the quartermaster
stared at him but dropped the subject.
By the end of the "day" (ship's
time, for Eighty-eight had a period of eight hours and thirteen minutes), work
was well under way. The transport had grounded close by a low range of hills.
The Captain selected a little bowl-shaped depression in the hills, some
thousand feet long and half as broad, in which to establish a permanent camp.
This was to be roofed over, sealed, and an atmosphere provided.
In the hill between the ship and the
valley, quarters were to be excavated; dormitories, mess hall, officers'
quarters, sick bay, recreation room, offices, store rooms, and so forth. A
tunnel must be bored through the hill, connecting the sites of these rooms, and
connecting with a ten foot airtight metal tube sealed to the ship's portside
air-lock. Both the tube and tunnel were to be equipped with a continuous
conveyor belt for passengers and freight.
Libby found himself assigned to the
roofing detail. He helped a metalsmith struggle over the hill with a portable
atomic heater, difficult to handle because of a mass of eight hundred pounds,
but weighing here only sixteen pounds. The rest of the roofing detail were
breaking out and preparing to move by hand the enormous translucent tent which
was to be the "sky" of the little valley.
The metalsmith located a landmark on the
inner slope of the valley, set up his heater, and commenced cutting a deep
horizontal groove or step in the rock. He kept it always at the same level by
following a chalk mark drawn along the rock wall. Libby enquired how the job
had been surveyed so quickly.
"Easy," he was answered,
"two of the quartermasters went ahead with a transit, leveled it just
fifty feet above the valley floor, and clamped a searchlight to it. Then one of
'em ran like hell around the rim, making chalk marks at the height at which the
beam struck."
"Is this roof going to be just fifty
feet high?"
"No, it will average maybe a hundred.
It bellies up in the middle from the air pressure."
"Earth normal?"
"Half Earth normal."
Libby concentrated for an instant, then
looked puzzled. "But look -- This valley is a thousand feet long and
better than five hundred wide. At half of fifteen pounds per square inch, and
allowing for the arch of the roof, that's a load of one and an eighth billion
pounds. What fabric can take that kind of a load?"
"Cobwebs."
"Cobwebs?"
"Yeah, cobwebs. Strongest stuff in
the world, stronger than the best steel. Synthetic spider silk, This gauge
we're using for the roof has a tensile strength of four thousand pounds a
running inch."
Libby hesitated a second, then replied,
"I see. With a rim about eighteen hundred thousand inches around, the
maximum pull at the point of anchoring would be about six hundred and
twenty-five pounds per inch. Plenty safe margin."
The metalsmith leaned on his tool and
nodded. "Something like that. You're pretty quick at arithmetic, aren't
you, bud?"
Libby looked startled. "I just like
to get things straight."
They worked rapidly around the slope,
cutting a clean smooth groove to which the 'cobweb' could be anchored and
sealed. The white-hot lava spewed out of the discharge vent and ran slowly down
the hillside. A brown vapor boiled off the surface of the molten rock, arose a
few feet and sublimed almost at once in the vacuum to white powder which
settled to the ground. The metalsmith pointed to the powder.
"That stuff 'ud cause silicosis if we
let it stay there, and breathed it later."
"What do you do about it?"
"Just clean it out with the blowers
of the air conditioning plant"
Libby took this opening to ask another
question. "Mister -- ?"
"Johnson's my name. No mister
necessary."
"Well, Johnson, where do we get the
air for this whole valley, not to mention the tunnels? I figure we must need
twenty-five million cubic feet or more. Do we manufacture it?"
"Naw, that's too much trouble. We
brought it with us."
"On the transport?"
"Uh huh, at fifty atmospheres."
Libby considered this. "I see -- that
way it would go into a space eighty feet on a side."
"Matter of fact it's in three
specially constructed holds -- giant air bottles. This transport carried air to
Ganymede. I was in her then -- a recruit, but in the air gang even then."
In three weeks the permanent camp was
ready for occupancy and the transport cleared of its cargo. The storerooms
bulged with tools and supplies. Captain Doyle had moved his administrative
offices underground, signed over his command to his first officer, and given
him permission to proceed on 'duty assigned' -- in this case; return to Terra
with a skeleton crew.
Libby watched them take off from a vantage
point on the hillside. An overpowering homesickness took possession of him.
Would he ever go home? He honestly believed at the time that he would swap the
rest of his life for thirty minutes each with his mother and with Betty.
He started down the hill toward the tunnel
lock. At least the transport carried letters to them, and with any luck the
chaplain would be by soon with letters from Earth. But tomorrow and the days
after that would be no fun. He had enjoyed being in the air gang, but tomorrow
he went back to his squad. He did not relish that -- the boys in his squad were
all right, he guessed, but he just could not seem to fit in.
This company of the C.C.C. started on its
bigger job; to pock-mark Eighty-eight with rocket tubes so that Captain Doyle
could push this hundred-mile marble out of her orbit and herd her in to a new
orbit between Earth and Mars, to be used as a space station -- a refuge for
ships in distress, a haven for life boats, a fueling stop, a naval outpost.
Libby was assigned to a heater in pit
H-16. It was his business to carve out carefully calculated emplacements in
which the blasting crew then set off the minute charges which accomplished the
major part of the excavating. Two squads were assigned to H-16, under the
general supervision of an elderly marine gunner. The gunner sat on the edge of
the pit, handling the plans, and occasionally making calculations on a circular
slide rule which hung from a lanyard around his neck.
Libby had just completed a tricky piece of
cutting for a three-stage blast, and was waiting for the blasters, when his
phones picked up the gunner's instructions concerning the size of the charge.
He pressed his transmitter button.
"Mr. Larsen! You've made a
mistake!"
"Who said that?"
"This is Libby. You've made a mistake
in the charge. If you set off that charge, you'll blow this pit right out of
the ground, and us with it."
Marine Gunner Larsen spun the dials on his
slide rule before replying, "You're all het up over nothing, son. That
charge is correct."
"No, I'm not, sir," Libby
persisted, "you've multiplied where you should have divided."
"Have you had any experience at this
sort of work?"
"No, sir."
Larsen addressed his next remark to the
blasters. "Set the charge."
They started to comply. Libby gulped, and
wiped his lips with his tongue. He knew what he had to do, but he was afraid.
Two clumsy stiff-legged jumps placed him beside the blasters. He pushed between
them and tore the electrodes from the detonator. A shadow passed over him as he
worked, and Larsen floated down beside him. A hand grasped his arm.
"You shouldn't have done that, son.
That's direct disobedience of orders. I'll have to report you." He
commenced reconnecting the firing circuit.
Libby's ears burned with embarrassment,
but he answered back with the courage of timidity at bay. "I had to do it,
sir. You're still wrong."
Larsen paused and ran his eyes over the
dogged face. "Well -- it's a waste of time, but I don't like to make you
stand by a charge you're afraid of. Let's go over the calculation
together."
Captain Doyle sat at his ease in his
quarters, his feet on his desk. He stared at a nearly empty glass tumbler.
"That's good beer, Blackie. Do you
suppose we could brew some more when it's gone?"
"I don't know. Cap'n. Did we bring
any yeast?"
"Find out, will you?" he turned
to a massive man who occupied the third chair. "Well, Larsen, I'm glad it
wasn't any worse than it was."
"What beats me, Captain, is how I
could have made such a mistake. I worked it through twice. If it had been a
nitro explosive, I'd have known off hand that I was wrong. If this kid hadn't
had a hunch, I'd have set it off."
Captain Doyle clapped the old warrant
officer on the shoulder. "Forget it, Larsen. You wouldn't have hurt
anybody; that's why I require the pits to be evacuated even for small charges.
These isotope explosives are tricky at best. Look what happened in pit A-9. Ten
days' work shot with one charge, and the gunnery officer himself approved that
one. But I want to see this boy. What did you say his name was?"
"Libby, A.J."
Doyle touched a button on his desk. A
knock sounded at the door. A bellowed "Come in!" produced a stripling
wearing the brassard of Corpsman Mate-of-the-Deck.
"Have Corpsman Libby report to
me."
"Aye aye, sir."
Some few minutes later Libby was ushered
into the Captain's cabin. He looked nervously around, and noted Larsen's
presence, a fact that did not contribute to his peace of mind. He reported in a
barely audible voice, "Corpsman Libby, sir."
The Captain looked him over. "Well,
Libby, I hear that you and Mr. Larsen had a difference of opinion this morning.
Tell me about it."
"I -- I didn't mean any harm,
sir."
"Of course not. You're not in any
trouble; you did us all a good turn this morning. Tell me, how did you know
that the calculation was wrong? Had any mining experience?"
"No. sir. I just saw that he had
worked it out wrong."
"But how?"
Libby shuffled uneasily. "Well, sir,
it just seemed wrong -- it didn't fit."
"Just a second, Captain. May I ask
this young man a couple of questions?" It was Commander
"Blackie" Rhodes who spoke.
"Certainly. Go ahead."
"Are you the lad they call
'Pinkie'?"
Libby blushed. "Yes, sir."
"I've heard some rumors about this
boy." Rhodes pushed his big frame out of his chair, went over to a bookshelf,
and removed a thick volume. He thumbed through it, then with open book before
him, started to question Libby.
"What's the square root of
ninety-five?"
"Nine and seven hundred forty-seven
thousandths."
"What's the cube root?"
"Four and five hundred sixty-three
thousandths."
"What's its logarithm?"
"Its what, sir?"
"Good Lord, can a boy get through
school today without knowing?"
The boy's discomfort became more intense.
"I didn't get much schooling, sir. My folks didn't accept the Covenant
until Pappy died, and we had to."
"I see. A logarithm is a name for a
power to which you raise a given number, called the base, to get the number
whose logarithm it is. Is that clear?"
Libby thought hard. "I don't quite
get it, sir."
"I'll try again. If you raise ten to
the second power -- square it -- it gives one hundred. Therefore the logarithm
of a hundred to the base ten is two. In the same fashion the logarithm of a
thousand to the base ten is three. Now what is the logarithm of ninety-five?'
Libby puzzled for a moment. "I can't
make it come out even. It's a fraction."
"That's O.K."
"Then it's one and nine hundred
seventy-eight thousandths -- just about."
Rhodes turned to the Captain. "I
guess that about proves it, sir."
Doyle nodded thoughtfully. "Yes, the
lad seems to have intuitive knowledge of arithmetical relationships. But let's
see what else he has."
"I am afraid we'll have to send him
back to Earth to find out properly."
Libby caught the gist of this last remark.
"Please, sir, you aren't going to send me home? Maw 'ud be awful vexed
with me."
"No, no, nothing of the sort. When
your time is up, I want you to be checked over in the psychometrical
laboratories. In the meantime I wouldn't part with you for a quarter's pay. I'd
give up smoking first. But let's see what else you can do."
In the ensuing hour the Captain and the
Navigator heard Libby: one, deduce the Pythagorean proposition; two, derive
Newton's laws of motion and Kepler's laws of ballistics from a statement of the
conditions in which they obtained; three, judge length, area, and volume by eye
with no measurable error. He had jumped into the idea of relativity and
nonrectilinear space-time continua, and was beginning to pour forth ideas
faster than he could talk, when Doyle held up a hand.
"That's enough, son. You'll be
getting a fever. You run along to bed now, and come see me in the morning. I'm
taking you off field work."
"Yes, sir."
"By the way, what is your full
name?"
"Andrew Jackson Libby, sir."
"No, your folks wouldn't have signed
the Covenant. Good night."
"Good night, sir."
After he had gone, the two older men
discussed their discovery.
"How do you size it up,
Captain?"
"Well, he's a genius, of course --
one of those wild talents that will show up once in a blue moon. I'll turn him
loose among my books and see how he shapes up. Shouldn't wonder if he were a
page-at-a-glance reader, too."
"It beats me what we turn up among
these boys -- and not a one of 'em any account back on Earth."
Doyle nodded. "That was the
trouble with these kids. They didn't feel needed."
Eighty-eight swung some millions of miles
further around the sun. The pock-marks on her face grew deeper, and were lined
with durite, that strange close-packed laboratory product which (usually) would
confine even atomic disintegration. Then Eighty-eight received a series of
gentle pats, always on the side headed along her course. In a few weeks' time
the rocket blasts had their effect and Eighty-eight was plunging in an orbit
toward the sun.
When she reached her station one and
three-tenths the distance from the sun of Earth's orbit, she would have to be
coaxed by another series of pats into a circular orbit. Thereafter she was to
be known as E-M3, Earth-Mars Space Station Spot Three.
Hundreds of millions of miles away two
other C.C.C. companies were inducing two other planetoids to quit their age-old
grooves and slide between Earth and Mars to land in the same orbit as
Eighty-eight. One was due to ride this orbit one hundred and twenty degrees
ahead of Eighty-eight, the other one hundred and twenty degrees behind. When
E-M1, E-M2, and E-M3 were all on station no hard-pushed traveler of the
spaceways on the Earth-Mars passage would ever again find himself far from land
-- or rescue.
During the months that Eighty-eight fell
free toward the sun, Captain Doyle reduced the working hours of his crew and
turned them to the comparatively light labor of building a hotel and converting
the little roofed-in valley into a garden spot. The rock was broken down into
soil, fertilizers applied, and cultures of anaerobic bacteria planted. Then
plants, conditioned by thirty-odd generations of low gravity at Luna City, were
set out and tenderly cared for. Except for the low gravity, Eighty-eight began
to feel like home.
But when Eighty-eight approached a tangent
to the hypothetical future orbit of E-M3, the company went back to maneuvering
routine, watch on and watch off, with the Captain living on black coffee and
catching catnaps in the plotting room.
Libby was assigned to the ballistic
calculator, three tons of thinking metal that dominated the plotting room. He
loved the big machine. The Chief Fire Controlman let him help adjust it and
care for it. Libby subconsciously thought of it as a person -- his own kind of
person.
On the last day of the approach, the
shocks were more frequent. Libby sat in the right-hand saddle of the calculator
and droned out the predictions for the next salvo, while gloating over the
accuracy with which the machine tracked. Captain Doyle fussed around nervously,
occasionally stopping to peer over the Navigator's shoulder. Of course the
figures were right, but what if it didn't work? No one had ever moved so large
a mass before. Suppose it plunged on and on -- and on. Nonsense! It couldn't.
Still he would be glad when they were past the critical speed.
A marine orderly touched his elbow.
"Helio from the Flagship, sir."
"Read it."
"Flag to Eighty-eight; private
message, Captain Doyle; am lying off to watch you bring her in --
Kearney."
Doyle smiled. Nice of the old geezer. Once
they were on station, he would invite the Admiral to ground for dinner and show
him the park.
Another salvo cut loose, heavier than any
before. The room trembled violently. In a moment the reports of the surface
observers commenced to trickle in. "Tube nine, clear!" "Tube
ten, clear!"
But Libby's drone ceased.
Captain Doyle turned on him. "What's
the matter, Libby? Asleep? Call the polar stations. I have to have a
parallax."
"Captain--" The boy's
voice was low and shaking.
"Speak up, man!"
"Captain -- the machine isn't
tracking."
"Spiers!" The grizzled head of
the Chief Fire Controlman appeared from behind the calculator.
"I'm already on it, sir. Let you know
in a moment."
He ducked back again. After a couple of
long minutes he reappeared. "Gyros tumbled. It's a twelve hour calibration
job, at least."
The Captain said nothing, but turned away,
and walked to the far end of the room. The Navigator followed him with his
eyes. He returned, glanced at the chronometer, and spoke to the Navigator.
"Well, Blackie, if I don't have that
firing data in seven minutes, we're sunk. Any suggestions?"
Rhodes shook his head without speaking.
Libby timidly raised his voice. "Captain--" Doyle jerked around.
"Yes?"
"The firing data is tube thirteen,
seven point six three; tube twelve, six point nine oh; tube fourteen, six point
eight nine."
Doyle studied his face. "You sure
about that, son?"
"It has to be that, Captain."
Doyle stood perfectly still. This time he
did not look at Rhodes but stared straight ahead. Then he took a long pull on
his cigarette, glanced at the ash, and said in a steady voice,
"Apply the data. Fire on the
bell."
Four hours later, Libby was still droning
out firing data, his face gray, his eyes closed. Once he had fainted but when
they revived him he was still muttering figures. From time to time the Captain
and the Navigator relieved each other, but there was no relief for him.
The salvos grew closer together, but the
shocks were lighter.
Following one faint salvo, Libby looked
up, stared at the ceiling, and spoke.
"That's all, Captain."
"Call polar stations!"
The reports came back promptly,
"Parallax constant, sidereal-solar rate constant."
The Captain relaxed into a chair.
"Well, Blackie, we did it -- thanks to Libby!" Then he noticed a
worried, thoughtful look spread over Libby's face. "What's the matter,
man? Have we slipped up?"
"Captain, you know you said the other
day that you wished you had Earth-normal gravity in the park?"
"Yes. What of it?"
"If that book on gravitation you lent
me is straight dope. I think I know a way to accomplish it."
The Captain inspected him as if seeing him
for the first time. "Libby, you have ceased to amaze me. Could you stop
doing that sort of thing long enough to dine with the Admiral?"
"Gee, Captain, that would be
swell!"
The audio circuit from Communications cut
in. "Helio from Flagship: 'Well done, Eighty-eight.'" Doyle smiled
around at them all. "That's pleasant confirmation."
The audio brayed again.
"Helio from Flagship: 'Cancel last
signal, stand by for correction.'"
A look of surprise and worry sprang into
Doyle's face -- then the audio continued:
"Helio from Flagship: 'Well done,
E-M3'"
Methuselah's
Children
PART I
"MARY SPERLING, you're a fool not to
marry him!"
Mary Sperling added up her losses and
wrote a check before answering, "There's too much difference in age."
She passed over her credit voucher. "I shouldn't gamble with you-sometimes
I think you're a sensitive."
"Nonsense! You're just trying to
change the subject. You must be nearly thirty and you won't be pretty
forever."
Mary smiled wryly. "Don't I know
it!"
"Bork Vanning can't be much over
forty and he's a plus citizen. You should jump at the chance."
"You jump at it. I must run now.
Service, Ven."
"Service," Ven answered, then
frowned at the door as it contracted after Mary Sperling. She itched to know
why Mary would not marry a prime catch like the Honorable Bork Vanning and was
almost as curious as to why and where Mary was going, but the custom of privacy
stopped her.
Mary had no intention of letting anyone
know where she was going. Outside her friend's apartment she dropped down a
bounce tube to the basement, claimed her car from the robopark, guided it up
the ramp and set the controls for North Shore. The car waited for a break in
the traffic, then dived into the high-speed stream and hurried north. Mary
settled back for a nap.
When its setting was about to run out, the
car beeped for instructions; Mary woke up and glanced out. Lake Michigan was a
darker band of darkness on her right. She signaled traffic control to let her
enter the local traffic lane; it sorted out her car and placed her there, then
let her resume manual control. She fumbled in the glove compartment.
The license number which traffic control
automatically photographed as she left the controlways was not the number the
car had been wearing.
She followed a side road uncontrolled for
several miles, turned into a narrow dirt road which led down to the shore, and
stopped. There she waited, lights out, and listened. South of her the lights of
Chicago glowed; a few hundred yards inland the controlways whined, but here
there was nothing but the little timid noises of night creatures. She reached
into the glove compartment, snapped a switch; the instrument panel glowed,
uncovering other dials behind it. She studied these while making adjustments.
Satisfied that no radar watched her and that nothing was moving near her, she
snapped off the instruments, sealed the window by her and started up again.
What appeared to be a standard Camden
speedster rose quietly up, moved out over the lake, skimming it-dropped into
the water and sank. Mary waited until she was a quarter mile off shore in fifty
feet of water, then called a station. "Answer," said a voice.
"'Life is short--'"
"'-but the years are long.'"
"'Not,'" Mary responded,
"'while the evil days come not.'"
"I sometimes wonder," the voice
answered conversationally. "Okay, Mary. I've checked you."
"Tommy?"
"No-Cecil Hedrick. Are your controls
cast loose?"
"Yes. Take over."
Seventeen minutes later the car surfaced
in a pool which occupied much of an artificial cave. When the car was beached,
Mary got out, said hello to the guards and went on through a tunnel into a
large underground room where fifty or sixty men and women were seated. She
chatted until a clock announced midnight, then she mounted a rostrum and faced
them.
"I am," she stated, "one
hundred and eighty-three years old. Is there anyone here who is older?"
No one spoke. After a decent wait she went
on, "Then in accordance with our customs I declare this meeting opened.
Will you choose a moderator?"
Someone said, "Go ahead, Mary."
When no one else spoke up, she said, "Very well." She seemed
indifferent to the honor and the group seemed to share her casual attitude-an
air of never any hurry, of freedom from the tension of modern life.
"We are met as usual," she
announced, "to discuss our welfare and that of our sisters and brothers.
Does any Family representative have a message from his family? Or does anyone
care to speak for himself?"
A man caught her eye and spoke up.
"Ira Weatheral, speaking for the Johnson Family. We've met nearly two
months early. The trustees must have a reason. Let's hear it."
She nodded and turned to a prim little man
in the first row. "Justin . . . if you will, please."
The prim little man stood up and bowed
stiffly. Skinny legs stuck out below his badly-cut kilt. He looked and acted
like an elderly, dusty civil servant, but his black hair and the firm, healthy
tone of his skin said that he was a man in his prime. "Justin Foote,"
he said precisely, "reporting for the trustees. It has been eleven years
since the Families decided on the experiment of letting the public know that
there were, living among them, persons who possessed a probable, life
expectancy far in excess of that anticipated by the average man, as well as
other persons who had proved the scientific truth of such expectation by having
lived more than twice the normal life span of human beings."
Although he spoke without notes he sounded
as if he were reading aloud a prepared report. What he was saying they all knew
but no one hurried him; his audience had none of the febrile impatience so
common elsewhere. "In deciding," he droned on, "to reverse the
previous long-standing policy of silence and concealment as to the peculiar
aspect in which we differ from the balance of the human race, the Families were
moved by several considerations. The reason for the original adoption of the
policy of concealment should be noted:
"The first offspring resulting from
unions assisted by the Howard Foundation were born in 1875. They aroused no
comment, for they were in no way remarkable. The Foundation was an
openly-chartered non-profit corporation--"
On March 17, 1874, Ira Johnson, medical
student, sat in the law offices of Deems, Wingate, Alden, & Deems and
listened to an unusual proposition. At last he interrupted the senior partner.
"Just a moment! Do I understand that you are trying to hire me to marry
one of these women?"
The lawyer looked shocked. "Please,
Mr. Johnson. Not at all"
"Well, it certainly sounded like
it."
"No, no, such a contract would be
void, against public policy. We are simply informing you, as administrators of
a trust, that should it come about that you do marry one of the young ladies on
this list it would then be our pleasant duty to endow each child of such a
union according to the scale here set forth. But there would be no Contract
with us involved, nor is there any 'proposition' being made to you-and we
certainly do not urge any course of action on you. We are simply informing you
of certain facts."
Ira Johnson scowled and shuffled his feet.
"What's it all about? Why?"
"That is the business of the
Foundation. One might put it that we approve of your grandparents."
"Have you discussed me with
them?" Johnson said sharply.
He felt no affection for his grandparents.
A tight-fisted foursome-if any one of them had had the grace to die at a
reasonable age he would not now be worried about money enough to finish medical
school.
"We have talked with them, yes. But
not about you."
The lawyer shut off further discussion and
young Johnson accepted gracelessly a list of young women, all strangers, with
the intention of tearing it up the moment he was outside the office. Instead,
that night he wrote seven drafts before he found the right words in which to
start cooling off the relation between himself and his girl back home. He was
glad that he had never actually popped the question to her-it would have been
deucedly awkward.
When he did marry (from the list) it
seemed a curious but not too remarkable coincidence that his wife as well as
himself had four living, healthy, active grandparents.
"-an openly chartered non-profit
corporation," Foote continued, "and its avowed purpose of encouraging
births among persons of sound American stock was consonant with the customs of
that century. By the simple expedient of being closemouthed about the true
purpose of the Foundation no unusual methods of concealment were necessary
until late in that period during the World Wars sometimes loosely termed 'The
Crazy Years--'"
Selected headlines April to June 1969:
BABY BILL BREAKS BANK
2-year toddler youngest winner $1,000,000
TV jackpot
White House phones congrats
COURT ORDERS STATEHOUSE SOLD
Colorado Supreme Bench Rules State Old Age
Pension Has
First Lien All State Property
N.Y. YOUTH MEET DEMANDS UPPER LIMIT ON
FRANCHISE
"U.S. BIRTH RATE 'TOP
SECRET!'"-DEFENSE SEC
CAROLINA CONGRESSMAN COPS BEAUTY CROWN
"Available for draft for
President" she announces while
starting tour to show her qualifications
IOWA RAISES VOTING AGE TO FORTY-ONE
Rioting on Des Moines Campus
EARTH-EATING FAD MOVES WEST: CHICAGO
PARSON EATS CLAY SANDWICH IN PULPIT
"Back to simple things," he
advises flock.
LOS ANGELES HI-SCHOOL MOB DEFIES SCHOOL
BOARD
"Higher Pay, Shorter hours, no
Homework-We Demand
Our Right to Elect Teachers,
Coaches."
SUICIDE RATE UP NINTH SUCCESSIVE YEAR
AEC Denies Fall-Out to Blame
"'-The Crazy Years.' The trustees of
that date decided-correctly, we now believe-that any minority during that
period of semantic disorientation and mass hysteria was a probable target
for persecution, discriminatory
legislation, and even of mob violence. Furthermore the disturbed financial condition
of the country and in particular the forced exchange of trust securities for
government warrants threatened the solvency of the trust.
"Two courses of action were adopted:
the assets of the Foundation were converted into real wealth and distributed
widely among members of the Families to be held by them as owners-of-record;
and the so-called 'Masquerade' was adopted as a permanent policy. Means were
found to simulate the death of any member of the Families who lived to a
socially embarrassing age and to provide him with a new identity in another
part of the country.
"The wisdom of this later policy,
though irksome to some, became evident at once during the Interregnum of the
Prophets. The Families at the beginning of the reign of the First Prophet had
ninety-seven per cent of their members with publicly avowed ages of less than
fifty years. The close public registration enforced by the secret police of the
Prophets made changes of public identity difficult, although a few were
accomplished with the aid of the revolutionary Cabal.
"Thus, a combination of luck and
foresight saved our Secret from public disclosure. This was well-we may be sure
that things would have gone harshly at that time for any group possessing a
prize beyond the power of the Prophet to confiscate.
"The Families took no part as such in
the events leading up to the Second American Revolution, but many members
participated and served with credit in the Cabal and in the fighting which
preceded the fall of New Jerusalem. We took advantage of the period of
disorganization which followed to readjust the ages of our kin who had grown
conspicuously old. In this we were aided by certain members of the Families
who, as members of the Cabal, held key posts in the Reconstruction.
"It was argued by many at the
Families' meeting of 2075, the year of the Covenant, that we should reveal
ourselves, since civil liberty was firmly reestablished. The majority did not
agree at that time . . . perhaps through long habits of secrecy and caution. But
the renascence of culture in the ensuing fifty years, the steady growth of
tolerance and good manners, the semantically sound orientation of education,
the increased respect for the custom of privacy and for the dignity of the
individual-all of these things led us to believe that the time had at last come
when it was becoming safe to reveal ourselves and to take our rightful place as
an odd but nonetheless respected minority in society.
"There were compelling reasons to do
so. Increasing numbers of us were finding the 'Masquerade' socially intolerable
in a new and better society. Not only was it upsetting to pull up roots and
seek a new background every few years but also it grated to have to live a lie
in a society where frank honesty and fair dealing were habitual with most
people. Besides that, the Families as a group had learned many things through
our researches in the bio-sciences, things which could be of great benefit to
our poor short-lived brethren. We needed freedom to help them.
"These and similar reasons were
subject to argument. But the resumption of the custom of positive physical
identification made the 'Masquerade' almost untenable. Under the new
orientation a sane and peaceful citizen welcomes positive identification under
appropriate circumstances even though jealous of his right of privacy at all
other times-so we dared not object; it would have aroused curiosity, marked us
as an eccentric group, set apart, and thereby have defeated the whole purpose
of the 'Masquerade.'
"We necessarily submitted to personal
identification. By the time of the meeting of 2125, eleven years ago, it had
become extremely difficult to counterfeit new identities for the
ever-increasing number of us holding public ages incompatible with personal
appearance; we decided on the experiment of letting volunteers from this group
up to ten per cent of the total membership of the Families reveal themselves
for what they were and observe the consequences, while maintaining all other
secrets of the Families' organization.
"The results were regrettably
different from our expectations."
Justin Foote stopped talking. The silence
had gone on for several moments when a solidly built man of medium height spoke
up. His hair was slightly grizzled-unusual in that group-and his face looked
space tanned. Mary Sperling had noticed him and had wondered who he was-his
live face and gusty laugh had interested her. But any member was free to attend
the conclaves of the Families' council; she had thought no more of it.
He said, "Speak up, Bud. What's your
report?"
Foote made his answer to the chair.
"Our senior psychometrician should give the balance of the report. My
remarks were prefatory."
"For the love o'--" the grizzled
stranger exclaimed. "Bud, do you mean to stand there and admit that all
you had to say were things we already knew?"
"My remarks were a foundation . . .
and my name is Justin Foote, not Bud.'"
Mary Sperling broke in firmly.
"Brother," she said to the stranger, "since you are addressing
the Families, will you please name yourself? I am sorry to say that I do not
recognize you."
"Sorry, Sister. Lazarus Long,
speaking for myself."
Mary shook her head. "I still don't
place you."
"Sorry again-that's a 'Masquerade'
name I took at the time of the First Prophet . . . it tickled me. My Family
name is Smith . . . Woodrow Wilson Smith."
"'Woodrow Wilson Sm--' How old are
you?"
"Eh? Why, I haven't figured it
lately. One hun . . . no, two hundred and-thirteen years. Yeah, that's right,
two hundred and thirteen."
There was a sudden, complete silence. Then
Mary said quietly, "Did you hear me inquire for anyone older than
myself?"
"Yes. But shucks, Sister, you were
doing all right. I ain't attended a meeting of the Families in over a century.
Been some changes."
"I'll ask you to carry on from
here." She started to leave the platform.
"Oh no!" he protested. But she
paid no attention and found a seat. He looked around, shrugged and gave in.
Sprawling one hip over a corner of the speaker's table he announced, "All
right, let's get on with it. Who's next?"
Ralph Schultz of the Schultz Family looked
more like a banker than a psychometrician. He was neither shy nor absent-minded
and he had a flat, underemphasized way of talking that carried authority.
"I was part of the group that proposed ending the 'Masquerade.' I was
wrong. I believed that the great majority of our fellow citizens, reared under
modern educational methods, could evaluate any data without excessive emotional
disturbance. I anticipated that a few abnormal people would dislike us, even
hate us; I even predicted that most people would envy us-everybody who enjoys
life would like to live a long time. But I did not anticipate any serious
trouble. Modern attitudes have done away with interracial friction; any who
still harbor race prejudice are ashamed to voice it. I believed that our
society was so tolerant that we could live peacefully and openly with the
short-lived.
"I was wrong.
"The Negro hated and envied the white
man as long as the white man enjoyed privileges forbidden the Negro by reason
of color. This was a sane, normal reaction. When discrimination was removed,
the problem solved itself and cultural assimilation took place. There is a
similar tendency on the part of the short-lived to envy the long-lived. We
assumed that this expected reaction would be of no social importance in most
people once it was made clear that we owe our peculiarity to our genes-no fault
nor virtue of our own, just good luck in our ancestry.
"This was mere wishful thinking. By
hindsight it is easy to see that correct application of mathematical analysis
to the data would have given a different answer, would have spotlighted the
false analogy. I do not defend the misjudgment, no defense is possible. We were
led astray by our hopes.
"What actually happened was this: we
showed our shortlived cousins the greatest boon it is possible for a man to
imagine . . . then we told them it could never be theirs. This faced them with
an unsolvable dilemma. They have rejected the unbearable facts, they refuse to
believe us. Their envy now turns to hate, with an emotional conviction that we
are depriving them of their rights . . . deliberately, maliciously.
"That rising hate has now swelled
into a flood which threatens the welfare and even the lives of all our revealed
brethren . . . and which is potentially as dangerous to the rest of us. The
danger is very great and very pressing." He sat down abruptly.
They took it calmly, with the unhurried
habit of years. Presently a female delegate stood up. "Eve Barstow, for
the Cooper Family. Ralph Schultz, I am a hundred and nineteen years old, older,
I believe, than you are. I do not have your talent for mathematics or human
behavior but I have known a lot of people. Human beings are inherently good and
gentle and kind. Oh, they have their weaknesses but most of them are decent
enough if you give them half a chance. I cannot believe that they would hate me
and destroy me simply because I have lived a long time. What have you to go on?
You admit one mistake-why not two?"
Schultz looked at her soberly and smoothed
his kilt. "You're right, Eve. I could easily be wrong again. That's the
trouble with psychology; it is a subject so terribly complex, so many unknowns,
such involved relationships, that our best efforts sometimes look silly in the
bleak light of later facts." He stood up again, faced the others, and
again spoke with flat authority. "But I am not making a long-range
prediction this time; I am talking about facts, no guesses, not wishful
thinking-and with those facts a prediction so short-range that it is like
predicting that an egg will break when you see it already on its way to the
floor. But Eve is right . . . as far as she went. Individuals are kind and
decent . . . as individuals and to other individuals. Eve is in no danger from
her neighbors and friends, and I am in no danger from mine. But she is in
danger from my neighbors and friends -and I from hers. Mass psychology is not
simply a summation of individual psychologies; that is a prime theorem of
social psychodynamics -not just my opinion; no exception has ever been found to
this theorem. It is the social mass-action rule, the mob-hysteria law, known
and used by military, political, and religious leaders, by advertising men and
prophets and propagandists, by rabble rousers and actors and gang leaders, for
generations before it was formulated in mathematical symbols. It works. It is
working now.
"My colleagues and I began to suspect
that a mob-hysteria trend was building up against us several years ago. We did
not bring our suspicions to the council for action because we could not prove
anything. What we observed then could have been simply the mutterings of the
crackpot minority present in even the healthiest society. The trend was at
first so minor that we could not be sure it existed, for all social trends are
intermixed with other social trends, snarled together like a plate of
spaghetti-worse than that, for it takes an abstract topological space of many
dimensions (ten or twelve are not uncommon and hardly adequate) to describe
mathematically the interplay of social forces. I cannot overemphasize the
complexity of the problem.
"So we waited and worried and tried
statistical sampling, setting up our statistical universes with great care.
"By the time we were sure, it was
almost too late. Socio-psychological trends grow or die by a 'yeast growth'
law, a complex power law. We continued to hope that other favorable factors
would reverse the trend-Nelson's work in symbiotics, our own contributions to
geriatrics, the great public interest in the opening of the Jovian satellites
to immigration. Any major break-through offering longer life, and greater hope
to the short-lived could end the smouldering resentment against us.
"Instead the smouldering has burst
into flame, into an uncontrolled forest fire. As nearly as we can measure it,
the rate has doubled in the past thirty-seven days and the rate itself is
accelerated. I can't guess how far or how fast it will go-and that's why we
asked for this emergency session. Because we can expect trouble at any
moment." He sat down hard, looking tired.
Eve did not argue with him again and no
one else argued with him at all; not only was Ralph Schultz considered expert
in his own field but also every one of them, each from his own viewpoint, had
seen the grosser aspects of the trend building up against their revealed kin.
But, while the acceptance of the problem was unanimous, there were as many
opinions about what to do about it as there were people present. Lazarus let
the discussion muddle along for two hours before he held up a hand. "We
aren't getting anywhere," he stated, "and it looks like we won't get
anywhere tonight. Let's take an over-all look at it, hitting just the high spots:
"We can--" He started ticking
plans off on his fingers- "do nothing, sit tight, and see what happens.
"We can junk the 'Masquerade'
entirely, reveal our full numbers, and demand our rights politically.
"We can sit tight on the surface and
use our organization and money to protect our revealed brethren, maybe haul 'em
back into the 'Masquerade.'
"We can reveal ourselves and ask for
a place to colonize where we can live by ourselves.
"Or we can do something else. I
suggest that you sort yourselves out according to those four major points of
view-say in the corners of the room, starting clockwise in that far right hand
corner-each group hammer out a plan and get it ready to submit to the Families.
And those of you who don't favor any of those four things gather in the middle
of the room and start scrappin' over just what it is you do think. Now, if I
hear no objection, I am going to declare this lodge recessed until midnight
tomorrow night. How about it?"
No one spoke up. Lazarus Long's streamlined
version of parliamentary procedure had them somewhat startled; they were used
to long, leisurely discussions until it became evident that one point of view
had become unanimous. Doing things in a hurry was slightly shocking.
But the man's personality was powerful,
his years gave him prestige, and his slightly archaic way of speaking added to
his patriarchal authority; nobody argued.
"Okay," Lazarus announced,
clapping his hands once. "Church is out until tomorrow night." He
stepped down from the platform.
Mary Sperling came up to him. "I
would like to know you better," she said, looking him in the eyes.
"Sure, Sis. Why not?"
"Are you staying for
discussion?"
"Could you come home with me?"
"Like to. I've no pressing business
elsewhere."
"Come then." She led him through
the tunnel to the underground pool connecting with Lake Michigan. He widened
his eyes at the pseudo-Camden but said nothing until they were submerged.
"Nice little car you've got."
"Yes."
"Has some unusual features."
She smiled. "Yes. Among other things,
it blows up-quite thoroughly-if anyone tries to investigate it."
"Good." He added, "You a
designing engineer, Mary?"
"Me? Heavens, no! Not this past
century, at least, and I no longer try to keep up with such things. But you can
order a car modified the way this one is through the Families, if you want one.
Talk to-"
"Never mind, I've no need for one. I
just like gadgets that do what they were designed to do and do it quietly and
efficiently. Some good skull sweat in this one."
"Yes." She was busy then,
surfacing, making a radar check, and getting them back ashore without
attracting notice.
When they reached her apartment she put
tobacco and drink close to him, then went to her retiring room, threw off her
street clothes and put on a soft loose robe that made her look even smaller and
younger than she had looked before. When she rejoined Lazarus, he stood up,
struck a cigarette for her, then paused as he handed it to her and gave a
gallant and indelicate whistle.
She smiled briefly, took the
cigarette, and sat down in a large chair, pulling her feet under her.
"Lazarus, you reassure me."
"Don't you own a mirror, girl?"
"Not that," she said
impatiently. "You yourself. You know that I have passed the reasonable
life expectancy of our people-I've been expecting to die, been resigned to it,
for the past ten years. Yet there you sit . . . years and years o1der than I
am. You give me hope."
He sat up straight. "You expecting to
die? Good grief, girl-you look good for another century."
She made a tired gesture. "Don't try
to jolly me. You know that appearance has nothing to do with it. Lazarus, I
don't want to die!"
Lazarus answered soberly, "I wasn't
trying to kid you, Sis. You simply don't look like a candidate for
corpse."
She shrugged gracefully. "A matter of
biotechniques. I'm holding my appearance at the early thirties."
"Or less, I'd say. I guess I'm not up
on the latest dodges, Mary. You heard me say that I had not attended a
get-together for more than a century. As a matter of fact I've been completely
out of touch with the Families the whole time."
"Really? May I ask why?"
"A long story and a dull one. What it
amounts to is that I got bored with them. I used to be a delegate to the annual
meetings. But they got stuffy and set in their ways-or so it seemed to me. So I
wandered off. I spent the Interregnum on Venus, mostly. I came back for a while
after the Covenant was signed but I don't suppose I've spent two years on Earth
since then. I like to move around."
Her eyes lit up. "Oh, tell me about
it! I've never been out in-deep space. Just Luna City, once."
"Sure," he agreed.
"Sometime. But I want to hear more about this matter of your appearance.
Girl, you sure don't look your age."
"I suppose not. Or, rather, of course
I don't. As to how it's done, I can't tell you much. Hormones and symbiotics
and gland therapy and some psychotherapy-things like that. What it adds up to
is that, for members of the Families, senility is postponed and that senescence
can be arrested at least cosmetically." She brooded for a moment.
"Once they thought they were on the track of the secret of immortality,
the true Fountain of Youth. But it was a mistake. Senility is simply postponed
. . . and shortened. About ninety days from the first clear warning-then death
from old age." She shivered. "Of course, most of our cousins don't
wait-a couple of weeks to make certain of the diagnosis, then euthanasia."
"The hell you say! Well, I won't go
that way. When the Old Boy comes to get me, he'll have to drag me-and I'll be
kicking and gouging eyes every step of the way!"
She smiled lopsidedly. "It does me
good to hear you talk that way. Lazarus, I wouldn't let my guards down this way
with anyone younger than myself. But your example gives me courage."
"We'll outlast the lot of 'em, Mary,
never you fear. But about the meeting tonight: I haven't paid any attention to
the news and I've only recently come earthside-does this chap Ralph Schultz
know what he is talking about?"
"I think he must. His grandfather was
a brilliant man and so is his father."
"I take it you know Ralph."
"Slightly. He is one of my
grandchildren."
"That's amusing. He looks older than
you do."
"Ralph found it suited him to arrest
his appearance at about forty, that's all. His father was my twenty-seventh
child. Ralph must be-let me see-oh, eighty or ninety years younger than I am,
at least. At that, he is older than some of my children."
"You've done well by the Families,
Mary."
"I suppose so. But they've done well
by me, too. I've enjoyed having children and the trust benefits for my
thirty-odd come to quite a lot. I have every luxury one could want." She
shivered again. "I suppose that's why I'm in such a funk-I enjoy
life."
"Stop it! I thought my sterling
example and boyish grin had cured you of that nonsense."
"Well you've
helped."
