INTERVENTION



A   ROOT   TALE   TO   THE

GALACTIC MILIEU



and a

vinculum

between it and

THE SAGA OF

PLIOCENE EXILE



JULIAN MAY

1987

HOUGHTON   MIFFLIN   COMPANY   •   BOSTON
CONTENTS

Prologue

Part I • The Surveillance

Part II • The Disclosure

Part III • The Intervention

Epilogue



Appendix

The Remillard Family Tree

To Robie Macauley
INTERVENTION



Evolutionary creativity always renders invalid the "law
of large numbers" and acts in an elitist way.



-Erich Jantsch

The Self-Organizing Universe



At the still point of the turning world. Neither flesh nor fleshless;

Neither from nor towards; at the still point, there the dance is,

But neither arrest nor movement. And do not call it fixity,

Where past and future are gathered. Neither movement from nor
towards,

Neither ascent nor decline. Except for the point, the still point,

There would be no dance, and there is only the dance.



-T. S. Eliot

"Burnt Norton"

PROLOGUE

HANOVER, NEW HAMPSHIRE, EARTH

17 FEBRUARY 2113



the proverbial february thaw did not materialize for the 203rd
annual Dartmouth Winter Carnival, and the temperature was around
-10° Celsius when Uncle Rogi Remillard emerged from the
sanctuary of the Peter Christian Tavern into a blustery, festive
night. Cheered by a late supper of turkey-apple soup and a
Vermont cheddar omelette, not to mention a liberal intake of spirits,
he was damned if he would let the Family Ghost keep him from the
fireworks display. The thing couldn't possibly do anything blatant in
the midst of such a mob.

The northeast wind blew leftover snow about thronged Main Street
and down the tavern's stairwell. Rogi had to push past revelers who
tried to crowd down the steps as he climbed up. When the full
blast caught him, he gave his long red-wool muffler an extra twist to
wrap it partially about his head. Thick grizzled hair stuck out of the
scarf folds like a scraggly fright wig. Uncle Rogi was tall, skinny,
and slightly stooped. His youthful face was disfigured by great
bags under the eyes and a slightly mashed nose, which dripped
when forced to inhale the arctic air of unmodified New Hampshire
winters. More fastidious Remillards had long since given up
pleading with Rogi to fix himself up. The family image? Ça ne chie
pas!

He stood in the partial shelter of the tavern building and looked
warily around. The melting grids for both the streets and sidewalks
of downtown Hanover had been turned off to preserve a properly
old-fashioned atmosphere for the celebration. A six-horse team
pulling a snow-roller had tamped down the worst ruts; and now
sleighs, farm wagons full of hay and carousing students, and
chuffing antique autos equipped with antique tire chains drove
toward the College Green in anticipation of the pyrotechnics
display. No modern vehicles were in sight. One could imagine it
was the 1990s again... except that among the human pedestrians
in their reproduction winter gear from L. L. Bean and Eddie Bauer
were slower-moving groups of exotic tourists from the nonhuman
worlds of the Galactic Milieu. All but the hardy little Poltroyans were
snugly sealed inside environmental suits with visors closed against
the harsh Earth weather. The Poltroyans romped and chortled in
the stinging cold, and wore fish-fur mukluks and oversized
Dartmouth souvenir sweat shirts over their traditional robes.

Rogi searched the night, using his watering eyes rather than his
farscan ultrasense. The damn Ghost was too clever a screener to
be spotted with the mind's eye - or at least his mind's eye. Perhaps
the thing had given up and gone away. God, he hoped so! After
leaving him in peace for thirty years it had given him a nasty shock,
accosting him there in the bookshop just as he was getting ready
to close up. He had fled out into the street and it had followed,
importuning him, all the way to the eter Christian Tavern.

"Are you still here, mon fantôme?" Rogi muttered into his scarf. "Or
did it get too cold for you, waiting outside? Silly thing. Who'd notice
a ghost in a crowded bar with mulled cider and hot buttered rum
flowing like Ammonoosuc Falls? Who'd notice a dozen ghosts?"

Something insubstantial stirred in the tiny plaza fronting the Nugget
Cinema just south of the tavern. Whirling powder snow seemed for
a moment to slide over and around a certain volume of empty air.

Bon sang! It had waited for him, all right. Rogi farspoke it:

Hello again. Beats me, Ghost, why you don't simply put on a
psychocreative body and sit down to supper with me like a civilized
being. Other Lylmik do it.

The Ghost said: There are too many alumni operants in the Peter
Christian tonight. Even a Grand Master or two. In their cups, the
older ones might be unpredictably insightful.

"And that would never do, eh? Some really big operator might see
through you in the worst way!" Rogi's whisper was scathing and his
mental façade, fortified with Dutch courage, no longer betrayed a
hint of unease. "Well, I'm going over to watch the fireworks. How
about you?"

The mysterious presence drifted closer, exuding restrained
coercion. Oh, yes - it could force its will on him anytime it liked; the
fact that it didn't had ominous implications. It needed wholehearted
cooperation in some scheme again, the sneaky bastard, and very
likely over some considerable span of time. Fat chance!

The Ghost's mind-voice was insistent: We must talk.

"Talk between skyrockets, " Rogi told it rudely. "Nobody invited you
here tonight. I've been waiting for this all winter. Why should I give
up my fun?"

He turned his back and set off into the crowd. Nothing restrained
him physically or mentally, but he was aware of the thing following.
Bells in the Baker Library tower struck ten. A brass band was
playing "Eleazar Wheelock" over in front of the brilliantly lit Hanover
Inn. The leafless branches of the ancient elms, maples, and locust
trees around the snowy quadrangle were trimmed in twinkling
starlights. Streetlamps had been dimmed so the pseudoflames of
the energy torches set up around the campus were the major
source of illumination. They cast a mellow glow over the cheerful
waiting throng and the ranks of huge snow sculptures in front of the
college residence halls. In this centennial year of the Great
Intervention, whimsical takeoffs on Milieu themes predominated.
There was a flying saucer with its Simbiari crew marching down the
gangplank, each exotic carrying a bucket of frozen green Jell-O. A
hideous effigy of a Krondaku held out a tentacle to take a candy
cane from a smiling human snow-child. Gi engaged in their favorite
pursuit were posed in a Kama Sutra ensemble. Sigma Kappa had
produced Snow White and the Seven Poltroyans. Out in the middle
of the College Green was the festival's monumental theme
sculpture: a bizarre armored humanoid like a fairy-tale knight,
astride a rampant charger that was almost - but not quite - a horse.
This statue was almost eight meters high.

The Ghost observed: A fair likeness of Kuhal, but the chaliko's a bit
off the mark.

"The Outing Club tried to get him to be grand marshal of the
cross­country ski parade, " Rogi said, "but Cloud put her foot
down. Spoil­sport. And you can't fool me, Ghost. I know why you
showed up tonight instead of some other time. You wanted to see
the Winter Carnival yourself. " He groped inside his disreputable
old blanket-coat and found a leather-bound flask of Wild Turkey.

There was a choong from a cleared area over beyond Wentworth
Street. The first rocket went up and burst in an umbrella of pink,
silver, and blue tinsel extending from horizon to horizon. The crowd
yelled and applauded. Rogi moved into the lee of a giant elm trunk
to escape the wind. He held out the flask. "Une larme de booze?"

Nobody noticed when the container left his gloved hand, tilted in
the air, and then returned to its owner.

Good stuff, said the Family Ghost.

"As if a damned alien Lylmik would know, " Rogi retorted.
"Gotcha!" He took three hefty swallows.

Still seeking solace in the bottle instead of the Unity, I see.

"What's it to you?" Rogi drank again.

I love you. I wish you joy and peace.

"So you always said... just before you gave me a new load of shit
to shovel. " He took another snort, capped the flask, and put it
away. The expression on his face as he watched scarlet fire-
flowers bloom above black branches was both cunning and
reckless. "Level with me. What are you, really? A living person or
just a manifestation of my own superego?"

The Ghost sighed and said: We're not going to start that all over
again, are we?

"You're the one who started it - by coming back to bug me. "

Don't be afraid of me, Rogi. I know there were difficult times in the
past -

"Damn right! Least you can do is satisfy my curiosity, settle my
mind before you start in all over again with the botheration. Put on
an astral body like your damn Lylmik compères. Show yourself!"

No.

Rogi gave a derisive sniff. He took a bandanna handkerchief from
his pocket and mopped his nose. "It figures. You're not a real
Lylmik any­more than you're a real ghost. " Wind-chill tears blurred
the purple and orange comets that chased each other overhead
like she-elves with their hair on fire.

The Ghost said: I am a Lylmik. I am the entity charged with the
guidance of the Family Remillard through your agency, just as I've
always claimed to be. And now I come to you with one last task -

"Shit - I knew it!" Rogi howled in mortal anguish. Three stunning
detonations from aerial bombs announced a flock of golden
pinwheels. They zoomed heavenward in a tight formation,
fissioned into hundreds of small replicas of themselves, then
rained down toward the skeletal treetops, whirling and whistling like
demented birds. There were vocal and telepathic cheers from the
crowd. The brass band in front of the inn played louder.
Metapsychic operants among the students were mind-shouting the
final verse of the old college song with drunken exuberance:



Eleazar and the Big Chief harangued and gesticulated.

And they founded Dartmouth College, and the Big Chief
matriculated.

Eleazar was the fa-cul-tee, and the whole curriculum

Was five hundred gallons of New England rum!



"All my life, " Rogi moaned, "haunted by a damn exotic busybody
masquerading as the Family Ghost. Why me? Just a quiet man,
not very clever, hardly any metabilities worth mentioning. No world-
shaker, just a harmless bookseller. Most insignificant member of
the high and mighty Remillard Dynasty. Why me? Persecuted!
Pushed around with­out any common consideration. Forced into
one dangerous situation after another just to carry out your damn
Lylmik schemes and forward the manifest destiny of humanity...
unless it all hatched in my own unconscious. "

Like starry dandelion puffs, colossal pompoms of Dartmouth green
and white exploded high over the Old Row. The wind
strengthened, stirring more and more snow into the air.

Patiently, the Ghost said: You and your family were the key that
opened the Galactic Milieu to the human race. The work required
an exotic mentor because of the psychosocial immaturity of Earth's
people and the pivotal role of you Remillards. And while I admit
that you were called upon to endure mental and physical hardship -

"You should be ashamed, using me that way. Playing goddam
God. " Rogi gave a maudlin snuffle. He had the flask out again and
emptied it with a single pull. "Nobody ever knew I was the one -
your catspaw. Always another pot you wanted stirred, another
piece of manipulation, meddling with this Remillard or that one.
Uncle Rogi, galactic agent provocateur! And you used every dirty
trick in the book to keep me in line, tu bâton merdeux."

The Ghost said: Your family would have been aware if we had tried
to coerce them, and they never would have accepted direct
counsel from nonhumans - especially in the pre-Intervention years.
We had to work through you. You were the perfect solution. And
you sur­vived.

A cascade of white fire poured from the sky behind the library,
sil­houetting its lovely Georgian Revival tower. Psychokinetic
adepts among the spectators took hold of the falling sparks and
formed them into Greek letters and other emblems of college
fellowship. The crystal dust of the blown snow began to mix with
heavier flakes running ahead of the predicted storm.

Rogi's eyes glittered with fresh moisture. "Yes, I survived it all. A
hundred and sixty-eight winters and still going strong. But good old
Denis had to die before he ever reached Unity, and Paul and his
poor Teresa... and Jack! My Ti-Jean, the one you exotics call a
saint - for what good it does him. You could have prevented all their
deaths, and the billions of deaths in the Rebellion! You could have
had me warn Marc, shown me some way to stop him. You could
have used me prop­erly, you cold-hearted monster, and nipped the
conspiracy in the bud before it ever came to war!"

The Ghost said: It had to happen as it happened. And in your own
heart, Rogatien Remillard, you know that the tragedies brought
about a greater good.

"Not for Marc! Not for poor Marc the damned one. Why did he have
to end that way? My little boy! I think he loved me more than his
own father - nearly as much as he loved Ti-Jean. He almost grew
up in my bookstore. My God, he teethed on a mint copy of Otto
Willi Gail's By Rocket to the Moon!"

The Ghost said: So he did... I remember watching him.

"And yet you stood by and let him become the greatest mass
mur­derer in human history - that brilliant misguided man who could
have done so much good, if only you'd guided him instead of using
an im­potent old fart like me as your puppet. "

The fireworks were reaching a crescendo. Great jets of vermilion
fire rose from the four points of the compass behind the trees and
nearly converged overhead. In the dark at the zenith, in the midst of
the glare, there appeared a dazzling white star. It vibrated and split
in two and the paired lights began to orbit a common center,
drawing intricate figures like laser projections. The stars split again
and again; each set drew more detailed designs about the central
focus until the sky was covered with a blazing mandala, a magical
pattern of spinning wheels within ornate wheels, white tracery in
ever-changing motion.

Then it froze. It was fire-lace for a moment, then broke into fine
shards of silver that still held the wondrous pattern. The night was
webbed in a giant constellation of impossible intricacy. Down on
the campus the crowd released a pent-up breath. The tiny
diamond-points faded to darkness. The show was over.

Uncle Rogi shivered and pulled his muffler tighter. People were
hur­rying away in all directions now, fleeing the cold. The band
finished playing "The Winter Song" and withdrew into the shelter of
the Hanover Inn, there to drink the health of Eleazar Wheelock and
many another Dartmouth worthy. Sleigh bells jingled, the wind
roared in the white pines, and fresh falling snow curtained off the
tall sculpture of the Tanu knight on the Dartmouth College Green.

"Whatever you want, " Rogi told the Ghost, "I won't do it. "

He darted off across rutted Wheelock Street, dodging a Model A
Ford, a wasp-colored Ski-Doo, and a replica post-coach of 1820
vintage car­rying a party of riotous Poltroyans.

The unseen presence dogged Rogi's heels. It said: This is the
centen­nial year of the Intervention, 2113, and a year significant in
other ways as well.

"Et alors?" sneered Rogi loftily. He headed back on Main Street
along­side the hotel.

The Ghost was cajoling: You must undertake this last assignment,
and then I promise you that these visitations will end... if at the end
you wish it so.

"The devil you say!" The bookseller came to a sudden stop on the
brightly lit sidewalk. There were roisterers all around, shouting to
one another and filling the aether with farspoken nonsense. The
celebrating students and visitors ignored Rogi and he in turn shut
out all perception of them as he strained his mental vision to get a
clear view of his tormentor. As always, he failed. Frustration
brought new tears to his eyes. He addressed the Ghost on its
intimate mode:

Thirty goddam years! Yes, thirty years now you've let me alone,
only to come back and say you want to start all over again. I
suppose it's to do with Hagen and Cloud. Well, I won't help you
manipulate those poor young folks - not even if you bring a whole
planetful of Lylmiks to lay siege to my bookshop. You exotics don't
know how stubborn an Earth­ling can be till you try to cross an old
Canuck! To hell with you and your last assignment - et va te faire
foutre!

The Ghost laughed. And the laugh was so different from its
charac­teristic dispassionate expressions of amusement, so warm,
so nearly human, that Rogi felt his fear and antagonism waver. He
was overcome by a peculiar sense of déjà vu.

Then he was startled to discover that they had already reached
South Street and were just across from The Eloquent Page, his
bookshop. In this part of town, away from the college buildings and
drinking establishments, the sidewalks were nearly deserted. The
historic Gates House, with his shop on the first-floor corner and the
white clapboard of the upper storeys blending into the thickening
storm, had only a single lighted window in the north dormer: the
sitting room of his third-floor apartment. He hustled up the steps
into the entry on Main Street, pulled off a glove, and thumbed the
warm glowing key-pad of the lock. The outer door swung open. He
looked over his shoulder into the swirling snow. The laughter of the
Ghost still rang in his mind.

"Are you still there, damn you?"

From inside the hallway, the Ghost said: Yes. You will not refuse
me, Rogi.

The bookseller cursed under his breath, stepped inside, and
slammed the door. Stamping his feet, he shook himself like an old
hound and untwined the red muffler. "Go ahead - coerce me! But
sooner or later I'll break away, and then I'll sic the Magistratum on
your self-righteous, scheming ass! I'm a Milieu citizen and I've got
my rights. Not even the Lylmik can violate the Statutes of Freedom
and get away with it. "

The Ghost said: You're half drunk and wholly ridiculous. You've
worked yourself into a frenzy without even knowing what my
request is.

Rogi rushed up the stairs, past the doors of darkened offices on
the second floor, until he came to his own aerie. He fumbled in his
pocket for the famous key ring with its gleaming red fob.

"You've set your sights on Hagen and Cloud- or on their kids!" he
said wildly. He flung the door open and nearly tripped over Marcel,
his great shaggy Maine Coon cat.

The Ghost said: My request does concern them, but only indirectly.

Outside, the snow hissed against the double-glazed windows. The
old wooden building responded to the storm's pressure with
dozens of se­cret little noises. Rogi slouched into his sitting room.
He dropped his coat and scarf over a battered trestle bench, sat
down in the cretonne-covered armchair in front of the standing
stove, and began to take off his boots. Marcel circled the bench
purposefully, bushy tail waving. He broadcast remarks at his
master in the feline telepathic mode.

"In the right coat pocket, probably frozen stiff, " Rogi told the cat.
Marcel rose on his great hind legs, rummaged with a forepaw that
would have done credit to a Canada lynx, and hooked a doggie-
bag of French fries left over from Rogi's supper. Uttering a faint
miaow, incongruous for such a large animal, he transferred the
booty to his jaws and streaked out of the room.

The Ghost said: Can it be the same Marcel, food-thief
extraordinaire?

"The ninth of his line, " Rogi replied. What do you want?

Once again the strangely evocative laughter invaded Rogi's mind,
along with reassurance:

You have nothing to be afraid of this time. Believe me. What we
want you to do is something you yourself have contemplated doing
from time to time over the past twenty years. But since you're such
a hopeless old flemmard, you've put it off. I've come to make sure
you do your duty. You will write your memoirs.

The bookseller gaped. "My... my memoirs?"

Exactly. The full history of your remarkable family. The chronicle of
the Remillards as you have known them.

Rogi began to giggle helplessly.

The Ghost went on: You'll hold nothing back, gloss over no faults,
tell the entire truth, show your own hidden role in the drama clearly.
Now is the appropriate time for you to do this. You may no longer
procrastinate. The entire Milieu will be indebted to you for your
inti­mate view of the rise of galactic humanity - to say nothing of
Hagen and Cloud and their children. There are important reasons
why you must undertake the task immediately.

Rogi was shaking his head slowly, staring at dancing
pseudoflames behind the glass door of the stove. Marcel strolled
back into the room, licking his chops, and rubbed against his
master's stockinged ankles.

"My memoirs. You mean, that's all?"

It will be quite enough. They should be detailed.

Again the old man shook his head. He was silent for several
minutes, stroking the cat. He did not bother to attempt a thought-
screen. If the

Ghost was real, it could penetrate his barrier with ease; if it was not
real, what difference did it make? "You're no fool, Ghost. You know
why I never got around to doing the job before. "

The Ghost's mental tone was compassionate: I know.

"Then let Lucille do it. Or Philip, or Marie. Or write the damned thing
yourself. You were there spying on us from the beginning. "

You are the only suitable author. And this is the suitable time for the
story to be told.

Rogi let out a groan and dropped his head into his hands. "God- to
rake up all that ancient history! You'd think the painful parts would
have faded by now, wouldn't you? But those are the most vivid. It's
the better times that I seem to have the most trouble recalling. And
the overall picture - I still can't make complete sense of it. I never
was much good at psychosynthesis. Maybe that's why I get so little
conso­lation from the Unity. Just a natural operant, an old-style
bootstrap head, not one of your preceptor-trained adepts with
perfect memorecall. "

Who knows you better than I? That's why I'm here myself to make
this request. To give help when it's needed -

"No!" Rogi cried out. The big gray cay leapt back and crouched
with flattened ears. Rogi stared pointedly at the spot where the
Ghost seemed to be. "You mean that? You intend to stay around
here prompting me and filling in the gaps?"

I'll try to be unobtrusive. With my help, you'll find your own view of
the family history clarifying. At the end, you should understand.

"I'll do it, " Rogi said abruptly, "if you show yourself to me. Face to
face. "

Your request is impossible.

"Of course it is... because you don't exist! You're nothing but a
fuckin' figment, a high-order hallucination. Denis thought so, and he
was right about the other loonies in the family, about Don and
Victor and Maddy. You tell me to write my memoirs because some
part of my mind wants to justify the things I did. Ease my
conscience. "

Would that be so terrible?

Rogi gave a bitter laugh. The cat Marcel crept back on enormous
furry feet and bumped his forehead affectionately against his
master's leg. One of Rogi's hands automatically dropped to
scratch the animal's neck beneath its ruff. "If you're a delusion,
Ghost, then it means that the triumph of Unified Humanity was
nothing but the result of an old fool's schizophrenia. A cosmic joke.
"

I am what I say I am - a Lylmik.

"Then show yourself! You owe it to me, damn you. "

Rogi... nobody sees the Lylmik as they really are, unless that
person is also a Lylmik. We are fully perceptible only to minds
functioning on the third level of consciousness - the next great step
in mental evolu­tion, which you younger races of the Milieu have yet
to attain. I tell you this - which is known to no other human - to prove
my commitment to you. My love. I could show you any one of a
number of simulacrum bodies, but the demonstration would be
meaningless. You must believe me when I say that if you saw me
truly, with either the mind's eye or that of the body, your sanity
would be forfeit.

"Horse-puckey. You don't show yourself, I don't write the memoirs.
" A tight little smile of satisfaction thinned Rogi's lips. He patted his
lap and Marcel leapt up, purring. The old man watched the dancing
artifi­cial flames. He whispered, "I've had my suspicions about you
for years, Ghost. You just knew too much. No probability analysis,
no proleptic metafunction can account for what you knew. "

The Seth Thomas tambour clock that had belonged to Rogi's
mother struck twelve with familiar soft chimes. Outside, the storm
winds as­saulted the north wall of the building with mounting vigor,
making the aged timbers groan and the clapboards snap. Marcel
snuggled against Rogi's stomach, closed his wildcat eyes, and
slept.

"I'm bound and determined to know the truth about you, Ghost.
Read my mind! I'm wide open. You can see I mean what I say. I'll
work with you and write the memoirs only if you come out in the
open at last - whatever the consequences. "

Rogi, you're incorrigible.

"Take it or leave it. " The old man relaxed in the armchair, fingering
a silken cat's ear and toasting his feet at the stove.

Let me propose a sublethal compromise. I'll let you see me the
way I was.

"You got a deal!"

Rogi realized that the thing was invading his mind, flooding him with
the artificial calm of redactive impulses, taking advantage of the
li­quor's depressant effect, triggering endorphins and God knew
what-all to bolster him in anticipation.

And then Rogi saw. He said, "Ha. " Then he laughed a little and
added, "Goddam. "

Are you satisfied?

Rogi held out a trembling hand. "Are you going to tell me the way
you worked it?"

Not until you complete your own story.

"But -"

We have a deal. And now, good night. We'll begin the family
history tomorrow, after lunch.

PART I
THE SURVEILLANCE

1

FROM THE MEMOIRS OF ROGATIEN REMILLARD



I WENT DOWN to walk along the icebound Connecticut River very
early today before beginning this chronicle. My wits were more than
usually muddled from overindulgence, and I had received an
emo­tional shock as well - call it a waking dream! - that now
seemed quite impossible out here in the fresh air and the
revitalizing aetheric reso­nances of the rising sun. As I went west
along Maple Street the pave­ments were still patchy wet and
steaming; the melting network had been turned back on precisely
at 0200 hours. In the business district and throughout most of the
college precincts the -25° chill would be gentled by area heaters,
but in this residential part of Hanover it was still fast winter. The
night's brief storm had given us an additional ten or fifteen cents of
snow, piling small drifts in the lee of fences and shrubs. Out here
only a few wealthy eccentrics had force-field bubbles over their
houses to screen out the elements. It was early enough so that the
gravo-magnetic ground-cars and flying eggs were still locked away
in their garages.

Down in the sheltered strip of woodland alongside frozen Mink
Brook the scene was even more reminiscent of the New England I
knew when I was a kid in the 1940s. The snow under the tall
hemlocks and birches was almost knee-deep and level as a
marble floor. I'd brought decamole showshoes in my coat pocket
and it took only a moment to inflate them, slip them on, and go
slogging down to the shore path that paral­leled the silent
Connecticut.

The great deep river was locked under a thick ice mantle,
reminding me that winters are colder now than in my youth - if not
always so picturesque. Thanks to the storm, the snow-cover of the
Connecticut was again without blemish, swept clean of the tracks
of skis and power toboggans and the footprints of foolish rabbits
seeking a better climate on the other bank, over in Vermont. I
'shoed north for nearly two and a half kloms, passing under the
Wheelock Street Bridge and skirting the Ledyard Canoe Club.
Finally I reached that awesome patch of forest preserve where
white pines tower eighty meters high and little siskins and
nuthatches whisper mysteriously in the brush thickets. The scent of
conifer resin was intense. As so often happens, the odor triggered
memory more strongly than any effort of will ever could.

This snow-girt woods I had not visited for three decades was the
place where the boys used to come.

The Gilman Biomedical Center of the college was only a few
blocks away - and the Metapsychic Institute, and the hospital.
Young Marc, an undergraduate already showing the promise that
would someday make him a Paramount Grand Master, used to
coerce the nursing staff in the intensive care unit and take Jack
away. The beloved baby brother, slowly dying of intractable
cancers that would devour his body and leave only his great brain
untouched, rode in an ingeniously modified backpack. Marc and
Jack would spend a morning or an afternoon talk­ing, laughing,
arguing. Stolen, pitiable hours of pine and pain and the contention
of those brother-minds! It was then the rivalry was born that would
bring thousands of inhabited planets to the brink of ruin, and
threaten not only the evolution of the Human Mind but also that of
the five exotic races who had welcomed us into their peaceful
Galactic Milieu...

Close to the shore where the snow lies drifted, it is not easy to tell
where granite ends and the frozen river begins. The juncture is
veiled. Molecules of water have slowed to the solidity of stone,
apparently immutable. My deep-sight easily sees through the snow
to tell the dif­ference, just as it pierces the icy lid of the Connecticut
to perceive black water flowing beneath. But I am not strong-
minded enough to see the subtler flux of the ice molecules
themselves, or the vibration of the crystals within the granite
boulders, or the subatomic dance of the bits of matter and energy
among the nodes of the dynamic-field lattices that weave the reality
of ice and gray rock in the cosmic All. My vision of the winter river
in its bed remains limited, in spite of the abstract knowledge
science lends me.

And how much more difficult it is to apprehend the greater pattern!
We know we are free, even though constraints hedge us. We
cannot see the unus mundus, the entirety that we know must exist,
but are forced to live each event rushing through space and time.
Our efforts seem to us as random as the Brownian movement of
molecules in a single drop of ultramagnified water.

Nevertheless the water droplets come together to make a stream,
and then a river that flows to the sea where the individual drops - to
say nothing of the molecules! -are apparently lost in a vast and
random pooling. The sea not only has a life and identity of its own,
but it engenders other, higher lives, a role denied to water
molecules alone. Later, after the sun draws them up, the
molecules condense into new water drops or snowflakes and fall,
and sustain life on the land before draining away to the sea again in
the cycle that has prevailed since the biogenesis. No molecule
evades its destiny, its role in the great pattern. Neither do we,
although we may deny that a pattern exists, since it is so difficult to
envision. But sometimes, usually at a far remove of time, we may
be granted the insight that our actions, our lives, were not pointless
after all. Those (and I am one) who have never experienced
cosmic consciousness may find consolation in simple instinct. I
know in my heart - as Einstein did, and he was justified in the long
view if not in the short - that the universe is not a game of chance
but a design, and beautiful.

The great white cold takes hold of the amorphous water droplet
and turns it into an ice crystal of elegant form. Can I organize my
memories into an orderly ensemble and give coherence to the
tangled story of the Family Remillard? I have been assured that I
can... but you, the entity reading this, may decide otherwise.

C'est bien ça.

The chronicle will begin in New Hampshire and conclude in
interstel­lar space. Its time-span, willy-nilly, will be that of my own
life; but I will tell the story from a number of different viewpoints -
not all of them human. My personal role in the drama has not
always been prom­inent, and certain Milieu historians have
forgotten that I existed, except for grudging footnotes! But I was
Don's fraternal twin and close to his wife and children, I was with
Denis and Lucille at the Intervention, and I know what drove Victor
and the Sons of Earth to their infamy. I was privy to the secrets of
the "Remillard Dynasty" and to those of the Founding Human
Magnates. I watched Paul "sell" New Hampshire as the human
capital of the Milieu. I stood by Teresa throughout her tragedy. I
know what kind of demons possessed Madeleine. I can tell the
story of Diamond Mask, since her life was inextricably entwined
with that of my family. Marc's tormented presence and his
Metapsychic Rebellion will pervade these memoirs and climax
them.

Above all, however, this will have to be the story of Jon Remillard,
whom I called Ti-Jean and the Milieu named Jack the Bodiless.
Even though he was born after the Intervention, his life is
prefigured in the struggles and triumphs of the people I will write
about in this book: the first human beings to have full use of their
higher mind-powers. But Jack would be their culmination. He would
show us the awful and wonderful course our human evolution must
take. He was the first Mental Man. Terrified, we saw in him what we
will eventually become.

Saint Jean le Désincarné, priez pour nous! But please - let us not
have to follow your example for at least another million years.



2

OBSERVATION VESSEL CHASSTI [Simb 16-10110]

9 AUGUST  1945



"look there, " cried Adalasstam Sich. "They've done it again!"

The urban survey monitoring system had zeroed in on the terrible
event at the moment of the bomb's detonation, and at once
Adalasstam stabbed the key that would transfer the enhanced
image from his con­sole to the large wall-screen. The other two
Simbiari on duty saw the fungoid growth of the death-cloud. A blast
wave spread away from it, obliterating the beautiful harbor.

"O calamity! O day of despond! O hope-wreck!" intoned Elder
Laricham Ashassi. Thin green mucus poured from the scrobiculi of
his fissured countenance and outstretched palms. Being the senior
member of his race present, it was his duty to express the sorrow
and vexation of all Simbiari at the catastrophic sight - and its
implications. The tele­pathic overtones of his keening brought the
observers of the other Mi­lieu races on watch hurrying into the
oversight chamber.

The two little humanoid Poltroyan mates, Rimi and Pilti, who had
been at work in EM Modulation Records next door, were followed
closely by the monstrous bulk of Doka'eloo, the Krondak Scrutator
of Psychosocial Trends and a magnate of the Concilium. The
horror un­folding on the wall-screen was so riveting that none of the
entities thought to prevent the entry of the ship Gi, NupNup Nunl,
until it was too late. The creature's great yellow eyes rolled back
into its skull as the mass death-shout from the holocaust filled the
chamber. NupNup Nunl uttered a wail in a piercing progression of
minor sixths, lost conscious­ness from shock, and proceeded to
collapse. Doka'eloo caught it with his psychokinesis and lowered it
gently to the deck, where it lay in a disheveled heap of silky
filoplumage, gangling limbs, and pallid genita­lia. Aware that their
supersensitive colleague's mind had withdrawn safely into the
consolation of the Unity, the others paid no more atten­tion to it.

Elder Laricham, still dripping in ritual mourning, let dismay sharpen
into indignation. "One atomic bombing was dire enough. But to
devas­tate two cities -! And with peace feelers already sent forth
by the wretched Islanders!"

"Barbaric beyond belief, " agreed Chirish Ala Malissotam; but she
held her green, as did her spouse Adalasstam. "But it was just
about what one might expect of humanity, given the escalation of
atrocities among all participants in this war. "

"By using this appalling weapon, " Adalasstam said, "the
Westerners prove they are no less savage and immoral than the
Island warmon­gers. "

"I do not agree, " Doka'eloo said ponderously. He paused, and the
others knew they were in for a lecture; but the Krondaku was their
superior officer as well as a magnate of the Concilium, so they
steeled themselves. "While it is true that the Islanders at this time
have ex­pressed a certain inclination to sue for peace, prompted
by the first display of atomic weaponry, their gesture was by no
means whole­hearted. The Island military leaders remain
determined to continue hostilities - as our Krondak analysis of their
high-level signals has con­firmed. The Westerners are partially
aware of this intelligence. Even without it, however, given the
Islanders' record of perfidy in past deal­ings, plus the warrior-ethic
forbidding honorable surrender, one might hold the West justified
in thinking that the Islander High Command required a second
stimulus" - he nodded at the fire-storm on the screen - "to bring the
truth of their situation home to them beyond the shadow of a doubt.
"

"Bring home indeed!" exclaimed the scandalized Chirish Ala. "Oh, I
agree that this second atomic bombing will end the stupid war,
Doka'eloo Eebak. But by taking this course the planet Earth has
signed its metapsychic death-warrant. No world utilizing atomic
weaponry prior to its cooperative advent into space has ever
escaped destruction of its primary civilized population component.
The coadunation of the global Mind has been set back at least six
thousand years. They'll revert to hunter-gatherer!"

"We might as well pack up the mission and go home right now, "
old Laricham said. The other two Simbiari murmured agreement.

"Precedent tends to support your pessimism, " said the
imperturbable Krondaku. "Nevertheless, we will await the decision
of the Concilium. Debate has been lively since the atomic bombing
of the first Island city. This second incident, which I farspoke to
Orb promptly, should elicit a vote of confidence concerning our
Earth involvement. "

"The Concilium's vote is a foregone conclusion, " Adalasstam said.
"The Earthlings are bound to blast themselves to a postatomic
Paleolithic within the next fifty orbits or so, given their abysmal state
of sociopolitical immaturity. "

"Perhaps not!" the male Poltroyan, Rimi, piped up. He and his
mate had been watching the mushroom cloud hand in hand, with
tears in their ruby eyes and their minds locked in mutual
commiseration. But now they showed signs of cheering up.

Pilti, the female Poltroyan, said, "Earthlings have been atypical in
their accelerated scientific progress as well as in their aggressive
ten­dencies. Certain segments responded to this war with a great
upsurge of solidarity, setting aside petty differences for the first
time in human history as they worked together to oppose a clearly
immoral antago­nist. "

"By Galactic standards, they're ethical primitives, " Rimi said. "But
they have amazing metapsychic potential. Isn't that right, Doka'eloo
Eebak?"

"You speak truly, " the monstrous being assented.

Now the fallen Gi began to stir. It opened its enormous eyes while
keeping its mind well screened from distressing resonances. "I do
hope we won't have to write Earth off, " NupNup Nunl fluted. "It has
such gorgeous cloud formations and oceanic shadings - and its
inventory of presapient life is rich beyond measure and quite
resplendent. The birds and butterflies! The oceanic microflora and
the glorious sea-slugs!"

"Pity the sea-slugs aren't candidates for induction into the Milieu, "
snorted Adalasstam.

NupNup Nunl climbed to its feet, assisted by kindly Rimi. The Gi
settled its plumage and untangled its testicular peduncles. "Human
beings are quarrelsome and vindictive, " it conceded. "They
persecute intellectual innovators and mess up the ecology. But
who can deny that their music is the most marvelous in the known
universe? Gregorian chant! Bach counterpoint! Strauss waltzes!
Indian ragas! Cole Porter!"

"You Gi!" Elder Laricham exclaimed. "So hopelessly sentimental.
What matter if the human race is an aesthetic wonder - when it so
obstinately resists the evolution of its Mind?" Laricham turned to
the two Poltroyans. "And your optimistic assessment, Rimi and
Pilti, is supported by nothing more than a naive view of the
synchronicity lat­tices. The Arch-College of Simb has recognized
Earth's unsuitability from the very start of this futile surveillance. "

"How fortunate for humanity, " Rimi remarked suavely, "that our
federation of worlds outranks yours in the Concilium. "

Chirish Ala could not resist saying, "Poltroyans empathize with
Earthlings merely because both races are so revoltingly fecund. "

"So speed the great day of Earth's Coadunate Number, " Pilti said,
lowering her eyes in piety. And then she grinned at the female
Simb. "By the way, my dear, did I tell you I was pregnant again?"

"Is this a time for vulgar levity?" cried Adalasstam, gesturing at the
wall-screen.

"No, " Pilti said. "But not a time for despair, either. "

Rimi said, "The Amalgam of Poltroy has confidence that the human
race will pull back from the brink of Mind destruction. In friendship,
let me point out to our esteemed Simbiari Uniates that we of
Poltroy be­long to a very old race. We have studied many more
emerging worlds than you have. There has been at least one
exception to the correlation between atomic weaponry and racial
suicide. Us. "

The three green-skinned entities assumed a long-suffering mental
linkage. Elder Laricham acknowledged the point with cool formality.

"Oh, that's so true!" burbled the Gi. It wore a sunny smile, and its
pseudomammary areolae, which had been bleached and shrunken
by its horrific experience, began to re-engorge and assume their
normal elec­tric pink color. "I'd forgotten what bloodthirsty brutes
you Poltroyans were in your primitive years. No wonder you feel a
psychic affinity to the Earthlings. "

"And no wonder we don't, " Elder Laricham growled. He crinkled
his features to stem the flow of green. "Earth is a lost cause, I tell
you. " He pointed melodramatically to the screen. "The principals in
the current conflict, Islanders and Westerners, are certain to
remain deadly antag­onists for the next three generations at the
very least. There will be fresh wars of vengeance and retaliation
between these two nations so highly charged with ethnic
dynamism, then global annihilation. The Galactic Milieu's overly
subtle educative effort has been in vain. We will surely have to
abandon Earth - at least until its next cycle of high civilization. "

"It's the Concilium's decision, not yours, " Rimi said flatly. "Any
word yet, Doka'eloo Eebak?"

The fearsome-looking officer sat motionless except for a single
tentacle that flicked emerald mucus blobs toward the floor
scuppers in nonjudgmental but relentless tidiness. Doka'eloo
opened his stupendous farsensing faculty to the others so that
they might envision the Concilium Orb, a hollow planetoid more
than four thousand light-years away in the Orion Arm of the Milky
Way. In the central sanctum of the Orb, the governing body of the
Coadunate Galactic Milieu had finally completed its deliberation
upon the fate of Earth's Mind. The data had been analyzed and a
poll of magnates was taken. The result flashed to the receptor
ultrasense of Doka'eloo with the speed of thought.

He said, "The Poltroyan Amalgam voted in favor of maintaining the
Milieu's involvement with Earth. The Krondak, Gi, and Simbiari
mag­nates voted to discontinue our guidance - giving a majority in
favor of disengagement. ''

"There!" exclaimed Adalasstam. "What did I tell you?"

"We can't let their music die, " NupNup Nunl grieved. "Not Sibelius!
Not Schoenberg and Duke Ellington!"

But the Krondaku was not finished. "This negative verdict of the
Concilium magnates was summarily vetoed by the Lylmik
Supervisory Body. "

"Sacred Truth and Beauty!" whispered Elder Laricham. "The Lylmik
intervened in such a trivial affair? Astounding!"

"But wonderful, " cried the two little Poltroyans, embracing.

The Gi shook its fluffy head. Its ovarian externalia trembled on the
verge of cerise. "A Lylmik veto! I can't think when such a thing ever
happened before. "

"Long before your race attained coadunation, " Doka'eloo told the
hermaphrodite. "Before the Poltroyans and Simbiari learned to use
stone tools and fire. That is to say, three hundred forty-two
thousand, nine hundred and sixty-two standard years ago. "

In the awestruck mental silence that followed, the Krondaku
signaled Adalasstam to change the image on the wall-screen. The
picture of the devastated Island city melted into a longer view of
Earth as seen from the Milieu observation vessel. The sun shone
full on it and it was blue and white, suspended like a brilliant agate
against the foaming silver breaker of the galactic plane.

"There is more, " Doka'eloo said. "The Lylmik order us observers
to commence a thirty-year phase of intensified overt manifestation.
The people of Earth are to be familiarized with the concept of
interstellar society - as a preliminary to possible Intervention. "

The three affronted Simbiari fell to choking on green phlegm. The
Poltroyan couple clapped their hands and trilled.

NupNup Nunl controlled itself heroically, quieting its reproductive
organs to the magenta state, and uttered a luxurious sigh. "I'm so
glad. It's really a fascinating world, and there is a statistically
significant chance that the people will shape up. Very long odds,
but by no means hopeless... "

It extended a six-jointed digit and activated the ambient audio
sys­tem, which was patched to Vienna radio. The climaxing strains
of "Verklarte Nacht" filled the oversight chamber of the exotic
space ves­sel.

Invisible, it continued the Milieu's surveillance of over sixty
thou­sand years.



3

FROM THE MEMOIRS OF ROGATIEN REMILLARD



I was born in 1945, in the northern New Hampshire mill town of
Berlin. My twin brother Donatien and I took our first breaths on 12
August, two days after Japan opened the peace negotiations that
would end World War II. Our mother, Adele, was stricken with
labor pains at early Sunday Mass, but with the stubbornness so
characteristic of our clan gave no indication of it until the last notes
of the recessional hymn had been sung. Then her brother-in-law
Louis and his wife drove her to St. Luke's, where she was
delivered of us and died. Our father Joseph had perished six
months earlier at the Battle of Iwo Jima.

On the day of our birth, clouds of radioactivity from the bombing of
Hiroshima and Nagasaki were still being carried around the world
by the jet-stream winds. But they had nothing to do with our
mutations. The genes for metapsychic operancy lay dormant in
many other fami­lies besides ours. The immortality gene, however,
was apparently unique. Neither trait would be recognized for what it
was until many years had gone by.

Don and I, husky orphans, had a legacy from our mother of a GI
insurance policy and an antique mantelpiece clock. We were taken
in by Onc' Louie and Tante Lorraine. It meant two more mouths to
feed in a family that already included six children; but Louis
Remillard was a foreman at the big Berlin paper mill that also
employed other males of our clan (and would employ Don and me,
in good time). He was a stocky, powerful man with one leg slightly
shorter than the other, and he earned good wages and owned a
two-storey frame apartment on Second Street that was old but well
maintained. We lived on the ground floor, and Oncle Alain and
Tante Grace and their even larger brood lived upstairs. Life was
cheerful, if extremely noisy. My brother and I seemed to be quite
ordinary children. Like most Franco-Americans of the re­gion, we
grew up speaking French to our kinsfolk, but used English quite
readily in our dealings with non-Francophone neighbors and
playmates, who were in the majority.

The Family Ghost, when I first met it, also spoke French.

It happened on an unforgettable day when I was five. A gang of us
cousins piled into the back of an old pickup truck owned by Gerard,
the eldest. We had a collection of pots and pans and pails, and
were off on a raspberry-picking expedition into the National Forest
west of town, a cut-over wilderness beyond the York Pond fish
hatchery. The berries were sparse that year and we scattered
widely, working a maze of over­grown logging tracks. Don and I
had been warned to stick close to our cousin Cecile, who was
fourteen and very responsible; but she was a slow and methodical
picker while we two skipped from patch to patch, skimming the
easily reached fruit and not bothering with berries that were harder
to get.

Then we got lost. We were separated not only from Cecile and the
other cousins but from each other. It was one of the first times I
can remember being really apart from my twin brother, and it was
very frightening. I wandered around whimpering for more than an
hour. I was afraid that if I gave in to panic and bawled, I would be
punished by having no whipped cream on my raspberry slump at
supper.

It began to get dark. I called feebly but there was no response.
Then I came into an area that was a dense tangle of brambles, all
laden with luscious berries. And there, not ten meters away, stood
a big black bear, chomping and slurping.

"Donnie! Donnie!" I screamed, dropping my little berry pail. I took
to my heels. The bear did not follow.

I stumbled over decaying slash and undergrowth, dodged around
rot­ted stumps, and came to a place where sapling paper birches
had sprung up. Their crowded trunks were like white broom-
handles. I could scarcely push my way through. Perhaps I would
be safe there from the bear.

"Donnie, where are you?" I yelled, still terror-stricken.

I seemed to hear him say: Over here.

"Where?" I was weeping and nearly blind. "I'm lost! Where are
you?" He said: Right here. I can hear you even though it's quiet.
Isn't that funny?

I howled. I shrieked. It was not funny. "A bear is after me!"

He said: I think I see you. But I don't see the bear. I can only see
you when I close my eyes, though. That's funny, too. Can you see
me, Rogi?

"No, no, " I wept. Not only did I not see him, but I began to realize
that I didn't really hear him, either - except in some strange way that
had nothing to do with my ears. Again and again I screamed my
broth­er's name. I wandered out of the birch grove into more rocky,
open land and started to run.

I heard Don say: Here's Cecile and Joe and Gerard. Let's find out
if they can see you, too.

The voice in my mind was drowned out by my own sobbing. It was
twilight - entre chien et loup, as we used to say. I was crying my
heart out, not looking where I was going, running between two
great rock outcroppings...

"Arrête!" commanded a loud voice. At the same time something
grabbed me by the back of my overall straps, yanking me off my
feet. I gave a shattering screech, flailed my arms, and twisted my
neck to look over my shoulder, expecting to see black fur and
tusks.

There was nothing there.

I hung in air for an instant, too stupefied to utter a sound. Then I
was lowered gently to earth and the same adult voice said, "Bon
courage, ti-frère. Maintenant c'est tr'bien. "

The invisible thing was telling me not to be afraid, that everything
was now all right. What a hope! I burst into hysterical whoops and
wet my underpants.

The voice soothed me in familiar Canuckois, sounding rather like
my younger uncle Alain. An unseen hand smoothed my touseled
black curls. I screwed my eyes shut. A ghost! It was a ghost that
had snatched me up! It would feed me to the bear!

"No, no, " the voice insisted. "I won't harm you, little one. I want to
help you. Look here, beyond the two large rocks. A very steep
ravine. You would have fallen and hurt yourself badly. You might
have been killed. And yet I know nothing of the sort happened... so
I saved you myself. Ainsi le début du paradoxe!"

"A ghost!" I wailed. "You're a ghost!"

I can hear the thing's mind-voice laughing even now as it said:

Exactement! Mais un fantôme familier...

Thus I was introduced to the being who would help me, advise me
- and bedevil me - at many critical points in my life. The Family
Ghost took my hand and drew me along a shadowy, twisted game
trail, mak­ing me run so fast I was left nearly breathless and forgot
to cry. It reassured me but warned me not to mention our meeting
to anyone, since I would not be believed. All too probably brother
and cousins would laugh at me, call me a baby. It would be much
better to tell them how bravely I had faced the bear.

As the first stars began to show, I emerged from the forest onto
the road near the fish hatchery where the pickup truck stood. My
cousins and the fish men were there and welcomed me with
relieved shouts. I told them I had flung my berry bucket in a bear's
face, cleverly gaining time to make my escape. None of them
noticed that I stank slightly of pipi. My brother Don did look at me
strangely, and I was aware of a question hovering just behind his
lips. But then he scowled and was silent.

I got double whipped cream on my raspberry slump that night.

I told nobody about the Family Ghost.



To understand the mind of our family, you should know something
of our heritage.

The Remillards are members of that New England ethnic group,
de­scended from French-Canadians, who are variously called
Franco-American, Canado-Américaine, or more simply Canuck.
The family name is a fairly common one, now pronounced REM-ih-
lard in a straightforward Yankee way. As far as I have been able to
discover, no other branches of the family harbored so precocious
a set of supravital genetic traits for high metafunction and self-
rejuvenation. (The "bodi­less" mutagene came from poor Teresa,
as I shall relate in due time. )

Our ancestors settled in Quebec in the middle 1600s and worked
the land as French peasants have done from time immemorial.
Like their neighbors they were an industrious, rather bloody-
minded folk who looked with scorn upon such novelties as crop
rotation and fertilization of the soil. At the same time they were
fervent Roman Catholics who regarded it as their sacred duty to
have large families. The predictable result, in the harsh climate of
the St. Lawrence River Valley, was eco­nomic disaster. By the mid-
nineteenth century the worn-out, much-subdivided land provided no
more than a bare subsistence, no matter how hard the farmers
worked. In addition to the struggle required to earn a living, there
was also political oppression from the English-speaking
government of Canada. An insurrection among the habitants in
1837 was mercilessly crushed by the Canadian army.

But one must not think of these hardy, troublesome people as
mis­erable or downtrodden. Au contraire! They remained
indomitable, lusty, and intensely individualistic, cherishing their
large families and their stern parish priests. Their devotion to home
and religion was more than strong - it was fierce, leading to that
solidarity (a species of the coercive metafaculty) that Milieu
anthropologists call ethnic dyna­mism. The Quebec habitants not
only survived persecution and a grim environment, they even
managed to increase and multiply in it.

At the same time that the French-Canadian population was
outstrip­ping the resources of the North, the Industrial Revolution
came to the United States. New England rivers were harnessed to
provide power for the booming textile mills and there was a great
demand for laborers who would work long hours for low salaries.
Some of these jobs were taken by the immigrant Irish, themselves
refugees from political oppression and economic woe, who were
also formidably dynamic. But French-Canadians also responded to
the lure of the factories and flocked south­ward by the tens of
thousands to seek their fortunes. The migratory trend continued
well into the 1900s.

"Little Canadas" sprang up in Massachusetts, New Hampshire,
Ver­mont, Maine, and Rhode Island. The newcomers clung to their
French language and to much of their traditional culture, and most
especially to their Catholic faith. They were thrifty and diligent and
their numer­ous offspring followed the parents into the family
occupation. They became American citizens and worked not only
as mill-hands but also as carpenters, mechanics, lumberjacks, and
keepers of small shops. Most often, only those children who
became priests or nuns received higher education. Gradually the
French-Canadians began to blend into the American mainstream
as other ethnic groups had done. They might have been quite
rapidly assimilated - if it hadn't been for the Irish.

Ah, how we Franco-Americans hated the Irish! (You citizens of the
Milieu who read this, knowing what you do of the principal human
bloodlines for metapsychic operancy, will appreciate the irony. )
Both the Irish and the French minorities in New England were
Celts, of a passionate and contentious temperament. Both were, in
the latter nine­teenth and early twentieth centuries, rivals for the
same types of low-status employment. Both had endured
persecution in their homelands and social and religious
discrimination in America because of their Catholic faith. But the
Irish were much more numerous, and they had the tremendous
social advantage of speaking the English language - with a rare
flair, at that! The Irish parlayed their genius for politicking and self-
aggrandizement into domination of the New England Catholic
hierarchy, and even took over entire city governments. We Francos
were more aloof, politically naive, lacking in what Yankees called
"team spirit" because with us it was the family that came first. With
our stubbornly held traditions and French language, we became an
embarrassment and a political liability to our more ambitious
coreligionists. It was an era fraught with anti-Catholic sentiment, in
which all Cath­olics were suspected of being "un-American. " So
the shrewd Irish-American bishops decreed that stiff-necked
Canucks must be forcibly submerged in the great melting-pot.
They tried to abolish those parishes and parochial schools where
the French language was given first place. They said that we must
become like other Americans, let ourselves be assimilated as the
other ethnic groups were doing.

Assimilate - intermarry - and the genes for metapsychic operancy
would be diluted all unawares! But the great pattern was not to be
denied.

We Francos fought the proposed changes with the same
obstinacy that had made us the despair of the British Canadians.
The actions of those arrogant Irish bishops during the nineteenth
century made us more determined than ever to cling to our
heritage. And we did. Even­tually, the bishops saved face with what
were termed "compromises. " But we kept our French churches,
our schools, and our language. For the most part we continued to
marry our own, increasing our homozygosity - concentrating those
remarkable genes that would put us in the vanguard of humanity's
next great evolutionary leap.

It was not until World War II smashed the old American social
struc­tures and prejudices that the Canucks of New England were
truly as­similated. Our ethnocentricity melted away almost
painlessly in those postwar years of my early childhood. But it had
prevailed long enough to produce Don and me... and the others
whose existence we never suspected until long after we reached
adulthood.



4

SOUTH BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS, EARTH

2 AUGUST  1953



he was on his way home from the ten-o'clock at Our Lady, toting
Sunday papers and some groceries Pa had remembered they
were out of, when he got the familiar awful feeling and said to
himself: No! I'm outside, away from her. It can't be!

But it was. Sour spit came up in his throat and his knees went
wobbly and the shared pain started glowing blue inside his head,
the pain of somebody dying who would take him along if he wasn't
careful.

But he was outside, in the sunshine. More than six blocks from
home, far beyond her reach. It couldn't be her hurting and
demanding. Not out here. It never happened out here...

It happened in a dark room, cluttered and musty, where a candle in
a blue-glass cup burned in front of one Sorrowful Mother (the one
with seven swords through her naked pink heart), and the other one
lay on her bed with the beads tangled in her bony fingers and her
mind en­treating him: Pray a miracle Kier it's a test you see he
always lets those he loves best suffer pray hard you must you must
if you don't there'll be no miracle he won't listen...

The full force of the transmitted agony took hold of him as he
turned the corner onto D Street. Traffic was fairly heavy even at this
early hour, when most of Southie drowsed or marked time until the
last Mass let out and the sandlot ballgames got underway and the
taverns opened; but there wasn't another person in sight on the
dirty sidewalks -no­body who could be hurting demanding calling -

Not a person. An animal dying.

He saw it halfway down the block, in the gutter in front of McNulty's
Dry Cleaning &. Alterations. A dog, hit by a car most likely. And
Jeez he'd have to go right by it unless he went way around by the
playground, and the groceries were so heavy, and it was so rotten
hot, and the pleading was irresistible, and he did want to see.

It was a mutt without a collar, a white terrier mix with its coat all
smeared red and brown with blood and sticky stuff from its insides.

Intelligent trustful eyes looked up at him, letting pain flood out. A
few yards away in the street was a dark splotch where it had been
hit. It had dragged itself to the curb, hindquarters hopelessly
crushed.

Kieran O'Connor, nine years old and dressed in his shabby Sunday
best, gulped hard to keep from vomiting. The dog was dying. It had
to be, the way it was squashed. (Her dying was inside her, not
nearly so messy. )

"Hey, fella. Hey, boy. Poor old boy. "

The dog's mind projected hurtful love, begging help. He asked it:
"You want a miracle?" But it couldn't understand that, of course.

The dog said to him: Flies.

They were all over the wounded parts, feeding on the clotted blood
and shit, and Kieran grunted in revulsion. He could do something
about them, at least.

"No miracle, " he muttered. He set the bag of groceries and the
paper down carefully on the sidewalk and hunkered over the dog,
concentrat­ing. As he focused, the iridescent swarm panicked and
took wing, and he let them have it in midair. The small green-
backed bodies fell onto the hot pavement, lifeless, and Kieran
O'Connor smiled through his tears and repeated: "No miracle. "

The dog was grateful. Its mind said: Thirst.

"Say- I got milk!" Kieran pulled the quart bottle out of the grocery
bag, tore off the crimped foil cap, and lifted the paper lid, which he
licked clean and stowed in his shirt pocket for later. Crouching over
the ruined body in the sunshine, holding his breath and letting the
pain lose itself inside his own head, he dripped cool milk into the
dog's mouth.

"Get well. Stop hurting. Don't die. "

The animal made a groaning sound. It was unable to swallow and a
white puddle spread under its open jaws. From the brain came a
medley of apology and agony, and it clung to him. "Don't, " he
whispered, afraid. "Please don't. I'm trying -"

A shadow fell over the boy and the dog. Kieran looked up, wild-
eyed with terror. But it was only Mr. Dugan, a middle-aged bald
man in a sweat-rumpled brown suit.

"Oh, " said Dugan shortly. "So it's you. " He scowled.

"I didn't do it, Mr. Dugan. A car hit it!"

"Well, can't I see that with my own two eyes? And what are you
doing messing with it? It's a goner, as any fool can see, and if you
don't watch out, it'll bite. "

"It won't -"

"Don't sass me, boy! And stop wasting good milk on it. I'll phone
the Humane Society when I get home and they'll come and put it
out of its misery. "

Kieran began to recap the bottle of milk. Tears ran down his
flushed face. "How?" he asked.

Dugan threw up his hands impatiently. "Give it something. Put it
down, for God's sake. Now get away from it, or I'll be telling your
Pa. "

No! Kieran said. You go away! Right now!

Dugan straightened up, turned, and walked away, leaving Kieran
kneeling in the filthy gutter, shielding the dog from the sun.

"Put you out of your misery, " Kieran whispered, amazed that it
could be so simple. (Why did Mom try to make it complicated?)
He'd never thought of it that way before. Bugs, yes; he didn't care a
hoot about them. The rats, either. But a dog or even a person...

"You wouldn't take me along, would you?" Kieran asked it warily.
The pain-filled eyes widened. "Stop loving me and I'll do it. Let go.
Lay off. " But the dog persisted in its hold, so finally he reached out
and rested his fingertips on its head, between its ears, and did it.
Oddly, all of the hairs on the dog's body stiffened for an instant,
then went flat. The animal coughed and lay still, and all pain
ceased.

Kieran wondered if he should say a prayer. But he felt really rotten,
so in the end he just covered the body with the want-ad section of
the newspaper. His Pa never bothered with that part.



5

FROM THE MEMOIRS OF ROGATIEN REMILLARD



I WAS NOT to experience another manifestation of the Family
Ghost for nearly sixteen years. That first encounter in the twilit
woods took on a dreamlike aspect. It might have been forgotten, I
suppose, had not the memory been rekindled every time I smelled
raspberries or the distinctive pungency of bear scats. But I did not
brood on it. Truth to tell, I had more important matters to occupy
me: my own developing metafunctions and those of my brother. I
have already mentioned that Don and I were fraternal twins, no
more closely related than any singleton brothers. Many years later,
Denis told me that if we had both hatched from a single egg, our
brains might have been consonant enough to have attained
harmonious men­tal intercourse, instead of the clouded and
antagonistic relationship that ultimately prevailed between us. As it
was, we were of very different temperaments. Don was always
more outgoing and aggressive, while I was introspective. In
adulthood we both were tormented by the psy­chological chasm
separating us from normal humanity. I learned to live with it, but
Don could not. In this we were like many other natural operants
who came after us, our successes and tragedies blending into the
ongoing evolutionary trend of the planetary Mind studied so
dis­passionately by the scientists of the Galactic Milieu.

In our early childhood, following that initial stress-provoked incident
of farspeech and farsight out in the woods, we experienced other
near-involuntary telepathic interchanges. Once Don scalded
himself with hot soup and I, in the next room, jumped up
screaming. I would have a furious argument with a cousin and Don
would come running up, knowing exactly what the fight was about.
We sometimes dreamed the same dreams and shared unspoken
jokes. Eventually, we attained crude telepathic communication as
well as a kind of shared farsight and mu­tual sensitivity. We
experimented, "calling" to each other over greater and greater
distances, and exercised our farsight with variations on games
such as hide-and-seek and hide-the-thimble. Our cousins were
blasé about our talents, ascribing them to the acknowledged
freakish­ness of twins. They learned early not to play card games
with us, and casually utilized our farsensing abilities to track down
lost items and anticipate impending adult interference in illicit
activities. We were a little weird, but we were useful. No big thing.

On one of our first days at school I was cornered by a bully and
commanded to hand over my milk money, or suffer a beating. I
broad­cast a mental cry for help. Don came racing into the
schoolyard alcove where I had been trapped, radiating coercive
fury and saying not a single word. The bully, nearly twice Don's
size, fled. My brother and I stood close together until the bell rang,
bonded in fraternal love. This would happen often while we were
young, when each of us was the other's best friend. It became
rarer as we approached adolescence and ended alto­gether after
we reached puberty.

By the time we were nine (the age, Denis later explained to me,
when the brain attains its adult size and the metafunctions tend to
"solidify, " resisting further expansion unless painful educational
techniques stim­ulate them artificially), Don and I had become fairly
adept in what is now called farspeech on the intimate mode. We
could communicate across distances of two or three kilometers,
sharing a wide range of nuance and emotional content. Our
farscanning ability was weaker, requiring intense concentration in
the transmission of any but the sim­plest images. By mutual
agreement, we never told anyone explicit de­tails of our telepathic
talent, and we became increasingly wary of dem­onstrating
metapsychic tricks to our cousins. Like all children, we wanted to
be thought "normal. " Nevertheless there was a good deal of fun to
be had using the powers, and we couldn't resist playing with them
surreptitiously in spite of vague notions that such mind-games
might be dangerous.

In the lower grades of grammar school we drove the good sisters
crazy as we traded farspoken wisecracks and then snickered
enigmatically out loud. We sometimes recited in eerie unison or
antiphonally. We traded answers to test questions until we were
placed in separate classrooms, and even then we still managed to
cooperate in uncanny disruptive pranks. We were tagged fairly
early as trouble­makers and were easily bored and inattentive. To
our contemporaries we were the Crazy Twins, ready to do the
outrageous to attract attention - just as in our baby years we had
vied to attract the notice of hard-working, hard-drinking Onc' Louie
and kind but distracted Tante Lorraine. (But our foster parents had
three additional children of their own after our arrival, for a total of
nine, and we were lost in the crowd of cousins. )

As we grew older we developed a small repertoire of other
metafacul­ties. I was the first to learn how to raise a mental wall to
keep my inmost thoughts private from Don, and I was always better
at weaving mind-screens than he. It provoked his anger when I
retreated into my private shell, and he would exercise his coercive
power in almost frantic attempts to break me down. His mental
assaults on me were at first without malice; it was rather as if he
were afraid to be left "alone. " When I finally learned to block him
out completely he sulked, then revealed that he was genuinely hurt.
I had to promise that I would let him back into my mind "if he really
needed me. " When I promised, he seemed to forget the whole
matter.

Don amused himself by attempting to coerce others, a game I
instinc­tively abhored and rarely attempted. He had some small
success, espe­cially with persons who were distracted. Poor Tante
Lorraine was an easy mark for gifts of kitchen goodies while she
was cooking, for ex­ample; but it was next to impossible to coerce
the redoubtable nuns who were our teachers. Both of us
experimented in trying to read the minds of others. Don had little
luck, except in the perception of gener­alized emotions. I was
more skilled in probing and occasionally picked up skeins of
subliminal thought, those "talking to oneself" mumblings that form
the superficial layer of consciousness; but I was never able to read
the deeper thoughts of any person but my twin brother, a limita­tion
I eventually learned to thank God for.

We developed a modest self-redaction that enabled us to speed
the healing of our smaller wounds, bruises, and blisters. Curing
germ-based illness, however, even the common cold, was beyond
us. We also prac­ticed psychokinesis and learned to move small
objects by mind-power alone. I remember how we looted coin
telephones throughout two glo­rious summer weeks, squandering
the money on ice cream, pop, and bootleg cigarettes. Then,
because we were still good Catholic Franco-American boys at
heart, we had qualms of conscience. In confession Father Racine
gave us the dismal news that stealing from New England Bell (we
didn't reveal our modus operandi) was just as much of a sin as
stealing from real human beings. Any notions we might have had of
becoming metapsychic master-thieves died aborning. Perhaps
because of our upbringing, perhaps because of our lack of criminal
imagination, we were never tempted along these lines again. Our
fatal flaws lay in other directions.

The first indications of them came when we were ten years old.

It was late on a dreary winter day. School was over, and Don and I
were fooling around in what we thought was an empty school gym,
making a basketball perform impossible tricks. An older boy
named O'Shaughnessy, newly come to the school from a tough
neighborhood in Boston, happened to come along and spot us
working our psychokinetic magic. He didn't know what he was
seeing - but he decided it must be something big and sauntered
out to confront us.

"You two, " he said in a harsh, wheedling voice, "have got a secret
gimmick - and I want in on it!"

"Comment? Comment? Qu'est-ce que c'est?" we babbled,
backing away. I had the basketball.

"Don't gimme that Frog talk - I know you speak English!" He
grabbed Don by the jersey. "I been watching and I seen you
gimmick the ball, make it stop in midair and dribble all over your
bodies and go into the hoop in crazy ways. Whatcha got - radio
control?"

"No! Hey, leggo!" Don struggled in the big kid's grip and
O'Shaughnessy struck him a savage, sharp-knuckled blow in the
face that made my own nerves cringe. Both of us yelled.

"Shaddup!" hissed O'Shaughnessy. His right hand still clenched
Don's shirt. The left, grubby and broken-nailed, seized Don's nose
in some terrible street-fighter grip with two fingers thrust up the
nostrils and the thumbnail dug into the bridge. Don sucked in a
ragged agonized breath through his mouth, but before he could
utter another sound the brute said:

"Not a squeak, cocksucker - and your brother better hold off if he
knows what's good for the botha you!" The fingers jammed deeper
into Don's nose. I experienced a hideous burst of sympathetic
pain. "I push just a little harder, see, I could pop out his eyeballs.
Hey, punk! You wanna see your brother's eyeballs rollin' on the
gym floor? Where I could step on 'em?"

Queasily, I shook my head.

"Right. " O'Shaughnessy relaxed a little. "Now you just calm down
and do a repeat of that cute trick I saw you doing when I came in.
The in-and-outer long bomb. "

My mind cried out to my brother: "DonnieDonniewhatgonnaDO?

TricktrickDOit! DOitGodsake -

Thenhe'llKNOW -

O'Shaughnessy growled, "You stalling?" He dug in. I felt pain and
nausea and the peripheral area of the gym had become a dark-red
fog.

"Don't hurt him! I'll do it!"

Trembling, I held the ball between my hands and faced the basket
at the opposite end of the court. It was fully sixty feet away, more
than eighteen meters. I made a gentle toss. The ball soared in a
great arc as though it were jet-propelled and dropped into the
distant basket. When it hit the floor it bounced mightily, came up
through the hoop from beneath, and neatly returned to my waiting
hands.

"Jeez!" said O'Shaughnessy. "Radio control! I knew it. Thing's a
gold mine!" Raw greed glared out of his eyes. "Awright, punk, hand
over the ball and the gimmick. "

"Gimmick?" I repeated stupidly.

"The thing!" he raged. "The thing that controls the ball! Dumb little
fart-face frog! Don't you know a ball-control gimmick like that's
gotta be worth a fortune? Get me outa this backwoods hole and
back to Beantown and my Uncle Dan and - never mind! Hand it
over. "

"Let my brother go first, " I pleaded.

The big kid laughed. He crooked one leg around Don's ankle and
simultaneously pushed. My brother sprawled helplessly on the
floor, gagging and groaning. O'Shaughnessy advanced on me with
hands out­stretched. Two of his fingers were bloody.

"The ball and the gimmick, " he demanded, "or it's your turn, punk.
"

"The only gimmick's inside my head, " I said. "But you can have the
ball. "

I drove the rubber sphere at him with all my psychokinetic strength,
hitting him full in his grinning face. His nose shattered with the
impact and the ball burst its bladder. I heard a gargling scream
from O'Shaughnessy and a throaty noise like a Malamute snarl
from some­body else.

Help me get him Donnie!

The torn and flattened ball like some writhing marine organism
clamping itself across a horror-stricken face. Savage sounds and
big hands clawing and punching at me. The brother mind poured
out its own PK spontaneously to meld with mine, strength
magnified manyfold, cemented with mutual loathing, fear, and
creative solidarity. Somebody shrieking as the three of us
struggled beneath the basket. Then a gro­tesque figure like a
scarecrow, its head a red-smeared dented globe. Go for it Donnie
man HEY togethernow togethernow allezallez SLAM-DUNK THE
BASTARD...

They found O'Shaughnessy bloody-nosed and half out of his mind
with terror, stuffed headfirst into the basket so that the hoop
impris­oned his upper arms. The broken basketball encased his
head and muf­fled his cries a little, but he was never in any real
danger of suffocating. We had been caught, literally red-handed,
trying to sneak out of the gymnasium. O'Shaughnessy blamed us,
of course, and told the story pretty much as it had happened -
leaving out his own extortion at­tempt and assault with intent to
maim. He also accused us of owning a mysterious electronic
device "that the FBI'd be real interested in hear­ing about. "

His tale was too outlandish to be credited, even against us, the
Crazy Twins. We maintained that we had found him in his weird
predicament and attempted to help. Since we were obviously both
too small to have boosted a hulking lout three meters above floor-
level, it was evident that O'Shaughnessy had lied. His reputation
was even more dubious than ours: he was a bad hat who had been
shipped off to relatives in the New Hampshire boondocks in the
vain hope of keeping him out of a Boston reformatory. Following
the incident with us he was retransported with alacrity and never
heard from again.

We, on the other hand, were clearly not telling all we knew.

Many questions were asked. Odd bits of circumstantial evidence
were noted and pondered. In the midst of the uproar we remained
tight as quahog clams. Our cousins who knew (or could deduce) a
thing or two rallied round loyally. The family came first - especially
against the Irish saloperie! After some weeks the incident was
forgotten.

But Don and I didn't forget. We hashed over and over the glorious
experience of metaconcert, the two-minds-working-as-one that had
pro­duced an action greater than the sum of its parts, giving us
transcendent power over a hated enemy. We tried to figure out
how we had done it. We knew that if we could reproduce the effect
at will we would never have to be afraid of anyone again.

We thought about nothing else and our schoolwork was totally
ne­glected; but we were never able to mesh our minds that way
again, no matter how hard we tried. Some of the fault lay in our
imperfect metapsychic development, but the greater failure was
grounded in a mutual lack of trust. Our peril at O'Shaughnessy's
hands had been sufficient to cancel our jealous individuality; but
once the danger was lifted, we reverted to our deeper mind-sets -
Don the driven, domineer­ing coercer and I the one who thought
too much, whose imagination even at that young age whispered
where the abuse of power might lead.

Each of us blamed the other for the metaconcert failure. We
ended up locking each other out in a fury of disappointment,
thwarted ambition, and fear - and we barely missed flunking the
fifth grade.

Onc' Louie called us to him on a certain spring evening and
displayed the fatal report cards. Our cousins were all outside
playing in the warm dusk. We heard their laughter and shrieks as
they played Red Rover in a vacant lot while we stood sulkily before
our uncle and faced the time of reckoning.

"Haven't I done my best to rear you properly? Aren't you as dear to
me as any of my own children?" He brandished the cards and his
beer-tinged breath washed over us. "A few failing grades, one
could under­stand. But this! The sisters say that you must make up
these failed subjects or repeat a year. All summer long, you must
go to the public school in the morning. What a disgrace! Such a
thing has never hap­pened before in this family. You shame the
Remillards!"

We mumbled something about being sorry.

"Oh, my boys, " he said sorrowfully. "What would your poor parents
say? Think of them, watching from heaven, so disappointed. It's
not as though you were blockheads who could do no better. You
have good brains, both of you! To waste them is an insult to the
good God who made you. "

We began to sniffle.

"You will do better?"

"Yes, Onc' Louie. "

"Bon." He heaved a great sigh, turned away from us, and went to
the sideboard where he kept the whiskey. "Now go out and play for
a while before bedtime. "

As we fled onto the front porch we heard the clink of glassware.

"Now he can get stinko in peace, " Don hissed bitterly. "Rotten old
drunk. Never expect him to understand. He talks about us being a
disgrace -"

We sat together on the bottom step, putting aside our enmity. It
was quite dark. The other kids were dodging around under the
streetlights. We had no wish to join them.

I said, "Plenty of people flunk. He didn't have to drag Papa and
Maman into it... or God. "

"God!" Don made the word a curse. "When you come right down
to it, the whole darn mess is his fault. "

Horrified at the sacrilege, I could only gape at him.

He was whispering, but his mental voice seemed to shout inside
my skull. "God made us, didn't he? Okay - our parents made our
bodies, but didn't he make our souls? Isn't that what the nuns say?
And what's a soul anyhow, Rogi? A mind!"

"Yes, but -"

"God made these weird minds of ours, so it's his fault we have all
this trouble. How can we help it?"

"Gee, I don't know, " I began doubtfully.

He grabbed me by the shoulders. The voices of the kids mingled
with crickets and traffic noises and the sound of a television
program that Onc' Louie had turned on inside.

"Didn't you ever stop to think about it, dummy?" Don asked me.
"Why are we like this? Why aren't there any other people in the
world like us? When God made us, what in hell did he think he was
doing?"

"What kind of a dumb question is that? That's the dumbest thing
you ever said! It's probably some kind of sin, even. You better shut
your stupid trap, Donnie!"

He started to laugh, then, a smothered squeaky sound loaded with
an awful triumph, and he mind-screamed at me:

He did it it's not our fault we didn't ask for this he can't blame us
nobody can hell with all of them hell! hell! hell!...

I closed my mind to him, slamming the barrier into place as though
I were locking the door of a cellar that threatened to spew out black
nightmares; and then he began to snivel and beg me to open up to
him again, but I got up from the steps and went back into the
house, into the kitchen where Tante Lorraine was baking
something and the lights were bright, and I sat at the table and
pretended to do my homework.



6

OBSERVATION VESSEL SPON-SU-BREVON [Pol 41-11000]

10 NOVEMBER  1957



the poltroyan commander's ruby eyes lost their twin­kle and his
urbane smile faded to a grimace of incredulity. "Surely you jest,
Dispensator Ma'elfoo! Personnel from my ship?"

The Krondaku's mind displayed a replay of the incident, complete
with close-ups of the miscreant Simbiari scouts taken flagrante
delicto. "As you see, Commander Vorpimin-Limopilakadafin. "

"Call me Vorpi. Do you mind telling me what you were doing in the
vicinity of the satellite anyhow?"

"My spouse, Taka'edoo Rok, and I were doing an unscheduled
survey in order to include details of its fascinatingly crude design in
a report we have prepared. Our transport module was totally
screened, as is the invariable custom of the Krondak Xenocultural
Bureau when visiting pre-emergent solar systems. The scout craft
with the Simbiari was also screened heavily, but this presented no
particular obstacle to Grand Master farsensors such as Taka'edoo
and myself. We considered replac­ing the stolen property.
However, the scouts had meddled with the biomonitoring
equipment, and there was a chance that the satellite might have
transmitted some anomalous signal to the Earthside control
station. And so we contented ourselves with taking the scouts in
charge, together with their booty, and bringing them to you. "

"Love's Oath, " groaned Commander Vorpi. "Our tour's nearly
over, and we had an almost perfect disciplinary record - up to now.
"

"My condolences. " The Krondaku politely refrained from stating
the obvious: When vessels of his own methodical race were in
charge of planetary Mind observations, nothing ever went wrong.

"I must request that you testify at the disciplinary hearing, " Vorpi
said. "And perhaps you have suggestions for redress. "

"Our time is limited, Commander Vorpi. We are due back on
Dranra-Two in the Thirty-Second Sector for a conference on
primitive orbital biohabitats, derelict and functional. We postponed
presentation of our paper and sped here at maximum
displacement factor when we learned that Sol-Three had just
entered this phase of astronautic achievement. (Most of our
investigations have involved the orbiters of extinct civili­zations. )
However, it will not be convenient to prolong our stay... " "Oh, I'll
call the silly buggers on the carpet right now. " Vorpi sent out a
thought on the imperative mode: GupGup Zuzl! Have Enforcer
Amichass bring in those two scouts on report. And don't forget the
contraband. I'll need you to log the hearing. Snapsnapsnap!

Dispensator Ma'elfoo glanced about the commander's directorium.
"A handsomely appointed chamber, " he remarked politely. "The
arti­facts are from Earth?" One tentacle palpated the multicolored
animal-fiber carpet while another lifted an Orrefors crystal vase
from Vorpi's monitoring desk.

"Souvenirs. " Vorpi waved a violet-tinted hand. "The drapery
textiles from the serictery secretions of certain insect larvae; the
rug painstak­ingly knotted by hand-laborers in a desert region; the
paintings by Matisse and Kandinsky, rescued from a Parisian
fence; the settee by Sears Roebuck; the liquor-dispensing cabinet
by Harrods. May I offer you some refreshment, by the way?"

"I would esteem some Bowmore Scotch, " the Krondaku said. "My
deep-sight perceives a bottle hidden away. "

Vorpi chuckled as he left his desk to do the honors. "Distinctive
treatment of alcohol, the Scotches. I predict a wide market for
them in the Milieu - provided the Intervention does take place.
Mixer?"

"Just a splash of liquid petrolatum. " The two entities toasted one
another. After savoring his drink, Ma'elfoo exhaled gustily. "Yes, it
is as I remembered. Ten orbits ago I visited Sol-Three to
participate in a comparative study of aircraft evolution. We went on
a survey to the British Isles and I acquired a taste for this
beverage, among others. Earth technology has developed apace;
but one can be grateful that the dis­tilleries cling to tradition."

The connoisseurs enjoyed a momentary mental rapport. "Have you
ever sampled the genuine rareties?" Vorpi asked softly.
"Bunnahabhain? Bruichladdich? Lagavulin? Caol Ila?"

The fearsome Krondaku uttered a whimper of ecstasy. "You're not
joshing me, you fire-eyed little pipsqueak? Caol Ila?"

Vorpi lifted his shoulders, let a tiny smile crease his lips.

The door of the directorium slid open. The Gi GupGup Zuzl,
secre­tary of the mission, stalked in, followed by two very young
Simbiari scouts and an enforcer of the same race. Vorpi went back
to his desk and sat down. The Gi declaimed:

"Commander, the prisoners taken by Grand Masters Ma'elfoo and

Taka'edoo Rok herewith submit to disciplinary inquiry. Defendant
names: Scout Misstiliss Abaram and Scout Bali Ala Chamirish.
Charges: On this Galactic Day La-Prime 1-344-207, the
defendants, on a routine inspection of the Second Earth Orbital
Vehicle, did mischievously in­terfere with said orbiter in
contravention of divers Milieu statutes and regulations, removing its
subsapient passenger with intent to smuggle said creature on
board the Spon-su-Brevon. "

The male and the female scouts stood at attention with screened
minds and dry, impassive faces. Bali Ala had a harder time of it
than her comrade because the small animal in her arms was
squirming wildly and resisting her attempts at coercion. The
Simbiari enforcer scowled and added his coercive quotient, but the
beast only struggled harder, gave a sharp yap, and jumped free. It
made a dash for the still-open door and would have escaped if
Ma'elfoo had not zapped its brainstem very gently, paralyzing it in
its tracks.

Enforcer Amichass, mortified and glistening with green sweat,
re­trieved the creature and set it like a stuffed toy beside the two
crewmen on report. "I'm sorry about that, Commander. A
recalcitrant species that resists -"

"Never mind, " Vorpi sighed. "Get on with it. What do you two have
to say for yourselves? Of all the sophomoric idiocies - pinching the
damn Russian dog!"

"Her name is Laika, " Misstiliss said.

Bali Ala said, "The power-source of the vehicle's environmental
sys­tem was almost exhausted. The animal was about to perish
from oxy­gen lack. We - we shorted out the biomonitoring
equipment and took Laika after making certain that Soviet ground
control would have no indication of any anomaly. "

Misstiliss added, "The orbit of the satellite is very eccentric and
de­caying rapidly. Sputnik II will burn up on re-entry, obliterating any
trace of our interference. Laika has endured nearly a week in orbit,
and we thought she might provide us with valuable research data -"

"Half-masticated lumpukit!" swore the Poltroyan commander. "You
wanted to take the thing back with you as a souvenir! As a pet!"

A green droplet hung from Misstiliss's nose. He fixed his gaze on a
point where the wall behind Commander Vorpi met the ceiling.
"You are correct, of course, sir. We admit our guilt fully, repent of
the infrac­tion, and stand ready to accept discipline at the
Commander's plea­sure. "

"So say I also, " Bali Ala murmured. "But we really didn't do any
harm. "

"Won't you youngsters ever learn?" Vorpi was out of his chair and
pacing in front of the pair and the dog, waving his glass of Scotch
by way of punctuation. "We realize that these long surveillance
tours of exotic worlds can be tedious - especially to youths who,
like yourselves, be­long to a race imperfectly attuned to Unity. But
think of the importance of our work! Think of the Milieu's noble
scheme for planet Earth and our hope that its unique Mind may
eventually enrich the Galaxy!"

The Krondaku addressed Commander Vorpi on his intimate mode:
At least that's what the Lylmik keep telling us.

"Young people, " Vorpi went on, "remember your history. Think of
the poor planet Yanalon, Friin-Six, that was hurled back to
barbarism on the very threshold of coadunation merely because a
careless botanist on a Milieu survey vessel contravened
regulations and picked a single piece of fruit and spat out the
pips... "

She was a Poltroyan, as I recall, said Ma'elfoo.

"The work we do, coaxing these primitive worlds toward
metapsychic operancy and coadunation with our Milieu, is
excruciatingly delicate. It can be jeopardized by a single
thoughtless action, even one that seems harmless. This is why
every infraction of the Guidance Statutes for Overt Intervention
must be considered a most serious matter. One doesn't meddle
frivolously with the destiny of a sapient race. "

And tell that to the Lylmik as well! Ma'elfoo suggested.

His peroration at an end, Vorpi resumed his seat and said, "Now
you may respond. "

"We would not deliberately contravene any scheme of the
Concilium, " Bali Ala said stiffly, "even in the case of a patently
unwor­thy world such as Earth, which has been showered with far
more Milieu assistance than it deserves. But... the Earthlings will
never know that we saved the little dog, and it has a very appealing
personality. Far more appealing than that of the average human,
when it comes to that! We farspoke Laika on all three of our
inspection tours of the satellite, and I admit that we both became
bonded to her. "

The Gi smiled and whiffled its cryptomammaries. "It really is
ador­able. "

Misstiliss said, "When we saw that the planetside controllers meant
to let Laika die, we were outraged - and we acted. I'm sorry we
violated the Guidance Statutes, but not sorry we saved the little
dog. "

Commander Vorpi tapped the side of the empty Scotch glass with
the talon of his little finger. "A grave matter. Yet, as you said, it
would seem no harm was done. "

"I haven't yet logged the hearing, " GupGup Zuzl insinuated slyly.
"And we have enjoyed a perfect duty tour up until now... "

Vorpi fixed the Krondak scientist with a meaningful gaze.
"However, the violation was witnessed and reported by two citizens
of unimpeach­able status. "

Did you say Caol Ila, my dear Vorpi?

I only have two bottles.

One for me and one for Toka'edoo Rok.

"What is your disposition of this case, Commander?" the Gi
secretary inquired formally.

"I don't find any infraction of Milieu statutes, " Vorpi replied, "but
these crewmen are clearly derelict in not having filed a report on
their last inspection of the satellite Sputnik II. Let a reprimand be
entered in their files, and they are sentenced to six days each on
waste-water-recycling system maintenance. The animal can keep
them company. Dismissed. "

The Krondaku canceled his coercive grip on the dog, which came
to its senses as Misstiliss scooped it up. It lapped at the Simb's
glistening green face.

"Likes the way we taste, " the scout said sheepishly. He and Bali
Ala saluted and hurried away, taking Laika with them.



7

FROM THE MEMOIRS OF ROGATIEN REMILLARD



belatedly, at the age of twelve, I discovered that I liked to read. It
was early in 1958 and every American kid was passionately
interested in the new "race for space. " Our older cousins bought
science-fiction magazines and left them lying around, and I picked
them up and immediately became addicted. They were much more
exciting than comic books. But it was not the tales of space travel
that fascinated me so much as the stories that dealt with
extrasensory perception.

ESP! For the first time I was able to put a name to the powers that
made Don and me aliens in our own country. I got all worked up
over the discovery and made Don read some of the stories, too;
but his reaction was cynical. What did that stuff have to do with us?
It was fiction. Somebody had made it up.

I ventured beyond the magazines, to the Berlin Public Library.
When I looked up ESP and related topics in the encyclopedias, my
heart sank. One and all, the reference books acknowledged that
"certain persons" believed in the existence of mental faculties such
as telepathy, clair­voyance, and psychokinesis. One and all, the
books declared that there was no valid scientific evidence
whatsoever for such belief.

I went through all the books in the juvenile department that dealt
with the brain, then checked the adult shelves. None of the books
even mentioned the mind-powers that Don and I had. The Berlin
library was rather small and it had no serious volumes about
parapsychology, only a few crank books listed under "Occult
Phenomena" in the card catalog. Hesitantly, I went to the librarian
and asked if she could help me find books about people who had
extraordinary mind-powers. She thought very hard for a moment,
then said, "I know the very book!"

She gave me one of the old Viking Portable Novel collections and
pointed out Olaf Stapledon's Odd John to me. Concealing my
disap­pointment at the fiction format, I dutifully took it home, read it,
and had the living hell scared out of me.

The book's hero was a mutant of singular appearance and
extremely high mental power. He was Homo superior, a genius as
well as an operant metapsychic, trapped in a world full of drab,
commonplace normals, most of whom did their fumbling best to
understand him but failed. Odd John wasn't persecuted by ordinary
humans; there were even those who loved him. And yet he was
tormented by loneliness and the knowledge of his uniqueness. In
one chilling passage, he described his attitude toward other
people:



I was living in a world of phantoms, or animated masks. No one
seemed really alive. I had a queer notion that if I pricked any of
you, there would be no bleeding, but only a gush of wind. And I
couldn't make out why you were like that, what it was that I missed
in you. The trouble really was that I did not clearly know what it was
in myself that made me different from you.



John's alienation led him to set up his own self-centered moral
code. He financed his ambitions by becoming a ten-year-old
burglar; and when he was caught at it by the friendly neighborhood
policeman, he had no compunction about murdering the man to
escape detection.

Later, when John was in his teens, he merely treated other people
as pets or useful tools. He thought great thoughts, used his
remarkable talents to make a lot of money, and traveled around the
world in search of other mutant geniuses like himself. He found a
fair number and proceeded to establish a secret colony on an
island in the South Seas.

(The inconvenient original inhabitants of the place were coerced
into mass suicide; but the superfolk held a nice feast for them first.
) Once John and his mutant friends were secure on their island,
they set out to organize a combination Garden of Eden (they were
all very young) and technocratic wonderland. They were able to
utilize atomic energy by "abolishing" certain nuclear forces through
mental activity. They had all kinds of sophisticated equipment at
their command, yet chose to live in rustic simplicity, often linked
telepathically to an Asian guru of like mind who had remained at
home in his lamasery in Xizang.

The colony made plans for the reproduction of Homo superior.
The young mutants "reviewed their position relative to the universe,
" at­tained a transcendental quasi-Unity called astronomical
consciousness, embraced the exotic mentalities inhabiting other
star-systems - and discovered that they were doomed.

A British survey vessel stumbled onto John's island in spite of the
metapsychic camouflaging efforts of the colonists. Once the
secret was out, the military powers of the world sent warships to
investigate. Some nations saw the colony as a menace; others
coveted its assets and schemed to use the young geniuses as
political pawns. Attempts at negotiation between Homo sapiens
and Homo superior broke down permanently when the Japanese
delegate put his finger on the basic dilemma:



This lad [Odd John] and his companions have strange powers
which Europe does not understand. But we understand. I have felt
them. I have fought against them. I have not been tricked. I can
see that these are not boys and girls; they are devils. If they are
left, some day they will destroy us. The world will be for them, not
for us.



The negotiating party withdrew and the world powers agreed that
as­sassins should be landed on the island, to pick off the
supranormals with guerrilla tactics.

Odd John and his companions had a weapon, a photon beam
similar to an X-laser, that they might have used to fend off an
invasion attempt; but they decided not to resist, since then "there
would be no peace until we had conquered the world" and that
would take a long time, as well as leaving them "distorted in spirit. "
So the young mutants gathered together, focused their minds upon
their atomic power station, and obliterated the entire island in a
fireball...

"You've got to read this story, Don, " I pleaded, with my mind
leaking the more sinister plot overtones that had frightened me -
the hero's icy immorality that contradicted everything I had ever
been taught, his awful loneliness, his totally pessimistic view of
ordinary mankind faced with the challenge of superior minds.

Don refused. He said he didn't have time and that I shouldn't get
worked up over a dumb, old-fashioned book. It had been written in
1935, and by an Englishman! I said it wasn't the story itself but
what it said about people like us that was important. I bugged him
about it and finally wore him down, and he waded through the novel
over a period of two weeks, keeping his mind tight shut against me
all that time. When he finished he said:

"We're not like that. "

"What d'you mean, we're not? Okay - so we aren't geniuses and
we'll never be able to make a million bucks on the stock market
before we're seventeen like John did, or invent all that stuff or
found a colony on an island. But there are things we do that other
people would think were dangerous. Not just the PK, but the
coercion. You're a lot better at it than me, so you ought to know
what I'm talking about. "

"Big deal. So I fend off guys in hockey or nudge Onc' Louie to
cough up a little money when he's half lit. " "And the girls, " I
accused him.

He only snickered, dropped the book into my hands, and turned to
walk away.

I said: DonnieDonnie when people findout they'll hate us just like
they did Oddjohn!

He said: Make sure they don't find out.



Don and I were late bloomers physically, puny until we graduated
from grammar school - after which we shot up like ragweed plants
in July. He was much better looking and more muscular, with a
flashing grin and dark eyes that went through you like snapshots
from a .30-06. His use of the coercive metafunction that used to be
called animal magnetism was instinctive and devastating. From the
time he was four­teen girls were crazy for him. Don Remillard
became the Casanova of Berlin High, as irresistible as he was
heartless. I was his shadow, cast by a low-watt bulb. Don was
husky and I was gangling. His hair was blue-black and curled over
his forehead like that of some pop singer, while mine was
lackluster and cowlicky. He had a clear olive skin, a dimpled chin,
and a fine aquiline nose. I suffered acne and sinus trouble, and my
nose, broken in a hockey game, healed rapidly but askew.

As our bodies changed into those of men, our minds drifted further
apart. Don was increasingly impatient with my spiritual agonizing,
my manifest insecurity, and my bookish tendencies. In high school
my grades were excellent in the humanities, adequate in math and
science.

Don's academic standing was low, but this did not affect his
popularity since he excelled in football and hockey, augmenting
genuine sports prowess with artful PK and coercion.

Don tried to educate me in that great Franco-American sport, girl-
chasing; but our double-dating was not a success. I was by nature
mod­est and inhibited while Don was the opposite, afire with fresh
mascu­line fervor. The urges awakened in me by the new flood of
male hormones disturbed me almost as much as my repressed
metafunctions. In Catholic school, we had been lectured about the
wickedness of "im­pure actions. " I was tormented by guilt when I
could no longer resist the temptation to relieve my sexual tensions
manually and carried a burden of "mortal sin" until I had the
courage to confess my transgression to Father Racine. This good
man, far in advance of most Catholic clergy of that time, lifted the
burden from my conscience in a straightforward and sensible way:
"I know what the sisters have told you, that such actions bring
damnation. But it cannot be, for every boy entering man­hood has
experiences such as this because all male bodies are made the
same. And who is harmed by such actions? No one. The only
person who could be harmed is you, and the only way such harm
could come is if the actions become an obsession - as
occasionally happens when a boy is very unhappy and shut away
from other sources of pleasure. Keep that in mind, for we owe God
the proper care of our bodies. But these actions that seem
necessary from time to time are not sinful, and especially not
mortally sinful, because they are not a serious matter. You recall
your catechism definition of mortal sin: the matter must be serious.
What you do is not serious, unless you let it hurt you. So be at
peace, my child. You should be far more concerned with the sins
of cheating on school exams and acting uncharitably toward your
aunt and uncle than with these involuntary urgings of the flesh. Now
make a good act of contrition... "

When I was sixteen, in 1961, I emerged a bit from my broody shell
and had occasional chaste dates with a quiet, pretty girl named
Marie-Madeleine Fabre, whom I had met in the library. She shared
my love of science fiction. We would walk along the banks of the
beautiful Androscoggin River north of the pulp mills, ignoring the
sulfurous stench and taking simple joy in the dark mirrored water,
the flaming maples in autumn, and the low mountains that enclosed
our New Hampshire valley. She taught me to bird-watch. I forgot
my nightmares of Odd John and learned to react with forbearance
when Don mocked my lack of sexual daring.

There were still five of us living at home: Don and I and our
younger cousins Albert, Jeanne, and Marguerite. That year we
played host to a grand Remillard family reunion. Relatives came
from all over New

Hampshire, Vermont, and Maine - including the other six children of
Onc' Louie and Tante Lorraine, who had married and moved away
and had children of their own. The old house on Second Street
was jammed. After Midnight Mass on Christmas Eve there was the
traditional réveillon with wine, maple candy and barber-poles,
croque-cignols and tourtières, and meat pies made of fat pork.
Tiny children rushed about shrieking and waving toys, then fell
asleep on the floor amid a litter of gifts and colored wrappings. As
fast as the big old-fashioned Christmas tree lights burnt out,
assiduous boy electricians replaced them. Girls passed trays of
food. Adolescents and adults drank toast after toast. Even frail,
white-haired Tante Lorraine got happily enivrée. Everyone agreed
that nothing was so wonderful as having the whole family under one
roof for the holidays.

Seventeen days later, when the Christmas decorations had long
been taken down, there was a belated present from little Cousin
Tom of Auburn, Maine. We came down with the mumps.

At first we considered it a joke, in spite of the discomfort. Don and
I and Al and Jeanne and Margie looked like a woeful gang of
chipmunks. It was an excuse to stay home from school during the
worst part of the winter, when Berlin was wrapped in frigid fog from
the pulp-mill stacks and the dirty snow was knee-deep. Marie-
Madeleine brought my class assignments every day, slipping them
through the mail slot in the front door while the younger cousins
tittered. Don's covey of cheerleaders kept the phone tied up for
hours. He did no homework. He was urged by the high school
coach to rest and conserve his strength.

Everybody got better inside of a week except me. I was prostrate
and in agony from what Dr. LaPlante said was a rare complication
of mumps. The virus had moved to my testicles and I had
something called bilateral orchitis. The nuns had been right after
all! I was being punished.

I was treated to a useless course of antibiotics and lay moaning
with an ice bag on my groin while Tante Lorraine hushed the
solicitous inquiries of little Jeanne and Margie. Don slept at a
friend's house, making some excuse, because I couldn't help
communicating my pain and irrational guilt telepathically. Marie-
Madeleine lit candles to St. Joseph and prayed for me to get well.
Father Racine's common sense pooh-poohed my guilt and Dr.
LaPlante assured me that I was going to be as good as new.

In my heart, I knew better.



8

verkhnyaya bzyb, abkhaziya assr, earth

28 SEPTEMBER  1963



the physician pyotr Sergeyevich Sakhvadze and his five-year-old
daughter Tamara drove south from Sochi on the Black Sea
Highway into that unique part of the Soviet Union called Abkhaziya
by the geographers. Local people have another name for it: Apsny,
the Land of the Soul. Its mountain villages are famed for the
advanced age at­tained by the inhabitants, some of whom are
reliably estimated at being more than 120 years old. The unusual
mental traits of the isolated Abkhazians are less publicized; and if
questioned, the people them­selves generally laugh and call the
old stories outworn superstition.

Dr. Pyotr Sakhvadze's wife Vera had done so until less than a
week ago, on the day she died.

Still numb with grief, Pyotr drove like an automaton, no longer even
bothering to question the compulsion that had taken hold of him. It
was very hot in the semitropical lowlands and Tamara slept for a
time on the back seat of the brand-new Volga sedan. The highway
led through tobacco fields and citrus groves and stands of palm
and eucalyptus, trending farther inland south of Gagra, where the
mountains receded from the coast in the delta of the great River
Bzyb. The road map showed no Upper Bzyb village, but it had to lie
somewhere in the valley. Pyotr turned off the highway onto the
Lake Ritsa road and pulled in at a village store at the lower end of
the gorge.

"I'll buy us some bottles of fruit soda here, " Pyotr said, "and ask
the way. We don't want to get lost in the mountains. "

"We wouldn't, " Tamara assured him gravely.

Pyotr's laugh was uneasy. "Just the same, I'll ask. "

But the woman in the store shook her head at his inquiry. "Upper
Bzyb village? Oh, there's nothing for tourists there, and the road is
nothing but a goat-track, suitable only for farm trucks. Better to go
to the lovely resort at Lake Ritsa. "

When Pyotr persisted she gave vague directions, all the while
main­taining that the place was very hard to find and not worth the
trip, and the people odd and unfriendly to boot. Pyotr thanked her
and returned to the car wearing a grim expression. He handed his
daughter her soda. "I have been told that the road to Upper Bzyb is
impossible. We simply can't risk it, Tamara. "

"Papa, don't worry. They won't let anything happen to us. They're
expecting us. "

"Expecting -! But I never wrote or telephoned -"

"Mamenka told them we'd come. And they told me. "

"That's nonsense, " he said, his voice trembling. What was he
think­ing of, coming here? It was madness! Perhaps he was
unhinged by sor­row! Aloud, he said, "We'll turn around at once
and go home. "

He started up the car, slammed it into reverse gear, and stamped
on the accelerator so abruptly that the engine died. He cursed
under his breath and tried again and again to start it. Damn the
thing! What was wrong with it? With him? Was he losing his mind?