"Mmm . . . look, Mary, why don't you
marry again and have some more squally brats? Keep you too busy to fret."
"What? At my age? Now, really,
Lazarus!"
"Nothing wrong with your age. You're
younger than I am." She studied him for a moment. "Lazarus, are you
proposing a contract? If so, I wish you would speak more plainly."
His mouth opened and he gulped. "Hey,
wait a minute! Take it easy! I was speaking in general terms . . . I'm not the
domestic type. Why, every time I've married my wife has grown sick of the sight
of me inside of a few years. Not but what I-well, I mean you're a very pretty
girl and a man ought to-"
She shut him off by leaning forward and
putting a hand over his mouth, while grinning impishly. "I didn't mean to
panic you, cousin. Or perhaps I did-men are so funny when they think they are
about to be trapped."
"Well-" he said glumly.
"Forget it, dear. Tell me, what plan
do you think they will settle on?"
"That bunch tonight?'
"Yes."
"None, of course. They won't get
anywhere. Mary, a committee is the only known form of life with a hundred
bellies and no brain. But presently somebody with a mind of his own will
bulldoze them into accepting his plan. I don't know what it will be."
"Well . . . what course of action do
you favor?"
"Me? Why, none. Mary, if there is any
one thing I have learned in the past couple of centuries, it's this: These
things pass. Wars and depressions and Prophets and Covenants- they pass. The
trick is to stay alive through them."
She nodded thoughtfully. "I think you
are right."
"Sure I'm right. It takes a hundred
years or so to realize just how good life is." He stood up and stretched.
"But right now this growing boy could use some sleep."
"Me, too."
Mary's flat was on the top floor, with a
sky view. When she had come back to the lounge she had cut the inside lighting
and let the ceiling shutters fold back; they had been sitting, save for an
invisible sheet of plastic, under the stars. As Lazarus raised his head in
stretching, his eye had rested on his favorite constellation. "Odd,"
he commented. "Orion seems to have added a fourth star to his belt."
She looked up. "That must be the big
ship for the Second Centauri Expedition. See if you can see it move."
"Couldn't tell without
instruments."
"I suppose not," she agreed.
"Clever of them to build it out in space, isn't it?"
"No other way to do it. It's too big
to assemble on Earth. I can doss down right here, Mary. Or do you have a spare
room?"
"Your room is the second door on the
right. Shout if you can't find everything you need." She put her face up
and kissed him goodnight, a quick peck. "'Night."
Lazarus followed her and went into his own
room.
Mary Sperling woke at her usual hour the
next day. She got up quietly to keep from waking Lazarus, ducked into her
'fresher, showered and massaged, swallowed a grain of sleep surrogate to make
up for the short night, followed it almost as quickly with all the breakfast
she permitted her waistline, then punched for the calls she had not bothered to
take the night before. The phone played back several calls which she promptly
forgot, then she recognized the voice of Bork Vanning. "'Hello,'" the
instrument said. "'Mary, this is Bork, calling at twenty-one o'clock. I'll
be by at ten o'clock tomorrow morning, for a dip in the lake and lunch
somewhere. Unless I hear from you it's a date. 'Bye, my dear. Service.'"
"Service," she repeated
automatically. Drat the man! Couldn't he take no for an answer? Mary Sperling,
you're slipping!-a quarter your age and yet you can't seem to handle him. Call
him and leave word that-no, too late; he'd be here any minute. Bother!
Chapter
2
WHEN LAZARUS went to bed he stepped out of
his kilt and chucked it toward a wardrobe which snagged it, shook it out, and
hung it up neatly. "Nice catch," he commented, then glanced down at
his hairy thighs and smiled wryly; the kilt had concealed a blaster strapped to
one thigh, a knife to the other. He was aware of the present gentle custom
against personal weapons, but he felt naked without them. Such customs were
nonsense anyhow, foolishment from old women-there was no such thing as a
"dangerous weapon," there were only dangerous men.
When he came out of the 'fresher, he put
his weapons where he could reach them before sprawling in sleep.
He came instantly wide awake with a weapon
in each hand . . . then remembered where he was, relaxed, and looked around to
see what had wakened him.
It was a murmur of voices through the air
duct. Poor soundproofing he decided, and Mary must be entertaining callers-in
which case he should not be slug-a-bed. He got up, refreshed himself, strapped
his best friends back on his thighs, and went looking for his hostess.
As the door to the lounge dilated
noiselessly in front of him the sound of voices became loud and very
interesting. The lounge was el-shaped and he was out of sight; he hung back and
listened shamelessly. Eavesdropping had saved his skin on several occasions; it
worried him not at all-he enjoyed it. A man was saying, "Mary, you're
completely unreasonable! You know you're fond of me, you admit that marriage to
me would be to your advantage. So why won't you?"
"I told you, Bork. Age
difference."
"That's foolish. What do you expect?
Adolescent romance? Oh, I admit that I'm not as young as you are . . . but a
woman needs an older man to look up to and keep her steady. I'm not too old for
you; I'm just at my prime."
Lazarus decided that he already knew this
chap well enough to dislike him. Sulky voice.
Mary did not answer. The man went on:
"Anyhow, I have a surprise for you on that point. I wish I could tell you
now, but . . . well, it's a state secret."
"Then don't tell me. It can't change
my mind in any case, Bork."
"Oh, but it would! Mmm . . . I will
tell you-I know you can be trusted."
"Now, Bork, you shouldn't assume
that-"
"It doesn't matter; it will be public
knowledge in a few days anyhow. Mary . . . I'll never grow old on you!"
"What do you mean?" Lazarus
decided that her tone was suddenly suspicious.
"Just what I said. Mary, they've
found the secret of eternal youth!"
"What? Who? How? When?"
"Oh, so now you're interested, eh?
Well, I won't keep you waiting. You know these old Johnnies that call
themselves the Howard Families?'
"Yes . . . I've heard of them, of
course," she admitted slowly. "But what of it? They're fakes."
"Not at all. I know. The
Administration has been quietly investigating their claims. Some of them are
unquestionably more than a hundred years old-and still young!"
"That's very hard to believe."
"Nevertheless it's true."
"Well . . . how do they do it?"
"Ah! That's the point. They claim
that it is a simple matter of heredity, that they live a long time because they
come from long lived stock. But that's preposterous, scientifically
incompatible with the established facts. The Administration checked most
carefully and the answer is certain: they have the secret of staying young."
"You can't be sure of that."
"Oh, come, Mary! You're a dear girl
but you're questioning the expert opinion of the best scientific brains in the
world. Never mind. Here's the part that is confidential. We don't have their
secret yet-but we will have it shortly. Without any excitement or public
notice, they are to be picked up and questioned. We'll get the secret-and you
and I will never grow old! What do you think of that? Eh?"
Mary answered very slowly, almost
inaudibly, "It would be nice if everyone could live a long time."
"Huh? Yes, I suppose it would. But in
any case you and I will receive the treatment, whatever it is. Think about us,
dear. Year after year after year of happy, youthful marriage. Not less than a
century. Maybe even--"
"Wait a moment, Bork. This 'secret'
It wouldn't be for everybody?"
"Well, now . . . that's a matter of
high policy. Population pressure is a pretty unwieldy problem even now. In
practice it might be necessary to restrict it to essential personnel-and their wives.
But don't fret your lovely head about it; you and I will have it."
"You mean I'll have it if I marry
you."
"Mmm . . . that's a nasty way to put
it, Mary. I'd do anything in the world for you that I could-because I love you.
But it would be utterly simple if you were married to me. So say you
will."
"Let's let that be for the moment.
How do you propose to get this 'secret' out of them?"
Lazarus could almost hear his wise nod.
"Oh, they'll talk!"
"Do you mean to say you'd send them
to Coventry if they didn't?"
"Coventry? Hm! You don't understand
the situation at all, Mary; this isn't any minor social offense. This is
treason- treason against the whole human race. We'll use means! Ways that the
Prophets used . . . if they don't cooperate willingly."
"Do you mean that? Why, that's
against the Covenant!"
"Covenant be damned! This is a matter
of life and death- do you think we'd let a scrap of paper stand in our way? You
can't bother with petty legalities in the fundamental things: men live by-not
something they will fight to the death for. And that is precisely what this is.
These . . . these dog-in-the-manger scoundrels are trying to keep life itself
from us. Do you think we'll bow to 'custom' in an emergency like this?"
Mary answered in a hushed and horrified
voice: "Do you really think the Council will violate the Covenant?"
"Think so? The Action-in-Council was
recorded last night. We authorized the Administrator to use 'full
expediency.'"
Lazarus strained his ears through a long
silence. At last Mary spoke. "Bork-"
"Yes, my dear?"
"You've got to do something about
this. You must stop it." "Stop it? You don't know what you're saying.
I couldn't and I would not if I could."
"But you must. You must convince the
Council. They're making a mistake, a tragic mistake. There is nothing to be
gained by trying to coerce those poor people. There is no secret!"
"What? You're getting excited, my
dear. You're setting your judgment up against some of the best and wisest men
on the planet. Believe me, we know what we are doing. We don't relish using
harsh methods any more than you do, but it's for the general welfare. Look, I'm
sorry I ever brought it up. Naturally you are soft and gentle and warmhearted
and I love you for it. Why not marry me and not bother your head about matters
of public policy?"
"Marry you? Never!"
"Aw, Mary-you're upset. Give me just
one good reason why not?"
"I'll tell you why! Because I am one
of those people you want to persecute!"
There was another pause. "Mary . . .
you're not well."
"Not well, am I? I am as well as a
person can be at my age. Listen to me, you fool! I have grandsons twice your
age. I was here when the First Prophet took over the country. I was here when
Harriman launched the first Moon rocket. You weren't even a squalling brat-your
grandparents hadn't even met, when I was a woman grown and married. And you
stand there and glibly propose to push around, even to torture, me and my kind.
Marry you? I'd rather marry one of my own grandchildren!"
Lazarus shifted his weight and slid his
right hand inside the flap of his kilt; he expected trouble at once. You can
depend on a woman, he reflected, to blow her top at the wrong moment.
He waited. Bork's answer was cool; the
tones of the experienced man of authority replaced those of thwarted passion.
"Take it easy, Mary. Sit down, I'll look after you. First I want you to
take a sedative. Then I'll get the best psychotherapist in the city-in the
whole country. You'll be all right."
"Take your hands off me!"
"Now, Mary . . .
Lazarus stepped out into the room and
pointed at Vanning with his blaster. "This monkey giving you trouble,
Sis?"
Vanning jerked his head around. "Who
are you?" he demanded indignantly. "What are you doing here?"
Lazarus still addressed Mary. "Say
the word, Sis, and I'll cut him into pieces small enough to hide."
"No, Lazarus," she answered with
her voice now under control. "Thanks just the same. Please put your gun
away. I wouldn't want anything like that to happen."
"Okay." Lazarus holstered the
gun but let his hand rest on the grip.
"Who are you?" repeated Vanning.
"What's the meaning of this intrusion?"
"I was just about to ask you that,
Bud," Lazarus said mildly, "but we'll let it ride. I'm another one of
those old Johnnies you're looking for . . . like Mary here."
Vanning looked at him keenly. "I
wonder-" he said. He looked back at Mary. "It can't be, it's
preposterous. Still it won't hurt to investigate your story. I've plenty to
detain you on, in any event, I've never seen a clearer case of antisocial
atavism." He moved toward the videophone.
"Better get away from that phone,
Bud," Lazarus said quickly, then added to Mary, "I won't touch my
gun, Sis. I'll use my knife."
Vanning stopped. "Very well," he
said in annoyed tones, "put away that vibroblade. I won't call from
here."
"Look again, it ain't a vibroblade.
It's steel. Messy."
Vanning turned to Mary Sperling. "I'm
leaving. If you are wise, you'll come with me." She shook her head. He
looked annoyed, shrugged, and faced Lazarus Long. "As for you, sir, your
primitive manners have led you into serious trouble. You will be arrested
shortly."
Lazarus glanced up at the ceiling
shutters. "Reminds me of a patron in Venusburg who wanted to have me
arrested."
"Well?"
"I've outlived him quite a
piece."
Vanning opened his mouth to answer-then
turned suddenly and left so quickly that the outer door barely had time to
clear the end of his nose. As the door snapped closed Lazarus said musingly,
"Hardest man to reason with I've met in years. I'll bet he never used an
unsterilized spoon in his life."
Mary looked startled, then giggled. He
turned toward her. "Glad to see you sounding perky, Mary. Kinda thought
you were upset."
"I was. I hadn't known you were listening.
I was forced to improvise as I went along."
"Did I queer it?"
"No. I'm glad you came in-thanks. But
we'll have to hurry now."
"I suppose so. I think he meant
it-there'll be a proctor looking for me soon. You, too, maybe."
"That's what I meant. So let's get
out of here."
Mary was ready to leave in scant minutes
but when they stepped out into the public hall they met a man whose brassard
and hypo kit marked him as a proctor. "Service," he said. "I'm
looking for a citizen in company with Citizen Mary Sperling. Could you direct
me?"
"Sure," agreed Lazarus.
"She lives right down there." He pointed at the far end of the
corridor. As the peace officer looked in that direction, Lazarus tapped him
carefully on the back of the head, a little to the left, with the butt of his
blaster, and caught him as be slumped.
Mary helped Lazarus wrestle the awkward
mass into her apartment. He knelt over the cop, pawed through his hypo kit,
took a loaded injector and gave him a shot. "There," he said,
"that'll keep him sleepy for a few hours." Then he blinked
thoughtfully at the hypo kit, detached it from the proctor's belt. "This
might come in handy again. Anyhow, it won't hurt to take it." As an
afterthought he removed the proctor's peace brassard and placed it, too, in his
pouch.
They left the apartment again and dropped
to the parking level. Lazarus noticed as they rolled up the ramp that Mary had
set the North Shore combination. "Where are we going?" he asked.
"The Families' Seat. No place else to
go where we won't be checked on. But we'll have to hide somewhere in the
country until dark."
Once the car was on beamed control headed
north Mary asked to be excused and caught a few minutes sleep. Lazarus watched
a few miles of scenery, then nodded himself.
They were awakened by the jangle of the
emergency alarm and by the speedster slowing to a stop. Mary reached up and
shut off the alarm. "All cars resume local control," intoned a voice.
"Proceed at speed twenty to the nearest traffic control tower for inspection.
All cars resume local control. Proceed at-"
She switched that off, too. "Well,
that's us," Lazarus said cheerfully. "Got any ideas?"
Mary did not answer. She peered out and
studied their surroundings. The steel fence separating the high-speed
controlway they were on from the uncontrolled local-traffic strip lay about
fifty yards to their right but no changeover ramp broke the fence for at least
a mile ahead-where it did, there would be, of course, the control tower where
they were ordered to undergo inspection. She started the car again, operating
it manually, and wove through stopped or slowly moving traffic while speeding
up. As they got close to the barrier Lazarus felt himself shoved into the
cushions; the car surged and lifted, clearing the barrier by inches. She set it
down rolling on the far side.
A car was approaching from the north and
they were slashing across his lane. The other car was moving no more than
ninety but its driver was taken by surprise-he had no reason to expect another
car to appear out of nowhere against him on a clear road: Mary was forced to
duck left, then right, and left again; the car slewed and reared up on its hind
wheel, writhing against the steel grip of its gyros. Mary fought it back into
control to the accompaniment of a teeth-shivering grind of herculene against
glass as the rear wheel fought for traction.
Lazarus let his jaw muscles relax and
breathed out gustily. "Whew!" he sighed. "I hope we won't have
to do that again."
Mary glanced at him, grinning. "Women
drivers make you nervous?"
"Oh, no, no, not at all! I just wish
you would warn me when something like that is about to happen."
"I didn't know myse1f," she
admitted, then went on worriedly, "I don't know quite what to do now. I
thought we could lie quiet out of town until dark . . . but I had to show my
hand a Little when I took that fence. By now somebody will be reporting it to
the tower. Mmm.
"Why wait until dark?" he asked.
"Why not just bounce over to the lake in this Dick Dare contraption of
yours and let it swim us home?"
"I don't like to," she fretted.
"I've attracted too much attention already. A trimobile faked up to look
like a groundster is handy, but . . . well, if anyone sees us taking it under
water and the proctors hear of it, somebody is going to guess the answer. Then
they'll start fishing-everything from seismo to sonar and Heaven knows what
else."
"But isn't the Seat shielded?"
"Of course. But anything that big
they can find-if they know what they're looking for and keep looking."
"You're right, of course,"
Lazarus admitted slowly. "Well, we certainly don't want to lead any nosy
proctors to the Families' Seat. Mary, I think we had better ditch your car and
get lost." He frowned. "Anywhere but the Seat."
"No, it has to be the Seat," she
answered sharply.
"Why? If you chase a fox, he-"
"Quiet a moment! I want to try
something." Lazarus shut up; Mary drove with one hand while she fumbled in
the glove compartment.
"Answer," a voice said.
"Life is short-" Mary replied.
They completed the formula.
"Listen," Mary went on hurriedly, "I'm in trouble-get a fix on
me."
"Okay."
"Is there a sub in the pool?"
"Yes."
"Good! Lock on me and home them
in." She explained hurriedly the details of what she wanted, stopping once
to ask Lazarus if he could swim. "That's all," she said at last,
"but move! We're short on minutes."
"Hold it, Mary!" the voice
protested. "You know I can't send a sub out in the daytime, certainly not
on a calm day. It's too easy to-"
"Will you, or won't you!"
A third voice cut in. "I was
listening, Mary-Ira Barstow. We'll pick you up."
"But-" objected the first voice.
"Stow it, Tommy. Just mind your
burners and home me in. See you, Mary."
"Right, Ira!"
While she had been talking to the Seat,
Mary had turned off from the local-traffic strip into the unpaved road she had
followed the night before, without slowing and apparently without looking.
Lazarus gritted his teeth and hung on. They passed a weathered sign reading
CONTAMINATED AREA-PROCEED AT YOUR OWN RISK and graced with the conventional
purple trefoil. Lazarus blinked at it and shrugged-he could not see how, at the
moment, his hazard could be increased by a neutron or so.
Mary slammed the car to a stop in a clump
of stunted trees near the abandoned road. The lake lay at their feet, just
beyond a low bluff. She unfastened her safety belt, struck a cigarette, and
relaxed. "Now we wait. It'll take at least half an hour for them to reach
us no matter how hard Ira herds it. Lazarus, do you think we were seen turning
off into here?"
"To tell the truth, Mary, I was too
busy to look."
"Well nobody ever comes here, except
a few reckless boys."
("-and girls," Lazarus added to
himself.) Then he went on aloud, "I noted a 'hot' sign back there. How
high is the count?"
"That? -Oh, pooh. Nothing to worry
about unless you decided to build a house here. We're the ones who are hot. If
we didn't have to stay close to the communicator, we-"
The communicator spoke. "Okay, Mary.
Right in front of you."
She looked startled. "Ira?"
"This is Ira speaking but I'm still
at the Seat. Pete Hardy was available in the Evanston pen, so we homed him in
on you. Quicker."
"Okay-thanks!" She was turning
to speak to Lazarus when he touched her arm.
"Look behind us."
A helicopter was touching down less than a
hundred yards from them. Three men burst out of it. They were dressed as
proctors.
Mary jerked open the door of the car and
threw off her gown in one unbroken motion. She turned and called, "Come
on!" as she thrust a hand back inside and tore a stud loose from the
instrument panel. She ran.
Lazarus unzipped the belt of his kilt and
ran out of it as he followed her to the bluff. She went dancing down it; he
came after with slightly more caution, swearing at sharp stones. The blast
shook them as the car exploded, but the bluff saved them.
They hit the water together.
The lock in the little submarine was
barely big enough for one at a time; Lazarus shoved Mary into it first and
tried to slap her when she resisted, and discovered that slapping will not work
under water. Then he spent an endless time, or so it seemed, wondering whether
or not he could breathe water. "What's a fish got that I ain't got?"
he was telling himself, when the outer latch moved under his hand and he was
able to wiggle in.
Eleven dragging seconds to blow the lock
clear of water and he had a chance to see what damage, if any, the water had
done to his blaster.
Mary was speaking urgently to the skipper.
"Listen, Pete- there are three proctors back up there with a whiny. My car
blew up in their faces just as we hit the water. But if they aren't all dead or
injured, there will be a smart boy who will figure out that there was only one
place for us to go-under water. We've got to be away from here before they take
to the air to look for us."
"It's a losing race," Pete Hardy
complained, slapping his controls as he spoke. "Even if it's only a visual
search, I'll have to get outside and stay outside the circle of total reflection
faster than he can gain altitude-and I can't." But the little sub lunged
forward reassuringly.
Mary worried about whether or not to call
the Seat from the sub. She decided not to; it would just increase the hazard
both to the sub and to the Seat itself. So she calmed herself and waited,
huddled small in a passenger seat too cramped for two. Peter Hardy swung wide
into deep water, hugging the bottom, picking up the Muskegon-Gary bottom
beacons and conned himself in blind.
By the time they surfaced in the pool
inside the Seat she had decided against any physical means of communication,
even the carefully shielded equipment at the Seat. Instead she hoped to find a
telepathic sensitive ready and available among the Families' dependents cared
for there. Sensitives were scarce among healthy members of the Howard Families
as they were in the rest of the population, but the very inbreeding which had
conserved and reinforced their abnormal longevity had also conserved and
reinforced bad genes as well as good; they had an unusually high percentage of
physical and mental defectives. Their board of genetic control plugged away at
the problem of getting rid of bad strains while conserving the longevity
strain, but for many generations they would continue to pay for their long
lives with an excess of defectives.
But almost five per cent of these
defectives were telepathically sensitive.
Mary went straight to the sanctuary in the
Seat where some of these dependents were cared for, with Lazarus Long at her
heels. She braced the matron. "Where's Little Stephen? I need him."
"Keep your voice down," the
matron scolded. "Rest hour-you can't."
"Janice, I've got to see him,"
Mary insisted. "This won't wait. I've got to get a message out to all the
Families-at once."
The matron planted her hands on her hips.
"Take it to the communication office. You can't come here disturbing my
children at all hours. I won't have it."
"Janice, please! I don't dare use
anything but telepathy. You know I wouldn't do this unnecessarily. Now take me
to Stephen."
"It wouldn't do you any good if I
did. Little Stephen has had one of his bad spells today."
"Then take me to the strongest
sensitive who can possibly work. Quickly, Janice! The safety of every member
may depend on it."
"Did the trustees send you?"
"No, no! There wasn't time!"
The matron still looked doubtful. While
Lazarus was trying to recall how long it had been since he had socked a lady,
she gave in. "All right-you can see Billy, though I shouldn't let you.
Mind you, don't tire him out." Still bristling, she led them along a
corridor past a series of cheerful rooms and into one of them. Lazarus looked
at the thing on the bed and looked away.
The matron went to a cupboard and returned
with a hypodermic injector. "Does he work under a hypnotic?" Lazarus
asked.
"No," the matron answered
coldly, "he has to have a stimulant to be aware of us at all." She
swabbed skin on the arm of the gross figure and made the injection. "Go
ahead," she said to Mary and lapsed into grim-mouthed silence.
The figure on the bed stirred, its eyes
rolled loosely, then seemed to track. It grinned. "Aunt Mary!" it
said. "Oooh! Did you bring Billy Boy something?'
"No," she said gently. "Not
this time, hon. Aunt Mary was in too much of a hurry. Next time? A surprise?
Will that do?'
"All right," it said docilely.
"That's a good boy." She reached
out and tousled its hair; Lazarus looked away again. "Now will Billy Boy
do something for Aunt Mary? A big, big favor?"
"Sure."
"Can you hear your friends?"
"Oh, sure."
"All of them?"
"Uh huh. Mostly they don't say
anything," it added.
"Call to them."
There was a very short silence. "They
heard me."
"Fine! Now listen carefully, Billy
Boy: All the Families- urgent warning! Elder Mary Sperling speaking. Under an
Action-in-Council the Administrator is about to arrest every revealed member.
The Council directed him to use 'full expedience'-and it is my sober judgment
that they are determined to use any means at all, regardless of the Covenant,
to try to squeeze out of us the so-called secret of our long lives. They even
intend to use the tortures developed by the inquisitors of the Prophets!"
Her voice broke. She stopped and pulled herself together. "Now get busy!
Find them, warn them, hide them! You may have only minutes left to save
them!"
Lazarus touched her arm and whispered; she
nodded and went on:
"If any cousin is arrested, rescue
him by any means at all! Don't try to appeal to the Covenant, don't waste time
arguing about justice rescue him! Now move!"
She stopped and then spoke in a tired,
gentle voice, "Did they hear us, Billy Boy?"
"Sure."
"Are they telling their folks?"
"Uh huh. All but Jimmie-the-Horse.
He's mad at me," it added confidentially.
"'Jimmie-the-Horse'? Where is
he?"
"Oh, where he lives."
"In Montreal," put in the
matron. "There are two other sensitives there-your message got through.
Are you finished?"
"Yes . . ." Mary said
doubtfully. "But perhaps we had better have some other Seat relay it back."
"No!" "But, Janice-"
"I won't permit it. I suppose you had
to send it but I want to give Billy the antidote now. So get out."
Lazarus took her arm. "Come on, kid.
It either got through or it didn't; you've done your best. A good job,
girl."
Mary went on to make a full report to the
Resident Secretary; Lazarus left her on business of his own. He retraced his
steps, looking for a man who was not too busy to help him; the guards at the
pool entrance were the first he found. "Service-" be began.
"Service to you," one of them
answered. "Looking for someone?" He glanced curiously at Long's
almost complete nakedness, glanced away again-how anybody dressed, or did not
dress, was a private matter.
"Sort of," admitted Lazarus.
"Say, Bud, do you know of anyone around here who would lend me a
kilt?"
"You're looking at one," the
guard answered pleasantly. "Take over, Dick-back in a minute." He led
Lazarus to bachelors' quarters, outfitted him, helped him to dry his pouch and
contents, and made no comment about the arsenal strapped to his hairy thighs.
How elders behaved was no business of his and many of them were even touchier
about their privacy than most people. He had seen Aunt Mary Sperling arrive
stripped for swimming but had not been surprised as he had heard Ira Barstow
briefing Pete for the underwater pickup; that the elder with her chose to take
a dip in the lake weighed down by the hardware did surprise him but not enough
to make him forget his manners.
"Anything else you need?' he asked.
"Do those shoes fit?
"Well enough. Thanks a lot,
Bud." Lazarus smoothed the borrowed kilt. It was a little too long for him
but it comforted him. A loin strap was okay, he supposed-if you were on Venus.
But he had never cared much for Venus customs. Damn it, a man liked to be
dressed. "I feel better," he admitted. "Thanks again. By the
way, what's your name?"
"Edmund Hardy, of the Foote
Family."
"That so? What's your line?"
"Charles Hardy and Evelyn Foote.
Edward Hardy-Alice Johnson and Terence Briggs-Eleanor Weatheral. Oliver-"
"That's enough. I sorta thought so.
You're one of my great-great-grandsons."
"Why, that's interesting,"
commented Hardy agreeably. "Gives us a sixteenth of kinship, doesn't
it-not counting convergence. May I ask your name?
"Lazarus Long."
Hardy shook his head. "Some mistake.
Not in my line."
"Try Woodrow Wilson Smith instead. It
was the one I started with."
"Oh, that one! Yes, surely. But I
thought you were . . . uh--"
"Dead? Well, I ain't."
"Oh, I didn't mean that at all,"
Hardy protested, blushing at the blunt Anglo-Saxon monosyllable. He hastily
added, "I'm glad to have run across you, Gran'ther. I've always wanted to
hear the straight of the story about the Families' Meeting in 2012."
"That was before you were born,
Ed," Lazarus said gruffly, "and don't call me 'Gran'ther.'"
"Sorry, sir-I mean 'Sorry, Lazarus.'
Is there any other service I can do for you?"
"I shouldn't have gotten shirty.
No-yes, there is, too. Where can I swipe a bite of breakfast? I was sort of
rushed this morning."
"Certainly." Hardy took him to
the bachelors' pantry, operated the autochef for him, drew coffee for his watch
mate and himself, and left. Lazarus consumed his "bite of
breakfast"-about three thousand calories of sizzling sausages, eggs, jam,
hot breads, coffee with cream, and ancillary items, for he worked on the
assumption of always topping off his reserve tanks because you never knew how
far you might have to lift before you had another chance to refuel. In due time
he sat back, belched, gathered up his dishes and shoved them in the
incinerator, then went looking for a newsbox.
He found one in the bachelors' library,
off their lounge. The room was empty save for one man who seemed to be about
the same age as that suggested by Lazarus' appearance. There the resemblance
stopped; the stranger was slender, mild in feature, and was topped off by
finespun carroty hair quite unlike the grizzled wiry bush topping Lazarus. The
stranger was bending over the news receiver with his eyes pressed to the
microviewer.
Lazarus cleared his throat loudly and
said, "Howdy."
The man jerked his head up and exclaimed,
"Oh! Sorry-I was startled. Do y' a service?"
"I was looking for the newsbox. Mind
if we throw it on the screen?"
"Not at all." The smaller man
stood up, pressed the rewind button, and set the controls for projection.
"Any particular subject?"
"I wanted to see," said Lazarus,
"if there was any news about us-the Families."
"I've been watching for that myself.
Perhaps we had better use the sound track and let it hunt."
"Okay," agreed Lazarus, stepping
up and changing the setting to audio. "What's the code word?'
"'Methuselah.'"
Lazarus punched in the setting; the
machine chattered and whined as it scanned and rejected the track speeding
through it, then it slowed with a triumphant click. "The DAILY DATA,"
it announced. "The only midwest news service subscribing to every major
grid. Leased videochannel to Luna City. Tri-S correspondents throughout the
System. First, Fast, and Most! Lincoln, Nebraska-Savant Denounces Oldsters! Dr.
Witweli Oscarsen, President Emeritus of Bryan Lyceum, calls for official
reconsideration of the status of the kin group styling themselves the 'Howard
Families.' 'It is proved,' he says. 'that these people have solved the age-old
problem of extending, perhaps indefinitely, the span of human life. For that
they are to be commended; it is a worthy and potentially fruitful research. But
their claim that their solution is no more than hereditary predisposition
defies both science and common sense. Our modern knowledge of the established
laws of generics enables us to deduce with certainty that they are withholding
from the public some secret technique or techniques whereby they accomplish
their results.
"'It is contrary to our customs to
permit scientific knowledge to be held as a monopoly for the few. When
concealing such knowledge strikes at life itself, the action becomes treason to
the race. As a citizen, I call on the Administration to act forcefully in this
matter and I remind them that the situation is not one which could possibly
have been foreseen by the wise men who drew up the Covenant and codified our
basic customs. Any custom is man-made and is therefore a finite attempt to
describe an infinity of relationships. It follows as the night from day that
any custom necessarily has its exceptions. To be bound by them in the face of
new--'"
Lazarus pressed the hold button. "Had
enough of that guy?
"Yes, I had already heard it."
The stranger sighed. "I have rarely heard such complete lack of semantic
rigor. It surprises me-Dr. Oscarsen has done sound work in the past."
"Reached his dotage," Lazarus
stated, as he told the machine to try again. "Wants what he wants when he
wants it- and thinks that constitutes a natural law."
The machine hummed and clicked and again
spoke up. "The DAILY DATA, the only midwest news-"
"Can't we scramble that
commercial?" suggested Lazarus. His companion peered at the control panel.
"Doesn't seem to be equipped for it."
"Ensenada, Baja California. Jeffers
and Lucy Weatheral today asked for special proctor protection, alleging that a
group of citizens had broken into their home, submitted them to personal
indignity and committed other asocial acts. The Weatherals are, by their own
admission, members of the notorious Howard Families and claim that the alleged
incident could be traced to that supposed fact. The district provost points out
that they have offered no proof and has taken the matter under advisement. A town
mass meeting has been announced for tonight which will air-"
The other man turned toward Lazarus.
"Cousin, did we hear what I thought we heard? That is the first case of
asocial group violence in more than twenty years . . . yet they reported it
like a breakdown in a weather integrator."
"Not quite," Lazarus answered
grimly. "The connotations of the words used in describing us were
loaded."
"Yes, true, but loaded cleverly. I
doubt if there was a word in that dispatch with an emotional index, taken alone,
higher than one point five. The newscasters are allowed two zero, you
know."
"You a psychometrician?"
"Uh, no. I should have introduced
myself. I'm Andrew Jackson Libby."
"Lazarus Long."
"I know. I was at the meeting last
night."
"'Libby . . . Libby," Lazarus
mused. "Don't seem to place it in the Families. Seems familiar,
though."
"My case is a little like
yours-"
"Changed it during the Interregnum,
eh?"
"Yes and no. I was born after the
Second Revolution. But my people had been converted to the New Crusade and had
broken with the Families and changed their name. I was a grown man before I
knew I was a Member."
"The deuce you say! That's
interesting-how did you come to be located . . . if you don't mind my
asking?"
"Well, you see I was in the Navy and
one of my superior officers-"
"Got it! Got it! I thought you were a
spaceman. You're Slipstick Libby, the Calculator."
Libby grinned sheepishly. "I have
been called that."
"Sure, sure. The last can I piloted
was equipped with your paragravitic rectifier. And the control bank used your
fractional differential on the steering jets. But I installed that myself-kinda
borrowed your patent."
Libby seemed undisturbed by the theft. His
face lit up. "You are interested in symbolic logic?"
"Only pragmatically. But look, I put
a modification on your gadget that derives from the rejected alternatives in
your thirteenth equation. It helps like this: suppose you are cruising in a
field of density 'x' with an n-order gradient normal to your course and you
want to set your optimum course for a projected point of rendezvous capital 'A'
at matching-in vector 'rho' using automatic selection the entire jump, then
if-"
They drifted entirely away from Basic
English as used by earthbound laymen. The newsbox beside them continued to
hunt; three times it spoke up, each time Libby touched the rejection button
without consciously hearing it.
"I see your point," he said at
last. "I had considered a somewhat similar modification but concluded that
it was not commercially feasible, too expensive for anyone but enthusiasts such
as yourself. But your solution is cheaper than mine."
"How do you figure that?"
"Why, it's obvious from the data.
Your device contains sixty-two moving parts, which should require, if we assume
standardized fabrication processes, a probable-" Libby hesitated
momentarily as if he were programming the problem. "-a probable optimax of
five thousand two hundred and eleven operation in manufacture assuming
null-therblig automation, whereas mine-"
Lazarus butted in. "Andy," he
inquired solicitously, "does your head ever ache?"
Libby looked sheepish again. "There's
nothing abnormal about my talent," he protested. "It is theoretically
possible to develop it in any normal person."
"Sure," agreed Lazarus,
"and you can teach a snake to tap dance once you get shoes on him. Never
mind, I'm glad to have fallen in with you. I heard stories about you way back
when you were a kid. You were in the Cosmic Construction Corps, weren't you?"
Libby nodded. "Earth-Mars Spot
Three."
"Yeah, that was it-chap on Mars gimme
the yarn. Trader at Drywater. I knew your maternal grandfather, too.
Stiffnecked old coot."
"I suppose he was."
"He was, all right. I had quite a
set-to with him at the Meeting in 2012. He had a powerful vocabulary."
Lazarus frowned slightly. "Funny thing, Andy . . . I recall that vividly,
I've always had a good memory-yet it seems to be getting harder for me to keep
things straight. Especially this last century."
"Inescapable mathematical
necessity," said Libby.
"Huh? Why?"
"Life experience is linearly
additive, but the correlation of memory impressions is an unlimited expansion.
If mankind lived as long as a thousand years, it would be necessary to invent
some totally different method of memory association in order to be eclectively
time-binding. A man would otherwise flounder helplessly in the wealth of his
own knowledge, unable to evaluate. Insanity, or feeble-mindedness."
"That so?" Lazarus suddenly
looked worried. "Then we'd better get busy on it."
"Oh, it's quite possible of
solution." "Let's work on it. Let's not get caught short."
The newsbox again demanded attention, this
time with the buzzer and flashing light of a spot bulletin: "Hearken to
the DATA, flash! Nigh Council Suspends Covenant! Under the Emergency Situation
clause of the Covenant an unprecedented Action-in-Council was announced today
directing the Administrator to detain and question all members of the so-called
Howard Families-by any means expedient! The Administrator authorized that the
following statement be released by all licensed news outlets: (I quote) 'The
suspension of the Covenant's civil guarantees applies only to the group known
as the Howard Families except that government agents are empowered to act as
circumstances require to apprehend speedily the persons affected by the
Action-in-Council. Citizens are urged to tolerate cheerfully any minor
inconvenience this may cause them; your right of privacy will be respected in
every way possible; your right of free movement may be interrupted temporarily,
but full economic restitution will be made."
"Now, Friends and Citizens, what does
this mean?-to you and you and also you! The DAILY DATA brings you now your
popular commentator, Albert Reifsnider:
"Reifsnider reporting: Service,
Citizens! There is no cause for alarm. To the average free citizen this
emergency will be somewhat less troublesome than a low-pressure minimum too big
for the weather machines. Take it easy! Relax! Help the proctors when requested
and tend to your private affairs. If inconvenienced, don't stand on
custom-cooperate with Service!
"That's what it means today. What
does it mean tomorrow and the day after that? Next year? It means that your
public servants have taken a forthright step to obtain for you the boon of a
longer and happier life! Don't get your hopes too high . . . but it looks like
the dawn of a new day. Ah, indeed it does! The jealously guarded secret of a
selfish few will soon--"
Long raised an eyebrow at Libby, then
switched it off.
"I suppose that," Libby said
bitterly, "is an example of 'factual detachment in news reporting.'"
Lazarus opened his pouch and struck a
cigarette before replying. "Take it easy, Andy. There are bad times and
good times. We're overdue for bad times. The people are on the march again . .
. this time at us."
Chapter
3
THE BURROW KNOWN as the Families' Seat
became jammed as the day wore on. Members kept trickling in, arriving by
tunnels from downstare and from Indiana. As soon as it was dark a traffic jam
developed at the underground pool entrance-sporting subs, fake ground cars such
as Mary's, ostensible surface cruisers modified to dive, each craft loaded with
refugees some half suffocated from lying in hiding on deep bottom most of the
day while waiting for a chance to sneak in.
The usual meeting room was much too small
to handle the crowd; the resident staff cleared the largest room, the
refectory, and removed partitions separating it from the main lounge. There at
midnight Lazarus climbed onto a temporary rostrum. "Okay," he
announced, "let's pipe it down. You down in front sit on the floor so the
rest can see. I was born in 1912. Anybody older?"
He paused, then added, "Nominations
for chairman speak up."
Three were proposed; before a fourth could
be offered the last man nominated got to his feet. "Axel Johnson, of the
Johnson Family. I want my name withdrawn and I suggest that the others do
likewise. Lazarus cut through the fog last night; let him handle it. This is no
time for Family politics."
The other names were withdrawn; no more
were offered. Lazarus said, "Okay if that's the way you want it. Before we
get down to arguing I want a report from the Chief Trustee. How about it, Zack?
Any of our kinfolk get nabbed?'
Zaccur Barstow did not need to identify
himself; he simply said, "Speaking for the Trustees: our report is not
complete, but we do not as yet know that any Member has been arrested. Of the
nine thousand two hundred and eighty-five revealed Members, nine thousand one
hundred and six had been reported, when I left the communication office ten
minutes ago, as having reached hiding, in other Family strongholds, or in the
homes of unrevealed Members, or elsewhere. Mary Sperling's warning was amazingly
successful in view of how short the time was from the alarm to the public
execution of the Action-in-Council-but we still have one hundred and
seventy-nine revealed cousins unreported. Probably most of these will trickle
in during the next few days. Others are probably safe but unable to get in
touch with us."
"Get to the point, Zack,"
Lazarus insisted. "Any reasonable chance that all of them will make it
home safe?"
"Absolutely none."
"Why?"
"Because three of them are known to
be in public conveyances between here and the Moon, traveling under their
revealed identities. Others we don't know about are almost certainly caught in
similar predicaments."
"Question!" A cocky little man
near the front stood up and pointed his finger at the Chief Trustee. "Were
all those Members now in jeopardy protected by hypnotic injunction?"
"No. There was no--"
"I demand to know why not!"
"Shut up!" bellowed Lazarus.
"You're out of order. Nobody's on trial here and we've got no time to
waste on spilled milk. Go ahead, Zack."
"Very well. But I will answer the
question to this extent: everyone knows that a proposal to protect our secrets
by hypnotic means was voted down at the Meeting which relaxed the 'Masquerade.'
I seem to recall that the cousin now objecting helped then to vote it
down."
"That is not true! And I insist
that--"
"PIPE DOWN!" Lazarus glared at
the heckler, then looked him over carefully. "Bud, you strike me as a
clear proof that the Foundation should 'a' bred for brains instead of
age." Lazarus looked around at the crowd. "Everybody will get his
say, but in order as recognized by the chair. If he butts in again, I'm going
to gag him with his own teeth-is my ruling sustained?"
There was a murmur of mixed shock and
approval; no one objected. Zaccur Barstow went on, "On the advice of Ralph
Schultz the trustees have been proceeding quietly for the past three months to
persuade revealed Members to undergo hypnotic instruction. We were largely
successful." He paused.
"Make it march, Zack," Lazarus
urged. "Are we covered? Or not?"
"We are not. At least two of our
cousins certain to be arrested are not so protected."
Lazarus shrugged. "That tears it.
Kinfolk, the game's over. One shot in the arm of babble juice and the
'Masquerade' is over. It's a new situation-or will be in a few hours. What do
you propose to do about it?"
In the control room of the Antipodes
Rocket Wallaby, South Flight, the telecom hummed, went spung! and stuck out a
tab like an impudent tongue. The copilot rocked forward in his gymbals, pulled
out the message and tore it off.
He read it, then reread it. "Skipper,
brace yourself."
"Trouble?"
"Read it."
The captain did so, and whistled.
"Bloody! I've never arrested anybody. I don't believe I've even seen
anybody arrested. How do we start?"
"I bow to your superior
authority."
"That so?" the captain said in
nettled tones. "Now that you're through bowing you can tool aft and make
the arrest."
"Uh? That's not what I meant. You're
the bloke with the authority. I'll relieve you at the conn."
"You didn't read me. I'm delegating
the authority. Carry out your orders."
"Just a moment, Al, I didn't sign up
for--"
"Carry out your orders!"
"Aye aye, sir!"
The copilot went aft. The ship had
completed its reentry, was in its long, flat, screaming approach-glide; he was
able to walk-he wondered what an arrest in free-fall would be like? Snag him
with a butterfly net? He located the passenger by seat check, touched his arm.
"Service, sir. There's been a clerical error. May I see your ticket?"
"Why, certainly."
"Would you mind stepping back to the
reserve stateroom? It's quieter there and we can both sit down."
"Not at all."
Once they were in the private compartment
the chief officer asked the passenger to sit down, then looked annoyed.
"Stupid of me!-I've left my lists in the control room." He turned and
left. As the door slid to behind him, the passenger heard an unexpected click.
Suddenly suspicious, he tried the door. It was locked.
Two proctors came for him at Melbourne. As
they escorted him through the skyport he could hear remarks from a curious and
surprisingly unfriendly crowd: "There's one of the laddies now!"
"Him? My word, he doesn't look old." "What price ape glands?"
"Don't stare, Herbert." "Why not? Not half bad enough for
him."
They took him to the office of the Chief
Provost, who invited him to sit down with formal civility. "Now then,
sir," the Provost said with a slight local twang, "if you will help
us by letting the orderly make a slight injection in your arm--"
"For what purpose?"
"You want to be socially cooperative,
I'm sure. It won't hurt you."
"That's beside the point. I insist on
an explanation. I am a citizen of the United States."
"So you are, but the Federation has
concurrent jurisdiction in any member state-and I am acting under its
authority. Now bare your arm, please."
"I refuse. I stand on my civil
rights."
"Grab him, lads."
It took four men to do it. Even before the
injector touched his skin, his jaw set and a look of sudden agony came into his
face. He then sat quietly, listlessly, while the peace officers waited for the
drug to take effect. Presently the Provost gently rolled back one of the
prisoner's eyelids and said, "I think he's ready. He doesn't weigh over
ten stone; it has hit him rather fast. Where's that list of questions?"
A deputy handed it to him; he began,
"Horace Foote, do you hear me?'
The man's lips twitched, he seemed about
to speak. His mouth opened and blood gushed down his chest.
The Provost bellowed and grabbed the
prisoner's head, made quick examination. "Surgeon! He's bitten his tongue
half out of his head!"
The captain of the Luna City Shuttle
Moonbeam scowled at the message in his hand. "What child's play is
this?" He glared at his third officer. "Tell me that, Mister."
The third officer studied the overhead.
Fuming, the captain held the message at arm's length, peered at it and read
aloud: "-imperative that subject persons be prevented from doing
themselves injury. You are directed to render them unconscious without warning
them." He shoved the flimsy away from him. "What do they think I'm
running? Coventry? Who do they think they are?-telling me in my ship what I
must do with my passengers! I won't-so help me, I won't! There's no rule
requiring me to . . . is there, Mister?"
The third officer went on silently
studying the ship's structure.
The captain stopped pacing. "Purser!
Purser! Why is that man never around when I want him?"
"I'm here, Captain."
"About time!"
"I've been here all along, sir."
"Don't argue with me. Here-attend to
this." He handed the dispatch to the purser and left.
A shipfitter, supervised by the purser,
the hull officer, and the medical officer, made a slight change in the
air-conditioning ducts to one cabin; two worried passengers sloughed off their
cares under the influence of a nonlethal dose of sleeping gas.
"Another report, sir."
"Leave it," the Administrator
said in a tired voice.
"And Councilor Bork Vanning presents
his compliments and requests an interview."
"Tell him that I regret that I am too
busy."
"He insists on seeing you, sir."
Administrator Ford answered snappishly,
"Then you may tell the Honorable Mr. Vanning that be does not give orders
in this office!" The aide said nothing; Administrator Ford pressed his
fingertips wearily against his forehead and went on slowly, "Na, Gerry,
don't tell him that. Be diplomatic but don't let him in."
"Yes, sir."
When he was alone, the Administrator
picked up the report. His eye skipped over official heading, date line, and
file number: "Synopsis of Interview with Conditionally Proscribed Citizen
Arthur Sperling, full transcript attached. Conditions of Interview: Subject
received normal dosage of neosco., having previously received unmeasured dosage
of gaseous hypnotal. Antidote--"How the devil could you cure subordinates
of wordiness? Was there something in the soul of a career civil servant that
cherished red tape? His eye skipped on down:
"-stated that his name was Arthur
Sperling of the Foote Family and gave his age as one hundred thirty-seven
years. (Subject's apparent age is forty-five plus-or-minus four: see bio report
attached.) Subject admitted that he was a member of the Howard Families. He
stated that the Families numbered slightly more than one hundred thousand
members. He was asked to correct this and it was suggested to him that the
correct number was nearer ten thousand. He persisted in his original
statement."
The Administrator stopped and reread this
part.
He skipped on down, looking for the key
part: "-insisted that his long life was the result of his ancestry and had
no other cause. Admitted that artificial means had been used to preserve his
youthful appearance but maintained firmly that his life expectancy was
inherent, not acquired. It was suggested to him that his elder relatives had
subjected him without his knowledge to treatment in his early youth to increase
his life span. Subject admitted possibility. On being pressed for names of
persons who might have performed, or might be performing, such treatments he
returned to his original statement that no such treatments exist.
"He gave the names (surprise
association procedure) and in some cases the addresses of nearly two hundred
members of his kin group not previously identified as such in our records.
(List attached) His strength ebbed under this arduous technique and he sank
into full apathy from which he could not be roused by any stimuli within the
limits of his estimated tolerance (see Bio Report).
"Conclusions under Expedited
Analysis, Kelly-Holmes Approximation Method: Subject does not possess and does
not believe in the Search Object. Does not remember experiencing Search Object
but is mistaken. Knowledge of Search Object is limited to a small group, of the
order of twenty. A member of this star group will be located through not more
than triple-concatenation elimination search. (Probability of unity, subject to
assumptions: first, that topologic social space is continuous and is included
in the physical space of the Western Federation and, second, that at least one
concatenative path exists between apprehended subjects and star group. Neither
assumption can be verified as of this writing, but the first assumption is
strongly supported by statistical analysis of the list of names supplied by
Subject of previously unsuspected members of Howard kin group, which analysis
also supports Subject's estimate of total size of group, and second assumption
when taken negatively postulates that star group holding Search Object has been
able to apply it with no social-space of contact, an absurdity.)
"Estimated Time for Search: 71 hrs,
plus-or-minus 20 hrs. Prediction but not time estimate vouched for by cognizant
bureau. Time estimate will be re--"
Ford slapped the report on a stack
cluttering his old-fashioned control desk. The dumb fools! Not to recognize a
negative report when they saw one-yet they called themselves psychographers!
He buried his face in his hands in utter
weariness and frustration.
Lazarus rapped on the table beside him,
using the butt of his blaster as a gavel. "Don't interrupt the
speaker," he boomed, then added, "Go ahead but cut it short."
Bertram Hardy nodded curtly. "I say
again, these mayflies we see around us have no rights that we of the Families
are bound to respect. We should deal with them with stea1th, with cunning, with
guile, and when we eventually consolidate our position . . . with force! We are
no more obligated to respect their welfare than a hunter is obliged to shout a
warning at his quarry. The--"
There was a catcall from the rear of the
room. Lazarus again banged for order and tried to spot the source. Hardy
ploughed steadily on. "The so-called human race has split in two; it is
time we admitted it. On one side, Homo vivens, ourselves . . . on the
other-Homo moriturus! With the great lizards, with the sabertooth tiger and the
bison, their day is done. We would no more mix our living blood with theirs
than we would attempt to breed with apes. I say temporize with them, tell them
any tale, assure them that we will bathe them in the fountain of youth-gain
time, so that when these two naturally antagonistic races join battle, as they
inevitably must, the victory will be ours!"
There was no applause but Lazarus could
see wavering uncertainty in many faces. Bertram Hardy's ideas ran counter to
thought patterns of many years of gentle living yet his words seemed to ring
with destiny. Lazarus did not believe in destiny; he believed in . . . well,
never mind-but he wondered how Brother Bertram would look with both arms
broken.
Eve Barstow got up. "If that is what
Bertram means by the survival of the fittest," she said bitterly,
"I'll go live with the asocials in Coventry. However, he has offered a
plan; I'll have to offer another plan if I won't take his. I won't accept any
plan which would have us live at the expense of our poor transient neighbors.
Furthermore it is clear to me now that our mere presence, the simple fact of
our rich heritage of life, is damaging to the spirit of our poor neighbor. Our
longer years and richer opportunities make his best efforts seem futile to
him-any effort save a hopeless struggle against an appointed death. Our mere
presence saps his strength, ruins his judgment, fills him with panic fear of
death.
"So I propose a plan. Let's disclose
ourselves, tell all the truth, and ask for our share of the Earth, some little
corner where we may live apart. If our poor friends wish to surround it with a
great barrier like that around Coventry, so be it-it is better that we never
meet face to face."
Some expressions of doubt changed to
approval. Ralph Schultz stood up. "Without prejudice to Eve's basic plan,
I must advise you that it is my professional opinion that the psychological
insulation she proposes cannot be accomplished that easily. As long as we're on
this planet they won't be able to put us out of their minds. Modern
communications-"
"Then we must move to another
planet!" she retorted.
"Where?" demanded Bertram Hardy.
"Venus? I'd rather live in a steam bath. Mars? Worn-out and
worthless."
"We will rebuild it," she
insisted.
"Not in your lifetime nor mine. No,
my dear Eve, your tenderheartedness sounds well but it doesn't make sense.
There is only one planet in the System fit to live on-we're standing on
it." Something in Bertram Hardy's words set off a response in Lazarus
Long's brain, then the thought escaped him. Something . . . something that he
had heard of said just a day or two ago . . . or was it longer than? Somehow it
seemed to be associated with his first trip out into space, too, well over a
century ago. Thunderation! it was maddening to have his memory play tricks on
him like that--
Then he had it-the starship! The
interstellar ship they were putting the finishing touches on out there between
Earth and Luna. "Folks," he drawled, "before we table this idea
of moving to another planet, let's consider all the possibilities." He
waited until he had their full attention. "Did you ever stop to think that
not all the planets swing around this one Sun?"
Zaccur Barstow broke the silence.
"Lazarus . . . are you making a serious suggestion?"
"Dead serious."
"It does not sound so. Perhaps you
had better explain."
"I will." Lazarus faced the
crowd. "There's a spaceship hanging out there in the sky, a roomy thing,
built to make the long jumps between stars. Why don't we take it and go looking
for our own piece of real estate?"
Bertram Hardy was first to recover.
"I don't know whether our chairman is lightening the gloom with another of
his wisecracks or not, but, assuming that he is serious, I'll answer. My
objection to Mars applies to this wild scheme ten times over. I understand that
the reckless fools who are actually intending to man that ship expect to make
the jump in about a century -then maybe their grandchildren will find
something, or maybe they won't. Either way, I'm not interested. I don't care to
spend a century locked up in a steel tank, nor do I expect to live that long. I
won't buy it."
"Hold it," Lazarus told him.
"Where's Andy Libby?"
"Here," Libby answered! standing
up.
"Come on down front. Slipstick, did
you have anything to do with designing the new Centarus ship?"
"No. Neither this one nor the first
one."
Lazarus spoke to the crowd. "That
settles it. If that ship didn't have Slipstick's finger in the drive design,
then she's not as fast as she could be, not by a good big coefficient.
Slipstick, better get busy on the problem, son. We're likely to need a
solution."
"But, Lazarus, you mustn't assume
that--"
"Aren't there theoretical
possibilities?"
"Well, you know there are,
but--"
"Then get that carrot top of yours
working on it."
"Well . . . all right." Libby
blushed as pink as his hair.
"Just a moment, Lazarus." It was
Zaccur Barstow. "I like this proposal and I think we should discuss it at
length not let ourselves be frightened off by Brother Bertram's distaste for
it. Even if Brother Libby fails to find a better means of propulsion-and
frankly, I don't think he will; I know a little something of field
mechanics-even so, I shan't let a century frighten me. By using cold-rest and
manning the ship in shifts, most of us should be able to complete one hop.
There is--"
"What makes you think," demanded
Bertram Hardy, "that they'll let us man the ship anyhow?"
"Bert," Lazarus said coldly,
"address the chair when you want to sound off. You're not even a Family
delegate. Last warning."
"As I was saying," Barstow
continued, "there is an appropriateness in the long-lived exploring the
stars. A mystic might call it our true vocation." He pondered. "As
for the ship Lazarus suggested; perhaps they will not let us have that . . .
but the Families are rich. If we need a starship-or ships-we can build them, we
can pay for them. I think we had better hope that they will let us do this . .
. for it may be that there is no way, not another way of any sort, out of our
dilemma which does not include our own extermination."
Barstow spoke these last words softly and
slowly, with great sadness. They bit into the company like damp chill. To most
of them the problem was so new as not yet to be real; no one had voiced the
possible consequence of failing to find a solution satisfactory to the
short-lived majority. For their senior trustee to speak soberly of his fear
that the Families might be exterminated-hunted down and killed-stirred up in
each one the ghost they never mentioned.
"Well," Lazarus said briskly
when the silence had grown painful, "before we work this idea over, let's
hear what other plan anyone has to offer. Speak up."
A messenger hurried in and spoke to Zaccur
Barstow. He looked startled and seemed to ask to have the message repeated. He
then hurried across the rostrum to Lazarus, whispered to him. Lazarus looked
startled. Barstow hurried out.
Lazarus looked back at the crowd.
"We'll take a recess," he announced. "Give you time to think
about other plans and time for a stretch and a smoke." He reached for his
pouch.
"What's up?" someone called out.
Lazarus struck a cigarette, took a long
drag, let it drift out. "We'll have to wait and see," he said.
"I don't know. But at least half a dozen of the plans put forward tonight
we won't have to bother to vote on. The situation has changed again-how much, I
couldn't say."
"What do you mean?"
"Well," Lazarus drawled,
"it seems the Federation Administrator wanted to talk to Zack Barstow
right away. He asked for him by name . . . and he called over our secret
Families' circuit."
"Huh? That's impossible!"
"Yep. So is a baby, son."
Chapter
4
ZACCUR BARSTOW TRIED to quiet himself down
as he hurried into the phone booth.
At the other end of the same videophone
circuit the Honorable Slayton Ford was doing the same thing-trying to calm his
nerves. He did not underrate himself. A long and brilliant public career
crowned by years as Administrator for the Council and under the Covenant of the
Western Administration had made Ford aware of his own superior ability and
unmatched experience; no ordinary man could possibly make him feel at a disadvantage
in negotiation.
But this was different.
What would a man be like who had lived
more than two ordinary lifetimes? Worse than that-a man who had had four or
five times the adult experience that Ford himself had had? Slayton Ford knew
that his own opinions had changed and changed again since his own boyhood; he
knew that the boy he had been, or even the able young man he had been, would be
no match for the mature man he had become. So what would this Barstow be like?
Presumably he was the most able, the most astute, of a group all of whom had
had much more experience than Ford could possibly have-how could he guess such
a man's evaluations, intentions, ways of thinking, his possible resources?
Ford was certain of only one thing: he did
not intend to trade Manhattan Island for twenty-four dollars and a case of
whisky, nor sell humanity's birthright for a mess of pottage.
He studied Barstow's face as the image
appeared in his phone. A good face and strong . . . it would be useless to try
to bully this man. And the man looked young-why, he looked younger than Ford
himself! The subconscious image of the Administrator's own stern and implacable
grandfather faded out of his mind and his tension eased off. He said quietly,
"You are Citizen Zaccur Barstow?"
"Yes, Mister Administrator."
"You are chief executive of the
Howard Families?"
"I am the current speaker trustee of
our Families' Foundation. But I am responsible to my cousins rather than in
authority over them."
Ford brushed it aside. "I assume that
your position carries with it leadership. I can't negotiate with a hundred
thousand people."
Barstow did not blink. He saw the power
play in the sudden admission that the administration knew the true numbers of
the Families and discounted it. He had already adjusted himself to the shock of
learning that the Families' secret headquarters was no longer secret and the
still more upsetting fact that the Administrator knew how to tap into their
private communication system; it simply proved that one or more Members had
been caught and forced to talk.
So it was now almost certain that the
authorities already knew every important fact about the Families.
Therefore it was useless to try to
bluff-just the same, don't volunteer any information; they might not have all
the facts this soon.
Barstow answered without noticeable pause.
"What is it you wish to discuss with me, sir?"
"The policy of the Administration
toward your kin group. The welfare of yourself and your relatives."
Barstow shrugged. "What can we
discuss? The Covenant has been tossed aside and you have been given power to do
as you like with us-to squeeze a secret out of us that we don't have. What can
we do but pray for mercy?"
"Please!" The Administrator
gestured his annoyance. "Why fence with me? We have a problem, you and I.
Let's discuss it openly and try to reach a solution. Yes?"
Barstow answered slowly, "I would
like to . . . and I believe that you would like to, also. But the problem is
based on a false assumption, that we, the Howard Families, know how to lengthen
human life. We don't."
"Suppose I tell you that I know there
is no such secret?"
"Mmm . . . I would like to believe
you. But how can you reconcile that with the persecution of my people? You've
been harrying us like rats."
Ford made a wry face. "There is an
old, old story about a theologian who was asked to reconcile the doctrine of
Divine mercy with the doctrine of infant damnation. 'The Almighty,' he
explained, 'finds it necessary to do things in His official and public capacity
which in His private and personal capacity He deplores.'"
Barstow smiled in spite of himself.
"I see the analogy. Is it actually pertinent?"
"I think it is."
"So. You didn't call me simply to
make a headsman's apology?"
"No. I hope not. You keep in touch
with politics? I'm sure you must; your position would require it." Barstow
nodded; Ford explained at length:
Ford's administration had been the longest
since the signing of the Covenant; he had lasted through four Councils. Nevertheless
his control was now so shaky that he could not risk forcing a vote of
confidence-certainly not over the Howard Families. On that issue his nominal
majority was already a minority. If he refused the present decision of the
Council, forced it to a vote of confidence, Ford would be out of office and the
present minority leader would take over as administrator. "You follow me?
I can either stay in office and try to cope with this problem while restricted
by a Council directive with which I do not agree . . . or I can drop out and
let my successor handle it."
"Surely you're not asking my
advice?"
"No, no! Not on that. I've made my
decision. The Action-in-Council would have been carried out in any case, either
by me or by Mr. Vanning-so I decided to do it. The question is: will I have
your help, or will I not?"
Barstow hesitated, while rapidly reviewing
Ford's political career in his mind. The earlier part of Ford's long
administration had been almost a golden age of statesmanship. A wise and practical
man, Ford had shaped into workable rules the principles of human freedom set
forth by Novak in the language of the Covenant. It had been a period of good
will, of prosperous expansion, of civilizing processes which seemed to be
permanent, irreversible.
Nevertheless a setback had come and
Barstow understood the reasons at least as well as Ford did. Whenever the
citizens fix their attention on one issue to the exclusion of others, the
situation is ripe for scalawags, demagogues, ambitious men on horseback. The
Howard Families, in all innocence, had created the crisis in public morals from
which they now suffered, through their own action, taken years earlier, in
letting the short-lived learn of their existence. It mattered not at all that
the "secret" did not exist; the corrupting effect did exist. Ford at
least understood the true situation- "We'll help," Barstow answered
suddenly. "Good. What do you suggest?"
Barstow chewed his lip. "Isn't there
some way you can stall off this drastic action, this violation of the Covenant
itself?"
Ford shook his head. "It's too
late."
"Even if you went before the public
and told the citizens, face to face, that you knew that-"
Ford cut him short. "I wouldn't last
in office long enough to make the speech. Nor would I be believed. Besides
that- understand me clearly, Zaccur Barstow-no matter what sympathy I may have
personally for you and your people, I would not do so if I could. This whole
matter is a cancer eating into vitals of our society; it must be settled. I
have had my hand forced, true . . . but there is no turning back. It must be
pressed on to a solution."
In at least one respect Barstow was a wise
man; he knew that another man could oppose him and not be a villain.
Nevertheless he protested, "My people are being persecuted."
"Your people," Ford said
forcefully, "are a fraction of a tenth of one per cent of all the people .
. . and I must find a solution for all! I've called on you to find out if you
have any suggestions toward a solution for everyone. Do you?"
"I'm not sure," Barstow answered
slowly. "Suppose I concede that you must go ahead with this ugly business
of arresting my people, of questioning them by unlawful means-I suppose I have
no choice about that-"
"You have no choice. Neither have
I." Ford frowned. "It will be carried out as humanely as I can manage
it-I am not a free agent."
"Thank you. But, even though you tell
me it would be useless for you yourself to go to the people, nevertheless you
have enormous propaganda means at your disposal. Would it be possible, while we
stall along, to build up a campaign to convince the people of the true facts?
Prove to them that there is no secret?" Ford answered, "Ask yourself:
will it work?"
Barstow sighed. "Probably not."
"Nor would I consider it a solution
even if it would! The people-even my trusted assistants-are clinging to their
belief in a fountain of youth because the only alternative is too bitter to
think about. Do you know what it would mean to them? For them to believe the bald
truth?"
"Go on?'
"Death has been tolerable to me only
because Death has been the Great Democrat, treating all alike. But now Death
plays favorites. Zaccur Barstow, can you understand the bitter, bitter jealousy
of the ordinary man of-oh, say 'fifty'- who looks on one of your sort? Fifty
years . . . twenty of them he is a child, he is well past thirty before he is
skilled in his profession. He is forty before he is established and respected.
For not more than the last ten years of his fifty he has really amounted to
something."
Ford leaned forward in the screen and
spoke with sober emphasis: "And now, when he has reached his goal, what is
his prize? His eyes are failing him, his bright young strength is gone, his
heart and wind are 'not what they used to be.' He is not senile yet . . . but
he feels the chill of the first frost. He knows what is in store for him. He
knows-he knows!
"But it was inevitable and each man
learned to be resigned to it."
"Now you come along," Ford went
on bitterly. "You shame him in his weakness, you humble him before his
children. He dares not plan for the future; you blithely undertake plans that
will not mature for fifty years-for a hundred. No matter what success he has
achieved, what excellence he has attained, you will catch up with him, pass
him-outlive him. In his weakness you are kind to him.
"Is it any wonder that he hates
you?"
Barstow raised his head wearily. "Do
you hate me, Slayton Ford?"
"No. No, I cannot afford to hate
anyone. But I can tell you this," Ford added suddenly, "had there
been a secret, I would have it out of you if I had to tear you to pieces!"
"Yes. I understand that."
Barstow paused to think. "There is little that we of the Howard Families
can do. We did not plan it this way; it was planned for us. But there is one
thing we can offer."
"Yes?"
Barstow explained.
Ford shook his head. "Medically what
you suggest is feasible and I have no doubt that a half interest in your
heritage would lengthen the span of human life. But even if women were willing
to accept the germ plasm of your men-I do not say that they would-it would be
psychic death for all other men. There would be an outbreak of frustration and
hatred that would split the human race to ruin. No, no matter what we wish, our
customs are what they are. We can't breed men like animals; they won't stand
for it."
"I know it," agreed Barstow,
"but it is all we have to offer . . . a share in our fortune through
artificial impregnation."
"Yes. I suppose I should thank you
but I feel no thanks and I shan't. Now let's be practical. Individually you old
ones are doubtless honorable, lovable men. But as a group you are as dangerous
as carriers of plague. So you must be quarantined."
Barstow nodded. "My cousins and I had
already reached that conclusion."
Ford looked relieved. "I'm glad
you're being sensible about it."
"We can't help ourselves. Well? A
segregated colony? Some remote place that would be a Coventry of our own?
Madagascar, perhaps? Or we might take the British Isles, build them up again
and spread from there into Europe as the radioactivity died down."
Ford shook his head. "Impossible.
That would simply leave the problem for my grandchildren to solve. By that time
you and yours would have grown in strength; you might defeat us. No, Zaccur
Barstow, you and your kin must leave this planet entirely!"
Barstow looked bleak. "I knew it
would come to that. Well where shall we go?"
"Take your choice of the Solar
System. Anywhere you like."
"But where? Venus is no prize, but
even if we chose it, would they accept us? The Venerians won't take orders from
Earth; that was settled in 2020. Yes, they now accept screened immigrants under
the Four Planets Convention but would they accept a hundred thousand whom Earth
found too dangerous to keep? I doubt it."
"So do I. Better pick another
planet."
"What planet? In the whole system
there is not another body that will support human life as it is. It would take
almost superhuman effort, even with unlimited money and the best of modern
engineering, to make the most promising of them fit for habitation."
"Make the effort. We will be generous
with help."
"I am sure you would. But is that any
better solution in the long run than giving us a reservation on Earth? Are you
going to put a stop to space travel?"
Ford sat up suddenly. "Oh! I see your
thought. I had not followed it through, but let's face it. Why not? Would it
not be better to give up space travel than to let this situation degenerate
into open war? It was given up once before."
"Yes, when the Venerians threw off
their absentee landlords. But it started up again and Luna City is rebuilt and
ten times more tonnage moves through the sky than ever did before. Can you stop
it? If you can, will it stay stopped?"
Ford turned it over and over in his mind.
He could not stop space travel, no administration could. But could an interdict
be placed on whatever planet these oldsters were shipped to? And would it help?
One generation, two, three . . . what difference would it make? Ancient Japan
had tried some solution like that; the foreign devils had come sailing in
anyhow. Cultures could not be kept apart forever, and when they did come in
contact, the hardier displaced the weaker; that was a natural law.
A permanent and effective quarantine was
impossible. That left only one answer-an ugly one. But Ford was toughminded; he
could accept what was necessary. He started making plans, Barstow's presence in
the screen forgotten. Once he gave the Chief Provost the location of the Howard
Families headquarters it should be reduced in an hour, two at the most unless
they had extraordinary defenses-but anywise it was just a matter of time. From
those who would be arrested at their headquarters it should be possible to
locate and arrest every other member of their group. With luck he would have
them all in twenty-four to forty-eight hours.
The only point left undecided in his mind
was whether to liquidate them all, or simply to sterilize them. Either would be
a final solution and there was no third solution. But which was the more
humane?
Ford knew that this would end his career.
He would leave office in disgrace, perhaps be sent to Coventry, but he gave it
no thought; he was so constituted as to be unable to weigh his own welfare
against his concept of his public duty.
Barstow could not read Ford's mind but he
did sense that Ford had reached a decision and he surmised correctly how bad
that decision must be for himself and his kin. Now was the time, he decided, to
risk his one lone trump.
"Mister Administrator---"
"Eh? Oh, sorry! I was
preoccupied." That was a vast understatement; he was shockingly
embarrassed to find himself still facing a man he had just condemned to death.
He gathered formality about him like a robe. "Thank you, Zaccur Barstow,
for talking with me. I am sorry that-"
"Mister Administrator!"
"Yes?"
"I propose that you move us entirely
out of the Solar System."
"What?" Ford blinked. "Are
you speaking seriously?"
Barstow spoke rapidly, persuasively,
explaining Lazarus Long's half-conceived scheme, improvising details as he went
along, skipping over obstacles and emphasizing advantages.
"It might work," Ford at last
said slowly. "There are difficulties you have not mentioned, political
difficulties and a terrible hazard of time. Still, it might." He stood up.
"Go back to your people. Don't spring this on them yet. I'll talk with you
later."
Barstow walked back slowly while wondering
what he could tell the Members. They would demand a full report; technically he
had no right to refuse. But he was strongly inclined to cooperate with the
Administrator as long as there was any chance of a favorable outcome. Suddenly
making up his mind, he turned, went to his office, and sent for Lazarus.
"Howdy, Zack," Long said as he
came in. "How'd the palaver go?"
"Good and bad," Barstow replied.
"Listen-" He gave him a brief, accurate résumé. "Can you go back
in there and tell them something that will hold them?"
"Mmm . . . reckon so."
"Then do it and hurry back
here."
They did not like the stall Lazarus gave
them. They did not want to keep quiet and they did not want to adjourn the
meeting. "Where is Zaccur?"-"We demand a report!"-"Why
all the mystification?"
Lazarus shut them up with a roar.
"Listen to me, you damned idiots! Zack'll talk when he's ready-don't
joggle his elbow. He knows what he's doing."
A man near the back stood up. "I'm
going home!"
"Do that," Lazarus urged
sweetly. "Give my love to the proctors."
The man looked startled and sat down.
"Anybody else want to go home?"
demanded Lazarus. "Don't let me stop you. But it's time you bird-brained
dopes realized that you have been outlawed. The only thing that stands between
you and the proctors is Zack Barstow's ability to talk sweet to the Administrator.
So do as you like the meeting's adjourned."
"Look, Zack," said Lazarus a few
minutes later, "let's get this straight. Ford is going to use his
extraordinary powers to help us glom onto the big ship and make a getaway. Is
that right?"
"He's practically committed to
it."
"Hmmm- He'll have to do this while
pretending to the Council that everything he does is just a necessary step in
squeezing the 'secret' out of us-he's going to double-cross 'em. That
right?"
"I hadn't thought that far ahead. I-"
"But that's true, isn't it?"
"Well . . . yes, it must be
true."
"Okay. Now, is our boy Ford bright
enough to realize what he is letting himself in for and tough enough to go
through with it?"
Barstow reviewed what he knew of Ford and
added his impressions from the interview. "Yes," he decided, "he
knows and he's strong enough to face it."
"All right. Now how about you, pal?
Are you up to it, too?" Lazarus' voice was accusing.
"Me? What do you mean?"
"You're planning on double-crossing
your crowd, too, aren't you? Have you got the guts to go through with it when
the going gets tough?"
"I don't understand you,
Lazarus," Barstow answered worriedly. "I'm not planning to deceive
anyone-at least, no member of the Families."
"Better look at your cards
again," Lazarus went on remorselessly. "Your part of the deal is to
see to it that every man, woman and child takes part in this exodus. Do you
expect to sell the idea to each one of them separately and get a hundred
thousand people to agree? Unanimously? Shucks, you couldn't get that many to
whistle 'Yankee Doodle' unanimously."
"But they will have to agree,"
protested Barstow. "They have no choice. We either emigrate, or they hunt
us down and kill us. I'm certain that is what Ford intends to do. And he
will."
"Then why didn't you walk into the
meeting and tell 'em that? Why did you send me in to give 'em a stall?"
Barstow rubbed a hand across his eyes.
"I don't know."
"I'll tell you why," continued
Lazarus. "You think better with your hunches than most men do with the
tops of their minds. You sent me in there to tell 'em a tale because you knew
damn well the truth wouldn't serve. If you told 'em it was get out or get
killed, some would get panicky and some would get stubborn. And some old-woman-in-kilts
would decide to go home and stand on his Covenant rights. Then he'd spill the
scheme before it ever dawned on him that the government was playing for keeps.
That's right, isn't it?"
Barstow shrugged and laughed unhappily.
"You're right. I didn't have it figured out but you're absolutely
right."
"But you did have it figured
out," Lazarus assured him. "You had the right answers. Zack, I like
your hunches; that's why I'm stringing along. All right, you and Ford are
planning to pull a whizzer on every man jack on this globe-I'm asking you
again: have you got the guts to see it through?"
Chapter
5
THE MEMBERS STOOD AROUND in groups,
fretfully. "I can't understand it," the Resident Archivist was saying
to a worried circle around her. "The Senior Trustee never interfered in my
work before. But he came bursting into my office with that Lazarus Long behind
him and ordered me out."
"What did he say?" asked one of
her listeners.
"Well, I said, 'May I do you a
service, Zaccur Barstow? and be said, 'Yes, you may. Get out and take your
girls with you.' Not a word of ordinary courtesy!"
"A lot you've got to complain
about," another voice added gloomily. It was Cecil Hedrick, of the Johnson
Family, chief communications engineer. "Lazarus Long paid a call on me,
and he was a damned sight less polite."
"What did he do?"
"He walks into the communication cell
and tells me he is going to take over my board-Zaccur's orders. I told him that
nobody could touch my burners but me and my operators, and anyhow, where was
his authority? You know what he did? You won't believe it but he pulled a
blaster on me."
"You don't mean it!"
"I certainly do. I tell you, that man
is dangerous. He ought to go for psycho adjustment. He's an atavism if I ever
saw one."
Lazarus Long's face stared out of the
screen into that of the Administrator. "Got it all canned?" he
demanded.
Ford cut the switch on the facsimulator on
his desk. "Got it all," he confirmed.
"Okay," the image of Lazarus
replied. "I'm clearing." As the screen went blank Ford spoke into his
interoffice circuit.
"Have the High Chief Provost report
to me at once-in corpus."
The public safety boss showed up as
ordered with an expression on his lined face in which annoyance struggled with
discipline. He was having the busiest night of his career, yet the Old Man had
sent orders to report in the flesh. What the devil were viewphones for, anyway,
he thought angrily-and asked himself why he had ever taken up police work. He
rebuked his boss by being coldly formal and saluting unnecessarily. "You
sent for me, sir."
Ford ignored it. "Yes, thank you.
Here." He pressed a stud a film spool popped out of the facsimulator.
"This is a complete list of the Howard Families. Arrest them."
"Yes, sir." The Federation
police chief stared at the spool and debated whether or not to ask how it had
been obtained-it certainly hadn't come through his office . . . did the Old Man
have an intelligence service he didn't even know about?
"It's alphabetical, but keyed geographically,"
the Administrator was saying. "After you put it through sorters, send
the-no, bring the original back to me. You can stop the psycho interviews,
too," he added. "Just bring them in and hold them. I'll give you more
instructions later."
The High Chief Provost decided that this
was not a good time to show curiosity. "Yes, sir." He saluted stiffly
and left.
Ford turned back to his desk controls and
sent word that he wanted to see the chiefs of the bureaus of land resources and
of transportation control. On afterthought he added the chief of the bureau of
consumption logistics.
Back in the Families' Seat a rump session
of the trustees was meeting; Barstow was absent. "I don't like it,"
Andrew Weatherall was saying. "I could understand Zaccur deciding to delay
reporting to the Members but I had supposed that he simply wanted to talk to us
first. I certainly did expect him to consult us. What do you make of it,
Philip?"
Philip Hardy chewed his lip. "I don't
know. Zaccur's got a head on his shoulders . . . but it certainly seems to me
that he should have called us together and advised with us. Has he spoken with
you, Justin?"
"No, he has not," Justin Foote
answered frigidly.
"Well, what should we do? We can't
very well call him in and demand an accounting unless we are prepared to oust
him from office and if he refuses. I, for one, am reluctant to do that."
They were still discussing it when the
proctors arrived.
Lazarus heard the commotion and correctly
interpreted it-no feat, since he had information that his brethren lacked. He
was aware that he should submit peacefully and conspicuously to arrest-set a
good example. But old habits die hard; he postponed the inevitable by ducking
into the nearest men's 'fresher.
It was a dead end. He glanced at the air
duct-no, too small. While thinking he fumbled in his pouch for a cigarette; his
hand found a strange object, he pulled it out. It was the brassard he bad
"borrowed" from the proctor in Chicago.
When the proctor working point of the
mop-squad covering that wing of the Seat stuck his head into that 'fresher, he
found another "proctor" already there. "Nobody in here,"
announced Lazarus. "I've checked it."
"How the devil did you get ahead of
me?'
"Around your flank. Stoney Island Tunnel
and through their air vents." Lazarus trusted that the real cop would be
unaware that there was no Stoney Island Tunnel "Got a cigarette on
you?"
"Huh? This is no time to catch a
smoke."
"Shucks," said Lazarus, "my
legate is a good mile away."
"Maybe so," the proctor replied,
"but mine is right behind us."
"So? Well, skip it-I've got something
to tell him anyhow." Lazarus started to move past but the proctor did not
get out of his way. He was glancing curiously at Lazarus' kilt. Lazarus had turned
it inside out and its blue lining made a fair imitation of a proctor's service
uniform-if not inspected closely.
"What station did you say you were
from?" inquired the proctor.
"This one," answered Lazarus and
planted a short jab under the man's breastbone. Lazarus' coach in
rough-and-tumble had explained to him that a solar plexus blow was harder to
dodge than one to the jaw; the coach bad been dead since the roads strike of
1966, his skill lived on.
Lazarus felt more like a cop with a proper
uniform kilt and a bandolier of paralysis bombs slung under his left arm.
Besides, the proctor's kilt was a better fit. To the right the passage outside
led to the Sanctuary and a dead end; he went to the left by Hobson's choice
although he knew he would run into his unconscious benefactor's legate. The
passage gave into a hall which was crowded with Members herded into a group of
proctors. Lazarus ignored his kin and sought out the harassed officer in
charge. "Sir," he reported, saluting smartly, "There's sort of a
hospital back there. You'll need fifty or sixty stretchers."
"Don't bother me, tell your legate.
We've got our hands full."
Lazarus almost did not answer; he had
caught Mary Sperling's eye in the crowd-she stared at him and looked away. He
caught himself and answered, "Can't tell him, sir. Not available."
"Well, go on outside and tell the
first-aid squad."
"Yes, sir." He moved away,
swaggering a little, his thumbs hooked in the band of his kilt. He was far down
the passage leading to the transbelt tunnel serving the Waukegan outlet when he
heard shouts behind him. Two proctors were running to overtake him.
Lazarus stopped in the archway giving into
the transbelt tunnel and waited for them. "What's the trouble?' he asked
easily as they came up.
"The legate--"began one. He got
no further; a paralysis bomb tinkled and popped at his feet. He looked
surprised as the radiations wiped all expression from his face; his mate fell
across him.
Lazarus waited behind a shoulder of the
arch, counted seconds up to fifteen: "Number one jet fire! Number two jet
fire! Number three jet fire!"-added a couple to be sure the paralyzing
effect had died away. He had cut it finer than he liked. He had not ducked
quite fast enough and his left foot tingled from exposure.
He then checked. The two were unconscious,
no one else was in sight. He mounted the transbelt. Perhaps they had not been
looking for him in his proper person, perhaps no one had given him away. But he
did not hang around to find out. One thing he was damn' well certain of, he
told himself, if anybody had squealed on him, it wasn't Mary Sperling.
It took two more parabombs and a couple of
hundred words of pure fiction to get him out into the open air. Once he was
there and out of immediate observation the brassard and the remaining bombs
went into his pouch and the bandolier ended up behind some bushes; he then
looked up a clothing store in Waukegan.
He sat down in a sales booth and dialed
the code for kilts. He let cloth designs flicker past in the screen while he
ignored the persuasive voice of the catalogue until a pattern showed up which
was distinctly unmilitary and not blue, whereupon he stopped the display and
punched an order for his size. He noted the price, tore an open-credit voucher from
his wallet, stuck it into the machine and pushed the switch. Then he enjoyed a
smoke while the tailoring was done.
Ten minutes later he stuffed the proctor's
kilt into the refuse hopper of the sales booth and left, nattily and loudly
attired. He had not been in Waukegan the past century but he found a
middle-priced autel without drawing attention by asking questions, dialed its
registration board for a standard suite and settled down for seven hours of
sound sleep.
He breakfasted in his suite, listening
with half an ear to the news box; he was interested, in a mild way, in hearing
what might be reported concerning the raid on the Families. But it was a
detached interest; he had already detached himself from it in his own mind. It
had been a mistake, he now realized, to get back in touch with the Families-a
darn good thing he was clear of it all with his present public identity totally
free of any connection with the whing-ding.
A phrase caught his attention:
"-including Zaccur Barstow, alleged to be their tribal chief.
"The prisoners are being shipped to a
reservation in Oklahoma, near the ruins of the Okla-Orleans road city about
twenty-five miles east of Harriman Memorial Park. The Chief Provost describes
it as a 'Little Coventry,' and has ordered all aircraft to avoid it by ten
miles laterally. The Administrator could not be reached for a statement but a
usually reliable source inside the administration informs us that the mass
arrest was accomplished in order to speed up the investigations whereby the
administration expects to obtain the 'Secret of the Howard Families'-their
techniques for indefinitely prolonging life. This forthright action in
arresting and transporting every member of the outlaw group is expected to have
a salutary effect in breaking down the resistance of their leaders to the
legitimate demands of society. It will bring home forcibly to them that the
civil rights enjoyed by decent citizens must not be used as a cloak behind
which to damage society as a whole.
"The chattels and holdings of the
members of this criminal conspiracy have been declared subject to the
Conservator General and will be administered by his agents during the
imprisonment of-"
Lazarus switched it off.
"Damnation!" he thought. "Don't fret about things you can't
help." Of course, he had expected to be arrested himself . . . but he had
escaped. That was that. It wouldn't do the Families any good for him to turn
himself in-and besides, he owed the Families nothing, not a tarnation thing.
Anyhow, they were better off all arrested
at once and quickly placed under guard. If they had been smelled out one at a
time, anything could have happened-lynchings, even pogroms. Lazarus knew from
hard experience how close under the skin lay lynch law and mob violence in the
most sweetly civilized; that was why he had advised Zack to rig it-that and the
fact that Zack and the Administrator had to have the Families in one compact
group to stand a chance of carrying out their scheme. They were well off . . .
and no skin off his nose.
But he wondered how Zack was getting
along, and what he would think of Lazarus' disappearance. And what Mary
Sperling thought-it must have been a shock to her when he turned up making a
noise like a proctor. He wished he could straighten that out with her.