"You've only forgotten your promise, " the little girl said.

Aghast, Pyotr turned around. "Promise? What promise?"

Tamara stared at him without speaking. His gaze slid away from
hers and after a moment he covered his face with his handkerchief.
Vera! If only you had confided in me. I would have tried to
understand. I'm a man of science, but not narrow-minded. It's just
that one doesn't dream that members of one's own family can be -

"Papa, we must go, " Tamara said. "It's a long way, and we'll have
to drive slowly. "

"The car won't start, " he said dully.

"Yes it will. Try. "

He did, and the Volga purred into instant life. "Yes, I see! This was
also their doing? The old ones waiting for us in Verkhnyaya Bzyb?"

"No, you did it, Papa. But it's all right now. " The little girl settled
back in her seat, drinking the soda, and Pyotr Sakhvadze guided
the car back onto the gorge road that led deep into the front ranges
of the Caucasus.



The promise.

In the motor wreck a week earlier, as Vera lay dying in her
husband's arms, she had said: "It's happened, Petya, just as little
Tamara said. She told us not to go on this trip! Poor baby... now
what will become of her? I was such a fool! Why didn't I listen to
them?... Why didn't I listen to her? Now I'll die, and she'll be alone
and frightened... Ah! Of course, that's the answer!"

"Hush, " the distraught Pyotr told her. "You will not die. The
ambu­lance is on its way -"

 "I cannot see as far as Tamara, " his wife interrupted him, "but I do
 now that this is the end for me. Petya, listen. You must promise
 me something. "

"Anything! You know I'd do anything for you. "

"A solemn promise. Come close, Petya. If you love me, you must
do as I ask. "

He cradled her head. The bystanders at the accident scene drew
back in respect and she spoke so low that only he could hear. "You
must take Tamara to my people - to the old ones in my ancestral
town of Upper Bzyb - and allow them to rear her for at least four
years, until she is nine years old. Then her mind will be turned
toward peace, her soul secure. You may visit Tamara there as
often as you wish, but you must not take her away during that time.
"

"Send our little girl away?" The physician was astounded. "Away
from Sochi, where she has a beautiful home and every
advantage?... And what relatives are you talking about? You told
me that all of your people perished in the Great Patriotic War!"

"I lied to you, Petya, as I lied to myself. " Vera's extraordinary dark
eyes were growing dim; but as always they held Pyotr captive,
bewitch­ing him. He knew his wife's last request was outrageous.
Send their delicate child prodigy to live with strangers, ignorant
mountain peas-ants? Impossible!

Vera's whisper was labored. She held his hand tightly. "I know what
you think. But Tamara must go so that she will not be alone during
the critical years of mental formation. I... I helped her as best I
could. But I was consumed with guilt because I had turned my
back on the heritage. You know... that both Tamara and I are
strange. Fey. You have read Vasiliev's books and laughed... but he
writes the truth, Petya. And there are those who will pervert the
powers! Our great dream of a socialist paradise has been
swallowed by ambitious and greedy men. I thought... you and I
together, when Tamara was older ... I was a fool. The old ones
were right when they counseled watch­ful patience... Take Tamara
to them, to the village of Verkhnyaya Bzyb, deep in the Abkhazian
mountains. They say they will care for her... "

"Vera! Darling Vera, you must not excite yourself-"

"Promise me! Promise you will take Tamara to them!" Her voice
broke, and her breath came in harsh gasps. "Promise!"

What could he do? "Of course. Yes, I promise. "

She smiled with pallid lips and her eyes closed. Around them the
gawkers murmured and the traffic roared, detouring around the
acci­dent on the busy Chernomorskoye Chaussee just south of
Matsesta. In  the distance the ambulance from Sochi was hooting,
too late to be of any use. Vera's hands relaxed and her breathing
stopped, but Pyotr seemed to hear her say:

The few years we have had together were good, Petya. And our
daugh­ter is a marvel. Some day she will be a hero of the people!
Take care of her well when she returns from the village. Help her
fulfill her great destiny.

Pyotr bent and kissed Vera's lips. He was calm as he looked up at
the medical attendants with their equipment, introduced himself,
and gave instructions for the body to be taken to the medical
center for the last formalities. With his wife's death, the
enchantment was broken. Dr. Sakhvadze put aside the morbid
fancy that had taken hold of poor Vera and himself and resumed
rational thinking. The promise? Mere comfort for a dying woman.
Little Tamara would stay home where she belonged with her father,
the distinguished head of the Sochi Institute of Mental Health.
Later, after the child had received appropriate therapy to as­suage
grief, they would scatter Vera's ashes together over the calm sea.
But for the present, it would be best if Tamara was spared...

When Pyotr came at last to his home that evening, the old
house­keeper greeted him with eyes that were red from weeping
and a fright­ened, apologetic manner. "She forced me to do it,
Comrade Doctor! It wasn't my fault. I couldn't help it!"

"What are you babbling about?" he barked. "You haven't broken
the news to the child, have you? Not after I instructed you to leave
it to me?"

"I didn't! I swear I said nothing, but somehow... the little one knew!
No sooner had I put the telephone down after your call, than she
came into the room weeping. She said, 'I know what has
happened, Mamushka. My mother is dead. I told her not to go on
the trip. Now I will have to go away. '"

"Idiot!" shouted the doctor. "She must have overheard something!"

"I swear! I swear not! Her knowledge was uncanny. Terrible! After
an hour or so she became very calm and remained so for the rest
of the day. But before going to bed tonight she - she forced me to
do it! You must believe me!" Burying her face in her apron, the
housekeeper rushed away.

Pyotr Sakhvadze went to his daughter's room, where he found her
sleeping peacefully. At the foot of Tamara's bed were two large
valises, packed and ready to go. Her plush bear, Misha, sat on top
of them.



The Lake Ritsa Road followed the Bzyb River gorge into the low
range called the Bzybskiy Khrebet, a humid wilderness thick with
hanging vines and ferns and misted by waterfalls. At one place,
Tamara pointed off into the forest and said, "In there is a cave.
People lived there and dreamed when the ice came. " Again, as
they passed some ruins: "Here a prince of the old ones had his
fortress. He guarded the way against soul-enemies more than a
thousand years ago, but the small minds overcame him and the old
ones were scattered far and wide. " And when they arrived at a
small lake, glowing azure even under a suddenly cloudy sky: "The
lake is that color because its bottom is made of a precious blue
stone. Long ago the old ones dug up the stone from the hills
around the lake and made jewelry from it. But now all that's left is
underwater, where people can't get at it. "

"How does she know this?" muttered Pyotr. "She is only five and
she has never been in this region. God help me - it's enough to
make one take Vasiliev's mentalist nonsense seriously!"

Up beyond the power station the paved route continued directly to
Lake Ritsa via the Gega River gorge; but the storekeeper had told
Pyotr to be on the lookout for an obscure side road just beyond the
big bridge, one that angled off eastward, following the main
channel of the Bzyb. He slowed the car to a snail's pace and vainly
scanned the dense woods. Finally he pulled off onto the exiguous
verge and said to Tamara:

"You see? There's nothing here at all. No road to your fairy-tale
village. I was told that the turning was here, but there's no trace of
it. We'll have to go back. "

She sat holding Misha the plush bear, and she was smiling for the
first time since Vera's death. "I love it here, Papa! They're telling
us, 'Wel­come!' They say to go on just a bit more. Please. "

He didn't want to, but he did. And the featureless wall of green
parted to reveal a double-rut track all clogged and overhung with
ferns and sedges and ground-ivy. There was no signpost, no
milestone, no indication that the way was anything more than a
disused logging road.

"That can't be it, " Pyotr exclaimed. "If we go in there, we'll rip the
bottom right out of the car!"

Tamara laughed. "No we won't. Not if we go slow. " She clambered
into the front seat. "I want to be here with you where I can see
everything-and so does Misha. Let's go!"

"Fasten your seat belt, " the doctor sighed.

Shifting into the lowest gear, Pyotr turned off. The wilderness
en­gulfed them, and for the next two hours they bounced and
crawled through a cloud-forest of dripping beeches and tall
conifers, testing the suspension of the Volga sedan to the utmost.
The track traversed moun­tain bogs on a narrow surface of rotting
puncheons and spanned brawl­ing streams on log bridges that
rumbled ominously as the car inched across. Then they came to a
section of the road that was hewn from living rock and snaked up
the gorge at horrific gradients. Pyotr drove with sweat pouring
down the back of his neck while Tamara, delighted with the
spectacular view, peered out of her window at the foaming rapids
of the Bzyb below. After they had gone more than thirty-five
kilometers the canyon narrowed so greatly that Pyotr despaired.
There could not possibly be human habitation in such a desolate
place! Per­haps they had missed a turning somewhere back in the
mist-blanketed woods.

"Just five minutes more, " he warned his daughter. "If we don't find
signs of life in another kilometer or so, we're giving up. "

But suddenly they began to ascend a series of switchbacks
leading out of the gorge. At the top the landscape opened
miraculously to a verdant plateau girt with forested uplands that
soared in the east to snowy Mount Pshysh, thirty-eight hundred
meters high, source of the turbu­lent Bzyb. The track improved,
winding through alpine meadows down into a deep valley guarded
by stands of black Caucasian pine. Stone walls now marked the
boundaries of small cultivated fields, and in the pastures were
flocks of goats and sheep. The track dead-ended in a cluster of
white-painted buildings sheltered by enormous old oak trees.
Twenty or thirty adults stood waiting in a tight group as Pyotr drove
the last half kilometer into Verkhnyaya Bzyb and braked to a stop in
a cloud of dust.

In this place the sun shone and the air had an invigorating sparkle.
Weak with fatigue and tension, Pyotr sat unable to move. A tall
stately figure detached itself from the gathering of villagers and
approached the sedan. It was a very old man with a princely
bearing, dressed in the festive regalia of the Abkhazian hills: black
karakul hat, black Cossack-style coat, breeches, polished boots, a
white neck-scarf, and a silver-trimmed belt with a long knife carried
in an ornamented silver scabbard with blue stones. His smiling
face was creased with countless wrinkles. He had a white
mustache and black brows above deep-set, piercing eyes. Eyes
like Vera's.

"Welcome, " the elder said. "I am Seliac Eshba, the great-
great­grandfather of your late wife. She left us under sad
circumstances. But her marriage to you was happy and fruitful, and
I perceive that you, Pyotr Sergeyevich Sakhvadze, also share the
blood and soul of the old ones - even though you are unaware of it.
This gives us a double cause to rejoice in your coming. "

Pyotr, craning out the car window at the old man, managed to
mum­ble some response to the greeting. He unsnapped his seat
belt and Tamara's and opened the car door. Seliac Eshba held it
with courtesy, then started around to Tamara's side; but the little
girl had already opened her door and bounded out, still keeping a
tight grip on Misha the bear. At that same moment more than a
dozen young children carrying bouquets of late-summer flowers
dashed out from behind the crowd of adults calling Tamara's
name.

She ran to meet them, shouting gleefully. "Nadya! Zurab! Ksenia!
It's me! I'm finally here! Hello, Akaky - what pretty flowers. I'm so
hun­gry I could almost eat them! But first, take me to the little
house before I burst!" Giggling and chattering, the children led
Tamara away.

Pyotr, white-faced, said to Seliac, "She knows their names! Holy
Mother, she knows their names. "

"Your daughter is very special, " Seliac said. "We will care for her
like a precious jewel. Be of good heart, grandson. I'll tell you
everything you must know about us in due time. But first let me take
you to a place where you can refresh yourself after your long drive.
Then we invite you to join us for the special meal that we have
prepared in your honor - and Tamara's. "



It was not until the middle of the afternoon that the last toast was
raised by Great-Great-Grandfather Seliac, the tamadar.

"To the soul - which now must pass from the old ones to the
young!"

"To the soul!" chorused the banqueting villagers, lifting their
glasses. But then Dariya Abshili, who was Tamara's great-great-
aunt and the chief organizer of the feast, exclaimed: "Hold! The
children must also drink this time. "

"Yes, yes, the children!" everybody shouted. The young ones, who
had been segregated at their own table in the outdoor dining
pavilion, where they bounced up and down and celebrated in their
own fashion during the long meal, now left their seats and filed
solemnly up to stand on either side of Seliac. Grand-Uncle
Valeryan Abshili, a stalwart of seventy years, poured a small
portion of rich Buket Abkhaziy wine into each child's glass, coming
finally to Tamara, who had the place of honor closest to Seliac.
The old man bent and kissed the girl's brow, then let his electric
gaze sweep over the assembly.

"Let us drink now to the soul... and to this little one, the daughter of
our poor lost Vera, who is destined to announce our ancient secret
to the world and open the door to peace. "

This time the villagers responded without words. Pyotr, befuddled
with a surfeit of wine and food, was surprised to find that he had no
difficulty at all hearing them:

To the soul. To Tamara. To the secret. To peace.

They drank, and there was much cheering and clapping, and a few
of the oldest women wiped their eyes. Then the indefatigable
Dariya be­gan to direct the clearing of the table. Younger men
drifted off to attend to certain necessary chores before the next
phase of the celebration, which would include dancing and singing.
Old folks ambled out of the open-air shelter to take their ease, the
men replenishing their pipes and the women gossiping softly, like
pigeons. When Pyotr thought to look about in search of Tamara, he
discovered that she had run off into the golden sunshine together
with the other youngsters. A pang of loss touched his heart as he
realized that she belonged to the village now. She was part of the
soul.

Seliac arose from the table and beckoned Pyotr to come for a
stroll. "There are still some questions of yours that I must answer,
grandson. And a few that I would ask you. "

They followed a path among the houses that led into a grove of
ven­erable walnut trees, their branches heavy with green-husked
fruit. Pyotr said, "I will have to begin my return journey soon. The
thought of negotiating that road in darkness freezes my balls. "

"But you must stay the night! I offer you my own bed. "

"You are very kind, " Pyotr said with distant formality. "But I must
return to my duties in Sochi. There are patients at the Institute for
Mental Health requiring my urgent attention. I bear heavy
responsibil­ities and the - the loss of Vera will make my workload
that much greater until adjustments can be made. "

"She was your comrade as well as your wife. " The old man
nodded slowly. "I understand. You were well suited to each other
both in tem­perament and in the blood. Instinctively, Vera chose
well even as she defied us. The ways of God are ingenious. "

The two walked in silence for a few minutes. Somewhere a horse
whinnied and children let out squeals of laughter. Then the old man
asked, "Are you of Georgian heritage entirely, grandson? Your
flame-colored hair and fair complexion suggest the Cherkess. "

"I am descended from both races, " Pyotr said stiffly. His
spectacular hair, now mercifully graying, had been somewhat of an
embarrassment to him throughout his professional life. He had
passed it on to Tamara, who gloried in it.

"The Caucasian peoples are all rich in soul, " Seliac observed,
"even though some of the tribes scanted its nurturing as modern
ways over­came the ancient customs... And is it not true that one of
your an­cestors belonged to a group even more brilliantly ensouled
than the folk of Apsny? I am speaking of the Rom. The
Wanderers. "

Pyotr looked startled. "There was an old scandal whispered about
my maternal grandmother, that she had been impregnated by a
gypsy lover before her marriage. But how you should know that -"

"Oh, grandson, " laughed the 123-year-old patriarch of Verkhnyaya
Bzyb. "Surely you have guessed by now why I know it, just as you
know what kind of special human being your late wife was, and
what your daughter is, and why you were commanded to bring her
to us. "

Pyotr stopped dead, turning away from the old man in a fury, willing
himself to be sober again, free of the thrall of this bewitched village
Vera had rebelled against so many years earlier, when she had run
away to the Black Sea Coast and civilization...

"Vera left us, " Seliac said, "because she did not love the man we
chose to be her husband. And she took seriously the tenets of
dialectical materialism presented in the schoolbooks, with their
naive, romantic view of the perfectability of human nature through a
mere socialist revolution. Vera came to believe that our ancient
soul-way was super­stition, reactionary and elitist, contravening the
basic socialist philos­ophy. And so she denied her birthright and
went to Sochi just before the Great Patriotic War. She threw
herself into hospital work and studies, remained a valiant maiden,
and seemed wed to Party loyalty and her profession of healing.
She almost managed to forget what she had been, as others have
done when distracted by the turmoil of modern times. Over the
years we called out to her, but there was never an answer. We
mourned her as lost. But all unknown to us, quite late in life she had
found you, her ideal mate, and when she was forty-two your
marvelous child was born."

"Tamara..."

Pyotr still refused to face the village elder. He stood on the stony
bank of a brook at the edge of the walnut grove, looking over the
countryside. The steep little fields and pastures were a green and
golden patchwork on the slopes. Crowded against their low rock
walls were hundreds of white-painted hives, piled high like
miniature apartment complexes, the homes of mild-tempered
Caucasian bees that flew about every­where gathering late-season
nectar for the aromatic honey that provided the village with its
principal income. Thyme was still blooming, and hogweed and
melilot and red clover, filling the crisp air with fragrance.
Grasshoppers sang their last song of doom before the frost, which
had already whitened the highest northern ridges below the spine
of the Bokovoi Range. It was here in these mountains that Jason
had sought the Golden Fleece; and here that Prometheus stole the
divine fire; and here that defiant tribes guided by sturdy
centenarians withstood wave after wave of conquering outlanders:
Apsny, Land of the Soul, a place of legends, where human minds
were said to accomplish wonders that conventional science
deemed impossible! But not all scientists scoffed, Pyotr recalled.
There were other believers besides the egregious Vasi­liev. The
great Nikolai Nikolayevich Semyonov, who had won the 1956
Nobel Prize for Chemistry, had spoken in favor of psychic
research, and it was studied seriously in Britain and America. But
even if such things as telepathy and psychokinesis did exist, did
they have prag­matic value?

Seliac Eshba bent and picked up a green walnut fruit from the
ground. "Does this?" he inquired, his dark eyes twinkling. "It is a
thing with a tough husk; and if you break into it, it stains the fingers
badly, and then there is a second inner shell that must be cracked
before the meat is reached. But the walnut is sweet and nourishing,
and if a man is patient and long-sighted he may even plant it in the
ground and someday reap a thousandfold. " Seliac scrutinized the
green ball and frowned. "Ouff! A weevil has been at this one. "
Cocking his arm, he flung the useless thing over the brook into the
pasture. "Perhaps the goats will eat it... but for the finest trees, one
must choose the best possible seed. "

"As you have?" Pyotr's laugh was bitter. "You draw a striking
anal­ogy. But even if it's a valid one... Tamara is only one little girl. "

"But a mental titan. And there are others - not many yet, but
in­creasing in numbers - all over the world. "

Pyotr whirled about to lock eyes with the village elder. "You can't
possibly know that!"

"We do know. "

"I suppose you claim some kind of telepathy -"

"Only a  little  of that, and not  over great  distances. The  real
knowledge comes because of our close rapport with the earth, with
her seasons and rhythms, those of the year and those of the aeon.
This land round about you with its hidden fertile valleys and secret
caves is the place where humanity first learned to dream. Yes! It
happened here, in the Caucasus, as the great winter ebbed and
flowed and primitive people honed their minds yearning for the
glories of spring. The hardships they endured forced them toward
the long fruition. Do you know that walnut trees will not bear fruit in
the tropics? They need the winter. In the old days, they needed it
twice! Once to stimulate the fruit to form, and again to rot the thick
husks so that the inner nut would be set free to germinate. Our
human cycle is much longer, but we, too, have passed through our
first great winter and attained the power of self-reflection. Over the
ages our minds have ripened slowly, giving us greater and greater
mastery over the physical world, and over our lower nature. "

"Oh, very good! And now I suppose the superior nuts are ready to
fall! The winter of nuclear war that threatens - is this what will bring
about your mental revolution? Are we to look forward to supermen
levitating over glowing ashes, singing telepathic dirges?"

"It might work out that way, " the old man admitted. "But think: One
doesn't have to wait for the walnut husks to rot naturally, not if one
is determined - and not afraid of stained hands. " Work with us,
grandson. Help us prepare Tamara to meet her peers, to use her
great gifts worthily. There will be a price you and I must pay, but we
dare not wait passively for the terrible season to do our work for
us...

Seliac held out his brown-dyed hand to Pyotr, smiled, and waited.



9

BERLIN, NEW HAMPSHIRE, EARTH

21 OCTOBER  1966



the notion of killing Don insinuated itself into his mind as he was
clocking out of the paper mill that Friday afternoon, and the other
office workers called out to him.

The women: "Night, Rogi! Save a pew for us at the wedding. "

The men: "See you at the Blue Ox tonight. We'll give that big stud a
sendoff he'll never forget!"

And the snide crack from Kelly the Purchasing Agent, Rogi's boss:
"Hey - don't look so down in the mouth, fella. The best man always
wins, even when he loses!"

Rogi grinned lamely and muttered something, then plunged into
the stream of exiting employees with long strides.

After the bachelor party. He could do it then. Don would be so
drunk that his mental defenses would be shaky and his offensive
coercion and reflexes slowed. The two of them would have to
cross the bridge over the Androscoggin on the way back to the
rooming house.

(Am I going crazy? My God, am I seriously considering killing my
own brother?)

My PK would be strong enough. It had been the last time, when the
fishing boat tipped in Umbagog Lake. Only my will had been too
weak.

(An accident! Of course it had been an accident. And unthinkable
not to haul Don up from the depths, swim with him to shore, and
pump life back into him... )

A car went by Rogi as he walked through the parking lot, windows
down and radio playing. His throat constricted. The song was
"Sunny,” and that had been his private, precious name for her. But
she had will­ingly surrendered it to Don along with all the rest.

Rogi went down to walk along the wide river. It was a fine evening,
with the sun just gone behind Mount Forist and the trees touched
with color from the first light frosts: the kind of evening they had
loved to share, beginning with the days they had walked back from
the library. There was a certain grove of trees down by the shore,
on the other side of the CN tracks, and a large flat rock. The trees
muffled the noise from the traffic along Main Street and gave an
illusion of privacy.

He found himself coming upon the place, and she was waiting for
him.

"Hello, Rogi. I hoped you'd come. I - I wished you would. "

And my mind's ear heard you!

He only nodded, keeping his eyes on the ground.

"Please, " she begged him. "You've avoided me for so long and
now there's no more time. You must understand. I want tomorrow
to be a happy day. "

"I wish you every happiness, Sunny... Marie-Madeleine. Always. "

Mentally, he saw her hold out supplicating hands. "But it'll all be
spoiled if you're miserable at the wedding, Rogi. If you blame Don.
He couldn't help what happened any more than I could. Love is
without rules. Quand le coup de foudre frappe... "

He laughed sadly. "You're even willing to use French when you talk
about him. But with me, you pretended you didn't understand. It
made me bold. I said things to you that I'd never dare say in
English. Very casually, so the tone wouldn't give me away.
Sneaking les mots d'amour into ordinary conversation and thinking
what a sly devil I was. "

"You were very sweet. "

"And of course you really did know how I felt. From the start. "

"Of course. And I learned to love you. I mean - to love being with
you. No! Oh, Rogi, try to understand! With Don it was so different.
The way I feel about him -"

He clenched his teeth, not trusting himself to speak. His eyes lifted
and met hers, those innocent blue eyes lustrous with tears. His
mind cried out to her:

You were mine! It went without saying. All we had to do was wait
until we were old enough. That was sensible, wasn't it? And he had
so many others to choose from, so many other girls he could have
taken. Did take. Why did he need you, too, Sunny?

She said, "Rogi, I always want you to be my dearest friend. My
brother. Please. "

The temptation had been strong before but now it became
overwhelm­ing, a compulsion thundering in his brain that battered
away the camouflage of abstraction he had erected to disguise it.
Kill Don. Tonight. He said, "Don't worry about me, Sunny. It'll be all
right. " She was weeping, clutching the strap of her shoulder bag in
both hands and shrinking away from him. "Rogi, I'm so sorry. But I
love him so much. "

He wanted to take her in his arms and dry her tears. He wanted to
shout: You only think you love him! You don't realize that he's
be­witched you - coerced you. When he's dead you'll come to your
senses and realize that the one you really love is me. You'll cry
bitter tears for him, but in time you'll forget that you ever loved
anyone but me.

Aloud he said, "I understand. Believe me. "

She smiled through the tears. "Be his best man tomorrow, Rogi,
and dance with me at the wedding. We'll all drink champagne and
be happy. Please tell me that you will. "

He took her gently by the shoulders and kissed the top of her
head. The smooth hair was as pale and shining as cornsilk. "I'll do
whatever it takes to make you happy, Sunny. Goodbye. "



Dave Valois nearly ruined the plan when he insisted on driving the
two of them home after the bachelor bash at the Blue Ox. But Rogi
pointed out that walking a mile in the fresh air was just what Don
needed to sober up.

"Gotta burn off some of that booze. Ol' Donnie's got such a skinful,
he'll be in a coma tomorrow 'less he walks it off. Father Racine
won't 'preciate a zombie groom. No, sir! You just leave ol' Don to
me. "

It was three in the morning, the Ox was closed tight, and the gang
was dispersing in dribs and drabs, bidding farewell with honks and
convivial hollering. Valois and some others protested a bit, but
gave in when Rogi took his twin's arm and started slowly down
Main Street with him. Don was all but unconscious. Only Rogi's
coercion kept him upright and plodding along the sidewalk. Dave
circled the block in his Ford and came back to yell, "You sure you
don't want a ride?"

"Damn sure, " said Rogi. "See you in church. "

A few minutes later, he and Don were virtually alone, walking slowly
toward the bridge. It was a chilly night with no wind. The
Androscoggin was a wide pool of ink reflecting a flawless duplicate
of upside-down streetlights and the omnipresent pillars of steam
that rose from the pulp mills.

Under his breath, Rogi chanted: "Pick 'em up and lay 'em down.
Pick 'em up and lay 'em down. Attaboy, Donnie. Just keep
slogging. "

"Argh, " said Don. His mind was a merry-go-round of fractured
images and emotions - hilarity, triumph, anticipation, and erotic
scenarios featuring Sunny and himself. He didn't suspect a thing.
Rogi had thrown off most of the effects of inebriation and was
concentrating on main­taining his mental shield and keeping Don
moving. The two of them made slow progress to the center of the
bridge. A few cars drove along Main Street, but none made the turn
to cross the river.

Rogi came to a halt. "Hey - looky here, man! Look where we are. "

Don uttered an interrogatory grunt.

"On the bridge, kid, " Rogi caroled. "The good old bridge. Hey,
re­member what we used to do in high school? Walk the rail! Drive
the other guys nuts. They didn't know we could use our PK to
balance. "

Don summoned concentration with a mighty effort. He giggled,
ex­uding good-natured contempt. "Yeah, I 'member. You were
chicken, though, till I showed you how. "

"I'm not chicken now, Don, " Rogi said softly. "But I bet you are. "

The railing was not exceptionally high. It was of metal, wide and
pipelike, interrupted every nine meters or so by a lamp stanchion.
The two young men stood by one of those stanchions now and
Rogi wrapped Don's arm around it so he wouldn't fall down.

"Watch this!" Grasping the lamppost in one hand, Rogi vaulted up.
"I'm gonna do it now, Don. Watch!" He extended his arms,
teetered a little, then began walking steadily along the pipe. The
deep Androscoggin was a star-flecked black mirror nearly twenty
meters below. Don could swim, but not strongly. It wouldn't take
much mental strength to keep him under in his present condition.
The tricky part was getting him off the bridge without laying a hand
on him.

"Wah-hoo! Boy, that's a kick!" Rogi skipped along the pipe, which
was a hand's span in width. When he reached the next stanchion
he hugged it and swung himself around and around, cackling
madly. "Oh, that's great! C'mon, Donnie. Now it's your turn. "

Rogi jumped to the pavement and faced his brother, tensing.

Don blinked. His teeth gleamed in a crooked grin. "Don't wanna. "

Rogi's guts lurched sickeningly. God! Had he leaked the hostility
after all? Given himself away? "Aw. What'sa matter, Don? You too
scared to walk the rail? Or maybe your li'l heart's throbbin' too hard,
thinkin' about Sunny. "

"Ain't my heart throbbin', " Don said, leering.

Rogi kept a grip on himself. "Then you're chicken. "

"Nope. Just drunk 's a skunk. "

"Well, so'm I - but I walked the rail. I'm just as smashed as you and
I walked the fucker. Thing is, I don't lose the power when I've got a
snootful - and you do. "

"Like hell!" Don balled a fist. "Famme ta guêle!"

"I'll shut up when you walk, pansy!"

Don gave a bellow, seized the stanchion in both hands, and hauled
himself up. It was perfect. Even if someone saw them there could
be no suspicion of foul play. Rogi was ten meters away and Don
had taken his first step.

"So long, Don, " Rogi said. "I'll take good care of Sunny. "

He exerted both PK and coercion with all his strength.

Don screamed and his feet flew out from under him. For a split
second he hung unsupported except by his own panic. Then he
fell, but he caught the railing and clung to it, kicking. His heavy
boots clanged against the ironwork. Rogi concentrated on his
brother's hands, lifting the fingers from the dew-slippery metal one
by one.

Don was crying his name and cursing. His fingernails broke and his
hands slid down the uprights and scrabbled at the toe-plates and
the rough concrete footing. Black blood from his lacerated skin
splattered the front of his windbreaker. There was a long cut
across his right cheek. Don's PK seemed to have deserted him
but he still clung to the bridge with all his considerable physical
strength, no longer wasting energy in kicking. Waves of rage and
imperfectly aimed coercion spewed from his brain.

"Let go, damn you!" Rogi cried. He felt his own powers beginning
to weaken. His skull seemed about to burst. He would have to take
a chance - get up close and stamp on Don's hands -

He was blind. Deprived of both vision and farsight.

A voice said: No, Rogi.

Unable to perceive his target, Rogi found that his coercion and
psychokinesis were useless. He let out a shout of despair and
relief and dropped like a dead man to the pavement. The voice that
addressed him was calm and remote:

Once more it seems that I am fated to intervene. How interesting.
One might conjecture that Don survived in some other fashion, and
yet the proleptic foci show no asymmetry as a result of my
obtrusion...

Rogi lifted his head and groaned. "You! You again. "

It said: Your brother must live, Rogi. He must wed Marie-Madeleine
Fabré and beget children of her according to the great pattern.
One of those children will become a man of high destiny. He will
not only possess mental powers more extraordinary than his
father's, but he will understand them - and help the whole human
race to understand them. This child unborn will have to overcome
great hardship. He will need consolation and guidance that his
parents will be unable to supply, and the friendship of another
operant metapsychic. You will be that child's friend and mentor,
Rogi. Now get up.

Nonono goaway let me kill him Imustonlyway must KILL -

Rogi, get up.

Better perhaps weboth die freaks damned unrealmen unrealhuman
kill them kill them BOTH intowaterdowndowndissolve -

Du calme, mon infant.

Best. Would be best.

You know nothing. Nothing! Get up, Rogi. You will remember
ev­erything I have said and you will act upon it at the appropriate
time.

"You're not my Ghost at all. " The realization filled him with
irra­tional sorrow.

The thing said: All of you are my responsibility and my expiation.
Your entire family. Your entire race.

With great difficulty, Rogi climbed to his feet. He was no longer
blind and he could see Don standing under a lamp, swaying, one
hand over his face. Poor old Donnie.

The Ghost said: Your brother has forgotten your attack. His injuries
are healed. Take him home, put him to bed, and get him to the
church on time.

Rogi began to laugh. He rocked and roared and stamped his feet
and howled. He wouldn't have to do it after all, and he wouldn't be
damned. Only poor Donnie, not him. The Ghost, that meddling shit,
had turned "Thou shalt not" into "Thou canst not" and set him free!
Oh, it was so funny. He couldn't stop laughing...

The Ghost waited patiently.

Rogi finally said to it, "So I let Don have his way. Then later on I
become a kind of godfather to his child prodigy. "

Yes.

Fury took hold of him suddenly. "But you couldn't let me be the
kid's father! You couldn't let me marry Sunny and beget the
superbrat my­self. Don's genes are Homo superior and mine are -"

The Ghost said: You are sterile.

Don was walking shakily toward him. A single car turned off Main
Street onto the bridge, slowed as it passed them, then accelerated
again when Don waved mockingly at it.

"I'm sterile... "

The Ghost said: The orchitis you suffered five years ago
destroyed the semeniferous tubules. Your self-redactive faculty
was inadequate to re­pair the damage. You function as a male but
will sire no offspring.

No little Odd Johns to dandle on his knee? Rogi was quite
uncon­cerned. The responsibility for unleashing the freaks on the
world would be Don's, not his! But pride made him say, "Heal me!
You could. I know it. "

It is not possible, nor is it appropriate. When the design is
complete you'll understand. For now, let it be. But take heart,
because you have a long life to live and important work ahead of
you.

It was drunken lunacy! A nightmare. And all at once Rogi was
deathly tired. "I don't know what the hell you're talking about. Go
away. For God's sake, leave me alone!"

I'll go for now, but I'll be back... when I'm needed. Au 'voir, cher
Rogi.

Don came stumbling up, a bleary smile on his face. "Hey, Rogi,
you look bad, man. Never could hold your liquor. Not like me.
C'mon, man, let's go home. "

"Right, " Rogi said. He draped an arm over his brother's shoulder.
Supporting each other, the two of them went off into the night.



10

excerpts from:



address given by dr. j. b. rhine

at the annual convention of the american psychological association



washington, dc, earth



4 september 1967



some impression of the spread of psi research over the world in
recent years can be had from facts connected with the McDougall
Award. This annual event, like the Parapsychological As­sociation,
was initiated at Duke in 1957 and was later adopted by the Institute
for Parapsychology when it took over the laboratory. The Award is
granted each year by the Institute staff for the most outstand­ing
contribution to parapsychology published during the preceding
year by workers not on the staff of the Institute. During the ten
years in which the awards have been made, two have been given
for American contributions and two for British, with one divided
between the two countries; one award each was made to
Czechoslovakia, India, the Netherlands, South Africa, and Sweden.

Another indication of the expansion of parapsychology may be had
from the establishment of new research centers. A number of
these have had the sponsorship of psychiatry, such as the one at
Maimonides Hospital in Brooklyn, one at the Department of
Psychiatry at the Uni­versity of Virginia, and a third at the
Neuropsychiatric Institute at the University of California at Los
Angeles. Others with more physically and technologically oriented
connections are located at the Newark College of Engineering in
New Jersey, the Department of Biophysics at the University of
Pittsburgh, and the Boeing Research Laboratories in Seattle.

The center in Leningrad is in the department of physiology; that at
Strasbourg, in psychophysiology; and the laboratory at St.
Joseph's Col­lege in Philadelphia, in the department of biology.
Psychology-centered psi research in the university is found mainly
in foreign countries rather than in the U. S. City College in New
York has what may rightly be called a center; and at Clemson
University, as well as at branches of the University of California
(Los Angeles, Berkeley, Davis), psychologists are allowed to do
psi research. But something more like centers have long existed in
Europe at Utrecht and Freiburg. More recently work has begun that
seems firmly planted in psychology departments at the Jap­anese
Defense Academy and the Universities of Edinburgh, Lund, and
Andhra (India). Some recognized research, of course, is not
connected with any institution whatever, as, for example, the work
of Forwald in Sweden and that of Ryzl while still in Prague.

One of the noteworthy changes taking place in the present period
is the development of more teamwork with workers in other
branches and the use of skills, knowledge, and equipment of many
other research areas. Some of the psi workers today are working
with physiological equipment or with computer analyses; others are
depending on elec­tronic apparatus in the measurement of psi
performance or utilizing new devices in statistics. Numbers of them
are using psychological tests or perhaps working in a laboratory of
microphysics, or of animal behavior....

Psi research is obviously of special concern to those who are
inter­ested in the full range of the unexplored nature of man, over
and above the existing subdivisions of science. As has happened
already in many of the smaller branches, parapsychology is certain
to find itself grouped sooner or later with other fields in one or
more of those composite sciences which are reshaping the
modern structure of knowledge - groupings such as the space
sciences, the earth sciences, the microbio­logical sciences, or
such major disciplines as medicine, education, and the like. When
we come eventually to the stage when the sciences of man take a
pre-eminent position, we shall find that one of the places around
the conference table will have to be reserved for parapsychology.
If the findings are as important as they seem to workers in this
field, we shall need no great concern over future recognition by the
academic world, by the larger bodies of the sciences, and by other
institutions that matter. Rather, the urgent needs today have to do
with holding on to the firm beginning psi research has made. This
research science needs to operate for the present mainly in the
freer terrain of the independent institute or center, or with such
semiautonomous attachments as may be found in hospitals,
clinics, engineering schools, smaller colleges, and industrial
research laboratories. In time its own roots will make the
attachments that are right, and proper, and lasting. Such growth is
slow, but it can be assisted by careful effort and understanding and
by recog­nition of its significance.



11

FROM THE MEMOIRS OF ROGATIEN REMILLARD



after the wedding of Don and Sunny I was miserable for months. I
toyed with the notion of moving out of town and went so far as to
peruse the "Help Wanted" column in the Manchester and Portland
newspapers. But by Christmas the entire family knew that Sunny
was pregnant, and I presume that my subconscious was in thrall to
the Ghost and its great expectations for the unborn - and so I
stayed.

Since that night on the bridge, Don and I had erected virtually
im­pregnable mental bulwarks against one another. Our social
relationship was affable on the surface, but mind-to-mind
communication was now nonexistent. I avoided Don and Sunny as
much as I decently could. It wasn't difficult, since they had moved
into a circle that included mostly young married couples like
themselves. I saw them during holiday get-togethers and at the
funeral of Tante Lorraine late in March. They seemed to be happy.

I continued at my job in the purchasing department of the mill and
Don worked in shipping, some distance away in another building. I
feel certain that he was doing as I was during those days: trying to
live as much like a "normal" as possible. I no longer used
psychokinesis, and I confined my coercive manipulations to
feather-light nudges of the office manager, a dour Yankee named
Galusha Pratt, who looked upon me as hard-working, ingratiating,
and deserving of advancement when the right spot came along.

During my leisure hours I practiced cross-country skiing and went
hiking in the mountains, and I continued to read whatever books I
could find that dealt seriously with paranormal mental activity. My
researches were still on the impoverished side, however, and
would remain so until the 1970s, when the legitimate science
establishment finally be­gan to concede that "mind" might be more
than an enigma best left to philosophers and theologians.



The child was born on 17 May 1967, some seven and a half
months after his parents' wedding. He was a small baby with an
oversized head and the charitable consensus was that he was
premature. My first sight of him was eleven days later, when I
drove him to church for the bap­tism. He looked pink, adequately
fleshed, and not at all unfinished. Sunny's sister Linda and I
renounced Satan and all his works on behalf of the infant, and then
Father Racine trickled cold water over the hair­less, swollen little
skull and baptized him Denis Rogatien.

Little blue eyes with shocked, dilated pupils flew wide open. The
baby sucked air and let it out in a wail.

And his mind clutched at me.

What I did was instinctive. I projected: [Comfort.]

He protested: !!! [cold] + [wet] = [discomfort] CRY!

I said: [Discomfort.] CRY. [Reassurance.]

He was dubious: ? !! CRY!

I amplified: Soon MOTHERyou soon youMOTHER. [Comfort.]

He was figuring it out: [HeartbeatwarmsecuregraspmilksuckLOVE]
= MOTHER? Cry...

I said: [Affirmation.] MotherGOOD. CRY. [Comfort + reassurance.]

He said: LoveYOU. [Acceptance trust peace.]

Then he went back to sleep, leaving me reeling.



It amazed me when the baby demonstrated telepathic ability at
such an early age; but I didn't realize just what else was amazing
until I thought the thing over lying in bed that night, and did a crude
replay of the incident. There in the church, distracted by the
ceremony and the relatives standing around, I had not been
consciously aware of the feed­back taking place between my mind
and the infant's. But the replay made it clear - and explained why I
still felt an uncanny closeness to that small mind asleep in its crib
on the other side of town.

I jumped out of bed, turned on the lights, and rooted through my
boxes of books until I found several on developmental psychology.
They confirmed my suspicion. Not only was my nephew a telepath,
but he was also a precocious telepath. His mind had displayed a
synthesizing ability, an intellectual grasp far above that of normal
newborn infants. He was hardly out of the womb, and yet he was
thinking, drawing conclusions in a logical manner.

I knew what I was going to have to do. I spent the rest of the night
thrashing and cursing the Family Ghost, and in the morning I called
in sick at work. Then I walked to the little rented house on School
Street to tell Sunny what kind of a brother-in-law she had, and what
kind of a husband, and what kind of baby son.

It was a glorious day. Spring flowers bloomed in the little front
yards and even dingy Berlin looked picturesque instead of shabby.
She came to the door with the baby in her arms, an eighteen-year-
old Madonna with long fair hair and an unsuspecting smile of
welcome. We sat in the kitchen - bright yellow and white enamel,
cafe curtains, Formica counters, and the scent of chocolate cake in
the oven - and I told her how Don and I discovered we were
telepaths.

I wanted to make the revelation as gentle as possible, so I did it in
the form of a life history, starting with the incident of the bear in the
raspberry patch. (I left out the Ghost. ) I explained how my brother
and I only gradually came to understand our singularity, how we
experi­mented with mindspeech and image projection and deep-
sight even before we started school. I demonstrated how easy it is
to cheat on exams when farsight enables you to read a paper lying
open ten feet away - behind you. I told her about psychokinesis
and revealed the secret of how young O'Shaughnessy got stuffed
into the basketball hoop. I discreetly moved a kitchen chair around
the floor to demonstrate the PK faculty. (She only smiled. ) I
explained why Don and I had early decided to keep our abilities
secret. I went into detail about Odd John and my fearful reaction to
it. Some instinct warned me not to mention the coercive
metafaculty to her - and of course I said nothing about my
conviction that Don had used some mesmerizing power to win her
away from me. Of the terrible events that took place on the eve of
the wedding I spoke not at all.

My long recital took most of the morning. She listened to it almost
without speaking but I could feel the tides of conflicting emotion
sweeping over her - affection for me and fear for my sanity,
disbelief coupled with profound unease, fascination overlaid by a
growing dismay. As I talked, she made us lunch and fed the baby.
When I finally finished and sat back exhausted in my chair, she
smiled in her sweet way, laid her hand over mine, and said:

"Poor dear Rogi. You've been awfully troubled these past months,
haven't you? And we hardly saw you, so we didn't know. But now
we'll see - Don and I - that you get help. "

Behind those dear blue eyes was a flat refusal to even consider
the truth of what I had told her. Adamant denial. And worse than
that was a new kind of fear. Of me.

God... I'd bungled it. I projected meekness, nonthreat, pure love.
Sunny, don't be afraid! Not of this thing. Not of me.

Very quietly I said, "I can't blame you for being skeptical, Sunny.
Lord knows it took years for Don and me to come to terms with our
special mind-powers. It's no wonder that the notion seems
outrageous to you. Crazy. Frightening, even. But... I'm the same
old Rogi, and Don is still Don. The fact that we can talk without
opening our mouths or move a thing around without touching it
doesn't make us monsters. "

As I said it, I knew I was lying.

She frowned, wanting to be fair. Early-afternoon sun streamed into
the small kitchen. On the table were cups with dregs of cold tea,
and plates with cake crumbs, and a bowl of fragrant lilacs making a
bar­rier between us. She said, "I read once about some studies
that were made at a college. Extrasensory perception experiments
with flash cards. "

I seized the opening eagerly. "Dr. Rhine, at Duke University! You
see? It's respectable science. I have books I can show you -"

"But no one can read another person's mind! It's impossible!" Her
panic stung me like a whip and there was outrage, too, at the
possibility of mental violation. "I couldn't bear it if you knew my
secret thoughts. If Don did!"

I summoned all sincerity. "We can't, Sunny. It's not like that. You
normals - I mean, people like you - are closed books to telepaths.
We can feel your strongest emotions and sometimes we receive
images when you think about something very intensely. But we
can't read your secret thoughts at all. Even with Don, I can only
receive the farspeech he wants to transmit. "

Partial truth. It was very difficult to decipher the innermost thoughts
of normals; but often enough they were vaguely readable,
especially when highlighted by strong feelings. And then many
persons "sub-vocalized" - mumbled silently to themselves - when
they weren't talking out loud. We could pick up this kind of stuff
rather easily.

The problem was to sort it, to make sense of the conceptual-
emotional hash that floated like pond-scum at the vestibule of an
undisciplined mind, confusing and concealing the inner thoughts.
Most of the time, you instinctively shut all that mental static out to
keep from being driven crazy.

I said, "You never have to worry that I'd spy on you and Don
through his mind, either. We put up mind-screens automatically
now to shut one another out. It's a trick we learned years ago. I'd
never pry into your life with him, Sunny. Never... "

She flushed, and I knew I'd seen through to at least one of her
great fears. She was a conventional, modest young wife and I
loved her for it.

"These so-called superpowers, " I said, "aren't really any more
un­usual than being able to play the piano well, or paint beautiful
pictures. They're just something we were born with, something we
can't help. You've read about people who seem to predict the
future. And - and water-dowsers! My God, that's an old New
England thing that nobody around these parts thinks twice about,
but it must seem like black magic to people who aren't used to it. I
think there may be lots of other telepaths, too, and psychokinetics,
but they're afraid to admit having the powers because of the way
normals would react. "

(But if there were others, why hadn't we been able to contact
them? And why hadn't researchers like Rhine found them - instead
of the unreliable and ambiguously talented "psychics" who
participated in his experiments?)

Sunny said, "I want to believe you, Rogi. "

"There was a particular reason why I came here today. It wasn't just
to unburden my own mind. I'd never have intruded on you for my
own sake. Not even for Don's. But now there's Denis. "

She sat there frozen with fresh disbelief. "Denis?"

"Yesterday at the christening I felt a wonderful thing. The baby's
mind communicated with me. No - don't look shocked. It was
mar­velous! He was startled by the water poured on him and I
reached out telepathically without thinking, used the kind of mental
soothing Don and I used to share when we were little kids. And
Denis responded. He did more than that! There was - a kind of
creative flash, something Very special. At first I only transmitted
formless feelings to him, trying to calm him and make him stop
crying. He grabbed at the comfort but it wasn't enough, so I let my
mind say, 'Soon you're going to be back with your mother, and
everything will be all right. ' Only I said it in the kind of mental
shorthand that Don and I sometimes use, not projecting real
words, just the concept of mother and baby together and happy.
And do you know what Denis did? He made a connection in his
mind between his own notion of mother and the image I projected!
It's what psychologists call a mental synthesis, a putting together.
But... a baby as young as Denis shouldn't have been able to do
that yet. He's too young. In another month or two, yes. But not yet. "

She said coldly, "My baby did nothing of the kind. "

"But he did, Sunny. I'm certain of it. "

"You're imagining things. It's ridiculous. "

"Look, " I said reasonably. "You go get Denis and I'll try to show
you. He's not even asleep in there. He's listening -"

"No!" She radiated a fierce, protective maternal aura. "My baby's
normal! There's nothing wrong with him!"

"He's more than normal, Sunny. Don't you see? He's probably
some kind of ESP genius! If you really want proof, you could
probably have him tested at one of the colleges or hospitals that
are doing -"

"No, no, no! He's just an ordinary baby!" She jumped to her feet
and the fear came pouring from her like a cataract of ice. "How can
you say these things to me, Rogi? You're sick! Sick with jealousy
because I married Don and had his child. Oh, go away! Leave us
alone!"

Exasperated, I began to shout at her. "You can't hide your head in
the sand! You know I'm not crazy and you know that what I've told
you is the truth! Your own mind gives you away!"

"No!" she screamed.

I gestured. The vase of lilacs on the table rose two feet in the air. I
sent it soaring across the kitchen to the bowl of the sink and let it
fall with a crash. In another room, the baby let out a terrible cry.
Sunny came at me like a tigress with her hands clenched into fists
and her eyes blazing.

"You freak! You bastard! Get out of my house!"

I had never in my life touched her with my coercion, but there was
nothing else to do.

Sit down.

Her voice choked off and she turned into a statue, except for her
widening eyes. Her face was a tragic mask, open-mouthed in silent
screaming.

Sit down.

Somewhere the baby was howling like a wild thing, reacting to the
emotion of his mother. Sunny's eyes implored me but I held her
fast. Two tears rolled down her frozen cheeks. She let her eyelids
close and volition evaporated. She sank slowly onto one of the
chairs. Her head fell forward, veiled by the long blond hair, and she
wept without making a sound.

Don't be afraid. Stay right there.

She wasn't hearing my precise telepathic words, of course, only
their

meaning filtered through the larger coercive impulse. I went and
got Denis, wrapped him in a blanket, and handed him carefully to
his mother. Then I freed her mind from the compulsion and
projected re­assurance at the baby.

CRY. [Tranquillity.] "It's okay, Denis. Maman's fine now. "

His wails ceased abruptly. He hiccupped and sniffed. I extended
my hand to the child, pointing my index finger, and ex­erted the
lightest invitation. The baby's eyes were still swimming but his tiny
mouth curved in a smile. A bare doll-like arm came out from under
the blanket, reached unerringly, and clasped the end of my finger
in a firm grip. I said:

ROGI [touch] DENIS. I/Rogi -you/Denis. Rogi [love] Denis.

There was a sudden radiant concordance. Even Sunny must have
sensed it for she gave a slight gasp. The baby cooed.

"Your name is Denis, " I said.

The baby made a small sound.

"Denis, " I repeated.

The little face shone. His mind said: DENIS! His voice uttered the
same funny little noise.

"He's trying to say his name, " I explained to Sunny, "but his vocal
cords and tongue really aren't hooked up properly to his brain yet.
But his mind knows that he's called Denis. "

Sunny rocked the child without speaking. She was still weeping
softly but the horror was gone, leaving only bewilderment and
reproach. Oh, Sunny, I'm so sorry you were afraid, so sorry for my
clumsiness...

"But I had to do it, " I told her, no longer coercing but pleading for
understanding. "I couldn't let you go on denying. It wouldn't be fair
to Denis. You're going to have to be brave for his sake. He's a
responsi­bility. He probably has all the special mental abilities that
Don and I have - plus more. I think he has superior intelligence,
too. If that giant brain of his has a chance to develop properly, he'll
grow up to be a great man. "

She was now entirely calm. The infant basked in self-satisfaction
and yawned. She held him tightly against her breast. "What am I
going to do, Rogi? Will - will they take him away from me?"

"Of course not! For God's sake, Sunny - when I said you could
have him tested by scientists, I only meant that you could do it if
you felt you had to. To prove he was - what I said. But nobody can
force you to give Denis up for experiments. No way! Not in this
country. If he was my son -"

She looked at me expectantly.

I was standing so close to her and the child that their combined
aura enveloped me. There was relief and dependency emanating
from her, and from the baby a strengthening variant of the
harmonious bond I had felt earlier.

Denis [love] Rogi.

Oh, Denis, you can't! You're not mine. She's not mine. It's Don you
have to imprint on. Your real father. Not me...

She asked quietly, "What would you do if Denis was your son?"

I heard myself speaking dispassionately. "The people who run
those ESP labs wouldn't have the faintest idea how to give this
baby what he needs. They're only normals. They've only dealt with
normals. Denis needs to be taught by others like himself. Only his
father and I are able to mindspeak him, so Don will have to - will
have to -"

DENIS/ROGI!

Mind to mind the bond was forging, whether I willed it or not. The
child was catching me just as he had earlier caught his mother, as
all babies form a linkage with their nearest and dearest.

Denis, no! Not me! (Bless me, Father, for I have sinned.
Attempted murder. Yes, we'd both been drinking. Yes, I was out of
my mind for love of her. Yes, I'm sorry sorry sorry... thank you. No,
Don never even knew. It was all in my mind? No, I don't think so,
but per­haps- perhaps - I don't know. Two months' fast and
abstinence and a good act of contrition and it's over and gone and
I'll never forget never...)

Sunny was saying, "Don help me teach the baby? Well, I suppose
we could ask him. He loves Denis, of course, but he's terribly old-
fashioned. I can't get him to change diapers or even give Denis his
bottle. What would Don have to do?"

My heart sank. I might have known. The Family Ghost knew all
along, of course. If it was a ghost.

"Well, Don would have to spend time with the baby. Talk to him,
mind to mind. Show him mental pictures. Help him learn control of
his faculties. "

She made a dubious little moue. "I suppose I can try. "

"This is important, Sunny! Listen. When Don and I were babies,
Tante Lorraine hardly had time to give us the love and attention
ordi­nary babies need - and God knows, she wasn't a telepath. So
we grew up stunted. "

Sunny opened her mouth to protest, but I held up my hand and
rushed on.

"Stunted in our use of the ESP powers, I mean. Look. Have you
ever read about feral children, ones raised by animals or locked
away from human contact by criminal parents? When they get out
at last into the normal world they're hardly human at all because
they were deprived of a certain kind of education they needed
when their young minds were most impressionable. Don and I
seem to be normal men - but we're really cripples, too. We should
have had somebody to teach us how to use our special mind-
powers when we were tiny babies. All my psychology books say
that the first three years of life are critical for mental development.
That must hold true for special powers even more than for ordinary
ones. Don and I discovered our powers accidentally and
developed them in a haphazard way. We've never been
comfortable with them. Don doesn't really understand them at all
and I'm - I know a bit more about them than he does, but not
enough. "

"You would have to explain to Don what had to be done. "

"Yes, of course. I'll work out some kind of general outline. Denis
would need to interact with both of you. There'd be a lot of things
you could do alone, Sunny - reading aloud to him, just talking to
him. I have a book by Piaget, a famous French child psychologist,
that I'll let you read. It gives the step-by-step progress of a baby's
learning. Really fascinating."

She nodded, holding the child close. The little boy's eyes were
fixed on me and there seemed to be an air of puzzlement about
him. I realized then that I had erected a mental barrier against his
persistent reaching out. He was rooting against the obstruction like
a puppy trying to dig under a wall.

No child no.

ROGI!

He forced himself on me. I tried to break eye contact with him and
found that I could not. There was a strength and determination in
him that was formidable, for all his immaturity, and I felt myself
weakening. Babies! They have ways to insure their survival that
even the normals are aware of. Mental ways. Why else do we think
a helpless, noisy, smelly, demanding, inconvenient little travesty of
a human being is almost irresistibly adorable?

No!

ROGImyROGI. [Love.]

My mental armor was dissolving. And then Denis smiled at me, and
the trap closed.

Sunny said, "We mustn't let any outsiders know the truth about
Denis for a long time. Not until he's old enough to protect himself
from people who might exploit him. We'll teach him to be cautious -
and to be good. " She cuddled his head against her cheek.
"Strange little superbaby. How will I ever keep up with him? I
wonder how Mama Einstein man­aged?"

"Little Alfred was a disappointing child, " I told her. "He didn't even
speak until he was four."

I went to the sink and began to gather up the broken pieces of the
lilac vase. It was quite a mess.



Don came home from work that evening and found Sunny and me
sitting with the baby on the front porch. While she made supper, he
and I had our first telepathic interchange in more than a year. I told
him what I had done, and why.

At first he laughed, and then he was enraged when I told him it was
his moral duty to undertake the special education of his son. We
got into a shouting match in the living room and Sunny came
running to put herself between us. Then she proceeded to beat
down every objec­tion Don could think of, all the while radiating
such passionate devo­tion to him and to Denis that I was
astounded. It was plain even to a fool like me that coercion was not
the force that bound Don and Sunny - nor had it ever been.

As she finished telling him of the plans she and I had worked out
for the first course of instruction, Don lifted his powerful arms in a
re­signed shrug. "All right! You win! I think it's a mistake to treat the
kid special - but what the hell. I'll mindspeak him the way you want.
But don't expect me to turn into a goddam kindergarten teacher,
okay?"

Sunny flung herself against him joyously and kissed him long and
hard. When he broke away from her he looked over her head and
gave me a sardonic grin.

"This business of working with the kid in the evenings. The flash
cards and all that crap. I'd be lousy at it. Tell you what, Rogi. You
help Sunny and me teach the kid. It's just the kind of thing you'd be
good at - and the whole damn thing is your idea, after all. How
about it?"

"What a wonderful idea, " Sunny said warmly. "Say you will, Rogi. "

From the bedroom came another plea: a formless mental one.

It was hopeless. The Family Ghost had won. I said, "All right. "

"Well, that's settled, " Don said. "What's for supper, sweetheart?"



12

excerpts from:



final report of the scientific study of unidentified flying objects



conducted by the university of colorado under contract to the
united states air force



9  JANUARY  1969



the idea that some UFOs may be spacecraft sent to Earth from
another civilization, residing on another planet of the solar sys­tem,
or on a planet associated with a more distant star than the Sun, is
called the extraterrestrial hypothesis (ETH). Some few persons
profess to hold a stronger level of belief in the actuality of UFOs
being visitors from outer space, controlled by intelligent beings,
rather than merely of the possibility, not yet fully established as an
observational fact. We shall call this level of belief ETA, for
extraterrestrial actuality....

Direct, convincing, and unequivocal evidence of the truth of ETA
would be the greatest single scientific discovery in the history of
man­kind. Going beyond its interest for science, it would
undoubtedly have consequences of surpassing significance for
every phase of human life. Some persons who have written
speculatively on this subject profess to believe that the supposed
extraterrestrial visitors come with beneficent motives, to help
humanity clean up the terrible mess that it has made. Others say
they believe that the visitors are hostile. Whether their coming
would be favorable or unfavorable to mankind, it is almost certain
that they would make great changes in the conditions of human
existence....

The question of ETA would be settled in a few minutes if a flying
saucer were to land on the lawn of a hotel where a convention of
the

American Physical Society was in progress, and its occupants
were to emerge and present a special paper to the assembled
physicists, reveal­ing where they came from, and the technology of
how their craft oper­ated. Searching questions from the audience
would follow.

In saying that thus far no convincing evidence exists for the truth of
ETA, no prediction is made about the future. If evidence appears
soon after this report is published, that will not alter the truth of the
state­ment that we do not now have such evidence. If new
evidence appears later, this report can be appropriately revised in
a second printing....

Whether there is intelligent life elsewhere (ILE) in the Universe is a
question that has received a great deal of serious speculative
attention in recent years.... Thus far we have no observational
evidence what­soever on the question, so therefore it remains
open.... The ILE ques­tion has some relation to the ETH or ETA
for UFOs as discussed in the preceding section. Clearly, if ETH is
true, then ILE must also be true because some UFOs have then to
come from some unearthly civiliza­tion. Conversely, if we could
know conclusively that ILE does not exist, then ETH could not be
true. But even if ILE exists, it does not follow that the ETH is true.

For it could be true that the ILE, though existent, might not have
reached a stage of development in which the beings have the
mechanical capacity or the desire to visit the Earth's surface.... We
have no right to assume that in life-communities everywhere there
is a steady evolution in the directions of both greater intelligence
and greater technological competence. Human beings now know
enough to destroy all life on Earth, and they may lack the
intelligence to work out social controls to keep themselves from
doing so. If other civilizations have the same limitation, then it might
be that they develop to the point where they destroy themselves
utterly before they have developed the technology needed to
enable them to make long space voyages.

Another possibility is that the growth of intelligence precedes the
growth of technology in such a way that by the time a society would
be technically capable of interstellar space travel, it would have
reached a level of intelligence at which it had not the slightest
interest in interstellar travel. We must not assume that we are
capable of imagin­ing now the scope and extent of future
technological development of our own or any other civilization, and
so we must guard against assum­ing that we have any capacity to
imagine what a more advanced society would regard as intelligent
conduct.

In addition to the great distances involved, and the difficulties
which they present to interstellar space travel, there is still another
problem. If we assume that civilizations annihilate themselves in
such a way that their effective intelligent life span is less than, say,
one hundred thou­sand years, then such a short time span also
works against the likeli­hood of successful interstellar
communication. The different civiliza­tions would probably reach
the culmination of their development at different epochs in cosmic
history....

In view of the foregoing, we consider that it is safe to assume that
no ILE outside of our solar system has any possibility of visiting
Earth in the next ten thousand years.



13

LENINGRAD, USSR, EARTH

5 MARCH 1969



"WE have saved the best for the last, Comrade Admiral. Please be
seated here at this table with the microphones... You other
comrades may take the chairs nearer the observation window. Dr.
Valentina Lubezhny, our specialist in biocommunications
phenomena, will bring the subject into the Faraday cage in just a
moment. There is a small delay. " Danilov offered an apologetic
smirk. "The little girl was very nervous. "

Kolinsky gave a curt nod and lowered his ample buttocks to the
hard wooden chair. Scared children! And you are the most
frightened of all, Comrade Doctor Asslicker, and rightly so,
considering the flimsy qual­ity of entertainment offered thus far in
your extremely expensive lab­oratory. Dull demonstrations of the
human bioenergetic field. A Chukchi shaman able to stop the heart
of a rat (but not the heart of any creature weighing more than four
hundred grams). A neurasthenic blind youth reading printed matter
with his fingertips. A modern Rasputin (sanitized) laying hands on
tortured rabbits and healing their wounds. A housewife doing
psychokinetic tricks with cigarettes and water glasses. A gypsy
who peers into a Polaroid camera lens and produces blurry "astral
photos" of the Petropavlovskaya Fortress, the Bronze Horseman,
and other local landmarks. (That one had looked promising - until

Danilov admitted that the subject could only "envision" places
where he had been. So much for psychic espionage!)

Sternly, Kolinsky said, "We have been most interested to see how
far you have progressed in the area of pure research, Comrade
Danilov. Still, it was not the existence of psychic powers that we
hoped to prove. Unlike the skeptics of the West, we are quite
willing to concede that the human brain is capable of such
activities. However, we had hoped that after five years of work you
might have uncovered a bioenergetic effect of more immediate
military significance. "

Danilov fiddled with the microphones, set out a pad of paper and
marker-pens, saw that the naval aides Guslin and Ulyanov and the
GRU attache Artimovich were settled in. "In just a few minutes we
will demonstrate the talents of our most remarkable subject. I don't
think you'll be disappointed, Comrade Admiral. By no means!"

Down in the test chamber on the other side of the glass a door
opened. A white-coated female scientist appeared with a
redheaded girl wearing a school uniform. The child had an
extraordinarily pretty face. She eyed the men in the observation
booth with a certain apprehension.

Danilov hurriedly addressed the admiral and the other officers.
"The girl is very sensitive to adverse mental attitudes - even more
so than the other subjects you have seen today. For this
experiment to succeed, we must have an atmosphere pervaded
with kindness and goodwill. Please try to banish all doubts from
your minds. Cultivate a positive attitude. "

Commander Guslin coughed. Ulyanov lit a cigarette. Artimovich,
the intelligence man, sat bolt upright with a fixed smile on his face.

Danilov picked up a microphone with blue tape wrapped around its
stand. "I will introduce you, Comrade Admiral, and then perhaps
you will speak a few words to the child and reassure her. "

Kolinsky, who had seven grandchildren, sighed. "As you wish. "

Danilov pressed the microphone stud. "All ready now, Tamara?"

The girl's voice came to them over a ceiling speaker. "Yes,
Comrade Doctor. "

"We have a special guest here today, Tamara. He is Admiral Ivan
Kolinsky, a great hero of the Soviet Navy. He is eager to see how
well you do your biocommunication exercise. The Admiral would
also enjoy talking to you. " The scientist made a formal gesture.
"Admiral Kolinsky, may I present Tamara Sakhvadze."

Kolinsky took the microphone and winked at the little girl. "Now, you
must not be nervous, devushka. We will leave the nervousness to
Dr. Danilov. " The child giggled. She had marvelous white teeth.
"How old are you, Tamara?"

"Eleven, Comrade Admiral. " Great dark eyes, rose-petal mouth.

"You have a Georgian name. Where is your home?"

"I live in Sochi - I mean, I used to live there before they found me
and brought me here to work and go to school. Sochi is on the
Black Sea. "

Ah, yes - a Celtic Caucasian girl, one of that ancient breed famed
through history for their beauty and bewitching ways! "I know Sochi
very well, Tamara. I have a vacation villa there, a very pretty place.
It must be spring in Sochi now, with flowers blooming and birds
singing in the palm trees. What a pity both of us are here in wintry
Leningrad instead of in your pleasant hometown. "

And if I were there, I could sail my little boat - or sit at a small table
in Riviyera Park, sipping a cold mix of Georgian champagne and
orange juice and baking my tired bones in the sunshine. Gorgeous
young things (your older sisters or cousins, Tamara!) would stroll
by, tall and barelegged and bold of eye, and I would admire and
remember old plea­sures. When that palled I would plot the
destruction of Gorshkov, that prick on wheels, and the KGB
schemer Andropov, whose hobbyhorse this whole bioenergetics
farce is, and put an end to it, and get on with the Extremely Low
Frequency Broadcaster, just as the Yankees have done. Psychic
forces as weapons! What superstitious peasants we Rus­sians
remain, in spite of our thin veneer of science and culture. One
might as well speak of enlisting the terrible Baba Yaga and her hut
on fowl's legs...

The girl laughed out loud. "You're so silly, Comrade Admiral!"

The woman scientist standing beside Tamara stiffened. Danilov
said hastily, "The child is overexcited. Please excuse her
rudeness. Let us begin the experiment -"

Kolinsky studied the girl narrowly. "Tamara and I have not yet
fin­ished our little talk. Tell me, devushka, what special talent do
you have that interests the doctors at this Institute?"

"I read thoughts. At a distance. Sometimes. "

"Can you read mine?" the admiral asked softly.

Tamara now looked frightened. "No!"

Danilov implored him. "It is most important that the child be calm,
comrade! If we could begin now... "

"Very well. " Kolinsky put the blue-marked microphone down.

Danilov signaled to his colleague. The woman took Tamara by the
hand and led her to a large cubicle of copper screening that stood
in the center of the test chamber. Inside it was a plain wooden
chair.

"The enclosure is called a Faraday cage, " Danilov explained. "It is
proof against most forms of electromagnetic radiation. We have
found that Tamara works best when shielded in this way. The
emanations from her mind do not seem to be in any way
connected to the energies of the electromagnetic spectrum,
however. The 'bioenergetic halo ef­fect' that we monitored for you
earlier on your tour seems to be a side effect of the life-energies
rather than part of their primary manifesta­tion. "

Kolinsky nodded, barely concealing his impatience. Within the test
chamber, the girl Tamara was now completely enclosed in the
copper-screen cage, sitting with her hands clasped in her lap. Dr.
Lubezhny had withdrawn, and within a few minutes came into the
observation booth.

"All is in readiness, " she reported. "Tamara feels confident. "

Danilov picked up a second microphone from the table. The tape
marking it was bright scarlet. Activating it, he said, "Danilov here.
Are you standing by?"

Masculine accents overlaid by static responded: "This is the diving
tender Peygalitsa awaiting your instructions. "

"Please give us your approximate position, " Danilov requested.

"We  are   standing  approximately  nine  kilometers   due  west   of
Kronshtadt Base in the Gulf of Finland. "

"The divers are ready?"

"Sublieutenant Nazimov and the Polish youth are suspended at the
required depth of ninety meters and awaiting your bioenergetic
trans­mission. "

"Okhuyevayushchiy!" exclaimed Commander Ulyanov.

Danilov flapped a frantic hand. "Please! No extraneous remarks!
All of you - think the most refined and peaceable thoughts. "

Commander Guslin smothered a chuckle.

"Stand by, Peygalitsa, we are prepared to transmit. " Danilov set
the red-marked microphone down.

The admiral murmured, "You are a man of surprises, Dr. Danilov. "

"The experiment has worked before, " the scientist said in a
strained voice, "and it will work again - given the proper conditions.
" He glared at the two aides and the GRU man.

Kolinsky wagged his right index finger at the trio. "Not a peep from
you, minetchiki. "

The scientist expelled a noisy breath. He explained rapidly, "The
girl Tamara is what we call an inductor. A telepathic broadcaster,
the most talented we had ever found. The percipient or receiver is
a seventeen-year-old Polish lad named Jerzy Gawrys, another
gifted sensitive. Gawrys wears cold-water diving dress. He is
holding an underwater writing pad and a stylus, but he is not
equipped with telephone apparatus, as is his companion,
Sublieutenant Nazimov. The only way that the boy Gawrys may
communicate is by writing on his pad. Nazimov will relay the pad's
message to the tender. The tender's radio operator will relay the
data to us. Our own receiver picks it up and broadcasts it through
the room speaker. "

"Understood, " said Kolinsky. "And what data are to be
transmitted?"

Danilov lifted his chin proudly. "The data of your choice. "

The aides muttered fresh exclamations of amazement.

Danilov said, "May I suggest that you start with a few simple
shapes - stars, circles, squares - then pictures, then a few words.
Use the pad of paper in front of you and the ink-marker. As you
finish each sheet, hold it up so that Tamara can see it... and send
the message."

Kolinsky compressed his lips and bent to the pad. He drew a five-
pointed star, raised the paper, and smiled at Tamara.

The girl stared intently.

"Star, " said the diving tender Peygalitsa.

The admiral drew an arrow.

"Arrow, " said the faraway relay operator.

The admiral drew a clumsy cat in profile.

"Cow, " the speaker reported.

Everybody in the booth laughed. Kolinsky shrugged and drew a
circle with pointed rays around it.

"Sun. "

The admiral waved jovially at Tamara. She smiled and waved back.
He wrote the seven Cyrillic letters that spelled a familiar greeting in
Russian and held it up. The girl concentrated on them for some
time. The speaker cleared its throat, then said: "We receive from
Sublieuten­ant Nazimov the letters zeh-deh-oh-er-oh-uncertain-oh.
"

Danilov picked up the red microphone. "Stand by, Peygalitsa. " He
told Kolinsky, "You must remain mindful that our percipient is
Polish. It may be difficult for him to receive complex messages
written in our script. Please keep the words as simple as possible.
" He alerted the boat to receive the next message.

Kolinsky printed carefully, "Tamara sends greetings. " The words
were returned, letter by letter, over the speaker.

"May I congratulate you, Dr. Danilov, Dr. Lubezhny. " The admiral
beamed on the scientists. "A splendid breakthrough!" And so
Andropov had been right after all. A billion-to-one gamble seemed
to have paid off and he, Kolinsky, would have to eat his ration of
shit. If Tamara's talent could be taught to others, the Soviet Navy
could scrub its own Ex­tremely Low Frequency Broadcaster
Project. Let the Americans use the long-wave radio system to
send messages to deep-lying missile submarines - a system that
worked, but was so slow that a three-letter word might take nearly a
half hour to transmit. The Soviet Union would talk to its submarines
via mental telepathy, in moments! As to the KGB's use of psychic
powers, the less said...

Danilov was babbling. "You are very kind, Comrade Admiral! I
know that little Tamara and the boy Jerzy Gawrys, who have
worked so hard, will also be gratified by your praise. Perhaps you
would like to tell them so yourself. "

Kolinsky said, "First we will test one other message. " He bent to
the pad, then held it up to Tamara. The lovely little face glowed at
him through the copper mesh, so pleased that everything had gone
well, so eager to show her skill.

She saw: FIRE MISSILES.

Tamara sat still. Her dark eyes opened wider, like those of a
cornered doe.

Admiral Kolinsky tapped a finger firmly against the paper.

They waited.

Finally, Danilov addressed the red microphone: "Attention,
Pey­galitsa. Do you have a message to relay?"

"No message, " said the loudspeaker.

Kolinsky regarded the little girl without expression. So that's the
way of it, little Tamara! Can one blame you? You have hardly lived
at all, and the true purpose of your work did not occur to you. You
are shocked and revolted. You shrink from adult wickedness. But
one day, will you see such wickedness as duty? As patriotism?

"No message, " said the loudspeaker.

Danilov apologized. "Perhaps the girl is tiring. Perhaps Jerzy has
tem­porarily suffered diminished sensitivity -"

"No message, " said the loudspeaker.

"I will go and speak to her, " Dr. Lubezhny suggested.

"No, " Admiral Kolinsky said. "Don't be concerned. I've seen quite
enough for today. Please be assured that I will urge full funding of
your continuing efforts here at the Institute, and I will commend
your work most highly to the Council for National Defense. " The
admiral rose from his seat, tore the sheet of paper into small
pieces, and let them sift from his hand onto the table. He
beckoned to his aides and strode out the door after having given
one last wave to the motionless little girl.

Dr. Danilov's eyes met those of Dr. Lubezhny. The woman said, "If
only she were younger. Then it would be a game. "

"She will bend to larger considerations in time, " Danilov said. He
picked up the red microphone and keyed it. "Attention, Peygalitsa.
The experiment is ended. Thank you for your cooperation. "

"Message coming through, " said the loudspeaker.

Danilov almost dropped the microphone. "What's that?"

The amplified voice was brisk. "We receive another set of letters.
It spells... nyet. "

"Nyet?" exclaimed Danilov and Lubezhny in unison.

Down in the Faraday cage, Tamara Sakhvadze looked at them and
slowly nodded her head.



14

FROM THE MEMOIRS OF ROGATIEN REMILLARD



I came to Don and Sunny's house every Tuesday, Thursday, and
Sunday evening for nearly three years. We would have supper, and
Sunny would stack the dishes. Then she would bring little Denis
into the living room for the educational sessions that we came to
call "head-lessons. "

At first Don tried to work along with me. But he had very little
empathy with the infantile mind and his attempts at telepathic
rapport were so crude as to be little more than mental puppy-
training: Here it is, kid - learn or else! He couldn't resist teasing the
baby, looking upon our work with him as an amusement rather than
serious business, treating the child like some glorified pet or a
sophisticated toy. The occasional mental quantum leaps made by
the boy could be very excit­ing, and then Don was all praise and
affection. But there were tedious times as well, the nuts and bolts
of teaching that Don found to be a colossal bore. He would put
pressure on Denis, and more often than not the session would end
with the child crying, or else stubbornly with­drawn in the face of his
father's mocking laughter.

As I expected, Don got tired of the teaching game after only a few
weeks. Not even Sunny's pleas would move him to continue
serious participation. So he watched television while Sunny and I
worked with the child, and looked in with a proprietary
condescension during com­mercial breaks. This might have been
a satisfactory solution - except that babies have no tact, and little
Denis couldn't help showing how much he preferred my mental
tutelage to that of his father. Don's pride was hurt and he began to
broadcast bad vibes that the sensitive baby reacted to, setting up a
kind of mind-screen that threatened to cut him off not only from his
father but also from me. I had to tell Don what was happening,
dreading his reaction. He surprised me, however, and said, "What
the hell! Teaching kids is no job for a man like me. " And he began
going out to the Blue Ox right after supper, leaving me alone with
his wife and son.

I found out some time later that a burly tavern habitué named Ted
Kowalski dared to make a suggestive crack about this unorthodox
do­mestic arrangement. Don decked him with a single uppercut.
Then he made a little speech to the awed onlookers at the Ox:

"My egghead brother Rogi is writing a book. It's about the way that
little kids' minds work. Me and Sunny are letting him use our son
Denis as a kind of guinea pig. Rogi runs tests on the kid using
blocks and beads and pictures cut from magazines and other
suchlike crap. Sunny helps. I used to help, too, but it was dull as
dishwater. That's why I'm here, and why my brother and my wife
and kid are at home. Now would anybody besides the late Kowalski
care to comment?"

Nobody did, then or ever.

Don got so fond of the Blue Ox that he took to spending evenings
there even when there were no head-lessons scheduled. Sunny
was sorry about that but she never reproached him. She did cook
especially fine meals for him on the nights that I visited, and kept
urging him to stay with us and see what Denis had learned. When
Don refused, as he almost invariably did, she kissed him lovingly
goodbye. When he re­turned two hours later in a haze of alcohol,
she kissed him lovingly hello. His drinking became heavier as the
months went by and the baby made spectacular progress.

At Remillard family gatherings, Don boasted to one and all that he
was proud as hell of his son, the genius. Denis, carefully coached
by me, let the relatives see him as a child who was plainly above
average - yet not so advanced as to appear bizarre. We let him
start speaking in public when he was thirteen months old, three
months after he had actually mastered speech. He learned to walk
when he was a year old; in this and in other purely physical
developments he was very nearly normal. In his appearance he
favored the Fabré side of his family, having Sunny's fair skin and
intensely blue eyes but lacking her beauty. He was never sick,
even though he had a deceptively frail look about him. His
temperament was shy and withdrawn (which was a vast
disappointment to Don), and I believe that he was by far the most
intellectually gifted of all the Remillards, not even excluding such
metapsychic giants as Jack and Marc. There are some Milieu
historians, I know, who mistook his gentleness for weakness and
his innate caution for vacillation, and who say that without the
psychic impetus furnished by his wife, Lucille Cartier, Denis's great
work might have remained unaccomplished. To counter these
critics I can only present this picture of the young Denis as I knew
him, surmounting the emotional trials of his youth with quiet
courage - and almost always facing those problems alone, since I
was only able to aid him during his earliest years, and
circumstances conspired to separate us during his latter childhood
and adolescence.

I must not minimize the role that Sunny played. Denis learned to
read before he was two, and she saved her housekeeping money
in order to buy him an encyclopedia. Since the child had a never-
ending thirst for novel sensations and experiences, she wheeled
him all over Berlin in a stroller during the warm months and toted
him on a sled in the winter. Later, she drove him about the
countryside in the family car, until the rising cost of gasoline and
Don's precarious financial situation put an end to her expeditions,
and their growing family left her less and less time to spare.

The metapsychic training of Denis was left almost entirely to me. I
worked hard, if inexpertly, in the development of his farsenses and
wasn't surprised when his abilities quickly surpassed my own. He
learned the art of long-sight amplification all by himself - and tried
in vain to pass the skill on to me. His mental screening function
very early became so formidable that neither Don nor I could
penetrate it; aside from that, Denis seemed untalented in coercion.
Psychokinesis didn't interest him much either, except as an adjunct
to manipulation when his little fingers were inadequate for handling
some tool, or for support­ing books too heavy to be held
comfortably. It was an eerie thing to come upon the child, not yet
three years old, still sucking his thumb as he perused a levitated
volume of the World Book Encyclopedia; or perhaps sitting in
unconsidered wet diapers, studying a disassembled transistor
radio while a cloud of electronic components and a hot sol­dering
iron floated in thin air within easy reach.

But I had even more disquieting experiences in store for me.

One February night in 1970 Don returned from the tavern a bit
early. He was no drunker than usual, and unaccustomedly cheerful.
He said he had a surprise for me, and admonished me and Sunny
to stay right where we were with Denis. He went into the kitchen
and closed the door.

Denis was deeply engrossed in a new book on the calculus that I
had just bought, thinking we might learn it together. Sunny was
knitting. Outside the little house on School Street a frigid wind from
Canada howled down the Androscoggin Valley and solidified the
old snowdrifts into masses like dirty white styrofoam. I hated to
think of walking home.

Don came back into the living room sans outdoor wear, carrying a
cup of steaming hot cocoa. Grinning, he held it out to me. "Just
what you need, Rogi mon vieux, to warm you up on a truly rotten
night. "

My brother making a cup of cocoa was an event about as
unprece­dented as me doing a tap dance on the bar at the Blue
Ox. I probed his mind, but the usual barriers were in place. What
was he up to?

Little Denis looked up from his differentiation formulas. His eyes
went first to his father, then to his mother. His expression was
puzzled.

Sunny gasped.

Don held out the cup to me.

"No!" Sunny cried. She sprang from her chair and slapped the cup
from Don's hand. It made an ugly brown splash on the wall. I was
flabbergasted.

Denis asked me gravely, "Uncle Rogi, will you tell me why lysergic
acid diethylamide makes cocoa taste better?"

Don started to giggle. Sunny regarded him with a terrible
expression of outrage. His mind-screen, shaken by her
unexpected action, wavered just enough to let me see what kind of
joke he had intended to play on me. Little Denis had had no trouble
penetrating Don's psychic barricade when it was still firm, and he
had perceived the name of the drug emblazoned on his father's
short-term memory trace as on a lighted theatre marquee.

But how had Sunny known?

Don's laugh was louder, more unsteady. "Hey, it was only a gag!
This hippie came into the Ox lookin' to deal, and we were ready to
throw him out on his ass when I remembered ol' Rogi jabbering
about altered states of consciousness. And I thought -hey! Whole
lotta talk about the wild side of the mind, but never any action.
That's you, Rog. "

I said, "You were going to slip the LSD into me and supervise my
trip. "

His grin became a grimace of pure hate. "You been experimenting.
I figured it was my turn. "

Sunny grabbed his arm. "You're drunk and you don't know what
you're saying!"

He shook Sunny off as though she were some importunate kitten
and took one step toward me, big hands opening and closing.
Denis whim­pered, abandoned his book, and scuttled aside.

"I know exactly what I'm saying, " Don blustered. "You and your
fuckin' mind-games! You turned my own kid against me! And my
wife - my wife - " He faltered, looked at Sunny in a dazed fashion.
His mind-walls were down and I could see the wheels turning as he
made the connection about the cup of cocoa and Sunny's
frustration of his plan.

"You knew, " he accused her. His tone was confused, the anger
mo­mentarily sidetracked. "But how?"

She straightened. "Denis asked me about the LSD before he
asked Rogi. Our son has been teaching me telepathy. It was to be
a surprise for you and Rogi. "

I was stunned. None of my books on parapsychology had
prepared me for a mind capable of exercising psychoredaction,.
the "mental editing" faculty that is so taken for granted in Milieu
pedagogy and psychiatry. I cried:

Sunny - is it true?

She didn't respond.

Denis said: Mommy can only mindspeak me. She can't hear you or
Papa. You aren't strong enough.

Don looked down incredulously at the little toddler in corduroy
over­alls and a miniature lumberjack shirt. Denis was on his hands
and knees. His lower lip trembled.

"I'm not strong enough?" Don roared. He stooped to seize the
child, ready to shake him, to slap him -

Sunny sensed what was coming and I saw it clearly in Don's mind.
We both started to intercept him. But it wasn't necessary.

"Papa won't hurt me, " Denis said. He climbed to his feet and
stood in front of his father. His head was about on a level with
Don's knees. "You won't ever hurt me, will you Papa. " It wasn't a
question. The boy's magnetic blue eyes were rock-steady as he
looked up.

"No, " said Don. "No. "

Sunny and I let out suppressed breath. She bent down and lifted
Denis in her arms.

Don turned to me. He moved like a man in a dream, or one in an
extremity of pain. His mental walls were back in place. I had no
idea what message Denis had transmitted, what coercive interdict
the child had used. I knew that Denis would never be harmed by
his father - but the protective aegis did not extend to me.

Don said, "You won't have to bother coming over in the evening
anymore, Rogi. "

"I suppose not, " I said.

The child reached out to comfort and reassure me. In those days I
knew nothing of the intimate mode of farspeech, that which tunes
directly to the personal mind-signature of the recipient;
nevertheless, I was aware that Denis spoke to my mind alone when
he said:

We will find a way to continue.

"Denis has had enough coddling, " Don said, "and Sunny's going
to be too busy to play games with you two. Did she tell you she's
expecting again?"

She held Denis close, her eyes brimming with tears. She hadn't.
And I'd never noticed the knitting. "Congratulations, " I said in a
level voice.

Don was at the front closet getting my coat and things. He held
them out to me, a defiant smile twisting up one side of his mouth,
his thoughts unreadable.

He said, "I plan to take care of the next kid's training myself. "



15

EDINBURGH, SCOTLAND, EARTH

28 JANUARY  1972



he climbed, as he often did when the tensions became too great,
clutching at slippery rocks and gnarled heather stems with
frost­bitten hands gone numb.

HALLOO!

Reveling in the height, the separation from the world of ordinary
mortals, he scrabbled for precarious footholds. His mud-clotted,
soggy waffle-stompers abraded the fresh blisters on his heels,
adding to the welcome ensemble of pain.

HALLOO OUT THERE!

His heart was banging in his throat fit to brast. The wintry gusts
blowing into the steep defile called the Guttit Haddie froze his
hurdies and his ears and his chin and his nose.

HALLOO! OI! IS THERE A BODY CAN HEAR ME?

He climbed like a man pursued by demons invisible, never looking
down. The spreading sea of city lights seemed to undulate dizzily
below - glittering currents of traffic, dirty backwaters of tenements
and shops, the up-thrust reefs of church steeples and castle
ramparts and the perilous shoals of the University.

HALLOO!

Down there ran the Pleasance and on it stood the building with the
laboratory. It had a grand name: the Parapsychology Unit of the
Depart­ment of Psychology of the University of Edinburgh; but it
was only a big dreary room up under the eaves, partitioned into
cramped wee offices and carrels for the endless testing. It was
presided over by the eminent

Dr. Graham Finlay Dunlap, whose staff - alas! - consisted only of
two graduate assistants, William Erskine and Nigel Weinstein, and
him: James Somerled MacGregor, a silly gowk of twenty, by virtue
of his fey talents awarded a bursary at one of the finest universities
in Britain - and for all that bored and wretched and wanting only to
go home to Islay in the Hebrides.

HALLOO! WHAT'S NEW? DAFT JAMIE SAYS: SOD YOU!

Climb up laughing at the uselessness of it. Climb above the
winterfast reeky city toward a louring sky still scarlet in the west.
Climb up the steepest, most dangerous way in shifty twilight,
hurting all the while. Scramble up rocks. Creep along the igneous
ridge all frosty and windblasted. Climb finally to the top of that
ancient crag, that sentinel of Dun Eadain beloved of tourists and
sentimentalists and trysting lov­ers. Climb up to Arthur's Seat!

HALLOO! HURRAW! EXCELSIOR!...

The near-gale blowing up the Forth from the North Sea now smote
him squarely. To escape he sprawled bellyflaught, face cradled in
his arms, and let rattling gasps from his parched throat soften while
his heart tripped over itself and slowed. He licked cracked lips and
tasted salt from wind-tears and wool from his sweater. The sheepy
taste and the ocean taste and the smell of wet cold stone and
moorland! The thrill of climbing in the high air, the pain of it, the
happiness... and see - the humor was coming on him again, just as
it used to so easily in the early days when he was still excited with
the novelty of demonstrating his uncanny powers to the
psychologists. He felt it coming. He knew that he was going to be
able to do it again.

The thing he thought he'd lost. What they'd been coaxing him vainly
to do again down in the damned laboratory for nigh on a year.

The out-of-body thing.

I'M AWAY!

Oh, aye, it was grand! To soar up and see himself left prone
below, a husk without a soul. He sped into the sunset, across West
Lothian's black fells and crouching Glasgow and the Firth of Clyde,
over Arran and Kintyre and tiny Gigha, beyond the sea to home. To
Islay, to his private place. Like a sea bird he hovered, seeing the
surf crash against the shoulder of Ton Mhor. A few sheep skirted
the bog on their way downhill. Somewhere one of the dogs was
barking. The ruins of the old croft near the bay sheltered a shaggy
red longhorn stot. In his own snug home the lights were on and a
thread of smoke rose from the chimney. Suppertime on a winter's
Friday night, and Granny portioning out the sweet while Mum
dished up savory haddock and fried potatoes. Dad and Colin and
old Iain came trampling in tired and famished and red-cheeked.

He watched them, full of joy and with all pain abolished. Then he
concentrated on the well-known dear aura. He said:

It's me! I'm here!

Granny looked up from the trifle she'd made that day for a special
treat: Jamie my dear laddie. It's been so long. And how are you
then?

Ah Gran I'm that miserable here at university I could die I think!
Such blether.

No no they're all fools and Dr. Dunlap the biggest of all with his
testing testing testing as if he didn't know my powers exist but had
to prove it over and over endlessly with his damned statistics and I
get so tired and impatient and I feel the hostility from the other
undergrads because I'm a privileged character and allowed my
special academic track here in the Psychology Department and
Gran dear Gran this queer mind of mine sometimes does its tricks
and sometimes not but what's the use it's not as though I could use
the Sight or the Speech or the Out-of-Body Thing to earn a good
living as a bookie or a blackmailer or a spy Lord knows the powers
are too unreliable and me too conscience-tender for that but Gran
I'm beginning to think I don't want to be a psychologist either not
even to study the powers if it means this endless dull dull testing
not only of me but of common folk and Dunlap and his two
assistants nattering on about "extrachance performance" and the
"psi-missing effect" (which means can you believe it test results so
rotten that the psi experts have decided they must be significant!)
and they keep trying to find a theory in physics to fit the powers and
nothing works and still they write their papers and look wise and
pretend it all means something when we know it doesn't have to
and what I'd really like to do is chuck the whole thing and go off and
be a stage magician or a mind reader on the telly and make a
packet like Uri Geller or the Amazing Kreskin...

Jamie Jamie ungrateful gorlin the time's come to stop playing with
the powers selfishly as I've told ye for now they must be put to use
for all mankind. And if the good Professor can't solve the problem
of mak­ing the powers fit into real science then maybe the job's
meant for YOU Daft Jamie MacGregor!

Ah Gran. Dunlap's department doesn't have the money to do the
job proper. Ah you should see what a threadbare wee place this
Parapsy­chology Unit is. If we were in America now it might be
different for there all the colleges are rich but here in Edinburgh the
two doctoral candidates working under Dunlap must live on cheese
sandwiches and beer I'm all right of course eating in the Pollock
dining room but -

It's time for us to eat here as well so stop your whinging. You must
fulfill your part of the bargain so bear with Professor Dunlap and his
perjinkities and study hard and be a credit to us. Then later if you
can't abide parapsychology you can shrink silly neurotics and get
rich.

Ah Gran.

Ah Jamie. Go back now. Your poor body's freezing in the haar and
one of your good friends has come searching for you...

He opened his eyes. He was back in Holyrood Park on the
pinnacle of Arthur's Seat and stiff as an iced halibut. He stood
upright, tottering in the east wind, tucked his bare hands into his
warm crutch, and stamped his feet. The pins-and-needles effect
was exhilarating.

It was too dark now to climb down the way he'd come, for the
west­ern side of the small mountain was steep and trackless down
the Haddie. And besides, the lights of Edinburgh were turning
yellow and fuzzy. It was the haar, as Granny had warned him,
sneaking in from the Firth to swaddle the city in freezing mizzle.
He'd have to go back the long way, down the easy east path to
Dunsapie Loch, and then along the Queen's Drive to the Dalkeith
entrance to the park where he'd come in. A dreary mile and a half,
but there was no helping it.

 He came down the east side of the knoll into thickening fog. The
 temperature was dropping and he moved as rapidly as he could
 along the footpath, comforting himself with the thought that
 antibiotics easily cured pneumonia these days -

"Jamie!"

He heard the thin shout from below. Gran had said a friend was
looking for him, hadn't she? But nobody knew where he'd gone! He
cantered down a precipitous stretch of track and saw an amber
light bobbing about: someone with a torch coming up to meet him.

"Oi!" he shouted. "I'm here!"

And there was a familiar stocky figure pouring out vibes of relief
only slightly tainted by peevish mutterings.

"Nigel!" Jamie exclaimed delightedly. "Did you track me with psi?
The hill's strongly magnetic, you know. I would've thought that -"

"Oh, put a sock in it, you young idiot, and let's get down to the car
before we both freeze. " Nigel Weinstein unwound a long striped
muffler from his own neck, flung it at Jamie, and glowered. "You
and your magnetism! Dunlap was pissed to the wide when Wee
Wully Erskine told him you'd aborted the afternoon magnetometer
session and run off. You bloody ass! We had a devil of a time
getting that test set up with the physics boys - and now, thanks to
your silly-buggery, we can go back to square one. "

"I'm sorry, Nigel. " The two of them came to the road. Dunsapie
Loch was lost in the murk. They turned right and hurried toward the
car-park at the south end. "Were you really worried about me?"

"You might have broken your neck, " the graduate assistant
snapped.

"Where would we find another test subject with your talent? You
know we're all chewing nails worrying about the new research
grant. "

The underlying fear leaked through his gruff words: And who
knows what kind of stupid thing a morose young Celt might get up
to on a slippery crag in the dead of winter?

"I'm not that depressed, " Jamie told him. But thanks for caring.
"As for the tests, they'd have been no good anyway. The morning
runs wore me down and I just didn't have the heart to keep on. I
keep telling Erskine that it's no good endlessly repeating really
tough mind maneu­vers. I lose motivation and get to swithering and
then the powers wonk out. I'm not a bloody computer, you know.
And Wee Wully's attitude is no help - Mr. Objectivity, plug me into
the circuit and work me like a damn dray-horse!"

Weinstein heaved a sigh. "Dr. Dunlap would say you're suffering
from a psi decline. Me - I'd label you a prima donna. "

"So'd my Granny, " Jamie admitted, grinning.

They found Weinstein's battered Hillman at last and climbed in.
There was no traffic at all on the one-way Queen's Drive that
encircled Holyrood Park and the fog was getting so thick that the
car's headlamps were worse than useless. Nigel muttered a curse,
switched them off, and navigated with the ambers. He drove little
faster than a walking pace. Outside was a world of dull-glowing
golden cotton wool.

Jamie said, "Tests like those we were doing today are a waste of
time. So I try to move drinking straws with psychokinesis and the
instrument measures the perturbation of the magnetic field around
my head. Super! A needle wiggles, the field gets slightly bent, and
it's all recorded for posterity... which won't give a tinker's dam. "

"The research adds to the body of parapsychological evidence. "

Jamie rolled his eyes. "How much evidence do you need, man? It
isn't as though the magnetic measurements told you anything
useful. You still haven't a clue about the nature of mental energy -
what forces operate during PK, how telepathic messages are
carried, what mecha­nism enables me to travel without my body.
There's no scientific the­ory for any of it. "

"We're still assembling data. Eventually we'll fit psi phenomena and
the whole notion of mind into the reality framework. "

Jamie huddled closer to the warm air beginning to come from the
car heater. "Weird powers have been around since caveman days.
How come Australian bushmen and Eskimos and African witch
doctors and fire-walking Hindus can use the powers and not worry
about it - but scientists can't? Science flies to the moon, but it
diddles and daddies and wrings its hands when the mind performs
its psychic tricks, and needs to be convinced over and over again
that it's not all a sham. As far as useful theory goes, we're not
much wiser today in 1972 than we were  in 1572 - when people
blamed it all on the devil and burnt blokes like me at the stake... For
God's sake, why can't we simply buckle down and use the powers
without the endless havering?"

Weinstein laughed. "Science likes things it can measure. Psi
powers are too slippery for comfort. So we must try to analyze
them, try to formulate theories and test them. And if psychic
research had the kind of financial backing that astronautics has,
we'd get results. "

"I used to think so, " Jamie said slowly, "but I've chewed over the
matter a lot lately. And I've about concluded that there may be a
basic flaw in the entire concept of psi research - one that makes
our kind of research futile. "

"Bosh!"

"No - listen to me, Nigel. All over the world scientists have been
doing serious studies of psi effects. The Russians are keen on it
because they think it might make a weapon. Give them credit for a
pragmatic attitude, anyhow! The Yanks are a touch leery just
because the Russkies believe in it - but they have quite a few
dedicated research groups, and the American Association for the
Advancement of Science did finally admit the Parapsychological
Association to membership. Our British teams are going full
throttle. There's good work being done by the Dutch and the
Indians and the Finns and the Japs and the Germans. Nobody who
matters laughs at us anymore or calls us crackpots. The
consensus in scientific circles is that psi effects are real. But... the
net practical result of nearly twenty years of activity has been just
about nil! You still get untrained people finding water with forked
sticks, and fakirs treading hot coals, and faith healers laying on
hands and curing the sick, and all the rest of the disorganized
clamjamphrie of PK and telepathy and precognition and all the rest
- unreliable and unexplainable - while trained researchers still have
no coherent re­sults from their experiments. "

"That's no reason to label our work futile -"

"What if the human race had the eyesight of a mole? Could we
de­velop a science of astronomy? Of course not! The appropriate
sense organs would be too weak even to notice the stars, much
less organize scientific data concerning them. I think that's the way
it is with psi and normal humanity right now. Most human beings
have some kind of parapsychological capability, but it's so weak
and undependable that it might as well not exist. The few people
like me who have stronger powers are still too ill-equipped to
demonstrate much that's useful. I think that science won't get off
the ground analyzing higher mind-powers until really efficient
psychic operators are born. "

"You're saying that our data will remain essentially incomplete until
... mental giants come along. Until the brain evolves further. "

"Exactly. When people have full control of their paranormal
faculties - whether they're born with it, or develop control through
training - then we'll be able to do valid testing. Nigel, I know I'm
right! I'm one of the flawed ones myself - not totally eyeless, but
still only seeing the stars as off-again, on-again blurs... Just look at
the fog outside this car of yours. Would you know there was a
great city all around Arthur's Seat if you spent your entire life in a
car, cruising around and around this misty drive, only catching a
rare glimpse of the lights outside? And with Edinburgh only a half-
seen mystery, would you even dream that other cities existed?"