Not that it mattered what any of them
thought. They would all either be light-years away very soon . . . or dead. A
closed book.
He turned to the phone and called the post
office. "Captain Aaron Sheffield," he announced, and gave his postal
number. "Last registered with Goddard Field post office. Will you please
have my mail sent to-" He leaned closer and read the code number from the
suite's mail receptacle.
"Service," assented the voice of
the clerk. "Right away, Captain."
"Thank you."
It would take a couple of hours, he
reflected, for his mail to catch up with him-a half hour in trajectory, three
times that in fiddle-faddle. Might as well wait here . . . no doubt the search
for him had lost itself in the distance but there was nothing in Waukegan he
wanted. Once the mail showed up he would hire a U-push-it and scoot down to--
To where? What was he going to do now?
He turned several possibilities over in
his mind and came at last to the blank realization that there was nothing, from
one end of the Solar System to the other, that he really wanted to do.
It scared him a little. He had once heard,
and was inclined to credit, that a loss of interest in living marked the true
turning point in the battle between anabolisim and catabolism-old age. He
suddenly envied normal short-lived people-at least they could go make nuisances
of themselves to their children. Filial affection was not customary among
Members of the Families; it was not a feasible relationship to maintain for a
century or more. And friendship, except between Members, was bound to be
regarded as a passing and shallow matter. There was no one whom Lazarus wanted
to see.
Wait a minute . . . who was that planter
on Venus? The one who knew so many folk songs and who was so funny when he was
drunk? He'd go look him up. It would make a nice hop and it would be fun, much
as he disliked Venus.
Then he recalled with cold shock that he
had not seen the man for-how long? In any case, he was certainly dead by now.
Libby had been right, he mused glumly,
when he spoke of the necessity for a new type of memory association for the
long-lived. He hoped the lad would push ahead with the necessary research and
come up with an answer before Lazarus was reduced to counting on his fingers. He
dwelt on the notion for a minute or two before recalling that he was most
unlikely ever to see Libby again.
The mail arrived and contained nothing of
importance. He was not surprised; he expected no personal letters. The spools
of advertising went into the refuse chute; he read only one item, a letter from
Pan-Terra Docking Corp. telling him that his convertible cruiser I Spy had
finished her overhaul and had been moved to a parking dock, rental to start
forthwith. As instructed, they had not touched the ship's astrogational
controls-was that still the Captain's pleasure?
He decided to pick her up later in the day
and head out into space. Anything was better than sitting Earthbound and
admitting that he was bored.
Paying his score and finding a jet for
hire occupied less than twenty minutes. He took off and headed for Goddard
Field, using the low local-traffic level to avoid entering the control pattern
with a flight plan. He was not consciously avoiding the police because he had
no reason to think that they could be looking for "Captain
Sheffield"; it was simply habit, and it would get him to Goddard Field
soon enough.
But long before he reached there, while
over eastern Kansas, he decided to land and did so.
He picked the field of a town so small as
to be unlikely to rate a full-time proctor and there he sought out a phone
booth away from the field. Inside it, he hesitated. How did you go about
calling up the head man of the entire Federation-and get him? If he simply
called Novak Tower and asked for Administrator Ford, he not only would not be
put through to him but his call would be switched to the Department of Public
Safety for some unwelcome inquiries, sure as taxes.
Well, there was only one way to beat that,
and that was to call the Department of Safety himself and, somehow, get the
Chief Provost on the screen-after that he would play by ear.
"Department of Civil Safety," a
voice answered. "What service, citizen?"
"Service to you," he began in
his best control-bridge voice. "I am Captain Sheffield. Give me the
Chief." He was not overbearing; his manner simply assumed obedience.
Short silence-- "What is it about,
please?"
"I said I was Captain
Sheffield." This time Lazarus' voice showed restrained annoyance.
Another short pause-- "I'll connect
you with Chief Deputy's office," the voice said doubtfully.
This time the screen came to life.
"Yes?" asked the Chief Deputy, looking him over.
"Get me the Chief-hurry."
"What's it about?"
"Good Lord, man-get me the Chief! I'm
Captain Sheffield!"
The Chief Deputy must be excused for
connecting him; he had had no sleep and more confusing things had happened in
the last twenty-four hours than he had been able to assimilate. When the High
Chief Provost appeared in the screen, Lazarus spoke first. "Oh, there you
are! I've had the damnedest time cutting through your red tape. Get me the Old
Man and move! Use your closed circuit."
"What the devil do you mean? Who are
you?"
"Listen, brother," said Lazarus
in tones of slow exasperation, "I would not have routed through your
damned hidebound department if I hadn't been in a jam. Cut me in to the Old
Man. This is about the Howard Families."
The police chief was instantly alert.
"Make your report."
"Look," said Lazarus in tired
tones, "I know you would like to look over the Old Man's shoulder, but
this isn't a good time to try. If you obstruct me and force me to waste two
hours by reporting in corpus, I will. But the Old Man will want to know why and
you can bet your pretty parade kit, I'll tell him."
The Chief Provost decided to take a
chance-cut this character in on a three-way; then, if the Old Man didn't burn
this joker off the screen in about three seconds, he'd know he had played safe
and guessed lucky. If he did-well, you could always blame it on a cross-up in
communications. He set the combo.
Administrator Ford looked flabbergasted
when he recognized Lazarus in the screen. "You?' he exclaimed. "How
on Earth--Did Zaccur Barstow--"
"Seal your circuit!" Lazarus cut
in.
The Chief Provost blinked as his screen
went dead and silent. So the Old Man did have secret agents outside the department . . . interesting-and not to be
forgotten.
Lazarus gave Ford a quick and fairly
honest account of how he happened to be at large, then added, "So you see,
I could have gone to cover and escaped entirely. In fact I still can. But I
want to know this: is the deal with Zaccur Barstow to let us emigrate still
on?"
"Yes, it is."
"Have you figured out how you are
going to get a hundred thousand people inboard the New Frontiers without
tipping your hand? You can't trust your own people, you know that."
"I know. The present situation is a
temporary expedient while we work it
out."
"And I'm the man for the job. I've
got to be, I'm the only agent on the loose that either one of you can afford to
trust. Now listen-"
Eight minutes later Ford was nodding his
head slowly and saying, "It might work. It might. Anyway, you start your
preparations. I'll have a letter of credit waiting for you at Goddard."
"Can you cover your tracks on
that? I can't flash a letter of credit from the Administrator; people would
wonder."
"Credit me with some intelligence. By
the time it reaches you it will appear to be a routine banking
transaction."
"Sorry. Now how can I get through to
you when I need to?"
"Oh, yes-note this code
combination." Ford recited it slowly. "That puts you through to my
desk without relay. No, don't write it down; memorize it."
"And how can I talk to Zack Barstow?
"Call me and I'll hook you in. You
can't call him directly unless you can arrange a sensitive circuit."
"Even if I could, I can't cart a
sensitive around with me. Well, cheerio-I'm clearing."
"Good luck!"
Lazarus left the phone booth with
restrained haste and hurried back to reclaim his hired ship. He did not know
enough about current police practice to guess whether or not the High Chief
Provost had traced the call to the Administrator; he simply took it for granted
because he himself would have done so in the Provosts' shoes. Therefore the
nearest available proctor was probably stepping on his heels-time to move, time
to mess up the trail a little.
He took off again and headed west, staying
in the local, uncontrolled low level until he reached a cloud bank that walled
the western horizon. He then swung back and cut air for Kansas City, staying
carefully under the speed limit and flying as low as local traffic regulations
permitted. At Kansas City he turned his ship in to the local U-push-it agency
and flagged a ground taxi, which carried him down the controlway to Joplin.
There he boarded a local jet bus from St. Louis without buying a ticket first,
thereby insuring that his flight would not be recorded until the bus's trip
records were turned in on the west coast.
Instead of worrying he spent the time
making plans.
One hundred thousand people with an
average mass of a hundred and fifty-no, make it a hundred and sixty pounds,
Lazarus reconsidered-a hundred and sixty each made a load of sixteen million
pounds, eight thousand tons. The I Spy could boost such a load against one
gravity but she would be as logy as baked beans, It was out of the question
anyhow; people did not stow like cargo; the I Spy could lift that dead
weight-but "dead" was the word, for that was what they would be.
He needed a transport.
Buying a passenger ship big enough to
ferry the Families from Earth up to where the New Frontiers hung in her
construction orbit was not difficult; Four Planets Passenger Service would
gladly unload such a ship at a fair price. Passenger trade competition being
what it was, they were anxious to cut their losses on older ships no longer
popular with tourists. But a passenger ship would not do; not only would there
be unhealthy curiosity in what he intended to do with such a ship, but-and this
settled it-he could not pilot it single-handed. Under the Revised Space
Precautionary Act, passenger ships were required to be built for human control
throughout on the theory that no automatic safety device could replace human
judgment in an emergency.
It would have to be a freighter.
Lazarus knew the best place to find one.
Despite efforts to make the Moon colony ecologically self-sufficient, Luna City
still imported vastly more tonnage than she exported. On Earth this would have
resulted in "empties coming back"; in space transport it was
sometimes cheaper to let empties accumulate, especially on Luna where an empty
freighter was worth more as metal than it had cost originally as a ship back
Earthside.
He left the bus when it landed at Goddard
City, went to the space field, paid his bills, and took possession of the I
Spy, filed a request for earliest available departure for Luna. The slot he was
assigned was two days from then, but Lazarus did not let it worry him; he
simply went back to the docking company and indicated that he was willing to
pay liberally for a swap, in departure time. In twenty minutes he had oral
assurance that he could boost for Luna that evening.
He spent the remaining several hours in
the maddening red tape of interplanetary clearance. He first picked up the
letter of credit Ford had promised him and converted it into cash. Lazarus
would have been quite willing to use a chunk of the cash to speed up his
processing just as he had paid (quite legally) for a swap in slot with another
ship. But he found himself unable to do so. Two centuries of survival had
taught him that a bribe must be offered as gently and as indirectly as a
gallant suggestion is made to a proud lady; in a very few minutes he came to the
glum conclusion that civic virtue and public honesty could be run into the
ground-the functionaries at Goddard Field seemed utterly innocent of the very
notion of cumshaw, squeeze, or the lubricating effect of money in routine
transactions. He admired their incorruptibility; he did not have to like
it-most especially when filling out useless forms cost him the time he had
intended to devote to a gourmet's feast in the Skygate Room.
He even let himself be vaccinated again
rather than go back to the I Spy and dig out the piece of paper that showed he
had been vaccinated on arrival Earthside a few weeks earlier.
Nevertheless, twenty minutes before his
revised slot time, he lay at the controls of the I Spy, his pouch bulging with
stamped papers and his stomach not bulging with the sandwich he had managed to
grab. He had worked out the "Hohmann's-S" trajectory he would use;
the results had been fed into the autopilot. All the lights on his board were
green save the one which would blink green when field control started his count
down. He waited in the warm happiness that always filled him when about to
boost.
A thought hit him and he raised up against
his straps. Then he loosened the chest strap and sat up, reached for his copy
of the current Terra Pilot and Traffic Hazards Supplement. Mmm...
New Frontiers hung in a circular orbit of
exactly twenty-four hours, keeping always over meridian 106 degrees west at
declination zero at a distance from Earth center of approximately twenty-six
thousand miles.
Why not pay her a call, scout out the lay
of the land?
The I Spy, with tanks topped off and cargo
spaces empty, had many mile-seconds of reserve boost. To be sure, the field had
cleared him for Luna City, not for the interstellar ship . . . but, with the
Moon in its present phase, the deviation from his approved flight pattern would
hardly show on a screen, probably would not be noticed until the film record
was analyzed at some later time-at which time Lazarus would receive a traffic
citation, perhaps even have his license suspended. But traffic tickets had
never worried him . . . and it was certainly worthwhile to reconnoitre.
He was already setting up the problem in
his ballistic calculator. Aside from checking the orbit elements of the New
Frontiers in the Terra Pilot Lazarus could have done it in his sleep;
satellite-matching maneuvers were old hat for any pilot and a doubly-tangent
trajectory for a twenty-four hour orbit was one any student pilot knew by
heart.
He fed the answers into his autopilot during
the count down, finished with three minutes to spare, strapped himself down
again and relaxed as the acceleration hit him. When the ship went into free
fall, he checked his position and vector via the field's transponder.
Satisfied, he locked his board, set the alarm for rendezvous, and went to
sleep.
Chapter
6
ABOUT FOUR HOURS LATER the alarm woke him.
He switched it off; it continued to ring-a glance at his screen showed him why.
The Gargantuan cylindrical body of the New Frontiers lay close aboard. He
switched off the radar alarm circuit as well and completed matching with her by
the seat of his pants, not bothering with the ballistic calculator. Before he
had completed the maneuver the communications alarm started beeping. He slapped
a switch; the rig hunted frequencies and the vision screen came to life. A man
looked at him. "New Frontiers calling: what ship are you?"
"Private vessel I Spy, Captain
Sheffield. My compliments to your commanding officer. May I come onboard to pay
a call?"
They were pleased to have visitors. The
ship was completed save for inspection, trials, and acceptance; the enormous
gang which had constructed her had gone to Earth and there was no one aboard
but the representatives of the Jordan Foundation and a half dozen engineers
employed by the corporation which had been formed to build the ship for the
foundation. These few were bored with inactivity, bored with each other,
anxious to quit marking time and get back to the pleasures of Earth; a visitor
was a welcome diversion.
When the I Spy's airlock had been sealed
to that of the big ship, Lazarus was met by the engineer in charge-technically
"captain" since the New Frontiers was a ship under way even though
not under power. He introduced himself and took Lazarus on a tour of the ship.
They floated through miles of corridors, visited laboratories, storerooms,
libraries containing hundreds of thousands of spools, acres of hydroponic tanks
for growing food and replenishing oxygen, and comfortable, spacious, even luxurious
quarters for a crew colony of ten thousand people. "We believe that the
Vanguard expedition was somewhat undermanned," the skipper-engineer
explained. "The socio-dynamicists calculate that this colony will be able
to maintain the basics of our present level of culture."
"Doesn't sound like enough,"
Lazarus commented. "Aren't there more than ten thousand types of
specialization?"
"Oh, certainly! But the idea is to
provide experts in all basic arts and indispensable branches of knowledge.
Then, as the colony expands, additional specializations can be added through
the aid of the reference libraries-anything from tap-dancing to tapestry
weaving. That's the general idea though it's out of my line. Interesting
subject, no doubt, for those who like it."
"Are you anxious to get
started?" asked Lazarus.
The man looked almost shocked. "Me?
D'you mean to suggest that I would go in this thing? My dear sir, I'm an
engineer, not a damn' fool."
"Sorry."
"Oh, I don't mind a reasonable amount
of spacing when there's a reason for it-I've been to Luna City more times than
I can count and I've even been to Venus. But you don't think the man who built
the Mayflower sailed in her, do you? For my money the only thing that will keep
these people who signed up for it from going crazy before they get there is
that it's a dead cinch they're all crazy before they start."
Lazarus changed the subject. They did not
dally in the main drive space, nor in the armored cell housing the giant atomic
converter, once Lazarus learned that they were unmanned, fully-automatic types.
The total absence of moving parts in each of these divisions, made possible by
recent developments in parastatics, made their inner workings of intellectual
interest only, which could wait. What Lazarus did want to see was the control
room, and there he lingered, asking endless questions until his host was
plainly bored and remaining only out of politeness.
Lazarus finally shut up, not because he
minded imposing on his host but because he was confident that he had learned
enough about the controls to be willing to chance conning the ship.
He picked up two other important data
before he left the ship: in nine Earth days the skeleton crew was planning a
weekend on Earth, following which the acceptance trials would be held. But for
three days the big ship would be empty, save possibly for a communications
operator-Lazarus was too wary to be inquisitive on this point. But there would
be no guard left in her because no need for a guard could be imagined. One
might as well guard the Mississippi River.
The other thing he learned was how to
enter the ship from the outside without help from the inside; he picked that
datum up through watching the mail rocket arrive just as he was about to leave
the ship.
At Luna City, Joseph McFee, factor for
Diana Terminal Corp., subsidiary of Diana Freight Lines, welcomed Lazarus
warmly. "Well! Come in, Cap'n, and pull up a chair. What'll you
drink?" He was already pouring as he talked-tax-free paint remover from
his own amateur vacuum still. "Haven't seen you in . . . well, too long.
Where d'you raise from last and what's the gossip there? Heard any new
ones?"
"From Goddard," Lazarus answered
and told him what the skipper had said to the V.I.P. McFee answered with the one
about the old maid in free fall, which Lazarus pretended not to have heard.
Stories led to politics, and McFee expounded his notion of the "only
possible solution" to the European questions, a solution predicated on a
complicated theory of McFee's as to why the Covenant could not be extended to
any culture below a certain level of industrialization. Lazarus did not give a
hoot either way but he knew better than to hurry McFee; he nodded at the right
places, accepted more of the condemned rocket juice when offered, and waited
for the right moment to come to the point.
"Any company ships for sale now,
Joe?"
"Are there? I should hope to shout.
I've got more steel sitting out on that plain and cluttering my inventory than
I've had in ten years. Looking for some? I can make you a sweet price."
"Maybe. Maybe not. Depends on whether
you've got what I want."
"You name it, I've got it. Never saw
such a dull market. Some days you can't turn an honest credit." McFee
frowned. "You know what the trouble is? Well, I'll tell you-it's this
Howard Families commotion. Nobody wants to risk any money until he knows where
he stands. How can a man make plans when he doesn't know whether to plan for
ten years or a hundred? You mark my words: if the administration manages to
sweat the secret loose from those babies, you'll see the biggest boom in
long-term investments ever. But if not well, long-term holdings won't be worth
a peso a dozen and there will be an eat-drink-and-be-merry craze that will make
the Reconstruction look like a tea party."
He frowned again. "What kind of metal
you looking for?"
"I don't want metal, I want a
ship."
McFee's frown disappeared, his eyebrows
shot up. "So? What sort?"
"Can't say exactly. Got time to look
'em over with me?"
They suited up and left the dome by North
Tunnel, then strolled around grounded ships in the long, easy strides of low
gravity. Lazarus soon saw that just two ships had both the lift and the air
space needed. One was a tanker and the better buy, but a mental calculation
showed him that it lacked deck space, even including the floor plates of the
tanks, to accommodate eight thousand tons of passengers. The other was an older
ship with cranky piston-type injection meters, but she was fitted for general
merchandise and had enough deck space. Her pay load was higher than necessary
for the job, since passengers weigh little for the cubage they clutter-but that
would make her lively, which might be critically important.
As for the injectors, he could baby
them-he had herded worse junk than this.
Lazarus haggled with McFee over terms, not
because he wanted to save money but because failure to do so would have been
out of character. They finally reached a complicated three-cornered deal in
which McFee bought the I Spy for himself, Lazarus delivered clear title to it
unmortgaged and accepted McFee's unsecured note in payment, then purchased the
freighter by endorsing McFee's note back to him and adding cash. McFee in turn
would be able to mortgage the I Spy at the Commerce Clearance Bank in Luna
City, use the proceeds plus cash or credit of his own to redeem his own
paper-presumably before his accounts were audited, though Lazarus did not
mention that.
It was not quite a bribe. Lazarus merely
made use of the fact that McFee had long wanted a ship of his own and regarded
the I Spy as the ideal bachelor's go-buggy for business or pleasure; Lazarus
simply held the price down to where McFee could swing the deal. But the
arrangements made certain that McFee would not gossip about the deal, at least
until he had had time to redeem his note. Lazarus further confused the issue by
asking McFee to keep his eyes open for a good buy in trade tobacco . . . which
made McFee sure that Captain Sheffield's mysterious new venture involved Venus,
that being the only major market for such goods. Lazarus got the freighter
ready for space in only four days through lavish bonuses and overtime payments.
At last he dropped Luna City behind him, owner and master of the City of
Chillicothe. He shortened the name in his mind to Chili in honor of a favorite
dish he had not tasted in a long time-fat red beans, plenty of chili powder,
chunks of meat . . . real meat, not the synthetic pap these youngsters called
"meat." He thought about it
and his mouth watered. He had not a care in the world.
As he approached Earth, he called traffic
control and asked for a parking orbit, as he did not wish to put the Chili
down; it would waste fuel and attract attention. He had no scruples about
orbiting without permission but there was a chance that the Chili might be
spotted, charted, and investigated as a derelict during his absence; it was
safer to be legal.
They gave him an orbit; he matched in and
steadied down, then set the Chili's identification beacon to his own
combination, made sure that the radar of the ship's gig could trip it, and took
the gig down to the auxiliary small-craft field at Goddard. He was careful to
have all necessary papers with him this time; by letting the gig be sealed in
bond he avoided customs and was cleared through the space port quickly. He had
no destination in mind other than to find a public phone and check in with Zack
and Ford-then, if there was time, try to find some real chili. He had not
called the Administrator from space because ship-to-ground required relay, and
the custom of privacy certainly would not protect them if the mixer who handled
the call overheard a mention of the Howard Families.
The Administrator answered his call at
once, although it was late at night in the longitude of Novak Tower. From the
puffy circles under Ford's eyes Lazarus judged that he had been living at his
desk. "Hi," said Lazarus, "better get Zack Barstow on a
three-way. I've got things to report."
"So it's you," Ford said grimly.
"I thought you had run out on us. Where have you been?"
"Buying a ship," Lazarus
answered. "As you knew. Let's get Barstow."
Ford frowned, but turned to his desk. By
split screen, Barstow joined them. He seemed surprised to see Lazarus and not
altogether relieved. Lazarus spoke quickly:
"What's the matter, pal? Didn't Ford
tell you what I was up to?"
"Yes, he did," admitted Barstow,
"but we didn't know where you were or what you were doing. Time dragged on
and you didn't check in . . . so we decided we had seen the last of you."
"Shucks," complained Lazarus,
"you know I wouldn't ever do anything like that. Anyhow, here I am and
here's what I've done so far-" He told them of the Chili and of his
reconnaissance of the New Frontiers. "Now here's how I see it: sometime
this weekend, while the New Frontiers is sitting out there with nobody inboard
her, I set the Chili down in the prison reservation, we load up in a hurry,
rush out to the New Frontiers, grab her, and scoot. Mr. Administrator, that
calls for a lot of help from you. Your proctors will have to look the other way
while I land and load. Then we need to sort of slide past the traffic patrol.
After that it would be a whole lot better if no naval craft was in a position
to do anything drastic about the New Frontiers-if there is a communication
watch left in her, they may be able to holler for help before we can silence
them."
"Give me credit for some
foresight," Ford answered sourly. "I know you will have to have a
diversion to stand any chance of getting away with it. The scheme is fantastic
at the best."
"Not too fantastic," Lazarus
disagreed, "if you are willing to use your emergency powers to the limit
at the last minute."
"Possibly. But we can't wait four
days." "Why not?'
"The situation won't hold together
that long."
"Neither will mine," put in
Barstow.
Lazarus looked from one to the other.
"Huh? What's the trouble? What's up?"
They explained:
Ford and Barstow were engaged in a
preposterously improbable task, that of putting over a complex and subtle
fraud; a triple fraud with a different face for the Families, for the public,
and for the Federation Council. Each aspect presented unique and apparently
insurmountable difficulties.
Ford had no one whom he dared take into
his confidence, for even his most trusted personal staff member might be
infected with the mania of the delusional Fountain of Youth . . . or might not
be, but there was no way to know without compromising the conspiracy. Despite
this, he had to convince the Council that the measures he was taking were the
best for achieving the Council's purpose.
Besides that, he had to hand out daily
news releases to convince the citizens that their government was just about to
gain for them the "secret" of living forever. Each day the statements
had to be more detailed, the lies more tricky. The people were getting restless
at the delay; they were sloughing off the coat of civilization, becoming mob.
The Council was feeling the pressure of
the people. Twice Ford had been forced to a vote of confidence; the second he
had won by only two votes. "I won't win another one-we've got to
move."
Barstow's troubles were different but just
as sticky. He had to have confederates, because his job was to prepare all the
hundred thousand members for the exodus. They had to know, before the time came
to embark, if they were to leave quietly and quickly. Nevertheless he did not
dare tell them the truth too soon because among so many people there were bound
to be some who were stupid and stubborn . . . and it required just one fool to
wreck the scheme by spilling it to the proctors guarding them.
Instead he was forced to try to find
leaders who he could trust, convince them, and depend on them to convince
others. He needed almost a thousand dependable "herdsmen" to be sure
of getting his people to follow him when the time came. Yet the very number of
confederates he needed was so great as to make certain that somebody would
prove weak.
Worse than that, he needed other
confederates for a still touchier purpose. Ford and he had agreed on a scheme,
weak at best, for gaining time. They were doling out the techniques used by the
Families in delaying the symptoms of senility under the pretense that the sum
total of these techniques was the "secret." To put over this fraud
Barstow had to have the help of the biochemists, gland therapists, specialists
in symbiotics and in metabolism, and other experts among the Families, and
these in turn had to be prepared for police interrogation by the Families' most
skilled psychotechnicians . . . because they had to be able to put over the
fraud even under the influence of babble drugs. The hypnotic false
indoctrination required for this was enormously more complex than that
necessary for a simple block against talking. Thus far the swindle had worked .
. . fairly well. But the discrepancies became more hard to explain each day.
Barstow could not keep these matters
juggled much longer. The great mass of the Families, necessarily kept in
ignorance, were getting out of hand even faster than the public outside. They
were rightfully angry at what had been done to them; they expected anyone in
authority to do something about it-and do it now!
Barstow's influence over his kin was
melting away as fast as that of Ford over the Council.
"It can't be four days,"
repeated Ford. "More like twelve hours . . . twenty-four at the outside.
The Council meets again tomorrow afternoon."
Barstow looked worried. "I'm not sure
I can prepare them in so short a time. I may have trouble getting them
aboard."
"Don't worry about it," Ford
snapped.
"Why not?"
"Because," Ford said bluntly,
"any who stay behind will be dead-if they're lucky."
Barstow said nothing and looked away. It
was the first time that either one of them had admitted explicitly that this
was no relatively harmless piece of political chicanery but a desperate and
nearly hopeless attempt to avoid a massacre and that Ford himself was on both
sides of the fence.
"Well," Lazarus broke in
briskly, "now that you boys have settled that, let's get on with it. I can
ground the Chili in-" He stopped and estimated quickly where she would be
in orbit, how long it would take him to rendezvous. "-well, by twenty-two
Greenwich. Add an hour to play safe. How about seventeen o'clock Oklahoma time
tomorrow afternoon? That's today, actually."
The other two seemed relieved. "Good
enough," agreed Barstow. "I'll have them in the best shape I can
manage."
"All right," agreed Ford,
"if that's the fastest it can be done." He thought for a moment. "Barstow,
I'll withdraw at once all proctors and government personnel now inside the reservation barrier and shut you off. Once
the gate contracts, you can tell them all."
"Right. I'll do my best."
"Anything else before we clear?"
asked Lazarus. "Oh, yes-Zack, we'd better pick a place for me to land, or
I may shorten a lot of lives with my blast."
"Uh, yes. Make your approach from the
west. I'll rig a standard berth marker. Okay?"
"Okay."
"Not okay," denied Ford.
"We'll have to give him a pilot beam to come in on."
"Nonsense," objected Lazarus.
"I could set her down on top of the Washington Monument."
"Not this time, you couldn't. Don't
be surprised at the weather."
As Lazarus approached his rendezvous with
the Chili he signaled from the gig; the Chili's transponder echoed, to his
relief-he had little faith in gear he had not personally overhauled and a long
search for the Chili at this point would have been disastrous.
He figured the relative vector, gunned the
gig, flipped, and gunned to brake-homed-in three minutes off estimate, feeling
smug. He cradled the gig, hurried inside, and took her down.
Entering the stratosphere and circling
two-thirds of the globe took no longer than he had estimated. He used part of
the hour's leeway he had allowed himself by being very stingy in his maneuvers
in order to spare the worn, obsolescent injection meters. Then he was down in
the troposphere and making his approach, with skin temperatures high but not
dangerously so. Presently he realized what Ford had meant about the weather.
Oklahoma and half of Texas were covered with deep, thick clouds. Lazarus was
amazed and somehow pleased; it reminded him of other days, when weather was
something experienced rather than controlled. Life had lost some flavor, in his
opinion, when the weather engineers had learned how to harness the elements. He
hoped that their planet-if they found one!-would have some nice, lively
weather.
Then he was down in it and too busy to
meditate. In spite of her size the freighter bucked and complained. Whew! Ford
must have ordered this little charivari the minute the time was set-and, at
that, the integrators must have had a big low-pressure area close at hand to
build on.
Somewhere a pattern controlman was
shouting at him; he switched it off and gave all his attention to his approach
radar and the ghostly images in the infra-red rectifier while comparing what
they told him with his inertial tracker. The ship passed over a miles-wide scar
on the landscape-the ruins of the Okla-Orleans Road City. When Lazarus had last
seen it, it had been noisy with life. Of all the mechanical monstrosities the
human race had saddled themselves with, he mused, those dinosaurs easily took
first prize.
Then the thought was cut short by a squeal
from his board; the ship had picked up the pilot beam.
He wheeled her in, cut his last jet as she
scraped, and slapped a series of switches; the great cargo ports rumbled open
and rain beat in.
Eleanor Johnson huddled into herself, half
crouching against the storm, and tried to draw her cloak more tightly about the
baby in the crook of her left arm. When the storm had first hit, the child had
cried endlessly, stretching her nerves taut. Now it was quiet, but that seemed
only new cause for alarm.
She herself had wept, although she had
tried not to show it. In all her twenty-seven years she had never been exposed
to weather like this; it seemed symbolic of the storm that had overturned her
life, swept her away from her cherished first home of her own with its homey
old-fashioned fireplace, its shiny service cell, its thermostat which she could
set to the temperature she liked without consulting others-a tempest which had
swept her away between two grim proctors, arrested like some poor psychotic,
and landed her after terrifying indignities here in the cold sticky red clay of
this Oklahoma field.
Was it true? Could it possibly be true? Or
had she not yet borne her baby at all and this was another of the strange
dreams she had while carrying it?
But the rain was too wetly cold, the
thunder too loud; she could never have slept through such a dream. Then what
the Senior Trustee had told them must be true, too-it had to be true; she had
seen the ship ground with her own eyes, its blast bright against the black of
the storm. She could no longer see it but the crowd around her moved slowly
forward; it must in front of her. She was close to the outskirts of the crowd
she would be one of the last to get aboard.
It was very necessary to board the
ship-Elder Zaccur Barstow had told them with deep solemnness what lay in store
for them if they failed to board. She had believed earnestness; nevertheless
she wondered how it could possibly be true-could anyone be so wicked, so deeply
and terribly wicked as to want to kill anyone as harmless and helpless as
herself and her baby?
She was struck by panic terror-suppose
there was no room left by the time she got up to the ship? She clutched her
baby more tightly; the child cried again at the pressure.
A woman in the crowd moved closer and
spoke to her "You must be tired. May I carry the baby for a while?"
"No. No, thank you. I'm all
right." A flash of lightning showed the woman's face; Eleanor Johnson
recognized her Elder Mary Sperling.
But the kindness of the offer steadied
her. She knew now what she must do. If they were filled up and could take no
more, she must pass her baby forward, hand to hand over the heads of the crowd.
They could not refuse space to anything as little as her baby.
Something brushed her in the dark. The
crowd was moving forward again.
When Barstow could see that loading would
be finished in a few more minutes he left his post at one of the cargo doors
and ran as fast as he could through the splashing sticky mud to the
communications shack. Ford had warned him to give notice just before they
raised ship; it was necessary to Ford's plan for diversion. Barstow fumbled
with an awkward un-powered door, swung it open and rushed up. He set the
private combination which should connect him directly to Ford's control desk
and pushed the key.
He was answered at once but it was not
Ford's face on the screen. Barstow burst out with, "Where is the
Administrator? I want to talk with him," before he recognized the face in
front of him.
It was a face well known to all the
public-Bork Vanning, Leader of the Minority in the Council. "You're
talking to the Administrator," Vanning said and grinned coldly. "The
new Administrator. Now who the devil are you and why are you calling?"
Barstow thanked all gods, past and
present, that recognition was onesided. He cut the connection with one unaimed
blow and plunged out of the building.
Two cargo ports were already closed;
stragglers were moving through the other two. Barstow hurried the last of them
inside with curses and followed them, slammed pell-mell to the control room.
"Raise ship!" he shouted to Lazarus. "Fast!"
"What's all the shoutin' fer?"
asked Lazarus, but he was already closing and sealing the ports. He tripped the
acceleration screamer, waited a scant ten seconds . . . and gave her power.
"Well," he said conversationally
six minutes later, "I hope everybody was lying down. If not, we've got
some broken bones on our hands. What's that you were saying?"
Barstow told him about his attempt to
report to Ford.
Lazarus blinked and whistled a few bars of
Turkey in the Straw. "It looks like we've run out of minutes. It does look
like it." He shut up and gave his attention to his instruments, one eye on
his ballistic track, one on radar-aft.
Chapter
7
LAZARUS HAD his hands full to jockey the
Chili into just the right position against the side of the New Frontiers; the
overstrained meters made the smaller craft skittish as a young horse. But he
did it. The magnetic anchors clanged home; the gas-tight seals slapped into
place; and their ears popped as the pressure in the Chili adjusted to that in
the giant ship. Lazarus dived for the drop hole in the deck of the control
room, pulled himself rapidly hand over hand to the port of contact, and reached
the passenger lock of the New Frontiers to find himself facing the
skipper-engineer.
The man looked at him and snorted.
"You again, eh? Why the deuce didn't you answer our challenge? You can't
lock onto us without permission; this is private property. What do you mean by
it?"
"It means," said Lazarus,
"that you and your boys are going back to Earth a few days early-in this
ship."
"Why, that's ridiculous!"
"Brother," Lazarus said gently,
his blaster suddenly growing out his left fist, "I'd sure hate to hurt you
after you were so nice to me . . . but I sure will, unless you knuckle under
awful quick."
The official simply stared unbelievingly.
Several of his juniors had gathered behind him; one of them sunfished in the
air, started to leave. Lazarus winged him in the leg, at low power; he jerked
and clutched at nothing. "Now you'll have to take care of him,"
Lazarus observed.
That settled it. The skipper called
together his men from the announcing system microphone at the passenger lock;
Lazarus counted them as they arrived-twenty-nine, a figure he had been careful
to learn on his first visit. He assigned two men to hold each of them. Then he
took a look at the man he had shot.
"You aren't really hurt, bub,"
he decided shortly and turned to the skipper-engineer. "Soon as we
transfer you, get some radiation salve on that burn. The Red Cross kit's on the
after bulkhead of the control room."
"This is piracy! You can't get away
with this."
"Probably not," Lazarus agreed
thoughtfully. "But I sort of hope we do." He turned his attention
back to his job. "Shake it up there! Don't take all day."
The Chili was slowly being emptied. Only
the one exit could be used but the pressure of the half hysterical mob behind
them forced along those in the bottleneck of the trunk joining the two ships;
they came boiling out like bees from a disturbed hive.
Most of them had never been in free fall
before this trip; they burst out into the larger space of the giant ship and
drifted helplessly, completely disoriented. Lazarus tried to bring order into
it by grabbing anyone he could see who seemed to be able to handle himself in
zero gravity, ordered him to speed things up by shoving along the helpless
ones-shove them anywhere, on back into the big ship, get them out of the way,
make room for the thousands more yet to come. When he had conscripted a dozen
or so such herdsmen he spotted Barstow in the emerging throng, grabbed him and
put him in charge. "Keep 'em moving, just anyhow. I've got to get for'ard
to the control room. If you spot Andy Libby, send him after me."
A man broke loose, from the stream and
approached Barstow. "There's a ship trying to lock onto ours. I saw it
through a port."
"Where?" demanded Lazarus.
The man was handicapped by slight
knowledge of ships and shipboard terms, but he managed to make himself
understood. "I'll be back," Lazarus told Barstow. "Keep 'em
moving-and don't let any of those babies get away-our guests there." He
holstered his blaster and fought his way back through the swirling mob in the
bottleneck.
Number three port seemed to be the one the
man had meant. Yes, there was something there. The port had an armor-glass
bull's-eye in it, but instead of stars beyond Lazarus saw a lighted space. A
ship of some sort had locked against it.
Its occupants either had not tried to open
the Chili's port or just possibly did not know how. The port was not locked
from the inside; there had been no reason to bother. It should have opened
easily from either side once pressure was balanced . . . which the tell-tale,
shining green by the latch, showed to be the case.
Lazarus was mystified.
Whether it was a traffic control vessel, a
Naval craft, or something else, its presence was bad news. But why didn't, they
simply open the door and walk in? He was tempted to lock the port from the
inside, hurry and lock all the others, finish loading and try to run for it.
But his monkey ancestry got the better of
him; he could not leave alone something he did not understand. So he
compromised by kicking the blind latch into place that would keep them from
opening the port from outside, then slithered cautiously alongside the
bull's-eye and sneaked a peep with one eye.
He found himself staring at Slayton Ford.
He pulled himself to one side, kicked the
blind latch open, pressed the switch to open the port. He waited there, a toe
caught in a handihold, blaster in one hand, knife in the other.
One figure emerged. Lazarus saw that it
was Ford, pressed the switch again to close the port, kicked the blind latch
into place, while never taking his blaster off his visitor. "Now what the
hell?" he demanded. "What are you doing here? And who else is here?
Patrol?"
"I'm alone."
"Huh?"
"I want to go with you . . . if
you'll have me."
Lazarus looked at him and did not answer.
Then he went back to the bull's-eye and inspected all that he could see. Ford
appeared to be telling the truth, for no one else was in sight. But that was
not what held Lazarus' eye.
Why the ship wasn't a proper deep-space
craft at all. It did not have an air1ock but merely a seal to let it fasten to
a larger ship; Lazarus was staring right into the body of the craft. It looked
like-yes, it was a "Joy-boat Junior," a little private strato-yacht,
suitable only for point-to-point trajectory, or at the most for rendezvous with
a satellite provided the satellite could refuel it for the return leg.
There was no fuel for it here. A lightning
pilot possibly could land that tin toy without power and still walk away from
it provided he had the skill to play Skip-to-M'Lou in and out of the atmosphere
while nursing his skin temperatures-but Lazarus wouldn't want to try it. No,
sir! He turned to Ford. "Suppose we turned you down. How did you figure on
getting back?"
"I didn't figure on it," Ford
answered simply.
"Mmm-- Tell me about it, but make it
march; we're minus on minutes."
Ford had burned all bridges. Turned out of
office only hours earlier, he had known that, once all the facts came out,
life-long imprisonment in Coventry was the best he could hope for-if he managed
to avoid mob violence or mindshattering interrogation.
Arranging the diversion was the thing that
finally lost him his thin margin of control. His explanations for his actions
were not convincing to the Council. He had excused the storm and the
withdrawing of proctors from the reservation as a drastic attempt to break the
morale of the Families-a possible excuse but not too plausible. His orders to
Naval craft, intended to keep them away from the New Frontiers, had apparently
not been associated in anyone's mind with the Howard Families affair;
nevertheless the apparent lack of sound reason behind them had been seized on
by the opposition as another weapon to bring him down. They were watching for
anything to catch him out-one question asked in Council concerned certain
monies from the Administrator's discretionary fund which had been paid
indirectly to one Captain Aaron Sheffield; were these monies in fact expended
in the public interest?
Lazarus' eyes widened. "You mean they
were onto me?"
"Not quite. Or you wouldn't be here.
But they were close behind you. I think they must have had help from a lot of
my people at the last."
"Probably. But we made it, so let's
not fret. Come on. The minute everybody is out of this ship and into the big
girl, we've got to boost." Lazarus turned to leave.
"You're going to let me go
along?"
Lazarus checked his progress, twisted to
face Ford. "How else?" He had intended at first to send Ford down in
the Chili. It was not gratitude that changed his mind, but respect. Once he had
lost office Ford had gone straight to Huxley Field north of Novak Tower,
cleared for the vacation satellite Monte Carlo, and had jumped for the New
Frontiers instead. Lazarus liked that. "Go for broke" took courage
and character that most people didn't have. Don't grab a toothbrush, don't wind
the cat-just do it! "Of course you're coming along," he said easily:
"You're my kind of boy, Slayton."
The Chili was more than half emptied now
but the spaces near the interchange were still jammed with frantic mobs.
Lazarus cuffed and shoved his way through, trying not to bruise women and
children unnecessarily but not letting the possibility slow him up. He
scrambled through the connecting trunk with Ford hanging onto his belt, pulled
aside once they were through and paused in front of Barstow.
Barstow stared past him. "Yeah, it's
him," Lazarus confirmed. "Don't stare-it's rude. He's going with us.
Have you seen Libby?"
"Here I am, Lazarus." Libby
separated himself from the throng and approached with the ease of a veteran
long used to free fall. He had a small satchel strapped to one wrist.
"Good. Stick around. Zack, how long
till you're all loaded?"
"God knows. I can't count them. An
hour, maybe."
"Make it less. If you put some husky
boys on each side of the hole, they can snatch them through faster than they
are coming. We've got to shove out of here a little sooner than is humanly
possible. I'm going to the control room. Phone me there the instant you have everybody
in, our guests here out, and the Chili broken loose. Andy! Slayton! Let's
go."
"Later, Andy. We'll talk when we get
there?'
Lazarus took Slayton Ford with him because
he did not know what else to do with him and felt it would be better to keep
him out of sight until some plausible excuse could be dreamed up for having him
along. So far no one seemed to have looked at him twice, but once they quieted
down, Ford's well-known face would demand explanation.
The control room was about a half mile forward
of where they had entered the ship. Lazarus knew that there was a passenger
belt leading to it but he didn't have time to look for it; he simply took the
first passageway leading forward. As soon as they got away from the crowd they
made good time even though Ford was not as skilled in the fishlike maneuvers of
free fall as were the other two.
Once there, Lazarus spent the enforced
wait in explaining to Libby the extremely ingenious but unorthodox controls of
the starship. Libby was fascinated and soon was putting himself through dummy
runs. Lazarus turned to Ford. "How about you, Slayton? Wouldn't hurt to
have a second relief pilot."
Ford shook his head. "I've been
listening but I could never learn it. I'm not a pilot"
"Huh? How did you get here?"
"Oh. I do have a license, but I
haven't had time to keep in practice. My chauffeur always pilots me. I haven't
figured a trajectory in many years."
Lazarus looked him over. "And yet you
plotted an orbit rendezvous? With no reserve fuel?"
"Oh, that. I had to."
"I see. The way the cat learned to
swim. Well, that's one way." He turned back to speak to Libby, was
interrupted by Barstow's voice over the announcing system:
"Five minutes, Lazarus!
Acknowledge."
Lazarus found the microphone, covered the
light under it with his hand and answered, "Okay, Zack! Five
minutes." Then he said, "Cripes, I haven't even picked a course. What
do you think, Andy? Straight out from Earth to shake the busies off our tail?
Then pick a destination? How about it, Slayton? Does that fit with what you
ordered Navy craft to do? "No, Lazarus, no!" protested Libby.
"Huh? Why not?"
"You should head right straight down
for the Sun."
"For the Sun? For Pete's sake,
why?"
"I tried to tell you when I first saw
you. It's because of the space drive you asked me to develop."
"But, Andy, we haven't got it."
"Yes, we have. Here." Libby
shoved the satchel he had been carrying toward Lazarus.
Lazarus opened it.
Assembled from odd bits of other
equipment, looking more like the product of a boy's workshop than the output of
a scientist's laboratory, the gadget which Libby referred to as a "space
drive" underwent Lazarus' critical examination. Against the polished
sophisticated perfection of the control room it looked uncouth, pathetic,
ridiculously inadequate.
Lazarus poked at it tentatively.
"What is it?' he asked. "Your model?"
"No, no. That's it. That's the space
drive."
Lazarus looked at the younger man not
unsympathetically. "Son," he asked slowly, "have you come unzipped?"
"No, no, no!" Libby sputtered.
"I'm as sane as you are. This is a radically new notion. That's why I want
you to take us down near the Sun. If it works at all, it will work best where
light pressure is strongest."
"And if it doesn't work," inquired
Lazarus, "what does that make us? Sunspots?"
"Not straight down into the Sun. But
head for it now and as soon as I can work out the data, I'll give you
corrections to warp you into your proper trajectory. I want to pass the Sun in
a very fiat hyperbola, well inside the orbit of Mercury, as close to the
photosphere as this ship can stand. I don't know how close that is, so I
couldn't work it out ahead of time. But the data will be here in the ship and
there will be time to correlate them as we go."
Lazarus looked again at the giddy little
cat's cradle of apparatus. "Andy . . . if you are sure that the gears in
your head are still meshed, I'll take a chance. Strap down, both of you."
He belted himself into the pilot's couch and called Barstow. "How about
it, Zack?" "Right now!"
"Hang on tight!" With one hand
Lazarus covered a light in his leftside control panel; acceleration warning
shrieked throughout the ship. With the other he covered another; the hemisphere
in front of them was suddenly spangled with the starry firmament, and Ford
gasped.
Lazarus studied it. A full twenty degrees
of it was blanked out by the dark circle of the nightside of Earth. "Got
to duck around a corner, Andy. We'll use a little Tennessee windage." He
started easily with a quarter gravity, just enough to shake up his passengers
and make them cautious, while he started a slow operation of precessing the
enormous ship to the direction he needed to shove her in order to get out of
Earth's shadow. He raised acceleration to a half gee, then to a gee.
Earth changed suddenly from a black
silhouette to a slender silver crescent as the half-degree white disc of the
Sun came out from behind her. "I want to clip her about a thousand miles
out, Slipstick," Lazarus said tensely, "at two gees. Gimme a
temporary vector." Libby hesitated only momentarily and gave it to him.
Lazarus again sounded acceleration warning and boosted to twice Earth-normal
gravity. Lazarus was tempted to raise the boost to emergency-full but he dared
not do so with a shipload of groundlubbers; even two gees sustained for a long
period might be too much of a strain for some of them. Any Naval pursuit craft
ordered to intercept them could boost at much higher gee and their selected
crews could stand it. But it was just a chance they would have to take . . .
and anyhow, he reminded himself, a Navy ship could not maintain a high boost
for long; her mile-seconds were strictly limited by her reaction-mass tanks.
The New Frontiers had no such
old-fashioned limits, no tanks; her converter accepted any mass at all, turned
it into pure radiant energy. Anything would serve-meteors, cosmic dust, stray
atoms gathered in by her sweep field, or anything from the ship herself, such
as garbage, dead bodies, deck sweepings, anything at all. Mass was energy. In
dying, each tortured gram gave up nine hundred million trillion ergs of thrust.
The crescent of Earth waxed and swelled and slid off toward the left edge of
the hemispherical screen while the Sun remained dead ahead. A little more than
twenty minutes later, when they were at closest approach and the crescent, now
at half phase, was sliding out of the bowl screen, the ship-to-ship circuit
came to life. "New Frontiers!" a forceful voice sounded.
"Maneuver to orbit and lay to! This is an official traffic control
order."
Lazarus shut it off. "Anyhow,"
he said cheerfully, "if they try to catch us, they won't like chasing us
down into the Sun! Andy, it's a clear road now and time we corrected, maybe;
You want to compute it? Or will you feed me the data?"
"I'll compute it," Libby
answered. He had already discovered that the ship's characteristics pertinent
to astrogation, including her "black body" behavior, were available
at both piloting stations. Armed with this and with the running data from
instruments he set out to calculate the hyperboloid by which he intended to
pass the Sun. He made a half-hearted attempt to use the ship's ballistic
calculator but it baffled him; it was a design he was not used to, having no
moving parts of any sort, even in the exterior controls. So he gave it up as a
waste of time and fell back on the strange talent for figures lodged in his
brain. His brain had no moving parts, either, but he was used to it.
Lazarus decided to check on their
popularity rating. He switched on the ship-to-ship again, found that it was
still angrily squawking, although a little more faintly. They knew his own name
now-one of his names-which caused him to decide that the boys in the Chili must
have called traffic control almost at once. He tut-tutted sadly when he learned
that "Captain Sheffield's" license to pilot had been suspended. He
shut it off and tried the Naval frequencies . . . then shut them off also when
he was able to raise nothing but code and scramble, except that the words
"New Frontiers" came through once in clear.
He said something about "sticks and
stones may break my bones-" and tried another line of investigation. Both
by long-range radar and by paragravitic detector he could tell that there were
ships in their neighborhood but this alone told him very little; there were
bound to be ships this close to Earth and he had no easy way to distinguish,
from these data alone, an unarmed liner or freighter about her lawful occasions
from a Naval cruiser in angry pursuit.
But the New Frontiers had more resources
for analyzing what was around her than had an ordinary ship; she had been
specially equipped to cope unassisted with any imaginable strange conditions.
The hemispherical control room in which they lay was an enormous multi-screened
television receiver which could duplicate the starry heavens either in view-aft
or view-forward at the selection of the pilot. But it also had other circuits,
much more subtle; simultaneously or separately it could act as an enormous
radar screen as well, displaying on it the blips of any body within radar
range.
But that was just a starter. Its inhuman
senses could apply differential analysis to doppler data and display the result
in a visual analog. Lazarus studied his lefthand control bank, tried to
remember everything be had been told about it, made a change in the set up.
The simulated stars and even the Sun faded
to dimness; about a dozen lights shined brightly.
He ordered the board to check them for
angular rate; the bright lights turned cherry red, became little comets
trailing off to pink tails-all but one, which remained white and grew no tail.
He studied the others for a moment, decided that their vectors were such that
they would remain forever strangers, and ordered the board to check the
line-of-sight doppler on the one with a steady bearing.
It faded to violet, ran halfway through
the spectrum and held steady at blue-green. Lazarus thought a moment,
subtracted from the inquiry their own two gees of boost; it turned white again.
Satisfied he tried the same tests with view-aft.
"Lazarus-"
"Yeah, Lib?"
"Will it interfere with what you are
doing if I give you the corrections now?"
"Not at all. I was just taking a
look-see. If this magic lantern knows what it's talking about, they didn't
manage to get a pursuit job on our tail in time."
"Good. Well, here are the figures . .
."
"Feed 'em in yourself, will you? Take
the conn for a while. I want to see about some coffee and sandwiches. How about
you? Feel like some breakfast?"
Libby nodded absent-mindedly, already
starting to revise the ship's trajectory. Ford spoke up eagerly, the first word
he had uttered in a long, time. "Let me get it. I'd be glad to." He
seemed pathetically anxious to be useful.
"Mmm . . . you might get into some
kind of trouble, Slayton. No matter what sort of a selling job Zack did, your
name is probably 'Mud' with most of the members. I'll phone aft and raise
somebody."
"Probably nobody would recognize me
under these circumstances," Ford argued. "Anyway, it's a legitimate
errand-I can explain that."
Lazarus saw from his face that it was
necessary to the man's morale. "Okay . . . if you can handle yourself
under two gees."
Ford struggled heavily up out of the
acceleration couch he was in. "I've got space legs. What kind of
sandwiches?"
"I'd say corned beef, but it would
probably be some damned substitute. Make mine cheese, with rye if they've got
it, and use plenty of mustard. And a gallon of coffee. What are you having, Andy?"
"Me? Oh, anything that is
convenient,"
Ford started to leave, bracing himself
heavily against double weight, then he added, "Oh-it might save time if
you could tell me where to go." -
"Brother," said Lazarus,
"if this ship isn't pretty well crammed with food, we've all made a
terrible mistake. Scout around. You'll find some."
Down, down, down toward the Sun, with
speed increasing by sixty-four feet per second for every second elapsed. Down
and still down for fifteen endless hours of double weight. During this time
they traveled seventeen million miles and reached the inconceivable speed of
six hundred and forty miles per second. The figures mean little-think instead
of New York to Chicago, a half hour's journey even by stratomail, done in a single
heartbeat.
Barstow had a rough time during heavy
weight. For all of the others it was a time to lie down, try hopelessly to
sleep, breathe painfully and seek new positions in which to rest from the
burdens of their own bodies. But Zaccur Barstow was driven by his sense of
responsibility; he kept going though the Old Man of the Sea sat on his neck and
raised his weight to three hundred and fifty pounds.
Not that he could do anything for them,
except crawl wearily from one compartment to another and ask about their
welfare. Nothing could be done, no organization to relieve their misery was
possible, while high boost continued. They lay where they could, men, women,
and children crowded together like cattle being shipped, without even room to
stretch out, in spaces never intended for such extreme overcrowding.
The only good thing about it, Barstow
reflected wearily, was that they were all too miserable to worry about anything
but the dragging minutes. They were too beaten down to make trouble. Later on
there would be doubts raised, he was sure, about the wisdom of fleeing; there
would be embarrassing questions asked about Ford's presence in the ship, about
Lazarus' peculiar and sometimes shady actions, about his own contradictory
role. But not yet.
He really must, he decided reluctantly,
organize a propaganda campaign before trouble could grow. If it did-and it
surely would if he didn't move to offset it, and . . . well, that would be the
last straw. It would be.
He eyed a ladder in front of him, set his
teeth, and struggled up to the next deck. Picking his way through the bodies
there he almost stepped on a woman who was clutching a baby too tightly to her.
Barstow noticed that the infant was wet and soiled and he thought of ordering
its mother to take care of the matter, since she seemed to be awake. But he let
it go-so far as he knew there was not a clean diaper in millions of miles. Or
there might be ten thousand of them on the deck above . . . which seemed almost
as far away.
He plodded on without speaking to her.
Eleanor Johnson had not been aware of his concern. After the first great relief
at realizing that she and her baby were safe inside the ship she had consigned
all her worries to her elders and now felt nothing but the apathy of emotional
reaction and of inescapable weight. Baby had cried when that awful weight had
hit them, then had become quiet, too quiet. She had roused herself enough to
listen for its heartbeat; then, sure that he was alive, she had sunk back into
stupor.
Fifteen hours out, with the orbit of Venus
only four hours away, Libby cut the boost. The ship plunged on, in free fall,
her terrific speed still mounting under the steadily increasing pull of the
Sun. Lazarus was awakened by no weight. He glanced at the copilot's couch and
said, "On the curve?"
"As plotted."
Lazarus looked him over. "Okay, I've
got it. Now get out of here and get some sleep. Boy, you look like a used
towel."
"I'll just stay here and rest."
"You will like hell. You haven't
slept even when I had the com; if you stay here, you'll be watching instruments
and figuring. So beat it! Slayton, chuck him out."
Libby smiled shyly and left. He found the
spaces abaft the control room swarming with floating bodies but he managed to
find an unused corner, passed his kilt belt through a handihold, and slept at
once.
Free fall should have been as great a
relief to everyone else; it was not, except to the fraction of one per cent who
were salted spacemen. Free-fall nausea, likes seasickness, is a joke only to
those not affected; it would take a Dante to describe a hundred thousand cases
of it. There were anti-nausea drugs aboard, but they were not found at once;
there were medical men among the Families, but they were sick, too. The misery
went on.
Barstow, himself long since used to free
flight, floated forward to the control room to pray relief for the less
fortunate. "They're in bad shape," he told Lazarus. "Can't you
put spin on the ship and give them some let-up? It would help a lot."
"And it would make maneuvering
difficult, too. Sorry. Look, Zack, a lively ship will be more important to them
in a pinch than just keeping their suppers down. Nobody dies from seasickness
anyhow . . . they just wish they could."
The ship plunged on down, still gaining
speed as it fell toward the Sun. The few who felt able continued slowly to
assist the enormous majority who were ill.
Libby continued to sleep, the luxurious
return-to-the-womb sleep of those who have learned to enjoy free fall. He had
had almost no sleep since the day the Families had been arrested; his overly
active mind had spent all its time worrying the problem of a new space drive.
The big ship precessed around him; he
stirred gently and did not awake. It steadied in a new attitude and the acceleration
warning brought him instantly awake. He oriented himself, placed himself flat
against the after bulkhead, and waited; weight hit him almost at once-three
gees this time and he knew that something was badly wrong. He had gone almost a
quarter mile aft before he found a hide-away; nevertheless he struggled to his
feet and started the unlikely task of trying to climb that quarter mile-now
straight up-at three times his proper weight, while blaming himself for having
let Lazarus talk him into leaving the control room.
He managed only a portion of the trip . .
. but an heroic portion, one about equal to climbing the stairs of a ten-story
building while carrying a man on each shoulder . . . when resumption of free
fall relieved him. He zipped the rest of the way like a salmon returning home
and was in the control room quickly. "What happened?"
Lazarus said regretfully, "Had to
vector, Andy." Slayton Ford said nothing but looked worried.
"Yes, I know. But why?' Libby was
already strapping himself against the copilot's couch while studying the
astrogational situation.
"Red lights on the screen."
Lazarus described the display, giving coordinates and relative vectors.
Libby nodded thoughtfully. "Naval
craft. No commercial vessels would be in such trajectories. A minelaying
bracket."
"That's what I figured. I didn't have
time to consult you; I had to use enough mile-seconds to be sure they wouldn't
have boost enough to reposition on us."
"Yes, you had to." Libby looked
worried. "I thought we were free of any possible Naval interference."
"They're not ours," put in
Slayton Ford. "They can't be ours no matter what orders have been given
since I-uh, since I left. They must be Venerian craft."
"Yeah," agreed Lazarus,
"they must be. Your pal, the new Administrator, hollered to Venus for help
and they gave it to him-just a friendly gesture of interplanetary good
will."
Libby was hardly listening. He was
examining data and processing it through the calculator inside his skull.
"Lazarus. . . this new orbit isn't too good."
"I know," Lazarus agreed sadly.
"I had to duck . . . so I ducked the only direction they left open to
me-closer to the Sun."
"Too close, perhaps."
The Sun is not a large star, nor is it
very hot. But it is hot with reference to men, hot enough to strike them down
dead if they are careless about tropic noonday ninety-two million miles away
from it, hot enough that we who are reared under its rays nevertheless dare not
look directly at it.
At a distance of two and a half million
miles the Sun beats out with a flare fourteen hundred times as bright as the
worst ever endured in Death Valley, the Sahara, or Aden. Such radiance would
not be perceived as heat or light; it would be death more sudden than the full
power of a blaster. The Sun is a hydrogen bomb, a naturally occurring one; the
New Frontiers was skirting the limits of its circle of total destruction.
It was hot inside the ship. The Families
were protected against instant radiant death by the armored walls but the air
temperature continued to mount. They were relieved of the misery of free fall
but they were doubly uncomfortable, both from heat and from the fact that the
bulkheads slanted crazily; there was no level place to stand or lie, The ship
was both spinning on its axis and accelerating now; it was never intended to do
both at once and the addition of the two accelerations, angular and linear, met
"down" the direction where outer and after bulkheads met. The ship
was being spun through necessity to permit some of the impinging radiant energy
to re-radiate on the "cold" side. The forward acceleration was
equally from necessity, a forlorn-hope maneuver to pass the Sun as far out as
possible and as fast as possible, in order to spend least time at perihelion,
the point of closest approach.
It was hot in the control room. Even
Lazarus had voluntarily shed his kilt and shucked down to Venus styles. Metal
was hot to the touch. On the great stellarium screen an enormous circle of
blackness marked where the Sun's disc should have been; the receptors had cut
out automatically at such a ridicubus demand.
Lazarus repeated Libby's last words.
"'Thirty-seven minutes to perihelion.' We can't take it, Andy. The ship
can't take it."
"I know. I never intended us top this
close."
"Of course you didn't. Maybe I
shouldn't have maneuvered. Maybe we would have missed the mines anyway. Oh,
well-" Lazarus squared his shoulders and filed it with the
might-have-beens. "It looks to me, son, about time to try out your
gadget." He poked a thumb at Libby's uncouth-looking "space
drive." "You say that all you have to do is to hook up that one
connection?"
"That is what is intended. Attach
that one lead to any portion of the mass to be affected. Of course I don't
really know that it will work," Libby admitted. "There is no way to
test it."
"Suppose it doesn't?'
"There are three possibilities."
Libby answered methodically. "In the first place, nothing may
happen."
"In which case we fry."
"In the second place, we and the ship
may cease to exist as mattei as we know it."
"Dead, you mean. But probably a
pleasanter way."
"I suppose so. I don't know what
death is. In the third place, if my hypotheses are correct, we will recede from
the Sun at a speed just under that of light."
Lazarus eyed the gadget and wiped sweat
from his shoulders. "It's getting hotter, Andy. Hook it up-and it has
better be good!"
Andy hooked it up.
"Go ahead," urged Lazarus.
"Push the button, throw the switch, cut the beam. Make it march."
"I have," Libby insisted.
"Look at the Sun."
"Huh? Oh!"
The great circle of blackness which had
marked the position of the Sun on the star-speckled stellarium was shrinking
rapidly. In a dozen heartbeats it lost half its diameter; twenty seconds later
it had dwindled to a quarter of its original width.
"It worked," Lazarus said
softly. "Look at it, Slayton! Sign me up as a purple baboon-it
worked!"
"I rather thought it would,"
Libby answered seriously. "It should, you know."
"Hmm- That may be evident to you,
Andy. It's not to me. How fast are we going?"
"Relative to what?"
"Uh, relative to the Sun."
"I haven't had opportunity to measure
it, but it seems to be just under the speed of light. It can't be
greater."
"Why not? Aside from theoretical
considerations."
"We still see." Libby pointed at
the stellarium bowl.
"Yeah, so we do," Lazarus mused.
"Hey! We shouldn't be able to. I ought to doppler out."
Libby looked blank, then smiled. "But
it dopplers right back in. Over on that side, toward the Sun, we're seeing by
short radiations stretched to visibility. On the opposite side we're picking up
something around radio wavelengths dopplered down to light."
"And in between?"
"Quit pulling my leg, Lazarus. I'm
sure you can work out relatively vector additions quite as well as I can."
"You work it out," Lazarus said
firmly. "I'm just going to sit here and admire it. Eh, Slayton?"
"Yes. Yes indeed."
Libby smiled politely. "We might as
well quit wasting mass on the main drive." He sounded the warner, then cut
the drive. "Now we can return to normal conditions." He started to
disconnect his gadget.
Lazarus said hastily, "Hold it, Andy!
We aren't even outside the orbit of Mercury yet. Why put on the brakes?"
'Why, this won't stop us. We have acquired
velocity; we will keep it."
Lazarus pulled at his cheek and stared.
"Ordinarily I would agree with you. First Law of Motion. But with this
pseudospeed I'm not so sure. We got it for nothing and we haven't paid for
it-in energy, I mean. You seem to have declared a holiday with respect to
inertia; when the holiday is over, won't all that free speed go back where it
came from?"
"I don't think so," Libby
answered. "Our velocity isn't 'pseudo' anything; it's as real as velocity
can be. You are attempting to apply verbal anthropomorphic logic to a field in
which it is not pertinent. You would not expect us to be transported
instantaneously back to the lower gravitational potential from which we
started, would you?"
"Back to where you hooked in your
space drive? No, we've moved."
"And we'll keep on moving. Our newly
acquired gravitational potential energy of greater height above the Sun is no
more real than our present kinetic energy of velocity. They both exist."
Lazarus looked baffled. The expression did
not suit him. '~I guess you've got me, Andy. No matter how I slice it, we
seemed to have picked up energy from somewhere. But where? When I went to
school, they taught me to honor the Flag, vote the straight party ticket, and
believe in the law of conservation of energy. Seems like you've violated it.
How about it?"
"Don't worry about it,"
suggested Libby. "The so-called law of conservation of energy was merely a
working hypothesis, unproved and unprovable, used to describe gross phenomena.
Its terms apply only to the older, dynamic concept of the world. In a plenum
conceived as a static grid of relationships, a 'violation' of that 'law' is
nothing more startling than a discontinuous function, to be noted and
described. That's what I did. I saw a discontinuity in the mathematical model
of the aspect of mass-energy called inertia. I applied it. The mathematical
model turned out to be similar to the real world. That was the only hazard,
really-one never knows that a mathematical model is similar to the real world until
you try it."
"Yeah, yeah, sure, you can't tell the
taste till you bite it- but, Andy, I still don't see what caused it!" He
turned toward Ford. "Do you, Slayton?"
Ford shook his head. "No. I would
like to know . . . but I doubt if I could understand it."
"You and me both. Well, Andy?"
Now Libby looked baffled. ~'But, Lazarus,
causality has nothing to do with the real plenum. A fact simply is. Causality
is merely an old-fashioned-postulate of a pre-scientific philosophy."
"I guess," Lazarus said slowly,
"I'm old-fashioned."
Libby said nothing. He disconnected his
apparatus.
The disc of black continued to shrink.
When it had shrunk to about one sixth its greatest diameter, it changed
suddenly from black to shining white, as the ship's distance from the Sun again
was great enough to permit the receptors to manage the load.
Lazarus tried to work out in his head the
kinetic energy of the ship-one half the square of the velocity of light (minus
a pinch, he corrected) times the mighty tonnage of -the New Frontiers. The
answer did not comfort him, whether he called it ergs or apples.
Chapter
8
"FIRST THINGS FIRST,"
interrupted Barstow. "I'm as fascinated by the amazing scientific aspects
of our present situation as any of you, but we've got work to do. We've got to
plan a pattern for daily living at once. So let's table mathematical physics
and talk about organization."
He was not speaking to the trustees but to
his own personal lieutenants, the key people in helping him put over the complex
maneuvers which had made their escape possible-Ralph Schultz, Eve Barstow, Mary
Sperling, Justin Foote, Clive Johnson, about a dozen others.
Lazarus and Libby were there. Lazarus had
left Slayton Ford to guard the control room, with orders to turn away all
visitors and, above all, not to let anyone touch the controls. It was a
make-work job, it being Lazarus' notion of temporary occupational therapy. He
bad sensed in Ford a mental condition that he did not like. Ford seemed to have
withdrawn into himself. He answered when spoken to, but that was all. It
worried Lazarus.
"We need an executive," Barstow
went on, "someone who, for the time being will have very broad powers to
give orders and have them carried out. He'll have to make decisions, organize
us, assign duties and responsibilities, get the internal economy of the ship
working. It's a big job and I would like to have our brethren hold an election
and do it democratically. That'll have to wait; somebody has to give orders
now. We're wasting food and the ship is-well, I wish you could have seen the
'fresher I tried to use today."
"Zaccur . . .
"Yes, Eve?"
"It seems to me that the thing to do
is to put it up to the trustees. We haven't any authority; we were just an
emergency group for something that is finished now."
"Ahrruniph-" It was Justin
Foote, in tones as dry and formal as his face. "I differ somewhat from our
sister. The trustees are not conversant with the full background; it would take
time we can ill afford to put them into the picture, as it were, before they
would be able to judge the matter. Furthermore, being one of the trustees
myself, I am able to say without bias that the trustees, as an organized group,
can have no jurisdiction because legally they no longer exist."
Lazarus looked interested. "How do
you figure that, Justin?"
"Thusly: the board of trustees were
the custodians of a foundation which existed as a part of and in relation to a
society. The trustees were never a government; their sole duties had to do with
relations between the Families and the rest of that society. With the ending of
relationship between the Families and terrestrial society, the board of
trustees, ipso facto, ceases to exist. it is one with history. Now we in this
ship are not yet a society, we are an anarchistic group. This present
assemblage has as much-or as little-authority to initiate a society as has any
part group.
Latarus cheered and clapped.
"Justin," he applauded, "that is the neatest piece of verbal
juggling I've heard in a century. Let's get together sometime and have a go at
solipsism."
Justin Foote looked pained.
"Obviously-" he began.
"Nope! Not another word! You've
convinced me, don't spoil it. If that's how it is, let's get busy and pick a
bull moose. How about you, Zack? You look like the logical candidate."
Barstow shook his head. "I know my
limitations. I'm an engineer, not a political executive; the Families were just
a hobby with me. We need an expert in social administration."
When Barstow had convinced them that he
meant it, other names were proposed and their qualifications debated at length.
In a group as large as the Families there were many who had specialized in
political science, many who had served in public office with credit.
Lazarus listened; he knew four of the
candidates. At last he got Eve Barstow aside and whispered with her. She looked
startled, then thoughtful, finally nodded.
She asked for the floor. "I have a
candidate to propose," she began in her always gentle tones, "who
might not ordinarily occur to you, but who is incomparably better fitted, by
temperament, training, and experience, to do this job than is anyone as yet
proposed. For civil administrator of the ship I nominate Slayton Ford."
They were flabbergasted into silence, then
everybody tried to talk at once. "Has Eve lost her mind? Ford is back on
Earth!"-"No, no, he's not. I've seen him-here-in the
ship."-"But it's out of the question!"-"Him? The Families
would never accept him!"-"Even so, he's not one of us."
Eve patiently kept the floor until they
quieted. "I know my nomination sounds ridiculous and I admit the
difficulties. But consider the advantages. We all know Slayton Ford by
reputation and by performance. You know, every member of the Families knows,
that Ford is a genius in his field. It is going to be hard enough to work out
plans for living together in this badly overcrowded ship; the best talent we
can draw on will be no more than enough."
Her words impressed them because Ford was
that rare thing in history, a statesman whose worth was almost universally
acknowledged in his own lifetime. Contemporary historians credited him with
having saved the Western Federation in at least two of its major development
crises; it was his misfortune rather than his personal failure that his career
was wrecked on a crisis not solvable by ordinary means.
"Eve," said Zaccur Barstown
"1 agree with your opinion of Ford and I myself would be glad to have him
as our executive. But how about all of the others? To the Families-everyone
except ourselves here present-Mr. Administrator Ford symbolizes the persecution
they have suffered. I think that makes him an impossible candidate."
Eve was gently stubborn. "I don't
think so. We've already agreed that we will have to work up a campaign to explain
away a lot of embarrassing facts about the last few days. Why don't we do it
thoroughly and convince them that Ford is a martyr who sacrificed himself to
save them? He is, you know."
"Mmm . . . yes, he is. He didn't
sacrifice himself primarily on our account, but there is no doubt in my mind
that his personal sacrifice saved us. But whether or not we can convince the
others, convince them strongly enough that they will accept him and take orders
from him . . . when he is now a sort of personal devil to them-well, I just
don't know. I think we need expert advice. How about it, Ralph? Could it be
done?'
Ralph Schultz hesitated. "The truth
of a proposition has little or nothing to do with its psychodynamics. The
notion that 'truth will prevail' is merely a pious wish; history doesn't show
it. The fact that Ford really is a martyr to whom we owe gratitude is
irrelevant to the purely technical question you put to me." He stopped to
think. "But the proposition per se has certain sentimentally dramatic aspects
which lend it to propaganda manipulation, even in the face of the currently
accepted strong counterproposition. Yes . . . yes, I think it could be
sold."
"How long would it take you to put it
over?"
"Mmm . . . the social space involved
is both 'tight' and 'hot' in the jargon we use; I should be able to get a high
positive 'k' factor on the chain reaction-if it works at all. But it's an
unsurveyed field and I don't know what spontaneous rumors are running around
the ship. If you decide to do this, I'll want to prepare some rumors before we
adjourn, rumors to repair Ford's reputation-then about twelve hours from now I
can release another one that Ford is actually aboard . Because he intended from
the first to throw his lot in with us."
"Ub, I hardly think he did,
Ralph." -
"Are you sure, Zaccur?"
"No, but- Well . . .
"You see? The truth about his
original intentions is a secret between him - and his God. You don't know and
neither do I. But the dynamics of the proposition are a separate matter.
Zaccur, by the time my rumor gets back to you three or four times, even you
will begin to wonder." The psychornetrician paused to stare at nothing
while he consulted an intuition refined by almost a century of mathematical
study of human behavior. "Yes, it will work. If you all want to do it, you
will be able to make a public announcement inside of twenty-four hours."
"I so move!" someone called out.
A few minutes later Barstow had Lazarus
fetch Ford to the meeting place. Lazarus did not explain to him why his
presence was required; Ford entered the compartment like a man come to
judgment, one with a bitter certainty that the outcome will be against him. His
manner showed fortitude but not hope. His eyes were unhappy.
Lazarus had studied those eyes during the
long hours they had been shut up together in the control room. They bore an
expression Lazarus had seen many times before in his long life. The condemned
man who has lost his final appeal, the fully resolved suicide, little furry
things exhausted and defeated by struggle with the unrelenting steel of
traps-the eyes of each of these hold a single expression, born of hopeless
conviction that his time has run out.
Ford's eyes had it.
Lazarus had seen it grow and had been
puzzled by it. To be sure, they were all in a dangerous spot, but Ford no more
I than the rest. Besides, awareness of danger brings a live expression; why
should Ford's eyes hold the signal of death? Lazarus finally decided that it
could only be because Ford had reached the dead-end state of mind where suicide
is necessary. But why? Lazarus mulled it over during the long watches in the
control room and reconstructed the logic of it to his own satisfaction. Back on
Earth, Ford had been important among his own kind, the short-lived. His
paramount position had rendered him then almost immune to the feeling of
defeated inferiority which the long-lived stirred up in normal men. But now he
was the only ephemeral in a race of Methuselas.
Ford had neither the experience of the
elders nor the expectations of the young; he felt inferior to them both,
hopelessly outclassed. Correct or not, he felt himself to be a useless
pensioner, an impotent object of charity.
To a person of Ford's busy useful
background the situation was intolerable. His very pride and strength of
character were driving him to suicide.
As he came into the conference room Ford's
glance sought out Zaccur Barstow. "You
sent for me, sir?'
"Yes, Mr. Administrator."
Barstow explained briefly the situation and the responsibility thel wanted him
to assume. "You are under no compulsion," he concluded, "but we
need your services if you are willing to serve. Will you?"
Lazarus' heart felt light as he watched
Ford's expression change to amazement. "Do you really mean that?" Ford
answered slowly. "You're not joking with me?"
"Most certainly we mean it!"
Ford did not answer at once and when he
did, his answer seemed irrelevant. "May
I sit down?"
A place was found for him; he settled
heavily into the chair and covered his face with his hands. No one spoke.
Presently he raised his head and said in a steady voice, "If that is your
will, I will do my best to carry out your wishes."
The ship required a captain as well as a
civil administrator. Lazarus had been, up to that time, her captain in a very
practical, piratical sense but he balked when Barstow proposed that it be made
a formal title. "Huh uh! Not me. I may just spend this trip playing
checkers. Libby's your man. Seriousminded, conscientious, former naval officer-just
the type for the job."
Libby blushed as eyes turned toward him.
"Now, really," he protested, "while it is true that I have had
to command ships in the course of my duties, it has never suited me. I am a
staff officer by temperament. I don't feel like a commanding officer."
"Don't see how you can duck out of
it," Lazarus persisted. "You invented the go-fast gadget and you are
the only one who understands how it works. You've got yourself a job,
boy."
"But that does not follow at
all," pleaded Libby. "1 am perfectly willing to be astrogator, for
that is consonant with my talents. But I very much prefer to serve under a
commanding officer."
Lazarus was smugly pleased then to see how
Slayton Ford immediately moved in and took charge; the sick man was gone, here
again was the executive. "It isn't a matter of your personal preference,
Commander Libby; we each must do what we can. I have agreed to direct social
and civil organization; that is consonant with my training. But I can't command
the ship as a ship; I'm not trained for it. You are. You must do it."
Libby blushed pinker and stammered.
"I would if I were the only one. But there are hundreds of spacemen among
the Families and dozens of them certainly have more experience; and talent for
command than I have. If you'll look for him, you'll find the right man."
Ford said, "What do you think,
Lazarus?"
"Um. Andy's got something. A captain
puts spine into his ship . . . or doesn't, as the case may be. If Libby doesn't
hanker to command, maybe we'd better look around."
Justin Foote had a microed roster with him
but there was no scanner at hand with which to sort it. Nevertheless the
memories of the dozen and more present produced many candidates. They finally
settled on Captain Rufus "Ruthless" King.
Libby was explaining the consequences of
his light-pressure drive to his new commanding officer. "The loci of our
attainable destinations is contained in a sheaf of paraboloids having their
apices tangent to our present course. This assumes that acceleration by means
of the ship's normal drive will always be applied so that the magnitude our
present vector, just under the speed of light, will be held constant. This will
require that the ship be slowly precessed during the entire maneuvering
acceleration. But it will not be too fussy because of the enormous difference
in magnitude between our present vector and the maneuvering vectors being
impressed on it. One may think of it roughly as accelerating at right angles to
Our course."
"Yes, yes, I see that," Captain
King cut in, "but why do you assume that the resultant vectors must always
be equal to our present vector?"
"Why, it need not be if the Captain
decides otherwise," Libby answered, looking puzzled, "but to apply a
component that would reduce the resultant vector below our present speed would
simply be to cause us to backtrack a little without increasing the scope of our
present loci of possible destinations. The effect would only increase our
flight time, to generations, even to centuries, if the resultant-"
"Certainly, certainly! I understand
basic ballistics, Mister. But why do you reject the other alternative? Why not
increase our speed? Why can't I accelerate directly along my present course if
I choose?"
Libby looked worried. "The Captain
may, if he so orders. But it would be an attempt to exceed the speed of light.
That has been assumed to be impossible-"
"That's exactly what I was driving
at: 'Assumed.' I've always wondered if that assumption was justified. Now seems
like a good time to find out."
Libby hesitated, his sense of duty
struggling against the ecstatic temptations of scientific curiosity. "If
this were a research ship, Captain, I would be anxious to try it. I can't
visualize what the conditions would be if we did pass the speed of light, but
it seems to me that we would be cut off entirely from the electromagnetic
spectrum insofar as other bodies are concerned. How could we see to
astrogate?"
Libby had more than theory to worry him;
they were "seeing" now only by electronic vision. To the human eye
itself the hemisphere behind them along their track was a vasty black; the
shortest radiations had dopplered to wavelengths too long for the eye. In the
forward direction stars could still be seen but their visible "light"
was made up of longest Hertzian waves crowded in by the ship's incomprehensible
speed. Dark "radio stars" shined at first magnitude; stars poor in
radio wavelengths had faded to obscurity. The familiar constellations were
changed beyond easy recognition. The fact that they were seeing by vision
distorted by Doppler's effect was confirmed by spectrum analysis; Fraunhofer's
lines had not merely shifted toward the violet end, they had passed beyond, out
of sight, and previously unknown patterns replaced them.
"Hmm . . ." King replied.
"I see what you mean. But I'd certainly like to try it, damn if I
wouldn't! But I admit it's out of the question with passengers inboard. Very
well, prepare for me roughed courses to type '0' stars lying inside this trumpet-flower
locus of yours and not too far away. Say ten light-years for your first
search."
"Yes, sir. I have. I can't offer
anything in that range in the '0' types."
"So? Lonely out here, isn't it?
Well?'
"We have Tau Ceti inside the locus at
eleven light-years." -
"A 05, eh? Not too good."
"No, sir. But we have a true Sol
type, a 02-catalog ZD9817. But it's more than twice as far away."
Captain King chewed a knuckle. "I
suppose I'll have to put it up to the elders. How much subjective time
advantage are we enjoying?"
"I don't know, sir."
"Eh? Well~ work it out! Or give me
the data and I will. I don't claim to be the mathematician you are, but any
cadet could solve that one. The equations are simple enough." -
"So they are, sir. But I don't have
the data to substitute in the time-contraction equation . . -. because I have
no way now to measure the ship's speed. The violet shift is useless to use; we
don't know what the lines mean. I'm afraid we must wait until we have worked up
a much longer baseline."
King sighed. "Mister, I sometimes
wonder why I got into this business. Well, are you willing to venture a best
guess? Long time? Short time?"
"Uh . . . a long time, sir.
Years."
"So? Well, I've sweated it out in
worse ships. Years, eh? Play any chess?"
"I have, sir." Libby did not
mention that he had given up the game long ago for lack of adequate
competition.
"Looks like we'd have plenty of time
to play. King's pawn;to king four."
"King's knight to bishop three."
"An unorthodox player, eh? Well, I'll
answer you later. I suppose I'd better try to sell them the 02 eyen though it
takes longer . . . and I suppose I'd better caution Ford to start some contests
and things. Can't have 'em getting coffin fever."
"Yes, sir. Did I mention deceleration
time? It works out to just under one Earth year, subjective, at a negative
one-gee, to slow us to stellar speeds."
"Eh? We'll decelerate the same way we
accelerated-with your light-pressure drive."
Libby shook his head. "I'm sorry,
sir. The drawback of the light-pressure drive is that it makes no difference
what your previous course and speed may be; if you go inertialess in the near
neighborhood of a star, its light pressure kicks you away from it like a cork
hit by a stream of water. Your previous momentum is canceled out when you
cancel your inertia."
"Well," King conceded,
"let's assume that we will follow your schedule. I can't argue with you
yet; there are still some things about that gadget of yours that I don't
understand."
"There are lots of things about
it," Libby answered seriously, "that I don't understand either."
The ship had flicked by Earth's orbit less
than ten minutes after Libby cut in his space drive. Lazarus and he had
discussed the esoteric physical aspects of it all the way to the orbit of
Mars-less than a quarter hour. Jupiter's path was far distant when Barstow
called the organization conference. But it killed an hour to find them all in
the crowded ship; by the time he called them to order they were a billion miles
out beyond the orbit of Saturn-elapsed time from "Go!" less than an
hour and a half.
But the blocks get longer after Saturn.
Uranus found them still in discussion. Nevertheless Ford's name was agreed on
and he had accepted before the ship was as far from the Sun as is Neptune. King
had been named captain, had toured his new command with Lazarus as guide, and
was already in conference with his astrogator when the ship passed the orbit of
Pluto nearly four billion miles deep into space, but still less than six hours
after the Sun's light had blasted them away.
Even then they were not outside the Solar
System, but between them and the stars lay nothing but the winter homes of
Sol's comets and hiding places of hypothetical trans-Plutonian planets-space in
which the Sun holds options but can hardly be said to own in fee simple. But
even the nearest stars were still light-years away. New Frontiers was headed
for them at a pace which crowded the heels of light-weather cold, track fast.
Out, out, and still farther out . . . out
to the lonely depths where world lines are almost straight, undistorted by
gravitation. Each day, each month . . . each year . . . their headlong flight
took them farther from all humanity.
PART
TWO
The ship lunged on, alone in the desert of
night, each lightyear as empty as the last. The Families built up a way of life
in her.
The New Frontiers was approximately
cylindrical. When not under acceleration, she was spun on her axis to give
pseudo-weight to passengers near the outer skin of the ship; the outer or
"lower" compartments were living quarters while the innermost or
"upper" compartments were store-rooms and so forth. Between
compartments were shops, hydroponic farms and such. Along the axis, fore to
aft, were the control room, the converter, and the main drive.
The design will be recognized as similar
to that of the larger free-flight interplanetary ships in use today, but it is
necessary to bear in mind her enormous size. She was a city, with ample room
for a colony of twenty thousand, which would have allowed the planned
complement of ten thousand to double their numbers during the long voyage to
Proxima Centauri.
Thus, big as she was, the hundred thousand
and more of the Families found themselves overcrowded fivefold.
They put up with it only long enough to
rig for cold-sleep. By converting some recreation space on the lower levels to
storage, room was squeezed out for the purpose. Somnolents require about one
per cent the living room needed by active, functioning humans; in time the ship
was roomy enough for those still awake. Volunteers for cold-sleep were not
numerous at first-these people were more than commonly aware of death because
of their unique heritage; cold-sleep seemed too much like the Last Sleep. But
the great discomfort of extreme overcrowding combined with the equally extreme
monotony of the endless voyage changed their minds rapidly enough to provide a
steady supply for the little death as fast as they could be accommodated.