They glided through mustard-colored murk, searching for the exit
road. And then a gust of wind blew the swirling vapors aside for a
moment and they saw the junction ahead, and both of them gave
ex­clamations of relief, and Nigel said, "You see? Breakthroughs
do hap­pen. Take a lesson, Jamie. " He turned the regular
headlamps back on and made the turn.

"You want us to keep traveling our research road, no matter how
foggy, until we find a way into the hidden city - and maybe a body
with radar eyes. "

"A muddled metaphor, but thine own. "

Jamie grinned at the older man. "You poor buggers working under
Dunlap are luckier than most. At least you've got me. Not quite as
blind as a mole. More in the hedgehog class, maybe. "

Weinstein sighed. "And to think I'm basing my doctoral thesis on
you! I'd do better to creep back to the family tog-shop on Duke
Street. " Jamie said, "I'll quit mucking up, Nigel. Just promise me...
when you do get your degree, stay on at the university. Work with
me on useful experiments, not this codswallop that Dunlap insists
on. You came out to get me tonight knowing exactly where I was.
We know what that has to mean. Let's train my clairvoyance and
yours, too, instead of stifling it with trivia. Let's show the world that
psychic powers are serious business. "

"Conceited little twit. All you want is my life, eh? All right - you're
on!" Weinstein peered through the windscreen at indistinct blobs
of light marking Dalkeith Road. "Now suppose you use your
clairvoyance, or your out-of-body faculty, or some damn thing to
find us a nice pub."



16

RIVER FOREST, ILLINOIS, EARTH

9 JUNE  1973



aldo "big al" Camastra stepped out of his air-conditioned study into
the muggy, music-filled evening and closed the French doors
behind him. He was smiling, for the business with the union reps
and the party bagmen from Chicago had gone very well indeed.
Now he was free to circulate among the guests like a proper host,
just as Betty Carolyn had begged him to do. Family business came
first, of course; but he wanted to keep her happy on their Twenty-
Fifth Anniversary, and be­sides, there were some people around
that he should glad-hand.

Nick and Carlo were patiently waiting on patio chairs, ever alert. Big
Al nodded to them. "Party going good?"

"Really swinging, Al, " Carlo said. "Joe Porks even brought this
broad who sang on the Johnny Carson show. Terrific! Sort of a
Cher, but with boobs. "

Big Al laughed, adjusted his silk cummerbund, and shot his cuffs
so the big gold links just peeked out from the sleeves of his dinner
jacket. "Did Rosemary get here?"

"Frankie drove her in from O'Hare about an hour ago, " Nick said.
"Her plane was delayed. She went to change. "

They went down the flagstone steps with Carlo leading and Nick
bringing up the rear. The big garden behind the Camastra mansion
was lit with skeins of Japanese lanterns in addition to the bronze
lamps illuminating the rose beds. A marquee for refreshments had
been set up near the west wing and there were throngs of guests
moving about inside of it. Another considerable crowd had
gathered around the por­table dance floor where tables and chairs
made an outdoor cabaret flanked by flower beds. The big band
was playing "Leaving the Straight Life Behind. " Some forty
couples gyrated to the music without ever engaging in body
contact.

Big Al grimaced contemptuously at the sight of them. "They call
that dancing? Everybody doing their own thing, bumping and
grinding like a buncha Clark Street hookers?"

The two soldiers guarding the patio steps greeted the Chicago
Boss respectfully and stepped aside so he and his bodyguard
could enter the crush of the party. The bolder guests began to
converge immediately - businessmen and politicians and lobbyists
and fellow mobsters and their expensive women. The relatives and
smaller fry hung around in the background, clutching drinks and
waving.

"Happy Silver Anniversary, Al!"

"Mazel tov, Al baby!"

"Wonderful party, Mr. Camastra. Quite a showplace you have
here!" "Lemme get a glassa spumante for you, Al. "

"Mr. Camastra, I think we met in Springfield at the last session -"

Shaking hands, smiling, and returning compliments, he wove
expertly through the crowd. Nick and Carlo were always a few
steps behind. He accepted the best wishes of a Chicago
alderman, kissed his wife's sister, gave a polite brush-off to a
hollow-eyed banking executive, told a dapper monsignor that he'd
be delighted to contribute to the parish carillon fund, and
congratulated a visiting New York consigliere of the Montedoro
Family for having beaten a federal conspiracy rap.

Then he was at the edge of the dance floor, and all the well-
wishers and importuners were swept away as if by magic. He
kissed his wife Betty Carolyn, who looked terrific in clinging white
Bob Mackie evening pajamas with silver fringe, topped off with a
coiffure like sculptured meringue. And there was his grown
daughter Rosemary, laughing as he swept her up in a bear hug.

"Hey, Rosie, my little princess! You look great. How's the art-
gallery business in the Big Apple? We were afraid you'd miss the
party with your plane delayed -"

"Al, the most exciting thing!" Betty Carolyn squealed. "Rosemary
didn't say anything when she called from the airport so's we
wouldn't worry, and anyhow by the time the plane landed it was all
over, and her wonderful hero of a boyfriend even cooled off the U.
S. Marshals so she and him don't even have to make a statement
until tomorrow when the skyjacker is arraigned. "

"What?" The word was like a soft explosion. Big Al held his smiling
daughter at arm's length. "Your plane was skyjacked? Jesus
Christ!"

"Poppa, I'm all right. No one was hurt and the skyjacker was
captured - thanks to Kieran. Kieran O'Connor, a very dear friend of
mine. "

Carlo and Nick were still fending off guests, and the band was
work­ing itself into incipient apoplexy as it approached the climax
of "Jeremiah Was a Bullfrog. " Rosemary drew forward a slender
dark-haired man who had been standing behind her. He was about
thirty years old, clean-cut and with conservatively styled hair. He
wore designer jeans and an open shirt with a gold neck-chain, the
usual summer formal wear of his generation. His smile was
diffident and his eyes cast down as Rosemary said:

"Kieran subdued the skyjacker single-handed, Poppa. He took
away the man's gun and - and somehow knocked him unconscious
with a single blow! Karate or something. "

Big Al seized the hand of Kieran O'Connor. "My God! How can I
thank you? You gotta tell me everything. My own daughter
skyjacked! What's this damn country coming to? Your name's
O'Connor? You a frienda Rosie's from New York? Let's find a
place to sit down and -"

The band, having brought "Jeremiah" to a rousing conclusion, now
blared out a fanfare. People started tinkling their glasses with
spoons.

"Ooh, " cried Betty Carolyn. "I told the band leader that when you
came in, he should quick finish up whatever they were playing and
then announce our special dance. Al, you know everybody's been
waiting for you to come down. And then we cut the cake -"

"Lay-deez and gentlemen!" The amplified voice of the band leader
boomed through the festive summer night. "And now, by special
re­quest, in honor of the Silver Wedding Anniversary of Mr. and
Mrs. Aldo Camastra... "

The opening strains of Big Al's favorite tune, "The Godfather
Waltz, " throbbed from a single violin. The guests broke into
applause and cheers and Betty Carolyn tugged at her husband's
left hand. The right one was still in the grip of Kieran O'Connor.

"Al, we gotta dance. Come on!"

But Big Al stood unmoving, his mouth open in an expression of
in­credulity and his eyes locked upon those of the young man
standing before him. Kieran O'Connor's lips were moving, but the
noise from the crowd and the now fully instrumented waltz music
made his voice inaudible to Betty Carolyn and Rosemary.

Big Al heard every word.

I have wanted to meet you - or someone like you - for a long time,
Mr. Camastra. The skyjack was a charade. An introduction and a
demonstration. I brought the gun aboard the aircraft myself, and I
selected the poor devil who would play the skyjacker role and
made certain that he played it. Wouldn't you like to know how I did
that, Mr. Camastra? I have a number of other useful talents at my
command. If we can come to an amicable arrangement, I am
willing to put them at your disposal.

"Malocchio, " whispered Big Al. Sweat had broken out on his
fore­head. "The Evil Eye!" He tried to cry out to Carlo and Nick.
The young Irishman's hypnotic voice reproached him.

You don't have to be afraid, Mr. Camastra. My offer is entirely
legitimate. I need you, and you stand to profit considerably through
use of my special services. "Al, come on!" said Betty Carolyn.

The voice in his mind was genial. The paralysis that had fettered
his body eased, but still that entrancing gaze held him. Malocchio!

I'll let you dance with your lovely wife in just a moment, Mr.
Camastra. I just want to assure you that there is no possible way
for you to harm me. We are going to be friends. Your daughter and
I are already very good friends.

Big Al felt himself being pulled onto the dance floor. Betty
Carolyn's body pressed against his and they began to waltz to the
sad, lilting melody. Rosemary stood arm in arm with a pleasant,
very ordinary looking young man - who still exerted his mental
wizardry from more than twenty feet away.

Ever since I finished law school at Harvard I've been researching
the economics of the nationwide organization operated by you and
your Sicilian colleagues. I found it fascinating. I know every
significant de­tail of the Five Families' operations back in New
York, including a maneuver currently being orchestrated to your
disadvantage by a cer­tain Mr. "Joe Porks" Porcaro of the Falcone
Family. We'll talk about it later. Enjoy your dance, Mr. Camastra. It's
really a great party.



17

FROM THE MEMOIRS OF ROGATIEN REMILLARD



I continued to act as the surreptitious confidant of Denis Remillard
throughout his early childhood in spite of my brother Don's
antagonism. The boy's long-distance farspeaking ability improved
with each passing year; and my own telepathic faculty, through our
constant interaction and mental symbiosis, also advanced far
beyond the level I had previously achieved with Don.

Little Denis soaked up knowledge like a human computer and my
role as simple tutor soon became obsolete. Nevertheless I still had
an important job to do educating Denis in human relationships. At
times he seemed almost like some naive little visitor from an
extraterrestrial civilization, overflowing with data about Earth, its
science, its culture, and its people - yet unable to fully comprehend
how the human race worked. I could not help but recall Odd John,
who was similarly bewil­dered. Not that Denis had any of the
fictional character's inhuman alienation - far from it. But the murkier
ins and outs of human psychology - especially the irrational
elements playing a part in hu­man decision making - tended to
perplex and bemuse him. Brilliant though he was, he was
handicapped by overly logical attitudes, social inexperience, and
the inevitably self-centered mind-set of a very young child. It would
have been futile to try to form Denis's conscience, for instance, by
referring him to treatises on ethics or moral theology; he needed to
develop a sense of values by observing the actions of others,
analyzing them, and judging their good or evil in a context that was
not only social but personal. Practically speaking, it amounted to
talking things over with me.

Looking back on our relationship from my present perspective,
140 years later, I can only be grateful that at the time I did not fully
appre­ciate the crucial importance of what I was doing. If I had, I
doubt that I would have had the courage to undertake the job -
Ghost or no Ghost.

With the birth of Don and Sunny's second son Victor in 1970,
Denis was relieved of a good deal of paternal constriction. Don
became ob­sessed with the new child, who was strapping and
handsome and the very image of his father, and lifted his earlier
prohibition of contact between Denis and me. With Sunny's
cooperation I was able to spend many hours each week with the
boy. Our meeting place was the old apartment on Second Street,
where aging Onc' Louie still lived with my unmarried cousins Al and
Margie.

It was in 1973, when the time came for Denis to enter school, that
the next crisis took place. After careful negotiation (and a bit of
coercion!) I had managed to wangle a partial scholarship for Denis
at Northfield Hall, a prestigious private boarding school in Vermont
that specialized in gifted children; but when the time came to
finalize the arrangements, Don balked. He was in a precarious
financial position. His alcoholism affected his job performance and
he had been passed over for promotion. Furthermore, Sunny was
pregnant again, and Dr. Laplante predicted twins. Don's share of
the tuition at Northfield would entail consider­able sacrifice on his
part - and he also professed an objection to the philosophical
orientation of the school, which was ultraliberal and per­missive
and not at all congenial to the old-fashioned Catholicism of our
family. Don dragged the entire Remillard family into the row. We
split into those who wanted the best for Denis (me, Sunny, Al, and
Margie), and those who maintained that no educational opportunity
was worth "endangering the child's faith at some godless, left-wing
school for spoiled rich kids" (Don, Onc' Louie, and about twenty-
five other cous­ins, uncles, aunts, and in-laws).

In vain, I argued that Denis's religious instruction could be assured
by special arrangement with a church near Northfield. Don
declared that the Berlin parochial school had been good enough
for him, and it should be good enough for his older son - genius or
no genius. When I volun­teered to share the tuition expenses Don
stubbornly refused. A last-ditch attempt on my part to garner a full
scholarship for Denis was shattered when Don made a truculent
phone call to the school's head­master. Northfield washed its
hands of us volatile Canucks.

Of course nobody had asked Denis what he wanted.

Frustrated and disgusted by the debacle, I decided to go on a
weekend backpack in the Mahoosucs to cool off. I could usually
restore my spirit by climbing in the mountains, and I have since
known many other metas who felt the same way. Perhaps it is
merely instinctive for the psychosensitive to ascend as high as
possible above the walls and con­fining rock formations that tend
to block the free ranging of our minds; perhaps it is more - a
yearning to be where the light is brightest, where the trees merge
and the extent and shape of the forest can be known, where mean
and mundane concerns are blotted out in flatland haze. I suppose I
am moderately devout, but I don't feel impelled to pray in the high
places. (I'm more likely to cry out of the depths!) Instead, I climb
upward to bask. Skyey energies seem to pour through me when I
stand on a peak like a human lightning rod; they renew me, and in
some mystical fashion revitalize the Earth I stand upon.

On that day in mid-August I climbed Goose Eye Mountain, a 1170-
meter pinnacle some fifteen crow-flight kilometers from Berlin, just
across the border in Maine. When I reached the top I farspoke
Denis and shared the summit experience with him. For two years
now he had begged to accompany me on my wilderness rambles,
but Sunny felt he was still too young and frail for strenuous hiking
and I reluctantly had to agree. I took Denis along with me mentally
instead, and he told me it was almost as good.

After I'd let him borrow my senses, I asked: What are you doing?

Baking CAKE allbymyself (OK Mom supervises) Papa goneout so
he won't laugh   took Victor they lookingfor birthdaypresentPapa
outboardmotor tomorrow Papabirthday I make cake Mom&me
privatejoke not tell Papa cake goingtobe magnificent.

OmyGod forgot completely tomorrow August 12. My birthday too
28yearsold just like yourPapa.

! [Dismay.] BUT YOU HAVE NO CAKE.

Laughter. Waitwait in backpack gooeycreamfilled Feuilleté!
Tomor­row put littletwigs in light sing HappyBirthdaytoMe.

[Mindshout broken off.] Cake done! Goodbye UncleRogi...

I'll try to speak you tomorrow MountSuccess. Goodbye Denis.

And he was gone, caught up in his great confectionery adventure.
Of course it would have to be kept secret from Don, who would
ridicule his little son for doing "women's work. " It was typical of my
brother that he should take three-year-old Victor, his pet, with him
while he shopped for his own expensive birthday present. Small
chance he would have saved the money for Denis's education.

I cursed quietly. If only the tuition at Northfield Hall weren't so
exorbitantly high. If only the great state of New Hampshire hadn't
let the gifted-child program go down the drain in a budget cut. If
only the local Catholic school weren't so stodgy and inflexible.
Sister Superior was willing to "see what could be done" about
assigning Denis some special courses of advanced study, but she
was adamant about having him start in first grade just like all the
other six-year-olds. It was nec­essary that he "gain the requisite
social skills and learn good work habits. "

Denis now probably knew more than I did. And how would I like to
spend a year twiddling my thumbs in first grade? Doux Jésus!

I slithered down from Goose Eye and picked up the Appalachian
Trail. I had intended to spend Saturday and Sunday browsing
about this region of the Mahoosucs, a rather modest weekend
ramble; but now renewed fury at Don's selfishness and my own
inability to help Denis kindled a perverse need to push myself to
the limit. I checked my watch. It wasn't quite noon. Sunset would
not be until around eight o'clock. My AMC map showed a more
challenging itinerary, a fourteen-kilometer hike to Gentian Pond
Shelter. That section of the trail was quite rugged, involving the
negotiation of steep ridge and valley terrain and several scrambles
over areas with great blocks of granite. I was a strong hiker,
however, and my legs are long. I figured that by pushing myself I
could cover the distance and arrive at Gentian well before dark -
dead tired and no doubt chock-full of self-justification.

So I set off.

It was a fine day in spite of the heat. A tricky descent along the
southwestern flank of Goose Eye commanded my attention. Then I
flushed a few languid spruce grouse down in a hollow, and was
further distracted by a harsh call that sounded like a raven, a
species formerly rare in New England but now making a
comeback. My bird-watcher's instinct perked up and I tramped
along more cheerfully. In time I reached Mount Carlo and made my
way up its rough northern shoulder. The eminence was as somber
as a chunk of Labrador tundra, but there was a good view back to
Goose Eye and ahead to Mount Success. I tried to hail Denis
telepathically but there was no answer. No doubt Don had returned
home and the child had been obliged to take refuge in the mental
sanctuary he customarily erected against his father's barbs and
disparagements.

Damn Don! He couldn't hurt Denis physically, but he could certainly
do enormous emotional damage. The boarding school had
seemed the perfect solution, taking the boy out of Don's orbit for
nearly nine months of the year and providing him with an
environment where he could continue his self-education, while at
the same time learning to get along with other bright youngsters
and sympathetic adults. With that escape vetoed, there seemed to
be only one other solution to Denis's dilemma.

I would have to reveal his metapsychic gifts.

Every instinct in me warned against it. The child would be
exploited, pressured, treated as a freak if not as a menace. Once
the truth came out, the psi laboratories at the various institutions
would squabble over him. And I had read recently about a psi
research facility at the U. S. Army's Aberdeen Center...

No. There had to be another way.

I hiked on, agonizing, entertaining one preposterous idea after
an­other. I would steal Denis away. I would poison Don's liquor just
enough to put him in bed, under my coercive thumb. I would
confide Denis's secret to the nuns at school and enlist their help.
(But the truth would leak out. The unsophisticated sisters could
never deal with it. ) I would write to Dr. Rhine himself! To our
bishop. To the Governor of New Hampshire. To President Nixon.
To The New York Times!

Occupied with these thoughts, I crossed the steep notch of Carlo
Col and slogged into New Hampshire again, beginning the long
climb to Mount Success, that ironically named central point of the
little Mahoosuc Range. Success wasn't very difficult to master. It
wasn't high, only interminably broad. Up around the summit were
treacherous patches of thinly crusted bog where a false step put
you boot-top-deep in black muck. I finally snapped out of my
distraction when I missed my footing and fell headlong into a
pocket of the stuff. It was only by the skin of my teeth that I missed
tumbling over a kind of rock-slab retain­ing wall into a lethally steep
ravine.

I had managed to wrench my knee, I was half soaked, and clinging
black glop slathered me from stem to gudgeon.

I crawled out swearing at my own stupidity - and at the whimsical
topography of my native state, where bogs appeared at the tops of
oth­erwise arid mountains. They were a consequent of the local
weather pattern, formed when moist air driven by strong winds
collided with the small peaks. In summer there might be thick mist
or drizzle or even sleet at the higher elevations while the lower
slopes remained warm and dry. The same terrain and weather
factors made for extremely vi­olent thunderstorms.

I recalled this as I sat on top of Mount Success changing my wet
pants and socks in a rising wind while towering cumulus clouds
billowed up behind the two Bald Caps in the west. Now I knew why
I had met so few hikers during the last three hours - and those
hiking in the opposite direction. Anybody with any brains was
already holed up in a shelter; but I was caught halfway between the
Carlo Col hut and Gentian Pond. It was almost five in the afternoon,
my knee hurt like hell, I had no tent in my pack, and shelter was
four hours away in either direction... for an able-bodied hiker.

I limped off in the direction of Gentian, moving as fast as the knee
permitted. As the clouds humped higher and darker, I looked for a
likely bivouac. I found nothing but windswept open ledges, knee-
high tangles of scrub spruce and balsam (but no wood large
enough to cut into a walking stick), and tumbled rocky slopes that
had to be traversed with the utmost caution. Clouds hid the sun and
wind whipped the minia­ture evergreens viciously in a prelude to
the arrival of the storm front. Off in the southwest, the sky was
purplish black.

As I slid downhill into a brushy washout my knee buckled. I went
over sideways, but managed to land on my pack. The pain was
intense. I lay there with my eyes shut listening to the tinkle of a tiny
rivulet a few meters away. Then came a faint grumble of thunder,
raindrops splattered my face, and I said, "Oh, shit. "

Now what? I was going to have to get out of that ravine, for starters,
since it would probably become a torrent once the storm began in
ear­nest. Shedding my pack, I hobbled around gathering sticks to
splint the knee. When the joint was immobilized I rested for a few
minutes, trying to concentrate my metapsychic healing ability on
the injury. But it was no good. I was too distracted and anxious to
focus my mind properly. I put on my Gore-Tex jacket, the only
rainwear I had, shouldered my backpack again, and began a long
and awkward climb.

The rain came on fast and so did the fireworks. There was a real
danger of being zapped by lightning if one remained in an exposed
po­sition during one of these big storms, and an outside chance of
getting killed on the slippery granite rocks. I was still a good hour
and a half away from Gentian Pond Shelter and I didn't have a
hope of making it before nightfall. I'd have to hole up somewhere;
but as I rummaged frantically in my memory trying to recall this
section of the trail from my last-year's hike, it seemed that there
was no real refuge to be had, not along the trail proper. And if I
went sidetracking in the dusk I would certainly get lost.

I stood still in the driving downpour and tried to exert my farsight,
seeking some cranny or marmot hole where I could gain at least
min­imal shelter. My ultrasense refused to function. Perhaps it was
the lightning that blazed all around me; perhaps it was the pain of
my sprained knee, or sheer funk. Whatever - I farsaw nothing. I
remember crying out mentally to little Denis in my desperation,
having some notion that his superior brain might be able to locate a
hiding place where mine had failed. But Denis didn't respond. I
suppose my tele­pathic howl was too feeble and too circumscribed
by the dense granite rock that surrounded me. I was stuck.

Alors - j'y suis, j'y reste! Unless...

What happened next seems, in retrospect, to be almost a
prefiguring - if not a parody - of the great event that would take
place forty years later. Trapped on that damned mountain in a
thundering deluge, I lifted my head to the sky and yelled:

"Ghost! Get me out of this!"

Between lightning blasts, the landscape was now nearly pitch
black. I cried out to the fantôme Familier a second time. The wind
roared and my knee gave me hell. I was drenched all over again in
spite of the Gore-Tex, since the rain was somehow blowing uphill. I
unfastened my pack and sat on the streaming rocks, my splinted
leg jutting awkwardly.

"Ghost, you son of a bitch! Where are you when I need you?"

And it said: Here.

I gave a violent start. Hallucination? But the wind had fallen off
abruptly and the rain spigot was turned off. I was aware of a hazy
glow surrounding me. The lightning's glare was almost lost in it,
only visible now as slightly brighter pulses of light in an overarching
luminescence.

I whispered, "Ghost?"

A vos ordres.

"Is it really you?"

Poor Rogi! When you have legitimate need of me, you have only to
call. Someone will hear and summon me. I thought you understood
this.

I cursed the mysterious presence roundly in French and English,
then demanded that it do something about my knee. Voilà! The
injury healed instantly. Giddy with triumph, I told it, "Now dry me off
- if you can. "

Nothing easier.

Pouf! Clouds of vapor poured out of the sleeves and from under
the lower edge of my rain jacket. I pulled the thing off and watched
my pants and sweater steam dry in a couple of minutes. Even my
socks dried.

"Hot damn!" I chortled. "Now let's have a nice cup of tea with plenty
of brandy in it. "

The Ghost's mind-voice was slightly caustic: I believe you've used
up the customary three wishes. You have your Bluet stove and the
makings in your pack.

Laughing like a loon, I pulled out the things and got cooking. The
Ghost had charitably dried off a few rocks in the immediate vicinity
so I just sat where I was, waiting for the pot to boil and munching a
Granola bar. The glow from what I now know was a psychocreative
bubble cast a friendly light over the dripping skunk-currant bushes.

After I had managed to calm down a little I said, "It's a good thing
you did show up. A man could die in this kind of a mess. Poor little
Denis has had enough hard luck without losing his favorite uncle,
too. "

The Ghost seemed surprised: Hard luck?

"The boarding-school thing I arranged for him fell through. Don and
most of the family are dead-set against it. I should think you'd
know. "

I have been... elsewhere. Do you mean to tell me that Don objects
to Denis being taught by the Jesuits?

"Jesuits! Hell, no. He objects to the kid going to that school for
bud­ding geniuses in Vermont - Northfield Hall."

The Ghost seemed to be ruminating: So! It seems that further
direct intervention is called for, with the probability loci focused by
this mi­nor contretemps of yours. An interesting manifestation of
synchronicity! Of course Denis never spoke of this failed
arrangement, so how was one to know?

The thing's jabbering made no sense so I brewed tea and tossed
in a hefty slug of Christian Brothers. Half joking, I held out the small
plastic flask. "I don't suppose you'd care for a nip?"

It said: Merci beau.

The flask floated away, tipped briefly, and returned. I hastily swilled
my tea and had a fit of coughing. If the Ghost was a delusion, as I
was beginning to suspect, my unconscious mind had a rare
imaginative flair. I said: "What's this about the Jebbies?"

It said: Two priests named Jared Ellsworth and Frank Dubois are
opening an experimental school intended to serve gifted children
from low-income families. It is called Brebeuf Academy and it is
located just outside Concord, on the grounds of a small Jesuit
college. You will find that the fathers will readily accept Denis,
under full scholarship. You yourself will take care of the boy's
incidental expenses. Don will give his consent.

A euphoric warmth, not from the brandy, began to suffuse me.
"Didn't I read something about Ellsworth in Newsweek a while
back?"

But it ignored me and continued: After Denis has attended Brebeuf

Academy for one year, you will tell Father Ellsworth the full truth
about the boy's supranormal mental faculties. He will know what
steps must be taken to protect Denis during his minority. You may
then safely leave the boy's guidance in this priest's hands.

My brain spun. For over six years I'd devoted almost every
moment of my spare time to the education and encouragement of
my nephew. The rest of the time I'd merely worried myself sick
over him. Was the Ghost telling me my job was done?

It said: Not done. Denis will always need your friendship. But you
have fulfilled very well the first charge I placed on you, Rogi, and
for a while you'll have time for yourself.

For a while!

Peace! Ne vous tracassez pas. There are years yet.

I shouted, "How can I believe you? What are you?" You may as
well know. It won't hurt. I am a being from another world, from
another star. I am your friend and Denis's friend - the special
guardian of the entire Remillard family, for reasons that will
eventually be made clear to you. Now I will see to your safety
before I go. The storm will last far into the night.

All I could think of were the flying-saucer flaps going on all over the
world for the past several years. And my Ghost was some kind of
extraterrestrial?

I blurted out, "What did happen to Betty and Barney Hill on the old
Franconia Highway?"

The Ghost uttered its dry little laugh: Perhaps we can discuss it
another time! I must go now. Adieu, cher Rogi...

Glowing mist closed in about me. I was captive for a few moments
inside a pearly sphere and then there was a dazzling lightning bolt
and a clap of thunder. Rain sprayed me as though I'd stepped
beneath a waterfall and the terrain was completely different. I was
standing about three meters away from a log cabin with lighted
windows that was perched on a rock shelf above a wind-whipped
little body of water. People moved around inside. A sound of
singing and concertina music drifted through the night.

I was still holding my teacup, which was now half full of rainwater.
My backpack lay at my feet. I dumped the cup and retrieved the
pack, then strode up to the Gentian Pond Shelter and pounded on
the door.



18

OBSERVATION VESSEL

KRAK NA'AM [Kron 96-101010]

24 JUNE  1974



ra'edroo slithered into the surveillance chamber, sa­luted her
Krondak superior on the intimate racial mode, and bid the other
three entities on duty a courteous vocal "High thoughts,
col­leagues. " An unspoken query was prominent in her mind's
vestibulum: Why have you summoned me, Umk'ai? The Russian
Salyut space lab­oratory is not scheduled to be launched for at
least another five hours. Thula'ekoo said aloud, "That is true,
Ra'edroo. But another event is about to take place below, one that
happens every year... in New Hampshire."

The Simb and the Gi who were working at the think tank laughed at
some private joke.

Thula'ekoo reproved the pair with the slightest mental tap on their
itch-receptors. He addressed Ra'edroo and a young Poltroyan who
had a puzzled smile on his grayish-purple, humanoid face. "I know
that both you and Trosimo-Finabindin are keen amateur
xenopsychologists. Since you two are new to the Earth tour, you'll
be interested in this rather typical example of the current North
American mind-set with respect to exotic encounters. "

"Perhaps not wholly typical, " sniffed the Simb, who was a
statisti­cian and inclined to be overpunctilious. "Our current
sampling among Status Seven Earth indigenes shows that 49. 22
percent believe that UFOs do exist, and that they originated on
other inhabited planets. Some 9.91 percent think they have
personally seen one. "

A brief wave of amusement passed over the Gi, DriDri Vuvl.
"We're getting to be positively old hat. I suppose it was inevitable. "

"I should think, " Ra'edroo said, "that those figures demonstrate
that the thirty-year familiarization scheme has been a resounding
success. "

"You've got a lot to learn about Earthlings, colleague, " said the
Simb.

DriDri Vuvl added, "These Americans, for instance. Their capacity
for ennui in the face of the marvelous is mind-boggling. Why,
they've very nearly lost interest in their space program! Major
funding was cut off in order to finance some idiotic war. And now
all their leaders seem concerned about is a tacky political scandal
and threats by Status Three nations to cut off the petroleum
supply. Petroleum! I ask you. "

The Simb passed judgment. "Excretory orifices, the lot of them.
How can they be expected to coadunate their world Mind?"

Thula'ekoo was busy at the monitor and chose to ignore the crude
chaffing. When the image was well centered, fully dimensioned,
and computer-enhanced for all eight Krondak senses (a pity young
Trosi would miss out on the pla'akst, which enriched this type of
observation so; but that was life), he transferred the scene to the
large wall-screen.

Twenty-three humans, fourteen men and nine women, sat in a
circle on the weathered rocks near the summit of Mount Adams in
New Hampshire's Presidential Range. It was 5° Celsius with a
cutting west­erly wind, overcast skies, and visibility of about twenty
kilometers. The people were dressed in nondescript outdoor gear
obviously chosen for warmth. Most of them were talking quietly,
with three or four engaged in solitary meditation. One woman
offered plastic cups of hot cocoa from a thermos and had a few
takers.

"Down from last year's gathering, " the Simb noted with wry
satis­faction. "Way down."

The Gi rolled its saucer eyes. "The faithful are defecting to
macrobiot­ics, pacifism, and whale watching."

"Silence!" said Thula'ekoo. "They are about to begin."

Ra'edroo and the Poltroyan, Trosi, were completely absorbed in
the scene. The human leader, a female of commanding aspect,
had directed members of the circle to join hands. She said:

"Fellow Aetherians, the time has come. Empty your minds of all
earthly thought. Prepare to divorce yourselves from your fleshy
bodies and take on the astromental configuration. Banish all
physical discom­fort. Close your eyes. Shut out all sounds except
that of my voice. Feel nothing but the Presence of the Universe.
Join with me as I call to it. Let our thoughts arise with a single
voice. Call out! The Universe sees us and loves us. It is alive with
powerful and friendly spirits who are watching us even at this
moment. If we only have faith and strength of will, these
extraterrestrial beings will answer when we call. They will come and
save our world from the death that threatens us. Call out! Bid the
otherworld creatures come! Let them know they are welcome.
To­gether, now, with me... "

Come.

"Why, she's a borderline suboperant!" Ra'edroo exclaimed. "The
oth­ers are hopelessly latent, but what meager faculties they can
project are actually in a loose mind-meld with the leader. How
extremely interest­ing!"

Come.

Trosi was radiant. "The dear things - what a splendid effort. " His
voice broke with compassion. "What a pity that the subsidiary
humans are so inferior in mind to the leader. "

Thula'ekoo said, "All humans possess latent metafaculties to a
greater or lesser degree. In this case, only the leader has the
projective farspeech capacity to penetrate the ionosphere. At this
distance, none but the Krondaku and the Poltroyans can detect the
metapsychic emanations of the subordinates in the meld. "

"Thanks be to Sacred Truth and Beauty, " muttered the Simb.

"I agree with Trosi, " offered Ra'edroo, "that the effort of this little
group is most affecting, a foreshadowing of the metaconcerted
request that must take place before Intervention. "

COME.

"Hah!" scoffed the Simb. "A futile mockery of such an effort, rather.
... One might as well compare a chorus of chirping insects to a
symphonic ensemble. These poor things are one of a handful of
cranks who peri­odically attempt to make mental contact with exotic
beings - what they so quaintly call extraterrestrials. They are only
unique in having a meagerly talented latent as their leader, which is
about what one might expect in New Hampshire. "

COME!

"Again I detect overtones of satire in your remark, colleague, "
Ra'edroo said.

"Oh, the place is crawling with latents. Even imperfect operants. It's
one of the irruptive metapsychic nuclei of the planet. This world's
Mind isn't evolving overall, but breaking out in spots. Quite
grotesque. Makes it devilish hard for the immatures. It's a wonder
any of them reach adulthood sane. "

COME!

The sentimental Gi clapped a hand over its central heart. Its
intromit­tent organ glowed crimson in empathetic passion. "Oh,
feel the good­will in the female entity's cry, citizens. The yearning!
One longs so to console her. "

Come come come.

"Hold your honey, colleague, " the Simb jeered, "until you've
traveled down below the planet's ionic shell as we Simbiari have,
and experi­enced the full unsavoriness of its puny knots of
consciousness - the selfishness, the irrational suspicion separating
one nation from another, the perverted male sex-dynamic that
keeps them endlessly at war. "

"What you say may be true, Salishiss, " little Trosi said, "but the
fact remains that these people have the greatest metapsychic
potential in the galaxy, according to the Lylmik. "

"The Lylmik tell us a lot of things they never bother to prove, "
grumped the Simb. "I'm no magnate of the Concilium, only a lowly
number-cruncher. But my trade gives me a certain insight into
social dynamics. Left to itself, this world Mind would inevitably
destroy it­self. "

Come. Please come.

"So far humans have refrained from using atomic weapons in
battle, " DriDri Vuvl noted, "even though they've had them for thirty
years. They keep making more and bigger weapons, but they don't
use them. It seems to be a sort of threat-display mechanism. "

"Oh, yes?" Salishiss gesticulated at the view-screen. "What do you
think that group on the mountain is so worked up about? They're
con­vinced that only a galactic civilization can rescue their world
from atomic suicide. That's why they call out to us in this pathetic
fashion. Of course, they have no conception of what Intervention
would really mean, with the vast majority of Earth's population still
metapsychically latent and socially infantile. Why, we'd have to
occupy the planet and play nanny to it for more than a hundred
orbits until its Mind matured - and the humans would oppose our
proctorship almost every step of the way. The very thought of it
makes me cringe. "

The Krondak officer, Thula'ekoo, said, "The picture is by no means
as bleak as you paint it, Salishiss. Large numbers of Earthlings
already experience feelings of universal fellowship, the precursor
to true coadunation. And the Lylmik profess to be gratified by the
accelerating mental evolution. "

"And who would dare question the ineffable judgment of the oldest
and wisest race in the galaxy?" the Simb inquired archly. "Those
archi­tects of the Milieu, those masters of absent-minded subtlety?
Hard luck for the rest of us that Lylmik reasoning is sometimes just
as ethereal as their bodies... "

Come!

"The human leader is weakening, " said Ra'edroo. "It must be very
stressful on that cold mountaintop for such high-metabolism
creatures. "

"So few in the little group now." DriDri Vuvl shook its ruff of
filoplumage sadly. "They may not show up at all next Midsummer
Day. "

Come oh come.

Trosi the Poltroyan leaked compassion from every neuron. "If only
we could encourage them - let them know that we're out here, and
we really do care. "

Great Thula'ekoo responded with implacable authority. "Even if
every human being now living on Earth called out to us, we could
not answer. It would violate the scheme of the Concilium. "

"Just some tiny gesture, " Trosi begged. "Something that wouldn't
warp the probability lattices. Love's Oath - we do enough
manipula­tion of them, what with the mental analyses and the
technical experi­ments and the flybys. How about a simple gesture
of friendliness for a change?"

"Statute Blue-4-001, " Ra'edroo said respectfully to her superior,
"gives the officer of the watch certain discretionary powers. Thou
and I, Umk'ai, have the expertise to direct a most delicate
farspeech beam in metaconcert. "

The circle of humans still held hands and had their faces raised to
the clouded sky. Their attempt at mental synergy was crumbling.
The leader urged them to one last effort.

Come!

Opaque membranes flicked over the accessory eyeballs of
Thula'ekoo. His primary optics glowed an intense blue and
seemed to suck in the willing psyches of his fellow Krondaku, the
eager Poltroyan, and the Gi. After a nanosecond's hesitation, the
Simb Salishiss blended into the fivefold brain, and it broadcast a
mental chord that blended tranquillity with patience - and the
merest hint of Unity:

Persevere.

For just an instant, the uplifted human faces were transfigured.
Then the spell was broken and the twenty-three startled people
turned to each other with whispers. The female leader buried her
head in her arms. Several others crowded around her anxiously,
touching her. She finally looked up, not seeing her companions,
lifted an arm to the sky, and smiled.

Then she started off down the Star Lake Trail to the Madison Huts.
The others came straggling after.



19

BRETTON WOODS, NEW HAMPSHIRE, EARTH

25 JUNE  1974



"wake up, denis. We're here. "

The Volkswagen Beetle slowed for the left turn and swung into the
hotel entrance road. The seven-year-old boy was immediately
alert, straining against his seat belt to see over the dashboard of
the car. Ahead of them to the east was a majestic panorama,
several hundred acres of rolling lawn fronting a wooded rise that
hid a tantalizing glimpse of white and red. Beyond this, a vast slope
that stretched almost from horizon to horizon culminated in a
mountain rampart, dark with timber in the middle reaches and a
gleaming pewter along bare summit peaks that reflected the early-
morning sun. This was the Presidential Range of the White
Mountains. Even though it had been ground down by ice-age
glaciers, it was still the highest part of northeastern North America.

The child cried: Wherehotel? Wherecograilway? Look
thatmountain SNOW top in June!

That's Mount Washington. The one we're riding to top of today.

Studied   allmountain   names   let's   see:
JeffersonClayWashington-MonroeFranklinEisenhowerClinton
north/south. (Notall  presidents!) Why Eisenhower so dinky
UncleRogi?

He got his mountain last and beggars can't be chosers. State
changed name MountPleasant to Eisenhower. Once tried change
name MountClinton to MountPierce honor only president born
NewHampshire. Try never amounted to much. Neither did
PresidentPierce. People still call mountain Clinton.

Laughter. Why thesemountains look bigger from here than from
Ber­lin? What that funnystreak MountWashington? When we see
yourHOTEL?

Rogi laughed out loud. "Take it easy. You've got three whole days
to ask questions. Batège! I'd nearly forgotten what a frantic little
quiz-kid you are. "

"You haven't forgotten at all. " The child was complacent. "I see
inside your mind how much you missed me. And I missed you, too.
"

The car slowed beside a guard kiosk painted a spotless white,
deco­rated with window boxes of scarlet petunias. The old
watchman stuck his head out. "Morning, Roger. Got your nevvy
here all safe and sound, I see. Plenty time yet for breakfast. "

"Morning, Norm. Yup - give him a treat before we go up the cog.
Say hi to Mr. Redmond, Denis. "

"Hello, Mr. Redmond. " Why hecallyou ROGER UncleRogi?

"See you, Norm. " Because that myname here: Roger Remillard.
Bettername man works bighotel easier people
remember&pronounce than Rogatien. (And Rogi sounds naughty.)

Appreciative mirth.

The car swung around a long curve and the famous old White
Moun­tain Resort Hotel came into view. At first it looked as though
it must be a toy castle, or a chateau made from white spun sugar
with the glisten­ing roofs of the towers and wings colored like
cherry jam. The hotel had more tiny windows than you could count,
and little flags flying, and a candy-spill of flower gardens amidst
miniature trees in front. The actual size of the place only gradually
became evident as the driveway seemed to stretch on and on, with
the hotel growing steadily larger until it blotted out the mountain
vista entirely. The five-storey building was made of white stuccoed
wood. It had a two-tiered colonnaded verandah curving from the
central porte-cochère all around the entire south wing.

"It's a palace, " exclaimed the overawed boy. "Are you really the
boss?"

Rogi shook his head, laughing. "Hardly. I'm only the assistant
con­vention manager. " [Explanatory image.] "But I get to live here
where I work, and I like this job much better than the one I had at
the paper mill. It pays better, too. "

They drove past the grand main entrance, which was crowded with
autos and tour buses and guests and bellmen scurrying to load
and unload people's luggage, and pulled into the employees'
parking lot behind a screen of tall shrubs. Denis insisted on
carrying his small suitcase himself. They entered an annex building
that housed resident staff members. A man dressed in a white
jacket and bow tie hurried past them, greeting Rogi and mussing
Denis's mousy brown hair.

Rogi said, "That was Ron, one of the waiter captains. Just wait until
you see the dining room here. There are two of them, but we'll eat
in the biggest one where Ron works this morning." They climbed
carpeted stairs.

"You like it here a lot, don't you, Uncle Rogi. " There was a tinge of
dejection in the boy, imperfectly screened.

"Yes. But I can come visit you in Berlin while you're home for the
summer. It isn't even an hour's drive. "

"I know. Only... " UncleRogi I miss you. Miss mindspeech. Miss
friendadult questionanswers fearcalming. Teachers at Brebeuf
nice kids notbad but not same YOU.

Comfort. Denis you know grownups must work sometimes goaway
oldhome.

Understand. But can't speak you through mountains down Concord
school can't speak you from Berlin whileyou here either.

There's your Maman & littlebrotherVictor to bespeak.

Denis stopped at the top of the stairs. He averted his eyes,
clumsily trying to conceal a dark emotional coloration. "Mom's
changed since last fall. When I came home from school last week
she could hardly mindspeak me at all anymore. She was like that
when I went home at Easter, too, but I thought it was just because
of the new babies. Now she - she just doesn't want to share her
thoughts with me the way she used to. She kisses me and says
she's busy and tells me to go play. "

"Your mother has a lot to do taking care of Jeanette and Laurette.
Twin babies are a terrible handful unless you have older children
as ready-made baby-sitters, the way Tante Lorraine had with your
Papa and me... Have you been able to mindspeak with your
Papa?"

"Not very much. I thought he'd be pleased at the way things worked
out at the academy. My good grades, and the way I was auditing
classes with the college kids, and how Father Ellsworth has been
getting me parapsychology books and publications from the library
at Brown Uni­versity, and how I'm learning archery, and how to play
the piano. But he wasn't much interested. He doesn't like me, you
know. Not like he does Victor. "

The hallway was deserted and quiet. Rogi knelt down to face the
boy. "Your father does love you, Denis. The thing is - Victor's only
a little boy and he needs more attention right now. "

But Victordumberthanme! Weakfarspeech/farsight/farhearing/PK.
(Strong coercion though. ) And he fights and swipes things and
mindpinches new babysisters awful when thinks nobody looking.
Tried mindpinch me HA! myshield reflected pinch back him.

"Victor is probably jealous of his new sisters. Maybe even jealous
of you now that you're going to school. Four-year-olds are still
pretty un­civilized. It takes time for them to learn right from wrong. "

"He already knows, " Denis said darkly. "I can tell. He hurts the little
twins anyway whenever their minds make telepathic noises that
bug him. You know how little babies are. "

Rogi made a comical grimace. "I remember. "

"Jeanette and Laurette can't help being pests sometimes. But
Victor doesn't seem to be any good at putting up a protective
mental shield, so the baby-thoughts drive him crazy. I told Mom
how he was tormenting the twins and she told him to stop - but
there's really not much she can do about it. "

"I see. " (Poor Sunny, retreating into fatalism and saying her beads
and watching soap operas on television! Inside of a year she
would be enceinte once again. )

"I tried to explain to Papa why Victor shouldn't harass the babies. I
told him it would discourage them from developing their own
ultrafaculties - maybe even make them normal. He laughed. "

Rogi stood up, keeping a tight lid over his own thoughts. "I'll talk
things over with your father when I take you back. Don't worry. "

Denis smiled at him. "I knew you'd help. "

"My room's right down here. Let's hurry. We want time for
breakfast, and the shuttle bus to the cog is at ten. " (And what can I
say to Don to show him how he's poisoning his younger son and
endangering his daughters and breaking the older boy's heart?
The only time he opens to me is when he's drunk. His precious
Victor can do no wrong. )

They went into the small suite that was Rogi's apartment and left
Denis's suitcase on the rollaway bed that had been brought in for
his visit. The child inspected the premises gravely and admired the
sweep­ing vista from the windows.

"That's a view that costs the hotel guests at least two hundred
dollars a day, " Rogi told his nephew, "but I get it for free. Of
course this place of mine is pretty small, and I have to walk up a lot
of stairs. But I have a nice office over in the main part of the hotel
with room for my books, and when I sit up here and watch the
storms play around the mountains I have a show that beats
anything on television. "

They went downstairs, crossed a courtyard, and entered the hotel's
north wing through a side door. Denis's eyes popped at the sight
of apparently endless corridors with pillars and chandeliers, ornate
Edward­ian furniture, potted palms, gilt-framed mirrors, and
fireplaces - large enough for a boy to stand in - that now had
bouquets of red and yellow peonies in the grates instead of
flaming logs. They looked into a great ballroom with green velvet
drapes and standing silver candlesticks as big as hat-trees. Two
men ran polishing machines across a floor that looked shiny
enough to ice-skate on. Rogi told Denis there would be a
Midsummer Night Ball there that evening. Another salon, lush with
ferns and tropical flowers, overlooked a golf course and the
approach to Mount Washington.

When they came at last to the dining room, Denis was struck
dumb. It was fancier than any restaurant he had ever seen in his
life. Ron, the captain who seated them, treated Denis like a grown
man and called him Sir when he gave him a menu. There were
weird things for break­fast like kippers and steak, and eight
different ways of having eggs, and twelve varieties of fresh fruit
including New Zealand gooseberries. The table was set with
crystal and shining silver and monogrammed damask napery.
There was a vase with a single mauve rose, so perfect in form and
so outre in color that Denis had to touch it to be certain it was real.
The sugar came in hard lumps wrapped in embossed gold paper.
(Denis stole two. ) Milk was served in a faceted goblet, sitting on its
own small plate with a paper doily underneath. They ate eggs
Benedict and had mini-croissants and strawberries Wilhelmine,
and were served funny little cups of espresso, which Denis drank
politely but didn't much care for.

When they had finished, Denis sighed and said, "I expect you'll
stay here forever. "

Rogi laughed and touched his lips with his napkin. "I'll tell you a
secret. What I'd really like to do is save my money until I have
enough to buy a little bookstore in a nice quiet college town. I could
stay in a place like that forever. "

The check came. Rogi signed it and he and Denis stood to go.
The boy said, "That doesn't sound very exciting - a bookstore. "

"I'm afraid I'm not a very exciting man, Denis. Most people aren't,
you know. Movies and television shows and books are full of
heroes, but they aren't too common in real life anymore. "

The boy thought about this as they walked through the lobby. It was
crowded with guests on their way to the day's activities, most of
them middle-aged or elderly, but with a sprinkling of young couples
and well-dressed parents with children. There were people in
tennis togs and riding breeches and hiking boots, and a group of
little old ladies in polyester pantsuits carrying shawls and heavy
sweaters, and old men in loud sports jackets hung about with
camera bags and binoculars. A pretty tour guide was calling for
their attention, please.

"I used to think it would be neat to be a hero when I was just a little
kid, " Denis said. "An astronaut or a jungle explorer or a hockey
star like Bobby Clarke or Gil Perreault. But I guess I'm not a very
exciting person either. Father Dubois kids me about it sometimes.
He says I should quit sitting around like a stuffed owl,
contemplating the infinite. " The boy chuckled. "But the infinite's
interesting. "

They went out the front door of the hotel to the shuttle bus. Rogi
said, "Don't take his teasing seriously. Be what you are. You've got
a brain - maybe one like nobody else in the whole world. Explore
that. "

The mob of old folks and the tour guide followed Rogi and Denis
into the bus. The guide counted her charges, then signaled the
driver. The bus drove off.

Denis said, "There are doctors who study the brain - take it apart
and poke needles and things into it to find out how it works. But I
don't want to do just that. What I want to learn about isn't how the
brain works but why. Why do those electrical impulses and
chemical ex-changes result in thinking? No electroencephalograph
shows the thoughts in a person's mind. And how do brains control
bodies? It's not my brain that commands my fingers to grab this
bus seat, it's me. A brain is nothing but a lump of meat. "

"With a mind in it. "

"That's right, " the boy agreed. "Mind! That's what I want to learn
about. A mind isn't the same as a brain. "

"Some scientists would argue the point - but I don't think the two
are identical. "

Denis said: People like you&me would give scientists fits! How
mybrain speak yourbrain? No radiowaves other energy pass
between us!

Through    whatmedium    propagates    coercion/PK/farspeech?
How farsight/hearing/smell/taste/touch  impulses   transmitted?
Received? What energysource powers PK? Why can't farsense
through granite? Why easier farsense at night? How mymind
influence another in coer­cion? How mymind heal mybody?... I
know mymind controls mymind. This means: mymind controls
chemistry&electricity in brain. The nonmatterenergything
dominates the matterenergything! HOW?

Rogi said: Denisdearchild find out! Explore your mind and mine
and Don's and Victor's. Explore other minds as well minds of
normals find way bridge gap separating them/us. What an
adventure... more excit­ing than mountaineering deepdiving
oceantraveling flyingouterspace!

[Good-humored juvenile skepticism.] But not anything like as
dan­gerous.

Rogi squeezed the thin little shoulder. Aloud, he said, "Of course
not. "

The bus bounced over the frost-heaved macadam road that
twisted through a forest of maples and hemlocks. Around Rogi and
Denis, the little old ladies twittered like wrens.



The cog railway that ascends the western slope of Mount
Washington is unique in North America, one of those mad Yankee
notions that never should have worked but somehow did, for more
than a hundred years. Denis took one look at the chunky coal-fired
locomotive, oddly lopsided on level track since its boiler was
designed to be horizontal when the train climbed the steep grade,
and cried: "It's the Little Engine That Could!"

The old folks simpered fondly.

There were many other tourists of all ages waiting at the base
station to board the train. The engine pushed a single car, painted
bright yellow.

Traction came from a rack-and-pinion mechanism beneath.
Between the regular narrow-gauge rails was a central track that
resembled an endless ladder of thumb-thick iron rods four inches
long. This rack was gripped by twin cog gears on the engine's
drive mechanism, which powered the train up the mountain with an
earsplitting clatter while the engine chugged and hissed and
belched an air-polluting cloud of ebony smoke such as Denis had
never seen before in his life.

As they crept upward through scrubby trees the entire Bretton
Woods area was visible behind them. "This is neat!" Denis yelled
over the racket. "Look down there - it's your hotel!"

Rogi said: I watch little trains go up&down mountain from my
win­dow. Sometimes when cloud clamps down on summit trains
look like they're heading into sky never to return... Man who
invented train went to state legislature in 1858 asked it to grant
charter so he could build railroad. Lawmaker proposed
amendment permitting inventor to build railroad to Moon after he
finish one up MountWashington.

Laughter. Getting really cold. Glad brought jacket. Glad we can
mindspeak can hardly hear WOW whatanoise!

You know about mountainweather? It can change in flash: bright
sunshine to freezing cold even now in June. Snow any month.
Wind blows hurricanefast on summit 1/3 days year.

Yes I read book school worldclass record MountWashington wind
231 mph! Know also Indians thought mountain home GreatSpirit
afraid to climb no wonder.

You hear story ChiefPassaconaway?

?

Lived NewHampshire early colonial times. Great wise leader also
famed wonderworking magic allkinds wizard tricks. When Chief
Pas­saconaway died legend says wolves pulled body on sled to
top MountWashington. There fiery coach carried him away into sky.

Like flyingsaucer? Awww...

Lots of other stories. You ever hear Great Carbuncle?

?

Supposed tobe huge shining red jewel hidden mountain worth
zillions. Glowing ruby light lures greedy people come search for it.
They follow light get trapped terrible storms never able get hold
carbuncle. Die. NathanielHawthorne used legend in story.

I'll get book BerlinLibrary this summer... UncleRogi you don't
be­lieve flyingsaucers do you?

Never saw one. But ElmerPeabody man drives tractormower at
hotel says he did. Sensible man Elmer. Lots of reputable people
say they see UFOs. Funny. NewHampshire seems have awfullot
those things con­founded UFO plague!

I  read  two  books  kindof  scary. Onebook man&woman driving
FranconiaNotch just west here say they abducted by saucermen.
Doctor got story years later by hypnotizing people! Saucerman told
lady came faraway star meant noharm. Anotherbook guy saw big
saucer with redlights over Exeter nearcoast. Went to police. Police
saw it too! Also wholebunch other people. What think?

I think... it may be possible.

Ahh. Littlegreenmen visit Earth but not make official contact? Why
they want do such crazything! Why keep secret instead reveal
selves rightout to world?

Dearchild why do we?



The little train crawled slowly to the region above timberline, leaving
behind gnarled and crouching dwarf trees and passing into a place
where carpets of subarctic flowers, pink and white and pale yellow,
bloomed in the midst of sedge meadows and a desolation of gray
crags. There was still snow in shadowed hollows and the western
side of the rocks was encrusted with thick hoarfrost. The summit
buildings came into view. They passed a cluster of water tanks and
saw a simple painted board:



LIZZIE   BOURNE

PERISHED   1855



"She was twenty-three, " Rogi said. "Nearly seventy other people
have died on this mountain - more than on any other peak in North
Amer­ica. Some died from accidents, some from exposure. The
mountain is deceptive, you see. People come up on a beautiful
day like this, without a cloud in the sky, and decide to take a little
hike. Suddenly clouds of icy fog come racing in and you can't see
two feet in front of you. There might be snow or hail or freezing rain
with a wind-chill factor way below zero. The worst weather on Earth
short of the polar regions hap­pens right here in our own state, on a
mountain only sixty-two hundred feet high. I've been up here lots of
times - on the cog, driving up the eastern side on the Carriage
Road, even hiking up from the hotel. But I never feel quite
comfortable. The top of Mount Washington is an eerie place. "

The train drew to a halt in front of a drab, barnlike wooden building
that the trainman proudly identified as the famous Summit House
Ho­tel. He warned the passengers that they would have only forty-
five minutes to explore. The return trip, like the journey up the
mountain, would take more than an hour.

A strong, cold wind was blowing and Rogi told Denis to watch his
step on the slippery gravel. There was very little snow on the
ground, but the windward side of every structure, rock, railing, and
guy-cable was thick with dazzling white rime. The giant frost
crystals looked like otherworldly marine growth, a crust of twisted
tabs and plates and knobs and opaque lenses of ice.

The Summit House Hotel held no interest for Denis. He wanted to
climb the cone-shaped rock mass that marked the absolute high
point of the mountain. Then he raced off to see if the weather
observatory or the TV and radio transmitter buildings were open to
the public. They weren't. As he squinted up at the ice-wrapped
antenna tower, the boy projected to Rogi dramatic imaginary
pictures of the way this place might look in a howling blizzard with
the wind blowing two hundred miles an hour. His mind was charged
with exhilaration as they walked to a rocky spur and looked south,
down a leg of the great Appalachian Trail, and saw a group of tiny
lakes and a hikers' hut more than a thousand feet below.

"Those are the Lakes of the Clouds, " Rogi said. "Maybe on one of
your later visits we can hike up to them from the Hotel, on the
Ammonoosuc Ravine Trail. "

"Wow! That'd be great. " Denis squinted, studying the area
immedi­ately below the spur. "What are those piles of rock with
yellow paint on top?"

"Cairns marking the trails. You have to watch very carefully for them
in some places to keep from getting lost. The trails on this
mountain don't look like the woodland paths you're used to - at
least not in the high parts. They mostly go over bare rock. That's
one of the reasons why Mount Washington can be treacherous. "

They went back to the northern area of the summit to see if they
could see Berlin. Sure enough, the steam plumes from the paper
mills were little tan feathers rising from the Androscoggin Valley.
The air was so clear that they could see Umbagog Lake and
Bigelow Mountain over in Maine, and the Green Mountains of
Vermont to the west, and beyond the White Mountain Resort Hotel
was a pimple on the horizon that was really Mount Marcy, 150 miles
away in the Adirondacks of New York.

"I see hikers, " Denis said, pointing to a line of people toiling up
alongside the cog railway line. He instinctively magnified the tiny
fig­ures with his farsight and projected the picture into Rogi's mind.

"... eighteen, nineteen, twenty... twenty-three of them. "

"It's a popular place to hike. Over there is the main trail leading to
Clay and Jefferson and Adams. There are overnight huts between
Mount Adams and Mount Madison, too. "

Denis shaded his eyes. He was shivering in the unrelenting wind.
The vision of the climbers faded from Rogi's ultrasense. And then
the child uttered a gasp of disbelief, and there came a surge of
fear from him that made Rogi cry out in concern.

"Denis! What's wrong?"

A trembling, bluish finger pointed at the line of people. They
disap­peared behind the shoulder of the mountain for a moment as
the trail dipped, then came into view again. The mental picture was
huge.

"Uncle Rogi, the lady in front. I hear her. "

"What?"

The boy burst into tears. "I hear her mind. She's like us! Another
person like us! Her mind projection is very faint and it doesn't make
much sense... "

He dashed the moisture from his eyes and hugged himself as he
tried to stop shuddering. Swiftly, Rogi unzipped his down-filled
jacket and wrapped Denis in it. He knelt beside the child on sharp
stones, feeling no cold, only a gut-churning hope. "Concentrate!
Try to share the farspeech with me, Denis. Help me hear what you
hear. " He put his arms around the boy and closed his eyes.

Oh my God.

She was singing a wordless melody, some classical fragment that
Rogi was unable to recognize. A joyful song. Now and then a
subvocalization floated above the music like gossamer spider-
threads against sunlit air:

Answered... they answered... out there... surely... the others may
doubt but... answered...

The clairaudient emanations and her farseen image cut off as the
woman followed the trail into another hollow, but his memory would
never relinquish that first picture, and whenever he thought of her
after she was lost to him, this vision of windblown vitality would
always come to mind: a strong-featured face, striking but not
conventionally pretty, slightly sunburned across the bridge of the
nose; eyes of a blue so pale that they were almost silver; an
exultant smile - my God, that smile! - that was the external sign of
her mind's rejoicing; strawberry-blond hair escaping from a green
woolen watch cap; a body tall, slender, and strong.

Denis was trying to squirm out of his paralyzed arms. "Uncle Rogi -
your jacket! You'll freeze!"

He came to himself. The hikers were still out of sight and Denis
was looking up at him, face tear-stained and twisted with emotion.
Rogi spoke urgently. "That woman. You're certain that the music
and farspeech came from her mind?"

"Absolutely certain. She really is another one like us. No - wait!
She's not as controlled as we are. Not aware. I don't think she
knows what she's doing when she mindspeaks. Perhaps she's
never had any other telepaths to speak to. But she is like us! Uncle
Rogi, we're not all alone... "

"And that she should be the one, " Rogi whispered. "C'est un
miracle. Un vrai miracle. " Sunny's voice came to him, an echo of a
long-ago apology: Quand le coup de foudre frappe -

The train whistle blew. Once, twice, three times.

"Oh, no!" cried the boy. "We can't just go and leave her!"

Rogi lifted Denis in his arms. "The hikers are coming this way,
prob­ably heading for Summit House. They should be here in half
an hour. We'll wait for them. "

"But the train - "

"Another train will come. "

Rogi stumbled over the frosty rocks, drunk with happiness, for the
first time realizing what Sunny had been trying to tell him about her
love for Don. When the thunderbolt strikes... there is no logic, no
resisting. And thus the marvel of the woman hiker's telepathic
ability was lost in a greater wonder. He scarcely heard Denis say:

"If there's one mind like hers, there must be lots more! All we have
to do is figure a way to find them. "

Wind sang in the antenna guy-wires and the humped little engine in
front of the hotel renewed its hooting. Tourists called to each other
and Denis shivered, radiating a fearful exultation that was almost as
intense as Rogi's own. Rogi carried the boy up the stairs into the
heavily insu­lated entry of the small hotel. A bearded man in
climbing gear held the door open, concern on his face.

"Little fellow's not hurt, is he?"

Rogi set Denis back on his feet, unwrapped him, and said, "All we
both need is a bit of warming up. "

"Try the dining room, " the man suggested. "Nice fire, fantastic
view. You can watch the train go down the mountain while you
stoke up with hot food and drink. Best thing. "

Thanking the man, Rogi led Denis into the Summit House lobby.
The boy was recovering fast and he eyed the souvenir counter with
interest. "Can I buy a guidebook and some maps? And maybe we
better get some Kleenex. My nose is running and so is yours. "
The small, wan face looked up with a critical frown. "You should
comb your hair before she gets here, too. "

Rogi burst out laughing. "Mais naturellement! It wouldn't do to look
scruffy. "

"I - I just want her to like us, " Denis protested.

"If she doesn't, we'll try coercion. "

"Be serious, Uncle Rogi! What are we going to say to her?"

"We'll have to think about that, won't we? But first, let's clean up
and then find something to eat. "

Hand in hand, they went looking for the men's room.



20

FROM THE MEMOIRS OF ROGATIEN REMILLARD



her name was Elaine Donovan Harrington.

She was thirty-one years old and separated from her husband, and
she lived in a "little country place" just outside the state capital of
Concord, where she edited and published a journal for UFO buffs
called Visitant. I found out later that she had inherited her
strawberry-blond hair - and probably her metapsychic traits - from
her late father Cole Donovan, a dynamic real-estate entrepreneur.
From her late mother, who was of Boston Brahmin stock, she had
a legacy of natural elegance and suffi­cient old money to support a
lifestyle far above any that Remillards of that day and age could
even imagine.

Scraping an acquaintance with her was the easiest thing in the
world, thanks to Denis.

We waited in ambush at a table in the rustic dining room of Summit
House; and when Elaine and her party of trail-weary Aetherians
arrived, the boy picked her brains. In retrospect, I am appalled at
his redactive expertise, for I realize now that he must have been
able to monitor every thought that passed between Elaine and me.
But at that time I had nothing but admiration for the child as he
trotted up to Elaine all primed with pilfered data from her memory
bank and claimed to be a reader of her magazine who had
recognized her from her masthead photograph. She was charmed
by the precocious, well-spoken lad, and engaged him in
conversation on sundry flying-saucerish topics while her friends
set­tled down to order a meal.

At an opportune moment I came up to retrieve my young relative.
Denis introduced me, explaining, "My Uncle Rogi - Roger - works
at the White Mountain Resort Hotel. Do you know it, Mrs.
Harrington? That big old place like a palace down at the western
foot of Mount Washington. "

"I'm staying there, " she said. The corners of her mouth lifted in a
little smile. "It's rather a family tradition, the White Mountain Hotel.
How do you do, Mr. Remillard?"

I had barricaded my unruly emotions behind the sturdiest mind-
screen I could muster; but when that silvery gaze focused on me I
might as well have tried to hide behind a shield of cellophane. The
rapport was instantaneous and I was unable to utter a word. God
only knows what thoughts I projected.

She laughed and enclosed my warm hand between her two chilly
ones. "Do you mind? My fingers are still like icicles and you seem
to be powered by some sort of atomic furnace. "

"I - of course I don't mind, " I mumbled idiotically. I had the sense
to bring up my other hand to complete the electrifying clasp. Denis
was grinning at us like a young chimpanzee and several of Elaine's
compan­ions threw quizzical looks in our direction.

When our hands finally fell apart, she asked casually, "What do you
do at the hotel?" I told her, and she seemed almost relieved. Being
a part of management - even very junior management - gave me at
least a minimal cachet. She asked: "Are you interested in cosmic
visitations, like your nephew?" I assured her that I was a fervid
aficionado of all matters UFOlogical, even though I had
unfortunately never come across her magazine. She nodded at
that. "We've had such trouble getting general newsstand
distribution for Visitant. Perhaps I could give you a copy of the
latest issue when I get back to the hotel. We'd be so glad to rustle
up a new subscriber. "

"That would be wonderful! I mean - I'd like that. "

The quirky little smile deepened and her eyes had a knowing glint.
"It will have to be late... Shall we say tonight about ten-thirty, in the
Grotto Lounge on the lower level of the hotel?"

Denis piped up, all solemn and regretful. "I'm afraid I'll be in bed
by then, Mrs. Harrington. "

She gave him an amused look. "Well, I'm sure your Uncle Roger
will share the magazine with you tomorrow. And now I must go and
eat. I'm dying for some real food after two days of freeze-dried trail
rations. So nice to have met you both. "

She wafted off, the very embodiment of aetheriality in spite of her
heavy climbing boots and insulated jacket, leaving my mind full of
voiceless music and my heart hopelessly lost.



She was only a few minutes late for our rendezvous, and as she
en­tered the crowded rathskeller-style bar, breathtaking in a
clinging white floor-length gown with a single bare shoulder, I
thanked God for the craftiness of my nephew, who had insisted
that I wear black tie rather than the casual jacket and slacks I had
thoughtlessly laid out.

"She'll want you to take her to the dance, " Denis had said. I didn't
bother to ask how he knew. He had nodded his approval when I
finished dressing and said, "It's a good thing you're so tall. She
likes tall men. And you look so nice in those clothes that it doesn't
matter that you're not handsome. " I had told him: "Ferme ta boîte,
ti-vaurien!" and left him giggling. But he had been right...

Elaine and I drank cognac, and I studied the copy of Visitant she
gave me while she expatiated on the authenticity of UFO visitations
and the pigheadedness of the U. S. Air Force, which persisted in
denying the "incontrovertible evidence" in favor of extraterrestrial
encounters. Her organization, the Aetherians, was about what you
would expect: a col­lection of quasi-mystical fanatics whose zeal
outpaced critical judg­ment. My darling Elaine was as willing to
accept the crackpottery of a Von Daniken as she was the serious
studies of researchers such as Dr. J. Allen Hynek and Dr. Dennis
Hauck. She and her friends were con­vinced that Earth was under
intense surveillance by otherworldly in­telligences, entirely
benignant, who would reveal themselves to hu­manity if we  would
only  "have faith"  and  embrace  a  pacifistic "astromental" way of
life.

She leaned over the small table toward me, enveloped in the
intoxi­cating fragrance of Bal à Versailles, and spoke with
surprising coolness. "And you, Roger... What do you think of all
this? Am I a credulous fool, as my ex-husband and my family have
always said? Am I hope­lessly romantic and visionary and deluded
by swamp gas and moon-shine?"

My mind cried out: You are romantic and utterly captivating, and in a
crazy backhanded way you're right!

But that would never do. Not yet. A false note, and she'd be off. I
found myself studying the situation with the detached cunning of a
master seducer, my normal awkwardness with women having been
somehow miraculously electrocauterized by the thunderbolt. I
rolled up the UFO magazine and tapped it meditatively against my
balloon glass. What would be the most judicious way of snaring
her? Perhaps - the truth?

"Elaine, what I'm about to confess to you I've never dared to tell
another person. I was afraid to, afraid of ridicule. There have been
so many jokes about spaceships and little green men... "

Her face shone. "Roger! Not - an encounter? You've had one?"

I let my eyes fall and made a deprecating gesture.

"You have!" she whispered. "Oh, tell me. "

I let it out with becoming hesitancy, well edited. "It was last
summer. I was in the mountains, hiking, and a violent storm came
up. I had hurt my leg. It was rather a serious situation. Night was
coming on and I had no shelter. Suddenly there was a strange kind
of light and the rain stopped in an unnatural way. And this voice -
this inhuman voice -"

"Did you see their spaceship? Did it land?"

The crowded bar all around us had faded to an unfocused blur.
Our faces were nearly touching. Her misty red hair was caught
back in a smooth chignon and the only jewelry she wore was a
pearl and diamond ring on her right little finger. Her deeply tanned
skin with its touch of sunburn made a sensuous contrast to the
white silk of her simple gown. In the fashion of the times, her
breasts were free. The nipples had come alive with the intensity of
her emotion.

My composure threatened to disintegrate completely. I took a
hasty gulp of cognac and resumed my tale.

"I didn't see any ship. I didn't even see the - the being who spoke
to me. Perhaps I was blinded by the light. But he healed my leg
instantly. And he told me without equivocation that he came from
another star. "

And there it is. Dear Elaine, you want so much to believe in
marvels. But I could show you marvels that would make flying
saucers insignif­icant, marvels inside your own mind and mine, and
within our bodies...

"Don't stop - go on!" she pleaded. "What happened next?"

I lifted my shoulders. "I seemed to fall asleep. Perhaps I lost
con­sciousness. It was very confusing. But when I awoke I was
standing just outside a trail shelter, although I swear I'd been more
than two miles away from it when I had my - my encounter. That's
really all there is to it. A very improbable story. I probably dreamed
the whole thing. "

"Oh, no! It's quite plausible, even the part about your losing
con­sciousness. The aliens may have taken you aboard their craft
and ex­amined you. "

I managed to look startled. "I don't remember any such thing. "

"You wouldn't!" She was intense. "Try to put yourself in the aliens'
place, Roger. To them, we're a primitive people - easily frightened,
scientifically unsophisticated, possibly even dangerous. They'd
want to study us but their activities would have to be discreet. They
wouldn't want to disrupt our culture... Have you ever heard of the
Cargo Cults in the South Pacific?"

"Those deluded tribes in New Guinea who thought the military
transport planes of World War Two were flown by gods?"

"Exactly. Not only in New Guinea, but in the islands all around it;
and the Cult started in the nineteenth century, when the first
European traders arrived. The local people saw wonderful cargoes
coming off the ships, and later off the aircraft. They wanted things
like that for them­selves and began to believe that the gods would
send miraculous cargoes if everyone prayed hard. Their ancient
way of life was completely dis­rupted by the Cargo Cult. "

"You think that extraterrestrials would want to be careful not to
touch off a similar reaction among Earthlings?"

"If they're intelligent and have our best interests at heart. "

"But the aliens have already disrupted our culture to a certain
extent with the flying-saucer flaps... "

"Not really, Roger. They've shown their ships to us so that we'll get
used to the idea of an interstellar civilization. To prepare us for the
day they actually do land. "

"Do you think it'll be soon?"

She hesitated. "You may know that my group has been coming to
these mountains for a number of years now, trying to make contact
with the visitors. Mental contact. This year, for the first time, I think
we may have been successful. "

I did my best to hide my skepticism. Darling, if you want to believe
it then let it be so! I made suitably encouraging comments while
she described the experience, which struck me as a patent case of
wishful thinking.

"I intend to write it up for the magazine, of course, " she said in
conclusion, "and I'd like to do an article on your encounter, too,
Roger. " I registered bourgeois alarm. "I'd rather you didn't, Elaine.
I've never told anyone about it - only you. And you're different from
anyone I've ever met. "

"So are you, Roger. " She smiled and extended her hand as she
rose from her chair. God! Had the gambit failed after all? My
coercive faculty seemed paralyzed. She said, "Of course I'll keep
your story in confi­dence if you want me to. Do look over my little
magazine, though. And if you change your mind -" "Must you go so
soon?" I asked inanely.

The silver eyes twinkled. "Well - we could go upstairs and dance if
you like. The rest of the Aetherians were too tired after our
mountain expedition, but I feel exhilarated. Would you like to take
me dancing, Roger?"

My mind gave a triumphant shout. I bowed over her hand,
summon­ing suavity from God knows where. "Enchanté, chère
Madame. "

"You're French!" She was delighted.

"Only a Franco-American, " I admitted. "Even Canadians make fun
of our low accent, and our Yankee neighbors secretly envy our
savior faire - while calling us frogs behind our backs. "

"There are frogs who are princes in disguise. Are you one of
those?"

Elaine, my beloved, I am indeed! And if my courage doesn't fail
me, you may see the fantasy's fulfillment this very night...

So we laugh, and we mount the stairs, and we sweep arm in arm
into the glittering ballroom while a hundred pairs of eyes watch.
The orchestra of the famous old resort has instructions to
intersperse contem­porary music with a generous leavening of
romantic oldies, so we hold each other close as we dance to "Fly
Me to the Moon" and "Where or When. " With her in my arms I am
no longer a lowly Assistant Conven­tion Manager presuming above
my station but a dark and debonair hero with a Mysterious Secret,
squiring the most lovely woman in the room. The other dancers
sense the psychomagnetism. We become the center of attention,
the golden couple wrapped in uncanny glamour. Our hu­man race
still does not recognize the existence of the higher mental faculties
- but it can't help feeling them.

Elaine and I dance and smile and begin to open our minds to one
another. Charily I lift the curtains hiding her emotions, using a
gentle redactive probe, the type I instinctively developed when
working with baby Denis. The floating thought-patterns are easily
accessible. She has loved before and she has tasted ashes. The
coolness is a symptom of unfulfillment and self-doubt. She is
idealistic but retains a healthy sense of humor. She is really afraid
that her pleasant and affluent world will end in a storm of
radioactive fallout.

The musical beat becomes more modern, more compelling, and
frankly sexual. Our bodies move to the explicit, angular rhythms, no
longer daring to touch. But our minds approach conjunction now
and I cannot help communicating my heat to her. It is accepted.

Finally, without a word, she leads me from the ballroom. We take
the elevator to her luxurious suite overlooking the moonlit mountain
range. We kiss at last and her mouth is velvety and cool, eager to
receive my fire, pathetically hopeful of returning it. I hear my
mindspeech shouting words of love and desire - and she gasps as
her lips break away.

"Roger... my dear, it's so strange, but -"

I know. I know. Don't be afraid.

Aloud, I whisper, "You heard a telepathic message from outer
space and it didn't frighten you. Will you be frightened if I tell you
why you were able to hear that alien message?"

Subconsciously, she already knows.

I hold her more tightly, kissing her brow, her cheeks, her upturned
fragrant throat. My flooding passion is channeled into the
ultraspeech and breaks through the barrier of her latency.

Elaine! Don't be afraid. I love you and I'll help you. Your mind-
powers have lain dormant all your life but they're coming alive now.
And here's the funny thing, my darling - I've been dormant, too, in a
different way, until you came.

Roger?... Roger!

See? It's all true. True and wonderful. Now I'll help you, and later
you'll help me.

She bespeaks me, tentatively at first, in clotted emotion-fuzzed
ut­terances that gradually assume coherence. Then she becomes
excited to the point of hysteria and I must constantly inject
reassuring redactive impulses. When she calms I kiss her bare
shoulder, her arms, the palms of her chilled hands. My PK finds the
pins that hold her hair knotted. I release it and she cries out:

Roger? ReallyTRUE? Really HAPPEN? GodGodGod! You&I
minds communicate...

Yes. Special minds. I love you.

Slowly, I undress her. I close the blinds with my PK, leaving only a
slender beam of moonlight to illuminate her body. The blood sings
in me and I must restrain myself. I say to her:

There are people who are born with extraordinary types of minds.
I'm one. So are you. There are a few others that I know about.
There must be many more. You've heard of extrasensory
perception...

She moans in mingled fear and ecstasy, holding out her arms to
me. "Come, " she begs. "Don't tell me any more. I can't bear it.
Just love me. "

I am naked myself now, and - yes, a little afraid. I have had so
many unfulfilled fantasies about the experience that lies ahead of
us, so many dreams. I know what the perfection ought to be, and
now I face the challenge of having to create it not only for myself,
but also for her - because up until now, my poor Elaine has, like
me, known only an empty release.

But she must not be frightened. I say, "Please close your eyes,
chérie. Trust me. "

My brain and body burn, and I am ready. As in the familiar dream I
feel myself hovering above her. I enfold her in my arms, lift her
without effort, and enter. Her coolness is shocked by my fever and
she cries out. Her eyes open but now we can see only each other.
The motion is mutual and quite perfect, for we are suspended
together in a bright rapture that endures and swells while our minds
seem to fuse. I have ignited her at last. When fulfillment comes
and my own brain seems to shatter I feel her faint for the joy of it.
Turning in the air, I support her, then let myself descend. We rest
together for a long time and I thank God for her. We will stay
together forever like this, sharing mind and body, banishing all
fear...

She awoke with her head on my chest. I was stroking her hair.

"I've never - never-" She was unable to continue.

"Was it good?"

"I wanted you very much, Roger. Now I know why. Does - does the
extrasensory thing account for it?"

"That, and my being something of a frog prince. "

She laughed giddily and began moving her body in gentle rhythm,
without urgency. "You amazing man. I actually felt as though we
were floating- doing it in midair. "

I was coming alive again slowly. "I had to wait so long. And then,
when I finally found you, I wasn't sure I could... the way I had
dreamed it. But it happened. At last. "

She lifted her head and regarded me with astonished eyes. My
mental sight caressed every plane of her face. Before she could
ask the question I closed her lips with mine.

"You couldn't be!" she whispered when she finally broke free.

It was my turn to laugh. "I warned you I had been dormant, waiting
patiently on my lily pad for a complaisant princess. A veritable
virgin frog. "

"I don't believe you. Is it some religious thing, then? No normal
man -"

My coercion silenced her. I opened my mind and showed her the
truth. To my amazement, she began to weep.

"My poor, darling Roger. Oh, my dear. And if we hadn't found each
other-?"

"I don't know. As you saw, my first experience with love ended
rather badly. I was mistaken about the depth of her feeling
because she was unable to open her mind to me. I couldn't risk
that again. Do you understand?"

"And you're sure about me. " It was a statement.

"You went to the heart of the matter when you started to tell me that
I wasn't normal. Of course I'm not. Luckily for me, neither are you.
That's why you're going to marry me. " I was grinning at her in the
moonlight and my fingers traced tickling pathways up and down the
luscious curve of her spine.

She said, "Oh, no!"

"You won't marry me?"

"Of course I will, fool. " She clung to me. "I meant - perhaps we
shouldn't do it again quite so soon. You destroyed me. Do you
realize that?"

I gave a sinister chuckle. "The prince is not to be denied. He has
princely prerogatives - et un boute-joie princier!"

"But I don't know whether I can live through it a second time
to­night!" Even as she made false protest, she was encouraging
my renais­sance. "If they find my poor little dead body in here
tomorrow, you'll be the prime suspect. Think of your
embarrassment when the prosecutor demands that you produce
the weapon in court! Think of the vulgar sensationalism, the
requests for autographs - aah!"

Shush.

Oh my darling oh Roger.

Have no fear. If you're really concerned, this time we'll do it on the
bed.



Elaine rented a house in Bretton Woods and transferred the one-
woman editorial office of her little magazine to its front bedroom.
We made good use of the other one all throughout that enchanted
summer and planned to marry in November, when her divorce
action would be finalized. In those years the Catholic Church was
ambivalent in its recognition of such marriages, and sexual liaisons
such as ours were considered to be sinful; but I was ready to defy
a regiment of archangels for Elaine's sake, and the guilt that must
accompany the violation of one's principles was banished to the
deepest part of my unconscious. Only those of you, reading this,
who are yourselves operant metapsychics can understand the
inevitability of our sexual merging, our excitement at the
increasingly profound bonding that we experienced - the soul-
mating that lovers have sought and celebrated throughout  all  the
ages. Even  though  Elaine  never  attained  full operancy in relation
to other minds, she did become fully consonant with me. We
spoke to each other without words, knew each other's moods and
needs through telepathic interchange, shared sensations, even
reinforced each other's ecstatic submersion. You lovers in the
Unity would no doubt think our efforts pitifully naive and maladroit;
but we thought ourselves in wonderland. Elaine's previous
partners, most especially her insensitive husband, had failed to
arouse her; her inhibitions had restrained her from any attempt at
remedy. But when she was with me there was no need for any
crass éclaircissement. I knew her from the very beginning. It was
the most amazing part of our love, and it also precipitated the
ending because I was not wise enough to know the hazards of
entering another's most private place while utterly disarmed.

The four short months with Elaine were the happiest time of my
life. Without her I would become a hollow thing - a mere spectator
when I was not a puppet. Looking back, I can see that our
separation helped bring the great scheme to fruition; but whether
the Lylmik engineered it deliberately or whether they simply took
advantage of our little trag­edy must remain an unanswered
question. The Ghost surely knows, but it is silent, just as heaven
was silent when I prayed for the strength of character that might
have carried me beyond fury and pride to the forgiveness that
would be so easy to give now, nearly 140 years too late...

But let me tell the story quickly. First, the happy memories:

Champagne picnics and love on an old Hudson's Bay blanket in
the deep woods beside Devil's Elbow Brook.

A moonlit tennis game played in the middle of the night on a court
at the White Mountain Hotel - and all the staff knowing about Elaine
and me, and not daring to say a word because she was
Somebody.

Pub-crawling with her in lowest Montreal on a Canadian holiday
weekend, and defending her honor in a riot of psychokinetically
smashed glassware when she was insulted by canaille even more
drunk than we were.

Going down to Boston together, staying at the Ritz-Carlton, sitting
on the grass for open-air Pops concerts, messing around the
market, and never but never eating baked beans.

Taking jaunts to the Donovan family's summer home at Rye where
she tried to teach me to sail, then browsing for antiques among the
tourist-trappy little coast villages until it was time to finish the day
with a clambake or lobster-broil and love on the beach.

Sitting petrified beside her as she drove her red Porsche like a
demon through the Maine woods, playing tag with highballing log
trucks going eighty-six miles an hour.

Lovemaking on a stormy afternoon in my ancient Volkswagen
stalled in the middle of a Vermont covered bridge.

Lovemaking in a meadow above her house at Concord, while
mon­arch butterflies reeled around us, driven berserk by the
aetheric vibes.

Love in a misty forest cascade during an August heat wave.

Love in my hotel office at noon behind locked doors.

Love on a twilit picnic table, interrupted by voyeur bears.

Mad psychokinetic love in thirty-three postural variations.

Love after a quarrel.

Hilarious love.

Marathon love.

Tired, comfortable love.

And toward the end, a desperate love that did hold fear and doubt
at bay for a little while...

There are memories of another type altogether, which I must deal
with more briskly:

One of the most disquieting was my realization that she would
never be able to overcome the mental blockages causing her
latency. She could converse telepathically with me, and Denis
could "hear" her as well as probe her memories; but she was never
functionally operant with others except when she was experiencing
extraordinary psychic stress. Elaine's mind thus seemed to belong
to me almost by default, and I felt the first stirrings of real guilt: we
were not one mind but two, and to pretend otherwise was to court
disaster.

She was able to keep very few things secret from me. This gave
me numerous opportunities to learn how to mask from her my own
reac­tions of shock or chagrin - as, for instance, when I found out
just how wealthy she really was. She cheerfully made plans for my
gainful em­ployment in Donovan Enterprises "after you give up
your tedious little job at the hotel. " She had all kinds of ideas on
how I might capitalize on my metapsychic talents (and how Denis
could go far if we only liberated him from the clutches of the
Jesuits). She wanted to expand Visitant magazine into a rallying
vehicle for as-yet-undiscovered superminds. When I balked at
these and similar enthusiasms she was hurt, resentful, and
unrepentently calculating.

Elaine's loyalty was ardent. Nevertheless she was unable to
disguise her disappointment when I was less than a success at a
meeting with her brother the eminent Congressman, her other
brother the wheeler-dealer land developer, and her sister the Back
Bay socialite do-gooder. Elaine plainly regretted my lower-class
origins, my lack of appreciation for the cosmological bullshit
espoused by her Aetherian clique, and my persistently old-
fashioned religious faith - which wasn't at all like the trendy version
of Catholicism made socially acceptable by the Kennedy clan.

I introduced Elaine to the Remillards at a disastrous Fourth of July
barbecue in Berlin thrown by Cousin Gerard. Poor Elaine! Her
clothes were too chic, her manners too high-bred, and the covered
dish she contributed to the rustic buffet too haute cuisine. She
compounded the debacle by speaking elegant Parisian French to
old Onc' Louie and the other Canuck elders, and by admitting that
her family were Irish Prot­estants. The only Remillards who weren't
scandalized were little Denis and my brother Don. Don was, if
anything, too damned friendly toward her. She assured me that
there was no telepathic communication be­tween the two of them;
but I recalled his coercive exploits of yesteryear and couldn't help
feeling doubt at the same time that I cursed myself for being a
jealous fool.

Later that summer, when we would briefly visit Don and Sunny to
pick up or drop off Denis, whom we often took on outings, Elaine
was distant or even covertly antagonistic toward my brother. At the
same time she claimed to pity him and pressed me to "see that he
got help" in combating his alcoholism. I knew that any effort on my
part would be worse than useless and refused to interfere - which
provoked one of our few serious quarrels. Another took place in
early September, when I took Denis back to Brebeuf Academy and
revealed his metapsychic abilities to Father Jared Ellsworth, as the
Ghost had instructed me to do. Elaine was irrationally convinced
that the Jesuits would "exploit" Denis in some nameless way. I
assured her that Ellsworth had reacted with sympathy and
equanimity to the revelation (he had even deduced some of the
boy's mental talents already); but Elaine persisted in her fretting
over Denis, and her attitude toward him was so oddly colored and
tor­tuous that I was unable to make sense of it until long after the
end. The end. God, how I remember it.

It was late in October on a day when the New Hampshire hills were
pur­ple and scarlet with the autumn climacteric. We had gone on a
season-end pilgrimage to the Great Stone Face, just she and I,
and finished up at a se­cluded country inn near Franconia. It was
one of those terminally quaint establishments that still draw
Galactic tourists to New England, featur­ing squeaky floors,
crooked walls, and a pleasant clutter of colonial Amer­ican
artifacts, many of which were for sale at ridiculous prices. The food
and drink were splendid and the proprietors discreet. After our
meal we retired to a gabled bedroom suite and nestled side by
side on a sofa with lumpy cushions, watching sparks from a
birchwood fire fly up the chim­ney while rain tapped gently on the
roof.

We had been talking about our wedding plans and sipping a rare
Aszu Tokay that the host reserved for well-heeled cognoscenti. It
was to be a simple civil ceremony down in Concord, with one of
her distinguished Donovan uncles officiating. Later we would have
a small supper "for the wedding party only, " which effectively
meant no Remillards except me. I listened to her with only half an
ear, drowsy from the wine. And then Elaine told me she was
pregnant.

I recall a thunderous sound. It may have come from the storm
outside the inn, or it may have been purely mental, my psychic
screens crashing into place. I remember a fixed-frame vision of my
hand, frozen in the act of reaching for the decanter. I can still hear
Elaine's voice prattling on about how she was so glad it had
happened, how she had always wanted children while her ex-
husband had not, how our child was certain to be a paragon of
"astromental" achievement, perhaps even more brilliant than Denis.

Incapable of speech or even a rational thought, I sat gripped by a
grand refusal. It could not be. She had not said it. I think I prayed
like a child, entreating God to cancel this thing, to save my love and
my life. I would repeat the same futile supplications later through
the bleak winter months as I tried in vain to conquer myself and
return to her; but always love would be obliterated as it was at that
hellish moment, wiped out by a blast of volcanic rage and fatally
wounded pride.

Of course I knew who the father was.

I finally turned my face to her, and I know I was without expression,
my howling despair inaudible beyond the closet of my skull. Elaine
cowered back against the cushions, shrinking from the exhalation
of pain and menace.

"Roger, what is it?"

Her mind was, as always, completely open to me. And now that her
thoughts concentrated on the certainty of the life growing within
her, I could perceive a complex skein of memories woven about
the embry­onic node. The confirmation would be there.

I knew I should leave those memories of hers untouched. It was
the only forlorn hope left to me. I must not look into the secret
place but seal it forever, pretend that the child's father was
someone else. Anyone else.

The secret places. All rational beings have them and guard them -
not only for their own sakes but for those of others. Who but God
would love us if all the secret places of our minds lay exposed? I
knew how to conceal my own heart of darkness; it is one of the first
things an operant metapsychic learns, whether he is bootstrap or
preceptor-trained. Only a few poor souls remain vulnerable always,
trapped in the shadow-country between latency and conscious
control of their high mental powers. Elaine was one. Open. Without
secrets.

"Roger, " she pleaded. "Answer me. For God's sake, darling,
what's the matter?"

Don't look. She loves you, not him. To look would be a sin - against
her and against yourself. You aren't a truth-seeker, you're a fool.
Don't look. Don't look.

I looked. Our love had been sinful, and I must be punished.

She was calm as I lifted my barriers at last, showing her the
incon­trovertible fact of my own sterility, and the theft of her secret,
and what made her betrayal impossible to forgive.

"If it had been anyone but him, " I said. "Anyone. But, you see, I
wouldn't be able to live with it. "

She looked me full in the face. "Once. It happened once - that first
time you took me to meet your family, at that silly Fourth of July
barbecue. It was madness. I don't know what came over me. It
happened before I realized - without my wanting it. "

No secret place. Poor Elaine. You had wanted it.

I saw the entire episode etched in her memory and knew I'd see it
forever. Don focusing the full force of his coercion, her fascination
and willing surrender, Don laughing as he took her by the rockets'
red glare, kindling in her a stupendous series of orgasms like chain
lightning. And his child.

"I can't live with it, " I told her.

"Once, Roger. Only once. And now I hate him. "

No secrets at all... Anyone but him. Damn the mind-powers. Damn
him! But never her.

"Roger, I love you. I know how much this must hurt. I feel the hurt.

But I honestly thought the child was yours... that the thing with your
brother was a piece of idiocy better left forgotten. " She tried to
smile, showed me a glowing mental image. "You love little Denis.
He's Don's child. "

"I couldn't help it. Denis is different. Sunny was different. "

"I'm only fifteen weeks gone. I could -"

"No!"

She nodded. "Yes, I see. It wouldn't make any difference, would
it? It would make matters worse. "

I let the wretched contents of my mind seep out: The child will be
brilliant. Don's mental faculties are far more impressive than mine,
in spite of his flaws. As you know. Goodbye, Elaine.

"Roger, I love you. For the love of God, don't do this!"

I must. I love you I will always love you but I must.

I walked to the door and opened it. Aloud, I said, "I'm going to take
your Porsche back to the White Mountain Hotel. In the morning, I'll
send one of our drivers back here with it. There are a few things I
must get from the house in Bretton Woods, but I should be out of it
before noon. I'll leave my key. "

"You fool," she said.

"Yes. "

I went out and softly closed the door after me.



Elaine married Stanton Latimer, a prominent Concord attorney, that
November. He gave her child, Annarita, his name and they were a
happy family until his death in 1992. The distractions of
motherhood - and the decline in flying-saucer sightings after 1975-
led Elaine to abandon Visitant. She turned her leadership talents to
environmental activism and campaigned against acid rain. In time
she decided that she had imagined the more improbable facets of
our liaison.

Annarita Latimer grew up to be an actress of vibrant and
unforgetta­ble presence who had a triumphant, tempestuous
career. Like her mother, she was a powerful suboperant. Annarita's
third husband was Bernard Kendall, the astrophysicist, who sired
her only child, the fully operant Teresa - known to historians of the
Galactic Milieu as the mother of Marc Remillard and Jack the
Bodiless.



21

SUPERVISORY CRUISER NOUMENON [Lyl 1-0000]

10 MAY  1975



the simb shuttle saucer made its ingress into the im­mense Lylmik
vessel in the manner of a lentil being swallowed by a whale, and
the four senior members of the Earth Oversight Authority gathered
in the shuttle's airlock to watch the curious docking maneu­vers.

"I hate coming aboard Lylmik spacecraft. One is so likely to
become overstimulated. " The Gi representative, RipRip Muml,
whiffled its plumage in a gesture of libido suppression and sealed
off four of its eight sensory circuits. "Strange that the Supervisory
Body should want to meet with us here in Earth orbit instead of
simply transmitting its instructions mentally. "

The Simb magnate, Lashi Ala Adassti, watched the scene outside
the viewport with rapt fascination. In spite of her high position in the
Over­sight organization, she had never before been invited to visit
a Lylmik cruiser. "I've given up trying to fathom the motives of the
Supervisors, especially those relating to this perverse little planet...
Sacred Truth and Beauty! Will you look what's happening out there
in the parking bay?"

"An interesting spectacle, but hardly unnerving, " remarked the

Krondaku, Rola'eroo.

"I've seen it a dozen or so times myself. " The Poltroyan magnate
shook his head. "But it still rattles me. It's as though we were being
digested!"

The saucer rested on a kind of animated turf, pearly tendrils that
rippled in peristaltic waves as they propelled the small spacecraft
slowly along. A few meters away, on either side of the shuttle's
path, plantlike excrescences apparently made of luminous jelly
were sprouting up with graceful regularity; they unfurled pallid leafy
ribbons and undulated in a questing fashion in the direction of the
passing ship. Some of the larger plants "fruited, " producing
crystalline structures that opened to discharge glittering powder
that swirled around the shuttle viewports like saffron smoke.
Behind these pseudo-organisms were rising much taller ones that
resembled glassy tree-ferns and opalescent feather-palms. These
soon formed an impenetrable jungle alongside the saucer, a bright
corridor with purple obscurity lying ahead. The smaller ribbon-
bearers became more and more numerous and their appendages
reached out to caress the moving vessel's sides. It was like sailing
underwater through a twisting tunnel alive with glowing albino kelp.

"By their spacecraft ye shall know them, " the poetical Gi
murmured. "Ours are preposterous and ramshackle, and their
operation is so cir­cumscribed by the reproductive habits of our
crews that no other enti­ties dare ride in them. Krondak ships are
bleakly functional and those of the Poltroyans cozy and baroque,
while Simbiari craft like this one we are riding in are paragons of
high technology. But how can one classify the Lylmik ships?"

"Peculiar, " suggested Rola'eroo, "like the race that produced
them. " The others laughed uneasily.

The Poltroyan, a dapper little humanoid wearing heavily bejeweled
robes, shared his meditation. "We never really see the Lylmik,
even though they must inhabit forms that are manifestations of the
matter-energy lattices. They are not pure mind, as some have
speculated - and yet they enjoy a mentality unfathomably above our
own. They will tell us very little of their history - nothing of their
nature. They are infal­libly kind. Their zeal in furthering the evolution
of the Galactic Mind is formidable, but they often seem capricious.
Their logic is not our logic. As RipRip Muml has noted, this ship of
theirs is an embodiment of the Lylmik enigma: it is lush,
extravagant, playful. Certain of our xenologists have speculated
that the enormous cruisers are themselves aspects of Lylmik life,
symbionts of the minds they transport. We know that these beings
are the Galaxy's most ancient coadunate race, but their actual age
and their origin remain a mystery. Our Poltroyan folk­lore says that
the Lylmik home-star Nodyt was once a dying red giant, which the
population rejuvenated into a g3 by a metapsychic infusion of fresh
hydrogen sixty million years ago. But such a feat is beyond Milieu
science, contradicting the Universal Field Theory. "

"Our legends, " the Krondak monster said, "are even more absurd.
They suggest that the Lylmik are survivors of the Big Bang - that
they date from the previous universe. A totally ridiculous notion. "

"No sillier than ours, " said RipRip Muml. "The more simple-minded
Gi believe that the Lylmik are angels - pseudocorporeal
messengers of the Cosmic All. An unlikely hypothesis, but not
inappropriate for men­tors of our Galactic Mind. "

An impatient frown had been deepening on Lashi Ala's emerald
fea­tures. "We Simbiari don't tell fairy-tales about the Lylmik. We
accept their guidance at the same time as we resent their arrogant
condescen­sion. Look how determined they are to give these
Earthlings favored treatment. The planet is a Lylmik pet! And yet
the Supervisory Body seems blithely ignorant about just how
unready for Intervention Earth is. How many times during the Thirty-
Year Surveillance have we Simbiari been obliged to save the
barbarians from accidentally touching off an atomic war? How
many more times will we have to rescue the planetary ass during
the upcoming pre-Intervention phase? All of us know that there is
no way this world's Mind can achieve full coadunation prior to
Intervention. Earth will be admitted to the Milieu in advance of its
psychosocial maturation! Sheer lunacy!"