Those who remained awake were kept humping
simply to get the work done-the ship's houskeeping, tending the hydroponic
farms and the ship's auxiliary machinery and, most especially, caring for the
somnolents themselves. Biomechanicians have worked out complex empirical
formulas describing body deterioration and the measures which must be taken to
offset it under various conditions of impressed acceleration, ambient
temperature, the drugs used, and other factors such as metabolic age, body
mass, sex, and so forth. By using the upper, low-weight compartments,
deterioration caused by acceleration (that is to say, the simple weight of body
tissues on themselves, the wear that leads to flat feet or bed sores) could be
held to a minimum. But all the care of the somnolents had to be done by hand-turning
them, massaging them, checking on blood sugar, testing the slow-motion heart
actions, all the tests and services necessary to make sure that extremely
reduced metabolism does not slide over into death. Aside from a dozen stalls in
the ship's infirmary she had not been designed for cold-sleep passengers; no
automatic machinery had been provided. All this tedious care of tens of
thousands of somnolents had to be done by hand.
Eleanor Johnson ran across her friend,
Nancy Weatheral, in Refectory 9-D--called "The Club" by its habitués,
less flattering things by those who avoided it. Most of its frequenters were
young and noisy. Lazarus was the only elder who ate there often. He did not
mind noise, he enjoyed it.
Eleanor swooped down on her friend and
kissed the back of her neck. "Nancy! So you are awake again! My, I'm glad
to see you!"
Nancy disentangled herself. "H'lo,
b~e. Don't spill my coffee."
"Well! Aren't you glad to see
me?"
"Of course I am. But you forget that
while it's been a year to you, it's only yesterday to me. And I'm still
sleepy."
"How long have you been awake,
Nancy?"
"A couple of hours. How's that kid of
yours?"
"Oh, he's fine!" Eleanor
Johnson's face brightened. "You wouldn't know him-he's shot up fast this
past year. Almost up to my shoulder and looking more like his father every
day."
Nancy changed the subject. Eleanor's
friends made a point of keeping Eleanor's deceased husband out of the
conversation. "What have you been doing while I was snoozing? Still
teaching primary?" -
"Yes. Or rather 'No.' I stay with the
age group my Hubert is in. He's in junior secondary now."
"Why don't you catch a few months'
sleep and skip some of that drudgery, Eleanor? You'll make an old woman out of
yourself if you keep it up;" - -
"No," Eleanor refused, "not
until Hubert is old enough not to need me."
"Don't be sentimental. Half the
female volunteers are women with young children. I don't blame 'em a bit. Look
at me-from my point of view the trip so far has lasted only seven months. I
could do the rest of it standing on my head."
Eleanor looked stubborn. "No, thank
you. That may be all right for you, but I am doing very nicely as I am."
Lazarus had been sitting at the same
counter doing drastic damage to a sirloin steak surrogate. "She's afraid
she'll miss something," he explained. "I don't blame her. So am
I."
Nancy changed her tack. "Then have
another child, Eleanor. That'll get you relieved from routine duties."
"It takes two to arrange that,"
Eleanor pointed out.
"That's no hazard. Here's
Lazarus, for example. He'd make a A plus father."
Eleanor dimpled. Lazarus blushed under his
permanent tan. "As a matter of fact," Eleanor stated evenly, "I
proposed to him and was turned down."
Nancy sputtered into her coffee and looked
quickly from Lazarus to Eleanor. "Sorry.
I didn't know."
"No harm," answered Eleanor.
"It's simply because I am one of his granddaughters, four times
removed."
"But . . ." Nancy fought a
losing fight with the custom of privacy. "Well, goodness me, that's well
within the limits of permissible consanguinity. What's the hitch? Or should I
shut up?"
"You should," Eleanor agreed.
Lazarus shifted uncomfortably. "I
know I'm oldfashioned," he admitted, "but I soaked up some of my
ideas a long time ago. Genetics or no genetics, I just wouldn't feel right
marrying one of my own grandchildren."
Nancy looked amazed. "I'll say you're
old-fashioned!" She added, "Or maybe you're just shy. I'm tempted to
propose to you myself and find out."
Lazarus glared at her. "Go ahead and
see what a surprise you get!"
Nancy looked him over coolly. "Mmn .
. ." she meditated.
Lazarus tried to outstare her, finally
dropped his eyes: "I'll have to ask you ladies to excuse me," he said
nervously. "Work to do."
Eleanor laid a gentle hand on his arm.
"Don't go, Lazarus. Nancy is a cat and can't help it. Tell her about the
plans for landing."
"What's that? Are we going to land?
When? Where?"
Lazarus, willing to be mollified, told
her. The type G2, or Sol-type star, toward which they had bent their course
years earlier was now less than a light-year away-a little over seven
light-months-and it was now possible to infer by parainterferometric methods
that the star (ZD9817, or simply "our" star) had planets of some
sort.
In another month, when the star would be a
half light-year away, deceleration would commence. Spin would be taken off the
ship and for one year she would boost backwards at one gravity, ending near the
star at interplanetary rather than interstellar speed, and a search would be
made for a planet fit to support human life. The search would be quick and easy
as the only planets they were interested in would shine out brilliantly then,
like Venus from Earth; they were not interested in elusive cold planets, like
Neptune or Pluto, lurking in distant shadows, nor in scorched cinders ilke
Mercury, hiding in the flaming skirts of the mother star.
If no Earthlike planet was to be had, then
they must continue on down really close to the strange sun and again be kicked
away by light pressure, to resume hunting for a home elsewhere-with the
difference that this time, not harassed by police, they could select a new
course with care.
Lazarus explained that the New Frontiers
would not actually land in either case; she was too big to land, her weight
would wreck her. Instead, if they found a planet, she would be thrown into a
parking orbit around her and exploring parties would be sent down in ship's
boats. - -
As soon as face permitted Lazarus left the
two young women and went to the laboratory where the Families continued their
researches in metabolism and gerontology. He expected to find Mary Sperling
there; the brush with Nancy Weatheral had made him feel a need for her company.
If he ever did marry again, he thought to himself, Mary was more his style. Not
that he seriously considered it; he felt that a iiaison between Mary and
himself would have a ridiculous flavor of lavender and old lace.
Mary Sperling, finding herself cooped up
in the ship and not wishing to accept the symbolic death of cold-sleep, had
turned her fear of death into constructive channels by volunteering to be a
laboratory assistant in the continuing research into longevity. She was not a
trained biologist but she had deft fingers and an agile mind; the patient years
of the trip had shaped her into a valuable assistant to Dr. Gordon Hardy, chief
of the research.
Lazarus found her servicing the deathless
tissue of chicken heart known to the laboratory crew as "Mrs.
'Avidus." Mrs. 'Avidus was older than any member of the Families save
possibly Lazarus himself; she was a growing piece of the original tissue
obtained by the Families from the Rockefeller Institute in the twentieth
century, and the tissues had been alive since early in the twentieth century
even then. Dr. Hardy and his predecessors had kept their bit of it alive for
more than two centuries now, using the Carrel-Lindbergh-O'Shaug techniques and
still Mrs. 'Avidus flourished.
Gordon Hardy had insisted on taking the
tissue and the apparatus which cherished it with him to the reservation when he
was arrested; he had been equally stubborn about taking the living tissue along
during the escape in the Chili. Now Mrs. 'Avidus still lived and grew in the
New Frontiers, fifty or sixty pounds of her-blind, deaf, and brainless, but
still alive.
Mary Sperling was reducing her size.
"Hello, Lazarus," she greeted him. "Stand
back. I've got the tank open."
He watched her slice off excess tissue.
"Mary," he mused, "what keeps that silly thing alive?"
"You've got the question
inverted," she answered, not looking up; "the proper form is: why
should it die? Why shouldn't it go on forever?" -
"I wish to the Devil it would
die!" came the voice of Dr. Hardy from behind them. "Then we could
observe and find out why." - -
"You'll never find out why from Mrs.
'Avidus, boss," Mary answered, hands and eyes still busy. "The key to
the matter is in the gonads-she hasn't any."
'Hummph! What do you know about it?"
"A woman's intuition. What do you
know about it?"
"Nothing, -absolutely nothing!-which
puts me ahead of you and your intuition."
"Maybe. At least," Mary added
slyly, "1 knew you before you were housebroken."
"A typical female argument. Mary,
that lump of muscle cackled and laid eggs before either one of us was born, yet
it doesn't know anything." He scowled at it. "Lazarus, I'd gladly
trade it for one pair of carp. male and female." -
"Why carp?" asked Lazarus.
"Because carp don't seem to die. They
get killed, or eaten, or starve to death, or succumb to infection, but so far
as we know they don't die."
"Why not?"
"That's what I was trying to find out
when we were rushed off on this damned safari. They have unusual intestinal
flora and it may have something to do with that. But I think it has to do with
the fact that they never stop growing."
Mary said something inaudibly. Hardy said,
"What are you muttering about? Another intuition?"
"I said, 'Amoebas don't die.' You
said yourself that every amoeba now alive has been alive for, oh, fifty million
years or so. Yet they don't grow indefinitely larger and they certainly can't
have intestinal flora."
"No guts," said Lazarus and
blinked.
"What a terrible pun, Lazarus. But
what I said is true. They don't die. They just twin and keep on living."
"Guts or no guts," Hardy said
impatiently, "there may be a structural parallel. But I'm frustrated for
lack of experimental subjects. Which reminds me: Lazarus, I'm glad you dropped
in. I want you to do me a favor."
"Speak up. I might be feeling
mellow."
"You're an interesting case yourself,
you know. You didn't follow our genetic pattern; you anticipated it. I don't
want your body to go into the converter; I want to examine it."
Lazarus snorted. "'Sail right with
me, bud. But you'd better tell your successor what to look for-you may not live
that long. And I'll bet you anything that you like that nobody'll find it by
poking around in my cadaver!"
The planet they had hoped for was there
when they looked for it, green, lush, and young, and looking as much like Earth
as another planet could. Not only was it Earthlike but the rest of the system
duplicated roughly the pattern of the Solar System-small terrestrial planets
near this sun, large Jovian planets farther out. Cosmologists had never been
able to account for the Solar System; they had alternated between theories of
origin which had failed to stand up and sound mathematico-physical
"proofs" that such a system could never have originated in the first
place. Yet here was another enough like it to suggest that its paradoxes were
not unique, might even be common.
But more startling and even more
stimulating and certainly more disturbing was another fact brought out by
telescopic observation as they got close to the planet. The planet held life .
. , intelligent life . . . civilized life.
Their cities could be seen. Their
engineering works, strange in form and purpose, were huge enough to be seen
from space just as ours can be seen.
Nevertheless, though it might mean that they
must again pursue their weary hegira, the dominant race did not appear to have
crowded the available living space. There might be room for their little colony
on those broad continents. If a colony was welcome. . .
"To tell the truth," Captain
King fretted, "I hadn't expected anything like this. Primitive aborigines
perhaps, and we certainly could expect dangerous animals, but I suppose I
unconsciously assumed that man was the only really civilized race. We're going
to have to be very cautious."
King made up a scouting party headed by
Lazatus; he had come to have confidence in Lazarus' practical sense and will to
survive. King wanted to head the party himself, but his concept of his duty as
a ship's captain forced him to forego it. But Slayton Ford could go; Lazarus
chose him and Ralph Schultz and his lieutenants. The rest of the party were
specialists-biochemist, geologist, ecologist, stereographer, several sorts of
psychologists and sociologists to study the natives including one authority in
McKelvy's structural theory of communication whose task would be to find some
way to talk with the natives.
No weapons.
King flatly refused to arm them.
"Your scouting party is expendable, he told Lazarus bluntly; "for we
can not risk offending them by any sort of fighting for any reason, even in
self-defense. You are ambassadors, not soldiers. Don't forget it."
Lazarus returned to his stateroom, came
back and gravely delivered to King one blaster. He neglected to mention the one
still strapped to his leg under his kilt.
As King was about to tell them to man the
boat and carry out their orders they were interrupted by Janice Schmidt, chief
nurse to the Families' congenital defectives. She pushed her way past and
demanded the Captain's attention. -
Only a nurse could have obtained it at
that moment; she had professional stubbornness to match his and half a century
more practice at being balky. He glared at her. "What's the meaning of
this interruption?"
"Captain, I must speak with you about
one of my children."
"Nurse, you are decidedly out of
order. Get out. See me in my office-after taking it up with the Chief
Surgeon."
She put her hands on her hips.
"You'll see me now. This is the landing party, isn't it? I've got
something you have to hear before they leave."
King started to speak, changed his mind,
merely said, "Make it brief."
She did so. Hans Weatheral, a youth of
some ninety years and still adolescent in appearance through a hyper-active
thymus gland, was one of her charges. He had inferior but not moronic
mentality, a chronic apathy, and a neuro-muscular deficiency which made him too
weak to feed himself-and an acute sensitivity to telepaths.
He had told Janice that he knew all about
the planet around which they orbited. His friends on the planet had told him
about it . . . and they were expecting him.
The departure of the landing boat was
delayed while King and Lazarus investigated. Hans was matter of fact about his
information and what little they could check of what he said was correct. But
he was not too helpful about his "friends." "Oh, just
people," he said, shrugging at their stupidity. "Much like back home.
Nice people. Go to work, go to school, go to church. Have kids and enjoy
themselves. You'll like them."
But he was quite clear about one point:
his friends were expecting-him; therefore he must go along.
Against his wishes and his better judgment
Lazarus saw added to his party Hans Weatheral, Janice Schmidt, and a stretcher
for Hans.
When the party returned three days later
Lazarus made a long private report to King while the specialist reports were
being analyzed and combined. "It's amazingly like Earth, Skipper, enough
to make you homesick. But it's also different enough to give you the
willies-llke looking at your own face in the mirror and having it turn out to
have three eyes and no nose. Unsettling."
"But how about the natives?"
"Let me tell it. We made a quick
swing of the day side, for a bare eyes look. Nothing you haven't seen through
the 'scopes. Then I put her down where Hans told me to, in a clearing near the
center of one of their cities. I wouldn't have picked the place myself; I would
have preferred to land in the bush and reconnoitre. But you told me to play
Hans' hunches."
"You were free to use your judgment,"
King reminded
"Yes, yes. Anyhow we did it. By the
time the techs had sampled the air and checked for hazards there was quite a
crowd around us. They-well, you've seen the stereographs."
"Yes. Incredibly android."
"Android, hell! They're men. Not
humans, but men just the same." Lazarus looked puzzled. "I don't like
it."
King did not argue. The pictures had shown
bipeds seven to eight feet tall, bilaterally symmetric, possessed of internal
skeletal framework, distinct heads, lens-and-camera eyes. Those eyes were their
most human and appealing features; they were large, limpid, and tragic, like
those of a Saint Bernard dog.
It was well to concentrate on the eyes;
their other features were not as tolerable. King looked away from the loose,
toothless mouths, the bifurcated upper lips. He decided that it might take a
long, long time to learn to be fond of these creatures. "Go ahead,"
he told Lazarus.
"We opened up and I stepped out
alone, with my hands empty and. trying to look friendly and peaceable. Three of
them stepped forward-eagerly, I would say. But they lost interest in me at
once; they seemed to be waiting for somebody else to come out. So I gave orders
to carry Hans out.
"Skipper, you wouldn't believe it.
They fawned over Hans like a long lost brother. No, that doesn't describe it.
More like a king returning home in triumph. They were polite enough with the
rest of us, in an offhand way, but they fairly slobbered over Hans."
Lazarus hesitated. "Skipper? Do you believe in reincarnation?"
"Not exactly. I'm open-minded about
it. I've read the report of the Frawling Committee, of course."
"I've never had any use for the
notion myself. But how else could you account for the reception they gave
Hans?"
"I don't account for it. Get on with
your report. Do you think it is going to be possible for us to colonize
here?"
"Oh," said Lazarus, "they
left no doubt on that point. You see, Hans really can talk to them,
telepathically. Hans tells us that their gods have authorized us to live here-and
the natives have already made plans to receive us."
"That's right. They want us."
"Well! That's a relief."
"Is it?"
King studied Lazarus' glum features.
"You've made a report favorable on every point. Why the sour look?"
"I don't know. I'd just rather we
found a planet of our own. Skipper, anything this easy has a hitch in it."
Chapter
2
THE Jockaira (or Zhacheira, as some
prefer) turned an entire city over to the colonists.
Such astounding cooperation, plus the
sudden discovery by almost every member of the Howard Families that he was sick
for the feel of dirt under foot and free air in his lungs, greatly speeded the
removal from ship to ground. It had been anticipated that at least an Earth
year would be needed for such transition and that somnolents would be waked
only as fast as they could be accommodated dirtside, But the limiting factor
now was the scanty ability of the ship's boats to transfer a hundred thousand
people as they were roused.
The Jockaira city was not designed to fit
the needs of human beings. The Jockaira were not human beings, their physical
requirements were somewhat different, and their cultural needs as expressed in
engineering were vastly different. But a city, any city, is a machine to
accomplish certain practical ends: shelter, food supply, sanitation,
communication; the internal logic of these prime requirements. as applied by
diiferent creatures to different environments, will produce an unlimited number
of answers. But, as applied by any race of warm-blooded, oxygen-breathing
androidal creatures to a particular environment, the results, although strange,
are necessarily such that Terran humans can use them. In some ways the Jockaira
city looked as wild as a pararealist painting, but humans have lived in igloos,
grass shacks, and even in the cybernautomated burrow under Antarctina; these
humans could and did move into the Jockaira city-and of course at once set
about reshaping it to suit them better.
It was not difficult even though there was
much to be done. There were buildings already standing-shelters with roofs on
them, the artificial cave basic to all human shelter requirements. It did not
matter what the Jockaira had used such a structure for; humans could use it for
almost anything: sleeping, recreation, eating, storage, production. There were
actual "caves" as well, for the Jockaira dig in more than we do. But
humans easily turn troglodyte on occasion, in New York as readily as in
Antarctica.
There was fresh potable water piped in for
drinking and for limited washing. A major lack lay in plumbing; the city had no
overall drainage system. The "Jocks" did not waterbathe and their
personal sanitation requirements differed from ours and were taken care of
differently. A major effort had to be made to jury-rig equivalents of shipboard
refreshers and adapt them to hook in with Jockaira disposal arrangements.
Minimum necessity ruled; baths would remain a rationed luxury until water
supply and disposal could be increased at least tenfold. But baths are not a
necessity.
But such efforts at modification were
minor compared with the crash program to set up hydroponic farming, since most
of the somnolents could not be waked until a food supply was assured. The
do-it-now crowd wanted to tear out every bit of hydroponic equipment in the New
Frontiers at once, ship it down dirtside, set it up and get going, while
depending on stored supplies during the change-over; a more cautious minority
wanted to move only a pilot plant while continuing to grow food in the ship;
they pointed out that unsuspected fungus or virus on the strange planet could
result in disaster . . .starvation.
The minority, strongly led by Ford and
Barstow and supported by Captain King, prevailed; one of the ship's hydroponic
farms was drained and put out of service. Its machinery was broken down into
parts small enough to load into ship's boats.
But even this never reached dirtside. The
planet's native farm products turned out to be suitable for human food and the
Jockaira seemed almost pantingly anxious to give them away. Instead, efforts
were turned to establishing Earth crops in native soil in order to supplement
Jockaira foodstuffs with sorts the humans were used to. The Jockaira moved in
and almost took over that effort; they were superb "natural" farmers
(they had no need for synthetics on their undepleted planet) and seemed
delighted to attempt to raise anything their guests wanted.
Ford transferred his civil headquarters to
the city as soon as a food supply for more than a pioneer group was assured,
while King remained in the ship. Sleepers were awakened and ferried to the
ground as fast as facilities were made ready for them and their services could
be used. Despite assured food, shelter, and drinking water, much needed to be
done to provide minimum comfort and decency. The two cultures were basicially
different. The Jockaira seemed always anxious to be endlessly helpful but they
were often obviously baffled at what the humans tried to do. The Jockaira
culture did not seem to include the idea of privacy; the buildings of the city
had no partitions in them which were not loadbearing-and few that were; they
tended to use columns or posts. They could not understand why the humans would
break up these lovely open spaces into cubicles and passageways; they simply
could not comprehend why any individual would ever wish to be alone for any
purpose whatsoever.
Apparently (this is not certain, for
abstract communication with them never reached a subtle level) they decided
eventually that being alone held a religious significance for Earth people. In
any case they were again helpful; they provided thin sheets of material which
could be shaped into partitions-with their tools and only with their tools. The
stuff frustrated human engineers almost to nervous collapse. No corrosive known
to our technology affected it; even the reactions that would break down the
rugged fluorine plastics used in handling uranium compounds had no effect on
it. Diamond saws went to pieces on it, heat did not melt it, cold did not make
it brittle. It stopped light, sound, and all radiation they were equipped to
try on it. Its tensile strength could not be defined because they could not
break it. Yet Jockaira tools, even when handled by humans, could cut it, shape
it, reweld it.
The human engineers simply had to get used
to such frustrations. From the criterion of control over environment through
technology the Jockaira were as civilized as humans. But their developments had
been along other lines.
The important differences between the two
cultures went much deeper than engineering technology. Although ubiquitously
friendly and helpful the Jockaira were not human. They thought differently,
they evaluated differently; their social structure and language structure reflected
their unhuman quality and both were incomprehensible to human beings.
Oliver Johnson, the semantician who had
charge of developing a common language, found his immediate task made absurdly
easy by the channel of communication through Hans Weatheral. "Of
course," he explained to Slayton Ford and to Lazarus, "Hans isn't
exactly a genius; he just misses being a moron. That limits the words I can
translate through him to ideas he can understand. But it does give me a basic
vocabulary to build on."
"Isn't that enough?" asked Ford.
"It seems to me that - I have heard that eight hundred words will do to
convey any idea."
"There's some truth in that,"
admitted Johnson. "Less than a thousand words will cover all ordinary
situations. I have selected not quite seven hundred of their terms,
operationals and substantives, to give us a working lingua franca. But subtle
distinctions and fine discriminations will have to wait until we know them
better and understand them. A short vocabulary cannot handle high abstractions."
"Shucks," said Lazarus,
"seven hundred words ought to be enough. Me, I don't intend to make love
to 'em, or try to discuss poetry."
This opinion seemed to be justified; most
of the members picked up basic Jockairan in two weeks to a month after being
ferried down and chattered in it with their hosts as if they had talked it all
their lives. All of the Earthmen had had the usual sound grounding in mnemonics
and semantics; a short-vocabulary auxiliary language was quickly learned under
the stimulus of need and the circumstance of plenty of chance to
practice-except, of course, by the usual percentage of unshakable provincials
who felt that it was up to "the natives" to learn English.
The Jockaira did not learn English. In the
first place not one of them showed the slightest interest. Nor was it
reasonable to expect their millions to learn the language of a few thousand.
But in any case the split upper lip of a Jockaira could not cope with
"m," "p," and "b," whereas the gutturals,
sibilants, dentals, and clicks they did use could be approximated by the human
throat.
Lazarus was forced to revise his early bad
impression of the Jockaira. It was impossible not to like them once the
strangeness of their appearance had worn off. They were so hospitable, so
generous, so friendly, so anxious to please. He became particularly attached to
Kreei Sarloo, who acted as a sort of liaison officer between the Families and
the Jockaira. Sarloo held a position among his own people which could be
trans1ated roughly as "chief," "father,"
"priest," or "leader" of the Kreel family or tribe. He
invited Lazarus to visit him in the Jockaira city nearest the colony. "My
people will like to see you and smell your skin," he said. "It will
be a happymaking thing. The gods will be pleased."
Sarloo seemed almost unable to form a
sentence without making reference to his gods. Lazarus did not mind; to
another's religion he was tolerantly indifferent. "I will come, Sarloo,
old bean. It will be a happy-making thing for me, too."
Sarloo took him in the common vehicle of
the Jockaira, a wheelless wain shaped much like a soup bowl, which moved
quietly and rapidly over the ground, skimming the surface in apparent contact.
Lazarus squatted on the floor of the vessel while Sarloo caused it to speed
along at a rate that made Lazarus' eyes water.
"Sasloo," Lazarus asked,
shouting to make himself heard against the wind, "how does this thing
work? What moves it?'
"The gods breathe on the-"
Sarloo used a word not in their common language. "-and cause it to need to
change its place."
Lazarus started to ask for a fuller
explanation, then shut up. There had been something familiar about that answer
and he now placed it; he had once given a very similar answer to one of the
water people of Venus when he was asked to explain the diesel engine used in an
early type of swamp tractor. Lazarus had not meant to be mysterious; he had
simply been tongue-tied by inadequate common language. Well, there was a way to
get around that- "Sarloo, I want to see pictures of what happens
inside," Lazarus persisted, pointing. "You have pictures?"
"Pictures are," Sarloo
acknowledged, "in the temple. You must not enter the temple." His
great eyes looked mournfully at Lazarus, giving him a strong feeling that the Jockaira
chief grieved over his friend's lack of grace. Lazarus hastily dropped the
subject.
But the thought of Venerians brought
another puzzler to mind. The water people, cut off from the outside world by
the eternal clouds of Venus, simply did not believe in astronomy. The arrival
of Earthmen had caused them to readjust their concept of the cosmos a little,
but there was reason to believe that their revised explanation was no closer to
the truth. Lazarus wondered what the Jackaira thought about visitors from
space. They had shown no surprise-~-or had they?
"Sarloo," he asked, "do you
know where my brothers and I come from?'
"I know," Sarloo answered.
"You come from a distant sun -so distant that many seasons would come and
go while light traveled that long journey." -
Lazarus felt mildly astonished. "Who
told you that?'
"The gods tell us. Your brother Libby
spoke on it."
Lazarus was willing to lay odds that the
gods had not got around to mentioning it until after Libby explained it to
Kreel Sarloo. But he held his peace. He still wanted to ask Sarloo if he had
been surprised to have visitors arrive from the skies but he could think of no
Jockairan term for surprise or wonder. He was still trying to phrase the
question when Sarloo spoke again:
"The fathers of my people flew
through the skies as you did, but that was before the coming of the gods. The
gods, in their wisdom, bade us stop."
And that, thought Lazarus, is one damn big
lie, from pure panic. There was not the slightest indication that the Jockaira
had ever been off the surface of their planet.
At Sarloo's home that evening Lazarus sat
through a long session of what he assumed was entertainment for the guest of
honor, himself. He squatted beside Sarloo on a raised portion of the floor of
the vast common room of the clan Kreel and listened to two hours of howling
that might have been intended as singing. Lazarus felt that better music would
result from stepping on the tails of fifty assorted dogs but he tried to take
it in the spirit in which it seemed to be offered.
Libby, Lazarus recalled, insisted that
this mass howling which the Jockaira were wont to indulge in was, in fact,
music, and that men could learn to enjoy it by studying its interval
relationships.
Lazarus doubted it.
But he had to admit that Libby understood
the Jockaira better than he did in some ways. Libby had been delighted to
discover that the Jockaira were excellent and subtle mathematicians. In
particular they had a grasp of number that paralleled his own wild talent.
Their arithmetics were incredibly involved for normal humans. A number, any
number was to them a unique entity, to be grasped in itself and not simply as a
grouping of smaller numbers. In consequence they used any convenient positional
or exponential notation with any base, rational irrational, or variable-or none
at all. It was supreme luck, Lazarus mused, that Libby was available to act as
mathematical interpreter between the Jockaira and the Families, else it would
have been impossible to grasp a lot of the new technologies the Jockaira were
showing them.
He wondered why the Jockaira showed no
interest in learning human technologies they were offered in return?
The howling discord died away and Lazarus
brought his thoughts back to the scene around him. Food was brought; the Kreel
family tackled it with the same jostling enthusiasm with which Jockaira did
everything. Dignity, thought Lazarus--lean idea which never caught on here. A
large bowl, full two feet across and brimful of an amorpheous meal, was placed
in front of Kreel Sarloo. A dozen Kreels crowded atound it and started
grabbing~giving no precedence to their senior. But Sadoo casually slapped a few
of them out of the way and plunged a hand into the dish, brought forth a gob of
the ration and rapidly kneaded it into a ball in the palm of his double-thumbed
hand. Done, he shoved it towards Lazarus' mouth.
Lmarus war not squeamish-but he had to
remind bimself first, that food for Jockaira was food for men, and second that
he could not catch anything from them anyhow, before he could bring himself to
try the proffered morsel.
He took a large bite. Mmmm. . . not too
bad-bland and sticky, no particular flavor. Not good either-but could be
swallowed. Grimly determined to uphold the honor of his race, he ate on, while
promising himself a proper meal in the near future. When lie' (cit that to
swallow another mouthful would be to invite physical and social disaster, he
thought of a possible way out. Reaching into the common plate he scooped up a large
handful of the stuff, molded it inot a ball, and offered it to Sarloo.
It was
inspired diplomacy. For the rest of the mast Lazarus fed Sexton, fed him until
his arms were tired, until he marveled at his host's ability to tuck it away.
After eating they slept and Lazarus slept
with the family, literally. They slept where they had eaten, without beds,
disposed as casually as leaves on a path or puppies. To his aurprise, Lazarus
slept well and did not awoke until false suns in the cavern roof glowed in
mysterious sympathy to new dawn. Sarloo was still asleep near him and giving
out most humanlike snores. Lazarus found that one infant Jockaira was cuddled
spoon fashion against his own stomach. He felt a movement behind his back~ a
rustle at his thigh. He turned cautiously and found that another Jockaira-a
six-year-old in human equivalence- had extracted his blaster from its holster
and was now gazing curiously into its muzzle.
With hasty caution Lazarus removed the
deadly toy from the child's unwilling fingers, noted with relief that the
safety was still on and reholstered it. Lazarus received a reproach for look;
the kid seemed about to cry. "Hush," whispered Lazarus, "you'll
wake your o1d man. Here--"- He gathered the child into his left arm, and
cradled it against his side. The little Jockaira snuggled up to him, laid a
soft moist mouth against his side, and promptly went to sleep.
Lazarus looked down at him. "You're a
cute little devil," he said softly. "I-could grow right fond of you
if 1 could ever get used to your smell."
Some of the incidents between the two
races would bave been funny bad they not been charged with potential trouble:
for example, the case of Eleanor Johnson's son Hubert This gangling adolescent
was a confirmed sidewalk-superintendent. One day he was watching two
technicians, one human and one Jockaira, adapt a Jockaira power source to the
feed of Earth-type machinery. Tbe Jockaira was apparently amused by the boy
and, in an obviously friendly spirit, picked him up.
Hubert began to scream.
His mother, never far from him, joined
battle. She lacked strength and skill to do the utter destruction she was bent
on; the big nonhuman was unhurt, but it created a nasty situation.
Administrator Ford and Oliver Johnson
tried very hard to explain the incident to the amazed Jockaira. Fortunately,
they seemed grieved rather than vengeful.
Ford then called in Eleanor Johnson.
"You have endangered the entire colony by your stupidity-"
"But I-"
"Keep quiet! If you hadn't spoiled the
boy rotten, he would have behaved himself. If you weren't a maudlin fool. you
would have kept your hands to yourself. The boy goes to the regular development
classes henceforth and you are to let him alone. At the lightest sign of
animosity on your part toward any of the natives, I'll have you subjected to a
few years' cold-rest. Now get out!"
Ford was forced to use almost as strong
measures on Janice Schmidt. The interest shown in Hans Weatheral by the
Jockaira extended to all the telepathic defectives. The natives seemed to be
reduced to a state of quivering adoration by the mere fact that these could
communicate with them directly. Kreel Sarloo informed Ford that he wanted the
sensitives to be housed separately from the other defectives in the evacuated
temple of the Earthmen's city and that the Jockaira wished to wait on them
personally. It was more of an order than a request.
Janice Schmidt submitted ungracefully to
Ford's insistence that the Jockaira be humored in the matter in return for all
that they had done, and Jockaira nurses took over under her jealous eyes.
Every sensitive of intelligence level
higher than the semimoronic Hans Weatheral promptly developed spontaneous and
extreme psychoses while being attended by Jockaira.
So Ford had another headache to straighten
out. Janice Schmidt was more powerfully and more intelligently vindictive than
was Eleanor Johnson. Ford was s-tpr~d to bind Janice over to keep the peace
under the threat of retiring her completely from the care of her beloved
"children." Kreel Sarloo, distressed and apparently shaken to his
core, accepted a compromise whereby Janice and her junior nurses resumed care
of the poor psychotics while Jockaira continued to minister to sensitives of
moron level and below.
But the greatest difficulty arose over . .
. surnames. Jockaira each had an individual name and a surname. Surnames were
limited in number, much as they were in the Families. A native's surname
referrect equally to his tribe and to the temple in which he worshipped.
Kreel Sarloo took up the matter with Ford.
"High Father of the Strange Brothers," he said, "the time has
come for you and your children to choose your surnames." (The rendition of
Sarloo's speech into English necessarily contains inherent errors.)
Ford was used to difficulties in
understanding the Jockaira. "Sarloo, brother and friend," he
answered, "I hear your words but I do not understand. Speak more
fully."
Sarloo began over. "Strange brother,
the seasons come and the seasons go and there is a time of ripening. The gods
tell us that you, the Strange Brothers, have reached the time in your education
(?) when you must select your tribe and your temple. I have come to arrange
with you the preparations (ceremonies?) by which each will choose his surname.
I speak for the gods in this. But let me say for myself that it would make me
happy if you, my brother Ford, were to choose the temple Kreel."
Ford stalled while he tried to understand
what was implied. "I am happy that you wish me to have your surname. But
my people already have their own surnames."
Sarloo dismissed that with a flip of his
lips. "Their present surnames are words and nothing more. Now they must
choose their real surnames, each the name of his temple and of the god whom he
will worship. Children grow up and are no longer children."
Ford decided that he needed advice.
"Must this be done at once?"
"Not today, but in the near future.
The gods are patient."
Ford called in Zaccur Barstow, Oliver
Johnson, Lazarus Long, and Ralph Schultz, and described the interview. Johnson
played back the recording of the conversation and strained to catch the sense
of the words. He prepared several possible translations but failed to throw any
new light on the matter.
"It looks," said Lazarus,
"like a case of join the church or get out."
"Yes," agreed Zaccur Barstow,
"that much seems to come through plainly. Well, I think we can afford to
go through the motions. Very few of our people have religious prejudices strong
enough to forbid their paying lip service to the native gods in the interests
of the general welfare."
"I imagine you are correct,"
Ford said. "I, for one, have no objection to adding Kreel to my name and
taking part in their genuflections if it will help us to live in peace."
He frowned. "But I would not want to see our culture submerged in
theirs."
"You can forget that," Ralph
Schultz assured him. "No matter what we have to do to please them, there
is absolutely no chance of any real cultural assimilation. Our brains are not
like theirs-just how different I am only beginning to guess."
"Yeah," said Lazarus, "
'just how different.'"
Ford turned to Lazarus. "What do you
mean by that? What's troubling you?"
"Nothing.
Only," he added, "I never did share the general enthusiasm for this
place."
They agreed that one man should take the
plunge first, then report back. Lazarus tried to grab the assignment on
seniority, Schultz claimed it as a professional right; Ford overruled them and
appointed himself, asserting that it was his duty as the responsible executive. -
Lazarus went with him to the doors of the
temple where the induction was to take place. Ford was as bare of clothing as
the Jockaira, but Lazarus, since he was not to enter the temple, was able to
wear his kilt. Many of the colonists, sunstarved after years in the ship, went
bare when it suited them, just as the Jockaira did. But Lazarus never did. Not
only did his habits run counter to it, but a blaster is an extremely
conspicuous object on a bare thigh.
Kreel Sarloo greeted them and escorted
Ford inside. Lazarus called out after them, "Keep your chin up, pal!"
He waited. He struck a cigarette and
smoked it. He walked up and down. He had no way to judge how long it would be;
it seemed, in consequence, much longer than it was.
At last the doors slid back and natives
crowded out through them. They seemed curiously worked up about something and
none of them came near Lazarus. The press that still existed in the great
doorway separated, formed an aisle, and a figure came running headlong through
it and out into the open.
Lazarus recognized Ford.
Ford
did not stop where Lazarus waited but plunged blindly on past. He tripped and
fell down. Lazarus hurried to him.
Ford made no effort to get up. He lay
sprawled face down, his shoulders heaving violently, his frame shaking with
sobs. Lazarus knelt by him and shook him. "Slayton," he demanded,
"what's happened? What's wrong with you?" Ford turned wet and
horror-stricken eyes to him, checking his sobs momentarily. He did not speak
but he seemed to recognize Lazarus. He flung himself on Lazarus, clung to him,
wept more violently than before.
Lazarus wrenched himself free and slapped
Ford hard. "Snap out of it!" he ordered. "Tell me what's the
matter."
Ford jerked his head at the slap and
stopped his outcries but he said nothing. His eyes looked dazed. A shadow fell
across Lazarus' line of sight; he spun around, covering with his blaster. Kreel
Sarloo stood a few feet away and did not come closer-not because of the weapon;
he had never seen one before.
"You!" said Lazarus. "For
the- What did you do to him?"
He checked himself and switched to speech
that Sarloo could understand. "What has happened to my brother Ford?"
"Take him away," said Sarloo,
his lips twitching. "This is a bad thing. This is a very bad thing."
"You're telling me!" said
Lazarus. He did not bother to translate.
Chapter
3
THE SAME CONFERENCE as before, minus its
chairman, met as quickly as possible. Lazarus told his story, Shultz reported
on Ford's condition. "The medical staff can't find anything wrong with
him. All I can say with certainty is that the Administrator is suffering from
an undiagnosed extreme psychosis. We can't get into communication with
him."
"Won't he talk at all?" asked
Barstow.
"A word or two, on subjects as simple
as food or water. Any attempt to reach the cause of his trouble drives him into
incoherent hysteria."
"No diagnosis?"
"Well, if you want an unprofessional
guess in loose language, I'd say he was scared out of his wits. But,"
Schultz added, "I've seen fear syndromes before. Never anything like
this."
"I have," Lazarus said suddenly.
"You have? Where? What were the
circumstances?'
"Once," said Lazarus, "when
I was a kid, a couple of hundred years back, I caught a grown coyote and penned
him up. I had a notion I could train him to be a hunting dog. It didn't work.
"Ford acts just the way that coyote
did."
An unpleasant silence followed. Schultz
broke it with, "I don't quite see what you mean. What is the parallel?'
"Well," Lazarus answered slowly,
"this is just my guess. Slayton is the only one who knows the true answer
and he can't talk. But here's my opinion: we've had these Jockaira doped out
all wrong from scratch. We made the mistake of thinking that because they
looked like us, in a general way, and were about as civilized as we are, that
they were people. But they aren't people at all. They are . . . domestic
animals.
"Wait a minute now!" he added.
"Don't get in a rush. There are people on this planet, right enough. Real
people. They lived in the temples and the Jockaira called them gods. They are
gods!"
Lazarus pushed on before anyone could
interrupt. "I know what you're thinking. Forget it. I'm not going
metaphysical on you; I'm just putting it the best I can. I mean that there is
something living in those temples and whatever it is, it is such heap big
medicine that it can pinch-hit for gods, so you might as well call 'em that.
Whatever they are, they are the true dominant race on this planet-its people! To them, the rest of us,
Jocks or us, are just animals, wild or tame. We made the mistake of assuming
that a local religion was merely superstition. It ain't."
Barstow said slowly, "And you think
this accounts for what happened to Ford?'
"I do. He met one, the one called
Kreel, and it drove him crazy."
"I take it," said Schultz,
"that it is your theory that any man exposed to this . . . this presence .
. . would become psychotic?"
"Not exactly," answered Lazarus.
"What scares me a damn' sight more is the fear that I might not go
crazy!"
That same day the Jockaira withdrew all
contact with the Earthmen. It was well that they did so, else there would have
been violence. Fear hung over the city, fear of horror worse than death, fear
of some terrible nameless thing, the mere knowledge of which would turn a man
into a broken mindless animal. The Jockaira no longer seemed harmless friends,
rather clownish despite their scientific attainments, but puppets, decoys, bait
for the unseen potent beings who lurked in the "temples."
There was no need to vote on it; with the
single-mindedness of a crowd stampeding from a burning building the Earthmen
wanted to leave this terrible place. Zaccur Barstow assumed command. "Get
King on the screen. Tell him to send down every boat at once. We'll get out of
here as fast as we can." He ran his fingers worriedly through his hair.
"What's the most we can load each trip, Lazarus? How long will the
evacuation take?"
Lazarus muttered.
"What did you say?
"I said, 'It ain't a case of how
long; it's a case of will we be let.' Those things in the temples may want more
domestic animals-us!"
Lazarus was needed as a boat pilot but he
was needed more urgently for his ability to manage a crowd. Zaccur Barstow was
telling him to conscript a group of emergency police when Lazarus looked past
Zaccur's shoulder and exclaimed, "Oh oh! Hold it, Zack-school's out."
Zaccur turned his head quickly an4 saw,
approaching with stately dignity across the council hail, Kreel Sarloo. No one
got in his way.
They soon found out why. Zaccur moved
forward to greet him, found himself stopped about ten feet from the Jockaira.
No clue to the cause; just that-stopped.
"I greet you, unhappy brother,"
Sarloo began.
"I greet you, Krecl Sarloo."
"The gods have spoken. Your kind can
never be civilized (?).You and your brothers are to leave this world."
Lazarus let out a deep sigh of relief. -
"We are leaving, Kreel Sarloo,"
Zaccur answered soberly.
"The gods require that you leave.
Send your bother Libby to me."
Zaccur sent for Libby, then turned back to
Sarloo. But the Jockaira had nothing more to say to them; he seemed indifferent
to their presence. They waited.
Libby arrived. Sarloo held him in a long
conversation. Barstow and Lazarus were both in easy earshot and could see their
lips move, but heard nothing. Lazarus found the circumstance very disquieting.
Damn my eyes, he thought, I could figure several ways to pull that trick with
the right equipment but I'll bet none of 'em is the right answer-and I don't
see any equipment.
The silent discussion ended, Sarloo
stalked off without farewell. Libby turned to the others and spoke; now his
voice could be heard. "Sarloo tells me," he began, brow wrinkled in
puzzlement, "that we are to go to a planet, uh, over thirtytwo light-years
from here. The gods have decided it." He stopped and bit his lip.
"Don't fret about it," advised
Lazarus. "Just be glad they want us to leave. My guess is that they could
have squashed us flat just as easily. Once we're out in space we'll pick our.
own destination."
"I suppose so. But the thing that
puzzles me is that he mentioned a time about three hours~away as being our
departure from this system."
"Why, that's utterly unreasonable,"
protested Barstow. "Impossible. We haven't the boats to do it."
Lazarus said nothing. He was ceasing to
have opinions.
Zaccur changed his opinion quickly.
Lazarus acquired one, born of experience. While urging his cousins toward the
field where embarkation was proceeding, he found himself lifted up, free of the
ground. He struggled, his arms and legs met no resistance but the ground
dropped away. He closed his eyes, counted ten jets, opened them again. He was
at least two miles in the air.
Below him, boiling up from the city like
bats from a cave, were uncountable numbers of dots and shapes, dark against the
sunlit ground. Some were close enough for him to see that they were men,
Earthmen, the Families.
The horizon dipped down, the planet became
a sphere, the sky turned black. Yet his breathing seemed normal, his blood
vessels did not burst.
They were sucked into clusters around the
open ports of the New Frontiers like bees swarming around a queen. Once inside
the ship Lazarus gave himself over to a case of the shakes. Whew! he sighed to
himself, watch that first step-it's a honey!
Libby sought out Captain King as soon as
he was inboard and had recovered his nerve. He delivered Sarloo's message.
King seemed undecided. "I don't
know," he said. "You know more about the natives than I do, inasmuch
as I have hardly put foot to ground. But between ourselves, Mister, the way
they sent my passengers back has me talking to myself. That was the most
remarkable evolution I have ever seen performed."
"I might add that it was remarkable
to experience, sir," Libby answered unhumorously. "Personally I would
prefer to take up ski jumping. I'm glad you had the ship's access ports
open."
"I didn't," said King tersely.
"They were opened for me."
They went to the control room with the
intention of getting the ship under boost and placing a long distance between
it and the planet from which they had been evicted; thereafter they would
consider destination and course. "This planet that Sarloo described to
you," said King, "does it belong to a G-type star?"
"Yes," Libby confirmed, "an
Earth-type planet accompanying a Sol-type star. I have its coordinates and
could. identify from the catalogues. But we can forget it; it is too far away.'
"So . . ." King activated the
vision system for the stellarium. Then neither of them said anything for
several long moments. The images of the heavenly bodies told their own story.
With no orders from King, with no hands at
the controls, the New Frontiers was on her long way again, headed out, as if
she had a mind of her own.
"I can't tell you much,"
admitted Libby some hours later to a group consisting of King, Zaccur Barstow,
and Lazarus Long. "I was able to determine, before we passed the speed of
light-or appeared to-that our course then was compatible with the idea that we
have been headed toward the star named by Kreel Sarloo as the destination
ordered for us by his gods. We continued to accelerate and the stars faded out.
I no longer have any astrogational reference points and I am unable to say
where we are or where we are going,"
"Loosen up, Andy," suggested
Lazarus. "Make a guess."
"Well . . . if our world line is a
smooth function-if it is, and I have no data-then we may arrive in the
neighborhood of star PK3722, where Kreel Sarloo said we were going."
"Rummph!" Lazarus turned to
King. "Have you tried slowing down?"
"Yes," King said shortly.
"The controls are dead."
"Mmmm . . . Andy, when do we get
there?"
Libby shrugged helplessly. "I have no
frame of reference. What is time without a space reference?"
Time and space, inseparable and one- Libby
thought about it long after the others had left. To be sure, he had the space
framework of the ship itself and therefore there necessarily was ship's time.
Clocks in the ship ticked or hummed or simply marched; people grew hungry, fed
themselves, got tired, rested. Radioactives deteriorated, physio-chemical
processes moved toward states of greater entropy, his own consciousness
perceived duration.
But the background of the stars, against
which every timed function in the history of man had been measured, was gone.
So far as his eyes or any instrument in the ship could tell him, they had
become unrelated to the rest of the universe.
What universe?
There was no universe. It was gone.
Did they move? Can there be motion when
there is nothing to move past?
Yet the false weight achieved by the spin
of the ship persisted. Spin with reference to what? thought Libby. Could it be
that space held a true, absolute, nonrelational texture of its own, like that
postulated for the long-discarded "ether" thatthe classic
Michelson-Morley experiments had failed to detect? No, more than that-had
denied the very possibility of its existence? -had for that matter denied the possibility
of speed greater than light. Had the ship actually passed the speed of light?
Was it not more likely that this was a coffin, with ghosts as passengers, going
nowhere at no time?
But Libby itched between his shoulder
blades and was forced to scratch; his left leg had gone to sleep; his stomach
was beginning to speak insistently for food-if this was death, he decided, it
did not seem materially different from life.
With renewed tranquility, he left the
control room and headed for his favorite refectory, while starting to grapple
with the problem of inventing a new mathematics which would include all the new
phenomena. The mystery of how the hypothetical gods of the Jockaira had
teleported the Families from ground to ship he discarded. There had been no
opportunity to obtain significant data, measured data; the best that any honest
scientist could do, with epistemological rigor, was to include a note that
recorded the fact and stated that it was unexplained. It was a fact; here he
was who shortly before had been on the planet; even now Schultz's assistants
were overworked trying to administer depressant drugs to the thousands who had
gone to pieces emotionally under the outrageous experience. But Libby could not
explain it and, lacking data, felt no urge to try. What he did want to do was
to deal with world lines in a plenum, the basic problem of field physics.
Aside from his penchant for mathematics
Libby was a simple person. He preferred the noisy atmosphere of the
"Club," refectory 9-D, for reasons different from those of Lazarus.
The company of people younger than himself reassured him; Lazarus was the only
elder he felt easy with.
Food, he learned, was not immediately
available at the Club; the commissary was still adjusting to the sudden change.
But Lazarus was there and others whom he knew; Nancy Weatheral scrunched over
and made room for him. "You're just the man I want to see," she said.
"Lazarus is being most helpful. Where are we going this time and when do
we get there?" -
Libby explained the dilemma as well as he
could. Nancy wrinkled her nose. "That's a pretty prospect, I must say!
Well, I guess that means back to the grind for little Nancy."
"What do you mean?"
"Have you ever taken care of a
somnolent? No, of course you haven't. It gets tiresome. Turn them over, bend
their arms, twiddle their tootsies, move their heads, close the tank and move
on to the next one. I get so sick of human bodies that I'm tempted to take a
vow of chastity."
"Don't commit yourself too far,"
advised Lazarus. "Why would you care, you old false alarm?"
Eleanor Johnson spoke up. "Fm glad to
be in the ship again. Those slimy Jockaira-ugh!"
Nancy shrugged. "You're prejudiced,
Eleanor. The Jocks are okay, in their way. Sure, they aren't exactly like us,
but neither are dogs. You don't dislike dogs, do you?'
"That's what they are," Lazarus
said soberly. "Dogs."
"Huh?"
"I don't mean that they are anything
like dogs in most ways-they aren't even vaguely canine and they certainly are
our equals and possibly our superiors in some things . . . but they are dogs
just the same. Those things they call their 'gods' are simply their masters,
their owners. We couldn't be domesticated, so the owners chucked us out."
Libby was thinking of the inexplicable
telekinesis the Jockaira-or their masters-had used. "I wonder what it
would have been like," he said thoughtfully, "if they had been able
to domesticate us. They could have taught us a lot of wonderful things"
"Forget it," Lazarus said
sharply. "It's not a man's place to be property."
"What is a man's place?"
"It's a man's business to be what he
is . . . and be it in style!" Lazarus got up. "Got to go."
Libby started to leave also, but Nancy
stopped him. "Don't go. I want to ask you some questions. What year is it
back on~ Earth?"
Libby started to answer, closed his mouth.
He started to answer a second time, finally said, "I don't know how to
answer that question. It's like saying, 'How high is up?"
"I know I probably phrased it
wrong," admitted Nancy. '1 didn't do very well in basic physics, but I did
gather the idea that time is relative and simultaneity is an idea which applies
only to two points close together in the same framework. But just the same, I
want to know something. We've traveled a lot faster and farther than anyone
ever did before, haven't we? Don't our clocks slow down, or something?"
Libby got that completely baffled look
which mathematical-physicists wear whenever laymen try to talk about physics in
nonmathematical language. "You're referring to the Lorentz-2 FitzGerald
contraction. But, if you'll pardon me, anything one says about it in words is
necessarily nonsense."
"Why?" she insisted.
"Because . . . well, because the
language is inappropriate. The formulae used to describe the effect loosely
called a contraction presuppose that the observer is part of the phenomenon.
But verbal language contains the implicit assumption that we can stand outside
the whole business and watch what goes on. The mathematical language denies the
very possibility of any such outside viewpoint. Every observer has his own
world line; he can't get outside it for a detached viewpoint."
"But suppose he did? Suppose we could
see Earth right now?"
'~There I go again," Libby said
miserably. "I tried to talk about it in words and all I did was to add to
the confusion. There is no way to measure time in any absolute sense when two
events are separated in a continuum. All you can measure is interval."
"Well, what is interval? So much
space and so much time."
"No, no, no! It isn't that at all.
Interval is . . . well, it's interval. I can write down formulae about it and
show you how we use it, but it can't be defined in words. Look, Nancy, can you
write the score for a full orchestration of a symphony in words?" -
"No. Well, maybe you could but it
wonld take thousands of times as long."
"And musicians still could not play
it until you put it back into musical notation. That's what I meant,"
Libby went on, "when I said that the language was inappropriate. I got
into a difficulty like this once before in trying to describe the lightpressure
drive. I was asked why, since the drive depends on loss of inertia, we people
inside the ship had felt no loss of inertia. There was no answer, in words.
Inertia isn't a word; it is a mathematical concept used in mathematically
certain aspects of a plenum. I was stuck."
Nancy looked baffled but persisted
doggedly. "My question still means something, even if I didn't phrase it
right. You can't just tell me to run along and play. Suppose we turned around
and went back the way we came, all the way to Earth, exactly the same trip but
in reverse-just double the ship's time it has been so far. All right, what year
would it be on Earth when we got there?'
"It would be . . . let me see,
now-" The almost automatic processes of Libby's brain started running off
the unbelievably huge and complex problem in accelerations, intervals, difform
motion. He was approaching the answer in a warm glow of mathematical revery
when the problem suddenly fell to pieces on him, became indeterminate. He
abruptly realized that the problem had an unlimited number of equally valid
answers.
But that was impossible. In the real
world, not the fantasy world of mathematics, such a situation was absurd.
Nancy's question had to have just one answer, unique and real.
Could the whole beautiful structure of
relativity be an absurdity? Or did it mean that it was physically impossible
ever to backtrack an interstellar distance?
"I'll have to give some thought to
that one," Libby said hastily and left before Nancy could object.
But solitude and contemplation gave him no
clue to the problem. It was not a failure of his mathematical ability; he was
capable, he knew, of devising a mathematical description of any group of facts,
whatever they might be. His difficulty lay in having too few facts. Until some
observer traversed interstellar distances at speeds approximating the speed of
light and returned to the planet from which he had started there could be no
answer. Mathematics alone has no content, gives no answers.
Libby found himself wondering if the hills
of his native Ozarks were still green, if the smell of wood smoke still clung
to the trees in the autumn, then he recalled that the question lacked any
meaning by any rules he knew of. He surrendered to an attack of homesickness
such as he had not experienced since he was a youth in the Cosmic Construction
Corps, making his first deep-space jump.
This feeling of doubt and uncertainty, the
feeling of lostness and nostalgia, spread throughout the ship. On the first leg
of their journey the Families had had the incentive that had kept the covered
wagons crawling across the plains. But now they were going nowhere, one day led
only to the next. Their long lives were become a meaningless burden.
Ira Howard, whose fortune established the
Howard Foundation, was born in 1825 and died in 1873-of old age. He sold
groceries to the Forty-niners in San Francisco, became a wholesale sutler in
the American War of the Secession, multiplied his fortune during the tragic
Reconstruction.
Howard was deathly afraid of dying. He
hired the best doctors of his time to prolong his life. Nevertheless old age
plucked him when most men are still young. But his will commanded that his
money be used to lengthen human life. The administrators of the trust found no
way to carry out his wishes other than by seeking out persons whose family
trees showed congenital predispositions toward long life and then inducing them
to reproduce in kind. Their method anticipated the work of Burbank; they may or
may not have known of the illuminating researches of the Monk Gregor Mendel.
Mary Sperling put down the book she had
been reading when Lazarus entered her stateeoom. He picked it up. "What are
you reading, Sis? 'Ecclesiastes.' Hmm . . . I didn't know you were
religious." He read aloud:
"'Yea, though he live a thousand
years twice told, yet hath he seen no good: do not all go to one place?'
"Pretty grim stuff, Mary. Can't you
find something more cheerful? Even in The Preacher?' His eyes skipped on down.
"How about this one? 'For to him that is joined to all the living there is
hope-' Or . . . mnunm, not too many cheerful spots. Try this: 'Therefore remove
sorrow from thy heart, and put away evil from thy flesh: for childhood and
youth are vanity.' That's more my style; I wouldn't be young again for overtime
wages."
"I would."
"Mary, what's eating you? I find you
sitting here, reading the most depressing book in the Bible, nothing but death
and funerals. Why?"
She passed a hand wearily across her eyes.
"Lazarus, I'm getting old. What else is there to think about?'
"You? Why, you're fresh as a
daisy!"
She looked at him. She knew that he lied;
her mirror showed her the greying hair, the relaxed skin; she felt it in her
bones. Yet Lazarus was older than she . . . although she knew, from what she
had learned of biology during the years she had assisted in the longevity
research, that Lazarus should never have lived to be as old as he was now. When
he was born the program had reached only the third generation, too few
generations to eliminate the less durable strains-except through some wildly
unlikely chance shuffling of genes.
But there he stood. "Lazarus,"
she asked, "how long do you expect to live?"
"Me? Now that's an odd question. I
mind a time when I asked a chap that very same question-about me, I mean, not
about him. Ever hear of Dr. Hugo Pinero?"
"'Pinero... Pinero.. .' Oh, yes,
'Pinero the Charlatan.'"
"Mary, he was no charlatan. He could
do it, no foolin'. He could predict accurately when a man would die."
"But- Go ahead. What did he tell
you?"
"Just a minute. I want you to realize
that he was no fake. His predictions checked out right on the button-if he
hadn't died, the life insurance companies would have been ruined. That was
before you were born, but I was there and I know. Anyhow, Pinero took my
reading and it seemed to bother him. So he took it again. Then he returned my
money."
"What did he say?"
"Couldn't get a word out of him. He
looked at me and he looked at his machine and he just frowned and clammed up.
So I can't rightly answer your question."
"But what do you think about it,
Lazarus? Surely you don't expect just to go on forever?"
"Mary," he said softly, "Fm
not planning on dying. I'm not giving it any thought at all."
There was silence. At last she said,
"Lazarus, I don't want to die. But what is the purpose of our long lives?
We don't seem to grow wiser as we grow older. Are we simply hanging on after
our tune has passed? Loitering in the kindergarten when we should be moving on?
Must we die and be born again?"
"I don't know," said Lazarus,
"and I don't have any way to find out. . . and I'm damned if I see any
sense in my worrying about it. Or you either. I propose to hang onto this life
as long as I can and learn as much as I can. Maybe wishing and understanding
are reserved for a later existence and maybe they aren't for us at all, ever.
Either way, I'm satisfied to be living and enjoying it. Mary my sweet, carpe
that old diem! It's the only game in town."
The ship slipped back into the same
monotonous routine that had obtained during the weary years of the first jump.
Most of the Members went into cold-rest; the others tended them, tended the
ship, tended the hydroponds. Among the somnolents was Slayton Ford; cold-rest
was a common last resort therapy for functional psychoses.
The flight to star PK3722 took seventeen
months and three days, ship's time.
The ship's officers had as little choice
about the journey's end as about its beginning. A few hours before their
arrival star images flashed back into being in the stellarium screens and the
ship rapidly decelerated to interplanetary speeds. No feeling of slowing down
was experienced; whatever mysterious forces were acting on them acted on all
masses alike. The New Frontiers slipped into an orbit around a live green
planet some hundred million miles from its sun; shortly Libby reported to
Captain King that they were in a stable parking orbit.
Cautiously King tried the controls, dead
since their departure. The ship surged; their ghostly pilot had left them.
Libby decided that the simile was
incorrect; this trip had undoubtedly been planned for them but it was not
necessary to assume that anyone or anything had shepherded them here. Libby
suspected that the "gods" of the dog-people saw the plenum as static;
their deportation was an accomplished fact to them before it happened-a concept
regrettably studded with unknowns-but there were no appropriate words.
Inadequately and incorrectly put into words, his concept was that of a
"cosmic cam," a world line shaped for them which ran out of normal
space and back into it; when the ship reached the end of its "cam" it
returned to normal operation.
He tried to explain his concept to Lazarus
and to the Captain, but he did not do well. He lacked data and also had not had
time to refine his mathematical description into elegance; it satisfied neither
him nor them.
Neither King nor Lazarus had time to give
the matter much thought. Barstow's face appeared on an interstation viewscreen.
"Captain!" he called out. "Can you come aft to lock seven? We
have visitors!"
Barstow had exaggerated; there was only
one. The creature reminded Lazarus of a child in fancy dress, masqueraded as a
rabbit. The little thing was more android than were the Jockaira, though
possibly not mammalian. It was unclothed but not naked, for its childlike body
was beautifully clothed in short sleek golden fur. Its eyes were bright and seemed
both merry and intelligent.
But King was too bemused to note such
detail. A voice, a thought, was ringing in his head: ". . . so you are the
group leader . . ." it said. ". . . welcome to our world . . . we
have been expecting you . . . the (blank.) told us of your coming..."
Controlled telepathy. A creature, a race,
so gentle, so civilized, so free from enemies, from all danger and strife that
they could afford to share their thoughts with others-to share more than their
thoughts; these creatures were so gentle and so generous that they were
offering the humans a homestead on their planet. This was why this messenger
had come: to make that offer.
To King's mind this seemed remarkably like
the prize package that had been offered by the Jockaira; he wondered what the
boobytrap might be in this proposition.
The messenger seemed to read his
thought". . . look into our hearts. . . we hold no malice toward you . . .
we share your love of life and we love the life in you . . .
"We thank you," King answered
formally and aloud. "We will have to confer." He turned to speak to
Barstow, glanced back. The messenger was gone.
The Captain said to Lazarus, "Where
did he go?"
"Huh? Don't ask me."
"But you were in front of the
lock."
"I was checking the tell-tales.
There's no boat sealed on outside this lock-so they show. I was wondcring if
they were working right. They are. How did he get into the ship? Where's his
rig?'
"How did he leaver'
"Not past me!"
"Zaccur, he came in through this
lock, didn't he?
"I don't know."
"But he certainly went out through
it"
"Nope," denied Lazarus.
"This lock hasn't been opened. The deep-space seals are still in place.
See for yourself."
King did. "You don't suppose,"
he said slowly, "that he can pass through-"
"Don't look at me," said
Lazarus. "I've got no more prejudices in the matter than the Red Queen.
Where does a phone image go when you cut the circuit?" He left, whistling
softly to himself. King did not recognize the tune. Its words, which Lazarus
did not sing, started with:
"Last night I saw upon the stair
A little man who wasn't there-"
Chapter
4
THERE WAS NO CATCH to the offer. The
people of the planet-they had no name since they had no spoken language and the
Earthmen simply called them "The Little People"-the little creatures
really did welcome them and help them. They convinced the Families of this
without difficulty for there was no trouble in communication such as there had
been with the Jockaira. The Little People could make even subtle thoughts kndwn
directly to the Earthmen and in turn could sense correctly any thought directed
at them. They appeared either to ignore or not to be able to read any thought
not directed at them; communicatibn with them was as controlled as spoken
speech. Nor did the Earthmen acquire any telepathic powers among themselves.
Their planet was even more like Earth than
was the planet of the Jockaira. It was a little larger than Earth but had a
slightly lower surface gravitation, suggesting a lower average density-the
Little People made slight use of metals in their culture, which may be
indicative.
The planet rode upright in its orbit; it
had not the rakish tilt of Earth's axis. Its orbit was nearly circular;
aphelion differed from perihelion by less than one per cent. There were no
seasons. Nor was there a great heavy moon, such as Earth has, to wrestle its
oceans about and to disturb the isostatic balance of its crust. Its hills were
low, its winds were gentle, its seas were placid. To Lazarus' disappointment,
their new home, had no lively weather; it hardly had weather at all; it had
climate, and that of the sort that California patriots would have the rest of
the Earth believe exists in their part of the globe.
But on the planet of the Little People it
really exists.
They indicated to the Earth people where
they were to land, a wide sandy stretch of beach running down to the sea. Back
of the low break of the bank lay mile on mile of lush meadowland, broken by
irregular clumps of bushes and trees. The landscape had a careless neatness, as
if it were a planned park, although there was no evidence of cultivation. It
was here, a messenger told the first scouting party, that they were welcome to
live.
There seemed always to be one of the
Little People present when his help might be useful-not with the jostling
inescapable overhelpfulness of the Jockaira, but with the unobtrusive readiness
to hand of a phone or a pouch knife. The one who accompanied the first party of
explorers confused Lazarus and Barstow by assuming casually that he had met
them before, that he had visited them in the ship. Since his fur was rich
mahogany rather than golden, Barstow attributed the error to misunderstanding,
with a mental reservation that these people might possibly be capable of
chameleonlike changes in color. Lazarus reserved his judgment.
Barstow asked their guide whether or not
his people had any preferences as to where and how the Earthmen were to erect
buildings. The question had been bothering him because a preliminary survey
from the ship had disclosed no cities. It seemed likely that the natives lived
underground-in which case he wanted to avoid getting off on the wrong foot by
starting something which the local government might regard as a slum.
He spoke aloud in words directed at their
guide, they having learned already that such was the best way to insure that
the natives would pick up the thought.
In the answer that the little being
flashed back Barstow caught the emotion of surprise. ". . . must you sully
the sweet countryside with interruptions? . . . to what purpose do you need to
form buildings? . .
"We need buildings for many
purposes," Barstow explained. "We need them as daily shelter, as
places to sleep at night. We need them to grow our food and prepare it for
eating." He considered trying to explain the processes of hydroponic
farming, of food processing, and of cooking, then dropped it, trusting to the
subtle sense of telepathy to let his "listener" understand. "We need
buildings for many other uses, for workshops and laboratories, to house the
machines whereby we communicate, for almost everything we do in our everyday
life."
"Be patient with me . . ." the
thought came, since I know so little of your ways . . . but tell me do you
prefer to sleep in such as that? . . ." He gestured toward the ship's
boats they had come down in, where their bulges showed above the low bank. The
thought he used for the boats was too strong to be bound by a word; to Lazarus'
mind came a thought of a dead, constricted space-a jail that had once harbored
him, a smelly public phone booth.
"It is our custom."
The creature leaned down and patted the
turf. ". . . is this not a good place to sleep? . . ."
Lazarus admitted to himself that it was.
The ground was covered with a soft spring turf, grasslike but finer than grass,
softer, more even, and set more closely together. Lazarus took off his sandals
and let his bare feet enjoy it, toes spread and working. It was, he decided,
more like a heavy fur rug than a lawn. -
"As for food . . ."" their
guide went on, ". . . why struggle for that which the good soil gives
freely? . . come with me. . ."
He took them across a reach of meadow to
where low bushy trees hung over aT meandering brook. The "leaves"
were growths the size of a man's hand, irregular in shape, and an inch or more
in thickness. The little person broke off one and nibbled at it daintily.
Lazarus plucked one and examined it. It
broke easily, like a well-baked cake. The inside was creamy yellow, spongy but
crisp, and had a strong pleasant odor, reminiscent of mangoes.
"Lazarus, don't, eat that!"
warned Barstow. "It hasn't been analyzed~"
". . . it is harmonious with your
body . .
Lazarus sniffed it again. "I'm
willing to be a test case, Zack."
"Oh, well-" Barstow shrugged.
"I warned you. You will anyhow."
Lazarus did. The stuff was oddly pleasing,
firm enough to suit the teeth, piquant though elusive in flavor. It settled
down happily in his stomach and made itself at home.
Barstow refused to let anyone else try the
fruit until its effect on Lazarus was established. Lazarus took advantage of
his exposed and privileged position to make a full meal-the best, he decided,
that he had had in years.
". . . will you tell me what you are
in the habit of eating? . . ." inquired their little friend. Barstow
started to reply but was checked by the creature's thought: ". . . all of
you think about it . ." no further thought message came from him for a few
moments, then he flashed, ". . . that is enough . . -. my wives will take
care of it . . ."
Lazarus was not sure the image meant
"wives" but some similar close relationship was implied. It had not
yet been established that the Little People were bisexual-or what.
Lazarus slept that night out under the
stars and let their clean impersonal light rinse from him the claustrophobia of
the ship. The constellations here were distorted out of easy recognition,
although he could recognize, he decided, the cool blue of Vega and the orange
glow of Antares. -The one certainty was the Milky Way, spilling its cloudy arch
across the sky just as at home. The Sun, he knew, could not be visible to the
naked eye even if he knew where to look for it; its low absolute magnitude
would not show up across the light-years. Have to get hold of Andy, he thought
sleepily, work out its coordinates and pick it out with instruments. He fell
asleep before it could occur to him to wonder why he should bother.
Since no shelter was needed at night they
landed everyone as fast as boats could shuttle them down. The crowds were
dumped on the friendly soil and allowed to rest, picnic fashion, until the
colony could be organized. At first they ate supplies brought down from the
ship, but Lazarus' continued good health caused the rule against taking chances
with natural native foods to be re1axed shortly. After that they ate mostly of
the boundlein rai'gesse of the plants and used ship's food only to vary their
diets.
Several days after the last of them had
been landed Lazarus was exploring alone some distance from the camp. He came
across one of the Little People; the native greeted him with the same
assumption of earlier acquaintance which all of them seemed to show and led
Lazarus to a grove of low trees still farther from base. He indicated to
Lazarus that he wanted him to eat.
Lazarus was not particularly hungry but he
felt compelled to humor such friendliness, so he plucked and ate.
He almost choked in his astonishment.
Mashed potatoes and brown gravy!
". . . didn't we get it right? - .
." came an anxious thought.
"Bub," Lazarus said solemnly,
"I don't know what you planned to do, but this is just fine!"
A warm burst of pleasure invaded his mind.
". . . try the next tree . .
Lazarus did so, with cautious eagerness.
Fresh brown bread and sweet butter seemed to be the combination, though a dash
of ice cream seemed to have crept in from somewhere.
He was hardly surprised when the third
tree gave strong evidence of having both mushrooms and charcoal-broiled steak
in its ancestry. ". . . we used your thought images almost entirely . .
." explained his companion. ". . . they were much stronger than those
of any of your wives . . ."
Lazarus did not bother to explain that he
was not married. The little person added, ". . . there has not yet been
time to simulate the appearances and colors your thoughts showed does it matter
much to you? .
Lazarus gravely assured him that it
mattered very little.
When he returned to the base, he had
considerable difficulty in convincing others of the seriousness of his report.
One who benefited greatly from the easy,
lotus-land quality of their new home was Slayton Ford. He had awakened from
cold rest apparently recovered from his breakdown except in one respect: he had
no recollection of whatever it was he had experienced in the temple of Kreel.
Ralph Schultz considered this a healthy adjustment to an intolerable experience
and dismissed him as a patient.
Ford seemed younger and happier than he
had appeared before his breakdown. He no longer held formal office among the
Members-indeed there was little government of any sort; the Families lived in
cheerful easy-going anarchy on this favored planet-but he was still addressed
by his title and continued to be treated as an elder, one whose advice was
sought, whose judgment was deferred to, along with Zaccur Barstow, Lazarus,
Captain King, and others. The Families paid little heed to calendar ages; close
friends might differ by a century. For years they had benefited from his
skilled administration; now they continued to treat him as an elder statesman,
even though two-thirds of them were older than was he.
The endless picnic stretched into weeks,
into months. After being long shut up in the ship, sleeping or working, the
temptation to take a long vacation was too strong to resist and there was
nothing to forbid it. Food in abundance, ready to eat and easy to handle, grew
almost everywhere; the water in the numerous streams was clean and potable. As
for clothing, they had plenty if they wanted to dress but the need was esthetic
rather, than utilitarian; the Elysian climate made clothing for protection as
silly as suits for swimming. Those who liked clothes wore them; bracelets and
beads and flowers in the hair were quite enough for most of them and not nearly
so much nuisance if one chose to take a dip in the sea.
Lazarus stuck to his kilt.
The culture and degree of enlightenment of
the Little People was difficult to understand all at once, because their ways
were subtle. Since they lacked outward signs, in Earth terms, of high
scientific attainment-no great buildings, no complex mechanical transportation
machines, no throbbing power plants-it was easy to mistake them for Mother
Nature's children, living in a Garden of Eden.
Only one-eighth of an iceberg shows above
water.
Their knowledge of physical science was
not inferior to that of the colonists; it was incredibly superior. They toured
the ship's boats with polite interest, but confounded their guides by inquiring
why things were done this way rather than that?-and the way suggested
invariably proved to be simpler and more efficient than Earth technique. . .
when the astounded human technicians managed to understand what they were
driving at.
The Little Pedple understood machinery and
all that machinery implies, but they simply had little use for it. They
obviously did not need it for communication and had little need for it for
transportation (although the full reason for that was not at once evident), and
they had very little need for machinery in any of their activities. But when
they had a specific need for a mechanical device they were quite capable of
inventing, building it, using it once, and destroying it, performing the whole
process with a smooth cooperation quite foreign to that of men.
But in biology their preeminence was the
most startling. The Little People were masters in the manipulation of life
forms. Developing plants in a matter of days which bore fruit duplicating not
only in flavor but in nutrition values the foods humans were used to was not a
miracle to them but a routine task any of their biotechnicians could handle.
They did it more easily than an Earth horticulturist breeds for a certain
strain of color or shape in a flower.
But their methods were different from those
of any human plant breeder. Be it said for them that they did try to explain
their methods, but the explanations simply did not come through. In our terms,
they claimed to "think" a plant into the shape and character they
desired. Whatever they meant by that, it is certainly true that they could take
a dormant seedling plant and, without touching it or operating on it in any way
perceptible to their human students, cause it to bloom and burgeon into
maturity in the space of a few hours-with new characteristics not found in the
parent line . . and which bred true thereafter.
However the Little People differed from
Earthmen only in degree with respect to scientific attainments. In an utterly
basic sense they differed from humans in kind.
They were not individuals.
No single body of a native housed a
discrete individual. Their individuals were multi-bodied; they had group
"souls." The basic unit of their society was a telepathic rapport
group of many parts. The number of bodies and brains housing one individual ran
as high as ninety or more and was never less than thirty-odd.
The colonists began to understand much
that had been utterly puzzling about the Little People only after they learned
this fact. There is much reason to believe that the Little People found the
Earthmen equally puzzling, that they, too, had assumed that their pattern of
existence must be mirrored in others. The eventual discovery of the true facts
on each side, brought about mutual misunderstandings over identity, seemed to
arouse horror in the minds of the Little People. They withdrew themselves from
the neighborhood of the Families' settlement and remained away for several
days.
At length a messenger entered the camp
site and sought out Barstow. ". . .We are sorry we shunned you . . . in
our haste we mistook your fortune for your fault . . . we wish to help you . .
. we offer to teach you that you may become like ourselves . . ."
Barstow pondered how to answer this
generous overture. "We thank you for your wish to help us," he said
at last, "but what you call our misfortune seems to be a necessary part of
our makeup. Our ways are not your ways. I do not think we could understand your
ways."
The thought that came back to him was very
troubled. "We have aided the beasts of the air and of the ground to cease
their strife . . . but if~you do not wish our help we will not thrust it on you
. . ."
The messenger went away, leaving Zaccur
Barstow troubled in his mind. Perhaps, he thought, ha had been hasty in
answering without taking time to consult the elders. Telepathy was certainly
not a gift to be scorned; perhaps the Little People could train them in
telepathy without any loss of human individualism. But what he knew of the
sensitives among the Families did not encourage such hope; there was not a one
of them who was emotionally healthy, many of them were mentally deficient as
well-it did not seem like a safe path for humans.
It could be discussed later, he decided;
no need to hurry. "No need to hurry" was the spirit throughout the
settlement. There was no need to strive, little that had to be done and rarely
any rush about that little. The sun was warm and pleasant, each day was much
like the next, and there was always the day after that. The Members,
predisposed by their inheritance to take a long view of things, began to take
an eternal view. Time no longer mattered. Even the longevity research, which
had continued throughout their memories, languished. Gordon Hardy tabled his
current experimentation to pursue the vastly more fruitful occupation of
learning what the Little People knew of the nature of life. He was forced to
take it slowly, spending long hours in digesting new knowledge. As time
trickled on, he was hardly aware that his hours of contemplation were becoming
longer, his bursts of active study less frequent.
One thing he did learn, and its
implications opened up whole new fields of thought: the Little People had, in
one sense, conquered death.
Since each of their egos was shared among
many bodies, the death of one body involved no death for the ego. All memory
experiences of that body remained intact, the personality associated with it
was not lost, and the physical loss could be made up by letting a young native
"marry" into the group. But a group ego, one of the personalities
which spoke to the Earthmen, could not die, save possibly by the destruotion of
every body it lived in. They simply went on, apparently forever.
Their young, up to the time of
"marriage" or group assimilation, seemed to have little personality
and only rudimentary or possibly instinctive mental processes. Their elders
expected no more of them in the way of intelligent behavior than a human
expects of a child still in the womb. There were always many such uncompleted
persons attached to any ego group; they were cared for like dearly beloved pets
or helpless babies, although they were often as large and as apparently mature
to Earth eyes as were their elders.
Lazarus grew bored with paradise more
quickly than did the majority of his cousins. "It can't always," he
complained to Libby, who was lying near him on the fine grass, "be time
for tea."
"What's fretting you, Lazarus?"
"Nothing in particular." Lazarus
set the point of his knife on his right elbow, flipped it with his other hand,
watched it bury its point in the ground. "It's just that -this place
reminds me of a well-run zoo. It's got about as much future." He grunted
scornfully. "It's 'Never-Never Land."
"But what in particular is worrying
you?"
"Nothing. That's what worries me.
Honest to goodness, Andy, don't you see anything wrong in being turned out to
pasture like this?"
Libby grinned sheepishly. "I guess
it's my hillbilly blood. 'When it don't rain, the roof don't leak; when it
rains, I cain't fix it nohow," he quoted. "Seems to me we're doing
tolerably well. What irks you?"
"Well-" Lazarus' pale-blue eyes
stared far away; he paused in his idle play with his knife. "When I was a
young man a long time ago, I was beached in the South Seas-"
"Hawaii?'
"No. Farther south. Damned if I know
what they call it today. I got hard up, mighty hard up, and sold my sextant.
Pretty soon-or maybe quite a while-I could have passed for a native. I lived
like one. It didn't seem to matter. But one day I caught a look at myself in a
mirror." Lazarus sighed gustily. "I beat my way out of that place
shipmate to a cargo of green hides, which may give you some idea how. scared
and desperate I was!"
Libby did not comment. "What do you
do with your time, Lib?" Lazarus persisted.
"Me? Same as always. Think about
mathematics. Try to figure out a dodge for a space drive like' the one that got
us here."
"Any luck on that?" Lazarus was
suddenly alert.
"Not yet. Gimme time. Or I just watch
the clouds integrate. There are amusing mathematical relationships everywhere
if you are on the lookout for them. In the ripples on the water, or the shapes
of busts-elegant fifth-order functions."
"Huh? You mean 'fourth order."
"Fifth order. You omitted the time
variable. I like fifth-order equations," Libby said dreamily. "You
find 'em in fish, too."
"Huinmph!" said Lazarus, and
stood up suddenly. "That may be all right for you, but it's not my
pidgin."
"Going some place?"
"Goin' to take a walk."
Lazarus walked north. He walked the rest
of that day, slept on the ground as usual that night, and was up and moving,
still to the north, at dawn. The next day was followed by another like it, and
still another. The going"was easy, much like strolling in a park . . . too
easy, in Lazarus' opinion. For the sight of a volcano, or a really worthwhile
waterfall, he felt willing to pay four bits and throw in a jackknife.
The food plants were sometimes strange,
but abundant and satisfactory. He occasionally met one or more of the Little
People going about their mysterious affairs: they never bothered him nor asked
why he was traveling but simply greeted him with the usual assumption of
previous acquaintanceship. He began to long for one who would turn out to be a
stranger; he felt watched.
Presently the nights grew colder, the days
less balmy, and the Little People less numerous. When at last he had not seen
one for an entire day, he camped for the night, remained there the next
day-took out his soul and examined it.
He had to admit that he could find no reasonable
fault with the planet nor its inhabitants. But just as definitely it was not to
his taste. No philosophy that he had ever heard or read gave any reasonable
purpose for man's existence, nor any rational clue to his proper conduct.
Basking in the sunshine might be as good a thing to do with one's life as any
other- but it was not for him and he knew it, even if he could not define how
he knew it.
The hegira of the Families had been a
mistake. It would have been a more human, a mqre mature and manly thing, to
have stayed and fought for their rights, even if they had died insisting on
them. Instead they had fled across half a universe (Lazarus was reckless about
his magnitudes) looking for a place to light. They had found one, a good
one-but already occupied by beings so superior as to make them intolerable for
men. . . yet so supremely indifferent in their superiority to men that they had
not even bothered to wipe them out, but had whisked them away to this-this
-over-manicured country club.
And that in itself was the unbearable
humiliation. The New Frontiers was the culmination of five hundred years of
human scientific research, the best that men could do-but it had been flicked
across the deeps of space as casually as a man might restore a baby bird to its
nest.
The Little People did not seem to want to
kick them out but the Little People, in their own way, were as demoralizing to
men as were the gods of the Jockaira. One at a time they might be morons - but
taken as groups each rapport group was a genius that threw the best minds that
men could offer into the shade. Even Andy. Human beings could not hope to
compete with that type of organization any more than a backroom shop could
compete with an automated cybernated factory. Yet to form any such group
identities, even if they could which he doubted, would be, Lazarus felt very
sure, to give up whatever it was that made them men.
He admitted that he was prejudiced in
favor of men. He was a man.
The uncounted days slid past while he
argued with himself over the things that bothered him-problems that had made
sad the soul of his breed since the first apeman had risen to self-awareness,
questions never solved by full belly nor fine machinery. And the endless quiet
days did no more to give him final answers than did all the soul searchings of
his ancestors. Why? What shall it profit a man? No answer came back -save one:
a firm unreasoned conviction that he was not intended for, or not ready for,
this timeless snug harbor of ease.
His troubled reveries were interrupted by
the appearance of one of the Little People. ". . . greetings, old friend
your wife King wishes you to return to your home . . . he has need of your
advice . . ."
"What's the trouble?" Lazarus
demanded.
But the little creature either could or
would not tell him. Lazarus gave his belt a hitch and headed south. ". . .
there is no need to go slowly . . ." a thought came after him.
Lazarus let himself be led to a clearing
beyond a clump of trees. There he found an egg-shaped object about six feet
long, featureless except for a door in the side. The native went in through the
door, Lazarus squeezed his larger bulk in after him; the door closed.
It opened almost at once and Lazarus saw
that they were on the beach just below the human settlement. He had to admit
that it was a good trick.
Lazarus hurried to the ship's boat parked
on the beach in which Captain King shared with Barstow a semblance of community
headquarters. "You sent for me, Skipper. What's up?"
King's austere face was grave. "It's
about Mary Sperling."
Lazarus felt a sudden cold tug at his
heart. "Dead?"
"No. Not exactly. She's gone over to
the Little People. 'Married' into one of their groups."
"What? But that's impossible!"
Lazarus was wrong. There was no faint
possibility of interbreeding between Earthmen and natives but there was no
barrier, if sympathy existed, to a human merging into one of their rapport
groups, drowning his personality in the ego of the many.
Mary Sperling, moved by conviction of her
own impending death, saw in the deathless group egos a way out. Faced with the
eternal problem of life and death, she had escaped the problem by choosing
neither . . . selflessness. She had found a group willing to receive her, she
had crossed over.
"It raises a lot of new
problems," concluded King. "Slayton and Zaccur and I all felt that
you had better be here."
"Yes, yes, sure-but where is
Mary?" Lazarus demanded and then ran out of the room without waiting for
an answer. He charged through the settlement ignoring both greetings and
attempts to stop him. A short distance oustide the camp he ran across a native
He skidded to a stop. "Where is Mary Sperling?"
". . . I am Mary Sperling . .
"For the love of- You can't be."
"I am Mary Sperling and Mary Sperling
is myself do you not know me, Lazarus? . . . I know you.
Lazarus waved his hands. "No! I want
to see Mary Sperling who looks like an Earthman-Iike me!"
The native hesitated.". . . follow
me, then . . .
Lazarus found her a long way from the
camp; it was obvious that she had been avoiding the other colonists.
"Mary!"
She answered him mind to mind: ". . I
am sorry to see you troubled . . . Mary Sperling is gone except in that she is
part of us . . ."