The Krondaku remained stolid. "Should the Earth Mind deliberately
opt for nuclear warfare during the next forty years, you know that
the Intervention will be cancelled. Furthermore, Intervention is
contingent upon a certain minimal metaconcerted action by human
operants. If they cannot rise above egocentrism to the lowest rung
of mental soli­darity, not even the Lylmik can force the Milieu to
accept them. "

Lashi gave a disillusioned grunt. "No other potentially emergent
planet ever got such special treatment. "

"The Lylmik always have reasons for their actions, " the Poltroyan
said, "incomprehensible though they may be to us lesser minds. If
the Earthlings are destined to be great metapsychic prodigies, as
the Lylmik maintain, then the risk of early intervention will be
justified. "

"You can talk, Falto, " Lashi Ala shot back. "Your people haven't
been saddled with the bulk of the planetary surveillance and
manifestation as we Simbiari have. Why the Lylmik didn't appoint
you smug little mauve pricks as prime contractors for Earth, I'll
never know! You like hu­mans. "

Rola'eroo came as close to chuckling as his phlegmatic race was
ca­pable. "Perhaps that is the very reason why Poltroy was not
given the proctorship. Despite certain imputations of favoritism, I
am convinced that the Lylmik desire a fair and just evaluation of
humanity. And this" - he offered a magisterial nod to Lashi Ala -
"the citizens of the Simbiari Polity will conscientiously provide. "

"Oh, well, of course, " she muttered.

RipRip Muml gave a delicate shudder. "Thanks be to the Tranquil
Infinite that we have been spared close contact with Earth. Its
artistic productions are exquisite, but the reverberations of violence
and suffer­ing are a sore trial to truly sensitive minds. "

"I've noticed, " said Lashi sweetly, "that you Gi are too sensitive for
any number of tedious but necessary assignments. "

The great yellow eyes blinked in innocent reproach.

Falto the Poltroyan interposed diplomatically. "We all do the jobs
we're best suited for, given the mind-set of the planet under
evalua­tion. "

"And with a race as bumptious as humanity, you Simbiari end up
carrying the can!" RipRip gave its phallus a cheerful flourish.

Lashi responded with simple dignity. "We know very well that our
people are still imperfectly Unified - and I did not mean to imply
that we regretted our first assignment as prime contractor to an
emerging Mind. On the contrary, we are honored by the Milieu's
mandate. " She hesitated, a troubled expression crossing her now
glistening face. "But the Oversight Authority concedes that Earth is
an anomaly. It seems counter to all logic, therefore, that the
Concilium should assign its proctorship to us, the most junior Polity
in the Milieu. Surely this difficult and barbaric world would fare
better under the more sympa­thetic guidance of Poltroy - or, even
better, under the stern direction that the Krondaku vouchsafed to
Gi, Poltroyans, and Simbiari alike. "

The Krondak magnate's mind-tone was detached and serene. "My
race has proctored more than seventeen thousand planetary Minds
since the Lylmik raised us to Unity. Only you three survived to
coadunation and membership in the Milieu. "

"We've never had a winner in seventy-two tries, " the Poltroyan
ad­mitted, "and we're still smarting over the Yanalon fiasco. A
tough-minded Simb primacy might have saved that world... Don't
sell your abilities short, Lashi Ala Adassti. "

"You mustn't feel downhearted or put-upon, " the hermaphrodite
added kindly. "Think how the Unity will rejoice if you succeed! We
Gi will never enjoy such a triumph. We're too frivolous and sex-
obsessed ever to be appointed planetary proctors. No newborn
coadunate Mind will ever call us its foster-parents - and we are the
poorer thereby. "

A harmonious chord of chimes sounded in the mental ears of the
four magnates. Outside the viewports the iridescent glow
intensified. The shuttle-craft was approaching the terminus of the
overgrown tunnel, an iris gateway of yellow metal that opened
slowly like the expanding pupil of a great golden eye.

Welcome. And high thoughts to you, most beloved colleagues.
Please debark and join us in the hospitality chamber.

The shuttle had halted at the gateway. Rola'eroo extended a
tentacle and activated the hatch mechanism, admitting a billow of
warm, superoxygenated atmosphere to the airlock. The four
entities toddled, strode, stalked, and slithered down the integral
gangway, crossed a short expanse of anemonoid turf flanked by
crystal foliage, and entered the Lylmik sanctum. The gate shut
behind them.

It was rather dim inside, comfortably so after the brilliant part of the
ship they had just traversed. The walls and flooring were gently
corru­gated, transparent, and seemed to be holding back an
encompassing volume of bubbly liquid that swirled slowly in ever-
changing eddies of blue and green. In the center of the room was
a crescent-shaped table with three seats for the Gi, the Poltroyan,
and the Simb - and a squat­ting spot for the ponderous Krondaku.
Besides the furniture, which was austere in design and made of the
warm yellow metal, the room con­tained only a low dais about three
meters square, formed by slight exaggerations of the floor ribbing.

The Earth Oversight Authority took their places and waited. Lashi
Ala betrayed her apprehension by smearing the table surface with
dabs of ichor from her perspiring hands. She tucked them into the
sleeves of her uniform, where there were blotting pads, and buffed
away the smears with her elbows. The other three Overseers
tactfully averted their eyes and veiled their brains.

Above the dais there appeared a small atmospheric maelstrom.

Our heartfelt felicitations to you, dear colleagues, upon the
success­ful completion of Earth's first phase of intensified overt
manifestation.

In metaconcert, the Authority responded: We are gratified that the
Supervisory Body approves, and herewith present a digest of data
rele­vant to progress in coadunation of the World Mind. [Display.]

The maelstrom was enlarging, spinning in a plane perpendicular to
the dais, and five distinct whorls were condensing out of it.

How interesting that the outbreaks of metapsychic operancy
among the humans are so widely scattered. Even though the
genes for high mental function are present in all racial groups, one
notes that its phenotypic expression crops out with special vigor
among certain Celtic and Oriental populations.

This has been allowed for in ethnodynamic equations. The sorting
factors have a fascinating Darwinian aspect, in that those groups
subject to great environmental - as opposed to social - stress tend
to manifest the metapsychic traits most strongly. Thus the
Georgian, Alpine, Hebridean, and Eastern Canadian Celts tend to
become operant more rapidly than their more numerous Irish and
French congeners. The same is true of the Asian irruptive locus,
with the North Siberian, Mongol, and Hokkaido groups most
noteworthy, together with the isolate frac­tions flourishing in Tibet
and Finland. Unfortunately, the Australian aboriginal locus has
become nearly extinct, as have the Kalahari and Pigmy
concentrations in Africa. The Nilotic group trembles on the brink
due to severe social disruption. In any case, these southern
pop­ulations are now almost too small to be viable reservoirs of
operant genotypes.

Tragic. But as we know, operancy must be combined with ethnic
dynamism if coadunation of the Mind is to be achieved.

And on Earth, dynamism is largely a Northern function, due to the
complex interaction of stress factors.

"Northern hyperfertility isn't to be sneezed at, either, " murmured
the Poltroyan, ex-concert. "Which is why I put my money on the
Canucks in the operancy sweepstakes. "

The other three Overseers flinched at the effrontery of their small
colleague, but the Lylmik seemed amused.

You are most perceptive, Faltonin-Virminonin! It is indeed from that
group, especially the northeastern Franco-Americans, that we
expect the largest numbers of natural operants to be born during
this critical pre-Intervention phase of proctorship.

The five atmospheric vortices had now assumed a decidedly
material aspect. The Gi and the Krondaku, being the most
ultrasensitive mem­bers of the metaconcert, realized with some
excitement that the Super­visors were about to do them the
unusual honor of assuming astral bodies - or, at least, astral heads.
The news ignited the entire Author­ity, especially Lashi Ala, who
had never experienced a Lylmik vis-à-vis encounter.

They asked: Is it your wish, then, that we devise plans for the
special encouragement of these Franco-American operants?

By no means. This is a task reserved for others.

Others?... What others?

But before the Oversight Authority could pursue this puzzle further,
they were completely distracted by the apparition unfolding before
them. Above the dais now floated five heads. Perhaps in
consideration of the Poltroyan, Gi, and Simb representatives, who
had largely humanoid features, the heads each developed two
eyes and a single smiling mouth. Their psychocreative flesh was
roseate with no trace of hair, feathering, scales, or other epidermal
outgrowth. The eyes of the central head were gray; those of the
four surrounding heads were a brilliant aquamarine green. The
Lylmik had no necks, but from their occipital regions trailed multiple
ectoplasmic filaments like pale gauzy scarves stirring in a light
breeze. Strangely, each of the different Authority magnates thought
that the heads were supremely beautiful. Even those who had seen
this manifestation of the Lylmik before felt that they could look into
those eyes forever without tiring; and poor Lashi Ala, meeting them
for the first time, was reduced to bewitched helplessness.

"I am Noetic Concordance, " said the uppermost head.

"I am Eupathic Impulse, " said the lowest.

"I am Homologous Trend, " said the right-hand head.

"I am Asymptotic Essence, " said the one on the left.

The central head, which radiated the most overwhelming power of
all, had the softest voice. "And I am Atoning Unifex. We of the
Super­visory Body embrace you and your organization. We thank
you for what you have done, and charge you to carry on your
assigned tasks in spite of discouragements, doubts, and
difficulties. It is known to us that the small planet we are orbiting at
this moment occupies a critical place in the probability lattices.
From it may emerge a Mind that will exceed all others in
metapsychic potential. It is known to us that this Mind will be
capable of destroying our beloved Galactic Milieu. It is further
known to us that this Mind will also be capable of magnifying the
Milieu immensely, accelerating the Unification of all the inhabited
star-systems. For this reason we have directed this extraordinary
attempt at Intervention. It involves a great risk. But all evolutionary
leaps are hazardous, and without risk-taking there can only be
stagnation, the triumph of entropy, and eventual death. Do you
understand this, col­leagues?"

We understand.

"Mental potential is not actualization. The human race must reach
an acceptable level of operancy largely through its own efforts. We
can guide, but we cannot force evolution of the Mind. Thus there
still exists the possibility that this rising operant population may
founder - either through internal or external calamity. There exists
another possibility, fortunately diminishing, that the entire world may
perish in a suicidal conflict. So Intervention is not certain. But we
shall work toward it... you in your way and we in ours, full of trust. "

We understand.

"Go now and initiate the next Oversight phase. From time to time
we will lend special assistance. "

We do not understand, but we acquiesce willingly.

The central head nodded. The eyes of all five were ablaze with
irre­sistible psychic energy. The heads began melting away to
ectoplasmic vapor, but the eyes remained to focus Unifying power.

Join with us, said the Supervisors, and the minds of the Overseers
rushed into the joyous light.



A long time later, when the four awoke in their shuttle-craft, they
instinctively came together to gaze out of a viewport at the blue
planet rolling below.

"Incredible, " said the Krondaku.

"What an experience!" Lashi Ala was still in a state of near-total
bemusement. "I agree - it was quite incredible. "

The Gi shook its head, gently corrective. "While Unity with the

Lylmik is memorable, it is not the matter that Rola'eroo Mobak finds
difficult to believe. "

"Certainly not, " the monster growled. "It's what they said. "

The Poltroyan pursed lavender lips and hoisted a single eyebrow
in unspoken query.

"The head in the middle. " RipRip Muml amplified its speech with a
remembered vision. "It said that the Lylmik were going to assist us.
That's even more unprecedented than their original veto of the
Concilium pull-out vote!"

Rola'eroo said, "You will also recall that the Lylmik Supervisors told
us that we were not to attempt positive reinforcement of the
Franco-American operant group... that the task would be
undertaken by oth­ers. "

Both Poltroyan eyebrows shot up and the ruby optics bulged.
"Love's Oath! You can't mean it!"

"I conclude that certain human operants are to be shepherded by
the Lylmik themselves, " Rola'eroo asserted. "By these aloof
beings who scarcely ever condescend to participate in the
Concilium deliberations, who tantalize us and confuse us when
they are not vexing us with their mystical vagary. "

"There was nothing vague, " Lashi said, "about that crew we met
today. That central head was downright blunt. "

"Most uncharacteristic, " the Krondaku said. "We must ponder the
implications strenuously. "

The Gi had turned to the port and contemplated the blue planet
with a certain foreboding. Its irrepressible genitalia were blanched
and sub­dued. "Earthlings! Do you know - I'm beginning to be quite
afraid of them. "

"Nonsense!" said Lashi Ala stoutly. "We Simbiari know humanity
better than any of you. They don't scare us. "

The three other entities exchanged thoughts of sudden, shared
com­prehension.


THE END OF PART ONE

PART II

THE DISCLOSURE

1

NEW YORK CITY, EARTH

21 FEBRUARY  1978



the flight from Chicago had been over an hour late, and helicopter
shuttle service between Kennedy and Manhattan had been
disrupted by the same fog that had delayed the airplane. The car-
rental counter was mobbed, but here Kieran O'Connor's coercion
expedited procurement of a Cadillac limousine. He and Arnold
Pakkala, his ex­ecutive assistant, took the front seat while Jase
Cassidy and Adam Grondin got into the back. Then they were off in
a squeal of expen­sive rubber, with the minds of Cassidy and
Grondin clearing the way and Pakkala driving like the battle-trained
Chicago commuter that he was.

Kieran closed his burning eyes and dreamed while the big black
au­tomobile roared up the Van Wyck and Long Island
expressways in de­fiance of the speed limit. It negotiated the snarl
at the Queens-Midtown Tunnel magically and bulldozed its way
down 42nd Street. Other ve­hicles seemed to melt out of its way
as it streaked up Avenue of the Americas, ignored by patrolling
NYPD cruisers. It turned left onto West 57th against the lights,
zigzagged from lane to lane amidst traffic ap­parently frozen in
place, and plunged into the whorl of Columbus Circle like a black
shark invading a sluggish shoal of prey species. Here, with
vehicles coming at it from six directions, the limousine faced its
keen­est challenge. The targeting eyes of Cassidy and Grondin
flicked to and fro and their minds shouted silent commands to the
other drivers: You stop! You go right! You move left lane! Up the
curb bike! Out of the way walkers! Go! Stop! Gangway! Enchanted
buses froze at the curb or lumbered aside; private cars seemed to
cower as they yielded; take-out-food delivery boys on bicycles and
pedestrians scattered like pigeons before a hawk; even the
pugnacious Manhattan taxis were demoralized and swerved out of
the limousine's charmed path with tires screeching and brake lights
flashing scarlet alarm.

Arnold Pakkala guided the Cadillac with fluid precision through the
chaos, ran a red light for the seventeenth time that night, and
floored the accelerator when he attained the comparatively
unimpeded reach of Central Park West.

Adam Grondin said: Kennedy to Central Park 34 minutes. Beautiful
Arnie.

Jase Cassidy said: Time to make it. Chief still asleep?

Pakkala said: Until I tell him to wake up.

A map image of New York City seemed to hover in his peripheral
vision off to the right, among the lamplit bare trees of the park. He
spotted a police cruiser, but Adam and Jase had already fuzzed
the minds of the two officers inside. They knew they couldn't
possibly have seen a Caddy doing seventy northbound, and turned
their attention to a doorman walking three poodles who was
suspiciously unencumbered by a pooper-scooper.

Pakkala said: Only a few blocks more.

The limousine charged across 65th Street on the fag end of the
amber light, then hung a left onto 66th virtually riding the rims. For
the last time Cassidy and Grondin exerted their coercive powers to
stop the modest flow of vehicles on Columbus. The Cadillac took
the final cor­ner smoothly, decelerated, and drove up the ramp in
front of the Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts. A touch of
power brakes brought it to a sedate halt.

Cassidy and Grondin relaxed their overstrained brains with audible
groans of relief. Arnold Pakkala's face had gone rigid in the wan
light from the instrument panel. Still gripping the steering wheel, he
let his head fall back against the padded rest. His eyes closed.
The other two men flinched at the orgasmic discharge that
energized the interior of the car for an instant, setting their own
nerves afire with sympathetic vi­bration. Seconds later Pakkala was
sitting ramrod-straight again, not one white hair out of place,
stripping off his leather driving gloves with small, neat motions.

"Jesus, Arnie, I wish you wouldn't do that. " Grondin ripped open a
pack of Marlboros with shaking hands and coaxed one out.

Cassidy wiped his florid face with a handkerchief. "Wouldn't that be
a helluva thing for the chief to wake up to? The fallout from your
stupid come!"

Pakkala ignored that. "Mr. O'Connor may continue to sleep until I
make certain that our subjects are actually inside, in their box. If our
informants erred - of if they lied - other plans will have to be made.
"

"Well, get cracking, dammit, " Cassidy snapped. "Don't just sit
around here getting your rocks off. "

Pakkala's face went rigid again. He seemed to be studying the hub
of the steering wheel with blind eyes. Tiny flakes of snow sifted
down and smelted to pinpoint droplets when they struck the warm
windshield. The engine idled soundlessly and Kieran O'Connor
exhaled a deep, sigh­ing breath that was almost a sob.

Grondin sucked cigarette smoke fiercely. "Poor bastard. "

Cassidy said, "He'll be all right. Just so long as those two dago
butch­ers are in there where we can get at 'em. "

Nodding at Pakkala, Grondin said, "Arnie'll find out. Umpteen
thou­sand people in there, but Arnie'll find 'em if they're inside.
Helluva head, old Arnie, even if he has his weird moments. "

"I still think this is the wrong place for a hit, though, " Cassidy said.
"I know the chief has to do it before any of the New York crowd
expect him to act. But to do it here... "

Both men looked across Lincoln Plaza, where the five tall arches
forming the façade of the Metropolitan Opera House enclosed a
scene of festive splendor. They were more than ninety feet high
and panelled in transparent glass from top to bottom, framing the
four tiers of the house and the golden vaults of the ceiling.
Colossal murals by Marc Chagall blazed on either side of a grand
double staircase of white marble, car­peted in red. The walls were
crimson velvet or gleaming stone, set off by twinkling sconces. In
the central arch hung the famous starburst chan­deliers, the largest
at the top and the smaller satellites offset beneath it like a cluster
of crystal galaxies. Rising bright against the black sky of winter, the
opera house looked like the open door into a fantasy world, rather
than the designated site of a double execution.

Tonight's house was a sellout, a benefit performance of La
Favorita by Donizetti. The performance was a new and lavish one
featuring the superstars Luciano Pavarotti, Shirley Verrett, and
Sherill Milnes, a rare treat for aficionados of Italian opera. Among
the most devoted of these was a certain New York City business
leader named Guido "Big Guy" Montedoro. On most opening
nights he was to be found in his regular box with his wife, his grown
children, and the spouses of the latter. Tonight, however, his
companions were all male. Seated at the rear of the box were four
trusted associates of the Montedoro Family, whose rented tuxedos
bulged slightly under the arms. In front, next to Don Guido himself,
was the honored guest of the evening, Vicenzu Falcone. Don
Vicenzu, an old friend of the Big Guy and a fellow music-lover, was
being fêted on the occasion of his parole from the federal prison at
Lewisburg, Pennsylvania, where he had been serving time for tax
eva­sion. He was accompanied by his deputy, Mike LoPresti, who
had kept the Brooklyn narcotics pipeline running more or less
efficiently while his superior was hors de combat. LoPresti's
brother-in-law, Joseph "Joe Porks" Porcaro, the Falcone enforcer,
was also in attendance. It was this same Porcaro who had gone to
Chicago three days earlier to execute a contract on the upstart
young consigliere of the Chicago Outfit, whose far-reaching
activities had encroached once too often upon certain busi­ness
interests of the boys from Brooklyn.

Porcaro, following LoPresti's orders, had trailed his intended victim
to the posh Oakbrook shopping complex in the western suburbs of
Chicago. He had smiled as the counselor took pains to park his
brand new Mercedes 450SL at some distance from other cars,
lest their care­less drivers open doors against its immaculate
flanks and ding the paint job. When the consigliere went away,
Porcaro wired a small bomb to the Mercedes, drove to O'Hare
Airport, and was home in Brooklyn in time for a supper of linguini
with white clam sauce.

Unfortunately for him - and for Underboss LoPresti, who had
or­dered the hit on his own authority without consulting Don
Vicenzu - the Camastra Family's legal adviser had come to
Oakbrook to pick up his wife and children, who had spent the
morning shopping with the wife's mother. The young parents and
their daughters, aged two and three, had approached the booby-
trapped automobile together. But then Shannon, the three-year-old,
decided that she had to go to the bathroom. Scolding her just a
little, her father took her to a nearby department store while the
mother and younger child waited in the car.

It was a cold and blustery February day, and only natural that
Rose­mary Camastra O'Connor should start the engine of the
Mercedes to get the heater going.



[Fireflower!]

Wake up Mr. O'Connor.

[Fireflower!] The dark hallway in the dingy flat in Southie with the
emanations from the sickroom hitting him fresh again so that he
nearly puked with the pain before he could shut it out Kier Kier my
baby are you back did you pray did you...

Wake up. It's all right. We're at the Opera House.

[Fireflower!] Mom calling in her broken-glass-edge voice the voice
only he could hear crying and dying clinging obstinately to her
agony and to him Kier Kier you did receive Holy Communion didn't
you Kier you didn't sneak breakfast again did you oh you know you
have to pray hard I can't so you must and then there'll be a
miracle...

Wake up sir. Open your eyes.

[Fireflower!] The hands dry as newspaper the fingernails blue and
broken one hand gripping the tarnished silver-filigree rosary and
the other tangled in his old sweater pulling him closer and him
fighting to raise a higher and higher wall between the two of them
and she calling out to the awful Irish God she loved the one who
tortured Kier Kier he tests the ones he loves best he loves us I
love you Kier pray for the miracle pray Jesus it stops Jesus stop it
please stop it Kier stop it...

Mr. O'Connor! Wake up!

[Fireflower!] Yes Mom I'll stop it even if damned God won't I know
how... I know how... was it so easy? Blue eyes gone wide and
black and empty pain gone mind gone are you really gone? And
the boy screams [fireflower!] and the grown man screams
[fireflower!] and it expands in thunder under Illinois clouds as gray
as Mom's fluffy hair on the coffin's cheap satin pillow and the coffin
will have to be closed you understand

Mr. O'Connor wake up Mr. O'Connor wake up!

Kieran opened his eyes.

Arnold Pakkala was there, and Adam Grondin, and Jase Cassidy.
The loyal ones, the ones he had salvaged and bonded to him, the
ones like him: hurt through their own fault, ever hurting.

He asked Arnold: Are Porcaro and LoPresti inside?

"Yes, sir, " Pakkala said out loud. "Everything is exactly as Koenig
and Matucci told us it would be. The two subjects are here with the
dons. There are no women. Four button-men are inside the box
and two are on watch outside. The intermission between the Third
and Fourth Acts is about to begin. You and Adam and Jason can
mingle readily with the crowd. "

Kieran unfastened his seat belt and removed his hat, his white silk
scarf, and his dark blue cashmere overcoat. Grondin and Cassidy
hastily followed his example. All three of them were dressed in
black-tie formal evening wear. "Go around to Sixty-fifth Street, by
the Juilliard School, " Kieran told Arnold. "There's a tunnel on the
lower level that goes under the plaza to the stage door. We'll meet
you there afterward. "

"Yes, sir. Good luck!"

Cassidy and Grondin were already out on the pavement, heading
for the broad steps; but Kieran paused, half in and half out of the
limousine, and smiled at his executive assistant. A mental picture
hovered be­tween them: a drunken derelict being kicked to death
by a vicious punk in a Chicago alley, uttering a last telepathic cry for
help.

"Luck, Arnold? You of all people should know better than to say
that. People like us make our own luck. "

Kieran stepped out of the car and slammed the door. The
Cadillac's headlights came on like some great animal opening its
eyes. Arnold Pakkala raised his hand and said: I'll be waiting.

Kieran nodded. He stood there in spite of the arctic wind knifing
through his clothing, until the limousine disappeared around the
cor­ner. Yes, we make our own luck. We make our own reality, and
when the bill comes due we pay cash on the barrelhead. Arnold
and Jase and Adam didn't quite understand that yet, but they
would; and so would the others when Kieran found them and
bound them.

The Opera House began to shimmer. Thousands of people were
pour­ing from the auditorium and the balconies onto the grand
staircase for intermission. Cassidy and Grondin waited patiently,
silhouetted against the brilliance.

[Fireflower.]

All right, Kier said to them. This is what I want you to do.



The performance was running long, and Montedoro and Falcone
de­cided to spend this final intermission relaxing in their box, rather
than attempt another sortie into the high-society crush out on the
Grand Tier lobby. Three of the bodyguard were given permission
to take a smoke break and Joe Porks was sent for a magnum of
champagne. Mike LoPresti, whose musical tastes ran more toward
cabaret singers than divas, appeased his boredom by using the
binoculars to inspect the décolletages of the elegant ladies down
on the main floor.

The two dons made favorable comments about the rousing curtain-
closer ensemble that had ended Act Three. La Favorita, they
agreed, was somewhat of a potboiler - which explained why the
Met hadn't mounted a production since Caruso in 1905 -but it did
have some soaring melodies, and Pavarotti was in splendid voice.
Vicenzu Falcone was old-fashioned enough to express regret that
the heroine was being portrayed by a black soprano.

Montedoro shrugged. "At least she's not fat, and she's got a great
legato. So if her color bugs you, close your eyes during the duets.
"

"Look, Guido, I don't mind a chocolate Carmen or Aida - but there
oughta be limits. When I was in stir I saw Price do Tosca on Live
from the Met and it was fuckin' grotesque! What next? A Jap
Rigoletto? It's all the fault of that damn Kraut, Bing. He squanders a
bundle building this house, and we got trick chandeliers, no
privacy, everything open like a goddam goldfish tank - and the
singers gotta blast out their voiceboxes to fill the thing. The old Met
was better. "

"Nothing stays the same forever, Vince. Us old farts gotta change
with the changing times. "

"Sez you! You're only sixty-seven and you don't have arteries
sludged up like a Jersey backwater at low tide. " Falcone lowered
his voice and began to speak in Sicilian dialect. "And you don't
have a U. S. attorney standing on your testicles, ready to defy God
and the Madonna and the

Bill of Rights in order to make certain that you die in prison.
Piccolomini, that head of a prick! Do you know why he pursues
me? He intends to run for senator, and I am to provide him with his
ticket to Washington. Illegal wiretaps, suborned witnesses, planted
evidence - he doesn't care how he incriminates one. You had
better guard your own precious arse, friend Guido. "

"I always have, " Montedoro said in English. The perfect acoustics
of the auditorium filled the place with white noise during the interval,
so the conversation between the two dons was inaudible even to
LoPresti and the single remaining bodyguard, who were only a few
feet away. Nevertheless, the man whom the newspapers called
Boss of Bosses leaned very close to his old friend and spoke in
the tongue of secrecy. "Do you think that I'm blind to the
government conspiracy against Our Thing? I saw it coming years
ago, when that shitter-of-wisdom Robert Kennedy declared war on
us. For this very reason, my own Family has diversified, distanced
itself from the less savory sources of income. The Montedoro
Borgata is legitimate, Vicenzu! Well - very nearly so. My sons,
Pasquale and Paolo, have more three-piece-suits on their payroll
than a Wall Street brokerage. You don't find cunting zealots like
Piccolomini poking into our affairs. Not when they can spend their
time more profitably pursuing the greatest importer of heroin and
co­caine on the East Coast. "

"Perhaps I should peddle pizza?" Falcone growled.

Montedoro chuckled. "Why not? See here - I know that your gross
profits are tremendous, rising with each passing month. But you
are having difficulty laundering the money. And some of your
impatient young men complain that their share is slow in filtering
down to them. I happen to know that the Sortino Borgata has the
same problem, and there are rumors about Calcare's operation,
too. It is the unprecedented quantity of money - the drug money -
so inconvenient! But there are new methods of handling this
embarrassment of riches, Vicenzu -tricks of modern finance. "

"Hah! You suggest that we hand the money over to you for
safekeep­ing, my dear old friend?"

"Suppose, " Montedoro said softly, "that we revive the
Commission? Suppose that the Five Families work together
instead of at cross-pur­poses? The Commission was a good idea
- only ahead of its time. But now, with this massive influx of dirty
money that must be invested if it is not to be pissed away in
bankers' percentages, we need to unify to survive. "

"Oh, shit, " said Falcone in English. "Now you're startin' to sound
just like that Chicago asshole, Camastra. "

A troubled look crossed Montedoro's face. "Al Camastra phoned
me last night. He knew we'd be getting together. How did he know
that, Vince?... And what Al had to say worried me. "

The door at the back of the box opened and Joe Porks came in, a
tray of empty flute glasses in his hands and a big bottle of
champagne tucked under one arm. He nodded deferentially to the
dons and went over to LoPresti. The two whispered together.
LoPresti, scowling, headed for the door while Joe Porks undid the
cork wire on the magnum. There was a juicy pop. Joe began to
pour.

Falcone was distracted by the actions of his minions. There was a
creeping sensation behind his stiffly starched collar, which seemed
sud­denly to constrict his windpipe. He ran a finger behind the
collar and grunted to clear his throat. "Camastra! He always means
trouble. Him and that smartass Irish consigliere of his. What kinda
crap was he shovelin' this time?"

Before Montedoro could answer, the door to the box opened
again. LoPresti stood there, his face gray and drawn, and behind
him were three men in evening clothes. The quartet edged inside
and the door closed. The lone soldier on guard duty started up
from his seat, groping in his armpit, and then crumpled to the floor
with a muffled crash. He twitched and lay still.

"Jesus Christ, " said Joe Porks. His fingers tightened on the
cham­pagne bottle.

"Don't even think of trying it, Porcaro, " said one of the shadow
men behind LoPresti. "Take his piece, Mike. "

The two dons gaped. LoPresti stepped over to his enforcer, who
seemed to be paralyzed, and removed a .38 Detective Special
from his shoulder holster. Joe Porks stood like a battered
mannequin in an After Six dis­play window, a full glass of bubbly in
one hand and the big bottle in the other. Sweat poured down his
forehead and his acne-pitted cheeks.

Falcone lurched to his feet to confront his Underboss. "Mike, what
the fuck's going on here?"

LoPresti's mouth worked as if he were trying to overcome a spasm
of lockjaw. There were tears of rage in his eyes. He handed the
revolver to one of the men behind him and then went to a seat
beside Falcone and slowly lowered himself into it.

The shortest of the three intruders now stepped forward into the
light. He was a man in his mid-thirties whose dark hair grew in a
widow's peak, and his face wore one of the most compelling and
terri­fying expressions that the two dons could remember having
seen during their unquiet lives.

Montedoro remained seated. "A visitor from Chicago, " he said in a
neutral tone. "O'Connor, isn't it?"

Yes.

"Al Camastra mentioned your name when we spoke on the phone
last night. Do you intend to kill Vince and me?"

No. But I will explain certain matters to you.

Montedoro nodded. His glance took in the sagging LoPresti and
mo­tionless Joe Porks, who was teetering a bit with the
champagne but didn't spill a drop.

May we sit down? The intermission is nearly over.

Montedoro inclined his head graciously.

Your associates whom we met outside are resting in the men's
lounge. They'll probably feel much better after a good night's
sleep. The fellow on the floor will require prompt hospitalization.
Porcaro and LoPresti, however, will receive their treatment from
me.

O'Connor's two companions had gone to Joe Porks and relieved
him of his burdens. They guided him to the fourth seat at the front
of the box near to LoPresti and sat him down, then retired again to
the shadows. The five-minute-warning chime sounded. People
began returning to their seats in the boxes to the right and left.
They paid no attention to the mobsters and their uninvited guests.

"He's talking, " Falcone whispered, his eyes bulging with terror,
"but he ain't talking. "

Montedoro was staring at Kieran with shrewd speculation. "So
you're Camastra's edge. No wonder he made you. No wonder he
raised you to consigliere. "

"I have other talents as well, Don Guido. If you help reorganize the
Commission and put it into efficient operation, you may benefit
from my unique abilities yourself. And so may Don Vicenzu, and
other busi­nessmen of honor. " But first we must settle another
matter.

Falcone said hesitantly, "It wasn't me ordered the hit, O'Connor.
You know that, don't you? You're a counselor. Untouchable. But
LoPresti was burned because you undercut us on the bidding last
year for the Montréal Connection. That was a pipeline he sweat
blood to bring in, and the froggies were all ready to deal - until you
convinced 'em oth­erwise. " He gave a weak laugh. "Maybe now we
know how you con­vinced 'em. "

"I'm not a miracle-worker, " Kieran said. "My... influence isn't long-
lasting and it certainly doesn't extend over distances. What I
offered Montréal was a better deal and safer conditions of transfer,
using the Saint Lawrence Seaway. No danger of hijacking, no
payoffs to cops or customs, and payment direct to Switzerland.
Chapelle explained all that to LoPresti. It was a simple business
matter, Don Vicenzu, but your man chose to treat it as a personal
affront. He's stupid and shortsighted and vindictive, and so is his
animal, Porcaro. "

"I agree, " said Falcone.

The lights in the Opera House were dimming and the patrons
settled down. Applause greeted Maestro López-Cobos as he
entered the pit and motioned for the players in the orchestra to
rise.

Then there will be peace between Chicago and the Falcone
Family, Don Vicenzu?

The don spoke in a harsh whisper. "I swear it. I swear it. "

And you are a witness to this, Don Guido?

"I am, " said Montedoro.

The hall had become very dark. The conductor raised his baton
and the pianissimo notes of an organ began the overture to Act
Four of La Favorita. LoPresti and Porcaro sat beside Falcone with
only the rise and fall of their shirt-fronts signaling life, apparently
held in a trance by the two associates of O'Connor who were
glaring at the backs of their necks. Kieran rose to his feet and put
his right hand on Porcaro's head and his left on LoPresti's. The
paralyzed men started violently and O'Connor himself suppressed
a groan.

This... is not revenge, you understand. Only simple justice. A
res­toration of order. Don Guido, your men should be able to cope
with the disposal of this pair without too much difficulty. It will be an
educa­tional experience for them. We will send them in on our way
out.

And then O'Connor and the two men with him were gone, and the
gold brocade curtain opened on the handsome Ming Cho Lee set
of a monastery courtyard in Spain. The stage illumination lit the
faces of the audience. Falcone was aware of a faint, peculiar odor.
He leaned over and saw that the eye sockets of his henchmen had
become streaming wells of dark fluid, and that neither man was
breathing even though they both sat very straight in their luxurious
chairs.



2

ALMA-ATA, KAZAKH SSR, EARTH

10 JULY  1979



he was the most self-effacing member of the delegation of Indian
parapsychology scholars visiting Kazakh State University, and
afterward many staff members at the Bioenergetics Institute
(including the Director) denied that he had been there at all. But the
truth was that he had been the one who arranged for the tour in the
first place, as a pretext for meeting Yuri and Tamara.

The visitors had seen nothing of the laboratory where the young
biophysicist and his wife worked, since it was under the Cosmic
secu­rity classification. Instead they toured the Kirlian facility,
where scan­ning devices purported to monitor the nonphysical aura
of living things. Although one or two of the delegates asked
indiscreet questions about corona discharge effects and water
vapor, most were suitably impressed. In the afternoon there was a
tea, presided over by the Director of the Institute, where the
delegates were given the opportunity to mingle with the various
project supervisors and a few of the percipient subjects whose
psychic powers were under analysis. Yuri and Tamara were there,
introduced simply as "biocommunications specialists. " They said
very little and slipped away early, and forgot about the group of
Indian schol­ars almost at once. Their attention was fully occupied
by the matter of Abdizhamil Simonov. There were rumors that
Andropov himself was taking a personal interest in the KGB's
inquiry into the mind-controller's sudden death.

That evening, as Tamara was putting little Valery and Ilya to bed,
Yuri received a phone call from the Director.

"A distinguished member of the Indian Paraphysics Association
tour group has asked for a personal meeting with you and your
wife. " The Director's voice was strained and overly formal. "He
was told that such an appointment would be difficult to arrange,
since it would have to be approved by Moscow. This did not deter
him. He... prevailed upon me to phone the Comrade Academician
himself with the request. It was approved. "

Yuri could only say, "How unusual!"

"You will meet this Dr. Urgyen Bhotia in the main lobby of the Hotel
Kazakhstan as soon as possible. He is a Tibetan resident of
Darjeeling, and he wishes to speak to you about certain studies he
has made that are relevant to your work. Show him every courtesy.
" Before Yuri could respond, the Director hung up.

Tamara came out of the children's bedroom with lifted brows.

He transferred the amazing gist of the conversation to her in an
in­stant, adding: I have no idea what this is all about but we are
going to have to see this guru and postpone our discussion with
Alla and Mukan until later tonight I'll call them while you get Natasha
to baby-sit.

When everything was arranged, they took a bus across town to the
soaring new hotel on Lenin Avenue, where only the most
distinguished visitors were housed. No sooner had they come into
the air-conditioned lobby than the strangely influential Tibetan was
there bowing. He was a short, sturdy man with very brown skin,
dressed in crisply pressed trekker's garb.

"Dr. Gawrys and Madame Gawrys-Sakhvadze, I am Urgyen Bhotia.
I thank you profoundly for coming here, and apologize for causing
you inconvenience. I hope you will forgive my summoning you in
such a precipitate manner, but I have waited nearly five years for
this mo­ment. " Shall we stroll outside in the cool of the evening?

Yuri froze in the act of shaking hands. Tamara said: I think that
would be wise. Have you taken the cable car up Koktyube Hill?

Not yet but I hear it provides a marvelous view of the city.

Yuri said: You know us and our work? How can this be?

The Tibetan laughed and said, "This is not my first visit to your
lovely city of Alma-Ata, but it is my first opportunity to enjoy it with
all my physical senses! Let us walk. "

He casually took an arm of each of them when they were outside
and guided them across Abai Avenue into the gardens of the Lenin
Palace of Culture as though he were the host and they the visitors.
The fountains were lit with the coming of dusk and the spray from
them was cooling and welcome. A heavy scent of flowers arose
from the formal gardens and Urgyen paused to admire them.

"So many lush growing things in this splendid, modern city! The
aether sings with vitality. " He might have been any age from forty
to sixty. His head was shaved and his cheeks were such a bright
red that they might have been rouged. His teeth were very white
and perfect and his eyes, almost hidden in a mass of deep
creases when he smiled, were an unusual hazel color.

Tamara said, "It is clear that you are one of the adept - unlike your
colleagues. You will please tell us how you came to know of our
psychic faculties and of our work, since both are closely guarded
state secrets. "

"I know you, " the Tibetan said, "because I have been blessed with
an ability to perceive the bioplasma of the brightest ones across
great dis­tances. My vision extends only throughout Asia. But for
more than twenty years now, since leaving Tibet, I have studied the
soul manifes­tation by means of what you would call remote-
viewing. I saw the two of you for the first time in 1974, when you
were newly come to Alma-Ata, a double mind-star more brilliant
than any I had found before. Since then I have watched, I rejoiced
in the birth of your two brilliantly ensouled sons, and now I
anticipate with you the coming of your third child, a daughter. "

"It is a girl?" Tamara exclaimed.

"Most assuredly. " Urgyen searched the faces of the young couple,
ruefully acknowledging the mental barricades they had erected
against him. "Please do not be afraid of me. My only wish is to help
you at this very difficult time, when you two and the many immature
minds under your care find yourselves at a moral crossroads. "

"You say you have watched us, " Yuri stated. "How close has your
astral scrutiny been? Have you read our minds?"

"You know from your own remote-viewing studies that such a thing
is impossible. Nor can I read them now unless you freely give
access. Nevertheless, I am aware of the temptations bedeviling
you and the dangers that you face. I asked myself and the
Compassionate Lord if it was my duty to advise you. "

"And what, " Yuri inquired coldly, "did your heavenly oracle say?"

"I was helped to understand that, in spite of certain inhumane
actions you have abetted, you are both persons of goodwill. You
have rejected the false joy of the great determinism that hands
over the individual conscience to a group and evades personal
responsibility. You know you are free, and you know you will have
to make choices. Too many people of your nation deny this difficult
truth. They do not understand that the human mind must cultivate
both soul and spirit if it is to be integral. "

"You will have to explain that, " Yuri said.

They walked on, across the palace concourse and into trees where
cicadas were beginning to buzz.

Urgyen said, "A month ago there was a meeting of leaders in
Vienna. The President of the United States and the Soviet
President Leonid Brezhnev signed a strategic arms limitation
treaty. At one of their con­ferences, which took place in the Soviet
embassy in Vienna, a person from your Bioenergetics Institute
named Simonov exerted coercive and mind-altering force upon the
American President, throwing him into a state of confusion and
irrationality that still persists... The Chairman of your KGB was so
elated by Simonov's success that he made arrangements to send
the man to Washington, where he would be able to exert his
inimical influence upon other American leaders, as ordered. The
plan was aborted when Simonov dropped dead while jogging on
the university campus. "

"An autopsy showed that his heart was enlarged and weakened, "
Yuri said. "It is a disability that often accompanies great psychic
exertion. I myself am under a physician's care for similar
symptoms. "

"Exactly, " said Urgyen sadly.

They walked in silence. Ahead was the brightly lit funicular station,
the goal of many other evening strollers.

Tamara said, "Abdizhamil Simonov was a tribal shaman before he
was recruited to the Institute, a petty and vicious man who resisted
all our efforts to dissuade him from cooperating in Andropov's
scheme. He was half mad, a menace to world peace. The KGB
thought they could control him, but we knew they could not. "

Urgyen nodded. "There was also Ryrik Volzhsky, a strong coercer
and an incorrigible corrupter of children. You have in your special
program at the Institute more than sixty youthful psychics. When
Volzhsky persuaded your Director to assign him to the
pedagogical staff, both of you admonished him to restrain himself.
He laughed. Two days later he was found drowned in the Bolshaya
Alma-Atinka River. "

"The normals can only agonize in their impotence when confronted
by evil, " Yuri said. "They can only utter foolish curses or wish the
destruction of the wicked. We are more fortunate. "

"The soul would say so, but not the spirit, " said the Tibetan.

They came to the ticket office, where Yuri paid. Then the three of
them got into one of the crowded red-and-yellow cablecars. The
other holidaymakers made room for pregnant Tamara near the
window, and a moment later they were soaring up the hillside,
suspended in the clear air, with the discussion now relegated to
telepathy.

Yuri said: So you presume to judge me and castigate me with your
pious Eastern word-play... Soul and spirit! Talk instead of life and
death! Talk of a pair of fearful children become the toys of power-
corrupted old men who would use marvelous mind-powers as
weapons rather than dedicate them to the good of humanity!

Urgyen said: But if you kill even in a cause that seems just are you
any better than your oppressors?

Tamara said: We regretted the deaths bitterly. Yuri acted only after
serious reflection.

Urgyen said: In Tibet in the eleventh century the poet Milarepa had
mental powers like yours. He was able to strike his enemies dead
from afar. But only after he renounced his usurpation of god-power
did he become a saint.

Yuri said: We aren't saints. We are only persons wanting to survive.
Yes I killed and because I am a Pole and a Catholic I was
tormented and I wish there had been another way but there was
not. Once I was timid little Jerzy snatched from my parents in Lodz
bullied and cajoled into mental slavery thinking there was no
helping it. Then came Tamara! In Leningrad the scientists studied
us and tested us and the military men tried to convince us that our
duty was unquestioning loyalty and ser­vice to the state. But
Tamara knew better and helped me to know also. Her dear father
was exiled because he dared to protest and publicize the GRU's
treatment of us and of other psychics.

Urgyen said: Your unhappy memories are clear to me... and I see
what you are reluctant to state directly: that even then you thought it
necessary to kill...

Yuri said: Why can't you understand!

Tamara said: There was a cold-blooded brute the chief of the
GRU. Yes he was the first. He would have locked us away treated
us as equip­ment rather than human beings to further his ambition.
We were to be his secret weapon to spy with remote-vision on
Chairman Andropov of the KGB. When our enemy died the GRU
lost control of the psychic-study program. Andropov and Brezhnev
became fervent believers in the mind-powers, coopted the project
and promised us and the other adepts that we would now be
treated as honored Soviet citizens. It was 1974. Six months after
Papa's exile. I was 16 and Jerzy/Yuri 22. We were given
permission to marry and sent to Alma-Ata.

Yuri said: We expected a barbarous outpost in Central Asia with
camel caravans and fierce nomads and bazaars. Imagine our
surprise at this green new city with the great university where we
could study as well as be studied.

Urgyen said: You have acquired knowledge but not wisdom.

Yuri said: Gawno!

Tamara said: Urgyen Bhotia we are not Indians or Tibetans. Our
soul does not flinch at the prospect of violence because our
people have survived for centuries in violent lands enduring
persecution. We know we face grave choices but we have made
glorious plans and we are determined to see them carried out. This
means defending ourselves if necessary. Yuri and I are the most
powerful of all the minds assembled here in the pilot bioenergetics
program. We teach the young ones remote-viewing and convince
them to hide their true ability from the KGB evaluators. The
program thus seems to progress very slowly. But the children
understand that their minds set them apart that they must work for
all the world not only for the Soviet Union.

Urgyen said: If you are the teachers it is that much more important
that you reform your erring consciences.

"Here we are at the top of the hill, " Yuri said. "Come, let us enjoy
the view!"

There was an observation platform and a restaurant at the terminus
of the cableway, and the other passengers disembarked laughing
and ex­claiming at the beauty of the panorama. To the north, lost in
purple haze, were the steppes of the Virgin Lands, turned into
fields and or­chards by irrigation. The multicolored lights of the
great city were just beginning to twinkle on while the last sunset
glow illuminated the eastern foothills. Behind Koktyube, to the
south, was the Zailiysky Ala-Tau, a heavily wooded outlier of the
high Tien Shan. China lay only three hundred kilometers beyond.

They stood at the railing, looking out over Alma-Ata. Tamara said,
"The city's name means Father of Apples. There are orchards
every­where, and vineyards. We have come to love this place. At
the univer­sity, we are trusted. We say the proper things and are
circumspect in the use of our higher mind-powers. We can do so
much good, Urgyen... and someday when other persons like us in
other parts of the world are able to reveal themselves and work
openly, we will also. Then we will forever renounce the self-
defensive violence that we have been forced to resort to. I swear
it. "

"You know there are many others, many minds with these powers, "
Urgyen said. "But do you know that there is a World Mind, of which
you and I and the others, whether highly empowered or lowly,
par­take?"

"We know there is the Great Soul, " Tamara said. "My many-times-
great-grandfather told me of it when I was a child. Now we would
call it the Conscious Field of Humanity. Some persons call it God. "

"It is not God, " said the Tibetan. "God is spirit and cannot be
infected by evil. But the World Soul can... and this is why I came to
plead with you. "

Yuri cried: Soul! Spirit! Tell us plainly what you mean!

"I will try, " said the Tibetan. "Years ago, when I was a monk called
Urgyen Rimpoche and practiced my mind-powers proudly, I
thought I was one blessed by the gods, a living miracle who had
the right to command heaven. I was young! In the turmoil that my
poor country suffered during the Chinese invasion of the 1950s,
my attempts to co­erce divinity and repel the invaders were futile.
Our little monastery was utterly demolished and we were beaten
and called parasites by the Red soldiers. Of course, they were
right... I had confused soul with spirit. So had my brother monks
who had prospered and enjoyed pres­tige by celebrating my
talents. Along with many of my countrymen, I fled to India. After
suffering much and losing my psychic abilities be­cause of self-
doubts, I began to acquire wisdom. The first thing I took to heart
was the realization that the soul and its powers are not
supernat­ural. They are no miracle. They are part of the natural
human heritage and all people have them in greater or lesser
degree. "

"We have also come to that conclusion, " said Tamara.

Urgyen said, "The soul is neither physical or spiritual. But it is still
part of matter's realm, born with certain coalescences of matter
and energy. Even atoms have a minute portion of soul! Higher
organisms have much more. And there is a World Soul -"

"Do you speak of a World Mind?" Yuri asked.

"No, no. That comes later, with the infusion of spirit! But let me go
on... The soul feels but it cannot know. It is - as most thinkers have
recognized - feminine: life-giving, as patient and enduring as planet
Earth whose soul-essence is part of each one of us. Living things
form a hierarchy of soul, first tropistic, then sentient. Plants and
animals. In us, souls dream and imagine and fantasize and create.
They remember and they fear. They are basically passive and
amoral. When the soul is properly entuned, its powers may move
matter and change it. Some­times the human soul swells large and
begets ultrasenses, or a coercive will, or mental control of matter
and energy, or the reorganization of dysfunctioning mind or body
that we call healing. "

"Tell us how mind relates to soul, " Yuri demanded.

"Only in thinking creatures is the soul infused with spirit, making a
mind. "

"And spirit is what?" Tamara asked.

"It does not belong to the realm of matter. We may call it divine,
but it is of a different order of reality. It enkindles the intellect,
orders all things in our minds, impels us upward as flames rise. It is
masculine: impregnating and driving, engendering discipline, truth,
wisdom, and law. It makes thinking creatures yearn toward a higher
reality, what I would call the face of God. It knows good and evil. It
strives to unite in love with other minds and to form the World Mind.
But it can be debased. Its impulse toward increasing organization
can be crippled, even halted. "

They said: We do not understand. Especially we do not
understand why you say WE threaten your World Mind.

"Look around you, " Urgyen invited. "You see the terraced
mountains with their forests and orchards, and you see a modern
city. The moun­tains were upthrust ages ago, and slowly they are
being worn down. The trees and other plant-life spring up from
seed and grow - but when growth stops, they will die. The city of
Alma-Ata is only the latest of many human settlements in the Valley
of the Seven Rivers. Others flourished for a time, but when they
stopped growing, they died. Growth! Evolution, if you like, with life
and mind organizing itself at ever-higher levels! If Mind does not
grow, it will also die. My dear Tamara and Yuri, you are the
vanguard of the planetary Mind, together with the others like you. It
is so simple: you must be better than those who came before
because spirit must grow as well as soul in the evolving World
Mind. Without growth, there can only be death. If you, the leading
shoots of your growing species, become corrupt, you will tend to
corrupt the entire Mind. "

Yuri exclaimed: You would have us submit tamely to our enemies?
Die rather than kill in self-defense?

Yes.

Tamara said: You want us to be like Mahatma Gandhi. But our
sys­tem of values says we have a right to kill mortal enemies.

True... and yet your Avatar allowed his enemies to kill him.

Yuri said: We are not martyrs! We have a great plan and it requires
living leaders. You yourself said it: We are the vanguard we can
lead the world to peace!

Never if you kill to prevail. Never if you use the mind-powers that
way. Think! What was hard in the beginning becomes more and
more easy. Think! The once stricken conscience becomes dulled.
Think! Who are you going to lead? Your peers? What of the lesser
minds? What if they fear you and will not follow? Will you coerce
and kill? Think of your children watching you and learning. Think.

Tamara said: Urgyen your message is hard to hear harder to
accept. I don't know if I can accept it. But I do believe it...

Her husband rounded on her. "How can you? After all we have
suf­fered together - how can you?"

She placed her hand on her swollen body. Inside, the fetus leapt.
"I think it has to do with motherhood, " she said.

Urgyen nodded and smiled. "Yes. And fatherhood. "

Yuri looked from one to the other in confusion. Both of their minds
were open to him, showing. But he still could not understand.



3

SUPERVISORY CRUISER NOUMENON [Lyl 1-0000]

10 JULY  1979



"the former lama shows a coadunate sensitivity rare among
humans, " said Eupathic Impulse. "How gratifying. "

"He typifies an abhorrence of violence found mainly among
Eastern­ers of the Buddhist persuasion, " Homologous Trend said,
"and among the English. The trait is, as one has noted, regrettably
uncommon. "

"Making the coadunation of the World Mind that much more
un­likely, " Asymptotic Essence said.

"In the unlikelihood is the greatest glory, " said the poet, Noetic
Con­cordance.

"All very well for one to look on the bright side of a situation that's
hopeless, " Impulse said.

"One supposes that it was inevitable that perverse operants, such
as the lamentable O'Connor, would use their higher mind-powers
aggres­sively and for personal gain, " Trend observed. "Such
flawed personali­ties, are, after all, outside of the mainstream of
mental evolution. But one regrets most deeply that a pivotal
operant such as Yuri Gawrys, so estimable in other respects, has
seen fit to use his metafaculties to kill. "

"The temptation was overwhelming to one of his mind-set, "
Essence said.

"One fears he does not represent an isolated case, " Impulse
added. "On the contrary, he is probably typical, given that the most
dynamic of the irrupting operant minds share the moral view of the
West, not the East. Even Yuri's mate Tamara, inculcated with
gentleness and true coadunate principles during her formative
years, and assenting intellec­tually to the truth of the Tibetan's
admonition, will undoubtedly suc­cumb to the use of violence
under extreme provocation. Human fe­males will kill to defend their
children even as they counsel them to embrace peace. "

Noetic Concordance radiated sorrow. "Then the Tibetan's warning
was in vain?"

"One may hope, " Trend said, "that his message will have a
positive influence upon other human minds at a more favorable
point in mental evolution. "

"Strange, " Asymptotic Essence mused, "that the lama should
have so fortuitously conceived this advanced insight, and gone
counter to his naturally retiring disposition to deliver it to Yuri and
Tamara. If one had not noted the Tibetan's indubitably authentic
mental signature, one might be forgiven for suspecting that he was
none other than Unifex, masquerading again in human guise. "

"Indeed one might!" Concordance agreed.

"Now there is an oddity, " Eupathic Impulse remarked. "That It
should take pleasure in simply walking among the lower life-forms!"

"It empathizes so closely with them, " said Concordance. "Should
one be surprised when It assumes their physical form?"

"Yes, " Impulse said shortly. "Krondaku may do so routinely, but it
violates dignity and custom for a Lylmik to take on the material
aspect of a client race. "

"One is being a bit stuffy, " Trend suggested.

"And one should remember, " Concordance appended, "that It is in
love. "

"It is in New Hampshire even now, " said Essence, "having
completed its contemplation of the supernova in the Soulpto
Group that threat­ened to irradiate the planet of the Shoridai. It
saved them by interposing a gas-cloud - then sped back to Earth
when It perceived an urgent necessity to harangue its slow-witted
catspaw. "

"That one, " said Impulse darkly. "He would have used the powers
to kill also, if he had not been restrained. The very agent of Unifex -
a reprobate!"

Noetic Concordance's mind smiled. "Oh, I don't know. He rather
grows on one. "



4

FROM THE MEMOIRS OF ROGATIEN REMILLARD



milieu biographies of my nephew Denis have covered the latter
years of his childhood in considerable detail, thanks not only to his
diaries but also to the reminiscences of his teachers and fellow
students. For this reason I intend to highlight only a few incidents
from that time.

First, let me correct a persistent error. Denis was never seriously
endangered by Pentagon or CIA zealots seeking to utilize his
talents for intelligence gathering or experiments in "psychotronic"
aggression. Other young operants did suffer from the compulsory
enlistment at­tempts of official (and highly unofficial) groups; but
Denis went unharassed, thanks to his Jesuit protectors at Brebeuf
Academy and later to the Dartmouth Coterie, who formed an ad
hoc Praetorian Guard as well as a circle of intimate friends during
Denis's college years.

One story I must tell deals with the way Denis finally made contact
with the Coterie and his other early operant associates, using a
method so crude that he was too embarrassed even to mention it
when he became a respected academic. His biographers assume
that he instinc­tively used the declamatory mode of farspeech,
calling out in a gener­alized fashion. They seem to think that when
his developing powers reached an adequate level, numbers of
isolated operants automatically responded.

The truth is otherwise - and much more droll.

After our encounter with Elaine Harrington, Denis was firmly
con­vinced of the existence of other operants, and he made many
attempts to contact them via telepathy. Working together, the boy
and I checked out his "broadcast range" by the simple expedient
of having him be­speak me as I traveled to prearranged New
England locales. Although intervening mountain ranges tended to
block or interfere with his men­tal messages, as did the sun and
electrical storms, we discovered that Denis could farspeak me
reliably over a distance of more than a hundred kilometers. When
he operated out of Brebeuf near Concord in central

New Hampshire, as he usually did, he could theoretically blanket
our own state, plus Vermont, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, and
most of Connecticut - as well as a fair-sized chunk of Maine and
those parts of upper New York that weren't shielded by the
Adirondacks. Our record long-distance exchange during his school
years covered 166 kilometers, between Brebeuf and East
Hampton, Long Island, where I visited friends in 1977.

Nevertheless, in spite of his success in farspeaking me, Denis had
no luck at all in contacting other telepaths using a generalized
broad-spectrum hail. His mental CQs remained futile howls into an
aetheric rain-barrel, messages lacking addresses, until that day in
1978 when we first tried the seriocomic tactic I dubbed Operation
Witch Hazel.

It was in November, when Denis was eleven and in his final term of
study at the academy. I had come down on a delicate and rather
sticky mission: to break the bad news to Fathers Ellsworth and
Dubois that their prize prodigy would not, after all, be matriculating
at Georgetown University next year as they had hoped - and quite
taken for granted. Denis himself had no objections to attending the
Jesuit institution. It had a fine medical school and its faculty,
secretly briefed by my neph­ew's clerical mentors, was quite willing
to accommodate a twelve-year-old genius with a supernormal
psyche.

But the Ghost had other ideas.

My interview with the good fathers was an uncomfortable one.
Fol­lowing the Ghost's  suggestion, I told Ellsworth and Dubois
that Georgetown, being situated in Washington, DC, was too
susceptible to infiltration by government agents or other parties
who might take an unhealthy interest in Denis's talents. (This
maneuver of mine was un­doubtedly the source of later rumors that
Denis was actually pursued by unscrupulous psychological-warfare
specialists. ) The priests were deeply disappointed when I told
them that I had already arranged for Denis to enter Dartmouth
College, a venerable Ivy League school in western New
Hampshire. My arguments in favor of Dartmouth must have had a
paranoid flavor - and even worse, smacked of ingratitude after the
special pains taken by the Brebeuf faculty in the first five years of
the boy's education. The two priests tried hard to change my mind;
but I had my orders, and so I prevailed. With Don's total abdication
of re­sponsibility, I was Denis's de facto guardian and the decision
was mine to make. In the end, I cheered them up. Dartmouth was a
small college but it did have a school of medicine sympathetic to
the concept of metapsychic research. It was nearby, in the
beautiful town of Hanover on the Connecticut River. It had been
founded in 1769 and numbered among its alumni such luminaries
as Daniel Webster and Dr. Seuss. Above all, because of its
quixotic and individualistic atmosphere, it was about the last place
in the world likely to be infiltrated by the CIA, the lackeys of the
military-industrial establishment - or the KGB. So the matter was
settled.

With the Ellsworth-Dubois ordeal behind me, I was glad to escape
by taking Denis for a stroll into the gray and leafless woodland
adjacent to the Brebeuf campus. The clouds hung low and there
was a smell of snow in the air. Early frosts had withered the low-
growing plant-life. Fragile rinds of ice crusted the puddles along
the path. The boy and I walked for an hour or so, discussing
Dartmouth and making plans to visit it over the upcoming
Thanksgiving vacation. Then the conversation turned to a vexatious
old topic: Denis's continuing futile attempts to farspeak other
telepaths.

"I've been thinking over the theory of telepathic communication, "
the boy said. "Trying to discover why you and I can farspeak over
long distances - while I have no luck when I call out to others. " He
de-toured so as to walk through a deep drift of maple leaves,
kicking them into the air with childish satisfaction. "The first
possibility - and the most rotten! - is that there simply aren't any
receptive minds within my telepathic radius. I just can't believe that.
I feel them out there! They're probably unaware of their powers for
the most part, but some of them might have a gut conviction that
they're different from the rank and file of humanity... Now the
second possibility: The minds are there but they don't hear me for
some reason. I have to find out why my transmissions don't reach
them even though I can farspeak you. "

Little chickadees, lingering tardily in the woods before their annual
withdrawal to town and farmyard during fast winter, sang as we
crunched along. I said, "The problem might simply be that your
closet telepaths aren't listening! Look how we ignore the sounds
made by these birds while we concentrate on each other's voices.
"

"That's a good point. The unknowns out there aren't expecting a
telepathic message. They don't think such things are possible. So
when farspeech inadvertently reaches them, they may not
recognize it for what it is. They could think it was a daydream, or
some notion cooked up by their own brains, or even a ghost or
something. "

"Mm, " I said.

"If they were seriously expecting a farspoken message it would be
entirely different. You know that our own head-skeds were carefully
planned. We were both alert and waiting at the time we'd arranged
to communicate - and I knew where you would be. It didn't matter
that your mind has a relatively puny receptive faculty -"

"Thank you very much!"

His solemn little face broke into a grin. "Nothing personal. Your
mind is a weak telepathic transmitter and you're not a very sensitive
receiver. But my mind makes up for it. I put out a high-powered
signal that you can read, and I listen for you with an ultrasensitive
mental antenna. Theoretically, I should be able to bespeak other
weak or un­trained telepaths - if only they knew enough to listen for
me. " His mind flashed a farcical display advertisement:



TELEPATHS   OF   THE   WORLD!

TUNE   IN   YOUR   MENTAL   EARS

WITHOUT   FAIL

NEXT  TUESDAY, 8: 00 P. M. EST

FOR   AN   IMPORTANT   ANNOUNCEMENT!



He added aloud, "Of course we'd never dare do it. And even if we
did, the very people we wanted most to reach would ignore it
completely. "

"Eventually there will be a public acknowledgment, " I said. "You
will be able to discuss the powers openly someday... "

He nodded. "When I'm grown up, and I have my research facility
and a suitable aura of academic respectability. " The irony on his
young face was almost tragic. "But it's so tempting to take a short
cut!" "You're talking like a child. "

He wryly agreed. Then he gave me a sidelong look. "You've saved
me from making a lot of mistakes, Uncle Rogi. I'm just beginning to
un­derstand that. And the way you got me away from Papa - to this
school, where I'd be safe and able to grow. Now this business of
going to Dartmouth instead of Georgetown. I trust your judgment
and you know I'd never try to probe your motivation. But I hope that
someday... "

All I said was, "At the proper time. "

He sighed. We walked along in vocal and mental silence for
several minutes, and then he returned to our previous topic of
discussion.

"I've thought of another reason why my farspeech might not reach
other telepaths; signal incompatible with receiver. The am/fm thing.
"

"Could be, " I agreed. "Our voices can whisper, talk, yell, sing. Why
shouldn't there be different modes of telepathic output?"

"I believe there must be at least two. You know, when we're home
in Berlin, how you and I can bespeak each other without Papa or
Victor listening in? That's a sort of private mode. But there's a
public mode, too - the way we farspeak when the message comes
to you and me and Papa and Victor all at once. "

He stopped walking, frowned, and cogitated. Then he said, "What
if that private kind of telepathy is the most efficient kind? What if it's
coherent farspeech, say, sort of like a laser beam of light! Public
mode might be more like a streetlamp - casting light in all
directions but only illuminating a small, nearby area. You need a
tight beam for light­ing up faraway objectives. Maybe thoughts
need to be beamed, too. "

"Makes sense. "

His face went gloomy. "But if that's true, then my random telepathic
calls can never work. I don't know how I aim the beam... I suppose
I recognize your mind-pattern and tune to it in some instinctive way
when we go private, or when we do long-distance farspeaking. But
how will I ever find out the mental signatures of unknown
telepaths?" He was thinking hard, and in a moment he brightened.
"I bet they'd hear me if I spoke in public mode right up close to
them! Then I wouldn't need any signature. After all, I heard Elaine
okay when she was half a mile away on Mount Washington that first
time, and later she could hear me when we were a couple hundred
yards apart. Funny, though. I never seemed to be able to go
private with her."

I let that one lie. "You can hardly travel all over the country
farshouting in crowds, hoping to scratch up other telepaths. It
would be prohibitively expensive, slow, and boring beyond belief. "

"There ought to be another ultrasense for locating people, " the
boy growled. "A seekersense. "

We were going downhill, toward a little brook. The low ground had
moisture-loving red alder trees and occasional small thickets of
witch hazel. The clouds opened briefly, letting a shaft of sunlight
lance down, and from a distance it seemed that the leafless
branches were wrapped in a yellow haze. Then I realized that the
witch hazel shrubs were in bloom. I pointed out the phenomenon
mentally to Denis. It was a small bit of botanical sorcery repeated
every late fall in the New England woods.

"Weird old witch hazel, " Denis said. "No wonder the early folks
thought it was magic."

"That's why they used it for dowsing, I guess. You can find water
by divining with just about any kind of wooden rod, or even a piece
of wire. But the experts say that nothing works quite so well as a
branch of witch hazel. I remember reading about one dowser who
could find water just by moving a forked witch hazel stick over a
map. "

"It's your mind that does the finding, " the boy said absently. "The
stick probably just helps you to focus the -" He broke off abruptly.
His eyes met mine and we found ourselves mind-shouting in
unison:

Seekersense!

"The guy really used a map?" Denis whispered.

I nodded. "Found water on the island of Bermuda, as I recall. From
here in the States. "

"It's a cockamamie idea. Totally bananas. To think that I might be
able to dowse out telepaths with a forked stick and a road map. "

"Only, " I said pointedly, "if you believe you can. But it can't hurt to
try. I have a large-scale Delorme Atlas of New Hampshire in my
Volvo... "

"Even if I did manage to find people, we'd still have to drive to the
place where they were so I could send out a public-type hail. We'd
still have to do some hunting. "

"It can be managed, " I told him, "provided you don't turn up eight
hundred prospects. " I reached into my pocket for my trusty
penknife, and led the giggling boy into a witch hazel thicket to
select a suitable forked stick.



I only saw a water dowsing operation once, and that was on
television back in the '50s when I was just a kid. The program was
one of those down-around-home local documentaries that were
common then, and featured a famous "water-witch" from Hancock
in the southern part of the state. I remember being disappointed,
after the narrator's exciting build-up, when the witch turned out to
be a balding elderly man with a lantern-jawed Yankee face and
eyeglasses framed in black plastic. His clothes were unexceptional
and his manner laconic - until he took up his forked stick.

In the experiment, a fifty-five-gallon drum full of water had been
buried six feet deep in a freshly plowed area of field. The witch
held his Y-shaped divining rod by the two short arms and extended
the thing ahead of him as he slowly walked up and down the
furrows. The camera showed close-ups of his face, staring at the
ground with rapt attention, eyes wide behind the eyeglass lenses,
sweat beading his forehead. Then the camera pulled back and we
saw the witch plodding toward us, stick outstretched.

And the point of the stick suddenly dipped down.

There didn't seem to have been any causative movement of the
old man's hands: the stick just revolved a bit and pointed to an area
near the witch's feet. The tiniest glimmer of a smile crossed his
lips. He backed up, let the stick rise, then walked over the spot
once again. A dip. He approached the spot from the sides. As if
with a life of its own, the stick turned down perpendicular to the
earth.

"I reckon she's there, " said the witch.

Two sturdy fellows with shovels stepped forward and the soft dirt
began to fly. In a few minutes the drum lay revealed in an open pit;
its bung was removed and water gurgled from it. The witch allowed
as how he could find water "mebbe eighty percent of the time. " He
was the fourth generation of his family to have the gift and
apparently the last. His children and grandchildren, he said, lacked
confidence. Then he added, "But there ain't much call for water-
witching nowadays anyhow. Folks feel a little foolish about it.
They'd rather call in a geologist - nevvamind he hands 'em a
whoppin' bill for his services, so long's he's scientific. But the old
way still works... "

It worked for Denis, too - but only after six months of self-training. I
watched him mind-hunting many times, first using the atlas, later
poring over a series of aerial photos I'd purchased for him at the
cost of an arm and a leg. I had very little seekersense myself
(youthful experi­ments in imitation of the water-witch had proved
that), but it was possible for me to share the boy's search by
means of our mental rap­port. He would sit at a table in a species
of trance, the forked twig moving slowly over the surface of the
map, and what passed through his mind was almost magical.

We have all flown in aircraft at night and looked down on the
scat­tered jewel-lights that mark towns and settlements. The higher
one is, the more indistinct the luminous splotch; but descend, and
the indi­vidual streetlamps and lighted windows and slowly moving
ground-cars become clearly visible. Denis's seeking looked rather
like a night flight, when seen by my mind's eye. When he first
began to hunt he sensed only bright fuzzy masses that signified
concentrations of ordinary mentation: thinking people. But in time
he learned to sharpen his focus, to sort the sapient blur into a
sparkling collection of separate minds. They were multicolored,
bright and dim, large and small. Just as a dowser for water or
minerals visualizes the object of his search, then directs his higher
senses to find it, so Denis conjured up the quintes­sence of
"operant" mental energy and went hunting for it during a variant of
the classic out-of-body experience.

The first operants he viewed, in a targeting operation, were his
father and his brother Victor in Berlin. Initially it was hard for him to
avoid the instinctive use of their mental signatures; but when he
had conquered this technical glitch he was able to see the adult
mind and the child only as tiny beacons of higher function, distinct
in the miasma of nor­mally talented thought. Don's younger
children, who numbered six at that time, glowed dim and latent - a
tragedy that Denis and I would understand fully only years later. But
Don was a fitful variable star and nine-year-old Victor burned like a
baleful ember hiding in a half-extinguished campfire.

Denis never farspoke them, never hinted to them what kind of a
search he was engaged in. "It wouldn't be good for them to know, "
he told me in that sober, young-old way of his. And of course he
was right. The patient search for kindred spirits began to pay off in
June 1979, when he finally located Glenn Dalembert's mind in the
congestion of metropolitan Manchester. We set off on a frantic
ground-search then, me driving the Volvo and Denis, entranced,
sitting beside me with his finger hovering over a tattered aerial
survey sheet. (By then he had been able to discard the witch hazel
wand, to his manifest relief. ) Panic set in when it became evident
that our target was on its way out of Manchester.

A wild chase on the southbound lanes of the turnpike followed, and
once we almost lost Glenn; but we bagged him at long last in a
hilarious and touching scene at Benson's Wild Animal Park, where
he had a summer job coercing elephants in a small circus. The
young man re­acted to our telepathic revelations with equanimity
and took an instant shine to Denis. The boy was stunned to learn
that his newfound metapsychic ally was an undergraduate at
Dartmouth. Glenn Dalembert became the first member of the now-
famed Coterie and would become a champion of metapsychic
rights during the dark pre-Intervention years. A few weeks after
finding Glenn, Denis tracked down the second Coterie stalwart,
Sally Doyle, in her home at Troy. She was a minor celebrity in her
hometown because of a knack for finding lost persons and things.
She had graduated valedictorian of her high school class that year,
and in the fall (quelle surprise!) she was to enter Dartmouth. Once
again Denis was astonished at the coincidence. I, as you might
imagine, remained unruffled.

We located only two other operants that summer. One was an
elderly invalid, Odette Kleinfelter, whom we nearly frightened into
cardiac arrest with our telepathic greeting - and hastily disqualified
from re­cruitment. The other contactee was a Nashua girl a year
younger than Denis. When we confronted her, she fixed Denis with
a redoubtable glare and snapped: "I suppose you think you're
pretty smart!" Except for her metapsychic gifts, which we did not
fully appreciate at that time, she seemed a bright but unexceptional
child with that streak of mulish stubbornness that occasionally
characterizes Franco-American females. Denis was leery of her,
and for some years she would remain on the periphery of the
growing body of young operants. In 1979 there was no hint of the
girl's future role in the metapsychic drama. Her name was Lucille
Cartier, and one day she would become Denis's closest
col­league, his wife, and the mother of the Seven Founding
Magnates of the Human Polity of the Concilium. But that was far in
the future, and I will reserve Lucille's story until a later point in this
narrative.



That fall, shepherded by Glenn Dalembert and Sally Doyle, Denis
entered Dartmouth College. His seekersense quickly pinpointed
three other suboperants among the student body, who were
gathered into the Coterie through telepathic rapport. Two of these,
a senior named Mitch Losier and a sophomore named Colette
Roy, had been entirely unaware of their psychic talents until close
contact with Denis brought about an accelerated floraison. The
third, Tukwila Barnes, was a Puyallup tribes­man from Washington
state. At the time of Denis's matriculation Tukwila was a seventeen-
year-old junior in the college's premed program, a genius well
aware of his talent for hands-on healing and soul-travel who was
wise enough not to acknowledge his unorthodox skills publicly. He
was a wary mind-screener who completely eluded Denis's
dowsing, and only revealed himself after observing the activities of
the Coterie for more than six months.

As Denis devoured the undergraduate curriculum in three hectic
terms, he found time to ferret out three more operants whom he
in­duced to enroll at Dartmouth. Gerard Tremblay was a happy-go-
lucky worker in a Vermont granite quarry, nineteen years old, with
no idea that he was a suboperant telepath. Gordon McAllister, the
only one of the Coterie who would choose physics over
psychology or psychiatry, was twenty-six and operating the family
potato farm in Maine when he was tapped. He had always known
that he was a bit fey, but out of filial piety  had  repressed  his
psychic  tendencies  as  frivolous  and  un-Presbyterian. The final,
and oldest, Coterie member was Eric Boutin, who had worked for
nearly ten years as the service manager in a Ford dealership in
Manchester before Denis discovered him. Boutin's boss wept
unashamedly when the most uncanny diagnostician of auto
mal­function in the state of New Hampshire enrolled as a
Dartmouth fresh­man at the age of thirty.

Denis received his Bachelor of Arts degree in June of 1980,
applauded by me, his Coterie, his mother, and a goodly contingent
of Remillard relations. Don did not attend. In 1983, when Denis
was a mature and self-possessed sixteen, he was awarded an M.
D. from Dartmouth Med­ical School. This time I escorted to the
ceremony not only Sunny but also eight of her children - including
the infant, Pauline. Twenty-four other Remillards made the journey
to Hanover to celebrate the triumph of the family prodigy. Don,
however, suffered a diplomatic attack of flu and remained in Berlin,
attended by the adolescent Victor. They were not greatly missed.

Although Denis (as well as his Coterie) kept his extraordinary
psychic powers under wraps during his study years, he continued
to give his associates informal training. Mitch Losier, a methodical
type who quickly became a seekersense adept, continued to trace
other suboper­ants. Many of these were enticed to Dartmouth and
eventually helped form the first North American operant nucleus.
Denis served his three years' residency in psychiatry at the Mental
Health Center associated with the college, and simultaneously took
Ph. D. degrees in psychology and mathematics (the latter in the
field of cybernetics). His intellectual precocity had attracted
considerable public attention, of course, and certain anonymous
benefactors helped to finance the first small ESP research facility
that he set up and supervised as a postdoctoral fellow. For the
next three years Denis worked with numbers of operant and
suboperant metapsychics in this modest little laboratory. Members
of his Coterie contrived to join him as they completed their own
studies and residencies, sacrificing financial security for the
advancement of mental science. During this time of metapsychic
pioneering Denis pub­lished half a dozen cautious papers and
skirted the morass of premature publicity that might have fatally
tainted his image. Persistent media snoops - and there were some
- were summarily dealt with by the mettlesome Boutin and
McAllister, the designated enforcers of the Co­terie. More subtle
attempts at probing were sidetracked by certain per­sons high in
the administration of the Dartmouth Medical School, who realized
what a unique talent the college was harboring.

As rumors of remarkable psychic activities at Dartmouth
strength­ened, hard-nosed investigators attempted an end run
around Denis by importuning his father. Don was then attempting to
operate a small logging business, having been fired from the mill
for intractable alco­holism. The sensation-seekers were
discouraged by bilingual curses and the menaces of Victor, who
was by then a hulking youth with a notably malevolent demeanor.
Denis had made many attempts to bring Victor into his own circle
of young operants, but without success. Victor's coercive faculty
had come on strong, together with a raging jealousy of his older
brother. He wanted nothing to do with higher education or
metapsychic experimentation. Eventually he dropped out of high
school and joined Don in the woods.

In 1989, having established himself as one of the premier psychic
researchers in the country, Dr. Denis Remillard was admitted to the
Dartmouth Medical School faculty as a research associate with the
rank of Associate Professor of Psychiatry (Parapsychology). He
was by that time twenty-three years old, almost totally alienated
from his father and brother Victor, and committed to the work that
would occupy him for the rest of his life... until his great mind was
lost to humanity and the rest of the Galactic Milieu in the prelude to
the Metapsychic Rebellion.



5

ALMA-ATA, KAZAKH SSR, EARTH

18 JANUARY  1984



only old pyotr Sakhvadze noticed the earthquake.

The rest of the spectators and the crowd of ice skaters in Medeo
Stadium were completely oblivious. Any faint seismic whisper
would have been drowned out by the loudspeakers playing the
waltz from Yevgeniy Onyegin and the shouting of the children. It is
true that the side walls of the gaily ornamented yurta warming tents
out on the ice swayed a little, and their horsehair tassels danced;
but that might just as easily have been caused by a stray gust from
the Zailiyskiy Ala-Tau intruding for a moment into the ice-rink's
sheltered bowl.

But Pyotr knew better.

He was newly come to the Central Asian metropolis of Alma-Ata to
live with his daughter Tamara and his son-in-law Yuri Gawrys and
their three children, after nearly ten years of exile in Ulan-Ude,
ministering to the mental-health needs of the Buryat Mongols. On
this winter af­ternoon he was performing grandfatherly duties,
shepherding Valery, Ilya, and Anna - who were nine, seven, and
four years of age - on a skating outing at Medeo. Pyotr had nearly
begged off going because of the sick headache that had plagued
him for the past two days; but the youngsters would have been
very disappointed, and he wanted so much for them to learn to
love him that he pretended he felt better. He drove them in
Tamara's red Zhiguli up to the big alpine sports complex in the
foothills south of the city. Medeo's rink was world-class, and so
cleverly sited that even in midwinter one could usually skate in
comfort with­out bundling up. The three children had joined the
throng out on the ice, leaving Pyotr to watch from a front row of the
stands.

He had huddled there nursing his headache in silent misery for
nearly two hours, feeling cold in spite of the tatty fur greatcoat and
shapka he had brought from Siberia. He sipped mint tea from an
insulated bottle, felt very sorry for himself, and wondered if he had
made a serious mis­take allowing his daughter to "rescue" him
from exile. Ulan-Ude wasn't the Russian Riviera like Sochi; but the
Mongols were a vigorous and good-humored lot and the psychic
dabblings of their shamans were strictly apolitical... unlike those of
Tamara and her high-strung Polish husband.

The headache grew worse, nauseating him with the pain. At last,
when it seemed his poor head would explode, his eyes began to
play tricks on him. The sunset-tinged snowy slopes that overhung
the sta­dium started to shimmer, throwing off auroralike beams of
an unnatu­ral green color, and the bare rock areas were haloed with
eerie violet. He felt the slight vibration of the earth tremor through
the sensitive base of his spine and at the same time a lance of
white agony seared his vision. He groaned out loud and tottered in
his seat, nearly spilling the bottle of tea.

And then, a miracle!

His head cleared and was free of pain. The strange aura effect cut
off abruptly. His muzzy brain snapped into a keen state of
cognition. An earthquake! Yes! And accompanied by the same
mental phenomena he had experienced twice before, in 1966 at
the disastrous psychiatric con­ference in Tashkent, and just last
year in Siberia, when a minor temblor had rocked the Lake Baikal
basin.

It could not be a coincidence. It was a species of extrasense! And
he shouted:

You see, children? I am one of you after all! This proves that I, too,
have the soul-power!

Dizziness overcame him and he lost track of reality until he heard
the anxious voice of Valery, his oldest grandson.

"Dedushka? Are you feeling all right? We... we heard you cry out. "

Pyotr was aware of the cheerful music again, and he saw the two
boys and their little sister standing in front of him in their bright
jackets and knit hats with pompoms. Their breath was coming in
quick cloudy puffs and their dark eyes were wide with
astonishment. A couple of adult skaters had also stopped because
of the evident concern of the children, and a sturdy woman in a
blue speed-suit asked, "Any problem here, comrade?"

"No, I'm fine, " Pyotr forced himself to say, giving a chuckle that
was nearly giddy. "I nodded off and nearly slid out of my seat. Silly
of me. "

The adults paid no more attention to him but his grandchildren
crowded closer. Pyotr could sense the swift telepathic exchange
passing between Valery and Ilya. Their faces were distant, almost
frightening in their maturity. But little Anna reached out to him with
mittened hands, smiling, her cheeks as shiny as the Aport apples
for which Alma-Ata was famous.

"Your head feels better now, doesn't it, Dedushka?"

He squeezed her hands gently. "Much better, little angel. In fact - I
think I have made a wonderful discovery!"

Ilya was almost accusing. "We heard your mind shout to us. There
was a strange image, too. "

"Didn't you feel the ground tremble while you were skating?" Pyotr
asked. "There was a small earthquake - and I perceived it with both
my body and my mind!"

"I didn't feel anything, Grandfather, " Valery said.

"Are you sure you didn't imagine it?" Ilya said.

Anna piped shyly, "I think I felt it, Dedushka. Was it sort of bright,
and deep-down?"

"Yes, exactly!" Pyotr swept up the child, skates and all, and kissed
her resoundingly. Then he crouched with a serious expression and
told the three of them, "I detected the faint preliminaries to the
earth tremor with some kind of an extrasense, and the actual
shock, the discharge of seismic energy, was translated into a
visual phenomenon. It's just as the village elder Seliac said more
than twenty years ago: I, too, have the soul! I am one of you! A true
extrasensor!"

The children stared at him blankly. Their minds shared subliminal
comments that were as incomprehensible to Pyotr as the twittering
of bats.

"Don't you see?" the old man said desperately. "My terrible
headache was part of it, and I saw colored auras around the rocks
as well. The important point is, I've had this type of experience
before just prior to earthquakes, but I never realized its
significance. Now I'm positive! Yes! It must be some new kind of
psychic power - different from the telepathy or psychokinesis or
out-of-body travel that your parents study at the Bioenergetics
Institute. We must go home at once and tell them about it! It will be
a wonderful surprise, and now perhaps they won't feel I'm such a
useless burden -"

"You aren't a burden, Grandfather, " Valery said, but his smile was
remote.

"Do we have to go home?" Ilya's mouth turned down at the
corners.

''You said we'd stay until eighteen hours. I want to skate some
more. I didn't feel any earthquake. "

Valery gave him a poke.

Anna threw her arms around Pyotr's legs and peeped up at him. "I
know you have the soul, Dedushka. Never mind what they think. "

A coldness crept over Pyotr. The colorful whirl of skaters was
grow­ing shadowy as dusk fell, and the music now seemed harsh.
All of a sudden the great banks of stadium floodlights flashed on,
nearly blind­ing him with their reflection off the ice. Could he have
imagined the entire episode? Was it only the wish-fulfillment of a
septuagenarian fool? Or - more ominously - might he have
suffered a small stroke? (The symptoms were suggestive, even to
a rusty psychiatrist like him­self. )

"There was a small earthquake, " he said firmly. It was real, my
chil­dren! Believe me don't shut me out read it in my memories
accept my mind-opening accept me...

They stood in a row looking at him, opaque - even the dear little
Anna - seeming to weigh him among themselves. He tried to relax.
He tried with all his heart to love them and not fear them, this new
generation for whom he had suffered so much, whose freedom he
had championed at the cost of his own liberty and professional
advancement. It had been rather easy to do when the truly alien
young minds were yet unborn, when there were only Tamara and
Yuri (then called Jerzy) and a handful of other frightened, gifted
ones in danger of exploitation by the military and the GRU fanatics
under Kolinsky. Pyotr had demanded that they be treated as Soviet
citizens, not guinea pigs; and through his international professional
contacts he had publicized some of the dubious directions that
psychic research was taking in his country during the late 1960s
and '70s. He had sounded warnings - and he had been silenced.
But things changed for the better.

The children stared. Anna smiled first, and then Valery, and finally
Ilya, who said:

"Yes, let's go home and tell Mama and Papa. "

"Zamechatel'no!" Pyotr whispered, lowering his head so they
would not see his tears. Then they all trooped down to the
cloakroom.



When they arrived at the big apartment in the new university quarter
of Alma-Ata, the children ran down the hall ahead of Pyotr and
burst into the kitchen where Tamara and Yuri were preparing dinner
to­gether, as was their custom when Yuri did not feel too
exhausted after work. The unmistakable aroma of homemade
kielbasa permeated the room, and Tamara was just lifting
kachapuri, delectable Georgian cheese tarts, from the oven. With a
great deal of shouting and jumping up and down, the children
announced their grandfather's claim to a new psy­chic power. Anna
still maintained that she had felt the tremor and experienced the
terrestrial aura effect "just like Dedushka. "

"Oh, I don't think she did, " the old man protested. "Perhaps it was
all my imagination after all. " He wilted under the barrage of juvenile
pro­test and lifted his hands helplessly. "Now I scarcely know
myself whether or not it really happened. "

Yuri untied his apron after covering the simmering kettle of
sausage and cabbage. "Come along with me, Papa. We'll leave
these Red Indians for Tamara to pacify and find something to
steady your nerves. "

They went into the young biophysicist's cozy, messy little study and
closed the door. Pyotr sank into an overstuffed lounge chair while
his son-in-law poured brandy into a large glass from a leather-
bound bottle.

"Not so much, Yuri! You mustn't waste it on a deluded old fool. "

"Drink. Then we'll find out what you've been up to. " Gawrys sat
down at his desk and shoved aside dog-eared publications and
stacks of correspondence. He formed his thin fingers into a
steeple and studied the bluish nails, his pallid features in repose
and his hair falling lankly over his high forehead. He took none of
the brandy.

"What we really ought to do, " Pyotr mumbled, his face in the glass,
"is check with the university to see whether or not there was a small
earthquake at about four-thirty this afternoon. "

"Tamara is attending to it. "

"Oh. Of course. " Even after living with them for more than two
weeks, he never ceased to be amazed by the domestic interaction
of practicing telepaths. Pyotr took a hefty swig of the brandy. It was
Geor­gian, not Kazakh, mellow and earthy. Pyotr sighed. "It really
did hap­pen, you know. "

"A psychic response to seismic activity is not unknown to science,
" Yuri remarked. "Other persons have described similar
experiences. "

"Then it may be that I am a genuine extrasensor?" The old man
half rose from his chair in his eagerness.

Yuri Gawrys lifted his eyes. They were dark blue, like the lapis lazuli
stones Pyotr remembered inset in the silver knife-scabbard of
Seliac Eshba, the patriarch of Verkhnyaya Bzyb. "Would you like to
tell me about the other times you sensed impending earthquakes?"

"It happened twice before. The first was in 1966, before I got into
trouble fending the jackals off from Tamara. There was a
conference on mental health in Tashkent, in April. "

"Yes... a great quake devastated the city then. "

"When I arrived at the airport I began to suffer the same kind of
headache, the same vision of ghostly luminosity playing about the
earth's surface. And when the first shock occurred, my symptoms
van­ished. But there was so much confusion in the aftermath - our
hotel was damaged, you see - that I never made the connection.
Then last year in Ulan-Ude there was a rather small tremor. I read
about it the next day in the newspaper and wondered a bit, but at
the time I was distracted. It was December, when you suffered
your second heart at­tack, and-"

"Yes, Papa, yes. " Yuri made an impatient gesture. "You are very
lucky to be a sturdy Georgian rather than a Polack with an
unfortunate history of cardiac insufficiency. And there is so much
work yet to be done... especially now, when we are about to enter
into a new, positive phase of psychic research at the university. "

Pyotr's jaw dropped. "But the KGB-sponsored programs of
bioenergetic weaponry! Surely you will remain locked into them
indefinitely -" "Andropov is dying, " said Yuri. "He will not last
another month. And when he goes, so will the KGB's stranglehold
on our work. He was the one, together with Fleet Admiral
Gorshkov, who originally saw aggres­sive potential in psychic
faculties. While Andropov headed the KGB, he took a personal
interest in the guidance of psychic research in the Soviet Union.
You know, of course, that Secretary Brezhnev was himself treated
by a psychic healer, and was completely in accord with Andropov's
mind-war schemes. "

Pyotr nodded.

"When Andropov finally took over as Party Secretary he was
already deathly ill. His grip on us slowly loosened. The awful days
of summer 1979, when Simonov and others of his perverted ilk
violated the Amer­ican President's mind during the salt II signings
in Vienna, will not soon come again. " Yuri Gawrys's smile was
terrible. "We have weeded our mental garden at Kazakh State
University's Institute of Bioenerget­ics. The job was a long one, but
it is complete. The last poisonous growth was uprooted only last
December. By me, personally."

"Radi Boga! Your heart attack -"

"We all have a certain price to pay, Pyotr Sergeyevich. You have
paid yours and I, mine. For the soul."

"What will happen when Andropov goes?" asked the psychiatrist.
"There will be a holding action by the old guard, a caretaker put in
place while young Gorbachev and Romanov fight their duel.
Whichever wins, we will be safe. They are both well-educated
technocrats who have no patience with... the unconventional. They
will forcibly retire Admiral Gorshkov and we shall probably find that
our funding is dras­tically reduced. It is laser and particle-beam
research that will get the rubles now. "

"But -" Pyotr hesitated.

"Shall I read your thought?" Yuri inquired, smiling gently now. "This
cutback will actually benefit us. The essential work - the gathering
together of the psychically gifted here at the Institute - has already
been done. We may deplore that these young people were taken
from their families, as Tamara and I were, but in the larger view it is
all for the best. Now that our minds are linked, we will always
remain in contact with one another. The garden, Papa! The garden
will grow. "

The old man sipped his brandy, unable to respond. After a few
minutes the door opened and Tamara came in, buxom and radiant,
her bright auburn hair struggling out of its confining chignon.

"I have spoken to Akhmet Ismailov at the Geophysical
Observatory. At precisely eighteen-twenty-eight hours there was a
minor earth tremor measuring two point four on the Richter Scale.
Its epicenter was about thirty kilometers south of Medeo, in the
Zailiyskiy Ala-Tau. "

"Ah!" cried Pyotr. "I am one of you! I am!"

Tamara kissed the top of his head, where a few sand-colored hairs
still grew. "Of course you are. You would be even if your head were
stuffed with sawdust, instead of wise old brains that may be very
valuable to our work. "

"You really think that I can help you, daughter? You aren't simply
humoring me?"

Tamara laughed. "Alma-Ata is in a zone of seismic instability. We
have minor tremors often, and an occasional large one. Our
buildings are specially engineered for safety. If you live here with
us, Papa, your extrasense may get more of a workout than you
would like. You may end up wishing that you were back in Ulan-
Ude, shrinking Mongolian nut-cases!... Now please wash up for
dinner. "

When Pyotr had gone out, Tamara said to her husband, "The
faculty is of a certain theoretical interest, and it will help Papa to
adjust to us. He was afraid, you know. "

Yuri got up from his chair. "I told him - obliquely, but he understood
- about our Black Frost. "

"Was that wise?"

"He had to know that our group is trustworthy, and that we are not
without means of self-defense. I spoke only of my own role in the
terminations. "

"There must be no more of them! We must find other ways!"

"Hush. " He took both her hands and pressed them to his cool lips.
"We will find other ways. But above all, we must survive, my
darling. Otherwise, the plan will not succeed and it will all have
been for noth­ing. "

"The soul, " she whispered. "The poor soul of our people. Why
must it have this terrible dark side? But it has always been so. We
progress only through violence, never through reasoning and love.
"

"The normals of our nation will have to be taught to love us. It will
not be an easy lesson. The plan that we have worked so hard on
prom­ises a way, but it cannot be put into force for many years yet.
I do not have those years. It will be up to you to be strong. To
defend all your mind-children from those who would destroy or
pervert them. This Alma-Ata group must survive and link up with the
others in other nations, with the World Soul, Tamara. Until then, the
children must endure in a wilderness, defended by a valiant
mother. " He looked down at her, full of pity. She was twenty-six.

"I will try to find peaceful ways, " she said. "If they fail, then I will do
as you have taught me. "



6

excerpts from:



address given by yasuhiro nakasone, prime minister of japan, at
the general assembly of the united nations



united nations, new york, earth



23  OCTOBER  1985



at the time the United Nations Charter was signed in San Francisco
on 26 June 1945, Japan was waging a desperate and lonely war
against over forty-odd Allied countries. Since the end of that war,
Japan has profoundly regretted the ultranationalism and militarism
it un­leashed, and the untold suffering the war inflicted upon
peoples around the world and, indeed, upon its own people.

As the only people ever to have experienced the devastation of the
atomic bomb, in Hiroshima and Nagasaki, the Japanese people
have steadfastly called for the elimination of nuclear weapons.
Nuclear en­ergy should be used exclusively for peaceful purposes;
it must never again be employed as a means of destruction.

We believe that all living things - humans, animals, trees, grasses -
are essentially brothers and sisters, [and yet] our generation is
recklessly destroying the natural environment which has evolved
over the course of millions of years and is essential for our
survival. Our soil, water, air, flora and fauna are being subjected to
the most barbaric attacks since the earth was created. This folly
can only be suicidal. Man is born by the grace of the great
universe:



Afar and above the dark and endless sky,

the Milky Way runs

toward the place I come from.



7

HANOVER, NEW HAMPSHIRE, EARTH

19 SEPTEMBER  1987



the saturday afternoon was classic autumnal Ivy League, with a
clear blue sky above broad-leaved trees that were just beginning to
ignite in their fall colors. Lucille Cartier was glad to be back at
Dartmouth, glad that Doctor Bill had agreed to resume coun­seling
her, happiest of all that the damn dreams had gone away with her
return to the campus, and that there was as yet no sign of
subversive mental influence from Remillard's Coterie.

She bicycled to her shrink session, going the long way around
Occom Pond and approaching the Mental Health Center via
Maynard Street. She arrived with ten minutes to spare, dismounted
in a shady spot by the main entrance, and took slow, deep breaths.

I am not resisting therapy. It will help me. I need help and welcome
it. I am glad to be here...

She lifted her eyes, looked across Maynard, across the big
Hitchcock Hospital parking lot, across busy College Street. And
there it was, not five hundred feet away, an old gray saltbox
building that hulked among spindly birches and dark evergreens
like a haunted house out of a Stephen King novel, its windows
blank-eyed and sinister.

You won't put me off! I'm not afraid of you. To hell with you and
your Coterie. I defy you!

Recklessly, she hopped back on her bicycle and zoomed across
the road to stand in the very forecourt of 45 College Street. There
were only two cars parked beside the saltbox - Glenn Dalembert's
old Mustang with the odd-colored door, and a spiffy new Lincoln
with Massachusetts plates, no doubt belonging to some visitor.

You see? I'm back. You couldn't scare me away. I don't need you
and I won't let you harass me. You can't recruit me against my will
like you did Donna Chan and Dane Gwaltney. I'll live my own life,
thank you very much... and I'll integrate my freak brain without
surrendering to any mind-worm collective!

The saltbox building was utterly still, without telepathic response.
And then Lucille realized that she had been using his private
wave­length, what the mind-worms called a "mental signature, "
perceptible to him alone. Obviously, he wasn't even here today.
Her gesture of defiance was futile.