"Oh, come off it, Mary! Don't give me
that stuff! Don't you know me?"
". . . of course I know you, Lazarus
. . . it is you who do not know me . . . do not trouble your soul or grieve
your heart with the sight of this body in front of you . . . I am not one of
your kind . . . I am native to this planet.
"Mary," he insisted,
"you've got to undo this. You've got to come out of there!"
She shook her head, an oddly human
gesture, for the face no longer held any trace of human expression; it was a
mask of otherness. ". . . that is impossible . . .Mary Sperling is gone .
. . the one who speaks with you is inextricably myself and not of your
kind." The creature who had been Mary Sperling turned and walked away.
"Mary!" he cried. His heart
leapt across the span of centuries to the night his mother had died. He covered
his face with his hands and wept the unconsolable grief of a child,
Chapter
S
LAZAIWS found both King and Barstow
waiting for him when he returned. King looked at his face. "I could have
told you," he said soberly, "but you wouldn't wait."
"Forget it," Lazatus said
harshly. "What now?"
"Lazarus, there is something else you
have to see before we discuss anything," Zaccur Barstow answered.
"Okay. What?"
"Just come and, see." They led
him to a compartment in the ship's boat which was used as a headquarters.
Contrary to Families' custom it was locked; King let them in. There was a woman
inside, who, when she saw the three, quietly withdrew, locking the door again
as she went out.
"Take a look at that," directed
Barstow.
It was a living creature in an incubator-a
child, but no such child as had ever been seen before. Lazarus stared at it,
then said angrily, "What the devil is it?"
"See for yourself. Pick it up. You
won't hurt it."
Lazarus did so, gingerly at first, then
without shrinking from the contact as his curiosity increased. What it was, he
could not say. It was not human; it was just as certainly not offspring of the
Little People. Did this planet, like the last, contain some previously
unsuspected race? It was manlike, yet certainly not a man child. It lacked even
the button nose of a baby, nor were there evident external ears. There were
organs in the usual locations of each but flush with the skull and protected
with many ridges. Its hands had too many fingers and there was an extra large
one near each wrist which ended in a cluster of pink worms.
There was something odd about the torso of
the infant which Lazarus could not define. But two other gross facts were
evident: the legs ended not in human feet but in horny, toeless
pediments-hoofs. And the creature was hermaphroditic-not in deformity but in
healthy development, an androgyne.
"What is it?" he repeated, his
mind filled with lively suspicion.
"That," said Zaccur, "is
Marion Schmidt, born three weeks ago."
"Huh? What do you mean?"
"It means that the Little People are
just as clever in manipulating us as they are in manipulating plants."
"What? But they agreed to leave us
alone!"
"Don't blame them too quickly. We let
ourselves in for it. The origihal idea was simply a few improvements."
"Improvements!' That thing's an
obscenity."
"Yes and no. My stomach turns
whenever I have to took at it . . . but actually-well, it's sort of a superman.
Its body architecture has been redesigned for greater efficiency, our useless
simian hangovers have been left out, and its organs have been rearranged in a
more sensible fashion. You can't say it's not human, for it is . . - an
improved model. Take that extra appendage at the wrist. That's another hand, a
miniature one . . - backed up by a microscopic eye. You can see how useful that
would be, once you get used to the idea." Barstow stared at it. "But
it looks horrid, to me~'
"It'd look horrid to anybody,"
Lazarus stated. "It may be an improvement, but damn it, I say it ain't
humans"
"In any case it creates a
problem."
"I'll say it does!" Lazarus
looked at it again. "You say it has a second set of eyes in those tiny
bands? That doesn't seem possible."
Barstow shrugged. "I'm no biologist.
But every cell in the body contains a full bundle of chromosomes. I suppose
that you could grow eyes, or bones, or anything you liked anywhere, if you knew
how to manipulate the genes in the chromosomes. And they know."
"I don't want to be
manipulated!"
"Neither do I."
Lazarus stood on the bank and stared out
over the broad beach at a full meeting of- the Families. "I am-" he
started formally, then looked puzzled. "Come here a moment, Andy." He
whispered to Libby; Libby looked pained and whispered back. Lazarus looked
exasperated and whispered again. Finally he straightened up and started over.
"I am two hundred and forty-one years
old-at least," he stated. "Is there anyone here who is older?"
It was empty formality; he knew that he was the eldest; he felt twice that old.
"The meeting is opened,~' he went on, his big voice rumbling on down the
beach assisted by speaker systems from the ship's boats. "Who is your
chairman?"
"Get on with it," someone called
from the crowd.
"Very well," said Lazarus.
"Zaccur Barstow!"
Behind Lazarus a technician aimed a
directional pickup at Barstow. "Zaccur Barstow," his voice boomed
out, "speaking for myself. Some of us have come to believe that this
planet, pleasant as it is, is not the place for us. You all know about Mary
Sperling, you've seen stereos of Marion Schmidt; there have been other things
and I won't elaborate. But emigrating again poses another question, the
question of where? Lazarus Long proposes that we return to Earth. In such
a-" His words were drowned by noise from the crowd.
Lazarus shouted them down. "Nobody is
going to be forced to leave. But if enough of us want to leave to justify
taking the ship, then we can. I say go back to Earth. Some say look for another
planet. That'll have to be decided. But first-how many of you think as I do
about leaving here?"
"I do!" The shout was echoed by
many others. Lazarus peered toward the first man to answer, tried to spot him,
glanced over his shoulder at the tech, then pointed. "Go ahead, bud,"
he ruled. "The rest of you pipe down."
"Name of Oliver Schmidt. I've been
waiting for months for somebody to suggest this. I thought I was the only
sorehead in the Families. I haven't any real reason for leaving-I'm not scared
out by the Mary Sperling matter, nor Marion Schmidt. Anybody who likes such
things is welcome to them-live and let live. But I've got a deep down urge to
see Cincinnati again. I'm fed up with this place. I'm tired of being a lotus
eater. Damn it, I want to work for my living! According to the Families'
geneticists I ought to be good for another century at least. I can't see
spending that much time lying in the inn and daydreaming."
When he shut up, at least a thousand more
tried to get the floor. "Easy! Easy!" bellowed Lazarus. "If
everybody wants to talk, I'm going to have to channel it through your Family
representatives. But let's get a sample here and there." He picked out
another man, told him to sound off.
"I won't take long," the new
speaker said, "as I agree with Oliver Schmidt I just wanted to mention my
own reason. Do any of you miss the Moon? Back home I used to sit out on my
balcony on warm summer nights and smoke and look at the Moon. I didn't know it
was important to me, but it is. I want a planet with a moon."
The next speaker said only, "This
case of Mary Sperling has given me a case of nerves. I get nightmares that I've
gone over myself."
The arguments went on and on. Somebody
pointed out that they had been chased off Earth; what made anybody think that
they would be allowed to return? Lazarus answered that himself. "We
learned a lot from the Jockaira and now we've learned a lot more from the
Little People-things that put us way out ahead of anything scientists back on
Earth had even dreamed of. We can go back to Earth loaded for bear. We'll be in
shape to demand our rights, strong enough to defend them."
"Lazarus Long-" came another
voice.
"Yes," acknowledged Lazarus.
"You over there, go ahead."
"I am too old to make any more jumps
from star to star and much too old to fight at the end of such a jump. Whatever
the rest of you do, I'm staying."
"In that case," said Lazarus,
"there is no need to discuss it, is there?"
"I am entitled to speak." -
"All
right, you've spoken. Now give sotheone else a chance."
The sun set and the stars came out and
still the talk went on. Lazarus knew that it would never end unless he moved to
end it. "All right," he shouted, ignoring the many who still, wanted
to speak. "Maybe we'll have to turn this back to the Family councils, but
let's take a trial vote and see where we are. Everybody who wants to go back to
Earth move way over to my right. Everybody who wants to stay here move down the
beach to my left. Everybody who wants to go exploring for still another planet
gather right here in front of me." He dropped back and said to the sound
tech, "Give them some music to speed 'em up."
The tech nodded and the homesick strains
of Valse Triste sighed over the beach. It was followed by The Green Hills of
Earth. Zaccur Barstow turned toward Lazarus. "You picked that music."
"Me?" Lazarus answered with
bland innocence. "You know I ain't musical, Zack."
Even with music the separation took a long
time. The last movement of the immortal Fifth had died away long before they at
last had sorted themselves into three crowds.
On the left about a tenth of the total
number were gathered, showing thereby their intention of staying. They were
mostly the old and the tired, whose sands had run low. With them were a few
youngsters who had never seen Earth, plus a bare sprinkling of other ages.
In the center was a very small group, not
over three hundred, mostly men and a few younger women, who voted thereby for
still newer frontiers.
But the great mass was on Lazarus' right.
He looked at them and saw new animation in their faces; it lifted his heart,
for he had been bitterly afraid that he was almost alone in his wish to leave.
He looked back at the small group nearest
him. "It looks like you're outvoted," he said to them alone, his
voice unamplifled. "But never mind, there always comes another day."
He waited.
Slowly the group in the middle began to
break up. By ones and twos and threes they moved away. A very few drifted over
to join those who were staying; most of them merged with the group on the
right.
When this secondary division was complete
Lazarus spoke to the smaller group on his left. "All right," he said
very gently, "You . . . you old folks might as well go back up to the
meadows and get your sleep. The rest of us have things to make."
Lazarus then gave Libby the floor and let
him explain to the majority crowd that the trip home would not be the weary
journey the flight from Earth had been, nor even the tedious second jump. Libby
placed all of the credit where most of it belonged, with the Little People.
They had straightened him out with his difficulties in dealing with the problem
of speeds which appeared to exceed the speed of light. If the Little People
knew what they were talking about -and Libby was sure that they did-there appeared
to be no limits to what Libby chose to call
"para-acceleration"-"para-" because, like Libby's own
light-pressure drive, it acted on the whole mass uniformly and could no more be
perceived by the senses than can gravitation, and "para-" also
because the ship would not go "through" but rather around or
"beside" normal space. "it is not so much a matter of driving
the ship as it is a selection of appropriate potential level in an
n-dimensional hyperplenum of n-plus-one possible-"
Lazarus firmly cut him off. "That's
your department, son, and everybody trusts you in it. We ain't qualified to
discuss the fine points."
"I was only going to add-"
"I know. But you were already out of
the world when I stopped you."
Someone from the crowd shouted one more
question. "When do we get there?"
"I don't know," Libby admitted,
thinking of the question the way Nancy Weatheral had put it to him long ago.
"I can't say what year it will be . . . but it will seem like about three
weeks from now."
The preparations consumed days simply
because many round trips of the ship's boats were necessary to embark them.
There was a marked lack of ceremonious farewell because those remaining behind
tended to avoid those who were leaving. Coolness had sprung up between the two
groups; the division on the beach had split friendships, had even broken up
contemporary marriages, had caused many hurt feelings, unresolvable bitterness.
Perhaps the only desirable aspect of the division was that the parents of the
mutant Marion Schmidt had elected to remain behind.
Lazarus was in charge of the last boat to
leave. Shortly before he planned to boost he felt a touch at his elbow.
"Excuse me," a young man said. "My name's Hubert Johnson. 1 want
to go along but I've had to stay back with the other crowd to keep my mother
from throwing fits. If I show up at the last minute, can 1 still go
along?"
Lazirus looked him over. "You look
old enough to decide without asking me."
"You don't understand. I'm an only
child and my mother tags me around. I've got to sneak back before she misses
me. How much longer-"
"I'm not holding this boat for
anybody. And you'll never break away any younger. Get into the boat"
"But. . ."
"Oft!" The young man did so,
with one worried backward glance at the bank. There was a lot, thought Lazarus,
to be said for ectogenesis.
Once inboard the New Frontiers Lazarus
reported to Captain King in the control room. "All inboard?" asked
King.
"Yeah. Some late deciders, pro and
con, and one more passenger at the last possible split second-woman named
Eleanor Johnson. Let's go!"
King turned to Libby. "Let's go,
Mister."
The stars blinked out.
They flew blind, with only Libby's unique
talent to guide them. If he had doubts as to his ability to lead them through the
featureless blackness of other space he kept them to himself. On the
twenty-third ship's day of the reach and the eleventh day of para-deceleration
the stars reappeared, all in their old familiar ranges-the Big Dipper, giant
Orion, lopsidecL Crux, the fairy Pleiades, and dead ahead of them, blazing
against the frosty backdrop of the Milky Way, was a golden light that had to be
the Sun.
Lazarus had tears in his eyes for the
second time in a month.
They could not simply rendezvous with
Earth, set a parking orbit, and disembark; they had-to throw their hats in
first. Besides that, they needed first to know what time it was.
Libby was able to establish quickly,
through proper motions of nearest stars, that it was not later than about 3700
A.D.; without precise observatory instruments he refused to commit himself
further. But once they were close enough to see the Solar planets he had
another clock to read; the planets themselves make a clock with nine hands.
For any date there is a unique
configuration of those "hands" since no planetary period is exactly
commensurate with another. Pluto marks off an "hour" of a quarter of
a millennium; Jupiter's clicks a cosmic minute of twelve years; Mercury whizzes
a "second" of about ninety days. The other "hands" can
refine these readings-Neptune's period is so cantankerously different from that
of Pluto that the two fall into approximately repeated configuration only once
in seven hundred and fifty-eight years. The great clock can be read with any
desired degree of accuracy over any period-but it is not easy to read.
Libby started to read it as soon as any of
the planets could be picked out. He muttered over the problem. "There's
not a chance that we'll pick up Pluto," he complained to Lazarus,
"and I doubt if we'll have Neptune. The inner planets give me an infinite
series of approximations-you know as well as I do that "infinite" is
a question-begging term. Annoying!"
"Aren't you looking at it the hard
way, son? You can get a practical answer. Or move over and I'll get one."
-
"Of course I can get a practical
answer," Libby said petulantly, "if you're satisfied with that
But-"
"But me no 'buts'-what year is it,
man!"
"Eh? Let's put it this way. The time
rate in the ship and duration on Earth have been unrelated three times. But now
they are effectively synchronous again, such that slightly over seventy-four
years have passed since we 1eft.'
Lazarus heaved a sigh. "Why didn't
you say so?" He had been fretting that Earth might - not be recognizable .
. . they might have torn down New York or something like that.
"Shucks, Andy, you shouldn't have
scared me like that."
"Mmm . . ." said Libby. It was
one of no further interest to him. There remained only the delicious problem of
inventing a mathematics which would describe elegantly two apparently
irreconcilable groups of facts: the Michelson-Morley experiments and the log of
the New Frontiers. He set happily about it. Mmm . . . what was the least number
of pamdimensions indispeMably necessary to contain the augmented plenum using a
sheaf of postulates affirming- It kept him contented for a considerable
time-subjective time, of course.
The ship was placed in a temporary orbit
half a billion miles from the Sun with a radius vector normal to the plane of
the ecliptic. Parked thus at right angles to and far outside the flat pancake
of the Solar System they were safe from any long chance of being discovered. A
ship's boat had been fitted with thç neo-Libby drive during the jump and a
negotiating party was sent down.
Lazarus wanted to go along; King refused
to let him, which sent Lazarus into sulks. King had said curtly, "This
isn't a raiding party, Lazarus; this is a diplomatic mission."
"Hell, man, I can be diplomatic when
it pays!"
"No doubt But we'll send a man who
doesn't go armed to the 'fresher."
Ralph Schultz headed the party, since
psychodynamic factors back on Earth were of first importance, but he was aided
by legal voluntary and technical specialists. If the Families were going to
have to fight for living room it was necessary to know what sort of technology,
what sort of weapons, they would have to meet-but it was even more necessary to
find out whether or not a peaceful landing could be arranged.
Schultz had been authorized by the elders
to offer a plan under which the Families would colonize the thinly settled and
retrograded European continent. But it was possible, even likely, that this had
already been done in their absence, in view of the radioactive half-lifes
involved. Schultz would probably have to improvise some other compromise,
depending on the conditions he found.
Again there was nothing to do but wait.
Lazarus endured it in nail-chewing
uncertainty. He had claimed publicly that the Families had such great
scientific advantage that they could meet and defeat the best that Earth could
offer. Privately, he knew that this was sophistry and so did any other Member
competent to judge the matter. Knowledge alone did not win wars. The ignorant
fanatics of Europe's Middle Ages had defeated the incomparably higher Islamic
culture; Archimedes had been struck down by a common soldier; barbarians had
sacked Rome. Libby, or some one, might devise an unbeatable, weapon from their
mass of new knowledge-or might not and who knew what strides military art had
made on earth in three quarters of a century?
King, trained in military art, was worried
by the same thing and still more worried by the personnel he would have to work
with. The Families were anything but trained legions; the prospect of trying to
whip those cranky individualists into some semblance of a disciplined fighting
machine ruined his sleep.
These doubts and fears King and Lazarus
did not mention even to each other; each was afraid that to mention such things
would be to spread a poison of fear through the ship. But they were not alone
in their worries; half of the ship's company realized the weaknesses of their
position and kept silent only because a bitter resolve to go home, no matter
what, made them willing to accept the dangers..
"Skipper,". Lazarus said to King
two weeks after Schultz's party had headed Earthside, "have you wondered
how they're going to feel about the New Frontiers herself?"
"Eh? What do you mean?'
"Well, we hijacked her. Piracy."
King looked astounded. "Bless me, so
we did! Do you know, it's been so long ago that it is hard for me to realize
that she was ever anything but my ship . . . or to recall that I first came
into her through an act of piracy." He looked thoughtful, then smiled grimly.
"I wonder how conditions are in Coventry these days?"
"Pretty thin rations, I
imagine," said Lazarus. "But we'll team up and make out. Never
mind-they haven't caught us yet."
"Do you suppose that Slayton Ford
will be connected with the matter? That would be hard lines after all he has
gone through."
"There may not be any trouble about
it at all," Lazarus answered soberly. "While the way we got this ship
was kind of irregular, we have used it for the purpose for which it was
built-to explore the stars. And we're returning it intact, long before they
could have expected any results, and with a slick new space drive to boot. It's
more for their money than they had any reason to expect-so they may just decide
to forget it and trot out the fatted calf."
"I hope so," King answered
doubtfully.
The scouting party was two days late. No
signal was received from them until they emerged into normal spacetime, just
before rendezvous, as no method had yet been devised for signalling from
para-space to ortho-space. While they were maneuvering to rendezvous, King
received Ralph Schultz's face on the control-room screen. "Hello, Captain!
We'll be boarding shortly to report."
"Give me a summary now!"
"I wouldn't know where to start. But
it's all right-we can go home!"
"Huh? How's that? Repeat!"
"Everything's all right. We are
restored to the Covenant. You see, there isn't any difference any more.
Everybody is a member of the Families now."
"What do you mean?" King
demanded.
"They've got it."
"Got what?"
"Got the secret of longevity."
"Huh? Talk sense. There isn't any
secret. There never was any secret."
"We didn't have any secret-but they
thought we had. So they found it."
"Expiain yourself," insisted
Captain King.
"Captain, can't this wait until we get
back into the ship?' Ralph Schultz protested. "I'm no biologist. We've
brought along a government reptesentative-you can quiz him, instead?
Chapter
6
KING RECEWED Terra's representative in his
cabin. He had notified Zaccur Barstow and Justin Foote to be present for the
Families and had invited Doctor Gordon Hardy because the nature of the
startling news was the biologist's business. Libby was there as the ship's
chief officer; Slayton Ford was invited because of his unique status, although
he had held no public office in the Families since his breakdown in the temple
of Kreel.
Lazarus was there because Lazarus wanted
to be there, in his own strictly private capacity. He had not been invited, but
even Captain King was somewhat diffident about interfering with the assumed
prerogatives of the eldest Member.
Ralph Schultz introduced Earth's
ambassador to the assembled company. "This is Captain King, our commanding
officer and this is Miles Rodney, representing the Federation Council-minister
plenipotentiary and ambassador extraordinary, I guess you would call him."
"Hardly that," said Rodney;
"although I can agree to the 'extraordinary' part. This situation is quite
without preccdent. it is an honor to know you, Captain."
"Glad to have you inboard, sir."
"And this is Zaccur Barstow,
representing the trustees of the Howard Families, and Justin Foote, secretary
tO the trustees-"
"Service."
"Service to you, gentlemen."
"Andrew Jackson Libby, chief
astrogational officer, Doctor Gordon Hardy, biologist in charge of our research
into the causes of old age and death."
"May I do you a service?" Hardy
acknowledged formally."Service to you, sir. So you are the chief
biologist-there was a time when you could have done a service to the whole
human race. Think of it, sir-think how different things could have been. But,
happily, the human race was able to worry out the secret of extending life
without the aid of the Howard Families."
Hardy looked vexed. "What do you
mean, sir? Do you mean to say that you are still laboring under the delusion
that we had some miraculous secret to impart, if we chose?"
Rodney shrugged and spread his hands.
"Really, now, there is no need to keep up the pretense, is there? Your
results have been duplicated, independently."
Captain King cut in. "Just a
moment-Ralph Schultz, is the Federation still under the impression that there
is some 'secret' to our long lives? Didn't you tell them?"
Schultz was looking bewildered.
"Uh-this is ridiculous. The subject hardly came up. They themselves had
achieved controlled longevity; they were no longer interested in us in that
respect. It is true that there still existed a belief that our long lives
derived from manipulation rather than from heredity, but I corrected that
impression."
"Apparently not very thoroughly, from
what Miles Rodney has just said."
"Apparently not. I did not spend much
effort on it; it was beating a dead dog. The Howard Families add their long
lives are no longer an issue on Earth. Interest, both public and official, is
centered on the fact that we have accomplished a successful interstellar
jump."
"I can confirm that," agreed
Miles Rodney. "Every official, every news service, every citizen, every
scientist in the system is waiting with utmost eagerness the arrival of the New
Frontiers. It's the greatest, most sensational thing that has happened since
the first trip to the Moon. You are famous, gentlemen-all of you."
Lazarus pulled Zaccur Barstow aside and
whispered to him. Barstow looked perturbed, then nodded thoughtfully.
"Captain---" Barstow said to King.
"Yes, Zack?"
"I suggest that we ask our guest to
excuse us while we receive Ralph Schultz' report."
"Why?"
Barstow glanced at Rodney. "I think
we will be better prepared to discuss matters if we are brief by our own
representative."
King turned to Rodney. "Will you
excuse us~~ sir?"
Lazarus broke in. "Never mind,
Skipper. Zack means well but he's too polite. Might as well let Comrade Rodney
stick around and we'll lay it on the line. Tell me this, Miles; what proof have
you got that you and your pals have figured out a way to live as long as we
do?'
"Proof?' Rodney seemed dumbfounded.
"Why do you ask - Whom am I
addressing? Who are you, sir?"
Ralph Schultz intervened. "Sorry-I
didn't get a chance to finish the introductions. Miles Rodney, this is Lazarus
Long, the Senior."
"Service. 'The Senior' what?'
"He just means 'The Senior,'
period," answered Lazarus. "I'm the-oldest Member. Otherwise I'm a
private citizen."
"The oldest one of the Howard
Families! Why-why, you must be the oldest man alive-think of that!"
"You think about it," retorted
Lazarus. "I quit worrying about it a couple of centuries ago. How about
answering my question?'
"But I can't help being impressed.
You make me feel like an infant-and I'm not a young man myself; I'll be a
hundred and five this coming June."
"If you can prove that's your age,
you can answer my question. I'd say you were about forty. How about it?"
'Well, - dear me, I hardly expected to be interrogated
on this point. Do you wish to see my identity card?"
"Are you kidding? I've had fifty-odd
identity cards in my time, all with phony birth dates. What else can you
offer?'
"Just a minute, Lazarus," put in
Captain King. 'What is the purpose of your question?"
Lazarus Long turned away from Rodney.
"It's like this, Skipper-we hightailed it out of the Solar System to save
our necks, because the rest of the yokels thought we had invented some way to
live forever and proposed to squeeze it out of us if they had to kill every one
of us. Now everything is sweetness and light~-so they say. But it seems mighty
funny that the bird they send up to smoke the pipe of peace with us should
still be convinced that we have that so-called secret.
"It got me to wondering.
"Suppose they hadn't figured out a
way to keep from dying from old age but were still clinging to the idea that we
had? What better way to keep us calmed down and unsuspicious than to tell us
they had until they could get us where they wanted us in order to put the
question to us again?"
Rodney snorted. "A preposterous ideal
Captain, I don't think I'm called on to put up with this."
Lazarus stared coldly. "It was
preposterous the first time, but-but it happened. The burnt child is likely to
be skittish."
"Just a moment, both of you,"
ordered King. "Ralph, how about it? Could you have been taken in by a
put-up job?"
Schultz thought about it, painfully.
"I don't think so." He paused. "It's rather difficult to say. I
couldn't tell from appearance of course, any more than our own Members could be
picked out from a crowd of normal persons."
"But you are a psychologist. Surely
you could have detected indications of fraud, if there had been one."
"I may be a psychologist, but I'm not
a miracle man and I'm not telepathic. I wasn't looking for fraud." He
grinned I sheepishly. "There was another factor. I was so excited over
being home that I was not in the best emotional condition to note
discrepancies, if there were any."
"Then you aren't sure?" -'
"No. I am emotionally convinced that
Miles Rodney is telling the truth-"
"Lam!"
"-and I believe that a few questions
could clear the matter up. He claims to be one hundred and five years old. We
can test that."
"I see," agreed King. "Hmm
. . . you put the questions, Ralph?"
"Very well. You will permit, Miles
Rodney?"
"Go ahead," Rodney answered
stiffly.
"You must have been about thirty
years old when we left Earth, since we have been gone nearly seventy-five
years, Earth time. Do you remember the event?"
"Quite clearly. I was a clerk in
Novak Tower at the time, I in the offices of the Administrator."
Slayton Ford had remained in the
background throughout the discussion, and had done nothing to call attention to
himself. At Rodney's answer he sat up. "Just a moment, Captain-"
"Eh? Yes?"
"Perhaps I can cut this short. You'll
pardon me, Ralph?" He turned to Terra's representative. "Who am
I?"
Rodney looked at him in some puzzlement.
His expression changed from one of simple surprise at the odd question to
complete and unbelieving bewilderment. "Why, you . . . you are
Administrator Ford!"
Chapter
7
"ONE AT A TIME! One at a time,"
Captain King was saying. "Don't everybody try to talk at once. Go on,
Slayton; you have the floor. You know this man?" Ford looked Rodney over.
"No, I can't say that I do."
"Then it is a frame up." King
turned to Rodney."Suppose you recognized Ford from historical stereos-is
that right?" -
Rodney seemed about to burst. "No! I
recognized him. He's changed but I knew him. Mr. Administrator-look at me,
please! Don't you know me? I worked for you!"
"It seems fairly obvious that he
doesn't," King said dryly.
Ford shook his head. "It doesn't
prove anything, one way or the other, Captain. There were over two thousand
civil service employes in my office. Rodney might have been one of them. His
face looks vaguely familiar, but so do most faces."
"Captain-" Master Gordon Hardy
was speaking. "If I can question Miles Rodney I might be able to give an
opinion as to whether or not they actually have discovered anything new about
the causes of old age and death."
Rodney shook his head. "I am not a
biologist. You could trip me up in no time. Captain King, I ask you to arrange
my return to Earth as quickly as possible. I'll not be subjected to any more of
this. And let me add that I do not care a minim whether you and your-your
pretty crew ever get back to civilization or not. I came here to help you, but
I'm disgusted." He stood up.
Slayton Ford went toward him. "Easy,
Miles Rodney, please! Be patient. Put yourself in their place. You would be
just as cautious if you had been through what they have been through."
Rodney hesitated. "Mr. Administrator,
what are you doing here?"
"It's a long and complicated story.
I'll tell you later."
"You are a member of the Howard
Families-you must be. That accounts for a lot of odd things."
Ford shook his head. "No, Miles
Rodney, I am not. Later, please-I'll explain it. You -worked for me
once-when?"
"From 2109 until you, uh,
disappeared."
"What was your job?"
"At the time of the crisis of 2113 I
was an assistant correlation clerk in the Division of Economic Statistics,
Control Section."
"Who was your section chief?"
"Leslie Waldron."
"Old Waldron, eh? What was the color
of his hair?"
"His hair? The Walrus was bald as an
egg."
Lazarus whispered to Zaccur Barstow,
"Looks like I was off base, Zack."
"Wait a moment," Barstow
whispered back. "It still could be thorough preparation-they may have known
that Ford escaped with us."
Ford was continuing, "What was The
Sacred Cow?'
"The Sacred- Chief, you weren't even
supposed to know that there was such a publication!"
"Give my intelligence staff credit
for some activity, at least," Ford said dryly. "I got my copy every
week."
"But what was it?" demanded
Lazarus.
Rodney answered, "An office comic and
gossip sheet that was passed from hand to hand."
"Devoted to ribbing the bosses,"
Ford added, "especially me." He put an arm around Rodney's shoulders.
"Friends, there is no doubt about it. Miles and I were fellow
workers."
"I still want to find out about the
new rejuvenation process," insisted Master Hardy some time later.
"I think we all do," agreed
King. He reached out and refilled their guest's wine glass. "Will you tell
us about it, sir?'
"I'll try," Miles Rodney
answered, "though I must ask Master Hardy to bear with me. It's not one
process, but several-one basic process and several dozen others, some of them
purely cosmetic, especially for women. Nor is the basic process truly a
rejuvenation process. You can arrest the progress of old age, but you can't
reverse it to any significant degree-you can't turn a senile old man into a
boy."
"Yes, yes," agreed Hardy.
"Naturally-but what is the basic process?"
"It consists largely in replacing the
entire blood tissue in an old person with new, young blood. Old age, so they
tell me, is primarily a matter of the progressive accumulation of the waste
poisons of metabolism. The blood is supposed to carry them away, but presently
the blood gets so clogged with the poisons that the scavenging process doesn't
take place properly. Is that right, Doctor Hardy?'
"That's an odd way of putting it,
but-"
"I told you I was no
biotechnician."
"-essentially correct. It's a matter
of diffusion pressure deficit-the d.p.d. on the blood side of a cell wall must
be such as to maintain a fairly sharp gradient or there will occur progressive
autointoxication of the individual cells. But I must say that I feel somewhat
disappointed, Miles Rodney. The basic idea of holding off death by insuring
proper scavenging of waste products is not new-I have a bit of chicken heart
which has been alive for two and one half centuries through equivalent
techniques. As to the use of young blood-yes, that will work. I've kept
experimental animals alive by such blood donations to about twice their normal
span-" He stopped and looked troubled.
"Yes, Doctor Hardy?"
Hardy chewed his lip. "I gave up that
line of research. I found it necessary to have several young donors in order to
keep one beneficiary from growing any older. There was a small, but measurable,
unfavorable effect on each of the donors. Racially it was self-defeating; there
would never be enough donors to go around. Am I to understand, sir that this
method is thereby limited to a small, select part of the population?"
"Oh, no! I did not make myself clear,
Master Hardy. There are no donors."
"Huh?'
"New blood, enough for everybody,
grown outside the body-the Public Health and Longevity Service can provide any
amount of it, any type."
Hardy looked startled. "To think we
came so close . . . so that's it." He paused, then went on. "We tried
tissue culture of bone marrow in vitro. We should have persisted."
"Don't feel badly about it. Billions
of credits and tens of thousands of technicians engaged in this project before
there were any significant results. I'm told that the mass of accumulated art
in this field represents more effort than even the techniques of atomic
engineering." Rodney smiled. "You see, they had to get some results;
it was politically necessary-so there was an all-out effort." Rodney
turned to Ford. 'When the news about the escape of the Howard Families reached
the public, Chief, your precious successor had to be protected from the
mobs."
Hardy persisted with questions about
subsidiary techniques -tooth budding, growth inhibiting, hormone therapy, many
others-until King came to Rodney's rescue by pointing out that the prime
purpose of the visit was to arrange details of the return of the Families to
Earth.
Rodney nodded. "I think we should get
down to business. As I understand it, Captain, a large proportion of your
people are now in reduced-temperature somnolence?"
("Why can't he say 'cold-rest'?"
Lazarus said to Libby.)
"Yes, that is so."
"Then it would be no hardship on them
to remain in that state for a time."
"Eh? Why do you say that, sir?"
Rodney spread his hands. "The
administration finds itself in a somewhat embarrassing position. To put it
bluntly, there is a housing shortage. Absorbing one hundred and ten thousand
displaced persons can't be done overnight."
Again King had to hush them. He then
nodded to Zaccur Barstow, who addressed himself to Rodney. "I fail to see
the problem, sir. What is the present population of the North American
continent?"
"Around seven hundred million."
"And you can't find room to tuck away
one-seventieth of one per cent of that number? It sounds preposterous."
"You don't understand, sir," Rodney
protested. "Population pressure has become our major problem. Co-incident
with it, the right to remain undisturbed in the enjoyment of one's own
homestead, or one's apartment, has become the most jealously guarded of all
civil rights. Before we can find you adequate living room we must make over
some stretch of desert, or make other major arrangements."
"I get it," said Lazarus.
"Politics. You don't dare disturb anybody for fear they will squawk."
"That's hardly an adequate statement
of the case."
"It's not, eh? could be you've got a
general election coming up, maybe?'
"As a matter of fact we have, but
that has nothing to do with the case."
Lazarus snorted.
Justin Foote spoke up. "It seems to
me that the administration has looked at this problem in the most superficial
light. It is not as if we were homeless immigrants. Most of the Members own
their own homes. As you doubtless know, the Families were well-to-do; even
wealthy, and for obvious reasons we built our homes to endure. I feel sure that
most of those structures are still standing."
"No doubt," Rodney conceded,
"but you will find them occupied."
Justin Foote shrugged. "What has that
to do with us? That is a problem for the government to settle with the persons
it has allowed illegally to occupy our homes. As for myself, I shall land as
soon as possible, obtain an eviction ørder from the nearest court, and
repossess my home."
"It's not that easy. You can make
omelet from eggs, but not eggs from omelet. You have been legally dead for many
years; the present oácupant of your house holds a good title."
Justin Foote stood up and glared at the
Federation's envoy, looking, as Lazarus thought, "like a cornered
mouse." "Legally dead! By whose act, sir, by whose act? Mine? I was a
respected solicitor, quietly and honorably pursuing my profession, harming no
one, when I was arrested without cause and forced to flee for my life. Now I am
blandly told that my property is confiscated and my very legal existence as a
person and as a citizen has been taken from ,me beckuse of that sequence of
events. What manner of justice is this? Does the Covenant still stand?"
"You misunderstand me. I-"
"I misunderstood nothing. If justice
is measured out only when it is convenient, then the Covenant is not worth the
parchment it is written on. I shall make of myself a test case, sir, a test
case for every Member of the Families. Unless my property is returned to me in
full and at once I shall bring personal suit against every obstructing
official. I will make of it a cause celebre. For many years I have suffered
inconvenience and indignity and peril; I shall not be put off with words. I
will shout it from the housetops." He paused for breath.
"He's right, Miles," Slayton
Ford put in quietly. "The government had better find some adequate way to
handle this- and quickly."
Lazarus caught Libby's eye and silently
motioned toward the door. The two slipped outside. "Justin'll keep 'em
busy for the next hour," he said. "Let's slide down to the Club and
grab some calories."
"Do you really think we ought to
leave?'
"Relax. If the skipper wants us, he
can holler."
Chapter
8
LAZARUS
TUCKED AWAY three sandwiches, a double order of ice cream, and some cookies
while Libby contented himself with somewhat less. Lazarus would have eaten more
but he was forced to respond to a barrage of questions from the other habitués
of the Club.
"The commissary department ain't
really back on its feet," he complained, as he poured his third cup of
coffee. "The Little People made life too easy for them. Andy, do you like
chili con carne?"
"It's all right."
Lazarus wiped his mouth. "There used
to be a restaurant in Tijuana that served the best chili I ever tasted. I
wonder if it's still there?"
"Where's Tijuana?" demanded
Margaret Weatheral.
"You don't remember Earth, do you,
Peggy? Well, darling, it's in Lower California. You know where that is?"
"Don't you think I studied geography?
It's in Los Angeles."
"Near enough. Maybe you're right-by
now." The ship's announcing system blared out:
"Chief Astrogator-report to the
Captain in the Control Room!"
"That's me!" said Libby, and
hurriedly got up.
The call was repeated, then was followed
by, "All hands prepare for acceleration! All hands prepare for acceleration!"
"Here we go again, kids."
Lazarus stood up, brushed off his kilt, and followed Libby, whistling as he
went
"California, here I come,
Right back where I started from-"
The ship was underway, the stars had faded
out. Captain King had left the control room, taking with him his guest, the
Earth's envoy. Miles Rodney had been much impressed; it seemed likely that he
would need a drink.
Lazarus and Libby remained in the control
room. There was nothing to do; for approximately four hours, ship's time, the
ship would remain in para-space, before returning to normal space near Earth.
Lazarus struck a cigaret. 'What d'you plan
to do when you get back, Andy?"
"Hadn't thought about it."
"Better start thinking. Been some
changes."
"I'll probably head back home for a
while. I can't imagine the Ozarks having changed very much."
"The hills will look the same, I
imagine. You may find the people changed."
"How?"
"You remember I told you that I had
gotten fed up with the Families and had kinda lost touch with them for a
century? By and large, they had gotten so smug and soft in their ways that I
couldn't stand them. I'm afraid we'll find most everybody that way, now that
they expect to live forever. Long term investments, be sure to wear your rubbers
when it rains . . that sort of thing."
"It didn't aifect you that way."
"My approach is different. I never
did have any real reason to last forever-after all, as Gordon Hardy has pointed
out, I'm only a third generation result of the Howard plan. I just did my
living as I went along and didn't worry my head about it. But that's not the
usual attitude. Take Miles Rodney- scared to death to tackle a new situation
with both hands for fear of upsetting precedent and stepping on established
privileges."
"I was glad to see Justin
stand up to him." Libby chuckled. "I didn't think Justin had it in
him."
"Ever see a little dog tell a big dog
to get the hell out of the little dog's yard?"
"Do you think Justin will win his
point?"
"Sure he will, with your help."
"Mine?" -
"Who knows anything about the
para-drive, aside from what you've taught me?"
"I've dictated full notes into the
records."
"But you haven't turned those records
over to Miles Rodney. Earth needs your starship drive, Andy. You heard what
Rodney said about population pressure. Ralph was telling me you have to get a
government permit now before you can have a baby."
"The hell you say!"
"Fact. You can count on it that there
would be tremendous emigration if there were just some decent planets to
emigrate to. And that's where your drive comes in. With it, spreading out to
the stars becomes really practical. They'll have to dicker."
"It's not really my drive, of course.
The Little People worked it out."
"Don't be so modest. You've got it.
And you want to back up Justin, don't you?"
"Oh, sure."
'~Then we'll use it to bargain with. Maybe
I'll do the bargaining, personally. But that's beside the point. Somebody is
going to have to do a little exploring before any large-scale emigration
starts. Let's go into the real estate business, Andy. We'll stake out this
corner of the Galaxy and see what it has to offer."
Libby scratched his nose and thought about
it. "Sounds all right, I guess after I pay a visit home."
"There's no rush. I'll find a nice,
clean little yacht, about ten thousand tons and we'll refit with your
drive."
"What'll we use for money?"
"We'll have money. I'll set up a
parent corporation, while I'm about it, with a loose enough charter to let us
do anything we want to do. There will be daughter corporations for various
purposes and we'll unload the minor interest in each.. Then-"
"You make it sound like work,
Lazarus. I thought it was going to be fun."
"Shucks, we won't fuss with that
stuff. I'll collar somebody to run the home office and worry about the books
and the legal end-somebody about like Justin. Maybe Justin himself."
"Well, all right then."
"You and I will rampage around and
see what there is to be seen. It'll be fun, all right."
They were both silent for a long time,
with no need to talk. Presently Lazarus said, "Andy-"
"Yeah?"
"Are you going to look into this
new-blood-for-old caper?"
"I suppose so, eventually."
"I've been thinking about it. Between
ourselves, I'm not as fast with my fists as I was a century back. Maybe my
natural span is wearing out. I do know this: I didn't start planning our real
estate venture till I head about this new process. It gave me a new
perspective. I find myself thinking about thousands of years-and I never used
to worry about anything further ahead than a week from next Wednesday."
Libby chuckled again. "Looks like
you're growing up."
"Some would say it was about time.
Seriously, Andy, I think that's just what I have been doing. The last two and a
half centuries have just been my adolescence, so to speak. Long as I've hung
around, I don't know any more. about the final amwers, the important answers,
than Peggy Weatheral does. Men-our kind of men-Earth men-never have had enough
time to tackle the important questions. Lots of capacity and not time enough to
use it properly. When it came to the important questions we might as well have
still been monkeys."
"How do you propose to tackle the
important questions?"
"How should I know? Ask me again in
about five hundred years."
"You think that will make a
difference?"
"I do. Anyhow it'll give me time to
poke around and pick up some interesting facts. Take those Jockaira gods-
"
"They weren't gods, Lazarus. You
shouldn't call them that."
"Of course they weren't-I think. My
guess is that they are creatures who have had time enough to do a little hard
thinking. Someday, about a thousand years from now, I intend to march straight
into the temple of Kreel, look him in the eye, and say, 'Howdy, Bub-what do you
know that 1 don't know?'"
"It might not be healthy."
'We'll have a showdown, anyway. I've never
been satisfied with the outcome there. There ought not to be anything in the
whole universe that man can't poke his nose into-that's the way we're built and
I assume that there's some reason for it."
"Maybe there aren't any
reasons."
"Yes, maybe it's just one colossal
big joke, with no point to it."' Lazarus stood up and stretched and
scratched his ribs. "But I can tell you this, Andy, whatever the answers
are, here's one monkey that's going to keep on climbing, and locking around him
to see what he can see, as long as the tree holds out."