Or was it? She felt quite a bit better inside! For good measure, she
gave Dr. Denis Remillard's laboratory the finger, and then she rode
her bicycle back to Maynard Street, parked it in the Mental Health
Center rack, and went inside to keep her appointment.



dr. sampson: I'm very glad you decided to resume therapy, Lucille.
I presume this means that you've decided to remain at Dartmouth
rather than transfer to Rivier College for your senior year.

lucille: Yes. That idea turned out to be a mistake, Doctor Bill.

sampson: Would you like to tell me why you changed your mind?

lucille: We - you and I- didn't seem to be getting anywhere with the
therapy last term. And I was miserable here anyway, worrying
about Mom having to cope with Dad all by herself besides teaching
at the high school. I thought I'd solve that problem and help my
own feelings of anxiety and guilt by simply going back home. I
could day-hop to Rivier and complete my degree, and help Mom
with Dad and the housework just like before. When I went back to
Nashua for the summer break I felt pretty good for a few weeks...
but then the old shit started all over again.

sampson: The anxiety and insomnia?

lucille: [laughs] Don't I wish that was all!... Look, Doctor Bill, I've got
a confession to make. I haven't been completely honest with you. I
didn't tell you all my symptoms.

sampson: Why not?

lucille : I was afraid to. If the college found out, they'd want to
bounce me.

sampson: [mildly] You know our relationship is confidential.

lucille: Even so... it's so weird, you see. And it would interest -
never mind. I didn't think I had to mention it because I hadn't had
the thing for a long time. Not since I was thirteen, bucking the
puberty blues.

sampson: Would you like to tell me about it now?

lucille: I've got to. It's back. Going home again, living with my
parents this summer, triggered it. I didn't say anything to them -
they would have been scared to death, like they were the other
time. You're my only hope now, you see. I won't go to Remillard! I
won't!

sampson: [nonplussed] Denis Remillard? Of the parapsychology
lab?

lucille: It's his fault it's come back! Damn him and his meddling! If
he had only let me alone -

sampson: [making a note on his pad] Lucille... Stop for a moment
and relax. Then let's try to concentrate on this mysterious symptom
you neglected to mention.

lucille: All right. It goes back to when I was thirteen. The attacks of
creepiness, nerves, anxiety - they really began then. And I also had
nightmares. And then... the house burned down. I did it.

sampson: You deliberately started the fire?

lucille: No, no! I didn't mean to! But... it was a time when I was
feeling all mixed up. Nobody understood me, that kind of
adolescent bullshit, but something else, too. They really didn't
understand! I couldn't talk to them... Dad was just starting to come
down with the sclerosis thing and he was - was hard to live with. I
was so sorry for him and wanted to help, but he was so angry all
the time and didn't want me around him. Then I started to have
these nightmares about fire. I was Joan of Arc and they were
lighting the pyre and I was all noble and forgave them and the
flames came roaring up to swallow me and my skin would burn and
even my bones and I'd be nothing but clean bright sparks flying up
to heaven if only I wouldn't be afraid. But I was afraid. So the
flames hurt horribly because I wasn't Saint Joan at all, and I'd wake
up yelling and get the whole house in an uproar, Mom and Dad and
my kid brother Mike. It was awful. It was even worse the time I
woke up and found my bedroom wall was all in flames.

sampson: Good God!... I'm sorry. Go on.

lucille: I got out the door and woke Mom and Mike and we got Dad
into his wheelchair and made it outside safely. But by the time the
fire department came, the house was too far gone to save much.
Dad's piano burned. It was a Steinway grand he'd got years ago,
before he was ever married, when he was going to be a concert
pianist and studied at the New England Conservatory in Boston. It
cost thousands of dollars and he kept it even when he gave up his
classical ambitions. Then, when he got sick and couldn't do lounge
gigs or even give lessons anymore he wanted to sell it, to help out
the family. But Mom wouldn't let him. He loved that piano more than
anything. And I burned it.

sampson: But you said you didn't start the fire deliberately. Why do
you blame yourself?

lucille: My room was right next to the one where the piano was. The
fire started in that wall - the firemen could tell. I hadn't been
smok­ing or anything dumb like that, but the whole wall near my
bed and the piano on the other side of it somehow caught fire.

sampson: An electrical short.

lucille: There was no outlet on that wall, and only an ordinary lamp
near the piano... Later on, they thought I might have walked in my
sleep and lit a match. I told them it was my fault, you see. That I did
it. But I didn't dare explain how! I dreamed that fire. The dream
became more and more real... and finally, it was real.

sampson: What do you mean by that?

lucille: I did it with my mind. My unconscious. I'm one of them - the
freaks that Remillard tests over at the parapsychology lab. He
hunted me out long before he came to Dartmouth, when I was
eleven. Later on, he and his Coterie wanted me to come here to
school. I didn't want to, but there was the scholarship and my folks
put on the pressure. I came when I was sixteen, and then
Remillard really shifted into high gear. I should be grateful all to hell
to assist the boy genius in his researches, even if I could only do a
little telepathy when the moon was right, and melt ice cubes and
jiggle tables. Dumb, useless things! I told him no. He kept on
bugging me for three years, though, and so did his mind-worm
clique! I told him all I wanted to do was live a normal life, study a
legitimate science like biochemistry in­stead of waste time on
occult nonsense. And I will!

sampson: Excuse me, Lucille. You're an intelligent young woman.
Don't you see any contradiction in what you've been saying?

lucille: Remillard and his people give me the creeps - and I won't
be experimented upon!

sampson: I understand that. You want help. But why do you think
I'm the one who can give it to you - rather than Remillard?

lucille: It's a psychiatric problem. It really has nothing to do with
parapsychology except - in its manifestation.

sampson: You are convinced that this incendiary faculty is a
genuine paranormal phenomenon?

lucille: [laughs] There's even a name for it in folklore: fire-raising.
Look it up in any compendium of witchcraft. You'll find true stories
about people who start fires without any equipment - produce it out
of thin air. Some of them even manage to burn themselves to
death.

sampson: You only did this once, when you were thirteen?

lucille: I'm... not sure. We had other house-fires, small ones, when
I was younger. There always seemed to be a natural explanation.

sampson: The piano burning might have had one. A freak lightning
strike, for example.

lucille: It was me! My resentment of poor Dad. He only had time for
his illness and the damn piano and never any time for me...

sampson: Let's suppose your self-analysis is correct. Why do you
think you're playing with fire again now, at this particular time?

lucille: I don't know! That's why I came to you in the first place,
when Denis Remillard's badgering got me so edgy last February
and I couldn't sleep or study. I thought you'd just prescribe some
Valium, but instead you got me into this analysis that didn't seem to
help at all.

sampson: You never spoke to me about being harassed by
Remillard or his people.

lucille: I didn't want you to know. I thought... oh, hell. Now you do
know. Can't you help me? What if the fire nightmares start up here
at Dartmouth like they did at home this summer?

sampson: They haven't yet?

lucille: No.

sampson : You suffered from anxiety and depression here at
school last spring, and yet the really serious warning from your
unconscious only came to you when you tried to return home.
Does that suggest any­thing to you?

lucille: I had to come back here. To you. That's what my mind was
telling me.

sampson: Are you sure?

lucille: Yes.

sampson: I want to help you, Lucille. You must believe me. But you
do understand that your analysis presents unique problems. All
hu­mans carry within their unconscious a load of destructive wishes
left over from early childhood. You've studied psychology. You
know what I mean. The mother takes the nipple from the hungry
baby's mouth and it becomes enraged. A little child is punished for
being naughty and wishes its parents were dead. We all had
feelings like this once and we repressed them, and sometimes this
guilt or some­thing similar resurfaces in later life to give us psychic
pain. But a toddler is too weak to murder its parents. And an adult
who still unconsciously resents her father's neglect will not normally
harm him physically. The unconscious may rage, but unless the
person is psychotic it remains outwardly impotent and must find
other outlets for its revenge.

lucille: But my unconscious isn't impotent...

sampson: Evidently not. And one might ask whether your
conscious mind is similarly empowered.

lucille: God. What am I going to do?

sampson : The only useful answers in psychoanalysis are the ones
you see clearly for yourself. I can guide you, but I can't force you to
set your deep fears aside... And you are afraid of your paranormal
pow­ers, Lucille. You'd like them to go away so you can be just like
normal people -

lucille: Yes. Yes!

sampson: But it seems quite likely that the powers won't go away.
So we'll have to predicate our coping strategy on that supposition,
won't we?

lucille: [hotly] I know exactly what you're leading up to! And it has
nothing to do with mind reading. Remillard!

sampson: I haven't had too much professional contact with him, but
there are those on the Medical School faculty who think highly of
his work. For all his youth, he's a meticulous researcher. His test
subjects aren't treated like mental patients, you know. Most of them
seem to be Dartmouth students like yourself -

lucille: And just why have so many of these psychic freaks come
here? Why did I come? There was the scholarship offer, of course
- but I felt an unnatural compulsion, too!

sampson: [patiently] Is it necessarily bad to want to associate with
others who share your unusual mental faculties?

lucille: [despairingly] But I don't want them... I only want to stop
burning... to be happy... to have someone understand me and love
me.

sampson: Your unconscious wants you to be happy, too. It wants
you to face your dilemma honestly instead of running away from it.
The unconscious isn't a demon, Lucille. It's only you.

lucille: [after a silence] I suppose so.

sampson: No one can force you to participate in Dr. Remillard's
ex­periments, Lucille. But you must ask yourself: Might your fear of
him be irrational?

lucille: I don't know. I'm all mixed up. My head feels so feverish and
my throat is so dry. Can I get some water?

sampson: Today's session is almost over... I have a suggestion.
Let me find out some specifics of Remillard's research. Let me
ask him - without mentioning you - about the general state of
mental health among his subjects. Surely some of them must have
experienced conflicts similar to yours. When I get more
information, we can begin working out your coping strategy.

lucille: But not with him.

sampson: Not if you don't want to.

lucille: He'll want me to join his group. He'll coerce me.

sampson: [laughing] Over my dead body! And I played middle
line­backer for the Big Green in '56!

lucille: [admiringly] It figures. And you have the perfect name.

sampson: Uh... well, that was long ago and far away. But you can
rest assured that no one will coerce you into anything. Now, our
time is up for today. Can you come again at the same time next
Wednes­day?

lucille : Will the Center authorize more than one free therapy
session a week for me? I mean, I can't afford -

sampson: That's all right. Your case is unusual. As a matter of fact,
it's the most unusual one I've ever encountered... But you will sleep
with a fire extinguisher nearby, won't you?

lucille: Yes, Doctor Bill. Goodbye.

sampson: Goodbye, Lucille.



8

BERLIN, NEW HAMPSHIRE, EARTH

20 MAY  1989



don remillard didn't go to the Blue Ox on Saturday nights much
anymore, it being a lot cheaper to drink at home. But with Sunny
waiting tables on the late shift at the Androscoggin Kitchen this
week and Victor gone up to Pittsburg on some mystery errand, the
younger brats would be running wild around the place. He'd end up
belting a couple of them for sure, and then there'd be a row when
Sunny got back - and God knows he had enough trouble with her
already.

So he went down to the Ox, settled in at his usual spot on the far
end of the bar, and started working through his quota of
Seagram's. A few of his old buddies greeted him, but none stuck
around to interfere seri­ously with his drinking. Little by little the
place filled up and the tunes played by the jukebox got louder. By
ten o'clock Don was almost deaf­ened by the music and the racket
made by the roistering mill-hands and loggers and their exuberant
ladies. He had downed enough whiskey to be more or less skunk-
bit and incapable - and it hadn't done a damn bit of good.

He could still hear the obscene voices inside his head. The
goddam telepaths. The ones who were out to get him.

Just look at that pathetic fucker! Can't hardly hold a glass without it
sloppin' over. Eyes like poached eggs in ketchup! Skritch-jawed
and grubby and wearin' a week-old shirt.

Crazy as an outhouse rat, too. Brains so pickled his power's
petered away t'zilch. Won't belong now, he won't be able to shut us
out. We'll nail him!

May not have to bother, he screws up again like he did today. You
see the way he tried to clear the throat of the whole-tree hog he let
jam up!

Hell, yes. Goddam jeezly bar-toad almost got chopped to red-
flannel hash!... Hey, stupid! Finish the job next time. Do us all a
favor!

Do Victor a favor. What's he need a drunken old fart like you on the
operation?

"I taught him everything, dammit. Everything. "

Pig's ass. Kid got the outfit percolatin' despite you.

Yeah. That's right!

"I taught him everything! How to use his powers. Never woulda
done it without me. Green kid! Shit - I made that kid. "

You made him what he is.

Whatever that is! Haw haw haw...

"Damn right... damn right. You tell 'im that. "

Hey, Vic! How long you gonna put up with your drag-ass old man?
How long you gonna let the old stumblebum bollix up your show?
Listen, Vic. Bright kid like you don't hafta put up with shit like he
pulls. Lookit today. Feedin' the new Omark the wrong kinda stems.
Coulda broke the christly rig! Family loyalty can be mighty
expensive. Take our advice. Tie a can to the old asshole. Hire
somebody who knows what he's doin'!

I'm considering it...

"The hell you are!" Don muttered viciously.

Old Ducky Duquette, who was nursing a bottle of Labatt's a little
way down the bar, looked at him with an expression of mild
surprise.

Haw haw haw! You think Vic wouldn't get rid of you? Think again!

Tell him, Vic. Tell him why you went up to Pittsburg tonight.

Tell him!

... I'm putting it up to Howie Durant to come in with us. He's an
experienced hand with whole-tree chippers.

Way to go, Vic! Demote the old man to brush-piler. Better yet, get
him off the operation altogether. He's an accident waitin' to happen,
drinkin' on the job the way he does.

Maybe the sooner the accident happens, the better!

Wipe him out yourself, kid. Tip him over the edge. You don't hafta
wait for us. Be our guest!

... It might be for the best. Easy enough to rig an accident with
programmed incitement. His defenses are negligible now and his
farspeech no longer has the range to alert Denis or Uncle Rogi.

That's right, Vic. Be just another logging fatality. Happens all the
time.

Don slammed his shot glass down on the bar and yelled, "Oh no
you don't, punk! I'll fry your fuckin' brains out first!"

Ralph Pelletier, the Ox's owner, who was tending bar as usual,
called out over the din, "Anything wrong down there?"

Don forced a big grin and shook his head. "All I need's another
dou­ble, double-quick!" He waved his glass.

Pelletier brought the bottle and poured. Don downed the whiskey
and immediately demanded more. The tavern-keeper said quietly,
"You've had about enough for tonight, Don. Finish this and then
give your liver a rest. "

"Don't need your lectures, bonhomme. Just your booze. Un p'tit
coup. " Don tossed money onto the mahogany. The bills fell into a
puddle of spilled liquor.

Pelletier scooped them up with a grimace of distaste. "Drink up
and go home, Don. You hear what I'm saying?" He filled the double
shot glass again. "I mean it. Hors d'ici. " He went away.

Don mouthed silent curses after him. Pelly wanted to get rid of him.
Everybody wanted to get rid of him! He sipped from the glass and
groaned. All around him the Blue Ox patrons laughed and the
voices inside his head recited fresh indecencies.

Ducky Duquette edged closer, a tentative smile of sympathy
creasing his weathered old chops. "Ca va, Don? Had a rough
week?"

Don could only laugh helplessly.

"Trouble out at the chantier, maybe? The logging outfit has growing
pains?"

The mental voices chortled at the joke. Don pressed knuckles to
his temples until pain submerged them, then lifted his glass with a
trem­bling hand. "My damn kid's gettin' too big for his fuckin'
britches. Throwing his weight around. "

"Ah!" Ducky looked wise. "Such a clever boy, your Victor. But
per­haps impatient? That's the way of the young. Still, he's doing
very well, isn't he? I heard about the big new contract he landed
with Saint William. Amazing that they accepted the bid of such a
youthful entrepreneur, eh?"

"Fuckin' fantastic, " Don muttered.

"You can be proud, Don. What sons! First Denis le Mirobolant -
and now Victor, with his own logging company at the age of
nineteen. "

"And I'm such a lucky bastard, Ducky. I get to work for my own
wiseacre kid! I taught him everything. And now he wants to kick me
out. " His face lit up in a sour smile. "But he won't get away with it. I
know where a few bodies are buried... like how a shoestring
operation like his is able to field so much expensive rolling stock. "

Fold your face, you drunken blabbermouth!

Vic - you gonna let him keep this up?

Ducky had gone wary. He lowered his voice. "Tell you the truth,
Don, there has been some talk. Lot of people wondered how Vic
could afford that new Omark chip machine so soon after getting
the second feller-buncher. Equipment like that don't grow on trees.
"

"Lemme tell you something, Ducky. " Don draped an arm around
the old man's neck and spoke in a coarse whisper. "Any ol' wood
rat knows that logging machinery does, too, grow on trees. All you
hafta do is know what trees to look under. And when. "

Will you shut up, you peasoupin' lush?

He's gonna squeal, Vic. Don't say we didn't warn you. It's his
fuckin' conscience, see. Confession's good for the soul, he thinks.
Go ahead and confess, Don - we got the final absolution all ready!

We'll show him what happens to finks!... Give him to us, Vic. Come
on! What're you waitin' for-a posse of county mounties goin' over
your stuff with a magnifying glass and an electronic sniffer?

Don tittered. "Wouldn't find diddly. Got every damn ID number and
beeper-trace fixed. Told you my Vic was smart. And I taught him
ev­erything. " The injustice of it all overwhelmed him and his voice
broke. "Everything, Ducky. Not just the mind-powers but the
business, too. Vic was nothin' but a high school punk when they
pink-slipped me at the mill. It was my idea to go into the woods and
start cuttin' pulp-wood. "

And you'd still be a low-bore stump-jumper operatin' with two chain
saws and a pick-em-up if it wasn't for Vic!

You taught him! He taught you!

Who coerced the first big contract? Who rounded up the gear?
Who found the right men, the ones who know how to keep zipped
lips? Who keeps the whole show chargin' ahead in the black? Not
you, you washed-up alcoholic cuntlapper.

"No gratitude, " Don moaned. "From any of my children. "

Ducky blinked and began drawing away. "Tough luck... "

"I know what Vic's planning, " Don shouted. "But he won't get away
with it! None of 'em will!" Heads were turning and he felt the
pressure of hostile eyes delving after his dangerous secrets.
Could the patrons of the Blue Ox hear the taunting voices, too? No
- of course not! They were only in his head. They were only
imaginary! What was wrong with Ducky, then, looking so shit-
scared?... God! How much had he blabbed to the old fool?

"Where the hell you think you're going?" Don grabbed Ducky by
the front of the shirt. The old fellow yelped and pulled back, and his
bottle of beer tipped and burbled onto the bar.

Ralph Pelletier, his expression thunderous, called, "Goddammit,
Don - what'd I tell you?"

He knows! They all know! They'll tell Vic! Tell the cops!

You spilled your guts just fine this time, fink!

Don shook Duquette until his dentures rattled. "You won't tell! I
never said anything about Vic's equipment. You hear me?"

"He's crazy! He's crazy!" Ducky gibbered, hanging in Don's grip
limp as a spawned-out salmon.

Choke the lyin' sonuvabitch! Shut him up!

Lute Soderstrom, who stood six-six and had once punched a hole
in the radiator of a Kenwhopper, stepped up behind Don and took
hold of his arms. A couple of other Blue Ox habitues pried Ducky
loose.

Don's howl was agonized. "You won't get away with it! You're all in
it together, aren't you? All working with Vic and the others to finish
me off!"

"Ease him outside, " Pelletier said.

The jukebox was pounding a raucous dirt-rock tune. Women
squealed and men shouted jocose advice to Lute as he wrestled
his burden toward the door.

"They're waiting for me out there!" Don screamed. "Waiting with
Vic!" He tried to coerce the Swede: hopeless. He tried to trip Lute
up by knocking over chairs or tables with his psychokinesis: he
hadn't a glim­mer. He was impotent. He was nothing. A carousel of
light and noise and pain spun around him, slowly dissolving to
black, and the jeering mental voices receded to a far distance. Don
was a dead weight in Lute's powerful arms as they came out into
the soft May night.

Lute dragged him around back to the Ox's dark parking lot, picked
him up bodily, and dumped him onto a folded tarp in the bed of a
little Nissan 4x4. "You gonna be okay, Don. " He spoke soothingly.
"You stay here, get a little air, maybe sleep. I come back in just a
little bit and drive you home, okay?"

Fais un gros dodo, ordure! Haw haw haw...

Don made an inarticulate noise. Lute nodded and went off.

You can't stay here.

You dassn't go to sleep!

Vic knows what you said. You gotta get outa here!

"Je suis fichu, " Don mumbled. "Pas de couilles... mon crâne... ah,
Jesus... "

Pretty late in the game to be calling on him, shithead.

He can't help you. Nobody can. Nobody cares what happens to
you, you drunken freak. Nobody!

Nobody... nobody... nobody...

"You're wrong. " The words were slurred, tainted with the bile that
had risen in his throat. He clutched at the side of the pickup's cargo
bed, summoned strength, and heaved himself up and over. Then
he lay on his face in the dirt for a long time, stunned.

Something crawled across the back of his neck and he opened his
eyes, lifted his head, and grinned at the Nissan's left rear wheel.
His senses were reeling but he was no longer a man without hope.
The voices were wrong! Somebody did care. Somebody who
would help him, who would even fend off Victor...

"Merci, mon Seigneur. Merci, doux Jésus!"

He struggled to his feet, fighting off nausea. His head seemed to
be in the grip of iron tongs and he had to lean against the side of
the Nissan until the pain subsided and he could see. He peered
about anxiously among the parked cars and trucks for signs of the
enemy. Nobody was there. Not yet. They were waiting for Vic, and
it'd take the kid time to get back to Berlin from Pittsburg, sixty miles
away via two-lane black­top.

When he was steady he thumbed his wristwatch. The lighted read-
out showed just a little past eleven. She'd have to work until one on
Sat­urday and it was only a mile to walk, along well-lit Main Street
and then Riverside Drive. She had her car. He could sit in it and
wait, get coffee and sober up. It would be all right.

Pulling himself together, he shuffled onto the sidewalk and came
around to the front of the tavern. The music and laughter were
louder than ever. They'd forgotten all about him. Lamenting the
callousness of it all, he set off north on Main, heading for the
Androscoggin Kitchen restaurant and Sunny.



Don went to the take-out window and ordered a large black coffee
from Marcie Stroup, and asked her to have Sunny bring it to the
car.

"Gee, Don, I dunno. " The girl eyed him dubiously. He was a filthy
mess, reeking of alcohol, and he had caused scenes before at the
Kitchen that had nearly cost Sunny her job.

"Please, Marcie. I'm not here to make trouble. It's really important.
Tell Sunny that. "

The girl finally said, "Okay, " and went off. He shambled over to
Sunny's battered '81 Escort that was parked at the far side of the
big paved lot, and got in on the driver's side after opening the door
with his own key. The Andy K was bursting at the seams on this
fine spring night. The lot was jammed with vehicles coming in and
out and cruisers stopping for take-outs. The place was far too
brightly lit for those mur­dering bastards to chance coming after
him, so he leaned back and closed his eyes, feeling safe for the
moment. The long walk had helped to clear his brain but his head
ached worse than ever. It didn't matter. He welcomed the pain
because it kept the voices at bay. Not that he really cared about
their taunting anymore. They couldn't touch him without Vic's say-
so, and Sunny would take care of him.

"Don?" She was standing beside the open window, face drawn
with worry and shadowed by the overhead illumination of the vapor
lamps. She held a large container of coffee. The loving concern
that radiated from her mind struck him like a sword in the heart.
Poor Sunny. She was only forty-one, and she was old. Like him. He
had put her through so much.

He smiled crookedly. "Come sit with me. "

She handed him the coffee. "Don, you know I can't. We're busy. I
only came because Marcie said -"

His mind took hold of hers in an old familiar way, like a hand
slipping into a glove. "It's important. Just for a few minutes. "

She sighed and came around to open the passenger door, then
slid in beside him. "What is it?" Apprehension made her voice
unsteady. She still had one hand on the door handle.

He downed a gulp of steaming liquid. "I was at the Ox tonight.
Mak­ing a nickel-plated jackass outa myself. "

She turned away miserably. "Oh, Don. If only you -"

He interrupted her. "Listen. I made up my mind! If you just help me,
I'll give up drinking for good. I'll do what you been asking me to do.
"

She looked at him, incredulous. "You'll go to Denis? Let him check
you into the detox clinic at Project Cork?"

Don gritted his teeth. Even the mention of the quaintly titled but
nationally famous institute for alcoholism study at Dartmouth got his
back up. Project Cork! Enough to make a grown man puke. But
locked away in its stern sanctuary with Denis's powerful mind to
shield him, no enemy would ever be able to get hold of him. Not
Victor. Not the fiends of his own engendering.

"I'll go to Denis, " Don vowed. "Tonight, if you like. Call him up and
tell him I'm on my way. "

Tears filled Sunny's eyes. "You really mean it this time?"

"I swear to God!" His eyes shifted. Was that something moving in
the trees beyond the edge of the lot? Were they out there,
listening? Don set the coffee on the dashboard and clasped his
wife's hand. "But I gotta go now. I need help now, Sunny. You
understand?"

"You're in no condition to drive that far. I'll call Denis, and then
when Victor comes home he can -"

"No!" Don seized her by the shoulders. Her eyes dilated with fear
and he hastened to say, "Victor's gonna be gone God knows how
long. I can't wait! I've gotta go now or never!"

She took a resolute breath, detached his hands. "I'll drive you
myself. I'll call Denis and ask him to meet us on the road. "

"Good idea! Then you won't have to leave the kids alone too long. "
He gulped more coffee and thought hard. "We'll take Route 2. Ask
Denis to meet us at the Saint Johnsbury Rest Area on I-91. Go call
him, Sunny. Hurry. "

She stared at him, searching. "You're sure?"

His mind cried: Sunny for the love of God help me!

She opened the car door and slipped out. "I'll be right back. " Then
she was hurrying toward the gaudy lights of the restaurant and he
was alone, limp with reaction and relief. He reached over, locked
the right-hand door, and rolled its window fully closed. He secured
his own side as well. The car was stuffy and the windshield partly
fogged by coffee vapor, but he was safe. His mind seemed to slip
in and out of gear, focusing on one menace after another: Victor.
The hostile voices. His brother Rogi, that backbiting weasel. Even
Denis, remote, ice-hearted, intolerant of a hard-working father's
human weakness... God, how he dreaded having to submit to
Denis! He knew he'd have to come clean - tell Denis about the
voices and the way they'd drawn Victor into the conspiracy, maybe
even tell about the stolen equipment that had trig­gered the whole
fuck-up in the first place. Denis would despise him more than ever!
But he'd have to stand by his father nonetheless. Sunny would see
to it. Wonderful Sunny...

And then Don caught sight of the black customized Chevy van. It
was poised in the turn lane out on Route 16, signals blinking,
waiting for a break in the heavy northbound traffic so it could enter
the parking lot.

He's finally here.

It's about time!

Over here, Vic! Over here!

"No, " Don whispered. "No, God. "

At least four other cars were trying to get out of that exit. The van
was momentarily blocked. Sunny!... But she was probably still on
the telephone. Could he make a break for the restaurant? It was
too damn far away. The van would surely cut him off before he
made it to the door -

And now it was making the turn to enter!

Frantically, Don switched on the ignition of the Escort. There was
another way out, a dirt track that bumped over waste-ground. He
floored the pedal and went ripping down a lane of parked vehicles.
He clung to the wheel as his car careened over the rutted track and
onto the high­way. He swerved to avoid being rear-ended by a
furiously honking sta­tion wagon, jinked onto the shoulder, then
regained control. In the rearview mirror, he saw the black Chevy
van trapped in the restaurant lot by a tangle of cars in front of it and
behind it.

Vic! Vic! He's gettin' away!

In your mom's car. Northbound!

Don laughed at them. He checked the fuel gauge: nearly full. The
traffic was heavy in both directions. Victor's farsight was lousy and
his coercion didn't reach beyond a stone's throw. He could lose the
kid in the maze of logging roads up the Androscoggin River
beyond Milan, then double back and pick up Sunny.

You'll never get away!

We'll keep Vic on your trail!

You're finished, sucker.

Give up. We'll help Vic nail you!

Don was laughing so hard he nearly choked. "You're not real! You
can't hurt me! Go to hell!"

Oncoming cars were blinking their brights at him. He panicked for a
moment, then realized that he was driving with only the parking
lights on. Giggling, he flicked the headlight switch. Then he settled
down and sped north along the river road toward the deep woods.



Sunny wept in Victor's arms, sitting beside him on the front seat of
the black van. "He was still very drunk. He's sure to have an
accident! Victor, what are we going to do? How will we ever find
him?"

He held her tightly. "Hush, Maman. Let me think... There's Denis.
He could try using his seekersense on Papa. "

She broke away and cried, "Yes, of course! Hurry and telephone!
He may not have left Hanover yet. "

The young man sprinted for the front door of the restaurant,
dodging departing diners. Sunny sat with her face buried in her
hands, trying to summon from latency the telepathic power she had
used so long ago when her eldest son was a baby:

Denis stay home. Don't leave home yet. Stay Denis stay...

After an interminable time, Victor returned, alight with triumph.

"Caught him! He was on the way to the car, but he dropped his
keys - and then he heard the phone ringing and came back. "

"Oh, thank God. And he'll - he'll search? And tell you where to find
your father?"

Victor started the engine of the van. "Denis will track Papa down,
then call me at home. He said there may be some difficulty
because Papa's aura tends to be suppressed by the alcohol. But
you're not to worry. We'll find him. And now I'm taking you home. "

"But I'll have to speak to Mr. Lovett first, " Sunny protested. "He'll
be furious -"

"I've already spoken to him. " Victor's smile was invincibly
reassur­ing. "He's not furious, he understands it's a family
emergency. It's going to be all right, Maman. " He took a tissue
from the console dispenser and wiped her tears, then bent and
kissed her cheek with warm lips.

Sunny felt herself relaxing, giving over volition to this tall, masterful
son who was so like the strong, youthful Don she had married
twenty-three years ago. She said, "I know how hard it's been for
you lately, Victor. You're bitter. I understand why. But you must help
your father, if only for my sake. "

The black van was moving slowly forward. Victor gripped the wheel
and stared straight ahead, "Just leave everything to me, " he said.
"Now fasten your seat belt and we'll go home. "



An excruciating thirst, a tight bladder, and a skull-piercing chorus of
woodland birds woke Don.

His rheum-clogged eyelids opened with reluctance to misty dawn.
Every joint above the waist ached and every joint below was numb.
His brain was swollen too large for its fragile bony case and was on
the imminent verge of exploding. He cursed, invoked a
compassionate God, and asked himself aloud where the hell he
had ended up this time.

It was the usual Saturday night blackout. The usual Sunday
morning hangover. But he was in Sunny's car, not his own. What
the hell?... Oh, yeah. His heap was in the shop. He must have taken
hers.

The windows of the Escort were curtained in condensation. He
rubbed a clear space and tried to focus his bleary eyes. There
were giant shapes around him, yellow and blue, with jointed arms
held rakishly akimbo. The nose of the little car was snuggled up to
the flank of a monster machine. Another, even larger, confronted
him with threatening insectile jaws. On its back was a cab bearing
the legend:



REMCO   PULPWOOD   LTD., BERLIN, N. H.



Don cursed anew, then fell back into the seat. The thing with the
jaws was Victor's new feller-buncher, a self-propelled tree
harvester capable of shearing two-foot trunks in a single bite.
Grouped around it were other pieces of heavy equipment: the
hydraulic boom loader, the whole-tree chipper he usually operated,
the tree-length delimber, the second feller-buncher looming out of
thick mist.

He was out in the forest at their logging site up the Dead Diamond
River. He was hiding from Victor.

He remembered very little of the previous night. His last clear
recol­lection was when he passed through the town of Errol thirty
miles north of Berlin after a nightmare flight through the back
country around Cambridge Mountain. Goaded by the voices, he
had been afraid to re­turn to Sunny at the restaurant. Instead he
had decided to head west and work his way down to Hanover and
Dartmouth via the roads along the New Hampshire-Vermont
border.

But somehow he hadn't. Obviously he'd driven north out of Errol
instead of west. God knew what had impelled him to come to the
family logging operation...

He opened the car door and just managed to catch himself before
falling out. The shack! There was water there, the white-gas stove
and coffee makings, maybe a few Pepperidge Farm cookies left in
Victor's private stash, maybe a half bottle of brandy in the first-aid
box. Scorning the San­ikan, he relieved himself against one of the
tires of the Omark tree-chipper that had nearly taken his arm off
yesterday. That'd show the bastard!

He was fumbling with the padlock on the shack when he heard the
sound of an automobile engine.

Terror-stricken, he froze - only to be spotlighted by twin beams that
stabbed suddenly out of the fog. The approaching vehicle was
dark and blocky. The KC spots mounted on the roof glared at him
but no other lights showed at all. It was Victor's black van.

Don heard his son's mind-voice:

Hold it right there, Papa.

The coercive grip and the light held him like a hypnotized moth.
The van stopped about twenty yards away and Victor got out.

Don said: They sent you here, didn't they! They told you how to
find me! They turned you against me - after I did everything for
you!

Victor said: You imagined them. The voices. You're sick. You've
been sick for years. Your mind wasn't strong enough to adapt.

Don said: Don't come near me! I know what you're planning. You
heard me shooting my mouth off in the Ox!

Victor said: Yes. You wanted me to.

Don said: You're as loony as I am! Why the hell would I want you to
hear me call you - to hear me -

Victor said: To hear you call me a thief?

Don said: You are dammit you are! I taught you everything - but I
never taught you that. They did.

Victor said: You're pathetic. No use to anyone. You hate yourself
so much you want to die. But you're too much of a coward to kick
off like a man, so you try to drink yourself to death.

Don said: You're all against me Rogi Denis you we're all freaks
to­gether but you shut me out of your minds left me alone to suffer
left me alone with them.

Victor said: They're you, Papa.

Don said: Bastardsonuvabitchfuckingcocksuckerbrat...

Victor said: The voices are you. All the filth. All the accusations. All
the threats. The mutation broke you, Papa. You're one of
evolution's throwaways and it's time for you to go. You really are
too dangerous now, and Denis will be here soon. Neither one of us
could get a fix on you until you woke up, you know. Fortunately for
me, he drives cau­tiously on dirt logging roads. Unfortunately for
you...

Don said: What - what are you going to do?

Victor said: What you want me to do. It'll be an accident. A drunken
man playing suicidal games.

The dark silhouette disappeared as the blinding yellow lights shut
off. Don crouched in the shack doorway, rubbing his eyes. He saw
Victor get into the van and drive away. In his mind, the terrible
voices spoke together:

Now.

The big diesel engine of the new feller-buncher coughed into life.
Its shear, mounted on a twenty-six-foot knuckle boom, lifted into
the air with a hiss of hydraulics. Then the whole rig came lumbering
toward him on caterpillar treads, the grab-arms and the blades that
could sever a two-foot tree trunk in a single bite held open at the
height of a man's chest. The machine's cab was empty. Before
Don turned to flee, scream­ing, he saw the control levers moving
by themselves and heard silent laughter.



9

FROM THE MEMOIRS OF ROGATIEN REMILLARD



since that sunday promised to be a hectic one, with two convention
banquets and a fund-raiser dinner-dance scheduled at the hotel, I
went to the 6: 30 a. m. Mass at the little church in Bretton Woods. It
was a rustic place, dimmed by stained glass windows in ab­stract
patterns. Hikers, golfers, and other resort employees like myself
made up most of the somnolent, thinly scattered congregation. I
ar­rived a few minutes late, so I slipped into a rear pew back in a
dark corner. For this reason it was not immediately noticed when I
died with my brother.

It happened during the sermon. My mind was wandering and I had
become aware of an increasing sense of unease, only partly dulled
by my semiwakeful state. The foreboding may have been an
aspect of precog­nition; but I had no real intimation of catastrophe
until I abruptly lost my hearing. I saw Father Ingram's lips move but
no longer heard his voice. In place of the background noises of
shifting bodies, coughs, and rustling prayer booklets there was a
great hush, hollow and portentous. I snapped into alertness.

Then came an appalling noise, a deep grinding rumble laced with a
more shrill, undulating sound, like brasses wailing in dissonance or
howls from a chorus of lacerated throats. It built to a thunderous
cre­scendo as though the earth itself were being rent open
beneath me. I was immobilized by shock. I remember wondering
why the priest was obliv­ious to the tumult, why the other
worshipers kept their seats instead of leaping up in panic, why the
church roof remained firm when by rights it should have been
tumbling down around my ears.

Any notion I had of being caught in an earthquake was disabused
when I went blind. At the same time it seemed that a band of red-
hot metal clamped about my breast and squeezed, stopping my
heart and breath in an explosion of agony. I thought: a coronary!
But I was only forty-four, in perfect health - and hadn't the Family
Ghost told me that I had a long life ahead of me? Lord, it's a
mistake...

The shattering racket and the pain cut off simultaneously. My body
seemed immersed in a thick and swirling medium. All around me
was darkness, a liquefied void that was neither air nor water. Then I
realized that the black wasn't empty at all; pictures were flashing in
it, appear­ing and disappearing with subliminal rapidity almost like
single-frame cinema projections displayed on dozens of small
screens encircling me. I recognized early childhood scenes with
Tante Lorraine and the young cousins, school days, Don and I
blowing out candles on a joint birthday cake, Onc' Louie walloping
the pair of us for some transgression, Christ­mas caroling in deep
snow, fishing in the river, an embarrassing fresh­man high school
dance. The vignettes whirled faster and faster and I realized at last
that they were memories, the accelerating replay of a life.

But not my life. Don's.

For the first time I experienced real fear in place of stunned
astonish­ment. The riot of images was acquiring a full sensory and
emotional input and I seemed caught in an insane mélange of
sights, sounds, tastes, smells, visceral and tactile sensations. My
mental voice cried Don's name and I heard him babbling an
incoherent, furious reply. All of the remembered scenes were
showing me. And the emotional trans­fer revealed that my twin
brother despised and hated me to the very depths of his being.

Why, Donnie, why?

The only reply was rage. The visions were drenched in it. I seemed
to be at the center of a psychic tornado with Don's mind flailing at
me from every scene, hurt and degraded. His wife, his children, his
friends flickered past, all wounded by his soul-sickness, all
diminished, their attempts to help him rejected until it was too late.
And he blamed it all on me.

But I don't understand why!

I felt myself standing firm in the center of the vortex while he
whirled, helpless, remembering the very worst of it: his rejection of
Denis, his corruption of Victor, the torment he had heaped on
Sunny and the other children during the years of alcoholism, his
seduction of Elaine in a calculated desire to hurt and humiliate me.
To my amazement I saw that he was desperately sorry for all those
things, and had been for years. What lingered was the source of
the sins, his abiding hatred of me. In the final scene of his life he
punished himself for it, but the action was one of severance and
not remorse.

Donnie, I don't know why you hate me. But it's all right. I've never
hated you.

He said: You should have.

He controlled the machine with his own psychokinesis. I screamed,

begging him not to do it, but of course it had already happened.
The blades that cut him in half cut him free of me at last.



I opened my eyes. Bill Saladino, the limping old church usher, was
nudging me with the collection basket and grinning. I fished inside
my jacket for the envelope and dropped it in. Bill winked at me
tolerantly land stumped away, carrying the little basket of offerings
up to the altar to be blessed.



Don's funeral was a big one, attended by scores of Remillards
together with nearly two hundred others who had grown up or
worked with him. He looked fit and handsome in his casket after
the local croque-mort performed his duty; and the eulogy delivered
at his burial Mass pro­claimed God's unsearchable ways as well as
his compassion for the brokenhearted, to which category Don
indubitably belonged. There was a good deal of sotto voce
reference to "blessed release, " and the pious aunts reassured
one another that alcoholism was a disease one simply couldn't
help. Sunny, supported by husky Victor at her left elbow and the
slight but commanding Denis at her right, bore up well. Her eight
younger children stood about her dry-eyed at the gravesight while
the cousins and aunts and female neighbors wept.

The official verdict on Don was death by misadventure. Denis and
Victor had driven their cars simultaneously into the logging site just
as the runaway feller-buncher, with Don's severed body still held in
its grab-arms, struck a large stump with one of its tracks and tipped
over into a ravine. The resulting mangle, and a double dose of
coercion aimed at the green-faced investigating deputies, made
plausible to anyone but an experienced logger the final report on
Don's demise. One of the witnesses, at least, was of
unimpeachable reputation.



Denis and I were at the same motel, and the morning after the
funeral we breakfasted together. He would be staying to help
Sunny wind up Don's affairs while I was heading back to the White
Mountain Resort and the pre-Memorial Day rush. The coffee shop
was crowded and noisy, but noise is immaterial when the
conversation is largely mind-to-mind. The pair of us might have
been father and son: a gaunt older man in a good summer worsted
three-piece, thumbing through the Wall Street Journal, and a
vaguely undergraduate-looking youth in a navy-blue jogging outfit
whose extraordinary eyes were blanked out by dark glasses.

Denis lifted the plastic pot. "More coffee?" I think I've solved the
mystery of my young siblings' nonoperancy.

I said, "Half a cup, maybe. "Victor's certainly at the bottom of it -
and maybe Don, too. It's impossible that not a single one should
have inherited telepathic ability, given the fact that your mother has
occa­sionally shown flashes of the talent. Jeanette and Laurette
were tele­pathic as infants but then seemed to lose it. I'm not sure
about the others -

"Sugar?" It was the same with the other six. They were born with
higher faculties but had them deliberately suppressed by aversion-
conditioning: mental punishment. I got hold of the youngest,
Pauline, who's seven. She was vulnerable through grief and shock
and it was easy for me to - to - I suppose you'd call it hypnotize -
render her receptive to my command that she regress to
babyhood and describe her impressions of Victor and Papa. It was
clear what had been done. Poor little Paulie! But Papa had nothing
to do with it, thank God. It was all Victor.

The ruthless young bastard!... But how was it possible? He would
have had to suppress the babies when he was still just a kid
himself! How old was he when the girl twins were born? Four? And
then Jackie and Yvonne and the boy twins coming bang-bang-bang
and George just after you bachelored at Dartmouth in '80 that'd
make Vic ten - and he would've been twelve when Paulie arrived
my God my God no innocent kid could do such an evil thing -

[Detachment.] I'll have to show you some of my juvenile psychiatric
case histories. He could do it, all right. Nothing is more self-
centered than a toddler. Why do you think some of them have
tantrums? They want the world to turn around them. Most children
outgrow that mind­set and discover altruism. It's useful for survival,
actually. But there are exceptions: sociopaths. Vic certainly seems
to fit the profile. At first he acted to secure his position as Papa's
favorite. Later, his motives would have become more complex.
Power-oriented. You see the way he's go­ing. He's an uneducated
man, just as Papa was. A shallow thinker with a stunted conscience
and tremendous drive and overweening conceit. Papa had those
attributes, too, but he lacked self-confidence because he was
afraid of his psychic powers. Also, he'd been inculcated with moral
values from earliest childhood, which Vic hadn't, and guilt warred
with egoism, leading to ultimate destruction. Vic is a much tougher
nut than poor Papa. Even without higher faculties he'd be
something to reckon with. I have a feeling that being a pulpwood
tycoon is only the begin­ning of his ambition...

"Want to pass me a little more strawberry jam? Thanks. " What the
devil are we going to do?

He mind-screens like the Chase Manhattan Bank vault. I can't see
into him and I can't budge him a millimeter with coercion. I'm
virtually certain he's used his powers in shady ways for self-
aggrandizement. Those logging contracts, for instance, and the big
bank loan for capital­ization of the company. Pure coercion. And
there are rumors that at least two pieces of his equipment were
acquired via moonlight requi­sition. Watchmen and guard dogs are
no problem for an operator like Vic. (They wouldn't be to me!) And
God knows enough logging gear gets stolen by purely normal
thieves...

"Interesting article here in the Journal. Want a look? Seems
Senator Piccolomini's narcotics bill has a good chance of passing.
"

Do you mean to say there's nothing we can do to stop that young
freebooter?

"Let's see. Hey - bad news for the pot smugglers!" Getting legal
proof of his wrongdoing would be very difficult. And what's to
prevent him from coercing a jury even if we did get the goods on
him? A Homo superior criminal has the odds in his favor. And if
one tries to counter him using his own weapons... well, you saw
what happened to Papa.

I exclaimed out loud, "Doux Jésus - you can't be serious! I told you
the way it was. I shared it!"

But I was there. With Victor. He's a terrific screener, but he let the
triumph leak. I was standing there spewing my guts out and he was
crowing!... Papa was a morbid and self-hating man, like most
alco­holics, but that night he'd been scared into asking for help for
the first time. He wasn't sunk in despair, he was reaching for a way
out. Taking a first step onto a very shaky bridge across a black
canyon. And some­body cut that bridge somebody sabotaged his
newborn hope somebody planted a powerful coercive incitement
to suicide that reinforced his own underlying tendency toward
death: Victor! He knows I know. He knows I can't do a thing about
it.

Can Victor... hurt you?

No more than Papa could. [Concern.] But I'm not so sure about
you, Uncle Rogi. Your mind is pretty transparent, especially about
emotion-charged matters. Your sharing of Papa's death... if Victor
found out, he might think you were a threat. I've been considering
ways to protect you.

I pushed away my plate. "I don't think I'll finish these hot cakes
after all. Waitress! Will you give us our check, please?" Christ
Denis what a crock of shit maybe Don was right after all powers
cursed -

A long time ago you said that what you'd really like to do is open a
bookstore in a quiet college town.

... You're right. I'd almost forgotten.

You're a topflight convention manager. You could probably get a
job in hotel management somewhere else in the country. But
Hanover re­ally needs an antiquarian bookshop, and if you were
there you wouldn't be alone. There are nearly forty of us working at
Dartmouth now, re­search assistants and subjects in my lab. You
could help us. And I'm certain we could protect you.

"Somehow, " I said, smiling, "I don't think I'd be in serious danger
here. I have a strong belief in guardian... angels. "

"Don't be a fool!" Even through the dark glasses I could see
Denis's eyes blaze and feel the searing force of his mind that took
hold of me like a puppy. He released me instantly as I reacted with
fear and aston­ishment. His mental speech was anguished:

I should have been able to save Papa from Vic! I ran away from
the situation at home shut out what I knew was happening did it to
survive and because I believed my work more important than my
biological father's life but I should have saved him should have
loved him and didn't and I'll always blame myself always feel him
dying dying lost in despair and I won't lose you the same way damn
you Rogi can't you understand?... One day I'll find a way to
checkmate Vic. Until then the powers are cursed and perhaps we
are too but I'll find a way to redeem us and if that isn't megalomania
I don't know what it is maybe I'm crazier than Vic and more futile
than Papa but I must go ahead. I must! Please help please
understand please know who you are to me why I need you...

"Denis, " I said, reaching across the table. "Tu es mon vrai fils. "

Tears were streaming from behind his dark glasses. At my touch
he lifted his chin and the drops of moisture vanished. "That's
creativity, " he said softly in response to my start. "A psychic power
we've just begun to investigate, perhaps the capstone for all the
rest. Let me show you, Uncle Rogi. Join us. "

Love and a sudden inexplicable revulsion warred behind my mental
barricade. Prudence dictated that I safeguard myself from Victor.
But as for becoming closely involved with Denis and his crowd of
youthful operants... no. By no means.

The waitress handed me the check. I calculated the tip and fished
in my wallet for bills. Denis and I headed for the cashier.

You must come with me to Hanover! His coercion was poised.
Ordi­narily, I could fend him off readily (as I had been able to fend
off Donnie and Victor) but there was a chance that if I drove him to
extremes he might feel compelled to bludgeon me down. For my
own good. I couldn't let that happen.

So I smiled over my shoulder at him.

"I think, " said I, "that I'll call the shop The Eloquent Page. "



10

SUPERVISORY CRUISER NOUMENON [Lyl 1-0000]

26 APRIL  1990



four lylmik minds watched from their invisible vessel as the last
civilian evacuees from the American space station boarded the
commercial shuttle Hinode Maru. The smaller American orbiters
were still mated to the station's half-completed drive-unit while their
crews completed the demolition arrangements.

The vector of the meteoroid that had struck the manned satellite
might have been calculated with diabolical precision. The impact
had killed the orbital velocity needed to keep the structure circling
the Earth at its temporary altitude of five hundred kilometers, as
well as killing six workers. The twenty-three other persons aboard
the station survived because of the airlock system connecting the
"Tinkertoy" units. These had suffered only minimal damage; but the
power-plant that might have restored the velocity of the station was
unfinished, and kicking such a huge satellite back into orbit by
means of auxiliaries would have taken more booster engines than
the Western world, Japan, and China possessed. The addition of
Soviet boosters would have sufficed to save the station. However,
in addition to its multinational commercial facilities, research labs,
and astronomical observatory, the American station had also
included a module with functioning military surveillance apparatus.
The Soviets had declined to assist in the salvage; and now the
elaborate station, only a few months short of completion, traveled a
rapidly decaying orbit that doomed it. Rather than await the
inevitable reentry and fall to Earth, the United States had decided,
for strategic and safety reasons, to blow it up.

"The waste, the dashed hopes, " Noetic Concordance mused.
"The discrepancy between the promise of this great station and its
abortion, brought about by a mere chunk of nickel-iron coated with
ice... The situation is fraught with nuance. I shall compose a poem.
"

"You'd better wait until I finish analyzing the disruption of the
probability lattices, " Homologous Trend warned. "This event may
have a truly nodal significance. "

"Then perhaps I'd better plan an elegy. "

"A dirty limerick, rather, " Eupathic Impulse suggested, "dedicated
to the low-orbit proponents at NASA. If they'd been satisfied to
build a smaller station at high orbit, as the Soviets did, a hundred
meteor hits couldn't have knocked it down. But this close-in
structure was more economical - assuming that no large object
disrupted its delicately maintained low orbit during construction.
One concedes that the odds were all in the Americans' favor! But,
let's see:



The engineers trusted to luck,

Since they wanted more bang for the buck... "



"Please, " Homologous Trend admonished.

Asymptotic Essence said, "I think I perceive some sources of your
anxiety, Trend. The new détente between the United States and
the Soviet Union is lamentably fragile. In spite of their joint Martian
Ex­ploration Project, the ancient political dichotomy persists. The
loss of this American station will be viewed by the strategists of
both nations as a disruption of military parity. "

"Oh, well, of course, " Eupathic Impulse conceded. "One need
only analyze the psychological dynamics at work. The Americans
knew that their space station was immensely superior to the Soviet
one from a standpoint of technological sophistication, and it was
also to be a show­case of international goodwill. This made the
Americans chockfull of condescending magnanimity. (They love
being Grandfather to the world even more than we Lylmik do!) The
Soviet-American Mars expedition was intended to be only the
beginning of a new era of scientific, eco­nomic, and cultural
intercourse between these two powers. Now, how­ever, the
Americans stand humiliated. The impetus toward camaraderie in
outer space is disrupted. Worse, the Soviets will have a strategic
advantage - at least until the Americans put up a new space station.
(Two years? Three? The American economy is already strained. )
One hopes that Trend's computation does not point toward the
death of détente, but one must also keep in mind that we are
dealing with eth­ical primitives. "

"Logically, " Essence said, "the Americans should not feel
threatened. There are any number of robot surveillance satellites
that can be co-opted as backup spy-eyes - and Omega knows
both nations still have parity in nuclear weaponry. But the space
station was a symbol of national pride as well as security, and the
Soviets will certainly exult over the disaster while the Americans will
feel naked to hostile scrutiny. And when has human warfare ever
been logically motivated?"

"Listen to this, " Noetic Concordance broke in. "An experimental
apostrophe, but having possibilities: O Meteor! Frost-cauled
detritus of primordial cataclysm, fatal vagrant..."

"One detects a soupçon of bathos, " said Asymptotic Essence
with regret.

Eupathic Impulse was less charitable. "You certainly can't use the
meteor as the subject of the poem. It was a Pi-Puppid. How can
one possibly compose an elegy on a Pi-Puppid? Now if the thing
had be­longed to a meteoric cloud having more intrinsic grandeur -
say, if it had been a Beta-Taurid or even an Ursid -"

"I have the revised probability analysis, " Homologous Trend
declared, displaying it without further ado.

Asymptotic Essence voiced the mutual dismay. "A threat to the
In­tervention Scheme? Surely not!"

"Beyond a doubt, " Homologous Trend affirmed, "if one carries the
proleptic analysis to the eighteenth differential, as I have done. The
cuspidal locus results from my injection of the character of the
Amer­ican President. His background and his marketing genius link
him in­escapably to the destiny of the (at base) commercial
orientation of the failed space station. Now his bellicose, jingoistic
opponents will pre­vail. The next American station will be austere -
and entirely military. With the dire consequences that you see in
my projection of events for the next twenty years. "

Eupathic Impulse strove for neutrality of tone and failed. "One
might ask why the Supervisory Body failed to investigate the critical
nodality of the space station earlier - and why we didn't take steps
to protect the precious thing?"

"In the first case, " Trend said, "it is the responsibility of Atoning
Un­ifex, acting with us in Quincunx, to define situations susceptible
to such investigation. In the second case, overt protection would
have violated the Scheme as it stands: Shielding the space station
against meteoroids of consequent mass would require use of a
sigma-field (which the Earth-lings would surely have detected with
their radio-telescope array); or else a preprogrammed hyperspatial
matter trap (which as we know is unac­ceptably hazardous in a
solar system having significant casual interplan­etary traffic); or
else we should have had to deploy a guardian vessel au­thorized
to zap, deflect, grab, or otherwise dispose of intrusive space
flotsam (which would grossly contravene the Oversight Directives).
"

"Well, now what?" Eupathic Impulse asked.

Trend said, "The event requires contemplation by all five entities of
the Lylmik Supervisory Body, acting in the aforesaid Quincunx. "

"Anyone know where It is today?" Asymptotic Essence asked.

Noetic Concordance shrugged mentally. "Either extragalactic or
lurk­ing about that college again. We'd better call. "

The four combined in metaconcert: Unifex!

One responds.

[Situational image] + [probability analysis].

Serene preoccupation. Oh, yes. The collision was today, wasn't it?

Reproach. One might have shared one's prescience.

Well, I didn't exactly use prescience... but I do apologize. There is
no need for concern or action on your part with respect to this
situa­tion.

One disputes the probability analysis of Homologous Trend?!

Not at all. I plan to cope with the matter personally.

! [Forbearance.] Indirectly, one presumes, rather than through
rescue of the space station.

Oh, yes. The station's nodality hinges upon its use in weaponry
sur­veillance. I shall simply render the entire concept of spy-eye
satellites obsolete. Metapsychically. The planetary Mind has
already evolved the capability. Bifurcation is imminent. I do not
violate the planetary Will in this but, as it were, anticipate the
determination.

One of your esteemed Remillards?

No. The Scottish connection has been working on this particular
speciality. Given a gentle nudge, there should be a satisfactory
mani­festation within the critical time-period, restoring the original
coeffi­cients of the sexternion and putting our Intervention Scheme
back on the rails.

Comprehension. Most gratifying - and ingenious.

I really should have contemplated the matter with you prior to the
space-station disaster, however, in order to have spared you
needless distress. My absent-mindedness is getting to be a
scandal. I become rapt in nostalgia, to say nothing of my joy in the
unfolding of the metapsychic World Mind at long last... Now you
must excuse me.

"Gone again, " Asymptotic Essence said. "Ah, well. "

"One notes how confident It remains, " Homologous Trend
remarked.

Noetic Concordance said, "It has a unique perspective. "

"One hopes, " Eupathic Impulse added astringently, "that It knows
something we don't know about these contentious larvae, validating
Its confidence in them... "

"The probabilities are in Its favor. " Homologous Trend said, "as
one might expect. "

The four entities shared certain ironic retrospections. Then they
waited. Eventually, Eupathic Impulse said, "There goes the
destruct signal for the space station. "

"O Fireball!" declaimed Noetic Concordance. "O perished pride of
rigid circumstance -"

The other three Lylmik settled back to study the spectacle while
the poet's mind continued its commemoration.



11

CHICAGO, ILLINOIS, EARTH

2 MAY 1990



he had completed the mental exercises that he was ac­customed
to perform at the start of each business day, and now Kieran
O'Connor stood in front of the floor-to-ceiling window of his office
and let his mind range out. His aerie was on the 104th floor of the
Congress Tower, Chicago's most prestigious new office building,
and from its vantage point he could oversee thousands of lesser
structures, hives of concentrated mental energy that invigorated his
creative mind-powers at the same time that they stimulated his
hunger. Kieran had known other great cities - Boston, where he
was born in poverty and educated in Harvard's affluence;
Manhattan, where he had apprenticed in a law firm having a sizable
Sicilian fraction among its well-heeled clientele - but the effete and
tradition-bound East was an unsuitable home base for a unique
upstart such as himself. Instinctively he had come  to  the
dynamic  heartland   of  North  America, to  this city notorious for its
cavalier misprision and polymorphous get-up-and-go. Chicago was
the perfect place for him; its commerce was thriving, its politics
disheveled, and its morals overripe. It was a coercer's town with
bioenergies that matched Kieran's own, not suffering fools but
welcoming  bullies  with  open  arms - a  bottomless  wellspring  of
novelty, hustle, and clout.

From his high place Kieran looked out across a bristling forest of
skyscrapers, a grid of crowded streets, green bordering parklands
along the Lake Michigan shore that flaunted lush tints of spring.
Countless cars ant-streamed along the multiple lanes of the Outer
Drive. The lake waters beyond were a rich iris-purple, paling to
silver along the eastern horizon. Outside the breakwater was a
dancing sailboat. On a whim, he zeroed in on it and was rewarded
with the ultrasensory impressions of two people making love. He
smiled and lingered over the emanations momentarily, not with a
voyeur's vulgar need but in dispassionate reminiscence. He had
other pleasures now; still, the resonances were good...

A chime sounded, pulling him back to reality.

He turned away from the window and went to his enormous desk.
The polished surface mirrored a single yellow daisy in a black vase
and a photograph in an ebony frame - Rosemary holding the infant
Kathleen, little Shannon in a white pinafore clinging to her mother's
skirts. Rosemary and Kathleen would never grow older, but
Shannon was a moody fifteen-year-old now, resisting initiation into
her father's world. The phase would pass; Kieran was sure of it.

The chime sounded again.

Kieran touched one of a line of golden squares inset into the
rosewood desk-top. A compact communication unit lifted into
ready position. Arnold Pakkala looked out of the screen with his
deceptively distant expression. His colorless eyes seemed to
study a potted fig tree behind Kieran's right shoulder.

"Good morning, Arnold. "

"Good morning Mr. O'Connor. You'll be interested to know that
Grondin has checked out and approved two more California
recruits. They'll be flying in to the corporate training facility next
week. "

"Excellent. "

"Mr. Finster is standing by on the Washington land-line. However, I
must also advise you that Mr. Camastra's car has just entered the
Tower parking garage. He must have taken an early flight from
Kansas City. "

"Hmm. He'll be in a stew so we won't keep him waiting. Let me
know as soon as he gets up to the office. There's time for the
Finster call, I think. Put him through, full-sanitary scramble. "

"Right away, sir. "

The communicator screen displayed a sequence of security codes
punched up by Kieran's executive assistant. Eventually these
dissolved into a close-up of Fabian (The Fabulous) Finster, whose
engaging smile featured two large upper incisors separated by a
comical gap: chipmunk teeth. Most people were so captivated by
that droll grin that they failed to take note of the icy green eyes
above it. When Fabian Finster had earned his living as a bottom-of-
the-bill mentalist in Nevada casino shows, he had enhanced his
naturally striking appearance with neo-zoot suits trimmed in blinking
LEDs. Now that he was one of the confidential agents of Kieran
O'Connor, Finster strove for a more conservative image and had
taken to Italian silk suitings and striped ties, with nary a trace of
glitz. But the show-biz aura still clung to him, and he still performed
occasionally to keep up a front, even though most of his time was
now occupied by more serious and lucrative activities.

Kieran said, "We'll have to make this quick today, Fabby. Did you
wrap up Senator Scrope?"

"Tighter than a rattlesnake's ass, chief. You should have seen his
face when I mentioned the number of his secret Icelandic bank
account... Our pipeline into the Armed Services Committee is now
secure. Damn good thing, too. Reading politicians' minds is like
snorkeling in a sewer. Shit galore - but you got one helluva time
finding the one piece you really need before you drown in the
utterly extraneous. "

Kieran laughed. "Congratulations on doing a super job. I suppose
you're worn out with the effort now and ready for a quiet gig at the
Hotel Bora Bora. "

The mentalist's grin widened. "I can read your mind all the way
from here... almost. You got something interesting cooking, I
wouldn't mind giving it a spin. Provided I don't have to stay in
Washington. After digging in the brains of these politicos for six
months, I'm fed to the teeth. Really makes a guy appreciate the
lucid crumminess of the Mob mind. "

"What I have for you is an excavation with a good deal more class.
How would you like to go Ivy League, Fabby? Do a little
investigating for me at Dartmouth College up in New Hampshire?"

"Ah hah. You want me to sniff around that ESP project!"

"So you've heard of it. "

"I even read the new book by that Dartmouth prof that hit The New
York Times best-seller list. It took me two weeks - what with having
to look up all the big words - and I'm still not sure the guy said what
I think he said. "

Kieran's tone was incisive. "I had no idea that parapsychology
re­search was being taken so seriously by legitimate institutions.
Jason Cassidy and Viola Northcutt are looking into the work being
done at Stanford on the West Coast, but I want you to find out what
this man Denis Remillard is up to - especially what practical
applications of the higher mental powers might lie behind the
theoretical considerations set forth in his book. "

"You mean, is the guy up to anything dangerous to us - or is he just
blue-skying around?"

"Precisely. Remillard's book is a very unlikely best seller. It's
difficult to read and its conclusions are veiled to the point of
deliberate obscurantism. He almost seems to be bending over
backwards to make his data appear prosaic. Of course he couldn't
squelch the inherent sensationalism of the topic completely, even
with the pages of dry sta­tistics and the academic jargon. His
experimental verification of telep­athy and psychokinesis is one of
the hottest scientific stories of the century. But I have a feeling that
Remillard is holding back. I want to know what other psychic
experimentation might be going on at Dartmouth that the good
doctor has decided not to publicize... for prudence's sake. "

"Jeez, " mused The Fabulous Finster. "If certain parties start taking
mind reading and animal magnetism seriously, what's going to
happen to our edge?"

"Work me up a complete dossier on Denis Remillard. Get as much
information as you can on his close associates as well. I'm
particularly interested in how many adept mentalists he's recruited
for his research. How powerful they are. How committed. "

"You want me to turn head-hunter if I turn up any live ones?"

"Use the utmost discretion, Fabby. " Kieran's eyes rested for a
mo­ment on the photo of the late Rosemary Camastra O'Connor
and the two lovely children. "This is a dangerous game. The
government may have infiltrated the Dartmouth project - or even
foreign agents. Remil­lard's book hints at a worldwide network of
cooperating psychic labo­ratories beginning to achieve significant
results after years of fumbling and marking time. I want to know if
there's any truth in that idea, or if it's only wishful thinking. "

"I get the picture. "

"One last thing. If Remillard or any of his people show the least hint
of being able to probe your mind, get out of there fast and cover
your tracks. "

"I understand, " came the cheerful reply. "Not to worry, chief. I
won't screw up. I've noticed how people who cross you seem to
get these weird cerebral hemorrhages... "

"Senator Scrope's wrap-up nets you a cool Bahama million, Fabby.
The payoff on Remillard's organization could be even bigger.
Goodbye. "

Kieran touched a golden square, breaking the scrambler patch.
The screen went dark. Almost immediately, another square inset
on the desk began blinking red.

Kieran keyed the intercom. "I'll see Mr. Camastra at once, Arnold. "
He recessed the com-unit into the desk, performed a brief Yoga
trans­mutation designed to lift his coercive energies to the highest
level, and sat back to await the arrival of his mafioso father-in-law.



"You heard, Kier? You heard? He didn't veto! I got the word from
Lassiter in Washington on the car-phone just as we exited the
Kennedy!"

Big Al Camastra stormed into the room. His cyanotic lips trembled
in fury and a small driblet of saliva trailed from the corner of his
mouth. The two bodyguards accompanying Chicago's Boss wore
expressions of apprehension.

"I heard, Al. I've been expecting this. " Kieran came around his
desk, solicitous, as Carlo and Frankie helped Big Al settle his bulky
body into the office's largest leather armchair.

Al raved, "That yellow-belly bastard! That fink! He's just gonna hold
the bill until tomorrow without signing it, then it automatically goes
into law even without his signature. "

Kieran nodded. "The President wants the law but he didn't want to
give public affront to its opponents. "

"What the hell kinda religious man is he? Goin' against the Catholic
Bishops and the Council of Churches and the NAACP and the
fuckin' PTA, for chrissake? They all lobbied for the veto. We all
knew he'd have to veto! How could he do this? God - you know
what this means? It's Repeal all over again!"

"Boss, take it easy, " Carlo pleaded. "Your bionic ticker... you gotta
calm down!"

"A drink!" Big Al roared. "Kier, gimme a drink. "

"Al, you shouldn't, " whined Frankie, catching Kieran's eye and
shak­ing his head frantically. "The doc in K. C. said -"

Kieran O'Connor lifted one hand in peremptory dismissal. The two
bodyguards stiffened and their eyes glazed. Both of them turned,
com­pletely docile, and left the room - oblivious to the fact that Big
Al had enjoined them only five minutes earlier not to leave him
alone with Kieran O'Connor under any circumstances.

The don had forgotten his own order. He was leaning back in the
chair, one puffed and blotchy hand over his eyes, muttering
impreca­tions. Kieran busied himself at an antique sideboard
where cut-glass decanters sparkled in the sunlight. "A little Marsala
won't hurt you, Poppa. I'll have some, too. It's a nice virginale that
DeLaurenti discov­ered and sent in to New York on the Concorde
last week. If you like it, I'll have a couple of cases sent out to River
Forest. "

Kieran took one of the filled glasses and wrapped the old man's
trem­ulous fingers around it. He let healing psychic impulses flow
from his body to Camastra's through the momentary flesh contact.
"Salute, Poppa. To your health. " Kieran lifted his own glass and
sipped.

A bitter smile cracked Big Al's pallid features. "My health! Madonna
puttana, you should have seen those vultures giving me the eye in
Kansas City, wondering if I'd drop dead right in front of 'em so's
they could call off the Commission meeting and the vote!"

"The flight back has tired you out. You should have gone home to
rest instead of coming downtown directly from O'Hare. Everything
will work out fine. The Commission did as we expected. I won't
have to exert mental pressure on them directly. " He raised his
glass to the old man again and returned to his seat behind the
desk.

Big Al watched him with hooded eyes. At forty-six, Kieran
O'Connor was still youthful, his dark hair only slightly silvered at the
temples and at the distinctive widow's peak above his wide
forehead. With his olive skin and dark brown eyes Kieran looked
more Italian than Irish - but he wasn't, and that should have stalled
him in the consigliere niche permanently, no matter whose
daughter he had married. Big Al still didn't quite fathom why it
hadn't.

"The Commission voted you your seat, " Camastra told Kieran.
"You're the Acting, as of today, and they give tentative approval for
you to take over when I retire. But we're not outa the woods yet.
Falcone and his dinosaur faction keep harping on tradition, bitching
because you're not a paisan'. They're willing to give you respect -
but not to the point of joining your new financial consortium. "

Kieran made an airy gesture. "Patsy Montedoro's influence will
keep the younger dons on our side, and the Vegas and West
Coast people are solid. Let Falcone and his pigheaded
conservatives stew in their own juice for another year. Their
racketeering and gambling interests have been on a long slide for
over a decade - and now that the Pic­colomini legislation is on the
books, they're caught by the shorts. The end of Prohibition was a
Sunday-school picnic compared to the legalization of marijuana
and cocaine, and the decriminalization of other drugs. "

Big Al shook his jowls in bewilderment. "How could the President
do it? Every piss-poor tobacco farmer in Dixie will be planting pot
or coca trees. Little old ladies'll grow opium poppies in window
boxes! We'll have a country fulla junkies. " He gulped his wine.

Kieran got up and refilled the don's glass. "No we won't, Poppa.
The other provisions of the Piccolomini Law will see to that. The
educa­tional campaigns against all forms of chemical abuse... the
compul­sory treatment or confinement of hard-narc addicts... the
capital pen­alties for outlaw dealing. What the government has
done is to say: 'Okay, you low uneducated trash, you
unemployables, you losers, you cheap thrill-seekers. Go ahead
and smoke yourself into a stupor if you want to - and pay Uncle
Sam tax on each joint. Or snort till your nose falls off - but don't
bother nice people while you're doing it, or we lock you up and
throw away the key. And don't commit a crime under the influence,
or recruit underage users, or peddle shit illegally - or you die.' It's a
very simple, sensible solution to a nasty problem, Al. The Treasury
will recover revenue lost from the declining sales of tobacco and
hard liquor, the streets will be cleared of criminals supporting their
habit, and the big bad Mafia will have the financial floor cut out from
under it once and for all. "

"It's indecent, " Big Al said. "Sell cheap pot and crack and kids are
gonna get it. I don't give a damn about the adult addicts. Let 'em
turn their brains to stronzolo! But the little kids..."

Kieran resumed his seat with a shrug. "The bleeding-heart liberals
and the church people and the social workers tried to tell the
President and Congress that. And so did we, of course. "

Al stared morosely into his wine. "Thirty percent. We lose thirty
percent of our income just like that with the legalization - and we're
the most diversified of the Families! New York, Boston, Florida,
New Orleans - they're gonna drop fifty percent at least. And
California - !"

"The Outfit will have a lean year or two. But those Families who go
into my venture-capital pool will eventually end up richer than ever.
Chicago is leading the wave of the future, Poppa, and my
consortium will provide the impetus for a whole new profit
structure. We'll survive, and so will the Families who follow us. "

"Follow you. " Blood-webbed eyes burned for an instant with the
old antagonism and fear; but then came a fatalistic little laugh.
"What else could they do but follow you, stregone? Sorcerer!"

Kieran's expression was earnest, his coercive faculty working at
max. "Al, we can't keep running a two-hundred-billion-dollar
business like a gang of nineteenth-century banditti - squabbling
over a shrinking pie, eliminating rivals by shooting them and
stuffing their bodies in car trunks. Times have changed. In two
years, human beings will be walk­ing on Mars. All financial
transactions will be fully computerized. Most of the old rackets will
be as dead as the peddling of narcotics. Sure, the Mob is rich. But
you know what they say about money: if you just sit on it, it might as
well be toilet paper. "

"Yeah, yeah, " the don said wearily. "We gotta invest. I know. "

"Invest properly, Al, so that the money makes more money. That's
what I've been doing as your consigliere - and what I'll continue to
do when I'm Boss. "

"Boss of Bosses, " Camastra muttered.

Kieran did not seem to hear. "In addition to our legitimate
invest­ment corporation for the Organization funds, we now have
our own small tank of sharks to work with - three of them, all under
my thumb and without the slightest off-color taint to attract Justice
Department bloodhounds. We own Clayburgh Acquisitions,
Giddings & Metz, and Fredonia International. They're takeover
artists, Al, the kind of outfits that specialize in the leveraged buy-
outs of troubled or vulnerable com­panies. So far, our little pets
have confined themselves to modest raids of the loot-'em-and-
dump-'em type. But now I'm ready to give them the go-ahead for
some real action. Once the capital pool is ready, we're going after
the biggest money there is. "

"What, for God's sake?"

"We'll begin with small defense contractors - the ones whose stock
took a dive during the late-lamented détente. With the space-
station disaster and hawkish noises starting up again in Congress,
those defense companies will come back like gangbusters. When
we're ready to tackle a biggie, there's a McGuigan-Duncan
Aerospace, the firm that almost crashed when their Zap-Star
orbiting mirror weapon was axed by the Pentagon economizers. I
have a strong hunch that by 1993 - when we have a new President
and the Mars Project is recognized for the useless PR stunt that it
is - this country will wake up and realize how far ahead of us the
Russians are in the space arms race. Then those Zap-Stars may
get a new lease on life. "

Big Al had gone the color of chalk. "You think there's gonna be a
war?"

"Of course not. Only a fresh defense initiative. Once we've
wrapped up McGuigan, we can go after G-Dyn Cumberland, the
submarine builders. And Con Electric is shaky with the Japanese
and Chinese undercutting their domestic products - but they were
the fourth larg­est defense contractor in the country during the
1980s, and the Penta­gon certainly won't buy missile parts from
Asia. "

"Madonna puttana! You really mean it!" Big Al's glass fell without a
sound to the thick beige carpet. Inside his thoracic cavity, the
pace­maker adjusted his heartbeat in response to the elevated
level of adrenalinemia.

Kieran was patient. "History has shown that there is no greater
po­tential for profit than in a suitably stimulated military-industrial
complex - and the stimulation is imminent. The Soviets don't really
want war and neither do we. But both countries are bound to slide
back into the Cold War groove in response to internal tensions.
We have our high unemployment and monumental national debt.
They have their eternal food and consumer-goods shortages, and
Slavic angst. "

"What if you guess wrong about a defense build-up? What if this U.
S. -Russian Mars Project makes us all buddy-buddy with the damn
Reds and the disarmament thing gets into high gear?"

"Then it would be Goodbye, Daddy Warbucks. " Kieran waved one
hand dismissively. "But we won't let that happen. We'll protect our
investment. "

Big Al stared at his son-in-law with the unaccepting disbelief of a
man confronting an impending natural disaster - an avalanche
descending, a looming tornado funnel - and then his face cleared
and he began to laugh uproariously. "Jesus!" he wheezed. "Jesus
H. Christ! Wait till that cazzomatto Falcone gets a loada this
action!"

Kieran touched a golden square. Immediately the door to the outer
office opened and his executive assistant appeared.

"Yes, sir?" Arnold Pakkala inquired. His mind added: The two
hoods are sitting quietly biting their fingernails, and you have a
conference call coming up at ten-thirty with Mr. Giddings and Mr.
Metz in Hous­ton, and then an early luncheon with General
Baumgartner.

"Mr. Camastra is ready to leave now, Arnold. Would you ask Carlo
and Frankie to step in?" Kieran stood in front of Big Al with an
out­stretched hand and a cordial smile. "Thanks a lot for stopping
by, Poppa. Betty Carolyn invited me to bring Shannon to your place
tomorrow for dinner, so I'll see you then. If you feel up to it, we can
talk over this new financial business in more detail. "

Supported by his bodyguards, Big Al surged to his feet. "Sure.
We'll talk tomorrow. " He was still chuckling but his eyes refused to
meet those of the new Acting Boss of Chicago. "You can bring the
two cases of Marsala. It's real good stuff. See you, Kier. "

Kieran O'Connor turned to the window to look out again over the
luminous lake. The sailboat with the lovers was gone. He focused
his farsense on a big cabin cruiser moving up the river toward the
Michigan Avenue Bridge.

Arnold said: Ten-thirty. Shall I set up the call to Houston?

One person in the cruiser was telling another person a scandalous
anecdote about the Illinois Attorney General and a certain labor
official.

Kieran said: Give me five minutes to meditate and clear my mind.
Then bring on the sharks.



12

MILAN, NEW HAMPSHIRE, EARTH

16 AUGUST 1990



it was the worst psychic stakeout in his experience, from beginning
to end, bar none.

The damn tippy little rented johnboat! Essential to his night bass
fisherman cover, it was dismayingly low in the water, its aluminum
hull clanked at his slightest movement, and it stunk from decaying
salt-pork bait trapped down under the duckboards.

The damn hot, muggy night! Not a breath of fresh air stirred over
the small lake ringed with summer cottages, and after four hours of
sur­veillance, he was sopping wet with sweat and cramped all to
hell.

The damn fucking bugs! They really were - mating, that is - and
doing it all over him. Perhaps it was the seductive stench, or the
little boat might just have provided a convenient rendezvous out
there in the middle of the lake. Whatever... aquatic insects by the
hundreds, gossamer-winged and mostly connubially linked,
fluttered, crept, and copulated in and about the anchored johnboat.
Any shift in posture by the boat's occupant produced a
cellophanish crunch.

The damn fish! Smallmouth bass, gourmandizing on the besotted
bugs, leapt explosively out of the water at unnerving intervals. If he
had been a genuine angler, the sight of the noble lunkers would
have warmed his heart. But Fabian Finster was a city-bred, sports-
hating sophisticate who preferred his fish filleted, gently grilled,
and served with lemon-butter sauce. Periodically, when the feeding
frenzy in the waters around him disturbed his concentration to an
unbearable degree, he would break off the surveillance, muster his
coercive faculty, and blast both predators and prey. The fish would
hightail it into the depths and the bugs would faint, fall into the lake,
and drown. All would be serene for ten minutes or so, until a new
swarm of insects arrived and the fish pulled themselves together
again.

The real corker, however, the brain-bender supremo of that
enchanted evening, was a technical surveillance problem: the
subjects were speaking - and thinking telepathically - in French. He
had encountered this in his nightclub days, too, and learned to fake
translations by cracking the linguistic formulation of the thought and
extracting its purely imaginal content. (Ha ha, ugly gringo! Read my
mind! Tell me I have six thousand-dollar bills in my money-clip! )
But translating more than a phrase or two of a foreign language
was a bitch of a job for a mentalist - analogous to eyestrain. The
intense concentration required would leave him physically and
mentally pooped, by no means a healthy state for a guy in the
espionage and extortion racket. Add to the French translation grief
an uncanny premonition of disaster that no psychic could afford to
ignore, and Finster decided he had been very unwise to accept the
Remillard assignment, no matter how much loot Kieran O'Connor
dangled as bait.

Bait!

SCRAM! FUCK OFF! FUCK ELSEWHERE!

Momentarily alone again in the starlight, Finster sighed.

His troubles had started at the beginning of the assignment, when
he'd tackled the kid professor, Denis Remillard. Denis was a truly
boffo screener of his private thoughts, nobody to mess with. Any
probe at­tempt by Finster would not only have been detected - but
its source would have been pinpointed. So he'd settled for crumbs,
bits of "public" telepathy Remillard addressed to his friends and
associates. Denis spoke only English and his subvocal thoughts
were also couched in that lan­guage. But what thoughts! The prof
ratiocinated on such a rarefied level that poor Finster was totally
out of his league, lost in a labyrinth of symbolic logic, gestalts,
alatory subintellections, and other horrors. If Denis was working on
anything potentially threatening (or useful) to the O'Connor
enterprises, it would take a better brain than Finster's to prove it at
this stage. He had suggested, and his Boss had concurred upon, a
more indirect course of investigation. Finster would leave Denis
and his Coterie alone until there were hints of more than theoretical
activity, and concentrate his efforts on the young genius's many
rela­tives. One or more of them might provide useful leverage
material for future action against the Dartmouth group.

It was when Finster began surveillance of Denis's uncle, who acted
in loco parentis to the professor and worked at a big resort in the
White Mountains, that culture shock struck. Like most persons who
consid­ered themselves one-hundred-percent Americans at that
time, Fabian Finster was completely ignorant of the French-
speaking minority pop­ulation of New England. Uncle Roger was a
harmless fellow who spoke fluent Yankee - but his thoughts were
an untidy melange of French and English. Sorting them out had
consumed a tedious month, during which Finster stayed as a guest
at the resort during the high season, eating too many gourmet
meals. But there had been a payoff: Uncle

Roger was preparing to leave his job because he was afraid!
Afraid of Denis's younger brother, Victor, the black sheep of the
family.

Bingo.

Finster had zeroed in on Victor immediately, and discovered that
the twenty-year-old man was not only a telepath but a powerful
coercer as well - certainly stronger than his older brother and
perhaps even more compelling than Kieran O'Connor himself.
Furthermore, he was a crook, using a legitimate business as a front
in much the same way that Kieran did, only on a vastly smaller
scale.

O'Connor was very interested.

Finster was instructed to study Victor and his operation, using the
utmost caution. He was always to stay out of coercive range, which
they pegged at a hundred yards to be on the safe side, more than
twice Kieran's sphere of psychic influence. He was to eavesdrop
both elec­tronically and telepathically, being especially alert for
useful dirt. Each night Finster would fast-transmit the tape of the
day's data to Chicago via scrambled land-line, and there would
follow consultation and fresh orders from the Boss.

For three weeks, Finster had shadowed the young pulpwood
entrepre­neur in and around his home base of Berlin, New
Hampshire. It soon became apparent that the shady aspects of
Victor's operation were ex­pertly papered over; there was no
immediate prospect of blackmailing him. He had no wife, girlfriend,
boyfriend, or significant other suscep­tible to outside menaces.
(He shared support of his widowed mother and younger siblings
with Denis, but seemed to have no real love for any of them. ) His
financing was tightly secured in two local banks and a third in
Manchester. He had logging contracts in both New Hampshire and
Maine, and seemed ready to expand into Vermont as well - as
soon as he could pin down the appropriate persons to coerce.
Given Victor's apparently invulnerable setup, Kieran O'Connor
decided he had two options at the present time: He could let Victor
be, as he had Denis, filing him for future reference; or he could
invite the young man into his own criminal coalition.

Finster was now completing the feasibility study for the latter
alter­native... and it was looking dimmer and dimmer. In Finster's
judg­ment, Victor Remillard was not only a mental badass, he was
probably a nutter to boot. His French-English thoughts were often
chaotic, inde­cipherable. There were dark hints of no less than
three murders perpe­trated within the last year, together with an
indeterminate number of psychic and/or physical assaults. He
dreamed of monsters, and most of them had his own face. He
hated Denis, and only some deep-lying inhibition constrained him
from doing violence to the older brother he both envied and
despised.

Fabian Finster had long cherished a salutary fear of Kieran
O'Connor; but he had decided that he was even more afraid of
Victor Remillard. When he finished up for the night, Finster
intended to pass on to the Boss his own urgently negative vote
regarding any alliance with Victor. On the contrary, the Mob might
give serious consideration to putting out a contract on this kid
before he spread his web any wider...

Sweaty, pest-ridden, and disquieted, Fabian (The Fabulous)
Finster resolutely stayed on the job, whispering a simultaneous
translation and running commentary into a bug-smeared Toshiba
microcorder hung on a lanyard around his neck. Meanwhile, on the
screened porch of his lakeside summer cabin, Victor Remillard
drank cold beer and went about the business of recruiting fresh
heads for his growing coven of psychic henchmen. He was
concluding an interview with a middle-aged Canadian telepath of
dubious moral fiber who had driven down that day from Montreal in
a brand-new Alfa Spider.

"Now the two of 'em just sit there chewing things over... Now Vic
offers the guy another bottle of Hibernia Dunkel Weizen from the
re­frigerator on the porch (Jesus!)... Now Vic says out loud in Frog,
'I agree that a merger of our two groups might be advantageous,
Roe-bear, but it must be on my terms. I will make the machine
march - be the boss. ' And Fortyay says, 'For sure, Vic. No - uh -
hassle. I have seen for myself who you are and what you are. ' And
he takes a fast slug of suds, trying to be brave. And Vic leans
toward him and smiles just a little and thinks: 'Is it that you are
certain your four playmates will accept my direction? Without
making any doubts? I am not playing kids' games, Roe-bear. I am
going to shock the gallery' - dammit! he means score big - 'with this
mental thing. My Remco pulpwood oper­ation is just - uh - for
starters. I'm going to be a big vegetable' - shit! - 'big shot and
make more millions' - wait, that means bil­lions - 'than you can
count. So will the people who work with me. But you will have to do
things my way. Do you understand, Roe-bear? No one makes the
cunt with me - uh - fucks around with me and manages cheap - uh -
gets away with it. ' And the other guy says out loud: 'Good blood,
Vic! I told you, anything you say!' And his brain is dripping blue funk
like a colander, and he thinks: 'You know why we're anxious to join
up with you. Who else knows the music - the angles - of this mind
business like you? Up in Kaybeck, me and Armang and Donyel
and the rest have been just - uh - spinning our wheels, fooling
around with small-beer scams. We know we gotta come South to
get where the real - uh - action is. And that means joining your
outfit. Why do you think I made my proposition regular?' He means
above-board. 'Drill in my head all you want. Drill in the boys' heads.
You'll see we aren't - uh - bullshitting. ' And Vic is all charm now. He
says, like:

'Swell!' They both laugh. The thought-patterns are formless friendly
- only underneath Roe-bear is still trying not to wet his pants and
Vic's sub-basement has a gleam like your steel tiger-pit, Boss... "

Finster hit the pause button of the recorder and shifted position.
Inky ripples spread out in circles from the johnboat. The water was
now littered with insect bodies and the bass, sated, had retired for
the night. Finster prayed that soon Victor would, too.

He whispered a few more translations and comments as the young
man led his visitor down the front steps of the cabin and walked
with him to the Alfa Romeo. A next meeting was set up, to include
the other members of the Canadian gang. Then the Spider's
headlamps flashed on, making two paths of wavering light on the
lake that stopped short of Finster's boat. The car backed, turned,
and drove off along the shore road.

Victor Remillard's mind was strangely aglow. He stretched,
yawned, then walked down the path to the small dock in front of the
cabin, where he stood looking out over the lake with his arms
folded.

Finster's boat began to move slowly toward him, dragging its sash-
weight anchor.

"Oh, shit, " muttered the mind reader. "Shit a brick. "

He lunged for the three-horse outboard mounted at the stern and
yanked the starting cord, producing pathetic burbling sounds. He
yanked again and got a few apologetic pops. Cursing, he fumbled
the small oars into their locks and flailed desperately at the water
while the boat picked up speed, moving in the opposite direction.

"Turn me loose, dammit!" There were other cabins on the shore,
some with lights. He yelled: "Help! Help!... " But his voice died
away to a croak, lost in the summer chorale of frogs, crickets, and
katydids. Nothing left to do! The tall silhouette at the end of the
dock was barely ten yards away. Finster ripped buttons from his
soggy sportshirt to get at the. 357 magnum Colt Python in its
underarm holster. He lifted the gun with both hands and tried to
aim, but the Colt seemed to have a life of its own and the blood-hot
metal fought to squirm out of his grip, and when he clung to it, it
became heavy as the lead sash-weight anchor and tried to break
his wrists, and then he saw that the barrel was pointed at his right
kneecap and his finger was tightening on the trigger, and he
screamed and flung the thing sideways and it fell overboard and
Vic laughed.

I'll jump out! his mind howled. And I can't swim but I'd rather drown
-

He was drowning.

Drowning in his own vomit that had flooded up his throat and into
his windpipe. He made a terrible noise as he crashed against the
low aluminum gunwale, his head and upper body hanging over the
side, his eyes wide open beneath the dead-black water. And the
mental voice:

Don't be any more stupid than you've already been. Not until we
have a chance to talk.

Talk?...

He was sitting upright, wet only with his own perspiration, and the
boat glided smoothly up to the dock and stopped. A hand was
extended to help him climb out.

He looked up. The zillions of stars in the summer sky outlined a tall,
good-looking young man with dark curly hair. His mind was a
simmer­ing blur.

"Talk?" Finster repeated out loud, a wan chipmunk grin trembling
on his lips.

"Come up to the cabin, " Victor told him curtly, and turned his back
to lead the way off the dock. When the mind reader hesitated,
some­thing seemed to clamp his heart with red-hot pincers,
making his knees buckle; but in a split second the pain was gone
and he stood upright again, and the damn frog growled over his
shoulder, "Grouille-toi, merdaillon!"

Finster needed no translation. In fact, he was inclined to agree with
Victor's rude assessment of him. It was the royal screw-up of his
life - what was left of it - and he was a certain goner. Once this
realization came, Fabian Finster's spirits paradoxically lifted.

"Sit there, " Victor ordered, when they came through the screen
door onto the cabin porch. Finster lowered himself into a wicker
chair with cretonne cushions. Did he dare ask for a beer?

Something awful lit up behind Victor's eyes. "I could squeeze your
brain like a grapefruit, Finster. I could force you to tell me
everything you know about the ones who sent you to spy on me,
then kick your ass out of here with nothing but scrambled eggs left
inside your skull. I've already done that to a couple of snoopers.
One was a Russian - can you believe it? - offering me three
hundred grand to get him into my broth­er's laboratory. I took his
money very gladly and he disappeared without a trace. The woods
are lovely, dark and deep, Finster. You could go the same way... or
maybe not. You've got a certain familiar smell about you. "

And he lifted his mind-screen to give the barest glimpse of
reprieve.

"All right!" Finster shouted, breaking into a guffaw of relief. "I dig
what you're thinking, amigo! Do I ever!"

"Oh, yeah?" Victor's voice was like ice, and the tantalizing image
the mind reader had grasped so desperately did a chameleon shift
and faded to imminent doom. Finster sat up straight, waiting for it.

But Victor was smiling. "You're not one of my brother's stooges.

You're not from the government. You're not a Red. Your mind's
spread open like a planked salmon, Finster. I know exactly what
you are. "

"I'm a crook, Victor, " Finster said. "Just like you. And I'm here
fol­lowing orders from another crook - who is definitely not just like
you. He's big. Maybe the biggest, pretty soon. You reading my
mind?"

"Better than you know. Tell Kieran O'Connor exactly what I say,
Finster... Stay away from me. If your people try to interfere with me,
I'll send them back to O'Connor's office in Chicago to die, right in
front of his fancy desk. But you also tell him that I have certain
plans. If he lets me alone, here in my home territory, maybe the
day will come when the two of us have things to say to each other.
It won't be soon. But when one of us really needs the other, I'll talk
to him... Do you think you can remember my exact words, Finster?"

The mind reader shrugged, hooked one thumb around the lanyard
that hung from his neck, and pulled out the Toshiba microcorder.
"You're on the record, Mr. Remillard. "

"Then get out of here. " Victor turned away, heading for the interior
of the cabin.

"No beer?" Finster ventured.

"No beer. "

"Figures, " Finster said. He went out the screen door, closed it very
carefully, and headed for the dock.



13

FROM THE MEMOIRS OF ROGATIEN REMILLARD



As a bookseller, I have noted a curious thing: There are certain
scientific books of epochal importance, titles recognized by ev­ery
educated citizen in the Galactic Milieu, that nevertheless languish
unread by modern people. One thinks of Darwin's Origin of
Species, Freud's Interpretation of Dreams, Wegener's Origin of
the Continents and Oceans, Weiner's Cybernetics, and other
works that provoked controversy in their day - only to subside into
banality once their contents had passed the test of time and
merged with the common body of human knowledge.

Denis Remillard's towering work, Metapsychology, is another that
suffered this ironic fate. Now, 121 years after its publication, only a
few scientific historians bother to read it. But I remember the
uproar at­tending the book's appearance early in 1990, when it
sold nearly 250, 000 copies in hardback format during its first year
and became the common coin of TV talk shows and articles in the
popular press - an amazing performance for a highly technical
work, bristling with statistics, writ­ten in a dignified and daunting
style. Metapsychology presented for the first time an integrated
scheme encompassing all forms of mental ac­tivity, normal and
supranormal, with an emphasis upon mind's inter­relation to matter
and energy. In a detailed and elegant series of exper­iments,
scrupulously verified, Denis demonstrated how the so-called
higher mind functions are inherent in the mental processes of all
hu­man beings. He showed how every mind contains, in some
measure, powers both ordinary and extraordinary. His keystone
theory explained the unusual activities of psychic adepts in terms
of operant metafunc­tion, and the deficiencies of "normal" people
as an aspect of metapsychic latency - where operation of the
higher powers was either inhibited by psychological factors or
precluded by a limited talent.

Metapsychology provoked intense discussion - and a certain
dismay - within the scientific establishment, since it presented hard
evidence that the higher mental functions were genuine
phenomena and not merely dubious conjecture. Psychic
researchers (and there were many besides Denis), after enduring
decades of condescending tolerance or out-and-out ridicule from
their conservative peers, basked in a new and unprecedented
atmosphere of respect as they found themselves courted by the
media, by sundry government agencies, and by commer­cial
exploiters scenting a new growth industry that might eventually rival
aerospace or genetic technology. Numbers of hitherto clandestine
operants "came out of the closet" as a result of Denis's book and
be­came involved in serious research projects. There were also
legions of quacks - astrologers, tea-leaf readers, spoon-benders,
and practitioners of black magic - who enjoyed a brief heyday
riding the coattails of the legitimate metapsychic movement. The
public was entertained for months by debates and squabbles
among the mixed bag of opposing psychic factions.

Denis himself remained largely aloof from the altercations his book
had spawned, distancing himself from popular journalists,
television interviewers, and other purveyors of mass titillation. He
had not yet publicly revealed that he himself was one of the
principal subjects of his experiments, nor were other operant
workers at his Dartmouth labora­tory identified by name to
nonprofessional investigators. Attempts to make an instant
celebrity of the author of Metapsychology were doomed by Denis's
humorless and erudite manner, his penchant for quoting statistics,
and his total lack of "colorful" personality traits. Media snoops
found lean pickings at the scene of his researches, a drab old
saltbox on College Street in Hanover, across from the Hitchcock
Hospital parking lot. The metapsychology lab's personnel was loyal
and close-mouthed, giving superficial cooperation to reporters and
interested VIPs while making certain that no really sensational data
came under outside scru­tiny.

Fortunately for the disappointed newsmongers, there were plenty
of less diffident psychic researchers at other institutions who were
more than eager to fill the metapsychic publicity gap. These
basked in the limelight and hastened to publish their own
researches - as well as their critiques of Denis's magnum opus.
Since most ordinary people have a gut belief in the higher mental
powers, the public at large reacted positively to the opening of the
new Metapsychic Frontier. There were surprisingly few
commentators, in those early days, who envisioned any problem in
having an elite population of operants living and work­ing among
"normal" humanity...

Late in 1990 when the Mind Wars scandal broke and it was
revealed that the Defense Department of the United States had
attempted to pressure psychic researchers into undertaking
classified projects, public opinion experienced its first anti-meta
shift. But this was destined to be swept away in the fresh furor that
came the following year, when Pro­fessor James Somerled
MacGregor of Edinburgh University revealed to a stunned world
the first truly practical application of mind-power. MacGregor's
demonstration was a total vindication of Denis's theories. It was
also responsible for opening a rift in the human race that not even
the Great Intervention would heal completely.



To digress momentarily from the earthshaking to the jejune, I must
note that 1990 was also the year that I started my bookshop, The
Elo­quent Page. Nowadays the place has quasi-shrine status, but I
continue to resist attempts by various busybody groups to
institutionalize it. The shop persists under the original proprietor at
its address of 68 South Main Street, Hanover, New Hampshire. For
the sake of Galactic tour­ists, I have a section devoted to works by
and about famous Remillards. (I even have for sale a few fragile
copies of the first edition of Metapsychology, exorbitantly priced.
Inquiries are invited. ) However, my stock in trade remains, as
always, one of the largest collections of rare science fiction,
fantasy, and horror books in New England. My shelves hold no
modern liquid-crystal book-plaques; every volume is printed on
paper - and a goodly percentage of them are still sturdy enough to
be read. I welcome browsers of all races, even Simbiari, pro­vided
they utilize the plass gloves I keep available and refrain from
dripping green mucus on the stock.

The choice of the bookshop premises was not mine. I had initially
decided to rent a place farther north on Main Street, closer to the
Dartmouth campus, where there was much heavier foot traffic and
where my business instincts assured me that trade would be brisk.
This intention, however, was thwarted by an old acquaintance.

I remember the sunny autumn day that the rental agent, Mrs.
Mallory, took me on a round of inspection. Even though I had
already expressed my preference, the lady insisted on showing
me one last vacant prop­erty.

"It's such a pretty place, Mr. Remillard, " she told me, "the corner
shop on the ground floor of the historic Gates House building,
across from the post office. A marvelous example of the Late
Federal style, absolutely the ideal ambiance for a bookshop! The
premises are a tad smaller than the location down by the Hanover
Inn - but so much more evocative. And there's a lovely large
apartment available on the third floor. "

I agreed to look the place over, and it was everything she had
prom­ised. The apartment, in fact, was virtually perfect. The store
itself, however, seemed far too small for the type of establishment
I was then contemplating, a combination of used books and current
hardbound and paperback volumes. I told Mrs. Mallory that I found
it charming but unsuitable.

"Oh, dear! I really thought you'd like it. " She gestured at the old
beamed ceiling, the frowsty little nooks at the rear. "The
atmosphere of antiquity - can't you feel it?" And then she smiled
conspiratorially and said in a lowered voice, "It's even haunted. "

I paused in my inspection of the bay display window, polite
incredu­lity on my face. "Interesting. I'm sure having a ghost in
one's bookshop would be quite a novelty, especially since I plan to
specialize in fantas­tic literature. But I'm afraid the place really is
too small, and too far from the campus to attract much evening
trade -"

And then I felt it. Without conscious volition, I had let my
seekersense range out, the weak divination faculty I had been
practicing under Denis's tutelage with a view toward guarding
myself from intrusions by Victor or other undesirables. I had
managed to learn how to detect the distinctive bioenergetic aura of
fairly strong operants, such as Denis, Sally Doyle, or Glenn
Dalembert - provided that they were within a radius of ten meters or
so and not shielded by thick masonry or some other barrier.

And now, scanning this old frame building's empty corner
premises, I farsensed the presence. I stood rooted to the spot,
sweat starting out on my forehead.

Mrs. Mallory was chattering on: "... and if you're sure you'll need
more space, we might talk to the owner, since the little coffee shop
next door might not renew its lease and it might be possible to
double the square footage available... "

I seemed to hear someone say: Tell her you'll take it.

Who's there? my mind cried. Whothehell is that?

"I beg your pardon?" said Mrs. Mallory.

I shook my head. It was in the back room.

"I know!" she exclaimed brightly. "I'll just let you stay and look the
place over at your leisure, both the store and the apartment, and
you can drop in at my office later with the keys and let me know
what you've decided. "

"That will be fine, " I said. The sound of my voice was distant,
dimmed by my concentration on the detecting ultrasense. It was
coming out of the back room into the main part of the shop. Mrs.
Mallory said some­thing else and then went out, closing the street
door firmly behind her. Dust motes eddied in the brilliant sunbeams
shining through the dis­play window. As I began slowly to turn
around for the confrontation, an idiotic extraneous thought flickered
across my mind: In late afternoon, I would have to make some
provision so that the strong sunlight would not fade the books.

There's an awning. All you have to do is lower it.

"Bordel de dieu!" I spun around, exerting my farsense to the
utmost, and detected an all-too-familiar aura. It had no form, nor
was there anyone visible in the shadowed rear of the shop.

The Family Ghost said: It's been a long time, Rogi. But I had to be
certain that you took this place and not the other.

"Ah, la vache! I might have known... " I stood with one hand braced
against the wall, laughing with relief. "So you've been haunting this
shop, have you?"

The previous tenant was a trifle reluctant to vacate and I had to
insure that the lease would be available. Sometimes it's perplexing,
trying to determine precisely which occasions require my personal
attention. My overview of the probability lattices is by no means
omniscient, and after such a long time my other faculty is
unreliable.

"So! You've made up my mind for me and I'm to be forced to rent
this place even though it's too small. Is that it? My poor little
Eloquent Page and I will go broke just to satisfy your ineffable
whim. "

Nonsense. You'll do well enough if you stock antiquarian books
and forget about the cheap ephemera. The clientele will seek out
your es­tablishment and pay suitably high prices for collector's
items, and you can also do mail-order business... Be that as it may,
it is not your destiny to achieve commercial prosperity.

"Well, thanks all to hell for the good news! As if my morale isn't low
enough, changing careers at the age of forty-five and playing lab-
rat for one nephew while another contemplates offing my ass. "

Victor is otherwise occupied. You need not worry about him.

"Oh, yes? Well, you'd better keep him in line!"

I may not influence him or the other Remillards directly. It would
violate the integrity of the lattices. You are my agent, Rogi,
because you have been influenced. You must live and work here,
in this place that is appropriate, only two blocks away from the
house at 15 East South Street.

I was totally mystified. "Who lives there?"

At the present time, no one who need concern you.

I snarled, "Oh, no you don't!" and pointed a determined finger at
the volume of air that seemed to radiate the aura of le fantôme
Familier. "I'm not standing still for any more of your mysterious
directives from Mount Sinai! You cut the crap and give me a damn
good reason why I should rent this shop instead of the other one -
or find yourself another patsy. "

There was a cryptic silence. Then:

Come with me.

The front door opened and I was firmly impelled out onto the
pave­ment. I heard the locks click. A couple of coeds sitting at a
sidewalk table in front of the little restaurant next door eyed me
curiously. I let the Ghost shepherd me around the corner. It said:

Walk east on South Street.

All right all right! I said rebelliously. For Godsake don't make a
public spectacle out of me!

I - or perhaps I should say we - walked along the quiet side street.
It was only two blocks long, and near Main Street were a few
commer­cial structures and widely separated old homes converted
into offices and apartments. There was very little traffic and only
sporadic bits of sidewalk, so I strolled along the edge of the street,
past landscaped parking lots and mellow frame residences, and
crossed Currier Place. There stood the Hanover public library, a
modernistic pile of red brick, concrete, and glass-wall framed in
enough greenery to allow it to blend unobtrusively with the more
classic buildings around it. Immediately east of the library was a
large white clapboard house with dark green shutters, a modest
portico, and third-floor dormers, set well forward on a thickly
wooded lot that sloped toward a deep ravine in the rear. On a
weedy and unkempt lawn lay an abandoned tricycle. A football and
a yellow Tonka Toy bulldozer decorated the porch, along with a
sleeping Maine Coon cat that resembled a rummage-sale fur
piece. Two hydran­gea bushes flanking the steps still carried pink
papery blooms. No peo­ple were in evidence.

I stood under a scraggly diseased elm and stared at the house that
would one day be famed throughout the galaxy as the Old
Remillard Home. The Ghost said: You will note its convenient
proximity to the bookshop.

I didn't say anything.

The Ghost went on: Six years from now, Denis will buy this house
for his family. Many years later it will be Paul's home -

"Paul?" I said out loud. "Who the devil is Paul?"

Denis and Lucille's youngest son. Marc and Jon's father. The Man
Who Sold New Hampshire. The first human to serve on the
Galactic Concilium.

Starlings were yammering up in the elm and the golden autumn sun
heated the asphalt pavement and gave a faint pungency to the air.
The pleasant old house - as solid and homely a piece of New
Hampshire architecture as one could imagine - seemed to be
drowsing in the late-afternoon calm of this little college town. I
looked at it stupidly while my mind took hold of what the Ghost had
said and tried to digest its import. The "galactic" bit was too bizarre
to penetrate at first, so I seized on a more down-to-earth
improbability.

"Lucille? Marry Denis? You've got to be kidding. "

It will happen.

"Admitted, she's one of his most talented psychic subjects. But the
two of them are hopelessly incompatible - fire and ice. Besides, I
hap­pen to know that she's in love with Bill Sampson, a clinical
psychiatrist at Hitchcock. It's an open secret that they'll marry as
soon as her anal­ysis is complete and there's no ethical conflict. "

The Ghost said: Lucille and Denis must marry and produce
offspring. Both of them carry supravital alleles for high
metafunction.

"Tu paries d'une idée à la con! They don't even like each other.
And what about poor old Sampson?"

An unavoidable casualty of Earth's mental evolution. His wounded
heart will recover. The deflation of the Cartier-Sampson liaison will
be one of your most critical tasks in the months ahead. When
Lucille is free, she will naturally gravitate to Denis, her metapsychic
peer, and the genetic advantage of their union will become self-
evident to her. If it is not, you can discreetly press the point.

"Me? Me?" I was sandbagged by the casual arrogance of the
Ghost. "You think this girl's some kind of computer I can
reprogram?"

You'll find a way to work things out. You must. Sampson is
hope­lessly latent, an unsuitable mate for this young woman who is
so highly endowed with the creative metafunction. It is
unfortunately true that she and Denis have clashing temperaments,
but this is not an insuper­able barrier to a fruitful marriage. Lucille
will be an ideal professional partner for Denis as well. Her drive
and indomitable common sense will counter his tendency to brood
and vacillate. There will be continuing tension between them,
especially in the later years. It is then that your own supportive role
- and your fortuitous proximity - will be most advantageous.

"I'm your mole, you mean! Put into position for continuous
meddling with people who aren't even born yet - isn't that it?" I
pulled myself together. Although the street seemed to be
deserted, it would hardly do for local residents to look out of their
windows and discover a middle-aged loufoque haranguing an elm
tree. I walked on to the east, where the street curved into Sanborn
Road and the wooded precincts of the Cath­olic church.

Sternly, I addressed the Ghost in mental speech: I see very well
the role you intend for me. I am to be your agent provocateur,
interfering with upcoming generations of Remillards like some evil
genius in a goddam Russian novel!

Nonsense. Your influence will be entirely beneficial. You will be
needed. Your qualms are understandable, but they will fade as the
im­portance of your mental nurturing manifests itself.

If I refuse the commission - ?

I cannot coerce you. If your compensatory influence is to be
effective, it must be freely given. The unborn Remillards needing
your help are not ordinary human beings, however, and your
sacrifices on their behalf will have far-ranging consequences.

How... far?

Rogi, vieux pote, I have already said it - but you refused to accept
the implication. And so I will be explicit, so that you will know
exactly what is at stake. You are a member of a remarkable family:
one that will one day be the most important on Earth. Denis and
Lucille's children and grandchildren are destined to become
magnates - leaders, that is - of the Human Polity of the Concilium
of the Galactic Milieu.

"C'est du tonnerre!" I cried, aghast, and my mind asked the halting
question: Are you telling me that we... the planet Earth... will
become part of a galactic organization within my lifetime?

There was a furious honking and a sarcastic voice that called,
"Howsabout it, Charley? You gonna stand in the street till you grow
roots?"

I snapped out of my daze to see a laundry van two feet away from
me in the middle of Sanborn Road. There must have been
something in my face that turned the young driver's impatience to
concern. "Hey - you feeling all right?"

I lifted one hand and hastened onto the sidewalk. "I'm okay. Sorry
about that. "

The driver eyed me uncertainly, then shrugged and drove on.

The Ghost said: My dear blockhead.

You, the entity who reads this, will doubtless think the same of me.
Had not the Ghost told me long ago that it was a being from
another star, that its intentions were benevolent and our family was
of crucial importance? A man possessed of the least modicum of
imagination might have deduced some design behind these
uncanny maneuverings - always supposing that the spectral
puppet-master was real and not the perverted manifestation of my
own unconscious.

I made an attempt to gather my scattered wits. "When will this...
invasion of extraterrestrials happen?"

Never! Rogi, you are a prize idiot! Le roi des cons! Why should we
invade your silly little world? The starry universe is our domain and
our cherished responsibility, and we come to a world only when we
are called.

"Elaine and her people called you, " I muttered bitterly. I reverted
to mental speech when I noticed a workman cutting the lawn of the
church across the street: Why didn't you respond to Elaine's
appeal, mon fantôme? All her people asked was that you bring us
the blessings of your galactic civilization before we're destroyed in
a nuclear holocaust. Wasn't that a good enough reason for you to
bestow your cosmic CARE packages on Earth?

The Milieu does not dare to contact a developing world until the
planetary Mind attains a certain maturity. Premature intervention
would be hazardous.

To whom?

To the planet... and to the Milieu.

Well, don't cut it too fine! Détente's on a fast track to hell again and
every other tin-pot nation in the Third World seems to have an
atomic bomb ready to defend its honor. You wait too long and your
flying saucers might land in a radioactive slag heap!

The likelihood of a small nation detonating a nuclear weapon is
un­fortunately high. But the prospect of full-scale nuclear war
between the great powers is infinitesimal at the present time. The
danger seems destined to escalate with the passage of time, but
my prolepsis indicates that the Great Intervention will almost
certainly take place before your civilization destroys itself.

Well - when do you land, for chrissake?

When there is worldwide recognition of the higher faculties of the
mind, and when those faculties are used harmoniously by a certain
minimal number of humans.

Are you talking about the kind of thing Denis is working on?

Denis and many others. Metapsychic operancy is the key to lasting
peace and goodwill among disparate entities - human and
nonhuman. To know the mind of another intimately is to
understand, to respect, and ultimately to love.

Then all of the citizens of your Galactic Milieu have the higher
men­tal powers - telepathy and psychokinesis and all that?

The spectrum varies from race to race and from individual to
indi­vidual. But all Milieu minds share telepathic communication and
our leadership enjoys formidable insight. In matters of gravity there
can be no duplicity among us, no misunderstanding, no irrational
fear or sus­picion.

No wars?

We have never experienced interplanetary aggression. Our Milieu
is far from perfect, but its citizens are secure from exploitation and
insti­tutionalized injustice. No individual or faction may flout the will
of the Concilium. Every citizen-entity works toward universal
betterment at the same time that it is encouraged to fulfill its
personal potential. Ultimately, the goal of our people is to obtain
that mental Unity toward which all finite life aims.

"Grand dieu, " I whispered. "Ça, c'est la meillure!" Without thinking,
I had turned left onto Lebanon, a major thoroughfare. My heart
soared like that of a six-year-old on Christmas morning. I had thrust
aside all my doubts as to the authenticity of the Ghost. If it was a
figment, its delusions were comforting ones. I asked:

How many planets belong to this Milieu?

Thousands. Our present coadunate population includes some two
hundred thousand million entities - but only five races. This is a
very young galaxy. Eventually, all thinking beings within it who
survive the perilous ascent of technology's ladder will find Unity
with us. My own race, which was the first to attain coadunation (the
mental state leading to Unity) has the honor and the duty of guiding
other peoples into our grand fellowship of the Mind. Nearly a
quarter of a million juvenile races are currently under observation,
and six thousand of those have a high civilization... but you humans
are the only candidates approach­ing induction.

Jesus Christ! When I tell Denis -

You will tell no one, least of all Denis. These revelations are for
your own encouragement, given because you demanded of me
good reasons for your continuing cooperation.

Denis deserves to know!

He would be distracted from his great work. He must go on his own
way for now, assisted by you in secret. His trials - and there will be
many - will be his incentive.

God, you're a cold-blooded bastard! Suppose I tell him in spite of
you?

Denis would not believe you. You are being very silly, Rogi. Your
obtuseness wearies me.

"Sometimes, " I whispered with a certain malicious satisfaction, "I
get pretty sick of me, too! Poor Ghost. You picked a weak reed for
your galactic shuffleboard game. "

There was a spectral chuckle: I myself have had my own ups and
downs... but here we are in front of the real-estate office. Mrs.
Mallory awaits your decision on the bookshop rental.

I felt in my hip pocket for the two keys she had given me, one for
the Gates House store and one for the apartment upstairs. The two
pieces of brass were cool in my hand. God knew what they would
unlock in my future.

The Ghost said: I have a small token for you. Look in the gutter.

I did, and there among the leaves and pebbles and gum wrappers
was a gleam of red. I picked up a dusty little key ring. At the end of
its short silvery chain was a novelty fob, a red glass marble of the
type we kids used to call "clearies, " enclosed in a wire cage.

Well? asked the Ghost.

Don't rush me, dammit! I said. Then I opened the office door and
went in to sign the lease on my haunted bookshop.



14

HANOVER, NEW HAMPSHIRE, EARTH

22 DECEMBER 1990



the test chamber was heavily insulated against sound, temperature
change, and extraneous electromagnetic radiation. Its air was
filtered and its lighting dim and blue, which latter turned the ruddy
color of the kitten's fur to grizzled gray and its amber eyes to
smoky topaz. In the ceiling were video and cine cameras, radiation
detectors, and other environmental monitors, focused on the cat
and on Lucille Cartier. The young woman, wired with body-function
electrodes, sat in a chair at one end of a heavy marble balance
table. The kitten perched opposite her on the table top; the twin
EEG transmitters mounted near the inner base of its ears were
only two millimeters in diameter and almost completely concealed
by the fur. On the table between Lucille and the cat was the
ceramic platform of a hermetically sealed, ultrasensi­tive recording
electro-balance. It looked rather like a medium-sized cheeseboard
with a glass dome cover.

Vigdis Skaugstad's telepathic voice said: Ready Lucille?

Lucille said: Steady&ready. Minou too.

The kitten said: [Play?]

Lucille said: Soon now wait be good.

Vigdis said: Systems running scale hot GO.

A white baby spot flashed on, illuminating the glass-covered
balance plate. Simultaneously the blue lighting faded away, leaving
most of the room in darkness. Lucille began to hum monotonously.
She was still only imperfectly operant in creativity and the music
helped to suppress her insistent left brain and induce the
necessary lowering of the intercerebral gradient. She stared at the
dazzling balance plate, trying not to "will" too forcefully, urging the
primal power that resided in her unconscious mind to flow toward
the controlling conscious. In this way primitive humanity had
summoned its gods, worked its magic, achieved transcendence,
even compelled reality: by bridging unconscious and conscious,
right brain and left, in this subtle, quasi-instinctual way that had
been all but lost with the advent of the conquering word.
Verbalization, a left-brain function, had given birth to human
civilization - but at a price. The ancient creative powers were
repressed, and lived on mainly in the archetypal guise of muses,
those flashes of artistic inspi­ration or illuminating insight that
welled up from the soul's depths almost without volition. And the
old magical aspects of creativity, the ability to direct not only the
"mental" dynamic fields but also the fields generating space, time,
matter, and energy, were relegated to the dream­world in most
individuals.

It had been so for Lucille Cartier until four months earlier. Then,
bowing at last to the counsel of her analyst, she had agreed to
undertake training at the Dartmouth Metapsychology Laboratory
that would raise her latent mind-powers to operancy. "The faculties
are part of you, " Dr. Bill Sampson had told her, "and you'll have to
accept the fact. And learn to control them - or they'll control you. "

So she had come at last to the gray saltbox building. To her great
relief, Denis Remillard had assigned her a congenial and
nonthreatening mentor. Vigdis Skaugstad was a visiting research
fellow from the Uni­versity of Oslo, a specialist in psychocreativity.
She was thirty-six, pug-nosed and rosy, with very long flaxen hair
that she braided and wound about her head in a coronet. Vigdis's
own psychic talents were unex­ceptional, but she was a gifted
teacher; and her tact and empathy had led Lucille to overcome
most of her deep-seated repugnance toward the research
program - if not her dislike of its young director. Working with
Vigdis, Lucille had learned telepathy very easily. This most verbal
of the higher powers quickly assumes a "hard-wired" status in the
brain of a talented person, as do most of the related ultrasenses.
But Lucille's other significant faculty, creativity, had required a
tedious, almost Zenlike regimen to raise it to the operant level. It
was still far from reliable. Lucille took training exercises almost
every day from Vigdis, and at the same time worked toward her
doctorate in psychology. Thus far she had sedulously avoided
socializing with other operants, except for an occasional lunch with
Vigdis.

The laboratory cats, on the other hand, were her dear friends.

The animals were used in many different experiments, especially
those involving telepathy, a feline long suit. Lucille's special affinity
with the cats had at first provoked jokes among the staff about
witches and their familiars; but the joshing had cut off in short order
when Lucille seemed to establish a genuine mental linkage with
one partic­ular kitten, leading to an apparent creativity manifestation
that was having its first controlled test today.

"Ooh, Minou, " Lucille crooned aloud. And to the cat: Let's do it
baby you and me let's do it together again... together Minou!

The kitten's large ears swiveled and its pupils widened as it stared
fixedly at the shielded balance platform. It saw the image in
Lucille's mind and it knew what she was trying to accomplish.

So it helped.

"Minou, Minou, ooh-ooh, " sang Lucille.

The little animal's whiskers cocked forward in anticipation. It
ut­tered a barely audible trilling sound, the hunting call of the
Abyssinian breed, and its black-tipped tail twitched. Except for its
relatively large ears and eyes, its conformation and color were
almost exactly those of a miniature puma.

"Ooh-ooh-ooh. " Here it comes kitty here it comes...

The insubstantial image, brought forth from Lucille's memory.

[Amplified by kittenish predatory lust. Oh, fun!]

A smudgy cloud had begun to form above the center of the
ceramic balance pan. It was ovoid, smaller than an egg, with a
pointed anterior and a humped posterior.

"Ooh!"

[JumpjumpNOW!]

Impatiently, the kitten darted forward and batted the glass dome.
The psychocreative image shimmered as woman and cat faltered
in their mental conjunction, then sharpened as they drew together
again.

"Ooh-ooh, naughty Minou, not yet wait until we're through. " Good
baby yes work with me sit still help MAKE IT keep it under the
glass don't let it get away until it's here stay stay work with me...

[Mouse!]

Yes.

[MOUSE!]

The form was still translucent, in the early stage of materialization
that Vigdis Skaugstad had called "ectoplasmic Silly Putty. " But the
mousy shape was entirely plausible and becoming more detailed
with passing seconds. Snaky little tail. Jet-bead eyes. Tiny ears
and whiskers - shadowy, yet, but placed where they belonged.
(And how many patient hours had Lucille spent beside the cage in
the critter room of the Gilman Biomedical Center, committing those
anatomical details to memory so that her mind's eye and creativity
function would be able to resummon them whenever she
commanded it... )

The illusion became opaque. It settled onto the ceramic balance
plat­form beneath the glass dome. It had four feet with claws, a fur-
clothed body that shone sleek under the bright spotlight.

[Warmth of MOUSE smell of MOUSE twitchy allure of MOUSE!]

The kitten crouched, waggling its rump, stamping its hind feet in
preparation for the spring -

"Nooh-ooh, ooh-ooh. " Not yet Minou not yet wait baby you can't
get at it under the glass wait soon soon...

Abruptly, the read-out on the electro-balance went from zero to
0.061 µg. The mouse simulacrum began to move, its eyes
sparkling and its nose sniffing. It scuttled obliquely off the pan and
went through the thick lead glass of the dome cover, heading for
the table edge.

The kitten sprang.

Squeee!

[Gotcha!]

The psychocreative mouse vanished.

Lucille Cartier sat back in her chair and sighed, while the room
light­ing brightened to normal incandescent and the Abyssinian
kitten bounded about, searching for its elusive prey. The test-
chamber door opened and Vigdis Skaugstad came in, all smiles.

"Wonderful, Lucille! Did you notice the mass gain?"

"Not really. I was too busy making the mouse squeal. Minou is so
disappointed if it doesn't. " Lucille reached into the pocket of her
flannel skirt and took out a little ball with a bell in it, which she threw
to the kitten. Her face was weary and her mind dark.

Vigdis began to disconnect the body-function monitors that had
been pasted to the human subject. The kitten abandoned the ball
to mount an attack on the dangling electrodes.

"No no, kitty, " Vigdis scolded. "Behave yourself-or maybe next
time we wire you. "

"Minou wouldn't cooperate then, " Lucille said, disentangling the
small paws. "She won't perform unless the experiment is fun. I
should be so lucky. "

"It was hard on you?" Vigdis's kind, china-blue eyes were
surprised. "But you said doing the materialization was always an
amusement for the two of you - and your heart and respiration level
were not signif­icantly elevated during the activity. "

Lucille shrugged. "But now we aren't just playing. The mouse isn't
just a pounce toy, it's an experiment with the data all recorded for
analysis. "

"But the experiment was a great success!" Vigdis protested. "And
not just the materialization - although it was the best you have ever
done - but the fact of the metaconcert! This is our first
experimental confir­mation of two minds working as one. Your EEG
and the cat's were like music, Lucille! I shall write a paper:
'Evidence of Mental Synergy in a Human-Animal Psychocreative
Metaconcert. ' "

"That's a new term, isn't it? Metaconcert?"

"Denis coined it. So much more stylish than mind-meld or tandem-
think or psi-combo or those other barbarisms you Americans are
so fond of, don't you think?"

Lucille only grunted. She stood up, transferring the kitten to her
shoulder.

Vigdis said, "We shall have to repeat the experiment, and similar
ones. Eventually, we will want to try the metaconcert with you and a
powerful human operant, such as Denis. "

At the door, Lucille whirled around. "Not on your life!"

"But he would be the best, " Vigdis said, gently reproving.

"Not him. Anybody but him!"

"Oh, my dear. If there were only some way I could help you to
over­come your antagonism toward Denis. It was all a
misunderstanding, your earlier feeling that he was trying to force
you to participate -"

"I have the greatest respect for Professor Remillard, " Lucille said,
heading out into the hall. "He's brilliant, and his new book is a
mas­terpiece, and he's had the good taste to let me alone during
most of my work here. Let's keep things that way... Now I'll take
Minou home, and then I'm off to finish my Christmas shopping. "

Vigdis followed as Lucille headed for the Cat House, an opulently
furnished playroom where the resident animals ran free. "Lucille,
I'm sorry but there is something you must do first. I didn't want to
upset you before the run, but it is very important that you speak to
Denis before you leave for the Christmas break. He is waiting for
you in the coffee room. "

Oh Vigdis!

Lucille you must. Please.

"If he has any more friendly admonitions about Bill, I'm going to be
awfully pissed, holiday season or not!" Lucille stormed. "I've had
enough flak from my family without Denis adding his contribution. "

"The conference has nothing to do with Dr. Sampson. It is an
entirely different matter."

"Good, " said Lucille shortly. Then she relented at Vigdis's hurt
reac­tion to her asperity and apologized. "Don't take me seriously.
I'm still tensed up over the experiment... Did I tell you Bill wanted to
give me a diamond for Christmas? His late mother's ring. But I
refused. As long as I'm still his patient, there mustn't be even a hint
of - of our com­mitment. But the analysis is nearly complete. "

She opened the Cat House door and bent down to put Minou
inside. The place harbored five Maine Coon cats, three Siamese,
and two other Abyssinian kittens, all breeds noted for metapsychic
precocity. The animals lounged on carpeted ledges and shelves,
peered from padded lairs, slept in baskets, clambered up feline
gymnastic equipment, and lurked amid a well-chewed jungle of
potted plants. Minou ignored the lot and made a beeline for the
feeding station.

"Is it your family's disapproval of Dr. Sampson that makes you so
downhearted?" Vigdis asked, bending to scratch the head of a
Siamese that had come to caress her ankles.

"They're being very pigheaded, and it's so damned unfair! I
thought they'd be happy when I told them Bill wanted me to marry
him. "

"A psychiatrist and his patient, " Vigdis murmured. "There are
ethi­cal considerations -"

"To hell with that! And that's not what's bugging Mom and Dad.
They don't want me to marry anyone. " They don't understand they
only know their own stupid fear and Bill the doctor was supposed
to cure me of it exorcise it make me normal like them and instead
he loved it loved me and they can't stand that it proves them wrong
and proves me good and lovable and them wicked because they
hate and fear me and they'll be sorry Bill and I will make them feel
so small so ashamed make them burn with shame burn burnburn
BURN WITH SHAME -

The cats shrieked.

As if some switch had been thrown, the room exploded in a clamor
of tormented kitten squeals, full-throated Siamese yowls, and the
lynx-roars of frenzied Coon cats. The women dashed out into the
hall and slammed the door.

"Uff da! "said Vigdis.

Lucille had gone white. "I'm so sorry! The poor little things! God -
will I ever get this thing under control?"

Vigdis put an arm about the trembling girl. "It's all right. Your
cre­ativity was energized inadvertently. You must expect that to
happen sometimes when you are tired or stressed. The cats were
not harmed, only frightened. "

Lucille repeated dully, "I'm sorry. I'm sorry. " Sorry my mind is
per­verse sorry my folks don't like Bill sorry they fear me does Bill?
sorry they don't love me but just let him love me -

Lucille be strong. You want to be loved of course so do we all.

I think... he may be afraid too.

Yes. He may. You must face that. Your Bill is a normal.

He understands!

He is twice your age an experienced clinician yes he very likely
does understand and I am sure he loves you very much even if he
is also afraid. But normal! Oh Lucille my child I should tell you... but
how can I? Your parents may have known in their hearts loved you
more than you realized... but how can I tell you how -

What?

Lucille... I loved a normal man. We married before my faculties
became operant under the tutelage of Professor MacGregor but
then afterward the difference the terrible difference I did not want
to believe what the wisest operants warned me about I knew my
love would be strong enough but in the end Egil divorced me the
price paid for becoming operant is permanent alienation from
normal human attachments.

I don't believe it!

It is true.

It can't be... the way you said. Bill loves me! He knows exactly what
I am and he loves me.

He cannot know you. Your mind is closed to him. Your true self will
always be unknown and you can only love him rejecting lying -

"No!" Lucille said aloud.

The cats had fallen silent and the old building creaked in the
blus­tering wind. Somewhere in an empty office a telephone rang
five times before being switched to the answering machine.

Vigdis said, "It's getting late - nearly six. I must go back to the test
chamber and finish up. " Her mind had veiled itself, withdrawn from
the younger woman's defiance. "Please don't forget to meet with
Denis before you leave. "

Vigdis hurried away and Lucille stood there for several minutes,
seething with resentment, before going downstairs to the room on
the main floor that had once been the kitchen of the saltbox and
now served as a coffee room for the research staff. It had been
furnished with cast-off furniture. To honor the holiday season, there
was an eighteen-inch spruce tree decorated with multicolored
LEDs sitting on an old lab cart in front of the window.

As Lucille entered the room, Denis Remillard turned away from the
coffee machine near the Christmas tree, holding two steaming
cups. Of course he must have known exactly when she would
arrive...

"Good evening, Professor Remillard, " she said stiffly. "Dr.
Skaugstad said you wanted to see me."

"Sugar?" Denis lifted one of the cups. "The half-and-half is all
gone, I'm afraid. "

"Black is fine. " As if you didn't know!

As always, his mind was fathomless below its socially correct
over­lay. He was dressed for the weather in a red buffalo-plaid
shirt, corduroy pants, and Maine hunting shoes from Bean's - an
incongruously boyish bête noire who held out the coffee mug to
her with a noncommittal smile. His awful blue eyes were averted,
watching the snow outside the window.

"They say we'll get another eight inches before tomorrow. It'll be
rough for travel. "

Lucille said, "Yes. "

"I'm glad that your creativity run was successful. The implications
of the mass pickup on the simulacrum are almost more intriguing
than the metaconcert effect. "

"Vigdis has staked out the metaconcert paper, " Lucille said
sweetly. "That leaves the mass gain for yours. "

Denis nodded, still looking out the window. "You might be
interested in an article in the current issue of Nature. A man at
Cambridge has suggested a mechanism for the psychophysical
energy transfer, based on the new dynamic-field theory of Xiong
Ping-yung. "

"No doubt the Chinese Einstein will connect us mind-freaks to the
real universe in due time, and the Triple-A-S will heave a great sigh
of relief. But if you don't mind, I'll give the six-dimensional math and
lattice-construct theory a miss for now. Too many other things to
think about. " She set her coffee down, untasted. "Just what was it
you wanted to discuss with me, Professor?"

"A certain problem has come to light. " Denis spoke slowly,
keeping his tone casual. "At parapsychology establishments in
California, New York, Virginia, and Pennsylvania, workers have
been approached and offered enormous salaries as an
inducement to join a secret unit being formed at the Psychological
Warfare School of the Army Research and Development Center at
Aberdeen, Maryland. Persons who declined - and we believe most
did decline - were then subject to great pressure by the Army
representatives. In several cases, the pressure amounted to virtual
blackmail. The more polite decliners were urged to set up a
psychic-research data pipeline to the Pentagon. The military is
partic­ularly interested in the areas of excorporeal excursion, long-
distance coercion, and the psychocreative manipulation of
electrical and elec­tronic energy. "

"The bastards!" Lucille exclaimed. "It's the atomic weapons thing
all over again! Whether we like it or not, we're going to be used -"

We are not.

She gaped at him. He turned from the window so that his eyes
caught hers for an instant like a cobra mesmerizing a rabbit. An
instant later he lowered his gaze and she was left floundering.

He said, "The human mind is not a docile piece of machinery,
Lucille - especially not the mind of an operant metapsychic.
Perhaps some time in the future we operants may learn to disguise
our thoughts so thoroughly that we can deceive one another readily
in moral matters - but that time hasn't come yet. Any operant
sympathetic to this insane Mind Wars concept will be expelled
from our research projects. Sent to Coventry. Thank God the point
is moot thus far. "

"You're positive nobody's gone over?"

"Nearly so. However, if certain overzealous Pentagon types
discover just how close we really are to psychic breakthroughs of
global importance, they may resort to more dangerous tactics. The
advent of excorporeal excursion alone will turn foreign policy on its
ear... So we won't be able to remain passive in the face of this
threat. The people at Stanford are going to blow the whistle on the
dirty recruitment tactics - especially the attempted extortion. When
the scandal breaks, public and Congressional outrage will dig the
grave for the Army's Mind Wars scheme. "

"And then they'll leave us alone?"

"I'm afraid not. I'm certain that the military will continue to try to
penetrate our research groups for intelligence purposes. But I'm
deter­mined that this will not happen here at Dartmouth, where so
many strong operants are concentrated. So far, we seem to be
secure. Very few normals outside of the college administration are
aware of what we actually do, and I've examined all of our workers
and operant subjects without finding a single person who was
suborned by Pentagon head-hunters. That is - I've examined
everyone except you. "

"Well, nobody's tried to buy me or dragoon me. God help them if
they tried!"

"I have to be sure of that, " said Denis.

"You -what?"

The eyes took hold of her again.

"I must be quite certain. "

He set his coffee mug down beside the little Christmas tree and
closed the distance between them. His psychic barricade, that wall
of impreg­nable black ice, was dissolving now and she could see
for the first time a hint of the mentality that lay behind. It was even
worse than she had feared. The coercion was impossible to resist,
as cold and impersonal as the northeast wind driving the blizzard.
What a fool she had been to think that he had tried to coerce her
before! He'd done nothing - only talked, exerted ordinary
persuasive force. She had been left free, then, to make her own
choice.

Now there was no choice.

Dissolving, berating herself, helpless before his invasion, she
could only watch as he posed the questions and read the replies
her mind passively delivered up. Humiliated, too supine even to
rage, she found herself suddenly alone; and her only memory was
of a mind-voice, as unexpected as a razor cut:

Thank you Lucille. All of us thank you. We're very glad that you are
one of us...

The window drew her like a magnet. She pressed her nose against
the frosty pane and looked out into tumultuous white. The snow-
bleared red of his Toyota's taillights shone at the exit of the parking
lot and then disappeared.

She was all alone in the laboratory building. A curl of vapor arose
from her neglected coffee cup, sitting beside the empty one Denis
Remillard had left behind. The Christmas tree blinked against the
back­drop of the storm.

One of them.

Am I one of them?

Lucille turned out the room lights, leaving the little tree lit, and went
upstairs to make her peace with the cats before going to supper.



15

EDINBURGH, SCOTLAND, EARTH

11 APRIL 1991



A classic scotch mist fell on the tenements and closes of Old
Town, rendering the quaint streetlighting even more inadequate
than usual, but the two persons who stalked Professor James
Somerled MacGregor had no difficulty at all keeping track of him.
His gangly figure was a blazing beacon to the psychosensitive as
he tramped through the murk, haloed by a raging crimson aura
lanced with occasional fresh bursts of white indignation. His
subvocal thoughts, more often than not, were broadcast
heedlessly on the declamatory mode.

Two million quid! The bloody cheek of it!

Oh, aye! He'd been expecting something like this to happen once
the EE work reached the critical transition from theoretic to
practical. He'd alerted the other metapsychology research
establishments ac­tively studying the function to keep a sharp
watch for attempts at subversion. And now this! The low, furacious
skites hadn't made their move in America or India or West
Germany - they'd tried it here, in Scotland, on his very own patch
that he'd taken such pains to secure!

Of course loyal Nigel had told the CIA where to stuff their fewking
proposition. Whereupon the spooks had piled insult upon insult by
telling him that he couldn't hope for a better offer from MI5, who
were hamstrung by recent budget cuts. Then they'd hinted that he
would enjoy life a lot more in a nice Maryland condominium than in
a guarded compound in the Negev Desert or a GRU facility on the
outskirts of beautiful metropolitan Semipalatinsk!

Small wonder that Nigel's creative metafaculty had run slightly
amok at that point, setting the Yanks' attaché cases on fire and
prompting their hasty withdrawal. Nigel had bespoken his boss at
once, and he and Jamie had held a council of war in Nigel's
Canongate rooms, with the windows open to disperse the stench
of scorched cordovan, and tum­blers of Laphroaig to calm their
righteous ire. Now that the security of the Edinburgh
Parapsychology Unit was compromised, there seemed little hope
that they could continue on the cautious schedule of action
championed by Denis Remillard and Tamara Sakhvadze and the
other operant conservatives, who advocated delaying the public
announce­ment of EE capability until there were at least a thousand
adept prac­titioners scattered around the world. This move on
Nigel by the CIA meant that other intelligence agencies would soon
be homing in on the EE workers. Once the world militarists
became aware of the advanced state of EE, they might risk a
neutralization scheme of draconian scope in order to preserve the
strategic status quo.

The only thing for it was to do a media demonstration just as soon
as possible.

Once the news was out, the risks would be diminished - if not quite
eliminated. World opinion would help safeguard the adepts from
any blatant pogrom or conscription attempt. Yes... that was the only
way to go. There'd be resistance from Tamara and Denis to
overcome. Their timetable had been carefully reasoned. And
Denis would certainly balk at participation in a demonstration, since
he'd stuck his neck out so far in the publication of Metapsychology.
Right, then - Jamie would gladly put his own cock on the block.
They'd do the media demo right here at Edinburgh University.
Probably take until autumn to set it up. Mean­while, they'd all have
to take precautions, just as young Alana Shaunavon had urged that
very afternoon. Curious, her having that premonition of danger...

As Jamie squelched along, cogitating, he was oblivious of other
pe­destrians on the High Street. There weren't many, since it was
nearly one in the morning and the mist was thickening to drizzle.
Normally, he would have taken a bus from Nigel's place to his own
home a mile away in the northern New Town, but he'd wanted to
give his anger a chance to cool, besides mulling over what would
have to be done next. Set up safeguards for his own people in the
morning. Then excurse to America and tackle Denis. Or should he
do that as soon as he got home? What time was it in bloody New
Hampshire, anyhow?...

He was just short of North Bridge when the two superimposed
mental images struck him like a physical blow.

Alana!

And the Unknown.

... Alana Shaunavon, his most talented EE adept, shivering with her
witch-green eyes full of apprehension after a perfectly harmless
jaunt to Tokyo, gripping the arms of the barber's chair white-
knuckled and con­fessing that she'd had a flash of dire foreboding.
Impending disaster. He'd reassured her, then forgotten the matter
until Nigel Weinstein alerted him to the attempted subversion. And
now Alana's face sprang to Jamie's mind again - from his memory
or from somewhere else - projecting a second warning...

... that was savagely blotted out by the mental override of the
Un­known. A man, physically present nearby, strongly operant.

Turn right MacGregor into the next close.

The compulsion was irresistibly exerted. The intent was
murderous. Jamie was both stunned and incredulous. An operant
enemy? But that was impossible! Both Denis and Tamara had flatly
assured him that their governments had no operant agents. Denis
had checked Langley many times with his seekersense and
Tamara had subjected the files of both the KGB and GRU to
remote-view scrutiny.

"Who's there?" Jamie called. And then telepathically: What do you
want? Where are you?

Come in here under the archway.

Helpless, Jamie turned off the High Street into the entry of the
close, one of those narrow urban canyons peculiar to Edinburgh's
Old Town that gave access to the warrens of tenement blocks. The
corridor was nearly pitch-dark in the mist. Jamie had no penetrating
clairvoyance that would spotlight the way, no dowsing ability that
might identify the mentality coercing him. He stumbled on irregular
pavement and nearly took a header, then managed to orient
himself by looking up at the sky, which shone a faint golden gray
above the silhouetted roofs and chim­ney pots.

"Who are you?" Jamie demanded. American? Russian?
Sassenach?!

Keep walking.

His footsteps splashed and echoed in a narrow alleyway. He came
out into a broader courtyard where there was a bit of fuzzy
illumination from a building on the right and saw an insubstantial
figure, standing still.

Come closer to me.

What the devil do you want?

Let's just get this over with.

Jamie battled the coercion, reeling like a drunken man, but his
be­traying legs carried him on toward the waiting Unknown. He tried
to shout out loud, but his vocal cords now seemed paralyzed.
Strangely, he was not afraid, only more than ever furious. First
Nigel - now him!

The Unknown held a narrow tube, no larger than a biro, with a faint
metallic gleam. He pointed this at Jamie.

Closer. Closer.

Don't be a bloody fool! Jamie's mind shouted. You won't stop EE
by killing me...

In retrospect, Jamie was never quite sure what happened next.
Strong arms suddenly grasped him from behind and hauled him off
his feet. He got his voice back and uttered a bellow that rang up
and down the close. The Unknown swore out loud, crouched, and
thrust out the cylinder. Jamie heard a sharp hiss. Then he was
wrenched violently to one side by the person who had seized him
and fell in a heap onto the slippery stones, striking his head.
Roman candles popped in the vault of his skull and he heard
running footsteps receding into the distance.

"How're you doing, man? Did he hurt you?"

Dim flame of butane cigarette-lighter. Deep-set eyes and touseled
fair hair glistening in the drizzle. A burly man wearing a duffel coat,
bend­ing over him. A wry but friendly smile.

"I think I'm all right, " Jamie said. "Bit of a bump. "

His rescuer nodded, extended a big hand, and helped Jamie climb
to his feet. Although he was not young he was built like a
stevedore, and he topped Jamie's six feet three inches. He held
the lighter high, and its blue flame gave a surprising amount of
light.

"Your friend the mugger seems to have run off. Did he get your
wallet?"

"No. " Jamie used his handkerchief to dry his wet hands and
ex­plored the lump on his head with caution. "Thanks very much for
your help. "

"Good thing I happened along. Now and again I use this close as a
short cut. Want me to hunt up a policeman?"

"No... it wouldn't do much good, would it? As you said, he's gone.
I'd rather go home. "

"Whatever you say. " The lighter snapped off. "But take my advice
and stick to lighted streets after this. Better yet, take a taxi. You'll
find one back there on the High Street. "

"Yes, well -"

The man in the duffel coat started off in the direction taken by the
fleeing Unknown, calling over his shoulder with conventional good
humor, "Get along now. We'd really hate to lose you. "



"A suggestive remark, that, " Jean commented.

"And with that he was off. " Jamie drew her more tightly against
him, the palms of his hands enclosing her breasts as though they
were talismans through which the healing magic flowed. "And it's
only now, when I'm able to think clearly, that I realize how odd it
was that he was able to see that I was in mortal danger. It's not as
though the operant mugger had a gun or a knife. There was only
the wee tube thing there in the dark. I was certain it'd be the death
of me because the bugger's mind assured me of the fact -but how
did my Good Samaritan know?"

Tell me the answer, said his wife's mind.

My rescuer was an operant too he must have been and that means
of course it's only logical that there should be others but good God
that they should be watching us!

"You aren't inconspicuous, " she said, laughing softly. "As you said
it's logical. "

They lay together, naked before the fire, on a rug she'd made
herself of pieced black and white Islay sheepskins. When he had
come home, raging with worry and fear, she had closed her mind
to him and not permitted him to tell the story until she had
administered the great sovereign remedy there in the dark library,
their private sanctum. Then she'd listened calmly.

He said, "We'll have to work out some ways to guard ourselves,
until the public demonstration can be arranged. All of the EE
adepts will be at risk. Aside from the mysterious assassin, there
are the government agents lurking about. The CIA for certain - and
if the two who talked to Nigel are to be believed, there are
Russians and Israelis and even British agents to worry about... "

"You think they might try kidnaping if other recruitment tactics fail?"

"It's a possibility, " he said somberly.

She kissed his wrist lightly. "What you must do then is steal a
march on the lot of them. For Whitehall, a preview of coming
attractions demonstrating how an EE adept would react to
involuntary sequestra­tion by going out of body and raising a hue
and cry among his col­leagues. For the Yanks, a suggestion that
Whitehall pass on the good word, with a judicious warning against
poaching. For the others, a more devious approach. You and your
colleagues will have to descend to cloak-and-daggering. Excurse
into the appropriate embassies in London - and perhaps in Paris
as well - and find out whether there are any nefarious schemes
being planned against you. If there are take the aforementioned
steps. "

Jamie gave a delighted laugh. "Damn, but you're a cool one!"

She grabbed him by his Dundrearies and pulled his face close.
"Only because I don't think the intelligence people want to harm
you. They don't know enough about you yet, my dear, for that. But
your mystery man, the operant mugger, is something else
altogether. He frightens me, and I have no notion at all how you can
protect yourself from a person like that. He came from nowhere
and vanished back into it. You know nothing of his motives. He may
even have been a madman -"

"No, " said Jamie. "He was sane. "

"Then perhaps he's been frightened off by the other one. We can
pray that it's so. And you can follow your rescuer's advice and take
care not to travel in lonely places. "

"Not while I'm in my body, at least, " he said, and he kissed her
lips, and they lay together for a few minutes more watching the fire
die, and then went off to bed.



16

ZURICH, SWITZERLAND, EARTH

5 SEPTEMBER 1991



the eleven men and one woman who constituted the PRD, the
banking regulatory board of Switzerland, watched without emotion
as the confidential agent known as Otto Maurer showed his
videotape of the photographed documents that verified the nature
of Dr. James Somerled MacGregor's researches.

"It is now confirmed beyond a doubt, " Maurer said, "that the
psychic procedure for remote clairvoyant viewing is reliably
practiced by no less than thirty individuals connected with the
Parapsychology Unit at Edinburgh University, plus an undetermined
number of other persons in other parts of the world who have
made use of the mental program­ming techniques for this - uh -
talent, as perfected by Professor MacGregor and his associates.
Pursuant to my instructions, I have as­sembled other
documentation from the Psychology Department, the Astronomy
Department, and the Office of Media Relations for the Med­ical
School of the University of Edinburgh. This material confirms that
on or about twenty-two October of this year, MacGregor will hold a
briefing for world media announcing... and demonstrating this
psy­chic espionage technique. "

The twelve banking directors uttered varied cries of dismay.
Maurer lowered his head in a momentary gesture of
commiseration, then said, "It is needless to belabor the obvious.
MacGregor's researches effec­tively write 'finis' to the
confidentiality of the Swiss banking system. Additionally,
widespread utilization of psychic espionage will trigger chaos in
every stock market, commodity exchange, and financial insti­tution
throughout the world, opening virtually any transaction to the danger
of public scrutiny... This concludes my report, Messieurs and
Madame, and I await your questions and instructions. "

The woman asked, "This MacGregor - has he any radical political
affiliation? Is he a Red? An anarchist? Or simply an ivory-tower
aca­demic unaware of the potentially disastrous consequences of
his ac­tions?"

"He is none of these things, Madame Boudry. MacGregor is a Scot
and a fierce idealist. It is military secrecy he seeks to demolish by
introduc­ing this psychic spy technique, thinking thereby to
preclude the possi­bility of nuclear war. The collapse of the world
financial structure would seem to him a small price to pay for
peace. "

There was an appalled silence.

A stout, placid-looking man asked, "You have explored avenues of
- of influence that might deter him from his demonstration?"

Maurer nodded. "I have, Herr Gimel, but without conspicuous
suc­cess. He is fearless, in spite of an attempt upon his life last
April and intensive surveillance by a number of state security
agencies. He would be affronted by any attempt at bribery. His
position at the university is impregnable, and his professional
status is beyond reproach so there is no chance of his work being
discredited before or after the fact. "

"His personal life?" Gimel inquired.

Maurer spoke in English. "Squeaky clean. "

The bankers chuckled bitterly. A frail, ill-looking man with burning
eyes leaned toward the agent and quavered, "Are you telling us
that there is no way of stopping this man?"

"No licit way, Herr Reichenbach. "

The invalid clasped the edge of the mahogany table with skeletal
hands. "Maurer! You will have to think about this matter urgently. It
is of paramount importance to us, to your country's continuing
prosper­ity. Find a way to stop this demonstration - or, failing that, a
way to delay it. MacGregor himself is the key to the problem! Do
you under­stand me?"

"I'm not sure, Herr Reichenbach... "

"It is privacy that this psychic madman threatens. A fundamental
right of humanity! This thing you have shown us, this technique of
spying, is a nightmare out of George Orwell that any right-thinking
person would repudiate with horror. You say MacGregor hopes for
peace. I say MacGregor is the greatest menace civilization has
ever known. Think of it. Psychic overseers scrutinizing every action
of business, politics, even our personal lives. Think of it!"

Maurer's eyes swept around the broad-room table. The other
eleven PRD members were nodding their heads in solemn
affirmation.

"Do something, " old Reichenbach whispered. "Think very
carefully, then do something. "



17

FROM THE MEMOIRS OF ROGATIEN REMILLARD



that first year of mine in Hanover was very difficult. There is
inevitably a lot of hard work involved in getting a new business off
the ground, and my Eloquent Page bookshop was strictly a one-
man operation. Early in 1991 I traveled a lot, hitting sales and thrift
shops and jobbers all over New England as I gathered the basic
stock of used fantasy and science-fiction titles that were to be my
specialty. I ordered new books as well - not only fiction but also
science nonfiction of the type that I thought might appeal to my
hoped-for clientele. When spring came and the shop was pretty
well filled I opened the doors to walk-in customers and began to
prepare catalogs for the mail-order trade. Denis and his Coterie
were faithful patrons. They even sent their student subjects along
through subtle application of the coercer's art.

My nephew was always urging me to participate in this or that
ex­periment at his lab, but I invariably declined. The place crawled
with earnest young students, all gung ho for the advancement of
metapsychol­ogy, who made me feel like a scapegrace fogy when
I refused to share their enthusiasm. And then there was the
Coterie. Except for Sally Doyle, who was earthy and
nonjudgmental, and her husband Tater

McAllister, who had a wacko sense of humor in spite of being a
theo­retical physicist, the Coterie did not consist of folks I would
have freely chosen as drinking buddies. They were fanatically loyal
to Denis and his goals and did not suffer the heretical mutterings of
the Great Man's uncle with equanimity. My reluctance to sacrifice
myself on the altar of mental science was viewed as
semitreasonable by Denis's chief associ­ate, Glenn Dalembert, by
Losier and Tremblay, who ran the main operancy test program, and
by the mystic medicine man, Tukwila Barnes. Colette Roy,
Dalembert's wife, reacted to my negativism with the perky
hopefulness of a camp counselor confronting a recalcitrant eight-
year-old. But she moved me not a whit more than did Eric Boutin,
the strapping ex-mechanic, whose toothy grin did not quite conceal
his itch to whip me into tiptop mental shape, for my own good as
well as the good of the cause.

"No thanks, " said I, not giving a flying fuck that I was thereby letting
the side down. I would not accept operancy training. I would not let
them measure my overall PsiQ. I would not even submit to a
simple assay of my metafaculties. (Researchers now tended to
classify the mind-powers under the headings of Ultrasenses,
Coercivity, Psy­chokinesis, Creativity, and Healing - later
broadened to Redaction. )

Maybe someday, I said, lying in my teeth. But not now.

The publicity splash generated by the publication of Denis's book
finally petered out, to my relief, and the media abandoned Hanover
to cover more newsworthy events such as the Mars Mission, the
African plague, and the never-ending Middle Eastern terrorist
attacks. The mys­terious researches of my nephew became strictly
stale potatoes, jour­nalistically speaking - until the Edinburgh
bombshell exploded late in October.

Denis knew it was coming. In spring, MacGregor had tried to enlist
the cooperation of the Dartmouth group, in addition to that of the
Stanford team, for his upcoming demonstration. Denis turned him
down flat, and he tried hard to convince the Scot to postpone the
press conference - or at least make the EE demonstration a
private one for a select group of United Nations representatives. I
only found out what was in the wind by accident, when Denis let
anxiety over what he felt was a premature disclosure leak into the
vestibule of his mind, where I picked it up - and was aghast. If
MacGregor and his people came out into the open with a
demonstration of their powers, linked to a patently political
proposal, other metapsychics would also feel constrained to do
so. Denis's group, beyond a doubt! They would acknowledge their
operancy in support of the idealistic proposal of their fellow
researchers, and when they did my own protective coloration would
be destroyed.

MacGregor had confided to Denis his reasons for deciding to go
ahead; but Denis did not at that time reveal those reasons to me. I
only saw that my nephew had apparently caved in to the pressure
exerted by his older colleague and had abandoned a carefully
orchestrated scheme that would have revealed the existence of
operant minds to the world only after a period of careful
preparation.

Instead, it was to be: Voilà! Like us or lump us.

I was as furious with Denis as I was frightened for myself. We had
a flaming row over the matter that led to our first serious
estrangement. I cursed myself for ever coming to Hanover, where
it was inevitable that I would be drawn into whatever ruckus
attended Denis. My original reason for coming, Denis's fear that
Victor might try to harm me, now seemed to be without foundation.
I had seen Victor only at the Christ­mas and Easter family
gatherings, and he had been distantly cordial. It looked as though
the real danger to me, ironically enough, was going to be Denis
himself! And I was trapped. All my money was invested in the
bookshop and it was too late to set it up elsewhere. I would have to
stay in Hanover.

However, I distanced myself from Denis and the other operants
al­most completely from April, when the Edinburgh matter came to
a head, to October. Swaddled in midlife depression, I overworked,
trying to distract myself and force my infant business into the black.
I stayed open until midnight. I wrote reams of letters to specialty
collectors proffering my wares and inquiring about rarities. I went to
conventions of science-fiction and fantasy fans and peddled my
stuff, making friends and contacts who would be invaluable in later
years. I nearly managed to forget what I was. A mental freak? Not
I, folks! I'm only a humble bookseller. But if you're into the occult, I
might have just the title you're looking for...

It was Don who put an end to the charade.

Throughout the early fall, as my anxiety about the upcoming EE
demonstration increased, I slept very badly. I would awake stiff
with terror, my pajamas and pillow soaked with sweat, but unable
for the life of me to remember the content of the nightmare. Then
October came and the hills flagged their scarlet warning of
approaching winter, and the petunias in the decorative tubs out on
the sidewalks died with the first touch of frost. In the misty dawn,
when I lay in bed in that odd state between sleep and full
wakefulness, I began to feel again the familiar touch of my dead
brother's mind. He had wanted so desperately to be free of me...
but now, without me, he was lost.

I tried to blot out my irrational fantasies in the time-honored family
fashion, just as Don and even Onc' Louie had done before me.
Some­times the drinking helped. As a side effect I suffered a
drastic "psi decline" (for few things are as detrimental to the
metafaculties as overindulgence in alcohol), and this brought
reproaches from Denis, along with tiresome offers of help. I
refused, even though I was quite aware that I needed some sort of
therapy. Somehow I had conceived the notion that to seek
psychiatric help would be to "give in" to Don. I told myself that he
was only a memory. He was dead, prayed over by the Church,
buried in consecrated ground. Thoughts of him could hurt me only
if I let them - and I would not! In time I would conquer him and the
fears we had shared. Time would heal me.

But the bad dreams and the depression and the feeling of hovering
doom that the French-speaking call malheur only sharpened as the
day of the Edinburgh press conference drew nearer. I could no
longer get to sleep at all without drinking myself into insensibility. A
certainty took hold of me that I would end as Don had, a suicide,
and damned. In earlier years I might have prayed. I still went
through the arid formal­ities of religious practice, but only to ward
off additions to my already intolerable spiritual burden. My prayers
had the thin comfort of habit, but lacked the trust in divine mercy
that compels the probability lat­tices...

One day, rummaging through a recently arrived shipment of used
books, I came upon a title that I remembered Elaine burbling over,
a study of yogic techniques. I had smiled when she told me how
the book had "helped her resolution of the death-space. " (Death
had been the furthest thing from my mind in those days!) The
exercises she had described seemed to be mumbo jumbo,
Eastern balderdash. But now in my extremity I took the book up to
my untidy apartment and devoured it in a single reading. The states
promised to the adept seemed analo­gous to the "astronomical
consciousness" of Odd John, that supreme detachment that had
made both the conquest of the universe and death become
irrelevant to him.

So I tried.

Unfortunately, I was not very good at the meditations. They were
too inwardly directed, too chilling to the sanguine Franco soul. Still I
blun­dered on, for if the yogic exercises failed as the alcohol had
failed, what hope was there? The inevitable day would arrive, and
the exposure, and then I would be drawn along with all the rest of
them to the inevitable end.

At the start of his research, Denis had told me that there was only
one assured way that operants could escape the Odd John Effect,
the poten­tially fatal dichotomy between Homo superior and the
less favored mass of humanity. It lay in giving the "normals" hope
that someday they - or their children or their children's children -
might also attain the higher mind-powers. Much of the current work
at Dartmouth was di­rected toward this end, and it was to be the
subject of Denis's next book.

Other research groups in other parts of the world were also
studying the problem, trying to bridge the gap, to demonstrate that
metafaculties were a universal fact of human nature.

Given time, these preparatory efforts might have defused the
normals' perfectly rational fear of us. But there was no time.



18

EDINBURGH, SCOTLAND, EARTH

22 OCTOBER 1991



His mental alarm clock woke Jamie MacGregor at pre­cisely 4: 00
a. m., and he began the most memorable day of his life with a
queasy stomach and aching sinuses. The first could be attributed
to stage fright and a lingering anxiety over the spooks, who might
still be entertaining notions of kidnaping him before he let the EE
cat out of the bag. The second was evidence that his prayer for
just one more day of beautiful October weather had gone
unanswered; the low-pressure trough that had lurked coyly above
the Orkneys for the past week now sat astride Britain, charging the
atmosphere with inimical ions. That might mean that the
demonstration could be adversely affected. Under laboratory
conditions the matter could easily be remedied through ar­tificial
neg-ion generation - but any such fiddle was out of the question
during the public experiments, where the EE faculty had at least to
seem invincible.

Ah, well. If Nigel or Alana experienced problems he would simply
step into the breach himself, and professional modesty be hanged.

It was still very dark. Lying there beside Jean, whose mind cycled
in the serene delta waves of deepest sleep, Jamie MacGregor
addressed the first order of business: banishing the sinus
headache. He relaxed, ad­justed his breathing, then summoned a
picture of the front of his own skull in cutaway. He let gentle
insinuation become a firm command: Decrease histamine
production shrink membranes inhibit mucus se­cretion initiate sinus
drainage LET THERE BE NO PAIN.

It happened.

He savored relief for a few moments, listening to the faint ticking of
sleet against the windowpanes and his wife's gentle snores. Her
stron­gest faculty was the healing, and she had taught it to him and
to their two children and to numbers of their colleagues at
university. The gift was widespread among Celts and many Scots
possessed it suboperantly, with its practice requiring only strong
will power and never a modicum of doubt. It did not seem to matter
whether or not the healer's percep­tion of the ailment's source was
scientifically accurate. Experiments with their own young Katie and
David had proved that - and Jamie had to smile as he recalled
certain bizarre visualizations by the children. Yet if a person
sincerely believed that tiny demons with hammers were the true
source of sinusitis, wishing the evil creatures dead would work a
cure just as surely as his own explicit redactive commands had
done... Outside in Dalmond Crescent an automobile engine
whirred to a reluctant start and settled into a rough idle. The car did
not drive off and Jamie's uneasy stomach reasserted itself. Damn
them! Who was it this time? He cursed his inability to identify
individual auras at a distance. Those lucky enough to possess that
faculty, seekersense adepts such as Denis Remillard or the
Tibetan Urgyen Bhotia, who headed up the Darjeeling
establishment, did not have to fear being stalked or am­bushed by
human predators. But Jamie was blind to mental signatures. There
was only one way he would be able to find out which foreign agent
or British spook had spent a dreary night on station outside his
house and now suffered predawn demoralization that required the
com­fort of a car's heater.

Jamie let his mind go out of body.

He seemed to ascend through the bedroom ceiling, through the
loft, through the roof. He hovered above leafless trees tossing in
the wind and streetlamps glimmering on the dark granite paving
setts. One of the autos parked along the crescent, a Jaguar XJS
HE, had twin plumes of vapor rising from it. Jamie swooped down
to peer inside and saw Sergei Arkhipov, the London KGB resident,
wiping his streaming nose with a sodden handkerchief before
sucking a tot from his nearly depleted flask. The stereo was
playing "Fingal's Cave. " This solitary vigil by an agent of Arkhipov's
high rank undoubtedly meant that the Russians had fi­nally ruled
out a kidnap attempt, even as the Americans had. Sergei was
probably standing by only to make certain that no other faction -
es­pecially the GRU, Soviet military intelligence - got reckless.

Were there other spooks about? Jamie rose high again and began
to search for signs of the Yanks or MI5; but the other parked cars
on the street and in the adjacent mews were empty, and the only
wakeful persons in the neighborhood besides himself and
Arkhipov were Mrs.

Farnsworth and her fretful infant and old Hamish Ferguson,
insomniac again, watching Deep Throat on his VCR.

Jamie's upset stomach responded now to self-redaction and he
re­turned briefly to his own body to prepare for the principal
excorporeal excursion. Jean, sensing his tension, half woke and
sent out a little nonverbal query. He told her: No no it's nothing
sleep lass sleep not quite time to rise for the Big Day...

Then he was off again through the freezing dark, a soul that would
girdle the globe before returning to its physical anchorage. But
first, before crossing the Atlantic, he'd stop at Islay, for Gran.

Storm winds out of the northwest smote the shoulder of the island
squarely, shoving mountainous waves into Sanaigmore Bay. The
farmsteading in its hollow seemed to crouch like a patient, sturdy
beast, back to the gale. To Jamie's mind's eye, refined by the EE
faculty as it never was during short-distance attempts at
clairvoyance, the Hebridean darkness was as lucid as day, except
that there were no colors and the lack of shadows gave the scene
a peculiar flatness. The area lights that usually lit the farmyard at
night were out and the house looked unilluminated as well, alarming
Jamie. But when he glided down and came close he saw the glow
of a paraffin lamp through the kitchen window and a smoky thread
blasted horizontally from the chimney of the ancient, peat-burning
hearth. His older brother Colin and his wife Jean and their grown
son Johnnie, who worked the farm now, were still abed, enjoying
the last precious half hour of rest. But Gran was up getting
breakfast, as was her custom. He heard her humming as she put
another peat on the fire and stirred the porridge.

Jamie said: Gran it's me.

Dear laddie you took the time to come! said she.

For your blessing now that we're ready to show our secret to the
world... I see your electricity's gone out in the storm.

Aye and the fancy cooker and the lights and the closed-circuit telly
to the barn and all the other modern thingamajiks useless until
Colin wakes and starts the Honda generator but he and Jean and
Johnnie will wake to hot food naetheless I cooked over peat for
fifty years and I don't mind doing it now it's a comfort to know the
old ways still have their worth.

... And now some of the oldest of all to be new again Gran.

Affection! To think I'd live to see it! Eighty-one years but not even
my Sight gave me a hint of how it would really be and I'm so proud
so proud.

Well I still have misgivings. If only we could have waited until there
were more as adept at the soul-travel as Nigel Alana and I.

No you could not wait not with Them skulking about Godbethankit
you've been unmolested you must get it into the open then you'll all
be safe.

If the demonstration succeeds.

Now stop that. What have I taught you man and boy for thirty-nine
years but that doubt's the mind's poison causing the powers to
sicken and wane? Shame on ye!

I expect it's all this science that's spoiled me.

Laughter. Now don't be afraid. I See that your showing will bring
about a new world and it's Mother Shipton's joke you see: The
world then to an end shall come in Nineteen Hundred and Ninety-
One.

! So that explains that... still I wish I had the Sight like you and
Alana and your confidence. When I remember what happened
back in April my narrow escape I still get a cald grue if it hadn't
been for that big chap who came along by chance -

So it was chance was it!

Ah Gran.

Ah Jamie. Stop fashing yourself laddie just do what you've
prepared yourself and Nigel and Alana for don't think of the cold
world watching with its mechanical moonlet eyes pretend it's the
first soul-trip just like long years ago a natural thing if a wonder an
old thing cherished in spite of doubts and oppression and now it's
time we showed it proudly and how will you like being a famous
man my own wee Jamie?

You're a cruel old woman to laugh at me when I'm all in a flaughter
but I love you. Now charmbless me in the Gaelic for I must be off
to California and the Antipodes to make sure that all's ready.

Very well: Cuirim cumerih dhia umid sluagh dall tharrid do vho gach
gabhadh sosgeul dhia na grais o mullach gu lar unid ga ghradhich
na fire thu i na millidh na mhuaih thu... I put the protection of God
around you a host over you to protect you from every danger the
gospel of the God of Grace from top to ground over you may the
men love you and the women do you no harm.

Amen! Thank you dear Gran goodbye.

Farewell Jamie my own heart.



As he waited with the throng of journalists to be admitted to the
auditorium of the University of Edinburgh's George Square
Theatre, Fabian (The Fabulous) Finster amused himself by
ferreting out others like himself who had crashed the event with
forged credentials.

The exercise was not difficult. All intelligence operatives live their
waking hours wrapped in a miasma of hair-trigger vigilance and
subacute anxiety. A sensitive like Finster perceived this "loud"
mind-tone as easily as if a neon sign were being worn on the
forehead of the emanator.

So far, he had spotted spooks from France, East and West
Germany, Britain's domestic intelligence service MI5, the Israeli
Mossad, the CIA, and (rather strangely) the Swiss Banking
Regulatory Bureau PRD. Four Soviet GRU agents were among the
sizable press corps from TASS. There was also a lone KGB man
playing a clandestine game whom Finster had contrived to stand
next to. This Russian was a squat, fair-haired man with a nasty
head cold and rumpled clothing. He wore a lapel badge identifying
him as S. hannula - helsingen sanomat.

There was a flutter of action near the theatre's main entrance.

"Look at that!" Finster exclaimed to the counterfeit Finn. "They're
going to let the TV crews into the hall ahead of the working press!
It happens every goddam time. "

A rumble of indignation went up from the less favored media
repre­sentatives. Their protests were partly appeased when some
two dozen young people wearing University of Edinburgh
Psychology Department sweat shirts came out a side door and
began passing out press kits.

The alleged Hannula growled, "Now maybe we will get a clue about
the kind of circus these academic publicity-hounds are planning. "

Considerately, he handed one of the thick information packets to
the little squirrel-faced American next to him, whose ID badge
read: J. smith - seattle post-intelligencer. As the Soviet agent
opened his own packet he was thinking:

But surely it cannot be significant EE breakthrough not coming
from here this oldfashioned ridiculous place they couldnot have
kept data secure most likely merely another crude stunt suchas
MacGregor de­scribed literature but if demonstration not crucial
then why CIA crablice pursuing him&associates try lure to America
HolyMother what awful stuffed head fever perhaps I come down
pneumonia this prickish Scot­tish dampness at least GRU
donkeyfuckers aborted lunatic scheme kid­nap MacGregor
conscript into RedArmy psiresearch overcome KGB ad­vantage
Alma-Ata...

Finster studied his press kit for a few minutes, then asked the KGB
man, "Is there much interest in psychic phenomena in Finland?"

"Oh, yes. That kind of thing is part of the national tradition. We
Finns have been accused of practicing witchcraft by Swedes and
other super­stitious people from time immemorial. " He sneezed
and cursed and made use of a stained handkerchief.

"Gesundheit, " Finster told him cheerfully. (He was getting very
good with other languages. ) "How about your neighbors to the
east? Would you call the Russians superstitious?"

"Hah! They are perhaps the worst of all. " Hannula became very
ab­sorbed in the handout material.

"Not much useful stuff here, " Finster noted. "Will you look at this,
for chrissake? A History of the British Society for Psychical
Research, 1882 to Present. Did my editor send me halfway around
the world for that kinda shit? And this bio-sheet on MacGregor is
hardly anything except summaries of the guy's publications. How's
this for a grabber? 'EEG Beta Activity Correlates Among Six
Subjects During Short-Range Excorporeal Excursions. ' Jeez!"

The Soviet agent managed a perfunctory chuckle. He thought:

Shortrange it must be shortrange source New Hampshire assured
us remoteviewing still unreliable but if so why Americans offer so
much money Weinstein who try assassinate MacGregor April when
idiots allow us enter hall begin sodding demonstration?

"Any minute now, " Finster said absently, still studying the press-kit
material. "Say - here's a choice bit. Did you know that MacGregor's
official title here at Edinburgh University is 'Holder of the Arthur
Koestler Chair of Parapsychology'? This Koestler was a famous
writer, an ex-Commie who wrote about the abuse of power in the
Red Bloc. When he died he left a pile of money to found this
psychic professor­ship. Wouldn't it send up the Russkies if
MacGregor has discovered something big? We all know the Reds
have been trying to develop Mind Wars stuff for twenty, thirty years.
Lately, there've been rumors that they're close to succeeding. "

Hannula was blank-faced. "I have heard nothing about that. "

Finster flashed his chipmunk grin. "I'll just bet you haven't. " He
folded the information packet lengthwise and tucked it into the
Louis Vuitton shoulder bag that contained the tools of his trade -
audiovisual microcorder, cellular telephone with data terminal, and
the seasoned reporter's indispensable steno pad with three Bic
pens. Only the most careful scrutiny would have revealed the illegal
comsat-scrambler hookup on the phone and the needle-gun
charged with deadly ricin concealed within the Bic Clic with the
silver cap.

"Look!" Hannula cried. "Something happens!"

The doors of the auditorium were opening at last. A ragged cheer
arose from the media people waiting in the lobby and the mob
surged forward in a body. Finster called out to Hannula, "Stick with
me, buddy! I always get a good seat!" And somehow the throng
did part minimally to let the dapper little American pass through.
The KGB agent hastened to follow, and the two of them raced
down the center aisle and plopped breathlessly into seats in the
third row. "What'd I tell you?" Finster bragged. "Best seats in the
house. "

Hannula groped beneath his own rump. He extracted a placard that
said: reserved time magazine. Consternation creased his brow.

"Relax, " Finster told him. He took the Russian's sign, together with
one from his own seat that said: reserved corriere della sera, and
tore both sheets to bits. Reporters milling about in search of their
proper places were open-mouthed. Finster's eyes swept over
them. "We have a perfect right to sit anyplace we want. Versteh'?
Capisce? Pigez? You dig?"

The other journalists looked away, suddenly absorbed in their own
affairs.

The hall was jammed with more than a thousand people, and some
of those lurking about the fringes were plainclothes police officers.
Finster pretended to jot down items on his notepad as he
relocated the other spooks. Only the CIA, masquerading as an
SNN Steadicam team, and the TASS crew were more
advantageously placed than Finster and his Soviet acquaintance.
The Brits were clustered fifth row far left. Both sets of Germans
were way in back with the luckless standees - who now included a
distinguished Italian science editor and a hopping-mad Time
stringer. The Israeli agent and the lady from the Direction Générale
de la Sécurité Extérieure were side by side, chatting chummily. But
what had become of the Swiss bankers' spy? Ah. Somehow he
had wormed his way to the very front of the theatre, to the area
between the seats and the platform edge, where he stood
focusing his Hasselblad in the midst of a crush of television
technicians. The fellow's mind was wrapped in feverish excitement,
but because of the distance, it was impossible for Finster to sift out
coherent thoughts. Obscurely troubled, Finster frowned.

"Ah, " breathed Hannula. "It is about to start. "

A white-haired woman in a heather-colored suit had come out onto
the platform and stood expectantly, holding a cordless microphone
at the ready. Behind her was a simple small table with another
micro­phone, and a wooden chair. Hung upstage against a curtain
backdrop was an impressive GPD video screen that measured
four meters by five. It had been flashing enigmatic test patterns
while the audience settled down, but now it had gone blank except
for the digital time display in the lower right-hand corner that
indicated 09:58. No other apparatus was in evidence.

Ready-lights on the TV cameras surrounding the platform began to
wink on like wolves' eyes glittering in fireshine. Technical directors
muttered into headsets, giving last-minute instructions to their
col­leagues who manned a great gaggle of satellite-transmission
vans massed outside on George Square and Buccleuch Place. A
few still-cameras clicked and buzzed prematurely and print-media
people whispered es­tablishing remarks into their microcorders. At
precisely ten o'clock, the university spokeswoman cleared her
throat.

"Good morning, ladies and gentlemen. I am Eloise Watson, the
di­rector of media relations for the Medical School of the University
of

Edinburgh. We would like to welcome you to this special
demonstra­tion and press conference organized on behalf of the
Parapsychology Unit of the Department of Psychology.
Immediately after the demon­stration, questions will be accepted
from the floor. We must ask that you hold all queries until then. And
now, without further ado, let me present the man you have been
waiting to meet - James Somerled MacGregor, Koestler Professor
of Parapsychology. "

She withdrew, and from the wings shambled a tall and loose-
jointed figure. His jacket and trousers of oatmeal tweed were
baggy and nondescript, but he had compensated somewhat for
their drabness with a waistcoat cut from the scarlet MacGregor
tartan. Still-cameras snapped and whirred and TV lenses zoomed
in for close-ups of a lean and wild-eyed face. MacGregor's beaky
nose and thin lips were framed with extravagant Dundreary
whiskers of vivid auburn. His hair, unkempt and collar-length, was
also red. He clutched a sensitive dish-tipped microphone with big
bony hands, holding it up as though it were the hilt of a Highlander's
claymore presented in defiant salute. When he spoke his voice
was gruff, with the barest hint of a lilting western accent.

"What we're going to show you today is a thing that people of a
certain mind have been doing for hundreds of years - perhaps
even thousands. I learned it myself from my grandmother in the
Isles, and I've managed to teach it to numbers of my colleagues.
You'll be meeting some of them today. The phenomenon has been
called out-of-body ex­perience, remote-viewing, astral projection,
even soul-travel. Lately, psychic researchers have taken to calling it
excorporeal excursion or EE. I'll stick to those initials during the
demonstration for the sake of sim­plicity, but you journalists can
call it anything you like - just so long as you don't call it magic. "

There were scattered laughs and murmurs.

Jamie's fierce, dark eyes glowered and the audience fell silent.
"EE isn't magic! It's as real as radio or television or space flight!...
But I didn't invite you here today to argue its authenticity. I'm going
to show it to you. "

He half turned, indicating the huge video screen at the rear of the
platform. "With the kind assistance of the University's Astronomy
De­partment and the GTE Corporation, we have arranged for
several live television transmissions to be beamed exclusively to
this theatre from other locations. I will be able to speak directly to
the persons you will see, using this microphone - but they won't
see me. All they will re­ceive from me is an audio signal, like a
telephone call... Now I think we're ready to begin. "

At a gesture from MacGregor, a balding bearded man in his forties
came on stage, saluted the audience with a wave, and seated
himself at the table. Jamie said, "I'd like to introduce my old friend
and colleague of twenty years, Nigel Weinstein, Associate
Professor of Parapsychol­ogy here at the University. He will explain
his role in a few minutes. But first - may I have the California
transmission, please?"

A color picture flashed onto the screen. A smartly dressed woman
and an elderly man sat in easy chairs before a low glass table.
Opposite was a long settee and behind them potted plants and a
window that appeared to overlook moonlit waters spanned by an
enormous suspension bridge. City lights starred the surrounding
hills. The display in the corner of the screen now read: san
francisco usa 02: 05.

The woman said, "Good morning, Professor MacGregor - and all
of you members of the world media there in Edinburgh, Scotland!
I'm Sylvia Albert and I host the Late-Late Talk Show here on KGO-
TV, San Francisco. We're coming to you live via satellite in a
special closed transmission that was arranged at the personal
request of Dr. Lucius J. Kemp of Stanford University. Dr. Kemp is
no doubt well known to you all as a distinguished brain researcher
and a Nobel Laureate in Medicine ... Will you tell us, Dr. Kemp, why
you're participating in this dem­onstration?"

Kemp had been staring at his clasped hands. Now he nodded very
slowly several times. "Numbers of my colleagues at Stanford have
been involved in parapsychology research for some twenty-three
years. I've watched their progress with great interest, even though
my own work involves a different area of study - one that you might
say is more conventional. "

He looked directly into the camera and leveled an index finger at
his viewers on the other side of the world. "You might say! I say
parapsy­chology is as respectable as any other branch of
psychiatry. Now I study brain cells, things you can see and touch
and measure. But the brain is a peculiar piece of matter that
houses the mind - which we scientists most definitely cannot see
or touch, and which we are only incompe­tently able to measure.
The nature of mind, and its capabilities, are still nearly as
mysterious as outer space. It wasn't too many years ago that the
majority of educated people - scientists especially - dismissed
parapsychology as nonsense. Things aren't that way today, but
there are still skeptics in the scientific establishment who will try to
assure you that paranormal psychic phenomena are either
nonexistent or else freakish effects without practical value. I am not
one of those scientists..."

The screen in the Edinburgh lecture theatre was now filled with the
Nobel Laureate's face, copper-brown skin stretched over high
cheek­bones, black eyes narrowed with the intensity of his
emotion, a few drops of perspiration trickling from the snowy wool
of his hair onto his broad forehead. Then he flashed a brilliant
smile.

"Because of that, the parapsychology researchers at Stanford
nailed me! They asked for my help with this experiment, and they
got it. That's why I'm here in the wee hours of the morning along
with Miss Albert and the director and crew of her show and the
three impartial witnesses we've asked to assist us. "

The camera pulled back again and the talk-show hostess rapidly
ex­plained how the experiment was going to work. The three
witnesses had each been asked to bring a small card with a picture
or a few lines of writing. The subject of the card was to be known
only to them, and they had sealed it inside three successive
envelopes. The witnesses now waited in the TV studio's green
room, where guests assembled before being taken on stage for
their interviews. There were no cameras in the green room and the
monitor there had been disconnected.

Now Jamie MacGregor asked, "Miss Albert, is it true that there is
no means of outside communication in this green room? No
telephones or radio equipment?"

"None whatsoever, " she said.

"Very good. I want to be sure that the journalists with us here in
Edinburgh understand that. Go on, Lucius. Tell us what your own
part in the experiment will be."

"I'll wait, " Kemp said, "until you tell me that your colleague, Dr.
Weinstein, is ready to undertake a remote-viewing of those cards
the three witnesses have hidden away on their persons. When you
give me the word, I'll go to the green room and stand in the
doorway. I'll ask the witnesses to take out the envelopes and hold
them up, un­opened, for two minutes. After that they'll accompany
me back here to the cameras, envelopes still unopened. And then
we'll see, won't we?" He smiled.

"Aye, we certainly will, " Jamie said. "Thank you, Lucius. "

The audience in the theatre let out a collective sigh. Seats creaked
as many of them hunched forward. Jamie was holding a whispered
collo­quy with Nigel. The KGB agent turned to Finster and
whispered, "If this works - great God, the repercussions!"

"You can say that again, " the Mafia's man agreed. "In Finnish. "
Nigel picked up his own microphone. He was still seated at the
table, while Jamie had withdrawn to the left side of the platform.

"I'm afraid, " Weinstein said, his expression mischievous, "that
your worst suspicions are about to be confirmed. I'm going into a
trance. " Tension-relieving laughter.

"Usually we do this EE business in a soundproofed room to avoid
distraction. We relax in a kind of glorified barber's chair equipped
with monitoring gadgets that tell what our brains and bods are up to
while our minds go soaring through the blue empyrean... but that
wouldn't do today. We want you to see how ordinary EE can be.
But I warn you - don't cough or drop your pencils or crack chewing
gum while I'm off, or I just might crumble to dust before your eyes
like Dracula in the sun-light. "

More laughter. Then total silence.

Nigel had closed his eyes and was breathing slowly and deeply.
Up on the giant video screen the American scientist and the talk-
show hostess waited.

"Ready, " said Nigel in a flat voice.

Jamie spoke into his microphone. "You may go to the green room
now, Lucius. "

The California camera followed Kemp into the studio wings, where
he vanished amidst a clutter of equipment. Then it swiveled back to
Sylvia Albert and held. Twenty-six seconds clicked by on the digital
display.

Nigel's eyes opened. "Got it, " he said simply.

Jamie went to the platform edge. "Would one of you be so kind as
to pass up a sheet of paper and something to write with?"

A BBC technical director thrust up a yellow sheet and a pencil.
Jamie nodded his thanks and passed them on to Nigel, who
scribbled energet­ically for a few minutes. Then he gave the sheet
back to Jamie, who returned it to the BBC man, saying, "Hold on to
that. We'll want you to read it shortly. "

Almost nine thousand kilometers away, the two minutes having
passed, Dr. Kemp was returning to the talk-show set leading two
women and a man. The newcomers sat down at the glass table
and placed their sealed envelopes in front of them.

Sylvia Albert said, "May I present our guinea pigs! Lola McCafferty
Lopez, Assistant District Attorney for San Francisco County;
Maureen Sedgewick, Associate Editor of the San Francisco
Chronicle; and Rabbi Milton Green of the B'nai B'rith Hillel
Foundation of the University of California at Berkeley... Now, will
you tell us what results you have, Professor MacGregor?"

Jamie leaned down to the BBC crewman. "Sir, would you please
read out what Dr. Weinstein wrote?" He reversed his microphone
so that the tiny parabolic receiving dish at its tip was aimed at the
technician.

"First card, " came the man's voice clearly. "From a Monopoly
game: GO DIRECTLY TO JAIL, DO NOT COLLECT $200. "

The audience roared as on the screen, the attorney ripped open
her multiple envelopes and showed the card. The cartoon face
peering through bars loomed in an extreme close-up.

"Second card, " the BBC man read. "Handwritten quote from
Shakespeare: 'To be, or not to be: that is the question. ' "

The Edinburgh audience was murmuring loudly. As the California
camera zoomed in for the second confirmation the noise swelled
to a clamor. Jamie lifted his arms. "Please! There's still Rabbi
Green's card. "

The BBC man read, "Picture postcard of planet Earth taken from
space with handwritten note on back: 'Let there be light. ' "

Instead, there was bedlam.

The false reporter from the Helsingen Sanomat covered his face
with his hands and groaned, "Yob tvoyu mat'!" Finster appended,
"In spades, tovarishch. "

While the hubbub quieted, Jamie gave brief thanks to the California
participants and the screen blanked out. Almost immediately it was
replaced by a new image, a stark newsroom desk backed by a
station logo: TV-3 auckland. A comfortably homely man and a
blond young woman with an abstracted Mona Lisa smile sat close
together at one end of the desk. The time was 20:18.

"Good evening, Professor MacGregor! Ron Wiggins here, with
your graduate student Miss Alana Shaunavon, who flew in on Air
New Zealand SST from London earlier today. Alana, tell us just a
little bit about yourself. "

"I'm a doctoral candidate in parapsychology at Edinburgh
University, where I work with Professor Jamie MacGregor. There
are thirty-two of us at the Unit, in various stages of training for EE -
excorporeal excur­sion. I was chosen to come here and attempt to
view a message written by a member of the audience there at the
Edinburgh press conference. " Ron Wiggins gave a worldly
chuckle. "Well, we'll give it a fair go!... And here to keep a sharp
eye on things are Bill Drummond of the Auckland Star, Melanie Te
Wiata of the New Zealand Herald, and Les Seymour of the
Wellington Evening Post. "

The camera panned over the scribes, who sat at the opposite end
of the desk, looking aloof. Wiggins said, "As I understand it, Alana
will leave her body here in Kiwi Land and attempt to project herself
more than eighteen thousand kilometers to Scotland -"

"Excuse me, " the girl interrupted firmly. The close-up showed
eyes of a magnetic emerald green. Her voice was low and cajoling
as she con­tradicted Wiggins. "It's really not like that, you know.
Subjectively, I may feel as though I were traveling, but I don't - any
more than we travel when we dream. Current metapsychic theory
holds that the EE experience is a type of sensory response, like
long-distance sight. Farsight. But it's not mystical, and my mind
certainly doesn't leave my body. "

"Mm, " Wiggins said. "Be that as it may, let me assure our
witnesses here and overseas that we have no electronic means of
viewing events there at the Edinburgh press conference.
Furthermore, we aren't broad­casting this transmission to our
national audience. It's a coded impulse beamed solely to Scotland
via satellite. We are recording here for a later presentation,
however, in conjunction with the material we expect to receive from
our people on the scene in Edinburgh... And now, Alana, are you
ready to begin?"

"Yes. "

Jamie spoke once again to the BBC man who had read Nigel's
results aloud: "Sir, will you please select a colleague in your
immediate vicin­ity to write our sample message for Alana?"

"Right, " said the Beeb technician. "How about this Swiss bloke
over here with the Hasselblad?"

There was a brief wrangle when the Swiss seemed reluctant to
coop­erate, apparently perturbed when camera lenses were aimed
in his di­rection by the TV crews of several dozen nations.

Fabian Finster felt the skin along his spine tingle with the same
uneasy premonition he had experienced earlier. He whispered to
the KGB agent, "You know anything about that guy? Otto Maurer,
his badge says, photographer for the Neue Zurcher Zeitung... but I
have reasons to doubt that he's legit. "

"He would not have been admitted without a computerized
creden­tial check. He is surely a bona fide journalist. As legitimate
as you or I. "

"Idi v zhopu, " scoffed The Fabulous Finster. The thunderstruck
Rus­sian gaped at him.

Meanwhile, the Swiss had evidently complied with the request to
pen a brief message. Jamie MacGregor was saying, "Thank you,
Herr Maurer. Now if you will place the sheet of paper on the floor,
face down. None of the people around you have seen what you've
written?... Good. You must try not to think of it, either. EE seems to
be an ultrasense quite distinct from telepathy. It also seems
inconsequential what position the target object may be in, or what
barriers of matter may lie between the target and the percipient.
What we seek to demonstrate is that EE makes it possible for
trained persons to remotely view virtually anything in any part of the
world. "

A wave of incredulous exclamations swept the hall. Somebody
called out, "But if that's true, it means -"

"Please!" Jamie held up his hand again. "Let us have the
demonstra­tion first, then the questions. "

"I have already read the paper, " came the amplified voice of Alana
Shaunavon. Her young face was enormous on the screen, the
brilliant green eyes fixed, wide open, blinking slowly. "He has
written a verse in German:



Die Gedanken sind frei,

Wer kann sie erraten?

Sie fliegen vorbei

Wie nächtliche Schatten.

Kein Mensch kann sie wissen,

Kein Jäger erschiessen.

Es bleibet dabei: die Gedanken sind frei.



I can translate it rather freely: Thoughts are free, who can discover
them? They fly past like shadows of the night. No one can know
them, no hun­ter can shoot them down. When all's said and done,
thoughts -' My God, look out! His camera! It's a weapon!"

A wild fracas broke out on the floor and there were shouts as the
Swiss attempted vainly to rush away. But too many bodies and too
much equipment hemmed him in and he went down, tackled by two
intrepid Canadian Broadcasting Corporation telecasters. The lethal
Hasselblad was wrestled away and smashed by a soundman of the
Fuji Network. Plainclothes police officers materialized and camera
crews leapt about balletically recording the capture.

As Maurer was being hauled away, he screamed, "Fools! Cretins!
Er hat Sie alles beschissen! Don't you know what's going on here?
What this MacGregor has done? Um Gottes Willen... Pandora's
box... ruin ... chaos... anarchy... Weltgetümmel... "

The uproar subsided slowly. Jamie spoke into his microphone and
the screen was wiped clear of the New Zealand transmission.
There was a burst of video clutter and then the simple advisory:



OVERSEAS TELEPHONE MESSAGE READY

AUDIO SIGNAL ONLY



"Jamie? Jamie? I could not wait!" A woman's voice, speaking
heavily accented English, came through a hiss of interference. "I
saw everything - but then I became so excited that I lost the sight!
Tell me - is everything all right?"

The confusion subsided and the attention of the crowd of
newspeople was drawn once again to the platform. Jamie
MacGregor tugged at one of his Dundreary cheek-whiskers. His
expression was resigned. "All is quite well for the moment, lass.
But I think this wee carfuffle's only the beginning of what we'll be
seeing anon. "

"Yes, that's true... Are you ready for me to speak? I must not waste
any time. We may be cut off at any moment if my little bypass of
the monitored circuitry is traced. "

Jamie said, "Just wait for a moment, while I ask our Edinburgh
University communications people to show the journalists in our
audience where this telephone call is coming from. "

The loudspeakers trilled a brief electronic aria and the video
display printed an advisory:



originating: 68-23-79 alma-ata ussr

via sks-8 + eus-02 gte/bt 4-3



The female voice said, "I am Tamara Petrovna Sakhvadze, Deputy
Director of the Institute for Bioenergetic Studies at Kazakh State
Uni­versity, and a member of the Kazakh Academy of Sciences. "

"Nevozmozhno!" A pained whisper escaped the false Hannula.
Oth­ers in the lecture theatre seemed equally unbelieving and they
sprang to their feet shouting questions.

"Silence!" Jamie roared. Then he spoke gently into the
microphone. "Tell us why you've joined the demonstration today,
Tamara Petrovna. " "I am a person who loves my country and its
people. I am also a scientist, dedicated to discovering truth. And
finally, I am the mother of three small children whose minds are
just beginning to flower. I have worked in the field of
parapsychology since 1968, when I was only a young child. My late
husband, Dr. Yuri Gawrys, was my close associate. Like Jamie
MacGregor, I have specialized in the phenomenon of excorporeal
excursion, along with  clairvoyance  and  certain  other
metafaculties. On several occasions, I have... met with Jamie and
with certain other scientists in other parts of the world. When Jamie
told me he was determined to demonstrate EE, I agreed with his
decision. The work we are doing here in Alma-Ata falls under the
highest security classification, and this telephone call is a technical
violation of Soviet law. And yet I make it with the full consent of
every one of my col­leagues here at the Institute, in the interests of
all humanity.

"You people, listening to my words being beamed to you via many
satellites, try to understand! You Americans, especially, listen! The
whole world will benefit from what we do today. To my fellow
citizens of the Soviet Union who hear me, I say: Eto novoye
otkrytiye prinesyot polzu vsyemu chelovyechestvu! An
extraordinary door is opening, and from behind it shines a light that
does away with all state secrets. There can be no more
clandestine weapons research, no surprise military ac­tions, no
first-strike capability. The people of the Soviet Union need no
longer fear attack by the USA, and Americans need no longer fear
us. We can now work to resolve our differences without the threat
of ac­cidental or deliberate nuclear war. Our children can look into
the future with hope again. My children can... and Jamie's... and
yours. "

The voice paused, and the immediate response of those listening
was like the upsurge of a tremendous rising wind, wordless, laden
with emotional energy. But before the sound wave could crest,
Jamie cried out, "Wait! Let her finish!"

She said, "I was there with you, a witness to one man's despair. I
saw his violent reaction when he realized what changes we must
expect when the higher mind-powers come into common use. He
was afraid. He warned of Pandora's box, and perhaps his warning
is justified. 'Die Gedanken sind frei'... thoughts are free, but with
freedom comes re­sponsibility. There will be great difficulties to
overcome if we are not to exchange one kind of danger for
another. But the door is opened and nothing can close it! A new
age of the mind has dawned on our planet and all of us must enter
into it. We must face this terrible new enlight­enment courageously,
together. As a first step... I invite you, my dear Jamie, and all of the
scientists in the world who study the higher mind-powers to come
to a meeting - the First Congress on Metapsychology. I invite the
journalists of the world also. Come to Alma-Ata next year, in
September when the fragrance of ripening apples fills our lovely
city. Come and let us take the first step toward mir miru - a world at
peace. "

"Tamara, my lass, we'll be there, " said Jamie MacGregor. Then he
bowed his head to the tumult of shouting that erupted in the theatre
and waited patiently until order was restored and he could begin
an­swering the questions.



After the press conference was long over, two foreigners with
press ID badges still pinned to their raincoats sat together in
Greyfriars Bobby's Bar, making steady inroads on a bottle of the
Macallen. The astonishing news had spread like wildfire and the
place was packed, rocking with song and jollification as students
and other celebrators marked the ar­rival of the new age of the
mind with an impromptu ceilidh that showed signs of escalating into
a riot.

"I never knew 'Comin' Through the Rye' had words like that. " The
Fabulous Finster was slightly scandalized.

"Hah, " said the KGB man. "You should hear the unexpurgated
ver­sion of 'For A' That. ' Or 'Duncan Gray. ' Or 'Green Grow the
Rashes, O!' Yes, the Scottish hero poet, Robert Burns, wrote very
earthy songs. We are very fond of him in my country. He was truly
of the proletariat. " He brought his glass down onto the tiny table
with a thud and caroled in a raspy basso:



"Green grow the rashes, O!

Green grow the rashes, O!

The lassies they hae wimble-bores,

The widows they hae gashes, O!"



The patrons gave a yell of approval. Somebody with an accordion
tried to drag the Russian from his seat; but he shook his head
violently, red-rimmed eyes gone wide, and croaked, "No! I will not
sing! I cannot sing!"

Nobody took it amiss. Usquebalian dejection is no novelty in an
Edinburgh pub. The musical gilravagers directed their attention
else­where and Finster refilled his companion's glass. "Drink up,
Sergei, old hoss. I know why you're feeling low. To tell the truth, I'm
a trifle shook-up myself. Talk about a bombshell! My Boss back
home'll be farting flames. Yours, too, I betcha. "

The Russian agent tossed down the dram and began to pour
another. "You are talking nonsense. And my name is Sami, not
Sergei. "

Finster shrugged. He reached out, clamping the other man's hand
tightly to the bottle, and leaned very close. His face was so friendly,
so droll. With that gap between the large front teeth, the face
seemed like that of a saucy squirrel in a cartoon show for children.
Who could feel threatened by a squirrel?

"Tell me honestly, Sergei. Do you think that dame in Alma-Ata will
be able to pull it off? The open-door psychic congress? Or has
she bought herself and her bunch a quick ticket to the Gulag?"

It was not a comical squirrel asking such questions. It was not even
a reporter from Seattle, U. S. A. Who was it? Why was it so
necessary to answer this funny little man?

"She was devilishly clever... Deputy Director Sakhvadze... just like
a damned Georgian... knowing our countries still officially em­brace
détente... and we must uphold noble world-image... next year
Diamond Jubilee Revolution!... Sakhvadze all but confesses she
and her cohorts are involved in Mind Wars research... just as your
scien­tists are also, belka!... What a joke on both our countries...
we must fulfill the world's expectations of us now, like it or not... Die
Gedanken sind frei und wir stehen bis zum Hals in der Scheisse... "

The squirrel did not seem willing to believe this. "Do you mean
your government is going to let her get away with it?"

The tipsy KGB man laughed, then blew his nose resoundingly.
Finster's coercion was no longer needed. "Little squirrel, she has
al­ready got away with it. In that lecture hall were perhaps forty
television cameras, trained on MacGregor and his video screen.
Sakhvadze's words and their origination were broadcast live to our
people as well as to the rest of the world. We cannot claim her
message was a hoax because its source in Alma-Ata can be
verified easily by the computers of British Telecom. Doubtless this
verification will also be trumpeted to the world via the free satellite
transmissions... Oh, yes! The lovely Tamara Petrovna has caught
both the Soviet and American governments by the balls, and she is
on a downhill slide. The Cold War is over, thanks to the Scottish
Professor. You and I are washed up, Amerikanskiy. You are not
CIA - but whatever you are, you are finished. The soul-travelers
and the mind readers will expose the most closely guarded
secrets of our two nations as easily as cracking hazelnuts. There is
nothing left for us but to become friends... just as Robert Burns
wished. Yes, little squir­rel! The proletarian poet of Scotland was a
great prophet! Do you know what he said?



For a' that, and a' that,

It's comin' yet, for a' that!

That man and man the world o'er

Shall brothers be for a' that. "



"Sure, " Finster agreed, smiling. "Sure, Sergei. One for all, and all
for one. At least until we get rid of our mutual enemies. "



19

FROM THE MEMOIRS OF ROGATIEN REMILLARD



when the live telecast from Edinburgh ended at 7:00 a. m. Eastern
Time I was in a state of near-mortal funk. I downed a neat
tumblerful of Canadian Club sitting there in my armchair in front of
the blank television screen while my brain kept replaying that scene
of the crazed Swiss photographer screeching his Cassandra
warning as the Scottish police hauled him away.

Pandora's box! Oh, yes, indeed. It was opening wide to an amazed
and fascinated world, and what was inside was us.

I had to call Denis. I told myself it was to find out what plans he and
his people had. On my first three tries, his home phone was busy;
then

I only got his answering machine. I called the lab and reached
Glenn Dalembert, who had come in early to make a videotape of
the Scottish demonstration.

"Yeah, I got detailed for the scut-work while everybody else
watched the big show in comfort at home. This afternoon we'll do a
replay for the full Medical School faculty, together with learned
commentary by yours truly and homegrown EE talent displays by
Colette and Tucker. With Denis gone, I'll be in charge. Want a
freebie ticket?"

"Denis has gone where?" I demanded.

"Down to West Lebanon. They're sending an Air Force chopper to
shuttle him to Burlington International where the Washington flight
will be held for him -"

I cut Glenn off. "They? D'you mean those Mind Wars bastards
roped Denis in after all?"

My nephew's associate gave a strained laugh. "Oh, no. Nothing so
picayune as the Army or the CIA this time. The President himself
called Denis at home right after the telecast. Seems he read the
book and was very impressed, and now he's pegged Denis as the
guy most likely to give him the straight poop about the authenticity
of MacGregor's blockbuster. "

"Oh, shit, " I groaned. My nephew - the Kissinger of metapsychic
realpolitik! He would be asked to help recruit American operants
for MacGregor's noble scheme. He would certainly reveal his own
operancy. Or would he?

Glenn had turned solicitous. "Roger, is there something wrong?"

"Everything's wrong. "

"Listen - come to the faculty meeting and we'll talk. Better yet, join
Colette and me for lunch -"

"No thanks. You folks have a good time at the show-and-tell. I'll be
just fine. " I hung up, then took the phone off the hook.

Denis. He was the only one who could help. I could try to reach him
at the airport by telephone... but that was no good. I wouldn't be
able to say what was wrong...

Farspeak him, then. Make the appeal mind-to-mind.

I slouched over to the bedroom window and stood there in my
paja­mas and grubby old terry-cloth robe trying to marshal my
booze-addled wits. It was not going to be easy to attract Denis's
attention with the all-important telepathic "hail. " My mind was
weakened and Denis would surely be preoccupied with the
enormity of MacGregor's gamble and by the upcoming Oval Office
meeting. Furthermore, the bulk of Crafts Hill lay between me and
the West Lebanon Regional Airport, four miles south of Hanover. I
would have to muster up sufficient strength to "flow" my mental
shout around the hill and puncture my nephew's brown study. Once
alerted, he would have no difficulty tun­ing in to my puny thought-
beam.

But how was I going to manage that initial hail?

An idea slowly formed. One of my yogic exercises featured a
spiral focusing of body energies spinning centripetally in toward
the heart, which certain psychic authorities proposed as the vital
center of the modern human being. This so-called in-spiraling
chakra meditation had tended to promote feelings of comfort and
power even in my belea­guered soul. I could do it. The reverse
form of the exercise, the out-spiral, had carried a cautionary note
for novices. It was alleged to have more drastic effects in the
focusing of energies and was more difficult to control. Since
additional psychic trauma was the last thing I had needed during
the awful summer and fall, up until now I had given this partic­ular
form of meditation a firm miss. But it might just offer me my best
shot at reaching Denis.

I assumed the appropriate posture, one I had dubbed "Leonardo's
X-Man, " still standing there at the window. I closed my eyes,
shielded myself from external stimuli as best I could, and
concentrated on the region of my heart. Far more than a mere
blood-pump, the heart is also a gland whose secretions help in the
regulation of the entire body. I tried to visualize it as the focus of
my being, a receptacle of life-force and love. When there was a
distinct knot of warmth behind my lower breastbone, I coaxed it out
to begin a slow, tight, flattened curve. It moved to the left and
downward, traversing my solar plexus. Gaining strength and speed,
it spiraled smoothly up to the branching of the trachea and the
thymal remnant, then arced left within the body's fron­tal plane. It
dove down through my spleen, illuminated the suprarenals, and
swung back up toward the thyroid in my throat - for the first time
passing outside my body as the spiral widened. A long curve
brought the still-meager ball of energy to the root of my spine,
where lay the chakra that yogic tradition deemed one of the most
vital. I felt a great influx of fresh power enlarge and accelerate the
ball. It swung upward, seemed to blaze behind my closed eyes,
and began its final swift circuit through the elbow of my extended
left arm, through my left and right knees, through my right elbow. I
was waiting as it flew toward the crown of my head and branded it
with the impress of a single mental signature, adding a dollop of
heavenly appeal as a sop to the faith of my fathers. Then I hurled it
away from me, that cri de coeur véritable:

DENIS!

Simultaneous with the farspoken hail came a terrific neural ignition,
part orgasm and part high-voltage shock. My body convulsed and I
fell heavily to the floor.

[Images: Full-color 3-D Denis face stunned. Air Force helicopter
open

door blades windmill tearing fog fabric colored runway lights yellow
Toyota Land Cruiser.]

???GoodGodUncleRogi??? What'sWRONG?

... sorry... trying hard get your attention...

! You almost blasted me off my feet whatinhell you upto I suppose
Glenn told you WhiteHouse summons... !!!... HOW DID YOU DO
THAT?

[Image drenched in sheepishness.] Outspiral chakra Leonardo's X
with cyclotronic kundalini embellishment... worked a little better than
expected...

Fuckingidiot! Don't you know that could be dangerous?

Yes.

Acute anxiety. Dammit bon sang d'imbécile you leave thatstuff
alone until we go over it together I really mean what I say!

Yesyesyes but had to reach you had to... [image].

Concern. EdinburghDemo provoked fear? Explain.

[Concatenated images.]

Uncle Rogi... what you need I can't do at a distance. But you must
believe me when I tell you it will be all right. [Airman beckons inside
chopper Denis nods ducks blades scurries into aircraft door shuts
air­man orders seat belt signals pilot upup&away.]

Denis... what President want?

You can probably guess: my analysis assessment Scottelecast.
Legit? Practicable solution armsrace? Howmany EEops potential
US/USSR/ Scotland/Elsewhere? When online? Any chance Russ
have jump on us already emplace their Psi-Eye?

Psi-Eye!

Prexyname ever the GreatSalesman. Fortunately can tell him Russ
EEprogram controlled by Tamara [kiss!] she deceived Politburo re
her project readiness so not emplaced. Russ EEops all peaceniks
group purged of GRU/KGB/opportunist/fanatic heads last decade.
Now Russ operants tend antiestablishment because "elitist
phenom operancy" remains suspect under Marxist dogmatism.
Tamara will see to honest observer team setup. There will be no
war.

That was never my worry. Too selfish...

Then?

[Projected image: Screaming figure waving camera disappears
be­neath bodycrush hauled up handcuffed dragged away.]
Pandora's box ruin chaos anarchy and worse OUR EXPOSURE
OURS DENIS!

Difficult days yes there will have to be economic summits global
cooperation in many other psychaffected areas -

You don't understand yet what I've driving at! We will be pawns
manipulated hated the coercers willbe offered power over others -

This won't happen. Do you think we haven't anticipated such a
thing? It was dealt with in the longrange plan that had to be
scrapped but we will preserve our freedom and dignity. President
wants set up MetaBrainTrust. Public. Plan for best use other
operant faculties be­sides EE goodofcountry goodofworld. Guess
who invited to be chair­man?

! You had to write that goddam book.

Relax. My forte research not administration. I'll decline with
humblethanks let Brawley of Stanford or The Astronaut sit in
Wash­ington metahotseat.

How can you not listen when 900-lb canary sings?

Laughter. Now you know why I had no photo on bookjacket
Metapsychology. All President has to do is take look at me [image]
would YOU entrust Third Millennium diplomacy to halfbaked
egghead twerp?... I'm safe plan propose myself special advisor
sortof GrandYoungMan metapsychology.

Denis... are you going to tell him that you're operant?

Yes. I'm sorry Uncle Rogi... for your sake. But soonerorlater we
have to come out with it.

Despair. Later. Much later.

Yes... I argued JamieMacGregor pleaded caution wanted
postpone until operants numerous more organized for
selfpreservation and my training normals ? operancy proved
feasible. But MacGregor cited in­creasing peril globalwar... and
another factor. He said: We are all members humanrace survive or
perish together no Homosapiens vs Homosuperior only
Homoterrestris. Earth Man.

Resignation. Bitterness. Still terrible gamble Godsake nobody
seri­ously believes Russ planning launch WorldWarIII -

That was not deciding factor. I told you there was something else.
Someone tried to kill Jamie in April. He was afraid his whole group
endangered so decided to go to ground do demo soonest. His
attacker not KGB/GRU/CIA/XXX. He was another powerful
operant.

Jesus Christ.

Man coerced Jamie into darkalley physique metarendered fuzzy
aimed tubething at paralyzed Jamie apologetic implacability just
then muscleman in duffelcoat came scared off assailant was not
affected coercion nextday Jamie examined alley found needle
later analyzed coated deadly poison ricin favorite assassins no
other clue attacker... or rescuer. Damn worrying.

Operant crooks in Scotland! So NewHampshire doesn't have
monop­oly afterall. [Familiar image quickly erased.]

Jamie says coercive ability assassin formidable. Disguising of
appear­ance interesting jibes with my currentstudies creativity -

The mysterious power to cloud men's minds. The Shadow
knows!... Or are you too young to know that nonsense?

I've heard classic radiotapes. But apparently attacker not really
invis­ible or passerby might not have saved Jamie. Affair peculiar.
If not metagovernmentagent (impossible we would know) then
who?

Wild card. Odd John had one. Psychometa.

Jamie positive attacker sane.

You intend tell President metavillains atlarge?

Will mention possibility. But this minor compared to prospect end
nucleardeterrent.

MacGregor figure he's safe now?

He thinks now Psi-Eye scheme revealed danger minimal. Actually
SwissBankAgentfakephotographer had best motive for offing
Jamie. Per­haps metassassin another of theirs. Governments not
only ones with valuable secrets.

Be sure you tell President that. Eventually we'll need bodyguards
and they come expensive.

Hogwash.

Pauvre innocent! Go go carry out great mission pray Goodness
tri­umphs... Were other academiclights also summoned
President? He said no. Maybe later.

Hah. So that's wayofit. By time you return Dartmouth you famous
inspiteofself President will see to it whetherornot you agree head

BrainTrust.

Humor. It was the book. Talking heads come&go but if you write
book you are AUTHORity.

Laughter. Easing.

... Uncle Rogi we're approaching Burlington International. Please
try not to worry. When I get home you must let me try to help you.
(Yes yes I know how could I not tu es mon père!) Other Remillards
all over US&Canada will find selves in your position after I exit
metacloset. Most of them will cheerfully admit they haven't a
metafaculty to save their lives. You can too. But it would be best if
you didn't conceal your powers. Best for you for all operants as
well. We must hurry day when operancy commonplace as
musical/artistic/intellectual talent similarly unthreat to normals -
damn! - there I go we're just as normal as they are aren't we?

Pour sûr. [?]

Nonoperants will realize in time that they have nothing to fear from
us.

But they do.

Oh Uncle Rogi.

... and we have even more to fear from them. We're outnumbered.

Exasperation. If you spent some time with us at the lab you'd know
we're finding ways to... neutralize... antagonists. Peaceful ways.
You and your oneman stand! You don't have to face this alone
can't you see the only way is through solidarity even nonoperants
know a lonemind is doomed there must be two or three or more
loving for Love to heal and initiate transcendence please please
monpère don't shut us out -

We'll discuss later. Smallthing compared momentous events
demand­ing your attention. You must not be distracted.

We are landing... Please Uncle Rogi please join us. [Guile.] You
will ease my mind.

Will think over carefully. Bon voyage et bonne chance mon fils.



I stood looking out the window. Outside, the morning mist was
burn­ing away and the streetlights had gone out. I was hungry, very
nearly cheerful, but still perversely determined to best my inner
demons in single combat. I would certainly have to find out just
what self-defensive maneuvers Denis and his people had
discovered, but as to joining with them - letting Denis into the
secret parts of my mind - it was impossible. A Franco father cannot
stand naked before his son.

As I stared at the passing cars below and the students hurrying up
Main Street toward their early classes a mundane thought stole into
my skull. If the presidential favor did confer fresh notoriety upon
my nephew, there would surely be a great new demand for copies
of Metapsychology. If I called the jobbers in Boston with a rush
order, I could get a leg up on the competition at the big Dartmouth
Bookstore down the street. And when Denis returned, I might
prevail on him to do a signing session. He had never autographed
copies of his book before, but he might agree to help me out.

Just as I was turning away from the window my eyes focused upon
the glass itself. I swore mildly. Some damn kid with a BB-gun must
have been taking pot shots at squirrels. There was a small hole
neatly drilled in one of the upper panes. But it was a strange hole,
lacking the typical halo crater produced by the impact of a missile,
and there were no cracks radiating from it. It was about a quarter of
an inch in diameter and the edges were not sharp, but smooth.
Perplexed, I studied the tiny opening, which was above my eye
level. Then I went to a drawer in the kitchen and got a tape
measure.

The hole was six feet two inches above the floor, my exact height
in bare feet. I felt a blob of warmth begin to form again behind my
ribs. Wondering, I touched the top of my head.

Surely not. But on the other hand...

Denis would no doubt be eager to test it. Should I agree? Why not,
provided the rest of my mind was left inviolate? I chuckled at the
thought of the consternation this "mind-zap" power would provoke
among the academics. Nothing in any of my readings on
parapsychol­ogy had prepared me for an effect such as this, nor
had there been any mention of it in the lengthy catalog of higher
mental phenomena in Denis's book. Not only was my zapping new,
it was also fraught with possibility...

How d'you like them apples, Donnie? Maybe you better rest in
peace if you know what's good for you, mon frérot!

I went to the telephone. It was after 8:30 and the book jobber in
Boston would be open. I decided to triple the order I had originally
decided upon. Denis would beef about the autograph session, but
he'd cooperate.

Now I was certain of it.



20

ALMA-ATA, KAZAKH SSR, EARTH

24 OCTOBER 1991



any other general Secretary would have commanded her
immediate presence in Moscow before a Star Chamber tribunal. It
was a mark of this man's populist style, and his shrewdness in
dealing with the often nonconformist scientific element, that he
came to her. He dismissed his hovering aides, sat casually in front
of her desk in the small corner office of the Institute for
Bioenergetic Studies at Kazakh State University, and chatted about
the weather.

Tamara served him tea without hurrying. Afterward she did not
re­sume her normal seat behind the desk but pulled up a side chair
next to him. They could both look out the window and see the high
Tien Shan's white rampart in the south. The day was brilliant, but
the first storm of the season was forecast for tomorrow. He would
decline the preferred hospitality of the Kazakh Party Secretary and
fly back to Moscow to­night.

"And tell the comrades of the Politburo your elucidation of the
Edinburgh Demonstration, " he concluded, sipping the tea.
"Deli­cious. "

"I have prepared a précis of our work on excorporeal excursion. "
She smiled winsomely, a plump, dark-eyed woman whose shining
red hair was worn in a tidy knot, and indicated a sealed portfolio on
the desk. "It also contains recommendations for the speedy
establishment of a corps of psychic observers. I will be honored to
cooperate in its deployment, of course. "

He eyed her over the rim of the tea glass. "Of course. I daresay we
couldn't do without you... "

She shrugged. "I know my people and their capabilities. This EE
busi­ness is often more of an art than a science. You understand
that the operants will require congenial working conditions in order
to do their work properly. They are loyal Soviet citizens - you have
my word of honor on it - but fully committed to peace. "

The General Secretary sighed. "This is going to be difficult. "

"For us, " she said, "it has been difficult for twenty-five years. "

The General Secretary finished his tea and took up the portfolio.
Unsealing it, he leafed through the papers. After a few minutes of
si­lence, he said, "You were not at all surprised to see me come
here, Comrade Doctor. "

"I confess that I was curious about the reaction of the Politburo to
the Edinburgh Demonstration, as were all of my people. We did
not think you would panic, but we had to be sure. "

"Radi Boga! You spied on us!"

"And on the American President and his advisers, and on the
leaders of the People's Republic of China, and on the Pope. "

"The Pope?" The General Secretary was taken aback. "What did
he do?"

"He wept, Mikhail Semyonovich. "

"And so did Comrade Dankov of the KGB, " the Secretary
muttered. "You will be interested to know - if you don't already - that
the ever-vigilant comrades on Dzerzhinsky Square were
foreskinned to a marked degree at your personal participation in
the Edinburgh Demonstration. Dankov demanded the immediate
liquidation of you and your entire cadre of wizards. It seems you
have deceived your KGB sponsors rather spectacularly. "

"It was a matter of survival... "

"As you know, Dankov was made to see reason. There was
greater difficulty with the Defense Council. Marshal Kumylzhensky
pushed for a pre-emptive nuclear strike. This is still a serious
option if we do not have a competent EE inspection team to
balance that in the West. "

"We have sixty-eight EE adepts, most with global faculties. It is an
adequate number. The combined EE adepts of the West number
more than eighty - over thirty in Britain, perhaps forty-five in the
USA. There are also scattered groups of neutralist percipients in
other countries. Their numbers will grow, as will our own. "

The little office was becoming chilly with the close of day, but the
General Secretary's balding head had a gleam of sweat. "The
militarist lunatics were voted down resoundingly for now. The
Politburo knows that the present euphoric mood of our people
would never countenance a first strike - no more than it would allow
the psychics to be harmed. The people demand - demand! - that
MacGregor's proposal be imple­mented. "

"There was dancing in the streets of Alma-Ata, " Tamara said. "And
in Moscow. And everywhere throughout the Soviet Union! By
allowing them to view that telecast - and we are investigating that,
too! - we have indeed opened the door to a new age. But that age
may not be golden, as you and your idealistic associates hope,
Tamara Petrovna. You know that I have been striving for years now
to upgrade our faltering economy, to instill a new spirit of industry
and progress into our people, to control military adventurism, to
fight the ingrained corruption, the laziness, the despair infecting our
youth... And now, suddenly, there is this! Our enemies all around
us will be thwarted in aggression by the psychic observers. The
people will expect drastic dis­armament initiatives. They will
believe that reductions in our huge defense budget will bring about
improved domestic conditions. For a while, they will wait patiently
for this to come about. Perhaps they will wait as long as a decade,
distracted by our travels to Mars and other wonders. But then... "

"I read your subvocal thoughts, Comrade General Secretary. We
are not a unified nation. Discipline and right order have up until now
been preserved among our disparate ethnic elements primarily
through the Great Russian bureaucracy, and the people's
determina­tion to stand fast and defend the Motherland against the
common enemy. "

Smoothly, he took up the skein of his own thoughts again. "But
without that enemy to distract us, the masses will look more
critically at the kind of life they live - at the inefficiencies of our
system, at the often unjust decrees of the central power structure,
at our economy based upon obsolete philosophic principles that
falls further and further behind the other industrialized nations of
the world... Look into your crystal ball, Tamara Petrovna, you and
your psychic colleagues with your shining dream of peace for the
future! Will we have that peace in the Soviet Union? Will we be
able to adapt fast enough to avoid catas­trophe?"

She turned her face away abruptly, lips tightening. "I don't know.
Sometimes I do see the future. And far away... years from now...
there is a great change, a time of expanding horizons, when our
people will help to colonize the stars as we now seek to colonize
Mars... But the near future? I do not see that, Comrade General
Secretary. Thank God I do not. The job of guiding our nation
through the last perilous years of this twentieth century is yours, not
mine - and I also thank God for that. Now take the portfolio with the
details of the psychic-oversight scheme, and do what you must. "

"While you watch, " he said.

She rose from her chair, turning her back on him, and looked out at
the gleaming mountains. "While the world watches. "



21

FROM THE MEMOIRS OF ROGATIEN REMILLARD



the specifics of the EE monitoring plan were promptly delivered to
both Washington and Moscow, and a Summit was sched­uled. The
much-battered Strategic Arms Limitation Treaty was dusted off,
updated, and promised to an exultant world as a Christmas
present.

In the United States, the emplacement of Psi-Eye was considered
a fait accompli by the general public - and the White House did
nothing to discourage the impression, nor did the Soviets. Most
people were happy to believe that vigilant American EE adepts
(inevitably dubbed pEEps] had settled in on the job immediately
following the Scottish telecast. There were "Big Brother Is
Watching You" jokes and voyeuristic editorial cartoons, however,
and a tentative panic on Wall

Street that was quashed by the President in a brilliant personal
appeal. Some nay-sayers recalled the madman who had tried to
shoot MacGregor with a camera-gun, whose identity was released
to the press by the British only after a question had been raised in
Parliament. By and large, however, the United States reacted with
happy exuberance to the Psi-Eye scheme. It was seen as a
virtually foolproof reprieve from nuclear doomsday. The identities
(and the numbers) of the pEEps were kept secret, of course; but
everyone knew that they were en garde night and day, keeping a
mind's eye out for potential Kremlin button-pushers - at the same
time that their noble Russian opposite numbers scrutinized the U.
S. Joint Chiefs sulking impotently in the Pentagon war-room.

In actuality, neither the American nor the Soviet authorities
achieved a working psychic monitoring effort for nearly three
months, until early 1992. There were endless niggling details to be
resolved, the most critical of which was: Where do you look? As in
the classic beware of the dog sign ploy, however, the mere
proclamation of Psi-Eye was as good as its actuality. Neither of the
superpowers was willing to risk being caught out trying to steal a
march on the other - and although the Americans and Soviets
might have had doubts about each other's Psi-Eye capability, they
had none whatsoever about Scot­land's. At the close of the
Edinburgh Demonstration, Jamie Mac­Gregor had remarked
offhandedly that the University's independent psychic surveillance
team of thirty-two EE adepts was already at work, and would be
issuing regular press releases of selected U. S. and Soviet military
secrets. The team's revelations were far from sensational; they
were not intended to be. But they did provide a con­tinual reminder
to the world that excorporeal excursion was a reality, and inspired
the two superpowers to get on with the right stuff. Both the Soviet
Union and the United States behaved with unblemished probity
throughout the Summit talks, the SALT signing and ratification, and
the initiation of nuclear disarma­ment. The threats to world peace
came from entirely different directions.

Here in the United States, a groundswell from burdened taxpayers
called for an immediate halt to military spending. The few
remaining Congressional hawks, the fundamentalist Red-haters,
and the as yet insignificant numbers of meta-skeptics had their
objections steamrol­lered into oblivion. The President, shrewd as
ever in his response to consumer demand, hailed Tamara
Sakhvadze's call for a World Con­gress on Metapsychology, and
then proposed that the United States host a sister international
conference on shared high technology. The Soviet General
Secretary said that his nation would eagerly participate in both
meetings. Then he suggested that Professor Jamie MacGregor be
nom­inated for the Nobel Peace Prize.

My nephew Denis was closeted with the President for nearly a
week, briefing him on virtually every aspect of current metapsychic
research. He also testified before the House Committee on
Science and Technol­ogy, the Senate Armed Services Committee,
and a full meeting of the Cabinet. He would accept only an advisory
appointment to the Presi­dential Commission on Metapsychology,
but promised to consult with the Meta Brain Trust on a regular
basis.

Figuratively crowned with laurel and trailed by belling newshounds,
Denis returned to Dartmouth intending to get back to his
researches. It was a vain hope. Post-Edinburgh and post-
Washington, he and his little establishment became very big news
indeed. Now prestigious founda­tions stampeded to Dartmouth's
door, proffering endowments; and these, unlike the tainted
Pentagon grants that Denis had helped to discredit during the Mind
Wars scandal, were accepted "for the good of Dartmouth College
and for the advancement of metapsychology as a whole. "

There would be no more dodging of the media, either. Submitting
to the inevitable, Denis put his associate Gerard Tremblay in
charge of the lab's public affairs. At that time, the vivacious former
granite-quarryman was thirty-one years old and had taken his M. D.
just three years earlier. In spite of his Franco heritage, he was the
member of the Coterie that I liked least. He was a fiery, good-
looking fellow with intense presence; but I had always thought him
a bit of a brown-nose, suspecting that his obsequious manner
might be compensation for an unconscious envy of my nephew.
My suspicions were to be eventually confirmed. But until he
precipitated the disastrous Coercer Flap during President
Baumgart­ner's second term, Tremblay did an outstanding job
coping with the media, with curious politicians, and with the many
national and inter­national organizations that suddenly focused their
attention on the shoestring research establishment at 45 College
Street, Hanover, New Hampshire.

Tremblay's first PR triumph took place in November 1991, with the
interview of Denis by the investigative news program 60 Minutes.
CBS was prepared to devote the entire hour-long telecast to
metapsychology's Wunderkind. The interview would be combined
with a tour of the Dartmouth facility and would show the actual
testing of operant sub­jects, who would remain anonymous.
Denis's lab was a prime media target because it had always
remained off-limits to journalists during the blizzard of publicity
attending the publication of Metapsychology. Heaven only knows
what kind of Frankenstein shenanigans the 60 Min­utes people
hoped to uncover. As it happened, the program was destined to be
nearly as memorable as MacGregor's Edinburgh shocker... only
this time I was there, doing my thing in front of the network
cameras, and daring the world to make something of it.



22

EXCERPTS FROM THE  CBS-TV

PUBLIC AFFAIRS PROGRAM 60 Minutes



17 NOVEMBER  1991



FADE IN

BG STILL SHOT (MATTE) EXT DARTMOUTH RESEARCH
FACILITY

A picturesque, rather dilapidated three-storey New England saltbox
building, dark gray; resembling a barn on side of wooded hill, it
looms almost ominously above a stretch of rain-wet pavement and
is framed by bare-branched trees. In FG of MATTE stands
reporter CARLOS MORENO, whose hard-hitting questions, mobile
woolly-bear eyebrows, and divergent squint have often provoked
unexpectedly revealing re­sponses from even the most guarded
interviewees.

TITLE AND CREDIT ROLL



SUPERMINDS AMONG US!

Produced by Jeananne Lancaster



CARLOS MORENO



(addressing viewers)

Tonight we conclude our special three-week investigation of the
star­tling new developments in psychic research by meeting a
scientist who is acknowledged throughout the world to be one of
the most influential in the field. He heads this laboratory at
Dartmouth Col­lege in New Hampshire... a place that has been, up
until now, completely off-limits to reporters. 60 Minutes will be
taking you in­side this deceptively modest building, the workplace
of the man who was described by the President of the United
States as "the most awesome person I have ever met, an authentic
supermind"... But first, let's meet him in a more conventional
setting...

INT BOOKSHOP

Begin with ECU of DENIS REMILLARD, with downcast eyes; then
SLOW REVERSE ZOOM to a FULL SHOT of him sitting at table in
ELOQUENT PAGE BOOKSHOP signing volumes for a crowd of
CUS­TOMERS who include students in Dartmouth sweat shirts,
professional types, working-class types, retirees. Remillard is
slight of physique, blondish, with a pleasant, shy smile. He wears
tweed jacket with shirt and tie, exchanges inaudible comments with
his fans during MORENO VOICE OVER.

MORENO (VOICE OVER)

Denis Remillard looks more like a graduate student than an
Associate Professor of Psychiatry at an Ivy League school. He is
only twenty-four years old and he has always shunned publicity -
even after his book, Metapsychology, leaped to Number One on
national best-seller lists last year. Unlike the other psychic
researchers we've interviewed during this series, Denis Remillard
doesn't con­centrate on narrow areas of mind-study. Instead, he's
a theoretician who has tried to fit the puzzling higher mental powers
into a larger context.

CU REMILLARD

REMILLARD

I think my book was a success because people are very open to
new ideas now. Things that our grandparents would have called
absurd - like traveling to Mars - are reality. But the New Physics
shows us that even reality itself isn't what common sense says it
ought to be!

(quizzical boyish grin, eyes averted)

The universe isn't just space and time, matter and energy. You
have to fit life into a valid Universal Field Theory - and mind as well.
That's basically what my book is all about. Theoretical physicists
and life-scientists have known for quite a while that the old view of
the universe as a kind of supermachine just doesn't work. It doesn't
ex­plain the natural phenomena we experience, and it especially
doesn't explain the higher mind-powers, which have never fitted
into a con­ventional biophysical format.

INT BOOKSHOP - CLOSE SHOT MORENO

Remillard and his fans visible in BG as CAMERA MOVES BACK.

MORENO

(addressing viewers)

As he autographs copies of his book here in Hanover, New
Hamp­shire, in a little shop owned by his Uncle Roger, Denis
Remillard hardly seems to fulfill one's expectation of a world-
renowned psychologist - much less a supermind. But he was the
first person summoned to be a presidential consultant on psychic
affairs follow­ing the sensational Edinburgh Demonstration. He
declined the chair­manship of the President's recently organized
blue-ribbon Advisory Commission on Metapsychology... But he
has agreed to head the American delegation to Alma-Ata in the
Soviet Union, where re­searchers from dozens of nations will meet
next year to discuss the practical applications of mind-power... And
last week, Remillard's lab was singled out for a ten-million-dollar
grant from the Vangelder Foundation. The allocation has been
earmarked for an investigation into ways whereby ordinary people -
people like you and me -might someday be able to learn the
amazing mental feats that Denis Remillard has studied and written
about... feats that he himself performs.

MEDIUM SHOT - REMILLARD, UNCLE ROGER, FEMALE FAN
Remillard's CONVERSATION with his Uncle, who has brought
over a fresh supply of books for autographing, and the young
Female Fan is audible at LOW VOLUME under MORENO V. O.

MORENO (V. O. )

Yes... it's true. Vouched for by no less an authority than the
Presi­dent of the United States. Not only is Professor Denis
Remillard a distinguished psychic researcher, but he also
possesses extraordinary mind-powers himself!

REMILLARD

(looks up from book to Fan)

Well, it's not the kind of thing one brags about or shows off in bars.
But... yes, I am what we call metapsychically operant.

FEMALE FAN

(hesitantly)

Do you mean... you can read my mind?

REMILLARD

(laughs)

Certainly not. Not unless you deliberately try to project a thought-
sequence at me. However, I am aware of the general emotional
tenor of your mind. That you're not hostile, for instance. That you're
fas­cinated by the idea of higher mind-powers.

FAN

Oh, I am! It would be marvelous to do things like soul-traveling or
telepathy or that mind-over-matter thing... whatchacallit?

REMILLARD

Psychokinesis.

FAN

That's it. Just imagine being able to go to Las Vegas and clean up!

The rest of the CUSTOMERS laugh and murmur at this.

REMILLARD

(patiently)

But I can't, you know. Even if I were dishonest enough to try to
manipulate slot machines or dice or a roulette wheel with my mind -
how long would it take the casino owners to catch on? I'd be
tossed out on my ear... at the very least.

More laughs and murmurs from CUSTOMERS.

FAN

But... then what good are the powers?

REMILLARD

You might ask Professor Jamie MacGregor that... Actually, I find
my own metafaculties most useful in conducting experiments. I can
compare my own reactions to those of the test subjects in
psy­chokinesis training, for example.

FAN

(interrupts, gushing)

Ooh, Professor, do you suppose - ? I mean, would it be an awful
imposition if you showed us? I mean, I've seen it done on TV by
those Russians, but to see you do it live...

CUSTOMERS

(ad lib exclamations)

Hey!... Wow!... Would you?... Super!... Please!

REMILLARD

(indulgently)

And Mr. Carlos Moreno told you to ask me - right?

FAN

Uh... I'd really appreciate it.

CU REMILLARD looking sardonically into camera. For the first
time we see that his eyes are effulgent blue, almost glowing within
their deep orbits.

REMILLARD

Your camera crew is quite ready?... Well, PK is one of the least
significant metafaculties, so I guess I don't mind doing a small
dem­onstration. After all, we can't let the Scots and the Russians
garner all the kudos... Why don't I use these copies of my book?

MEDIUM SHOT. Remillard takes a volume, turns it so that front
cover faces camera. He balances book precariously on one corner
of its cover, takes hands away, and leaves book poised sur la
pointe.

Now it's impossible to balance a book like this, right? Defies the
law of gravity.

He balances another book on top of the first, also on its corner.
The books do not tremble or totter; they are rock-solid.

And if we balance another book on that... and then a third... and
then a fourth...

He does so.

... You know I must be either holding the books up with mind-
power, or else I'm some kind of a [BLEEP]ing magician. And if I
then extract the bottom book...

He does so, leaving the three upper books hanging in thin air.

... and the top trio remains there, then you have to be positive that
something rather out of the ordinary is going on.

CUSTOMERS

(ad lib exclamations, applause)

How about that!... Sheesh!... Eat your heart out, Houdini!

Remillard shrugs. The three books in the air tumble to the table
with a clatter. His UNCLE ROGER, the bookshop owner, a
beanpole with graying hair and a youthful face, steps forward
looking humorously indignant. Camera CLOSES ON HIM.

UNCLE ROGER

Is that any way to treat books? All you have to do is write them. I
have to sell them!

He extends his hands and beckons solicitously. All four books fly
off the table to him. He grasps them and forms them into neat
stack.

CUSTOMERS

(ad lib shouts, a feminine squeal)

God!... Holy [BLEEP]!... You see that?... Sonuvagun!

UNCLE ROGER

You didn't know? Sorry. My nephew should have told you that it
runs in the family.



[SCRIPT PAGES OMITTED]



TWO     SHOT - STEADICAM     FOLLOWING     MORENO
AND REMILLARD

Emerging from TELEPATHY EVALUATION CHAMBER, they walk
down HALLWAY toward Remillard's OFFICE, continuing
conversation begun in chamber.

REMILLARD

Only persons who already possess strong latencies for
metafunctions can reasonably expect to develop into operants
after training. It's like any other kind of talent: singing, for example.
One must first be born with a proper set of vocal cords. Then the
person might become a talented amateur without training. Usually,
however, the voice must be trained. The singer practices for years,
and with luck a great singer might result. But nobody can make an
opera singer out of a person who lacks the right vocal cords, or
who is tone-deaf. And you can't make a really competent vocalist
out of someone who hates to sing,

or who suffers from terminal stage fright.... It's a similar thing when
you work to raise a latent metafunction to operancy. Some will fail
to make it, and some - we hope! - will sing at the Met.

MORENO

(frowning)

Then all human beings don't have the potential for developing
these higher mind-powers?

REMILLARD

Of course not - any more than all people can become great opera
singers. This is why my proposal to test all Americans for latent
mind-powers is so important. The powers are a national resource.
We must discover who among our citizens have the potential for
becom­ing operant - then give them proper training.

MORENO

Sort of like the Astronaut Program?

REMILLARD

Yes... but enrolling both children and adults. Let me try to clarify the
concept of latency for you. Our studies have shown that everyone
is metapsychically latent to a certain extent. The strength of the
latency may vary from power to power. Dick may be strongly latent
in telepathy and weak in the healing faculty, while Jane is just the
opposite. With hard work, we may make an operant telepath of
Dick and an operant healer of Jane. But their weaker latencies may
never amount to anything.

MORENO

Suppose I was a latent telepath. Could you make me operant?

REMILLARD

Maybe. Keep in mind that there's no hard and fast line between
la­tency and operancy, though. Maybe you're a natural - what we
call a suboperant. All you need is a bit of practice and you're able
to broadcast telepathically to the Moon. But suppose your potential
is weak. We might train you till your skull warps - but discover that
your operant telepathic radius is only half a meter in diameter. Or
you can only broadcast at night when the sun's ionization of the
atmo­sphere is minimal, and even then only when you're
completely re­laxed and rested. You'd be an operant, technically
speaking, but your metafaculty wouldn't be very useful. Except
possibly for pillow talk.

MORENO

(smiles briefly)

You mention factors that can inhibit operancy, like ionization. Does
this mean that there are ways to screen out telepaths - or stop
them from using their powers?

REMILLARD

We're only beginning to discover ways to do this. It's very hard to
foil

the ultrasenses, such as excorporeal excursion and telepathy, that
don't seem to require much expenditure of psychic energy. Things
like psychokinesis, on the other hand, can be rather easily
frustrated by external factors. And internal, subjective factors can
be even more inhibitory.

TRACK INTO REMILLARD'S OFFICE

Angle favoring door as Remillard ushers Moreno inside. The office
fur­niture is old, academic-shabby. Extensive wall bookcases
overflowing with books and papers. Computer terminal. Wall
hologram of human brain. Painting of Mount Washington, New
Hampshire. And every­where - on desk, shelves, brackets, floor -
PLANTS growing luxuri­antly.

MORENO

(looking around)

Quite a conservatory you have here, Professor. You must have a
green thumb.

REMILLARD

(examining droopy plant on desk)

Actually, it's more like a green mind, I guess. Now this poor little
Paphiopedilum really needs mental TLC, so I keep it close by and
let it share my aura as well as the occasional healing thought.

He sits down and motions Moreno to a seat.

MORENO

(puzzled)

Your aura?

REMILLARD

(seeming vaguely annoyed with himself)

The bioenergetic field that surrounds my body - and that of every
other living thing. Plants included.

MORENO

(nods, as if suddenly recalling)

It seems to me I've read that certain people can even see the aura
that surrounds others... Can you see auras?

REMILLARD

Yes. If I concentrate on it.

MORENO

What do auras look like? What does mine look like?

CU REMILLARD

He is cupping his hands about the sick orchid plant and staring at it
with mild intensity.

REMILLARD

Auras look something like glowing, colored halos that pulse and
change. Healthy plants usually have a golden halo. Animals and
peo­ple have more varied colors. Operants have halos that look
bright to another operant who concentrates on viewing them. Since
you're latent, Mr. Moreno, your aura is quite faint. It's reddish, shot
through with flashes of violet.

MORENO (V. O. )

Does the color of a person's aura have any significance?

REMILLARD

We haven't worked out precise correlations yet. The individual
aural coloration tends to vary according to mood, health, and the
kind of mental activity being engaged in.

MORENO (V. O. )

Any particular significance to my red and purple?

REMILLARD

(looking blandly into camera)

I'd prefer not to comment on that today.

TWO SHOT - MORENO AND REMILLARD

Favoring Remillard and taking in the striking hologram of the brain.

MORENO

(in brisk mood switch)

We were discussing things that can inhibit the operation of the
higher mind-powers... I suppose things like liquor, drugs, fatigue,
illness - they'd all have an adverse effect on operancy, wouldn't
they?

REMILLARD

Oh, yes. If anything, the higher faculties are even more sensitive to
such things than the lower ones. But there are all kinds of other
factors that can diminish one's operancy as well. For example,
what the lay person calls mental blocks.

MORENO

Can you clarify?

REMILLARD

Let's take a more common mind function like memory. We've all
experienced forgetfulness. Suppose I'm sitting next to a lady at a
dinner party and I can't remember her name. Now why is that? Am I
eighty-seven years old - in which case my forgetfulness is to be
expected? No, I'm young and compos mentis. But no matter how
much I exert my will power, I just can't remember. A psychoanalyst
might come up with any number of reasons why. Perhaps the lady
is an old flame who jilted me many years ago. Perhaps her name is
the same as that of my Internal Revenue Service auditor! Or
perhaps the problem is simply a very difficult foreign name that I
failed to concentrate on when the lady and I were introduced. Any
one of those rather subtle factors could inhibit memory.
Metafunctions can be inhibited similarly.

MORENO

How about emotions? Anger, say. Or fear. If a person with strong
metafunctions was afraid of the reactions others might have - afraid
of hostility - could that make his powers go latent?

REMILLARD

It's possible. A strongly hostile or skeptical group of observers can
also inhibit displays of metafunction.

MORENO

Have you ever experienced a diminishing of your own mind-powers
because of emotional influences?

REMILLARD

(hesitating)

No. If anything, the adrenalin released by my body in response to
such emotions would tend to reinforce my metafaculties. But then,
I've been using the powers all my life, from the time I was an infant.
When we begin training small children to operancy, we'll probably
find that their higher faculties will remain usefully operant under all
but the most extreme inhibitory conditions. After all - you yourself
are seldom too shocked to speak. Or to see or hear. Or even to
react in an emergency.

CU MORENO

MORENO

This testing and training program you advocate. Some people
might say it had certain dangers. We'd be setting up a kind of elite
mind-corps, wouldn't we? One that might eventually feel justified in
seeking political power on the basis of their superior mentality.

TWO SHOT

REMILLARD

I don't think there's any danger of that.

MORENO

Oh?... Do you mean these operants would think politics was
be­neath them?

REMILLARD

(impatiently)

Certainly not. But there are so many other jobs to do that operants
would find more satisfying. Einstein didn't run for President, you
know.

CU MORENO

MORENO

(suddenly)

Do you, as a powerful operant, feel superior to normal people?

CU REMILLARD

REMILLARD

(again looking at plant, frowning)

The way you've phrased that question is somewhat inimical. Does
a concert violinist feel superior to the audience? Does a
mathematician feel superior to a cordon-bleu chef? Does a
librarian with an eidetic memory feel superior to an absent-minded
professor who won a Nobel Prize?

(lifts eyes and speaks deliberately)

Mr. Moreno, we all do things we know are wrong... like harbor
prejudices to boost our insecure egos. One can suffer from shaky
self-esteem no matter how well educated or how poorly educated
one happens to be. Even television journalists can show bias for or
against people they interview... I don't think that I look down upon
persons without operant metafunctions. I'd be a fool if I did. I have
certain talents, yes. But I lack so many others! I can't play the violin
or sing or even cook very well. I'm not good at drawing pictures or
playing tennis. I'm a terrible driver because I'm always off in the
clouds in­stead of paying attention to traffic. I tend to shilly-shally
around instead of making decisions promptly. So I would be an
integral idiot to think of myself as a superior being... and I don't
know of any other operants who think that way. If they do exist, I
hope I never meet up with them.

CU MORENO

MORENO

How about the flip side of that question, then? Do you ever feel
threatened by nonoperants?

TWO SHOT- REMILLARD FAVORED

REMILLARD

When I was much younger I kept my mind-powers completely
under wraps because I didn't want others to know I was different. I
wanted to be just like everyone else. You've interviewed a number
of other operants for your television series, so you know that such
protective coloration activity is the usual thing for youngsters who
grow up with self-taught metafunctions. Minorities who seem to be
a threat to majorities make the adaptations they must in order to
survive.

MORENO

Then you admit that operant psychics can pose a threat to
normals!

REMILLARD

(calmly)

I said seem to. Persons who are different from others in marked
ways are often perceived as threatening. But it doesn't have to be
that way. That's what civilization is supposed to be all about -
resolving dif­ferences maturely, not acting like bands of frightened
children. The

gap between operant and nonoperant is only the latest that modern
society has faced. We also have technology gaps, economic
gaps, cul­tural gaps, the generation gap, and even a sexual gap.
You can refuse to cross the gap and throw rocks at each other, or
you can cooperate to build a bridge to mutual betterment.

INTERCUT STOCK SHOTS - MONTAGE

Riotous scenes at London and Tokyo stock exchanges; mobs
besiege banks at Geneva and Zurich; Monte Carlo Casino with
sign: RELACHE/GESCHLOSSEN/CLOSED UNTIL FURTHER
NOTICE; Time magazine cover: DEFENSE STOCK DEBACLE;
newspaper head­lines: RUSSIA DUMPS GOLD, OIL LEASE
CHAOS, COCA-COLA FORMULA REVEALED, OFFSHORE TAX
REFUGES SELF-DESTRUCT; Newsweek magazine cover: WHO
WILL WATCH THE WATCHERS?

MORENO (V. O. )

But we've seen the turmoil that rocked the world stock and
commod­ity markets following the Edinburgh Demonstration. And
you must know that certain financiers and businesses that depend
upon secrecy for their operations look upon telepathy and
excorporeal excursion as deadly menaces. Other very serious
problems are just beginning to crop up. Operants aren't numerous
enough yet to pose much of a threat to society or to the global
economy, but what about the future, when the superminds you
propose to train begin to invade every walk of life?

TWO SHOT

REMILLARD

Operants aren't invaders from outer space, Mr. Moreno. We're only
people. Citizens, not superbeings. We want just about the same
things that you want - a peaceful and prosperous world for
ourselves and our children, satisfying work, freedom from
prejudice and oppression, a bit of fun now and then, someone to
love... This invasion of yours: Do you realize you could be talking
about your own children or grand­children? Our preliminary studies
seem to show that the human race has reached a critical point in
evolution. Our gene pool is throwing up increasing numbers of
individuals with the potential for becoming what you call a
supermind.

MORENO

(looking slightly shaken)

My children?

REMILLARD

Or those of your cousins and uncles and aunts... or neighbors, or
coworkers. In years to come, all humans will be born operant! But
that's a long way off, and we poor souls are going to have to
endure life in the transition zone during the foreseeable future. I
won't min­imize the fact that we may have a tough time.
Adjustments will have to be made. But all throughout human history
society has had to confront revolutions that overturned the old
order. In the Stone Age, metal was a threat! The first automobiles
frightened the horses and doomed the buggy-whip makers. But
what one group sees as a threat, another group may hail as a
blessing. Not to belabor the point... but did you notice that the
latest issue of the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists has turned back
the hands of its doomsday clock from two minutes before midnight
to half past eleven?

MORENO

(permitting himself a wintry smile)

Is that how you operants see yourselves, Professor? As the
saviors of humanity?

CU REMILLARD

REMILLARD

(sighs, fingering the plant)

Sometimes I wonder whether we might be the first scattered
spores of the evolving World Mind... and then again, we might be
only evo­lutionary dead ends, the mental equivalents of those
fossil Irish elk with the six-foot antlers that were gorgeous to look at
but losers in the survival game.

He looks at the plant, which seems noticeably perkier. Opening a
desk decanter, he pours a bit of water into the pot.

MORENO (V. O. )

(incredulously)

A World Mind? You mean, some kind of superstate, like the
Marxists envisioned? Operancy will lead to that?

TWO SHOT

REMILLARD

(laughs heartily)

No, no. Not a bit of it! No chance of our evolving into a metapsychic
beehive. Humanity's individuality is its strength. But, you see... with
the telepathy, especially, you have the potential for vastly
in­creased empathy: mind-to-mind socialization on a level above
any we've ever known... And it would be such a logical and elegant
survival response, the World Mind. A perfect counterpoint to our
increasingly dangerous technical advances.

MORENO

I still don't understand.

INTERCUT MYXOMYCETES NATURAL HISTORY SEQUENCE -
paralleling Remillard's VOICE OVER.

REMILLARD (V. O. )

Perhaps an analogy will help. There's a peculiar group of living
things

called Myxomycetes - or, to give them their more prosaic name,
slime molds. A slime mold is either an animal that acts like a plant,
or a plant that acts like an animal. Officially, it's a type of fungus.
But it's capable of independent movement, like an animal. In its
usual form, the slime mold is like a tiny amoeba, flowing here and
there on the forest floor engulfing and eating bacteria and other
microscopic goodies. It eats, it grows, and in time it splits like a
genuine   amoeba   into   two   individuals. In   a   favorable   forest
environment there will be thousands or even millions of these little
single-celled eaters going about their individual business... But
sometimes, the food supply gives out. Perhaps the forest dries up
in a prolonged drought. In some way the individual cells seem to
realize that it's "unite or die" time. They begin to come together.
First they form blobs and then rivulets of slime. These flow toward
a central point and combine into a multicelled mass of jelly that
becomes a real organism, sometimes more than thirty centimeters
in diameter ... and it creeps along the ground. Some creeping
slime molds look like pancakes of dusty jelly and some look like
slugs, leaving a trail of slime behind. The organism may travel for
two weeks, looking for a more favorable place to live. When it
stops migrating it changes shape again - often to a thing like a
knob at the end of a stalk. In time the knob splits open and
releases a cloud of dusty spores that fly through the air. Eventually
the spores come to earth, where warmth and moisture turn them
into amoebalike individuals again. They take up their old life - until
the next time things get rough and Unity becomes imperative...

TWO      SHOT - REMILLARD     AND     MORENO - STEADICAM
FOLLOWING -

We discover them as they are approaching the exit of the
RESEARCH FACILITY. Moreno is leaving.

MORENO

And you really believe that human minds will have to come together
in somewhat the same way in order to survive?

REMILLARD

The idea seems very natural to a telepath, Mr. Moreno. It's only a
higher form of socialization, after all. To a tribe of primitives living at
the clan level, the notion of a complex democratic society seems
hopelessly bizarre. But primitives transplanted into industrial
nations have often adapted very successfully. Think of some of the
Southeast Asian hill folk who came to America in the 1970s and
'80s. A World Mind is quite plausible to operants, and of course it
would include nonoperant minds as well.

MORENO

I don't see how!

REMILLARD

Neither do I... at the moment. But that's the payoff that some of us
metapsychic theoreticians envision. A society of the mind evolving
toward harmony and mutualism that still lets individuals retain their
freedom. That's one of the topics we'll be discussing in Alma-Ata
next year, at the First World Congress on Metapsychology. We'll
deal with practicalities first, but then the universe is the limit! It may
take a few thousand years to accomplish a World Mind, but I like to
think of the meeting there in Kazakhstan as the first little blob of
amoebas flowing together into a true organism. The creature is still
tiny and not very effectual... but it'll grow.

CUT TO MORENO CU - AGAINST PROGRAM LOGO (MATTE)

MORENO

(addressing viewers)

Denis Remillard's vision is an amazing one - but then he is an
amaz­ing man. Perhaps, as the President said, a supermind. Right
now there are at most a few hundred others like him scattered
around the world. But tomorrow, and next year, and in the twenty-
first century fast approaching, those superminds among us will
multiply. And as they do, they'll change the world. How they change
it remains to be seen ... I'm Carlos Moreno for 60 Minutes.

FADE TO COMMERCIAL BREAK



23

FROM THE MEMOIRS OF ROGATIEN REMILLARD



why had i done it?

What perverse compulsion had led me to top my nephew's display
of psychokinesis with one of my own, thus revealing my most
closely guarded secret on a television program beamed around
the globe?

Oh yes, I had been more than a little drunk at the time, having given
in to the need to fortify myself against the invasion of my bookshop
by

Carlos Moreno and his squad of muckrakers. But to show my
power so flippantly, with such cornball insouciance! I had to be
cracking up.

After the fatal taping session in the shop, when we had all had our
giggle and it occurred to me what a piece of lunacy I had
perpetrated, I went on a towering binge. I missed the actual 60
Minutes telecast that took place on Sunday, three days later, as
well as the debriefing party afterward that was given at the
Metapsychology Lab, where Denis and his Coterie celebrated
having thrown their bonnets over the windmill. Apparently only one
person missed me, out of all that supposedly psychosensitive lot,
and wondered where I had disappeared to, and fig­ured things out,
and had the compassion to come and ring the bell to my apartment
and shout telepathically until I was roused from my stupor and
coerced into opening the door...

Lucille.

"I knew it!" she exclaimed, pushing inside. "I just knew you'd done
something stupid. Look at you! Roger, what are you doing to
yourself?"

"Good question, " I mumbled, grinning down at her. But my
drunken insolence quailed in the face of her terrible charity. I must
have looked like a sodden scarecrow, half conscious and filthy; but
she had helped tend her invalid father for years and had no trouble
at all coping with me. She forced me to take a shower, dressed me
in clean pajamas, and pummeled my brain until I swallowed a
vitamin-laden milkshake. Then she put me to bed. When I woke up
ten hours later she was still there, dozing in a chair in the parlor,
and my hurrah's nest of an apartment was now spotless and my
entire stock of booze had been poured down the drain.

With my head throbbing like a calliope at full steam and my knees
awobble, I looked in hung-over wonderment at the sleeping young
woman, trying to think why she, of all people, had come to my
rescue.

Her eyes opened. They were brown and very stern, and I couldn't
help remembering how she had sent Denis and me packing when
we had first dowsed her out eleven years earlier.

"Why?" she said quietly, echoing my telepathic question. "Because
I know just what came over you when Denis did his thing and you
knew the jig was up. Poor old Roger. "

She stretched, then got up from the chair and looked at her wrist-
watch. "Quarter to eight. I have a seminar at nine this morning, but
there's time to scramble some eggs. " She headed for my kitchen.

"What d'you mean you know?" I croaked, shuffling after. "I don't
even know! And what the hell right do you have coming up here
and interfering with me? Don't tell me the fuckin' Ghost sent you!"

She began to crack eggs. The sound was like ax-blows against my
tortured eardrums. I lurched and her coercion reached out and
coolly tipped me into a kitchen chair. I let out a groan and caught
my head before it bounced on the freshly polished maple table
top. A few mo­ments later she was shoving a cup of coffee under
my nose.

"Microwaved instant, but strong enough to etch glass, " she said.
"Drink. " Coercion locked on, stifling my instinctive refusal. I drank.
Then she produced a nauseously aromatic plate of eggs with
buttered toast. My guts cringed at the loathsome prospect.

"Eat. "

"I can't -"

YES YOU CAN.

Bereft of will power, I dug in. Lucille sat down opposite me and
sipped tea, keeping the compulsion firm by maintaining eye
contact. She was not a pretty woman but her face had that high-
colored attractiveness indicative of a formidable character. Her
dark hair was cut in a simple pageboy with the bangs just touching
thick, straight brows. She wore a scarlet turtleneck sweater and
jeans, and her hands were raw, the once polished fingernails
damaged from the heavy housecleaning chores she had
undertaken on my behalf.

As my stomach filled and my aching head deflated to a size
approximating normality, I felt ashamed of my surly ingratitude and
more than ever mystified that she should have been the one to
think of me. She had been an occasional customer at the
bookshop, showing a rather regrettable penchant for fantasy books
featuring dragons. Her mind had always closed primly at my
avuncular jests and resisted my attempts to put her onto a more
sophisticated style of escapist literature. Lucille knew what she
liked and stuck to it with Franco stubbornness. She was not even a
full-fledged member of the Coterie, but only one of the more
talented experimental subjects - a mere student - which made her
assertion that she understood my mental state all the more
improbable.

"But I do understand, " she said, reading my subvocalizations.
"You and I are really quite a bit alike. Both of us are still trying to
adapt, asking questions about ourselves that desperately need
answers. "

I glared at the nervy little chit, mopping my plate with the last of the
toast. Her coercion slid aside as I managed to prop my mental
barricade into position.

She only smiled. "There's a person who's helped me to find some
answers, Roger. I think he could help you, too. I'm going to come
back here this afternoon at three o'clock and take you along with
me to meet him. "

"No, you aren't, " said I. "Don't think that I'm not grateful to you for
shoveling me up and putting this place back in order after my lost
weekend - but I'm quite all right now. I don't need any help from
your friend. And don't think you can force me. You'll find I'm not
nearly so susceptible to coercion when I'm compos mentis. "

She leaned toward me earnestly. "I wouldn't coerce you to come.
That wouldn't be any use. But you must, Roger! You know that
you're seriously in need of help. Everybody knows."

I laughed. "So I'm the talk of the town, am I? A disgrace and an
embarrassment, sans doute, to my nephew the distinguished
supermind! And which one of his brilliant young colleagues have
you pegged to drag the black sheep out of his alcoholic
wilderness?"

"None of the Coterie. I want you to talk to my own analyst, Dr. Bill
Sampson. He isn't an operant at all. But he has more insight - more
caring competence - than that whole damned labful of superior
metapsychic pricks. Denis included."

Oh my God. I squeezed my crusty eyelids shut.

She babbled on. "When I felt how deeply afraid you were there in
the bookshop, with the TV people closing in and Denis put in the
position of having to demonstrate his PK, I was just appalled. Then
you defied it! I knew right then that I'd have to do something to help
you. Take you to Bill. He helped me lick my dragons and he can
help you -"

Lightning struck.

Now I knew why I had made that lunatic gesture in front of the TV
cameras, why I had berated myself so that her mind's ear
overheard, why I had admitted her to my squalid sanctum, asking if
my own special dragon had sent her.

It had.

Poor little kindhearted Lucille! Let me reinforce my mind-screen,
hiding from you the blaze of certainty. It had been more than a year
ago that I was admonished to break up your love affair with Dr. Bill
Sampson, and I put the notion completely out of my mind. But
synchronicity is not so easily denied... and here we are, and there
the inevitability awaits us.

Once again I am not a man but a tool. And how is the dirty deed to
be done? (Neither she nor Sampson are fools, and any blatant
action, such as reporting the prima facie breach of doctor-patient
ethics, would tend to solidify their liaison rather than sever it. ) No, I
would have to be both subtle and direct.

All that is really necessary is to show old Sampson the truth.

The psychiatrist is a normal, but he is clearly enthralled by the
metapsychic phenomenon in his beloved. Show him how he has
played the romantic hero, rescuing a malleable young Andromeda
from the mental rock where she chained herself as dragon-meat.
The princess is tender and grateful now; but her chains can be
taken up and worn again at any time - and they can be stretched to
fit two minds as easily as one when reality inevitably intrudes on the
glamour. Then she will destroy the mortal lover as well as herself,
surrendering to her dragon's fire...

Does he think that love will transcend? Then show him what
operancy really means - what a mature operant can do - what she
will be able to do someday! Now, blinded and gentled, she shrinks
from prying into the deeper layers of his mind. But pry she will, and
she'll find the petty, cruel, and unworthy thoughts that flit through
every human mind, no matter how loving, and in her hurt she'll fling
them into his face. Show him how easily it's done! And then coerce
him. Show how his darling will be capable of violating his sovereign
will, should the mood come upon her. Show him the PK! Give him
just a hint of the healing faculty's flip side! And then the clincher.
Project the image that every operant, even the most noble, holds
deep in his heart when he compares himself to lowly normals.
Show him Odd John's truth.

"I was living in a world of phantoms, or animated masks. No one
seemed really alive. I had a queer notion that if I pricked any of you
there would be no bleeding but only a gush of wind... "

Learn the truth, Dr. Bill Sampson. Then find a normal woman to
love and leave Lucille Cartier to her metapsychic destiny. Learn the
easy way, from somebody who learned the hard way.

"Roger, " Lucille said. "Please come with me this afternoon. It will
all be for the best. "

"I hope so, " I told her. "God, I hope so. "



24

SUPERVISORY CRUISER NOUMENON [Lyl 1-0000]

4 JUNE  1992



when the fanatics successfully smuggled the second of the
Armageddon devices into place, and that place was the Israeli
nu­clear weaponry works at Dimona, the portents were such that
Homol­ogous Trend felt impelled to consult with its three fellow
entities.

"One must admit, " Trend told the others, "that my anatomization of
the probability lattices is somewhat disorderly - but that's Earth for
you. However, the resultant inevitably leads to still another global
cri­sis capable of disrupting the planetary sexternion - and
Intervention. "

"One's sensibilities churn, " Eupathic Impulse said, upon viewing
the analysis. "From this one locus proceed conflicts not only in the
Middle East, but also in South Africa, Uzbekistan, and India. "

"One is chagrined, " Asymptotic Essence said, "given the
worldwide flowering of goodwill after the Scottish Demonstration,
to note that the group instigating the atrocity stubbornly persists in
its ancient tribal hostility mode. Other Earth populations at higher
and lower levels of sociopolitical organization experienced positive
transformational nu­ances as a result of MacGregor's ploy. What's
wrong with this bunch?"

"Status Three indigenes, " Noetic Concordance observed sadly,
"are a perverse and difficult lot, more likely to stall in metapsychic
develop­ment than other classifications. Status Threes vest
authority in puppet rulers dominated by a powerful priestly caste.
The intellectual estab­lishment is subservient, and upward mobility
of individuals is limited according to their profession of orthodoxy.
The higher mind-powers - even elementary creativity - tend to be
repressed, except insofar as they serve the narrow religious
objective. The mind-set is intolerant, reactionary, xenophobic, and
more than a little silly. Fanaticism is a prime activator of
psychoenergies and the view of consequents is min­imal. Even
this impending catastrophe is seen by the perpetrators as a
glorification of the All. "

Eupathic Impulse said, "One has a sneaking suspicion that this
par­ticular terrorist group wants to get its licks in before the
inspection teams of the UN Nuclear Nonproliferation Agency
include persons adept in farsensing. "

Trend waved all this thought-embroidery aside. "You three agree
with my dire prognosis. Do you also agree that the gravity of the
situation demands that we summon Atoning Unifex for a
contemplation?"

"One regrets having to disturb It, " Concordance said. "But if Earth
is to be spared this profound trauma, overt action will have to be
taken. "

Asymptotic Essence permitted itself the barest hint of vexation.
"Another deliberate skew of the noögenetic curvature? That will
make three inside of fourteen months, including the rescue of
MacGregor from the Mafia hit-man and the augmentation of the
Alma-Ata group's coercion of the Soviet TV net. How long must we
keep this up? If Earth's Mind were treated in a normal manner, it
would never achieve coadunation!"

Eupathic Impulse was inclined to agree. "Intervention in due
season is one thing: continued interference with significant
nodalities on the evolving mental lattices is quite another. If it were
any entity save Unifex commanding this most atypical wet-nursing,
one might have the most serious misgivings. "

"One of the most notable incongruities is our own physical
presence here, " Noetic Concordance reminded the others. "One
questions why the Supervisory Body does not simply work through
the Agent Polities, who are more than a little scandalized by our
participation. "

"One may question, " Eupathic Impulse noted wryly, "but one
doesn't necessarily get straight answers. "

Homologous Trend said, "One must trust Unifex. "

Eupathic Impulse said, "If It would only share Its prescience!"

Noetic Concordance said, "Of all our vague and absent-minded
Lylmik race, It is the most terribly preoccupied. And weary. One
intuits that It would transfer the burden of Galactic mentorship and
submerge Itself in the Cosmic All in a trice, were It not faithful to
some great overriding dynamic -"

"Which It declines to share, " Impulse said.

"We must trust It, " Trend reiterated, "as we have since the dawn of
the Milieu, when It selected us four from all the eager Lylmik after
manifesting the Protocol of Unification. Unifex has shared... as
much as It has been able to do so. You know our racial Mind's
limitation as well as its strengths. We are ancient and tending
toward stagnation, conservative and over-fond of the mystical
lifestyle. Unifex's great vi­sion of a Galactic Mind was able to
electrify us, to send us beyond the Twenty-One Worlds in search
of other, immature Minds that we might shepherd toward
coadunation. Toward Unity. That, if you will, was the great outrage
Unifex committed: the initiation of the Milieu. You younger entities
have let the memory of it slip away in your earnest contemplation of
present anomalies. "

"Yes, " the three admitted. For some time they filled their minds
with the Milieu's essence and drifted, serene.

But Trend recalled them. "The two Armageddon devices are in
place. Action, if it is to be taken, must be taken soon. Let us
summon Unifex. "

They called in metaconcert.

And It was there with them, glowing in the liquid-crystal films of the
star-cruiser's innermost heart, emanating its familiar emotional mix
of affection and crotchety longanimity.

The Quincunx formed. The problem was set forth.

Unifex told them: "One may take no preventive action. This awful
event happens... as it must and as it has. "

"May we ask why?"

"To unite the World Mind more fully in pain, as it has failed to unite
in joy during the past seven months of premature celebration. This
calamity is only one in the ultimate educative series leading toward
the climax: pain upon pain lesson upon lesson ordeal upon ordeal.
"

"We suggest, in all respect, that the teaching process might be
less radical. As you saw from your contemplation of the problem
as formu­lated, there is a distinct probability that the United States
and the Soviet Union will abandon their newborn rapprochement
and be drawn into a fresh posture of hostility. The operant human
minds will no longer be viewed as an assurance for peace, but
rather as a hindrance to necessary war!"

"Nevertheless, we will not forestall the detonation of the
Armaged­don devices. " Unifex's mind-voice was sorrowful, but It
declined to reveal the thought-processes - proleptic or otherwise -
that had led to Its judgment.

The four subsidiary Lylmik entities came as close to outright
dissent as they had ever done in the two-million-year life of the
Quincunx. "We suggest that it may be unloving of you to fob us off
on this grave matter without resolving some aspect of the paradox.
Do you base your deci­sions upon analysis of the probability
lattices, as we do, or are you privy to some recondite data-source
that influences your special treatment of the planet Earth?"

"I may not tell you that... What I may tell you is that the lessons to
be learned by the Earthlings must be learned most especially by
the operant minds. It is these, not their contentious latent brethren,
who must mature in Light if there is to be an Intervention. The
majority of the operants must decide freely that their mind-powers
must never be used aggressively. Never. Not even in a cause that
their intellects perceive as good. And because this truth is counter
to one of the deepest imperatives of human psychology, its
apprehension will be attained only at a fearful price... a price that
will not be fully paid until after the Intervention. "

The four were aghast.

Unifex said, "O my friends, I admit that I have not been sufficiently
forthcoming since our Earth visitation began. I admit that I have
re­served data and allowed myself to be submerged in perplexity.
But I have forgotten so much and the chasm between the human
mind and our own is so vast... You are aware that Earth's nodalities
are more critical to the future of the Milieu than those of any other
world - and yet our own role in its mental evolution remains unclear
to me. Often I must act through feeling rather than through logic!
This world, unlike the worlds of the Krondaku, Gi, Poltroyans, and
Simbiari, does not occupy a place clearly defined in the larger
reality. I have been able to penetrate its mystery only partially
myself, by processes outside of in­tellection. So I can only beg
you to bear with me... and in return, I shall offer you a species of
metaphor. If you attend to it, certain aspects of the Earthly paradox
may be clarified. "

"We are eager to experience your metaphor. "

"Very well, " said Unifex. "We five will contemplate it together, but
as individuals and without any metapsychic penetration of the
human participants in the drama. We will empathize with the
Earthlings to the fullest, and view the spectacle as much on their
simple level as is possible for us. Please accompany me mentally
now to Japan, where a baseball game is about to be played... "



It was the final contest of an exhibition series: the first East-West
Championship ever organized, and one of numerous goodwill
enter­prises that had been undertaken in various parts of the world
in the joyous aftermath of the Edinburgh Demonstration. For a few
brief months, the planet had given itself over to a carnival of hope,
reacting to decades of nuclear anxiety. There had been festivals of
music and dance and drama and poetry, and there were seminars
of knowledge sharing, and there were games. Seven countries had
participated in the baseball series, and now it had all come down to
a last championship game between the mighty New York Mets and
the formidable Hiroshima Carp. The teams were tied at three
games apiece in the seven-game series.

The players, clad in colorful close-fitting suits, enacted the
decep­tively simple contest before an audience of more than
150,000 fans, who had packed the vast Hiroshima Yakyujo to the
topmost tier. Those who viewed the game on television numbered
nearly a billion - some twenty percent of the global population - and
included many who, like the fascinated Lylmik, were more
interested in the symbolic than the sporting aspect of this particular
match-up.

It was a multilayered event: physical, psychological, mathematical.
There was even an elusive musical element in its alternation of
violent action with intervals of pregnant ennui. Atoning Unifex
imparted to Its fellow entities an instantaneous knowledge of the
rules, the attributes and eccentricities of the players, and the
strategic theories employed by the team managers during the
previous games of the series.

"There are actually a number of metaphors being manifested here,
" Unifex said. "As we watch, let us also synthesize and strive to
apply the essential wisdom to the larger reality. "

Then the game began, and for more than two hours the exotic
beings were caught up in the symbolic conflict. The game was
closely fought until the seventh inning, when the Mets leaped
ahead, 4-2. They kept their lead through the bottom of the ninth,
and the Carp came to bat for the last time facing a make-or-break
situation.

The Mets pitcher, the celebrated Zeke O'Toole, was no longer in
the flush of youth and obviously tiring, but it was out of the question
that he should be replaced. Instead, he adopted an excessively
cautious technique designed to frustrate and anger the opposition.
He posed, ruminated, and eyeballed the Carp players on deck and
the waiting batter in an insolent and intimidating manner. The tactic
resulted in two strikeouts, and wails of dismay arose from the Carp
partisans in the stadium. Their desolation was transformed into
fresh hope, however, when the next batter hit a single, and the one
after him doubled.

"Now the climax of the drama approaches, " Atoning Unifex said.
"The next scheduled batter is the Carp pitcher, an untalented ball-
walloper who will undoubtedly be replaced by a pinch hitter. Yes.
Here comes Kenji 'Shoeless Ken' Katsuyama, a redoubtable but
somewhat erratic man in the clutch situation. The Carp manager
takes a monu­mental gamble sending him in. If this massively
muscled young slugger can connect with the ball, he may very well
hit it into the hyperspatial matrix! He would score himself on a
home run, and bring in the men on second and third, winning the
game for the Carp. To avoid this out­come, one might expect the
wily veteran pitcher, O'Toole, to give this dangerous rival a walk to
first base. This might set up a double play if the men on base
attempt to steal, wiping the Carp out and winning it for the Mets. Or,
even if a single Carp should score on the walk, it seems virtually
certain that the unagile Katsuyama would be tagged for the third
out on a subsequent play, also giving victory to the Mets. Another
possibility, more perilous for the Mets, is that with Ken taking first
on a walk and the bases loaded, the next batter up might put the
Carp into an advantageous scoring position. O'Toole and
Katsuyama are both in what humans call the hot seat. "

"The Japanese fans certainly do not concede defeat, " Noetic
Concor­dance remarked.

"See how they plead for a home run, " said Eupathic Impulse,
"exert­ing all their collective coercion! What a pity the metafaculty
has such a large suboperative component. "

Homologous Trend displayed statistics on the powerful young
batter's past performance. "This Shoeless One does not seem to
know the meaning of the term 'strike zone. ' One notes that he has
been known to flail away at bean balls. This may influence
O'Toole's style of play. "

"The batter is impatient with the dilatory tactics of the elderly
pitcher, " Asymptotic Essence said. "The men on second and third
base hold back, wary of the American's reputation as a butcher of
base-stealers. "

Zeke O'Toole was dawdling conspicuously on the mound, but he
was given the benefit of the doubt by the Japanese plate umpire.
Meanwhile, Katsuyama glowered, pawed the earth, and gripped his
Mizuno bat in a strangle hold.

Atoning Unifex said, "Play ball, you dragass Irish grandstander!"

Now the catcher was sidling to the right, obviously expecting a
waste pitch thrown wide. O'Toole shook his head minimally. A split
second later he hurled a sizzling knuckleball high and inside, barely
crossing a corner of the plate.

Strike one.

There were more delays. O'Toole sketched a series of cryptic
signals, then finally threw one very wide for ball one. Katsuyama
stomped about, twirling his bat and grimacing. He took his stance
and waited. And waited. When the pitch came, curving and slow,
he swung heroically. He missed.

Strike two.

The Lylmik were aware of Shoeless Ken's mounting fury. He stood
in a kind of sumo crouch while a fastball came zinging in,
deliberately wide, for ball two.

O'Toole chewed his cud of spruce gum, nonchalantly cupped the
return behind his back, swiveled his head to spear the men on
base with his pale and ornery eye, then seemed to bow his head in
prayer. The fans hooted and screamed but the complaisant umpire
merely waited. At last the pitcher wound up and delivered wide and
junky for ball three.

"This is called a full count, " Unifex said. "One notes that the
veteran O'Toole remains cool while Katsuyama is livid. "

The men on base were ranging out desperately. O'Toole wasted
no time but wound up with barely legal celerity and threw a wide
pitchout to the waiting catcher. It was intended to be a fourth ball,
walking Katsuyama and nailing the man creeping along the base
line toward home plate, but it barely scraped the edge of the strike
zone and...

Kwoing!

Crowding the plate, uttering a martial shout, Shoeless Ken swung
his bat in a flattened arc at that hopelessly wide pitch. The
connection came perilously close to the bat's tip; but so heroic was
the swing that the ball took off like a blurry white meteor into the
remotest coign of left field, topping the fence. A tsunami of
ecstatic sound engulfed Katsuyama as he ceremonially encircled
the bases. He bowed to the crowd. Then he bowed to Zeke
O'Toole, who still stood on the pitcher's mound with folded arms.

The huge electronic display posted the final score:



HIROSHIMA   CARP   5

NEW   YORK   METS   4

HIROSHIMA   CARP   WIN   PLANET   SERIES

4   GAMES   TO   3



In the Lylmik cruiser invisibly orbiting Earth, the supervising entities
studied the baseball game in its totality, frozen in the
spatiotemporal lattices like a fixed specimen on a slide, viewed
under a microscope at extreme magnification.

"One observes the obvious historical parallel, " said Homologous
Trend. "The old antagonism ritualized. "

Asymptotic Essence said, "One notes that, in sharing this
sublima­tion with their fellow humans, the two powerful nations
speed coadunation of the World Mind. "

Eupathic Impulse said, "One perceives that you, Unifex, knew the
outcome and educational potential of this obscure contest before it
began. This reinforces my own hypothesis of a great Proleptic
Peculiar­ity in the planet's sexternion - nodally determined by
yourself!"

The poet, Noetic Concordance, was silent for some time. Its
contri­bution, when it finally came, was almost tentative. "One
observes that the American sports fans in the stadium cheered the
Carp victory even more fervently than did the Japanese... "

Atoning Unifex let Its mind-smile embrace the four. "Well done.
Hold the collection of metaphors deep in your hearts. Return to it
from

time to time to assist your contemplation of Earth. And tomorrow
when the atomic bombs destroy Tel Aviv and Dimona, mourn with
humanity. But remember that the probability lattices are not
certain­ties. They can be moved by fervent acts of will. Both love
and evolution act in an elitist way. And now, farewell. "


THE END OF PART TWO

PART III

THE INTERVENTION

1

FROM THE MEMOIRS OF ROGATIEN REMILLARD



paul remillard, my grandnephew, made an observation during his
first address to the Galactic Concilium in 2052, when Earth's long
proctoring by the Simbiari finally ended and human magnates were
admitted at last to the Milieu's governing body:

"There are two prices that must inevitably be paid by the operant
mind. The first is a reluctant but certain alienation from the latent
members of one's race - and its consequent is pain. The second
price is less obvious, an obligation of the higher mind to love and
serve those minds who stand a step beneath on evolution's ladder.
Only when this second price is freely and selflessly paid is there
alleviation from the pain of the first... "

By the time Paul bespoke those words, he was merely uttering a
truism that operant human beings had recognized (and debated)
for more than sixty years. It was foreshadowed in Tamara
Sakhvadze's keynote speech before the First Congress on
Metapsychology in Alma-Ata in September 1992, where vigorous
exception was taken to it by certain factions. It was formally
codified after the Intervention in the ethical formulae imparted to all
student operants by their Milieu-trained teachers, but not fully
subscribed to by the Human Polity until our recalcitrant race
instigated the Metapsychic Rebellion in 2083, learning its lesson at
last as it nearly destroyed the Milieu that had prematurely
welcomed Earth into its benevolent confederation.

You reading this who are immersed in the Unity take the principle
for granted. It is as old as noblesse oblige or Luke 12:48. As for
the operant minds who denied or tried to evade their duty to serve,
they are all dead or reformed except me. For a long time I thought
I was tolerated as a harmless cautionary example - the last Rebel,
the sole surviving metapsychic maverick, neither a "normal" human
mind nor an operant integrated into the Milieu's Unity. I believed,
like other Remillards, that I had been allowed to persist in my
unregeneracy because of my famous family and because I was no
menace, my refusal having been grounded in bloody-minded
stubbornness rather than malice or arro­gance.

But now, as I approach the climax of this first volume of my
memoirs, I am inclined to revise my modest evaluation of myself.
Perhaps there is a deeper purpose in my relegation to the
sidelines in la grande danse. I do bring, after all, a unique
perspective to these memoirs. This may be the reason why I have
been compelled - by something - to write them.



The rain seemed interminable during the summer of 1992, not only
in my own section of New England but also in much of the rest of
the Northern Hemisphere, as if the sky itself were obliged to share
in the universal sorrow following the Armageddon strike. There was
the hu­man tragedy, the half million dead and more than two million
others rendered homeless, and the suffering of the injured that
would extend over so many years. But there was also the symbolic
loss: The land holy to Jews, Christians, and Muslims was debarred
to us for uncountable years beneath its pall of radioactivity.

The devices exploded in Tel Aviv and Dimona by the Islamic Holy
War terrorist group had been crude, with a yield of about ten
kilotons apiece. The fallout was intensified by the incineration of
the Israeli nuclear weapons stockpile in the Dimona blast; and it
was debris from this that spread northward in a wide swath, heavily
contaminating both Jerusalem and Amman and rendering some
forty thousand square kilo­meters of Israel and Jordan
uninhabitable for the foreseeable future.

In the early days of that summer of lamentation, when the rain was
poisoned and the whole world was shocked into incredulity, the
mag­nitude of the disaster almost lifted it out of the political realm.
Human beings of all races and all religious faiths mourned. A
massive multi­national relief effort mobilized while church bells
tolled, mosques over­flowed with bereaved Muslims, and Jews
around the world sang Kaddish - not only for the dead and for lost
Jerusalem, but for the dashed dream of peace.

"We could not watch everywhere, " the EE adepts said. "There are
too few of us, and the Armageddon strike was completely
unexpected. "

True; but there was still an irrational undercurrent feeling of
betrayal. The miraculous "happy ending" of the metapsychic
coming had proved a hollow mockery. Not only had the operants
failed to prevent the calamity, but they were not even able to help
locate the perpetrators. It was more than a year later that ordinary
UN investigators cooperating with Interpol traced the members of
the Iranian clique that had planted the bombs and brought them to
trial. The psychotic Pakistani techni­cian who had sold them the
plutonium had long since blown his brains out.

After six weeks, the airborne radioactivity was almost entirely
dissi­pated and the summer rains were clean again. Over most of
the planet, the deadly isotopes were spread very thinly, and they
sank with the rain into the soil or drifted to the bottom of the sea.
Earth recovered, as it had from Hiroshima and Nagasaki. But the
Holy Land was ruined. With the farmlands contaminated by the
heaviest fallout and livestock dead or scattered, the rural
population that had escaped immediate injury fled in panic to the
nearest unaffected cities, triggering food riots and the collapse of
law and order. The Jordanian government disintegrated almost
immediately. Israeli officials set up an emergency capital at Haifa
and vowed that the nation would survive; but by August, expert
consensus held that the economy of the Jewish homeland, always
frag­ile, had this time suffered a mortal blow. Surviving middle-
class and professional Israelis began a growing exodus to the
United States, Can­ada, and South Africa. Some Oriental Jews and
Arab Christians resettled in Morocco. Upper-class Muslims and
others with foreign bank accounts readily found haven. But the bulk
of the displaced Muslim population faced an uncertain fate.
Armageddon had killed more Jews, but it had left far greater
numbers of Muslims homeless because of the fallout pattern. Few
Christian nations were inclined to offer them asylum be­cause the
refugees were associated in the popular mind with the cause of the
Islamic terrorists, and because a vengeful minority proclaimed their
intention of escalating Armageddon into a full-scale jihad.
Re­sponding to popular opinion, the politicians of Europe, the
Americas, and the Pacific Basin concluded that the refugees would
be "unassimil­able, " a social and economic liability. Dar al-Islam
countered proudly that it would take care of its own. However, when
the speechmaking ended, it appeared that only Iran was eager to
welcome large numbers of immigrants. Other Islamic countries
were willing to open their doors to small numbers of homeless; but
the oil glut and overpopulation had already strained their
economies, and they feared the political conse­quences of an
influx of indigents.

The displaced Muslims were notably reluctant to put themselves at
the mercy of the fanatical Shiite regime in Iran. Most of them were
Sunnis, of a more moderate religious persuasion than the Iranians,
and they were appalled that the Ayatollah had proclaimed
Armageddon to be justified under shari'ah, the traditional Islamic
law. Furthermore, the refugees suspected (quite rightly) that they
would be required to show loyalty to their new country by fighting in
the long-standing war between Iran and Iraq. A few hundred fiery
young men accepted the Ayatollah's invitation. The rest of the 1.5
million men, women, and children remained encamped in squalid
"receiving centers" in Arabia and the Sinai, subsisting on charity,
until China announced its remarkable proposal. When this was
approved, the great airlift began early in September. By the end of
the year the last of the displaced families were resettled in remote
"Lands of Promise" in Xinjiang. Red Crescent and Red Cross
inspectors reported that the refugees were made welcome by their
coreligionists, the Uigurs, Kirghiz, Uzbeks, Tadjiks, and Kazakhs,
who had lived in that part of China from time immemorial; they
worked on collective farms in the oases and the irrigated deserts
and adapted well - until Central Asia blew up in the course of the
Soviet Civil War, and only the Intervention saved the Xinjiang
population from becoming cannon fodder in the projected Chinese
invasion of Kazakhstan.

The Intervention also restored Jerusalem to the human race as a
city of pilgrimage. Milieu science decontaminated the Holy Land
and thou­sands of the original inhabitants elected to return.
However, since the Milieu statutes forbade any form of theocratic
government, neither Is­rael nor Jordan were ever reborn. Palestine
became the first territory governed solely by the Human Polity of
the Milieu (successor to the United Nations) under mandate of the
Simbiari Proctorship and the Galactic Concilium.



The rain was torrential on 21 September 1992, the last Monday of
the summer, which turned out to be a very memorable day at my
bookshop.

The excitement began when I unpacked a box of paperbacks I had
purchased as part of a job lot at an estate sale in Woodstock the
previous weekend. The spines visible at the top showed mostly
science-fiction and mystery titles dating from the 1950s, and I'd
bought three boxes for thirty dollars. I figured I would at least
recoup my investment, since I had already spotted a moderately
rare collectible, The Green Girl by Jack Williamson. As I sorted
through the rest of that box I also uncov­ered a halfway decent first
edition of The Chinese Parrot, a Charlie Chan mystery that I knew
would fetch at least fifteen from a Dartmouth physics professor of
the same name. I began to whistle cheerily, even though the storm
was lashing the streets and the wind roared like a typhoon. There
probably wouldn't be a customer all day - but who cared? I could
catch up on my sorting.

Then I reached the very bottom of the box. I saw a soiled manila
envelope marked save this!!! in a pencil scrawl. There was a small
book inside. I pried the corroded clasp open, let the envelope's
contents slither out onto my worktable, and gasped. There lay Ray
Bradbury's Fahren­heit 451, from the limited Ballentine 1953
edition of two hundred cop­ies, signed by the author. The white
asbestos binding was spotless.

With the utmost care, I edged the precious volume onto a sheet of
clean wrapping paper and carried it to my office at the rear of the
shop. Setting the treasure reverently aside, I sat down at my
computer and summoned the current paperback collectors' price
guide, my fingers shaking as I tapped the keys. The screen
showed the going rate for my rarity. Even in VG condition, it would
sell for no less than six thousand dollars. And my copy was mint.

I chortled and hit the keys again for the Worldwide PB Want List,
and a moment later began to scrutinize the small group of well-
heeled bib­liophiles who presently coveted my nonincendiary little
gem: a Texas fantasy foundation; a doctor in Bel Air; a Bradbury
completist in Waukegan, Illinois; the Countess of Arundel, a keen
collector of dystopias; the Library of the University of Taiwan; and
(hottest pros­pect of all) a certain wealthy horror writer in Bangor,
Maine, who had just recently begun to snap up rare Bradburiana.
Did I dare to start the bidding at ten thou? Would it be worthwhile to
invite the Maine Monstermeister to inspect the book, so that I could
try reading his mind to see what the traffic might bear? And to think
I'd acquired the thing for a piddling thirty dollars!

And you should be ashamed of yourself.

I looked up with a start. Coming toward me from the front of my
shop was Lucille Cartier, followed by another woman. I erected my
mental barrier with haste, stepped outside the office and closed
the door, and gave the pair a professional smile.

"Well, hello, Lucille. It's been quite some time. "

"Five months. " You'd really take advantage of a poor unsuspecting
widow who didn't realize how valuable that book was?

Don't be ridiculous. The rule is caveat vendor, and I'm as ethical as
any other book dealer. "Have you been keeping busy with that new
Ph. D. of yours?"

"Fairly busy. " But not nearly as busy as you espèce de canardier!

"Is there some way I can help you?" And what's that crack
supposed to mean?

For starters you can BUTT OUT of my relationship with Bill
Sampson! "I'd like to have you meet my coworker, Dr. Ume
Kimura. She's a visiting fellow at Dartmouth from the University of
Tokyo, here under the auspices of the Japanese Society for
Parapsychology. "

"Enchanté, Dr. Kimura. " I abruptly terminated my telepathic
collo­quy with Lucille, which was straying close to dangerous
waters. It was very easy for me to concentrate all my attention on
the Oriental new­comer, who really was enchanting. She was older
than Lucille, and exquisitely soignée, with a complexion like
translucent porcelain and delicately tinted lips. A black wool beret
dotted with raindrops was pulled down at a saucy angle above her
exceptionally large eyes, which had black feathery lashes and little
of the epicanthic fold. She wore a trenchcoat of silvery leather with
a wide belt that emphasized her tiny waist, and a high-necked black
sweater. Her mind was densely screened in a manner that gave a
new dimension to inscrutability.

Lucille said briskly, "Ume and I are colleagues in a new project that
will investigate the psychoenergetic manifestations of creativity -"

"Working with Denis?" I cut in, raising my eyebrows in exaggerated
surprise.

"Of course working with Denis, " Lucille snapped. "We've been
asso­ciated with the Metapsychic Lab since the beginning of the
summer term. "

"I haven't seen him much lately, " I said. "He seems to be
spending most of his time in Washington since Alma-Ata. Were
you and Dr. Kimura able to attend the big congress?"

"Oh, yes!" exclaimed the delectable Ume, her eyes sparkling and
her mind all aglow with a spill of happy reminiscence. "It was a
most profound experience - more than three thousand
metapsychic research­ers, and over a third of them operant in
greater or lesser degree! So many interesting papers and
discussions! So much warmth and rapport!"

"So much talking and cautious telepathic chitchat, " Lucille said.
"So much political pussyfooting. "

"It was a good beginning, " Ume insisted. "Next year, in Palo Alto,
the Metapsychic Congress will meet for the second time with a
much ex­panded agenda - especially in the matter of education,
the training of new operants. That must be our most urgent goal. "

I frowned, remembering the media furor that had greeted the final
resolution at Alma-Ata, proposed by Denis and seconded by
Tamara and passed by a large majority of the Congress. Both
Lucille and Ume picked up on my skepticism.

"Denis was absolutely right to push through the resolution calling
for metapsychic testing of all people, " Lucille said. "I can't
understand the objections! We have very reliable mental assay
techniques now. You'd think that after Armageddon, the necessity
of finding and training all potential operants would be obvious. "

"A pity, " I said, "that Denis's resolution didn't specify voluntary
testing. "

"Oh, for heaven's sake, " Lucille said. "We have to test everyone.
That stands to reason."

I shrugged. "For an intelligent woman, you're really very naive. "

Ume looked at me with perplexity. "You really believe that this will
be a problem in the United States, Mr. Remillard? Such a universal
testing program is quite acceptable in Japan, I assure you. "

"It'll be a problem, " I said. "A big one. I'd be glad to explain the ins
and outs of the independent Yankee psyche to you over lunch, Dr.
Kimura. " My mind was still well guarded, but Ume's mental veil
thinned then for just an instant, giving me an unexpected glimpse
of something very encouraging indeed.

Her lashes lowered demurely. "That would be delightful. Lucille
and I thank you very much. "

So much for my tête-à-tête hopes! I gritted my teeth in frustration -
and then had to jack up the strength of my mental shield against
the renewed and insidious coercion of Lucille, who was now
grinning heart­lessly at my discomfiture.

She said, "You're so closely attuned to the social and political
impli­cations of operancy, aren't you, Roger? I can't wait to hear
your opinions on the subject. But before we go to lunch, let me tell
you why we came here today. I mentioned that Ume and I have a
creativity project. We're studying persons who seem to be able to
exert a metapsychic influence on energy - or even generate energy
mentally. Denis said that you apparently experienced such a
psychocreative manifestation right after the Edinburgh
Demonstration. As I understand it, you inadvertently conjured up
some form of radiant energy and melted a small hole in a window. "

"A Kundalini zap, " I said.

"Denis recommended very strongly that we check with you on your
experience. I was told that it took place when you were under
unusual conditions of stress. " All the time she was speaking, the
damn girl was skittering slyly all over my mind, giving little prods
with some incisive faculty quite different from coercion. I found out
later it was an aspect of the redactive function, a primitive mind-
ream. As she crept and poked, her telepathy hectored me on my
intimate mode: What have you been saying to Bill? WHAT you
sneaky undermining ratfink sale mouchard? What did you tell him
cafardeur?

I said, "I was shit-scared when I zapped the window, if you call that
stress. "

Ume giggled.

Lucille said: Tu vieux saolard! Ingrat! Calomniateur! Allez - déballe!
Foutu alcoolique!

I said: Nice to know you haven't completely abandoned your
French

heritage kiddo but I'm not really an alcoholic you know only an
alcohol abuser as an experimental psychologist you should watch
those fine distinctions!

The insults flew like bats out of hell, but her outward cool never
wavered. She said, "Roger, we'd like you to participate in a series
of simple experiments. An hour a day over the next eight weeks
would provide us with ample data to begin with. Now that you've
concluded your therapy with Dr. Sampson, we can hope that your
creative poten­tial has been somewhat restored. The energy-
projecting faculty is ex­tremely rare. You'd be advancing our
understanding of psychocreativity greatly by working with us. "
WHAT HAVE YOU TOLD BILL ABOUT ME?

"I'll think it over. " Nothing he didn't already suspect.

Suspect? Suspect?

She was still on the intimate mode, smiling on the outside and
raging on the inside, with enough antagonism slopping over now
into the general telepathic spectrum for Ume to catch. The
Japanese woman blinked in astonishment.

Lucille said suddenly, "And if you don't mind, we'd also like to take
your zapped windowpane for analysis. "

I have to hand it to her: She almost got me. I let out a guffaw at the
incongruity of the request... and at that instant she shot a sharply
honed and extremely powerful version of the coercive-redactive
thrust right between my eyes. It was a zinger worthy of Denis
himself (and I discovered later that he'd taught her the technique),
and it rolled me back on my heels. If I hadn't been expecting her to
try something, that probe might have turned my mind inside out like
a shucked sock. But Lucille hadn't really had a close view of my
mental machinery in more than a year, not since the time she'd
played Good Sam after the 60 Minutes taping. If I'd cracked, she'd
have gotten the whole story - Ghost and all. But I didn't crack.

I said, "You see? I am feeling much better. Old Sampson's a
topnotch shrink. I never really thanked you properly for introducing
me to him, Lucille. I owe you. You want my zapped windowpane?
You got it! But I think you'd better find another experimental subject
for your creativ­ity project - for both our sakes, and maybe for
Sampson's, too. "

"That wouldn't help. It's too late!" And then she burst into tears, and
turned around and rushed out of the bookshop, slamming the door
so violently that the little bell came off its bracket and fell to the
floor.

"Bon dieu de merde, " I said.

Ume and I looked at each other. How much did she know?

"I know more than I should, perhaps, " she whispered, her huge
dark eyes sad. "Lucille is my very dear friend, and she has told me
that her relationship with Dr. Bill Sampson is faltering badly. She
believes that you are somehow responsible. Are you, Mr.
Remillard?"

What Lucille's coercion had failed at, Ume's empathy
accomplished. "Yes, " I admitted wretchedly.

"Why?" Ume was calm.

"I won't explain my motives to you, Dr. Kimura. It was for Lucille's
own good. Sampson's, too. "

"They are wrong for each other, " she said, averting her gaze. "It
was very obvious to all of us. Nevertheless, we did not feel we had
the right to meddle in the lives of the two lovers. Lucille knew of the
general disapproval of the operant group. It seemed only to
strengthen her feel­ing toward Bill. "

"I know. " I went up the middle aisle to the front of the shop, bent
and picked up the fallen door-chime, and hung it back in place. The
rain was letting up a bit.

"You felt that you did have the right to interfere?" Ume asked.

I turned. "What I did was necessary. Lucille's badly hurt and I'm
sorry. But I did have the right to interfere. "

"Tell me only one thing. In your swaying of Bill's feelings - did you
lie about Lucille?"

"No. " I dropped my barriers just for an instant so she could see
that I had told the truth.

Slowly, Ume nodded. "Now I understand why she put off so long
approaching you about our project, even though Denis was very
anxious for us to include you in it. Today she suddenly insisted that
we come here. She has been upset about Bill for more than a
week. He seems to have... spoken to her just after our return from
Alma-Ata. "

It figured. News about the extraordinary discussions there opened
a lot of people's eyes to the seamier potentialities at large in the
metapsychic wonderland. There was the hitherto underreported
coer­cive function, for one thing, and the ominous implications of
the men­tal testing program. I'd been doing my own special
number on Sampson over a period of some eight months, and the
success of my subversion had been signaled when he finally
punched me in the nose. Fortunately, it happened outside of office
hours. When I broke off my counseling sessions in mid-July
Sampson had been fully primed to doubt and fear his operant
young fiancée. Alma-Ata had sparked the blowup, and now it
looked like my Ghostly mission was nearly accomplished. Shit...

Ume put a gloved hand on the sleeve of my old tweed jacket.
"Please. There is still the project. You will not wish to work with
Lucille, but would you consider working with me? The creativity
studies are most important. I myself have manifested a modest
projection of actinic ra­diation, as have certain others working in the
Soviet Union. But no one has ever channeled psychoenergies in a
coherent beam of great strength, as you seem to have done. Let
me show you the theoretical correlation between physical and
psychic energies presently being postulated by workers at
Cambridge and at MIT. " Would you open your mind a bit please?
Thank you -

Voilà! The limpid thought-construct flashed to me inside of a split
second. It was abstract as all hell and fiendishly complex - but I
un­derstood! Her transmission was to ordinary telepathic speech
as a Turbo Nissan XX3TT ground-car is to a bicycle. Not that I
would be able to explain the concept verbally to anyone else; but I
would be able to remember it and project its symbolic content.

"I'll be damned, " I said appreciatively. "Is that one of your new
ed­ucative techniques? The ones you use in operant training?"

"Oh, yes. It is called bilateral transfer. One coordinates the output
of the brain hemispheres. I would be happy to teach you this and
any of the other preceptive techniques that interested you, if you
would only agree to the experiments. "

"I'm tempted. " Oh, was I. And working with her in the lab wasn't
even the half of it...

The winsome academic turned up her charm rheostat. I was aware
that it was merely another aspect of coercion, her will acting to
master mine, but what a difference from Lucille's effort! Ume said,
"We would respect your desire for noninvolvement with the operant
community, Mr. Remillard. There would be no pressure. "

"Call me Roger. "

"And Lucille will present no problem for you. I shall have a discreet
word with Denis. He can assign her to other creativity studies. "

"All right, Dr. Kimura, under those conditions, I agree. "

"Please call me Ume. " Her expression was very earnest. "I think
we will be able to work together very compatibly, Roger. And now,
shall we talk about things further while we share a nice Dutch
lunch?"



"I hope I won't disappoint you, " I whispered. "Once I was rather
good at this, but it's been a very long time. "

"I can sense the latent power. It only needs to be reawakened.
Sadness and repressed violence have clogged the flow of
ambrosial energies. "

"Violence? Ume, I'm the most harmless guy in the world. "

"No, you are not. Your great reservoir of psychocreativity remains
sealed up within you, and this puts you in peril, for if these energies
are not used in creation, inevitably they destroy. The font of
creativity lies within all human souls; in women, it is very often never
channeled to the conscious level, but rather fruits instinctively in
childbearing and maternal nurture. A very few men are also
creative nurturers. But most - and certain women - must guide their
creativity deliberately into the exterior reality by intellectual action.
They must build -work. Unchanneled creativity is very dangerous
and readily turns to destruc­tiveness. The creation process is
painful. One may be strongly tempted to evade it, since its joy is
largely postponed until the creation is complete - and then the
satisfaction is intense and lasting. Destruc­tion brings pleasure,
too, dark and addictive and nonintellectual. For the destroyer,
however, process is all; he must continue, lest darkness catch up
with him and he come at the end to the hell he has deliberately
prepared for himself. "

"Donnie... "

"Hush, Roger. Do not think of your poor brother now. This is a time
for you to think of yourself, and of me. "

Ume and I saw each other perfectly in the dark. Her aura was a rich
blue, warmer close to her body and scintillating gold at the halo's
edge. I glowed a flickering and shadowed citron, with an outer
aureole of dim violet. My root chakra had a faint, hopeful carmine
radiance, signifying that the spirit was willing while the flesh was
weak.

"Don't worry. We are going to take a long time, " Ume said. Her lips
brushed my forehead, cheeks, and mouth as she spoke. "This is a
very old way in my part of the world. In the West, it has been called
carezza. It is unappreciated because of the impatience of
occidental lovers, who seek explosive release rather than
immersion in a pool of enduring light. " Her lips had taken on the
golden glow now, and so had her eyes. The outermost precincts of
both our minds had opened so that we could synchronize the
pleasure; but in spite of what she revealed to me of her life, the
real identity of Ume stayed that night and forever apart from me...
as I remained hidden from her. She had brought me to the small
rented house on the Ruddsboro Road where she lived alone. It
was sparsely furnished, almost ascetic, with many oddly shaped
ceramic vases holding arrangements of leafless branches and
dried grasses and bare, gnarled roots. The rain still fell. A brook
outside the bedroom window rushed over its bed of granite
boulders, filling the place with pervasive thunder. Ume had been
straightforward about the sexual at­traction, and I in turn was honest
about my abaissement du niveau psychique. Sampson's
psychoanalysis really hadn't helped me all that much spiritually,
aside from bolstering my courage and putting me more or less on
the track toward sobriety. I'd confessed to Ume that I was very
dubious about coming up with anything useful in the creativ­ity
experiments. She had countered with suggestions for a rather
differ­ent style of therapy. I had doubts about that, too, but she only
smiled wisely.

"We will begin very slowly and proceed very slowly, " she said,
kiss­ing my shoulders, stroking my inert arms in the lightest
possible man­ner with the tips of her fingernails. "You must not
speak. Try not even to think. Simply rest in me. Resist arousal. My
mind will speak to you and my body will share its creativity. You will
discover things about me and I will familiarize myself with you.
There will be feedback and a very slow increase of energetic
potential. Very slow. Now sit here among the cushions and take me
to you gently... "

This is Ume:

... A frail, strange child. The oldest of three daughters. Her home is
in the city of Sapporo on Hokkaido, the rugged northernmost island
of Japan. Her mother, once a schoolteacher, now cares for the
family. Her father is a photographer whose business never seems
to prosper. Both parents are descended from the Ainu, the
aboriginal inhabitants of the island. The heritage shames the
husband and wife and they never speak of it. The oldest daughter,
with her betraying fair skin and exotic eyes and the slight waviness
of her silken hair, is a reproach. She is not the favored child.

... A little girl of six. Her father takes close-up photographs of her
face for an advertising assignment. The child is obedient but
impatient with sitting still. She wishes ardently to run out of the
stuffy room to play with the little girl next door. This other child's
face, distorted but recognizable, appears on three successive
negatives of a film roll, in place of Ume's own.

... The father is astounded. He experiments and the miracle
happens again. He begins to realize what must be happening.
"Ume!" he cries. "Dear girl! You must do this again!"

... The child is eager to please him, to feel his love and admiration.
She cooperates in her father's experiments for weeks. It is learned
that she can imprint film not only while it is in the camera, but also
when it is outside it - provided the film is not exposed to normal
light. In the beginning her "thoughtographic" images vary greatly in
clarity, depend­ing upon whether she is summoning them from her
imagination or "reading" them directly from her surroundings or
from a book. Her best pictures are made with Polaroid film. All she
has to do is stare into the lens and think about a subject while her
father clicks the shutter. He makes many photos of Ume's
thoughts. He praises her lavishly and dreams of the millions of yen
the family will make when little Ume enters show business.

... The father's father learns of the marvel. He comes from the Ainu
settlement to the city and studies the little girl. "She is possessed
of an ancient demon, " he says. "She will bring bad luck. " The
father is scorn­ful. He has found a book. It tells how thought photos
were produced by a psychic researcher named Tomokichi Fukurai
in a remarkable series of experiments between 1910 and 1913.
Another book, translated from English, tells how the American
physician Jule Eisenbud obtained psy­chic photos from a hotel
worker named Ted Serios. Serios also stared into a Polaroid
camera. Most of his images were fuzzy and eventually his rare
talent faded away. But the talent of little Ume does not. The more
she practices, the better her results. Her pictures are now superbly
sharp. She can do both color and black-and-white.

... The great opportunity comes at last. The girl will appear on a
television show featuring local amateur performers. She and her
father have prepared for a whole year. But when she comes on
stage before a live audience, she is devastated by sudden
shyness. Her performance is a fiasco. A week later her father is
killed by falling in front of a subway train in the main Ohdori station
of Sapporo.

... The televised failure has one good result. It brings the little girl to
the attention of Dr. Reiko Sasaki, a respected parapsychologist.
This woman becomes a second mother to the girl. The real mother
is only too glad to relinquish care of her. Under Dr. Sasaki's kind
tutelage, Ume again produces thought photos. She also shows
evidence of being tele­pathic. Helped by the good doctor, the girl
receives a fine education, becomes Dr. Sasaki's assistant, and
cooperates in research that shows how her thought photos are
made.

... Unconsciously, Ume directs photons to impinge upon a selected
area of photo-emulsion, creating concrete images of her thoughts.
She can affect emulsion even when it is heavily shielded. Many
careful experiments prove that the photons are not derived from
existing sources of light. Either Ume's mind excites the emulsion
atoms or air atoms to a point where photons are emitted, or else
she creates the photons ex nihilo - out of another aspect of the
Greater Reality, as proponents of the new Universal Field Theory
would say.

... The strange and lonely little girl is now a woman, pursuing her
own goals. Dear Dr. Sasaki is gone, and so is the girl's mother. Her
two sisters do not have metapsychic talent. Ume writes to them,
and to her nieces and nephews. Sometimes there are answers.

Then Ume sang a poem:



Autumn light painting

shadow patterns bright and dark;

my mind reflects them.



Now her entire face was bathed in golden radiance, and her
breasts became autumn moons, and her sex a mystery of midnight
blue that I saluted as she sank down, enclosing me. Her hands
seemed to weave a luminous fabric around about us, an auroral
chamber that rippled in the remote sounds from the cascading
stream outside.

She pressed her fingertips to my nipples, my breastbone, and my
throat. My aura there kindled into lotuslike flames, no longer sickly
but rose-gold and shimmering. Her fingers traced mystical patterns
on my back, and I saw with my mind how the skin retained the cool
blazing designs, and how they blossomed and became more
intricate all by themselves after her hands had passed on.

I began to awaken. The penetration was very slow, a hesitant
growth after a long, parched dormancy. She arched her body back
and brought the fire-limning fingers over my shoulders. I kissed the
golden roses of her breasts, reverently pressed lips and tongue to
the aural mandala burning above her heart. It was incredibly sweet,
and as I drank from it it throbbed and expanded, and became
invested with rainbow colors. A blue brilliance now poured from her
hands, becoming golden as it gushed over my lower limbs. She
rose up, freeing me, and I groaned in protest.

Trust me! We have so long a time...

I kissed all of her turning body, now clothed in astral fire. There
were pulsating symmetries of blue-white with aureate coronas at
her mons, her navel, her heart, and her throat. Both breasts were
blinding stars. I was fully potent again myself, burning crimson and
gold. Please! I be­sought her. Let me return! But she only lifted my
arms, that had hung helplessly at my sides, and delineated the
pathway of every nerve with scarlet epidermal radiance.

I wanted to crush her, to devour her, to impale her on the
incandes­cent blade and burn her to ashes. No, she said. No. Wait
my dear one wait.

Tears of frustrated fury scalded my face. I was enveloped in a
thundering inferno with her coolness flickering madly out of reach.
And then she guided the star-fires to my eyes... and into my mind
burst the most beautiful thing I had ever known, a psychocreative
lotus-form revolving and ever-changing in a thousand glorious
variations. A new rare energy spread from my loins, up my spine,
and suffused my trunk and limbs. She was suspended in the
flower's heart, her body golden and her hair and blazing ecu azure.
I enfolded her at last and she descended. I penetrated her so
profoundly that it seemed I would pierce her heart, and there we
stayed, rapt together in contemplation of our own many-colored
splendor. There was never a culminating orgasm as such, but we
shared joy that persisted without cloying as we elaborated upon the
beautiful thing flowering between us, our personal creation.
Whatever it was, we had made it together, and we worshiped it for
hour after hour until we seemed to pass effortlessly into dreams,
separated, but still conjoined in the memory of that fantastic night's
work.

We woke the next morning contented, at peace, and the best of
friends.



Ume and I were never lovers in the conventional sense. We never
lived for each other or felt a need for permanent commitment. We
were more like two musicians coming together in a duet of perfect
har­mony, delighting in a work of art that neither of us could have
created alone. Sometimes sex was a part of it, and sometimes not.
Coitus was always sublimated in the service of creativity - and
since what we made was abstract, vanishing as music vanishes, it
was probably not a true creature of love. But it was marvelous and
it did us both good.

Ume's experimental work with me at the Metapsychology Lab, on
the other hand, was a failure. Under controlled conditions, I could
not generate the least attoerg of detectable energy anywhere in the
electro­magnetic spectrum - let alone produce a coherent laserlike
beam. The out-spiral yoga technique only left me with top-of-the-
skull headaches. (The in-spiral, on the other hand, was a great
adjunct to carezza!) I spent far too much time messing around in
the lab during the eight weeks of experimentation than I should
have, and at the end of it I was dismissed from the creativity
project as a nonstarter and my zapped windowpane was relegated
to some forgotten storage cabinet.

Denis told me, "There's an off chance your creative function might
become operant with practice, but I don't hold out much hope. Our
educative techniques are most successful with youthful subjects.
You're forty-seven and your metafunctions are encrusted with a
lifetime's ac­cumulation of neurotic dross. The more
psychoenergetic powers will probably always remain latent, except
possibly under conditions of great mental stress. "

"No big thing, " I said, glad of having escaped guinea-pig status. "I
can live very well without it. "

I was wrong about that. But then I've been wrong about a lot of
things throughout my checkered career.



Lucille Cartier and Bill Sampson endured a stormy severance. In
time - and most likely thanks to Ume's subliminal reassurances -
Lucille came to understand that I had not acted maliciously. I was
more to be pitied than censured, and she decided to forgive me.
The peace pact was sealed during the Christmas season of 1992,
when she presented me with what she said was a much-needed
addition to my bookshop: a dark and shaggy Maine Coon kitten to
chase mice, keep me company in morose moments, and lend the
place tone.

The kitten became the first Marcel LaPlume. By the time I
discovered that he was not only telepathic but coercive as well, I
was too used to him to give him up.



2

excerpts from:



final conversation between captain, orbiter module and surface
exploration team



joint soviet-american mars expedition noctis labyrinthus, mars



2 november 1992



gavrilov: What is your position now, Volodya?

kluchnikov: We are 32 meters [garble] top of the fog is perhaps 20
meters below us. It is not stable as it was yesterday but is rising as
sunlight [garble] the fissure and melts [garble].

gavrilov: Say again, Volodya. You are breaking up.

kluchnikov: We're 32 meters down the canyon wall. Descent is
easy. Top of fog bank 20 meters below but rising. Today fog bank
is rising. Do you copy, Andrei?

gavrilov: Roger on the copy. Fog rising... I am scanning the other
fissures of the Labyrinth of Night. Fog is filling most of them.
Perhaps the small dust storm yesterday provided condensation
nuclei. Is the fog hampering your operation?

kluchnikov: Not yet... Are you receiving any video yet, Andrei?

gavrilov: Negative on the video signal. Wayne, you had better give
that fancy American camera a good kick.

sturgis: Listen, I been pounding on this sucker ever since we went
over the rim and she started cutting out [garble] seals on the
housing when we bumped her. But if it's something else, like
maybe a glitch in the power supply, I can likely fix [garble] to put
our money on the ciné camera today. She's doing fine, so we'll
have the record. Tough luck about your travelog, Andrei.

gavrilov. [laughs] Well, you fellows will just have to give me a word-
picture of your descent into Night's Labyrinth. Be sure to let me
know at once if you see green men with four arms.

sturgis: Hey, you betcha. Ol' Tars Tarkas himself creeping up out
of the mist [garble] but red layers of rock. We're taking regular
samples. It's sedimentary and a fast eyeball scan shows no
evidence of macrofossils. There's a sizable dike of blackish
igneous rock a few hundred meters to the east of us. On our way
back up we'll work our way over and grab a specimen.

kluchnikov: Wayne, do you see how the dust in the crevices is not
so dry and fluffy anymore? It is more like coarse sand. I will take
some ... under the surface it begins to firm up even more. The
outcroppings have that spongy look even more down here than on
the surface. They are something like orange coral, but there is no
coral structure. No regularity indicative of life.

sturgis: Hey... you know? Hey.

kluchnikov: What?

sturgis: Over here. Like a little, shallow cave. Does that look like a
puddle of ice to you?

kluchnikov: It does. Sheltered [garble] from yesterday. There is no
dust on it. I will chip some out.

sturgis: Oh-oh. Here comes the fog.

kluchnikov: Helmet lamps.

sturgis: Aye-aye, Commander... Helps a little. No problem
climb­ing down [garble] goddam crunchy sand. And some of the
outcroppings have sharp edges. But outside of that [garble].

kluchnikov: Wayne, do not descend so quickly. I cannot see you.

sturgis: Sorry, Volodya, I wanted to... the damnedest thing. You got
me in sight now?

kluchnikov: Yes. This fog, ulcers to its soul, is getting thicker than
clotted cream and -

sturgis: Hey. Hey. I don't believe this. Put your headlamp to a rock.
Look. Just look.

kluchnikov: The rocks look wet.

gavrilov: Say again, Exploration Team? You found wet rocks?

sturgis: It looks like a thin coating of ice on the rocky outcropping,
with liquid water in a film on the surface. I'm taking a sample.

kluchnikov: Fog... it is the fog. Look - the porous rocks are all
getting this - this icy rind. And if we go lower...

sturgis: Now you wait for me.

kluchnikov: Usrat'sa mozhno.... This is incredible.

sturgis: Sheesh. Oh, wow.

gavrilov: What is it? What have you found? What do you see?

kluchnikov: Down here there is plenty of light, you understand, but
the fog turns everything to an orange haze... and the rocks have a
glistening coating. It is much darker than the ice. In my helmet lamp
it is sometimes dark blue-green, sometimes brown. Yey bogu. It
changes before my eyes.

sturgis: It's alive.

gavrilov: You think you have found Martian life?

sturgis: Well, it's not like any chemical reaction I ever saw... but
then I'm only a geologist. What this stuff is starting to look like is a
gelatinous marine growth. It's swelling very slowly. It must be
frozen - what's the ambient, Volodya? - but there's this glistening
film of what sure as hell looks like liquid at the surface.

kluchnikov: The ambient temperature is minus seventeen Celsius.

sturgis: Jeez - that's warm. There must be a thermal vent at the
bottom of the fissure. That was one of the hypotheses about this
damn Labyrinth, with the craters all connected by wormholes...

gavrilov: Life. Life on Mars. What a magnificent achievement for
the Diamond Anniversary of the Revolution.

sturgis: And Columbus sailed the ocean blue... 500 years ago,
com­rades. One for America, too.

gavrilov: Of course. Of course. This is wonderful.

sturgis: Right where we half expected to find it: down in the cracks.
... We're taking samples. Damn. That's tough. The pick ain't gonna
do her, Volodya.

klucknikov: Let us see what [garble] diamond-bit drill?

sturgis: Yeah, that might work. Stuff's like some incredibly tough
plastic. Resilient. But it'd have to be, right? To live in this
godforsaken place... Ah. You got that micro-sabresaw handy?

kluchnikov: Here. Yes... That looks like it will do it. I think I'll [garble]
you get that specimen packed. Here, connect the life line [garble]
another ten meters or so further down. I want to check out the
temperature and take an atmospheric [garble] stay here much
longer.

gavrilov: Are you descending further, Volodya? You are garbled.

kluchnikov: The outcroppings inter[garble]... reconnoitre a bit
far­ther... [garble] on the rocks. Not amorphous, like the other, but
with a kind of jellyfish radial symmetry. Like a thick pancake
perhaps fifteen [garble] and two, three centimeters thick.

sturgis: Jee-zuss. It's - it's corroding the stainless steel baseplate.

kluchnikov: Fantastic.. [garbled]... that stupid specimen, Wayne.
Get your arse down here and look.

sturgis: Oxidizing the thing like a house afire.... What the hell is it?
God - I think the blade's going. And the drill bit -

kluchnikov: ... are quite beautiful, with flowing structures of
ul­tramarine blue that engulf and seem to eat the green-brown
[garble] ... with a light of their own. Like lucite lanterns.

gavrilov: Volodya. Commander Kluchnikov, come in. Your
trans­mission is breaking up and fading badly.

kluchnikov: It is a fairyland. The beauty. Wayne, come down.

sturgis : Goddammit, Volodya, will you quit [garble] so sure this
stuff can't get at us. It could be dangerous. The acids or whatever
that I released when I [garble] a fuckin' vanadium-steel blade to a
rusty nubbin. Do you hear me? Commander?

kluchnikov: I am coming. You will not believe [garble] right off the
rock.

gavrilov: Exploration Team, this is Orbiter. Come in, please. Come
in Exploration Team.

kluchnikov: Zakroy ebalo, Andryusha. We are too busy to [garble]
life-forms of exquisite beauty. They are hard, but resilient, and
some of them are biolu[garble] of them right off its rock and into
my col­lection bag.

sturgis: Listen... listen, Volodya. Get up here fast, hear me? Don't
touch those things. Anything that can live in this awful place -

kluchnikov: Now, then. What ails you, little [garble] so active. How
did you [garble? scream?]...

sturgis: Volodya.

gavrilov: Vova. Commander. Vladimir Maksimovich.

sturgis: I'm coming. I'm coming...

gavrilov: The thing, Wayne. The thing he picked up. The Martian.

sturgis: Hey. You okay, Commander?... oh... oh, no. No.

gavrilov: Wayne, what's happened?

sturgis: ... [garble]... not a user-friendly world. No. Tell 'em that,
Andrei. Anyplace but Mars! Oh, Jesus. I can still [garble] fly in blue
amber dissolving [garble? scream?]... on my suit like little drops of
blue soup. Growing. Primordial soup is blue-green, Andrei
[garble].. love you dear Ruth... [garble]...



TRANSMISSION   ENDS



3

DU PAGE  COUNTY, ILLINOIS, EARTH

20 JANUARY  1993



As the chairman of the Republican National Committee came
slowly to the point, Kieran O'Connor's attention wandered - and
thus it was that he heard the unaccountable mental voice.

Desiccated embryos returned to water... floating in aloof
sad­ness...

"Even though some people may think it premature to consider
such a matter at this early date, let me assure you that the
Nominating Committee of the Republican Party does not, " Jason
Cassidy said. "We suffered a devastating defeat in November.
The incumbent beat our ass into the dust. He's riding high on the
platform of economic prosperity that the Democrats stole from us,
and he's managed to convince the voters that the metapsychic
peace initiative and the disarmament pro­gram are both personal
triumphs. "

Floating in the lustrous sea... letting their dry blood reconstitute ...
plumping out, regaining form...

Do any of the rest of you hear that voice? Kieran demanded.

Four of the five men sitting around the fireplace with him on that
bitterly cold night strained their farsense, listening. The other man,
Brigadier General Lloyd A. Baumgartner, USAF (Ret. ), only sipped
his Drambuie and stared at the Aubusson carpet in front of Kieran
O'Con­nor's hearth. He wondered, in a subvocalization that was
clearly per­ceptible to the telepaths, just when the National
Committee Chairman would get to the point and offer him the 1996
Republican presidential nomination.

Jason Cassidy said, "There was a time when candidates were
picked in smoke-filled rooms at the nominating convention itself.
Later, pri­maries influenced the nomination and presidential
aspirants began their campaign a year in advance. " I hear
absolutely zilch Kier.

Len Windham said: I don't get anything but the subvocals of our
male Cinderella impatient for his glass-slipper fitting. Would you
look at that noble profile? Holy Gary Cooper! And the silver cowlick
will be a po­litical cartoonist's delight.

Neville Garrett said: I don't detect anybody.

Arnold Pakkala said: Nor do I... The domestic staff was given the
night free as you ordered. There is no one in the house except the
six of us.

"Today, " Cassidy droned on, "the presidential nominating process
is infinitely more complex and requires long-range strategic
thinking. The National Committee has been working on that
strategy ever since our November defeat, in consultation with Mr.
Windham and Mr. Garrett, our Party poll and media specialists, and
certain senior advisers. "

Like Mr. Moneybags Kieran O'Connor! General Baumgartner said
to himself. And now it's all perfectly clear. Why he acquired
McGuigan-Duncan Aerospace and kept me on as CEO in spite of
the losses I'd incurred in the Zap-Star debacle. Why his media
flunky Garrett was so interested in my glory days as a Moonwalker -

And now the embryonic music starts... peeps and squeaks and
fidgets and flowing bloodhum... a song of rebirth from death...

Kieran said: Scan the entire house and grounds Arnold. I can still
hear the voice and now there's some damn music carrying over.

Yes sir.

Cassidy said, "The '96 presidential race is going to be even
tougher for us than the '92 campaign. A two-term incumbent, one
of the most popular presidents in history, will be able to pick his
own nominee - and we know that nominee will be Senator
Piccolomini. "

Another self-righteous Guinea prick, thought the General.

"We could, of course, stick with our Republican candidate of last
fall. "

If you want to lose again, the General thought. The goddam
quarter­back really knows how to lose with style!

"However, " the Chairman went on, "Piccolomini will be a hard nut
to crack because of the success of his antinarcotics program,
because of his close ties with the incumbent, and because of his
undeniable per­sonal magnetism. "

So, thought the General, you can't run your bought-and-paid-for
Mi­nority Leader, Senator Scrope. He's smart but he's a nerd, and
putting him up against Piccolomini would be peeing into the wind.

"We've studied a number of prospects, only to conclude that most
of them do not project a suitable image. The Party will be
developing a new platform for '96 in response to what we see as
gathering threats to our national economy and security. The
candidate we seek must exem­plify that platform. He must be a
man of authority, of proven courage, in tune with conservative
patriotic values. A man who will confront the disasters that our
experts foresee with a forthrightness unclouded by pseudoliberal
globalism. "

General Baumgartner straightened and frowned at the Republican
Chairman. "Disasters? What kind of disasters, Jase?"

He was answered by Kieran O'Connor. "By the end of this year our
Middle Eastern oil supplies will be entirely cut off by escalating
Islamic wars in the Persian Gulf and Arabia. Our re-elected
Democratic Presi­dent and the Democrat-controlled Congress will
not dare send in Amer­ican military forces. They have boasted that
theirs is the Party of Peace. An American military action in support
of the oil industry would be unthinkable. " Arnold. Listen!

Sea creatures... holothurian and crustaceans sad and glad...
singing and dancing in bloody water... a funeral dance and a birth
dance...

Pakkala said: I detect no intruder anywhere within the perimeter of
the estate. There is an aurora borealis tonight and you have been
hy­persensitive lately. Perhaps there is some metapsychic
phenomenon operating analogous to the skip of AM radio waves -

Kieran said: No. Never mind Arnold.

"Our analysts, " Cassidy said, "believe that the world is on the brink
of another serious energy shortage. Thermonuclear power is still
two decades away. Without that Persian Gulf oil, a major
depression will affect all industrialized nations. The Third World will
be pushed to the brink of anarchy. Africa is certain to blow up and
Pakistan is on the verge of an armed confrontation with India. "

Are they right? Baumgartner asked himself. If they are, America is
heading for the biggest mess since World War II - and whoever
the president is, he'll find himself in the same shoes Harry Truman
wore when he had to decide whether to invade Japan or drop the
bomb... Christ! No magical mystery metawhoozis finagling can
keep America safe from this crock of shit! Only strong leadership
by a real man - somebody people could be sure wasn't trading the
country off for some pie-in-the-sky Utopia scheme hatched by
Commies and loopy Scotch professors and fortunetelling freaks.

A dance... a water dance with embryos... I've been gestating it for
more than six weeks now ever since we knew Nonno was dying...

Kieran said: Oh Christ!

The ballet is a tribute to his memory... so much more tasteful than
the usual gangland obsequies... I want you to share it... If you like it
I may finish my performance alive Daddy...

"The turn of the century, " Cassidy said solemnly, "may turn out to
be the most dangerous period in American history. "

And one, thought the General, in which certain industries stand to
make an unconscionable amount of money - especially if they own
the White House. As if they could control me the way they do that
sleazy little douche bag Scrope! O'Connor and Cassidy and the
rest of their cabal think I'd play along... be manipulated like poor
old Ike. Just let me get into that Oval Office!

"Events may accelerate, " Cassidy went on, "so as to give us a
good shot at winning even in 1996 if we present a candidate with a
powerful, take-charge image. A man who knows his own mind. "

General Baumgartner said, "You know those mentalist freaks -
those metapsychics in the Psi-Eye program - could be real trouble
if they got into the political arena. "

"We do know that, " Kieran O'Connor said. "Party strategists have
been examining the metapsychic movement very carefully. Those
peo­ple represent a menace to American liberty, General. We'd
expect our presidential candidate to come down hard on any
suggestion that metapsychics participate directly in government. "

"Fuckin' A!" the General affirmed. The others chuckled.

Daddy it's for you... it's for Nonno... I won't go to his funeral
tomorrow but I will mourn him in the dance... and you... and me...

Kieran said: Shannon!

Arnold Pakkala said: Sir-your daughter?

Kieran said: The goddam voice. It's her she's here screening
herself threatening I think she may know -

Pakkala said: Where is she? I'll take care of it.

Kieran said: NO. I must. We'll have to finish this - Jase! Wind up
the pitch and then get him out of here! Neville you and Len take
him to your place. Jase and Arnie will help you wrap him up...

"Our pollsters and analysts are eighty-six percent certain that there
will be a Republican president in the White House by the year
2000, " Cassidy said. "The odds are longer for '96, but worth the
push. The National Committee has designated a unanimous choice
for the perfect candidate. That man is you, General Baumgartner. "

"Gentlemen, " said the General, "I'm - I'm really overwhelmed. "



Escaping from his guests in the library, Kieran hurried to the nearby
butler's pantry, where there was a master monitor-intercom unit. He
tapped 16 and the screen lit, giving a long overhead view of the
indoor swimming pool located on the mansion's lower level. The
chamber was dark except for what appeared to be underwater
illumination of a con­centrated cobalt blue. A shape suspended
within the light gyrated rhythmically. From the small loudspeaker of
the intercom came the nervous, deformed sound of Erik Satie's
Embryons Desséchés being played on a synthesizer. Kieran
tapped the code that would turn on the main room lights and the
underwater lamps of the natatorium. Nothing happened.

"Shannon?"

Kieran spoke calmly into the mike. At the same time he
manipulated the zoom control of the monitoring camera to magnify
the image of the swimmer. She was eighteen but looked more like
a twelve-year-old. Her legs were long and beautifully shaped but
the rest of the body was angular, the breasts small and flat, the
hips boyishly narrow. She was wearing a chaste white maillot. Her
long hair swirled in an inky cloud, its normal bright Titian red
masked by the Cerenkov blue of her visible psychic aura. From her
extended wrists curled other diaphanous fila­ments that her hands
seemed to caress and weave as she undulated in the submarine
ballet she had dedicated to her dead grandfather.

Her wrists were cut, trailing streamers of blood.

"Shannon, I'm watching. Do you hear me?"

I hear, Daddy! Holothurian larvae clinging to their purring,
grotesque parent... break away break away, babies!... go free if
you can and celebrate spineless triumph... be sure to hide from the
light!

"Shannon, come out of the water. " Come out. COME OUT.

He exerted his full coercion while the zany electronic music tinkled
and trilled. Sweat had broken out on his brow and he found that he
was holding his breath, commanding her to hold hers. But the
range was too great for his compulsion to take hold of her. He felt,
to his horror, a reciprocal mind-clutch and a gentle warning:

No... I must finish this dance... come down and watch me prop­erly,
Daddy. Your creatures have gone away now... come and share
mine with me... I'll help you... THE HOLOTHURIAN SPINS A WEB
LIKE MOIST PURPLE SILK -

"Damn you!" Lashing out violently, he broke her mental shackle
and erected a defensive barrier. She only laughed. The blue light
was fading with the end of the first embryonic song. A ruddy glow
introduced the second.

This is the dance of the edriophthalma, a crustacean with sessile
eyes... of a mournful disposition, it lives in retirement from the
world in a hole drilled in a cliff... Nonno! Dear Grandpa Al do you
want me with you shall I retire behind my film of red water with my
mind's eye turned inward?

"Shannon - for God's sake!"

The music was a lugubrious parody of a funeral march. The
swim­mer's limbs folded tight against her body and she became a
fetal ball, pinkly throbbing, floating some six feet below the surface
of the water. A measured stream of silver bubbles, flattened like
coins, tumbled up­ward from her emptying lungs.

Kieran stormed through the formal dining room into the main hall
and ran to the elevator. As he punched G and the door whisked
shut, he felt a hot pounding begin in his chest. There was an
irresistible urge to inhale, pressure on his eardrums, a scarlet fog
seeping into his periph­eral vision, a deadly stirring in his loins.
God damn the little bitch! He'd delayed the bonding too long -

The elevator door opened. Kieran staggered along a passage
walled with thermopane windows that cast wan light on the snowy
landscape outside. The great house had been built into the east
side of a hill and even now, in the dead of a winter's night, the
metropolis over forty miles distant lit the sky like false dawn.

This is the third and final song... the lively podophthalma have eyes
on mobile stalks... they are skillful and tireless hunters but they
must be cautious - their own flesh is good to eat!... Eat or be eaten,
Nonno. You lived in such a world and so will I twice over... if I
choose to...

Jolly galloping music and a vision of a slender form darting zigzag
through black water, leaving twin trails of golden blood behind.
Kieran ran sluggishly, as though he himself were under water. It
was impossi­ble for him to breathe, harder and harder to move. He
passed the exer­cise room and the spa and finally came to the
open door of the natato­rium. It was dark inside and there was a
strong smell of chlorine. The synthesizer music filled the tiled
chamber with clanging echoes. His mind screamed.

Shannon!

Deep in the pool was an upright, spindle-shaped violet glow. It
brightened abruptly, then shot up like a submarine missile,
break­ing the surface with a great splash and a dazzling burst of
white light. A parody of a symphonic finale blasted from the
overhead speakers. Erik Satie's jocose treatment of marine life
was coming to an end, and so was the sinister water ballet of
Kieran O'Connor's daughter.

He was finally able to haul in a gasping breath. His eyesight cleared
and he stabbed at the control panel on the wall beside him. Normal
incandescent light flooded the room and the only sound was the
slap of wavelets against the sides of the Olympic-sized pool.
Above the middle of the water a girl in a white tank suit floated on
her back, eyes closed, hair fanned out like strands of algae, arms
extended cruciform. She was smiling.

To Nonno. To my Grandfather on the day of his entombment. With
love from Shannon.

"Come out, " Kieran told her.

Descending, she swam, using a vigorous backstroke. She climbed
the ladder and stood looking up at him, pale and shivering, with tiny
drops of water winking at the ends of her eyelashes. Her mind
shone bright and it was impervious to either probing or coercion.

"I hope you liked my dance, Daddy. It was for you, too. "

He took hold of her hands and raised them, studying the wrists.
The cuts were not deep and she had not severed the tendons, but
there was a steady flow of blood that mixed with the water of her
dripping body to make a pinkish puddle on the travertine floor. He
released her, turned, and walked out the door. "We can fix you up
in the gym. Let's go. "

She followed with complete docility. The trainer's cubicle in the
elaborately equipped exercise room provided hydrogen peroxide,
anti­biotic ointment, and bandages. He sat her on the massage
table and wrapped her in a voluminous towel before tending her
wounds, closing the lips of the cuts deftly with butterfly tapes and
finishing up with gauze and temporary cuffs of waterproof plastic
wrap.

"Now you can take a hot shower without spoiling my first-aid job. "
His voice was gentle.

"Thank you, Daddy. " She eyed him askance. "You won't make me
go to the doctor for stitches, will you? I can heal myself easily
enough. But I had to have... the effect. "

"You had to scare the living shit out of me, " he told her in a level
tone, turning to rinse his hands of her blood.

"Have it your own way. "

"How did you get out here from Rosary at this time of night?"

"I took Tippie Bethune's car and just drove out, then hid the car in
Goldman's orchard and walked up our driveway. You were all so
busy with your low politicking that it was easy to fudge your minds
and sneak inside. I sang only for you. Don't you know about the
intimate mode of farspeech? You can aim it at only one person. "

So she knew about his plans for Baumgartner! "There'll be hell to
pay when the college authorities find out you skipped. "

She shrugged. "I'll take my shower now. "

When she was gone, Kieran took several damp towels and went to
clean up the gory traces she had left on the floor. The members of
his domestic staff were well-paid psychics, bonded to him and
utterly loyal; but he did not want them to know about this escapade.
It was extreme - even for Shannon.

He said to her: You ought to examine your unconscious motivation
for this piece of adolescent idiocy. The guilt you feel because of
who/what you/we are is irrational. Seeking punishment to atone for
my/your/Al's imaginary wickedness is also irrational. Attempting to
dissociate yourself from me/Family/yourmentalheritage is not only
ir­rational but futile. There is no rebirth for us. We are.

He put back the first-aid supplies, then lay down on the Panasonic
Shiatsu lounger and turned it on. Timed waves of vibration soothed
away some of the stress. It was nearly one in the morning. Big Al's
funeral was today. She'd loved the old bandit deeply. She didn't
think it a bit hypocritical that he had confessed a lifetime of sins on
his death­bed and expired with the Viaticum on his parched
tongue.

Damn her! She would have followed Al tonight if he hadn't given in
to her and begged... The suicide attempt was his own fault. It was
the culmination of a lot of things - mainly his own neglect of her
devel­oping mind-powers. She'd grown up pathologically shy,
introverted. There'd been suicidal hints that he had tried to laugh
off. The Edinburgh telecast had been traumatic, intensifying her
brooding. And now Big Al's death, and her growing realization of
her father's extraordinary ambition. She would have to be bonded.
The alternative was probably a descent into madness or self-
destruction.

But to bond his own daughter...

She was mind-humming a reprise of the crustacean dirge as she
took her shower. The musical parody was superimposed
incongruously upon an image of Queen of Heaven Mausoleum, a
fulsome monument to Italian-American piety that would, come
daylight, receive the mortal remains of Aldo Camastra.

Kieran said: Shannon? Do you know why so many of your
Grandfa­ther's people prefer tombs in a place like Queen of
Heaven rather than ordinary burial in the ground?

I never thought about it, Daddy.

Back in the Old Country, cemeteries may be more than a thousand
years old. Space in the earth is at a premium. When a new grave is
dug they may find old bones. The bones are taken up and put into
a kind of storage place called an ossuary, all mixed up higgledy-
piggledy with the bones of other skeletons.

How awful!

The only bodies sure to be left undisturbed are those interred in
aboveground tombs or in mausoleums. That ancient fear of not
being left to lie in peace lingers in tradition even here in America.
Tradition can be a powerful motivator. Many kinds of tradition.

... Oh, I know the twisted justification that Al and the others in the
Outfit subscribed to, Daddy - the old story about the simple
peasants resisting tyranny in Sicily, then later on using the Thing as
a step­pingstone to power and wealth in this country. But it's
different for you! You're no persecuted immigrant. You have
mental powers that you could use to help all humanity, just as the
organized metapsychics around the world are doing. But you won't
join them, will you, Daddy! You'd rather get rich and then take over
the country with your Mental Mafia.

Is that how you see it?

"That's how it is!"

Shannon came out of the spa wearing a white velour sweat suit,
with her hair bound up in a towel. Revulsion and frustrated love
radiated from her but her voice remained measured. "You're worse
than Big Al ever was, Daddy, because you came deliberately into
the Outfit. He and the others had their Family tradition, but you
joined them because you'd analyzed the possibilities in cold blood.
And you've done very well, transferring the Mob assets into
legitimate business and covering your tracks. You're Big Al's son-
in-law but nobody holds it against you - especially after your mind
exerts its special charm. "

Kieran laughed.

"Will bossing President Baumgartner be power enough for you,
Daddy? Or are you bucking for Boss of the World?"

"You could be my little Crown Princess, " he said.

She folded her bandaged arms and looked down on him lying in
the chair. "No, " she replied with cool dignity. "The embryo dance
helped me decide. I'm leaving here, getting out of Rosary College
and transfer­ring to Dartmouth. I'll ask that Professor Remillard to
accept me in his psychic Peace Corps thing. I won't do anything to
hurt you, but I won't stay with you anymore. I've been very silly and
naive, thinking it was natural for us to - to be above normal people.
The Edinburgh Demon­stration was like some kind of miracle,
opening my eyes. That won­derful Russian woman and her vision!
And then Denis Remillard explaining his educational plan for all
people with metapsychic talents -"

"He's very good on television, " Kieran admitted. "Very nearly as
charming a coercer as your depraved old Dad... but also an idealist
with no notion of the way the normal world actually works. He and
the rest of them are in for a rude awakening, you know. "

"No, I don't know!" Shannon flared. "Suppose you tell me. "

Kieran got up from the lounger and regarded her with concern. She
had begun to shiver again and her lips were blue. He wondered
how much blood she had lost. "If you're really interested, I'll explain
it to you. But not down here. I could use some coffee and brandy
right now, and so could you. "

He headed for the door and she trailed after. "I know you think I'm
only a child, " she said as they approached the elevator. "Maybe I
am, but you can't expect me to accept this - this scheming of yours
with­out questioning it!"

"Be sure you ask the right questions. You've led a very sheltered,
pampered life up until now, thanks to the loyalty of Bayard and
Louisa. Not all of us have been so lucky. I wasn't. Neither were
Jason or Arnold, or Adam or Lillian or Ken or Neville, or most of the
other people you so glibly designate my Mental Mafia. I wanted to
spare you the horror stories. It seems I made a mistake, denying
you the history of the per­secuted minority we all belong to."

The elevator door closed as Kieran pressed 3.

Shannon said, "When I saw MacGregor and his people do the
Edinburgh Demonstration, I was just devastated. There they were,
do­ing their thing just as though it were - natural. And I thought: It
doesn't have to be Daddy's way, hiding the powers, using them
selfishly. I could come out in the open! When more and more
operant people began to reveal themselves I got so excited I
thought I would die. I wanted to confess what I was, too! But I was
afraid... "

"For a good reason. "

Her eyes were pleading. "We're different, but not so very different.
The normals have been so grateful about the Psi-Eye program.
The sensible ones support the metapsychic testing plan, too. The
opposition is just from fundamentalist fanatics and people without
the education to appreciate the good we can do. When the
normals learn more about what operancy really means -"

"They will try to kill us, " Kieran said.

Shannon stared at him, speechless, and in that split second of
appalled vulnerability absorbed the details of the peril that he
projected. Then they were at the third floor of the mansion and
emerged into a part of the house that had always been officially
barred to her (although she had snooped through most of it when
Kieran was out of town). Here were the self-contained guest suites
for certain visitors; the antiseptic sanctum that housed the
awesome mainframe computer with its huge data bank, connected
by dedicated fiber optics to corporate headquarters in downtown
Chicago; the satellite receiving station; the mysterious "recovery
room" that was occupied from time to time by certain Mental Mafia
recruits; and - most tantalizing of all - a locked room referred to in
hushed tones by the household staff as the Command Post and by
Kieran as "my study. " Shannon had never been inside it. Few
people other than Kieran himself and Arnold Pakkala had.

They stood now in front of its door, armor-plated steel without a
knob or latch. Kieran pressed his right hand against an inset golden
plate. There was a complex clicking sound and a single electronic
chime. "Open up, " Kieran commanded, and the door slid silently
aside, admit­ting them.

Shannon uttered a low cry of astonishment.

Her father smiled. "Do you like my study? I do, very much. You
may come here as often as you like from now on. I'll reprogram the
door. But please don't attempt to operate any of the equipment
until I've given you proper instruction. I can begin that now, if you
like. "

"Oh, yes. "

"Sit there while I make our coffee. " He opened a taboret and took
out a Chambord. "I amuse myself by thinking of this room as the
high-tech equivalent of the kingdoms of the world that Satan
showed to Jesus from the pinnacle of the temple. If I were the
Earth Boss, I could certainly supervise things very nicely from right
here... Kona or Naviera?"

"Kona, " she whispered. She sat on the edge of a maroon leather
set­tee, looking very young. Her mental barriers had fallen
completely. Kieran came to her, unwound the turban from her
head, smoothed the damp hair, and kissed her crown. As he did so
he slipped a subliminal command into the exposed psyche that
would prevent voluntary clo­sure until he released her. It was a
thing he had learned to do instinc­tively when he bonded the first
hurt minds to himself - how long ago? - before her birth.

Daddy I feel very strange.

Relax dear baby.

He handed her the steaming coffee with a splash of fine cognac,
feel­ing his energies begin to mount. He had feared there might be
an insu­perable inhibition, but there was not. So, he thought, we
think we know ourselves, but we don't! Perhaps all devoted fathers
keep the thing repressed in the unconscious. It was as true an
instinct as the other, so closely related, that bound mind to mind in
perfect loyalty. He won­dered if anyone else among the operants
had discovered it. He thought not. The hierogamy was an old
mystery that repelled the overcivilized mind, dying with the old
Celtic and Greek votaries...

"Are you comfortable now, Shannon?"

Her smile was dreamy. "Yes. The coffee is good. "

"Drink it all. " He slipped off his Shetland cardigan, folded it, then
unknotted the blue silk scarf he wore at the open neck of his shirt.

"I thought the coffee would wake me up. But now I feel very
sleepy. " The dark lashes fluttered. She set her empty cup aside
and relaxed against the cushions.

"You can spend the night here, " Kieran said. "I often do. It's the
one place I know that I'm completely safe. The windows are
armored glass and the entire room is a self-contained little fortress.
Secure. "

Shannon's eyes had closed. "It's snowing. I can see the
snowflakes with my mind, blowing in the cold wind. Whenever I do
that I feel so lonely. " Her face was as white as the soft velour suit
she wore.

"You aren't going to be lonely. You'll be part of our group now. "
Would she remember? The others hadn't - except Arnold, whose
love had been strong enough to overcome the posthypnotic
suggestion. You won't remember, he told the deepest part of her
soul. Not unless you want to.

"I feel cold again, " she murmured. "A little. "

"Let me warm you, " he said, and touched the switch that would
turn off the lights and blind the machines.



Shannon remembered.



4

EDINBURGH, SCOTLAND, EARTH

7 APRIL  1994



when the girl came with the sandwiches, Jamie and Jean and Nigel
fell to with the usual voracious appetite of the EE adept, but Alana
Shaunavon didn't even seem to notice the plate in front of her. She
stared out the pub window at the statue of the wee dog, faithful and
melancholy in the rain. A hardy Japanese tourist focused his
camera on it, took the shot, and hurried off along Candlemaker
Row. Two nurses huddled under a single umbrella came into the
pub for lunch, and an old man in a black trench coat moved slowly
in the direction of the church­yard gate. He had a plastic carrier
bag.

Alana sighed, lifted the teapot, and poured a bit into her cup. It had
gone cold.

"Here now, we can't have that, " Nigel said. He took the pot in both
hands, squinted at it with keen determination, and grinned when
steam spurted out of the spout.

"What a useful talent, " Jean MacGregor observed. "With you
around the house, one wouldn't even need a microwave. Or an
electric blan­ket. "

Nigel filled Alana's cup. "So I've told this lovely lady many a time to
no avail. "

Alana smiled absently. "You want a wife, luv, and I'm not the
mar­rying kind. "

"Piffle, " said Nigel. "I won't give up, you know. Drink your tea and
eat your sandwich. You'll need your strength for this afternoon's
outing. It's Dallas again. Sibley and Atoka think the Super-Stealth
skin formu­lation may be hidden there in a fabricating
subcontractor's place."

"How dreary. " Alana took one bite of sandwich and one sip of tea.
"We've wasted five months haring about after this silly ferrite
coating process. Why couldn't the bloody stubborn Yanks simply
hand the thing over to the Russians instead of daring us and
Tamara's people to find it? There's so much more important work
we could be doing. "

"They're testing, " Jamie said. "Measuring our capabilities and our
resolution, and making a classic American 'Don't Tread on Me'
gesture. You can bet that the formulation is in a lead box walled up
in a rein­forced vault surrounded by an electrified grid in the midst
of an alligator pond... but we'll find it, whatever the rigmarole, and
we'll send copies to Washington and Moscow via diplomatic pouch
and tell the world press we've done it. Then we'll chalk up another
triumph for globalism and wait for the next confrontation. "

"Neither side really cares about the radar-invisible gunk, " Alana
complained. "It's only a matter of scoring off each other. They
may've thrown away their nuclear arms, but it seems they're just as
determined to dominate the world as they ever were - and our
metapsychic peace initiative is nothing but a referee in the
charade. "

"Did you really expect an instant Golden Age, my lass?" Jamie's
smile was ironic.

"I hoped it would be better than this," Alana admitted, looking out
the window again. The old man in the black raincoat was consulting
a small book and gazing about. "We don't have the specter of
nuclear war between superpowers anymore, but the old East-West
antagonism and suspicion are still there, and the little countries
cling to their eternal squabbles. There's war in Arabia and war in
Kashmir and war in Botswana and war in Bolivia... "

"And I'll never pray at the Wailing Wall, " Nigel said, "and your tea
is getting cold again, and what is so fascinating about that old chap
lurk­ing about out there?"

Alana said, "It's odd. He's subvocalizing both the words and tune
of 'Amazing Grace.' I can tell he's in a great state of emotional
agitation, and one would normally be able to read his thoughts like
a hoarding under those conditions - but because of the hymn-
singing I can't get a glimmer. I wonder if the poor old thing is lost?"

"A kind of normal's thought-screen, is it?" Jean asked. "How
inter­esting. Do you know, I think our young Katie and David may
have cottoned on to that one! There've been times when I've
noticed televi­sion commercials and theme songs and other
nonsense cycling over and over in their sly little brains when they
were obviously up to some deviltry. "

"We'd better hope the technique doesn't catch on in diplomatic
cir­cles, " Nigel said.

"According to Denis Remillard, " Jamie said, "it already has. But
for­tunately, not too many normals are able to keep it up for any
length of time... I forgot to mention that Denis popped over via EE
very early this morning. He had some important news. Dartmouth is
establishing a Department of Metapsychology with some whacking
great grants that've fallen down the chimney, and Denis is being
promoted to full professor and will head the thing up. "

"Lucky sod, " groaned Nigel. "And here we are with the University
casting about for ways to put us under the U. K. Civil Service! Can't
you just see our metapsychic peace initiative tucked tidily away in
Whitehall?" And he sang, in an excruciating fruity tenor:



"But the privilege and pleasure

That we treasure without measure

Is to run on little errands for the Ministers of State!"



"Denis had some bad news, too. " Jamie spoke in a lower tone.
"The bill for universal metapsychic testing of all American children
died in committee. The Civil Liberties Union and the Bible-
thumpers carried the day. Now the testing is to be done on a
strictly voluntary basis. There was some demand that the names of
the participants and the results of the metapsychic assay be made
a matter of public record, but Denis is fairly certain that meta-
supporters in Washington can shoot that one down by invoking the
famous American right to privacy. I asked Denis if he senses any
serious groundswell of antimeta sentiment building, but he thinks
not. More like a blasé attitude on the part of the normals, he said -
taking the mental marvels for granted the way they do space travel.
"

"We were all heroes, " Nigel declaimed, "right up until the last
nukes in North Dakota and Skovorodino were dismantled! But what
have we done for humanity lately?" He lifted his beer in a mock
toast.

"Denis's new book is about due, " Jamie added. "He's calling it
The Evolution of Mind. He said it may shake people up. I hope the
lad hasn't said anything too reckless. Sometimes he strikes me as
a bit toplofty, and I don't think that would sit well with the American
public. Your Yank-on-the-street tends to follow egalitarianism right
out the window, pretending that people really are all created equal
and deserving of equal treatment across the board. It doesn't work
out that way in actuality, of course -but God help the fellow who
advocates any elitist scheme. " He chomped up the remains of his
sandwich and took a deep draft of Arrol's.

"We, on the other hand, " Nigel said, "just love an aristocrat. "

"Speak for yourself, you kosher Sassenach!" said Jean with spirit.

A number of colorful racial slurs were exchanged in good humor,
and then all of them but Alana concentrated on food and drink. She
per­sisted in her abstraction until she suddenly said:

"Will Denis's new book have an explanation for precognition?"

"Have you had a skry, then?" Jean's face was troubled. "Not
another warning?"

"Not exactly, " Alana said. "No firm premonition, only a kind of
feeling. Just now. "

Nigel regarded the young woman with a pretense of exasperation.
"She's facing her weird again, that's what. So she can get out of
the excursion to Dallas. "

"It's no joke, " Jean admonished him. "Not to anyone born and
reared in the Highlands. Our own little Katie's had the Sight - and I
don't mind telling you it scares me. The other metafunctions are
only exten­sions and elaborations of our normal mind-powers, after
all. But pre­cognition seems supernatural somehow... " She turned
again to Alana. "Your feeling: was it for good or ill?"

"I - I don't know. I've never felt anything like it. It wasn't frighten­ing.
No vision, no notion of an event impending. Perhaps just the
op­posite. " She gave a small laugh and once again turned to the
window. The old man was stooped over, rummaging in his carrier
bag while the rain beat on his exposed neck. "He's still singing the
hymn, " Alana noted softly. "Still upset. Perhaps it's his
precognition. "

"Funny you should ask about the theoretical aspect of the Sight, "
Nigel said. "I was defending the crystal-ball effect as a legitimate
metafunction to Littlefield and Schneider just the other day. It has
to be a warping of the temporal lattices producing a wormhole in
the contin­uum through the agency of the seer's own coercion. In
theory, one could catch glimpses of the future or the past quite as
readily as contemporaneous remote-viewings in the here and now.
It's a matter of willing - coercing - a momentary plication of time
rather than space. "

"But how, " Alana said slowly, "can you explain the unpremeditated
glimpse of the future? The vision one doesn't ask for?"

Nigel looked uncomfortable. He swirled the last of his beer in the
bottom of the glass. "It's hard to explain that through dynamic-field
theory, I admit. You see, the temporal nodalities that we call
'events' require instigating forces. Causes, if you like. But if the
unexpected premonition doesn't originate in the coercivity of the
seer, we must ask just what the source of the coercive vector is. It
could be another person. It could be the collective unconscious of
humanity, if you want to accept Urgyen Bhotia's theory. "

"Or it could simply be angels, " said Jamie MacGregor.

Alana started. "Oh, you're putting me on!"

He was rummaging in his notecase for the Parapsychology Unit's
credit card. Discovering it at last, he waved it at the barmaid. "If you
eliminate the coercivity of the seer as the instigator of Sight, and
elim­inate the coercivity of other people - using the term in its
broadest sense to mean 'sapient entities inhabiting our physical
universe' -then you are left with an enigma. An extradimensional
genetrix. An initiat­ing force outside the eighteen generative
dynamic fields, but neverthe­less congruent to the three matrix
fields. "

The barmaid took Jamie's card away. Her face had an old-
fashioned expression.

"Are you speaking of God?" Alana asked.

"Not necessarily, " said Jamie. "The Universal Field Theory doesn't
define God, or the Cosmic All, or the Omega, or whatever. But if
such an entity exists outside our physical universe, then it must
have a method of relating to that universe. Denis Remillard
believes in God and suggests that an integral sexternion - or a
whole gaggle of them - operates between the All and the
dimensional construct we call the physical universe. He says the
sexternions already have a perfectly good name in religious
tradition: angels! Word means messenger. " He signed the credit-
card slip with a flourish and pocketed his copy.

Alana peered at him with suspicion. "Do you mean to say you really
believe second sight is instigated by angels?"

Jamie shrugged. They were all rising from the table and going after
their raincoats. "I didn't say that. I said it was a theory, and one of
Remillard's to boot. You can think as you like, lass. "

"Do you still feel fey?" Jean asked Alana solicitously. "You're
dread-fully pale and you didn't eat a thing. "

"It's a blank, " the girl whispered. She tried to smile. "There doesn't
seem to be anything beyond. "

"Take my arm, " Nigel urged her.

Alana's eyes slid away. "I'd really rather not. Please, Nigel. "

"No problem, " he said easily, and held the door open.

The two women went out into the rain.

By the churchyard gate, the elderly man was now kneeling on the
pavement, rooting in the plastic carrier bag and muttering. He had
lost his hat and the rain soaked his thin white hair and ran down his
fur­rowed cheeks. He looked up wildly and froze as he saw Alana.

There shah not be found among you any one that useth divination,
or an enchanter, or a witch! For all that do these things are an
abom­ination unto the Lord: and because of these abominations
the Lord thy God doth drive them out from before thee!

Alana stopped as the cry flooded her mind and tried to crowd Jean
back into the pub doorway with her body, but she was not quick
enough; the machine pistol that the old man pulled from his bag
spat five sudden gouts of yellow fire and woke thundering echoes
up and down the an­cient street. Alana crumpled, her face turned
scarlet and formless, dead before she reached the ground. Jean
took only one bullet, but that was in the neck, and she fell back into
Jamie's arms with her life fountaining onto the rain-darkened
granite pavement.

The old man shouted: "Thou shalt not suffer a witch to live!" He
threw down his weapon and darted into the Greyfriars churchyard.

Jamie went to his knees with Jean clasped to his breast, hearing
her mind say what her voice was unable to utter:

Katie and David... love them... continue the work...

He bent and kissed her, with the rational part of his brain assuring
him that this could not be happening. Not to her. Not to them. Their
life together had been absurdly perfect, an idyll throughout the
thirteen years of their marriage and professional collaboration and
the rearing of their joy-bedight offspring. This sort of ending was
impossible.

Jean said: I'm always with you.

He kissed her again, and was aware of a terrible howling sound.
Then, shockingly, he was almost bowled over by a plunging shape
and knew it was Nigel, gone after the madman, screaming at the
top of his lungs.

Jean said: He mustn't. Stop him.

When Jamie continued to cling to her, she mustered up a last
coercive impulse.

Go before it's too late!

He lowered her carefully to the stones. People were pushing out of
the pub, babbling and shouting. Several cars had stopped and their
occu­pants looked out, horror-stricken. Jamie dodged pedestrians
and pounded through the churchyard entrance. Beneath one of the
venerable trees just softening in spring leaf was a fierce orange
blaze. Nigel stood over it his scholarly face as implacable as the
marble death's-heads that decorated the seventeenth-century
tombs on either hand. A man writhed in the midst of the fire,
making a shrill keening sound.

Jamie ripped off his coat to blanket the flames, rolling the burning
man on the wet turf. Suddenly, without a word, Nigel leapt onto
Jamie's back and clawed at his eyes. Jamie levered himself
upright, got a grip on the wrists of the smaller man, and pried the
hands away from his face. Redness tinged the vision of one eye.

"No, Nigel! For God's sake!"

"Let the swine burn!" Nigel sank his teeth into Jamie's right hand.
Agonized, Jamie lifted Nigel bodily and flung him headfirst against
the trunk of the tree. He fell, groaning feebly, and Jamie turned
again to the smoldering body beneath the raincoat.

There were people running about the churchyard now and a sound
of approaching police cars. The flames seemed to be out. Jamie
pulled a fold of fabric aside and saw the charred features of the
fanatic -hawk­like nose, bold brow-arches of Caledonian bone,
lantern jaw - a face very much like his own. The eyes in their lidless
sockets seemed to retain an uncompromising gleam and the
mouth, distorted by the rictus of violent death, might have been
triumphantly grinning.

Jamie let the cloth drop back. He got up and limped over to Nigel,
who appeared to be embracing the tree as he attempted to haul
himself upright. One sleeve of his coat was torn and his bald pate
was purpled with a massive contusion. Jamie extended his left
hand to his colleague and pulled him to his feet. Nigel reciprocated
by binding Jamie's bitten hand with a handkerchief.

Police officers came and led them away, and then there was an
inter­val during which they were asked the same questions over
and over again with irritating persistence. Dr. Nigel Weinstein was
arrested and charged with culpable homicide. Later he was
released on his own re­cognizance to attend the Third Metapsychic
Congress, which was held that year in Edinburgh. He did not
present a paper.

In February 1995 Weinstein was acquitted when the Scottish jury
brought in a verdict of "Not Proven. " By then, however, with the
world­wide publicity given the trial, the damage had been done.



5

SURVEY VESSEL

krak rona'al [Kron 466-010111]

sector 14: star 14-893-042 [landa]: planet 4 [assawompset]

galactic year: la prime 1-357-627

[8 AUGUST   1994]



the monstrous krondaku are a race fabled throughout the Galactic
Milieu for their ancient wisdom, their merciless objectiv­ity, and
their composure. But there is another aspect to the great ten­tacled
invertebrates that other polities (except the Lylmik) do not
sus­pect.

At those rare times when they can be certain of being unobserved
by exotic minds, the Krondaku are given to fooling around.

The mated pairs, especially, in conditions of absolute privacy, will
cast aside all decorum and circumspection and for a brief interval
sub­merge themselves completely in sensory input. They revel,
they wal­low, they become intoxicated voluptuaries - drinking in,
above all, the supernal pla'akst sensation engendered by their
ponderous amours. Only the Gi, those paragons of
concupiscence, have a greater capacity for pla'akst than dallying
Krondaku. When the passionate interlude ends, its memory lingers
on and suffuses the normal Krondak phlegmatism with sunniness.
For a while, the terrible monsters are awash with un­characteristic
bonhomie.

It was in just such a mood that two senior Krondak planetologists
approached the Landa solar system in the 14th Sector.

Comparator Dota'efoo Alk'ai and her mate, Attestor Luma'eroo
Tok, had received a most unusual assignment from the Sector
Base on Molakar [Tau Ceti-2]. They were to go themselves, without
the usual support crew consisting of a mixed bag of Milieu races,
and perform an update assessment of the fourth Landa planet,
which they had surveyed many Galactic millenaries ago. Once a
promising prospect for coloni­zation, the world had suffered the
misfortune of being within a critical distance of supernova
14-322-931B-S2. As this dying star exploded, it launched a
relativistic blast wave of high-energy particles, x-rays, and gamma
rays in all directions. For several centuries, the normal back­ground
cosmic radiation flux through the Landa system increased by a
factor of nearly five thousand, with cataclysmic effects upon the
biota of the single habitable world. The blast wave had swept past
Landa exactly two Galactic millenaries ago [5476 Earth years]. The
14th Sector Survey Authority decided it was now time to find out if
the irradiated fourth planet had simmered down, and if it was still
potentially colonizable. A full-scale resurvey was not required.
Experienced field-workers such as Dota'efoo and Luma'eroo
would be able to decide rather quickly whether or not the world was
a write-off.

The Landa solar system lay on the outer fringe of the Orion Arm of
the Galaxy, some 6360 light-years from Molakar. Traveling at its
usual brisk displacement factor of 370, the starship of the two
Krondak planetologists required 17.19 subjective Galactic days to
make the trip, which was executed in eighteen consecutive
hyperspatial catenaries. Twice each day, as the ship entered and
left subspace by means of its upsilon-field superluminal translator,
the two entities within experi­enced a brief moment of horrific pain,
which they bore with Krondak stoicism. But in between the
translations, when they were alone to­gether in the gray limbo of
the hyperspatial subuniverse, that most remote of nonlocations, the
couple felt free to doff their dour racial façade and romp. They had
not had a honeymoon in more than five millenaries, and its glow
stayed with them as they neared the journey's end and climbed
reluctantly out of the connubial vat of glycerin, imidazolidinyl urea,
and iso-yohimbine.

The terminal break through the superficies was due any minute.
They headed for the survey craft's control room slithering side by
side, settled into their squatting pads, and waited. A small cyan
indicator on the instrumentation panel flashed on as the translator
mechanism spun the upsilon-field gateway. The viewport showed
only quasi-dimensional gray negation... and then there was a
unique swimming snap, a zang attended by incredible agony, a
zung, and relief. They had returned to normal space, in the vicinity
of the Landa system.

The smallish G1 sun was of modest mass and luminosity,
unassoci­ated with solar companions. It shone golden-yellow,
exhibiting mini­mal flare activity and an attractive "butterfly" corona
with pearly equatorial streamers and polar plumes. Five of its
family of fourteen planets were immediately visible to the multiple
Krondak oculi, but all of them were gas-giants of no interest to
colonization evaluators.

Luma'eroo shut down the overdrive mechanism and fired up the
subliminal gravo-magnetic propulsion generators. He switched the
ship's navigation unit from automatic to tentacular. A crawling
network of faint violet fire, the rho-field, now clothed the outer hull
of the dull-black spheroid. Under Luma'eroo's pilotage, it went full
inertialess and proceeded to the fourth planet, moving at a sizable
percentage of the speed of light. The ship took up station in a
geosynchronous orbit a few hundred thousand kilometers above a
bluish-green, cloud-swirled world.

"I wish thou wouldst not hot-dog, Tok. " Dota'efoo's admonition had
overtones of fond languor; the aftereffects of the recent debauch
were still very much with her.

"The sooner we get this evaluation over with, the sooner we can
begin the trip back to Molakar. " Luma'eroo's primary eyes retained
a misty periwinkle color and his integument was flushed with the
telltale rosy blotches of fulfillment. "This mission is hardly likely to
end pos­itively, Alk'ai, given the proximity of the poor planet to the
supernova. "

"I daresay thou art right, " Dota'efoo said, stroking his warty dorsal
prominence with absent-minded affection as she stared out the
main viewport, "Just look. The cloud cover has deteriorated to only
about fifty percent and there are polar ice caps now. The
atmospheric ozone layer must have been zapped to a green
frazzle. All-in-All pity the life-forms!... "

"I'm going to call up a precis of our last survey. It's been a long
time - and thanks to thee, O alluring source of hyperhedonia, my
mnemonic faculties are just the least bit unresponsive. " He flicked
a request to the computer and the abbreviated data flashed into
both their minds:



EVALUATION SUMMARY- 14-893-042-4



This eminently habitable world is a typical small metallolithoid with
an equatorial radius of [5902 km] and a mean density of [5.462
gm/cm3]. It has a nickel-iron core and is internally heated by natural
radioactiv­ity. The dipolar magnetic field is classed 06:2:05:9.
Planet Four is at­tended by three interlocked moons: A is a
coreless lithoid giant with a diameter 0. 22 and a mass 0. 01 that of
the primary; B and C are lithoid midgets scarcely 1/1000th as
massive as A, orbiting at the equilateral points of the giant. Planet
Four has an axial tilt of 19.35 degrees and a nearly circular orbit
around its sun. Its year is equivalent to 611.3 Galactic days and its
day 93 time units. The planetary albedo is 39.7 percent.



The atmosphere of Planet Four is generally within acceptable
parame­ters for Milieu races: 22.15 percent oxygen, 0.05 percent
carbon dioxide, and 77.23 percent nitrogen, with the balance
consisting of noble gases, hydrogen, ozone, miscellaneous trace
gases, miscellaneous suspended particulates, and varying
amounts of dihydrogen oxide vapor. Clouds formed of the latter
shroud about 62 percent of the planetary surface.



Land areas comprise 19 percent of Planet Four, and 81 percent is
cov­ered with dihydrogen oxide oceans with an average salinity of
3.03 percent. Nearly 20 percent of the hydrosphere is
epicontinental and very shallow. There are many freshwater lakes
of small area. The lithosphere has a Class 4 motile-plate structure
with a basaltic abyssal sea-floor and granitic continents. Two
continents are of moderate size and five are much smaller. There
are myriads of continental-class is­lands and many extensive
island-arcs at oceanic plate boundaries. Con­tinental mountain
ranges have formed adjacent to the active subduction zones of the
two principal land masses, and some of their peaks exceed [6000
m] in height. The continents also feature eroded highland
rem­nants of earlier cycles of continental drift. There is moderate
vulcanism in the island-arcs, along mid-oceanic ridges, and in the
subduction ranges.



Planet Four has a generally warm and humid maritime climate,
lacking polar or continental glaciation. Tropical conditions prevail in
the equa­torial belt, with full-summer temperatures exceeding
[40°C] and no winter. The midlatitude continental temperature
range is: summer - above [40°C]; winter - above [10°C]. Island
temperatures are generally lower than continental in summer and
higher in winter. One small continent near the North Pole has a
summer maximum temperature of [23°C] and a winter minimum of
[-5°C]. There is only one small desert, in the rain-shadow of the
coast range at the equatorial region of the largest continent.



Life-forms of Planet Four are C-H-O-N-S-Fe proteinoid,
predominantly aerobic. Both the oceans and the land harbor large
populations of protist and multicellular autotrophs. There are some
690,000 species of photoautotrophic, chemoautotrophic, and
mixotrophic plants - with green photoautotrophs making up the
majority of micro- and macroflora. About 60 percent of the energy
they bind is taken up by heterotrophic life-forms. Heterotrophs
include some 2,000,000 species of protists, plants, and animals -
marine, amphibian, terrestrial, and semiaerial. Most of the animals
and about half of the protists and plants are mobile. Higher species
of animals display homeostasis, bilateral symmetry, disexuality,
and endoskeletal body structure, with increasing cephaliza­tion in
the more highly evolved species. The most advanced life-form is a
presapient ovoviviparous semierect terrestrial biped with a brain
clas­sification of 67:3:462. It is stalled in its cephalic evolution by a
low birth rate and the presence in its ecosystem of six major
predators, two of them aerial.



PRELIMINARY PLANETOLOGICAL RATING:

Suited for colonization, with optional ecological modification to the
Fifth Degree.



WEIGHTED RACIAL COMPATIBILITY PERCENTAGE:

Simb: 89. Gi: 80. Poltroyan: 48. Krondak: 13.



"Well, " Dota'efoo noted sadly, "even a quick visual scan shows
that the place was severely damaged. The cloud cover's down to
about fifty percent. The climate has cooled to the ice-age stage,
and the concomi­tant lowering of sea level has exposed nearly all
of the continental shelves. The greater percentage of the islands
has merged into dry land. "

"So much for Gi colonization. Without plenty of island trysting sites,
their reproductive psychology packs up and the eggs are sterile. "
Luma'eroo activated a battery of monitoring devices at the same
time that he sent the craft plunging out of orbit. When the black
spheroid reached the planetary tropopause it came to an abrupt
halt, hovering in the deep-blue sky while thin jet-stream winds
hummed around it. "At least the magnetosphere has recovered to
its normal value. Reversed, though. "

"I was afraid of that. Is the ozone layer rebuilt?"

"To within normal parameters for the Gi sun. " He twiddled with the
radiation-monitoring unit, which was overdue for a refit. "Albedo's
down to twenty-eight overall. UV and solar wind penetration to
surface within normal range. Ditto the cosmic radiation. "

Dota'efoo studied the atmosphere analysis. "Oxygen is down by a
full two percent, and nitrogen is up one. Carbon dioxide has gone
from .05 to .03... And just look at the biotic differentiation read-out!
We've lost nearly half of the plant species and an even larger
percentage of the animals to hard radiation overdose, UV
exposure, or general niche de­terioration. "

"It could have  been worse, Alk'ai, and  the place  was perhaps
overspeciated. Residual populations have probably expanded to
fill most of the vacant niches - to say nothing of the successful
mutations. The grosser supernova damage to the biota seems to
have healed. " "But the world is still ruined. "

He blinked his primary optics in doleful agreement. "It is no longer
libidinously stimulating enough for the Gi and it is now too cold and
dry for the Simbiari. It remains too warm, too deficient in oxygen
partial-pressure, and too gravity-strong for us Krondaku. That
leaves only the Poltroyans as potential colonizers - but the place is
probably too warm for them as well, except in the circumpolar
regions. "

"And don't forget, we'd also have to do ecological modification of a
high degree to accommodate our little mauve brethren. This planet
never did have enough sulfur springs or useful species of purple
anaerobic photosynthesizers for their tastes. "

"Too true, " he agreed. "Shall we bother doing a surface recon? Or
wouldst thou prefer that we simply mark it for a dead loss and
minimize the insult to our freshly heightened sensibilities?"

She hesitated. "I would like to descend, Tok - if thou wouldst
in­dulge me. We did spend so much time on the original survey.
Besides, it's fitting to give it the utmost benefit of the doubt. "

"I agree. " Disdaining the instrumentation, he did a fast
metapsychic farscan of the largest continent, which projected
some distance into the North Temperate Zone. This part of the
world, which had the most landmass, was at the onset of winter; but
there was as yet no snow on the ground and the vegetation was
still adequately lush. "Let us visit the eastern coast of the major
continent, Alk'ai. There is a great river now traversing the old
continental shelf and a rather interesting embayment. "

"Very well. "

The survey vessel plummeted toward the planetary surface in a
straight line, shielded by its rho-field from the constraints of gravity-
inertia and by a temporary sigma-field from atmospheric ablation.
The region Luma'eroo had selected was just at the terminator, and
so they landed just as the sun was going down behind low hills,
painting a dancing golden pathway across the indigo waters of the
windswept bay. There was abundant plant-life. On the hills and on
the exposed head­land where the ship rested were stands of trees
with sturdy ligneous stems and deep-green aciform leaves. Other
species of trees in the low­lands on either side of the river showed
the beginning of chlorophyll degeneration in their obviously
deciduous foliage, which was stained in startling coppery, xanthic,
and rubineous hues.

The Krondaku emerged carefully from the ship and moved with
dif­ficulty in the gravitational field that was nearly twice their racial
opti­mum. They slithered over a ground cover of low-growing
anthophytes. Some were dried out; others, still green, bore star-
shaped pink, yellow, or white sexual organs. The air tasted of
terpineol, geranyl acetate, coumarin, and phenylethyl alcohol.
There was also a distinctive chloride-iodide exudation from the
marine organisms at the rocky mar­gin of the sea. An offshore
breeze made a rustling sound as it passed through the needle-leaf
trees, and waves crashed on the seaward side of the headland. Up
in one of the trees, an invisible creature voiced a complex warbling
ululation having a frequency between two thousand and four
thousand cycles per second. Small white-winged animals in a
ragged V-formation flew low over the bay waves, heading toward
the open sea.

The two tentacled monsters contemplated the scene for some
time, utilizing both their conventional senses and their ultrafaculties.
The sun set and the cloudless sky turned from yellow to
aquamarine to purple, studded with the first bright stars. The major
moon, in its full phase, came up over the blackening eastern sea
like a great disk of refulgent amber. One of the twin moonlets was
also in view, shining modestly silver through the silhouetted
branches of a nearby tree.

"Ruined. " Dota'efoo spoke with emphatic finality. "In its present
state, the planet is patently unfit for colonization by any of the
coadunate races of the Milieu. "

"It's hopeless, " Luma'eroo agreed. "Ecological engineering up to
the Tenth Degree wouldn't even begin to put it back into shape. "
He ru­minated for a few moments more. "Strange... it rather
reminds me of their world. " And he projected an oafish racial
image that had become a notorious target of low humor among
less charitable Simbiari and Poltroyan planetologists.

"By the All-Penetrant - I do believe thou art correct. Shall we go
back inside the ship and check the correlates?"

"With pleasure. My plasm aches from this burdensome gravity. "

The two Krondaku reboarded and went again to the control room,
where the computer confirmed Luma'eroo's hunch. The weighted
com­patibility percentage was an amazing 98.

"And so, in the most unlikely event that they are admitted to the
Milieu, our poor little orphan planet would undoubtedly be among
the first worlds to be colonized by them. " Dota'efoo called up
some addi­tional data. "Here is a noteworthy item. They recently
sent an explo­ration team to their most hospitable neighbor planet -
a dusty red frigid-desert hulk with an exiguous atmosphere. They
are also con­structing orbiting habitats in a futile effort to siphon off
their excess population. "

"Idiots. Why don't they simply limit procreation?"

"It is contrary to the prevailing ethic of certain racial segments, and
others are too ignorant to appreciate the reproductive predicament
of their planet. Thou must understand, Tok, that these people are
even more fecund than the Poltroyans, and this poses technical
difficulties for practical contraception as well as motivational ones.
Their principal means of population control are famine, abortion, a
high infant death-rate among Class Two indigenes, and war. "

"Those amazing humans!" Luma'eroo lifted four tentacles in a
gesture of puzzlement. "If the Lylmik are truly intent upon foisting
them upon the Milieu, we are in for some interesting times. I think
we may someday be grateful, Alk'ai, that there are numbers of
solar systems on the far side of the Galaxy that await our personal
scrutiny. "

His mate allowed a barely perceptible risibility to enter her mind-
tone. "And yet, they do have a certain reckless courage. Imagine a
race of their classification seriously attempting to colonize a nearly
airless, frigid-desert planet... or worse, artificial satellites!"

"It surpasses understanding. "

Dota'efoo summoned a last modicum of data from the computer.
"If Earthlings are accepted into the Milieu, their overpopulation
problem will become an asset overnight. As of now, we have 782
ecologically compatible planets within a 20,000-light-year radius of
their home world all surveyed and ready for settlement. " She
flicked a dismissive tentacle at the viewport, with its moonlit
seascape framed by evergreen trees. "And this place makes 783.
"

"Frightening. They'd very likely overrun the Galaxy in a few
mille­naries... "

Dota'efoo shuddered. "Let's get out of here. "

Her mate activated the rho-field generator to full inertialess and
sent the survey vessel screaming into interplanetary space.



6

FROM THE MEMOIRS OF ROGATIEN REMILLARD



on the face of it, there was nothing suspicious about the accidental
deaths of my three nieces.

The twins Jeanette and Laurette, who were twenty-one, and their
sister Jacqueline, two years younger, were driving home from a ski
weekend in North Conway early in January 1995 when their new
RX-11 went out of control on the icy highway, crashed, and burned.
Denis flew back from Edinburgh, where he had been called as an
expert witness for the defense in the sensational trial of Dr. Nigel
Weinstein. Once again he and Victor supported their widowed
mother through the ordeal of an old-fashioned Franco-American
veillée, funeral Mass, and cortège to the family plot in the cemetery
outside Berlin, where the girls were buried next to their father.

Sunny was not just grief-stricken, she was devastated. Both Denis
and I detected nuances of irrationality beneath the stuporous
anguish that cloaked her mind, but neither of us recognized the
fear. Denis had to return to Scotland immediately. He urged me to
stay in Berlin for the week following the funeral to make a closer
assessment of his mother's mental health. When I told him that
Sunny seemed in the grip of a morbid depression, he asked a
colleague from the Department of Metapsychology, Colette Roy,
to come to Berlin for consultation with the Remillard family
physician. Dr. Roy, Glenn Dalembert's wife, had been studying the
abnormal psychology of operants and was the best redactive
prober (outside of Denis) working at that time at Dartmouth. Her
examination of Sunny was inconclusive and she urged that I bring
Sunny to Hanover for a further evaluation at the Hitchcock Clinic.
Sunny adamantly refused to go. She said she would not leave the
other five children, who ranged in age from thirteen to eighteen,
even when Victor offered to pay for a full-time housekeeper. The
terrible anxiety that Sunny displayed at the suggestion that she
leave her rather frac­tious adolescent brood was diagnosed by Dr.
Roy as just another symp­tom of the depression; but in this Colette
was mistaken. Sunny, the mother of two metapsychic giants, had
managed for all her latency to screen her innermost thoughts with a
thoroughness none of us dreamed possible.

When Denis returned to New Hampshire after Weinstein's acquittal
and pleaded with her, Sunny finally agreed to a two-week course of
treatment at Hitchcock, with monthly outpatient checkups to follow.
She also said she would accept domestic help in the big house on
Swe­den Street that Denis and Victor had bought for her four years
earlier. Victor interviewed and rejected a parade of Berlin
applicants, and even­tually hired one Mme. Rachel Fortier of
Montreal, an amazonian femme de charge who came with the
highest references and eye-popping salary requirements. Sunny
accepted the housekeeper with apparent goodwill, and by the
second week in February things seemed to be going back to
normal.

So I went to a science-fiction convention.

Every year since 1991 I had attended Boskone, a sedate gathering
of fantasy buffs, writers, artists, booksellers, and academics.
Those unfa­miliar with such meetings may get a hint of the general
atmosphere when I say that I, a known operant and close relative
of one of the most famous metapsychic personalities in the
country, was looked upon as nothing out of the ordinary by the
convention-goers. I was just another bookseller, not to be
mentioned in the same breath with genuine ce­lebrities such as the
best-selling author of Tessaract One, the producer of the
Gnomeworld video series, or the first artist to do on-the-spot lunar
landscapes.

Sometimes at these conventions I shared a table in the dealers'
room with a fellow bookseller, offering middling rarities and telling
all com­ers about the much greater trove of goodies to be found at
my shop in Hanover. Sometimes I just circulated and perused the
other dealers' wares for likely items, or bought a few pieces of
artwork, or attended the more bibliophilic panel discussions, or sat
in on readings by my favorite authors. I scarcely ever bothered with
the endless round of parties that was a feature of convention
nights, preferring in earlier years to do my serious drinking in
solitude. The only festivity I attended was the com­bination
masquerade and meet-the-lions bash that traditionally took place
on Friday evening. There one might legitimately scrape up
ac­quaintance with notables, so as later to be in a favorable
position to offer them modest sums for their hand-corrected
proofs, typescripts (a surprising number of science-fiction writers
still refused to process their words), autographed first editions, or
literary curiosa of a marketable sort.

Boskone XXXII was held at the Sheraton-Boston. When the
dealers' room opened on Friday the tenth I made my rounds of the
tables and greeted old friends and acquaintances among the
hucksters. The anti­quarian pickings seemed leaner than in other
years and the prices higher. Very few new books were now being
published in the hardcover format; even first editions from the big
houses were issued mostly as large paperbacks. Regular
paperbacks, on the other hand, proliferated like fleas on a spaniel
in August in response to the reading explosion of the '90s.
Desktop printing technology had given rise to a host of cottage
publishers of every stripe - fantasy not excluded - and limited
collec­tor's editions of every Tom, Dick, or Mary with even the most
tenuous claim to fame crowded the good old stuff off the tables.

I did manage to find firsts of the G&D Fury by Henry Kuttner, and a
fine copy of the remarkable science-fantasy World D in the London
Sheed & Ward edition of 1935.

As I dickered for the latter with a bookseller acquaintance, Larry
Palmira, I became aware of a strange hostility in his manner. At first
his subvocalizations were too indistinct to decipher; but as we
settled on a final price somewhat higher than I had hoped for, I
heard him say:

And you won't coerce ME into going a buck lower dammitall so go
try your mental flimflam on some other nebbish!

I signed the credit-card slip and gave it to him smiling. He bagged
my book and said, "Always great to do business with you, Roj.
Drop in when you're in Cambridge. "

"I'll do that, Larry, " said I, and walked away thinking hard.

I decided to test my suspicions and stopped at the booth of
another dealer friend, Fidelity Swift, pretending interest in a Berkley
paperback first of Odd John, ludicrously overpriced at twenty-five
dollars. She let me beat her down a little. Then I looked her in the
eye and murmured, "Come on, Fee, gimme a break. You better be
nice to me, kiddo. You know what they say about not getting a
metapsychic pissed... "

"No, " she laughed. "What do they say?" In her mind was a
fearsome image: Nero's garden lit by human torches.

I thought: Merde dans sa coquille! And said, "Damned if I can
re­member. Double sawbuck, last offer. Cash on the barrelhead. "

"Sold!" Relief gushed out of her like blood from a cut artery. The
nightmare picture faded but her deep disquiet was now obvious.

I handed over the money and took my prize, saying goodbye while
I broadcast the most benignant vibes I could conjure up,
superimposed upon an image of her that shaved off thirty pounds
and ten years and arrayed her plain features in idealized sexuality.

"See you around, Roger, " she breathed, all apprehension swept
away. I winked and hurried out of the dealers' room.

The trial. The goddam Scottish trial!

Weinstein had been extremely lucky to win the famous "Not
Proven" verdict permissible under Scots law. The lunatic
clergyman he had in­cinerated was unarmed, and witnesses had
testified that the old man had offered no threat or resistance when
Weinstein ran him down. Only some fancy psychiatric footwork
about diminished responsibility due to temporary derangement and
Denis's testimony about the inadvertent projections of creative
flame exemplified by "Subject C" and docu­mented in his
laboratory (Lucille's identity was disclosed only to the judge)
brought about Weinstein's acquittal. Even then there were dark
editorials about "persons of special privilege" flouting the common
law of humanity. The Metapsychic Congress, held four months
before the trial, had attempted to anticipate and disarm public
apprehension by pointing out that only a minuscule percentage of
operants possessed mental faculties that could be classified as
threatening to ordinary mor­tals. There were more reassurances
later. How many normals, given Weinstein's provocation, might not
have been carried away as he was to the point of violence? In the
United States, Weinstein's immolation of the mad murderer
became the most hotly argued case since a quiet electronics
technician had shot four aggressive young muggers on a New York
subway back in the '80s. Behind the rational argumentation and
scholarly disputations on the dark side of the unconscious lurked
something uglier and more atavistic. The man who had slain Jean
MacGregor and Alana Shaunavon had denounced them as
witches, and quoted the Bible as justification. Of course intelligent
modern people understood that metapsychic powers were a
natural consequent of hu­man evolution. There was nothing devilish
or black-magical about them. But on the other hand...

There was a simple remedy for the irrational fear of a single
individ­ual. I had worked it myself on Fidelity Swift. But it was a
temporary thing, like a clever actor making an audience believe in a
character being portrayed. We operants would be able to disarm
the fear of some of the normals some of the time - for a little while.
But how would we convince them of our amity over the long haul?

Sunk in the old malheur, I went up to my room to stash the book
purchases before going to supper. As I came back into the
corridor I was reminded by the number of costumed figures
prowling about that the masquerade and meet-the-pros party was
in full swing down in the hotel's grand ballroom. There would be
music and drinks and convivi­ality, and such a mob scene that
nobody would bother thinking twice about my sinister mental
attributes.

The down-elevator door opened to reveal a chamber jammed with
exotic fun-seekers. I spotted a squad of youths dressed in
medieval battle-gear, a nubile lass with flaming hair and a four-foot
"peace-bonded" sword, wearing what seemed to be a bikini of
silver poker chips, a Darkoverian mother with two Darkoverian
moppets, a statu­esque black woman in a white satin evening gown
with a little white dragon perched on her shoulder, a stoutish
middle-aged gent clad in a conservative suit whose mundane
appearance was belied only by the propeller beanie on his head,
and a large ape sporting emerald fur and illuminated eyeballs, who
had neglected to use a personal deodorant. "No room! No room!"
chorused this bunch as I made to enter the elevator. The ape
opened its mechanically augmented white-tusked jaws and stuck
its carunculated tongue out at me.

But there is, occasionally, justice in this world. I speared the smelly
ape with my most potent coercive impulse and commanded: "Out!"
It complied like a lamb and I took its place to universal plaudits.
We made a nonstop trip to the ballroom level.

The party had attracted nearly two thousand people. Perhaps half
were in fancy dress. A live band played things like "Can You Read
My Mind?, " "Rocket Man, " "Annapurna Saucer Trip, " Darius
Brubeck's "Earthrise, " and John Williams's "Theme from
Gnomeworld. " In be­tween sets the convention Toastmaster
introduced the artists and writ­ers present, and a spotlight tried to
pick designated stars out of the crush. There were also parades of
the more spectacularly costumed fans across the stage. Those
who were particularly beautiful, humorous, or technically awesome
received warm ovations.

I headed immediately for the nearest open bar. By the time I had
downed three Scotches, I felt considerably cheered. I had
repinned my convention badge so that my name was mostly
obscured by the lapel of my suit coat. Five attractive ladies (and
one flamboyantly gorgeous transvestite, whose gender I detected
too late to worry about) danced with me. I introduced myself to the
convention Guest of Honor, a tottering nonagenarian survivor of the
Golden Age, and by dint of the most gentle coercion and a
speedily fetched raspberry seltzer got him to personally inscribe a
copy of Boskone's commemorative edition of his early short
stories.

And then I withdrew to the sidelines for a breather... and had my
first shock of the evening when I saw Elaine.

Even though she was now over fifty, she was still breathtaking. Her
tall slender figure was clad in a long gown of some lightweight
metal mesh that flowed from her neck to the floor like molten gold.
Her arms, shoulders, and back were bare. The dress's collar was a
wide, upstanding band of gold adorned with stones like blazing
orange to­pazes. She had a single heavy bracelet of the same
jewels. Her hair was blond now, piled high on her head in an
intricate coiffure of stiffly arranged ringlets sparked with gold glints.
She was dancing with Dracula.

I gulped down the dregs of my latest Scotch and pressed toward
the dance floor. Poor Drac didn't have a prayer in the face of my
coercion. For some reason the band was playing a melodic
standard, "Old Cape Cod. " Elaine stood there among the other
dancers, dismayed by the abrupt retreat of her caped and
befanged escort, not yet noticing me. I do not recall what my
thoughts were. Perhaps seeing her after so many years had
drained my brain of everything except the irresistible com­pulsion
to be near her again.

I took her into my arms and we picked up the beat. She stared up
at me, wordless. Her mind said: Roger!

"Voulez-vous m'accorder cette danse, Madame?"

"No!... Yes. " Oh, my God.

"May I compliment you on your dress. It's much too chic to be a
costume. " How appropriate that we should meet again at a bal
travesti. Do you come to Boskone often?

"No, " she said. "This is my first time. My daughter thought I'd find it
amusing. She's - she's a rabid science-fiction fan. "

Your daughter... Don's daughter... she would be twenty. May I ask
her name?

"Annarita Latimer. She's there, costumed as Red Sonja. "

My eyes followed her mental indication and I was surprised to see
the strapping redheaded wench in the silver-dollar bikini. She was
too far away for me to scrutinize her directly for operancy, and I am
unable to detect operant auras in lighted places. So I simply
asked, "Did she inherit the mind-powers?"

"I - I think so. " She won't let me in, Roger. There's a barrier, like a
shining wall of black glass. One doesn't notice it except at very
close range...

That explained my failure to spot her operancy in the elevator.

"What does Annarita do?" I asked easily. "Is she going to
college?"

"She's at Yale Drama School. I think she'll be a very good actress.
"

"Sans doute, " I murmured. "And your husband?"

The music was ending. We applauded, and then the M. C. took up
the microphone to announce the costume prizes. I led Elaine to the
edge of the dance floor, where Dracula waited, glowering.

Her mind told me hurriedly: Stanton died three years ago Roger
now I am married to him. "Gil, darling! Let me introduce you to a
very dear old friend of mine, Roger Remillard. Roger, this is my
husband, Gilbert Anderson. " The Third, she appended
telepathically.

Dracula shook hands with me as though I were Von Helsing. His
features, blandly handsome aside from the well-fitted orthodontic
fangs, wore a pensive, well-bred little frown. "Remillard...
Remillard. You wouldn't by any chance be related to -"

"It's really a very common Franco-American name, " I said.
"Thanks for letting me dance with Elaine. We haven't seen each
other in years. Are you enjoying the convention?"

He uttered some hearty inconsequentialities, deftly extracted from
me my modest means of earning a living, and decided I was no
threat after all. "Maybe we can get together for lunch or something
later on this weekend. "

"Great idea. Let's try to do that, " I replied with equally false
enthu­siasm, simultaneously reassuring Elaine that I was out of it. I
asked her: What is he? Upper management? Stockbroker?

She said: VP and chief corporate legal officer.

I said: It figures given the fangs.

And then I pretended to see someone across the crowded room
that I had to speak to, so I bid the pair of them adieu. Fleeing, I told
her: You are more lovely than ever be happy chèrie and never
never have any­thing to do with metapsychic operants...

Then I hurried out of the ballroom, wretched again, and sought a
dark corner to lose myself in. I found it in one of the hotel cocktail
lounges. Hunched on a stool at the bar, I ordered a double vodka
on the rocks.

When I had finished it my brain was as incapable of telepathic
reception as any normal's.

And so he had to tap me on the shoulder to get my attention.

I peered groggily at the intruder standing behind me. It was a tall
young man with dark curly hair wearing a Flying Tiger jacket, haloed
by a fierce neon-red aura. Victor said, "I might have known I'd find
you here getting sloshed. On y va!"

He took hold of my arm firmly and seized my mind in a grip like a
pit bull's. I saw stars and lurched against him. A rude rummaging
was going on in my head, punctuated with offhand thrusts of pain. I
was unable to speak. Victor whispered urgently in French, trying to
get me out of the bar, but my feet weren't moving. Then something
inside my skull seemed to crumple and I moaned out loud and
began to walk, biddable as any zombie.

"That's better, " said Victor. He steered me toward the elevators.
"You're all checked out. We'll go up to your room and pick up your
things. "

"What... what the hell?" I protested.

The elevator was crowded with noisy conventioneers. Victor
pressed the button for my floor. I didn't know what kind of mischief
he had wrought in my brain, but I was sobering rapidly and was
once again able to understand mental speech. I also had a
hideous headache.

He said: We're driving north Uncle Rogi up to Berlin Maman needs
you and I'm taking you to her.

I said: Sunny?... Dieu is she all right what's happened is it serious
have you called Denis -

Shut up Uncle Rogi. There is no crisis. When I said Maman
needed you I was speaking generally. She needs you if she is to
get well and I am to be freed from Denis's meddling.

The elevator door opened and we got out. My head was swollen
with lava and the corridor rolled from side to side like a skiff caught
in the trough of storm waves. Victor held me up, inserted the
coded plastic key-card into the slot of my room door, and thrust me
brutally inside. I staggered to the bed and collapsed on it.
Muttering obscenities, my nephew relaxed his hold on me and went
into the bathroom to gather my things.

Going horizontal must have helped my brain by increasing its blood
supply, and I regained a measure of self-control. What the devil
was going on? What did Victor really want?

He came out of the john carrying my pajamas and a pouch of
toilet­ries. "What I want is a simple matter, Uncle Rogi. Maman has
been very upset for quite some time. She has... suffered from
disturbing fanta­sies. About me. " He went to the closet and pulled
out my seat bag and two-suiter and began to stuff my clothing into
them. "Her problems have affected my younger brothers and
sisters. Interfered with my plans for their future. It didn't matter so
much when they were just kids, but now that they are approaching
an age when they can be useful to me, I can no longer permit
Maman to indulge herself by undermining my influence over them. I
was very disappointed at having to write off the girls. "

Slowly, I sat up. He had his back to me as he emptied a drawer of
some Operator #5 magazines I had intended to sell.

He said, "I urged Maman to go to Hanover, to put herself under
Denis's care in long-term resident therapy. It would have been the
ideal solution. As you know, she refused to leave the younger ones
in my charge. She suspects, you see - as she came to suspect in
the case of Papa. "

"So you were responsible for Don's death. "

Victor zipped up the cases with great efficiency, got my parka from
the closet, and tossed it to me. "Papa killed himself, as we all
know. He was a pathetic, self-destructive sot. So are you, Uncle
Rogi, but you are much more intelligent and I think your death wish
is probably as spine­less as the rest of your character. " He
opened the outer door. "Let's go. "

I had no choice. His coercion scooped me off the bed like a back-
hoe. I teetered along after him with terrible speculations oozing out
of my mind. As we waited for the elevator I asked him:

Why did you kill the girls?

He shrugged. "Ces garces, elles étaient chaudes lapines. " Their
rebel­lion took the form of promiscuity. It was disgusting. I had
hoped for alliances with some of my associates. It is an excellent
way of cement­ing loyalties you see but these sistersluts balked.
They took my gifts made promises then did as they pleased.
Coercion as you know has its limits. Perhaps I was too
domineering during their early adolescence and fear made them
reckless. At any rate it was not working and they were behaving
scandalously bringing the family into disrepute. I will not have that.

"Mon zob!" I sneered - then nearly screamed out loud as he
fetched my mind a blinding wallop.

Watch yourself Uncle Rogi... So you find my yearnings after
bour­geois respectability amusing do you? You weren't impressed
by the progress of Remco Pulp and Chemicals? Perhaps you
don't realize how far along I've come in the business world. Small
wonder when we hardly ever see one another except at funerals.
That will change.

The elevator arrived and we got in. I was so tightly controlled that I
couldn't blink without the young bastard's permission. But he
couldn't keep me coerced forever...

He said: No. And that's the problem overall. With Maman and the
family and even with my notorious older brother! Unlike you Uncle
Rogi I have ambitions. And they will require the close cooperation
of others whose loyalty I can count upon. Yvonne is eighteen and
compli­ant. She is not nearly so good-looking as her late older
sisters but she has youth and my associate Robert Fortier will find
her acceptable. Pauline unfortunately is still too young but she will
mature.

Good God you're scheming up a fucking dynasty -

Tu l'as dit bouffi!

The elevator reached the lobby and disgorged us. Victor handed
the two bags to me, deposited the card-key in the box at the desk,
and thriftily had a clerk validate his parking ticket. Then we headed
for the lower-level elevators. For the first time I began to realize
what a des­perate situation I was in. I still didn't entirely understand
why he wanted me, but want me he did. He could coerce me into
doing any number of things and lock me up incommunicado in the
interim without Denis suspecting anything. Denis was, after all,
distracted by matters of global importance; erratic behavior by his
black-sheep uncle was only to be expected.

We descended into the bowels of the great hotel. The lowest
parking level, where Victor had had to park his Porsche because of
the conven­tion crowd, was quiet, very cold, and virtually deserted.
He drew me along in his wake as he strode to the sports car.

We'll take the interstates up to Hanover. Tomorrow we can begin
making arrangements for your move. By the time Denis gets wind
of it you'll be settled in Berlin and they'll be reading the banns at
Saint Anne's.

The banns!...

Of course. Don't you understand Uncle Rogi? You're going to
marry Maman and relieve Denis's anxieties about her and help
make certain that my surviving brothers and sisters remain under
my control. And I'll find other uses for you too as time goes on.

"No!" I yelled. And from some mental reservoir I called up the
power to snap his coercive lead. I flung the two bags at his head.
He ducked and they skidded across the polished white hood of the
car. He struck back at me and it was as though twin ice picks had
been driven into my ears. I shrieked and almost fell, then
recovered with a heroic act of will and tried to run. A mental
thunderbolt struck me between the shoulder blades and seemed
to sever my spine. I sprawled headlong, still scream­ing, and in
seconds he was on me.

"Ferme ça, vieux dindon! Arrête de déconner!" Victor knelt on my
chest and grabbed me by the hair. His eyes were like paired
heliarc torches and I knew he could fry my gray matter and turn me
into a drooling idiot if he chose... but he didn't want to go that far.
He needed me and so he hesitated with his psychocreative
lobotomy, and I saw my last chance. The knot of fire ignited behind
my breastbone and stark terror and prayer accelerated it into an
out-spiral: around and around and around. Victor's blazing eyes
dimmed with surprise and then alarm. He let go of my head and
flinched, so that the ball of energy I shot at him did not strike his
face but glanced along the edge of his skull just above the hairline,
cauterizing a shallow furrow in scalp and bone.

He howled and fell off me. In desperation I rolled under a nearby
Winnebago camper with my nerves on fire from the psychozap and
most of my muscles turned to Jell-O. I knew I was a goner. I could
hear Victor scrambling on the pavement and reviling me in French
and En­glish.

And then he dropped like he'd been brained with a sledgehammer.

I lay there in semidarkness, smelling the Winnie's chassis
lubrication and a burnt-pork stench. Victor was utterly still except
for slow, stertorous breathing.

There were measured footsteps approaching: klok... klok... klok ...
the sound amplified by the dank concrete walls and pillars of the
underground garage, that haunt of lurking urban menace. I felt my
neck-hairs prickle and my guts go loose. I couldn't see the aura of
the ap­proaching operant because it was deliberately being
suppressed; but I could feel it, like the horrid quavering of the
nerves when you stand under high-voltage power lines.

My view of him was cut off by the rows of parked cars until he
came up to where Victor lay. I saw sturdy Timberland high-tops
with red wool socks and black chinos stuffed into them. Arms
enclosed in down mackinaw sleeves reached down to grasp
Victor, taking the back of his belt in one massive hand and the
collar of his jacket in the other. My nephew's body ascended out of
view. The booted feet plodded to the Porsche and I heard a heavy
thud, as if some vandal had desecrated the expensive vehicle by
plonking a duffel bag full of books onto the roof. The car door
opened and there was a softer thud. The door slammed.

The feet approached the Winnie and my two travel bags were set
down next to it. The aetheric tension had dissipated and I felt
enveloped in blessed relief.

A telepathic voice said: Victor will think you did it. That was quite a
commendable mental effort of yours. It provided a neat cover-up
for my necessary obtrusion.

Is that you?

Who else?... I don't think you'll have to worry about interference
from Victor for a few years now. He'll give you up as a bad job and
try to find other ways to cope with his family problems.

But Sunny -

You've probably saved her life. To say nothing of your own. Once
the two of you were married, Victor would have felt free to activate
his unconscious oedipal retribution fantasy, wiping out his mother's
threat to his ambitions.

I don't understand.

Then I suggest you reread Hamlet. But not on a dark and stormy
night ... Au 'voir, cher Rogi. Until the next time.

I began to squirm out from under the camper. The booted feet
walked away, their sound dispersed by the serried ranks of parked
vehicles. By the time I was able to stand up, the underground
garage was silent again. I could see Victor, unconscious, slumped
behind the wheel of the Porsche.

Eh bien, Rogi, you long streak of piss. Saved again! Or is your
psychocreativity more inventive than you suspect?

I picked up my bags. My suit was filthy and I had no doubt that my
face was, too; but front-desk personnel are inured to such things
during science-fiction conventions. No explanation would be
required. All I had to do was say that I had changed my mind about
checking out.

I went to the elevator and pressed the Up button. The damned
thing took forever to arrive.



7

CONCORD, NEW HAMPSHIRE, EARTH

13 MAY  1995



jared ellsworth, s. j .: Denis! Wonderful to see you again. Sit down!
Sit down! What has it been - ten years?

denis remillard: Twelve. When I got my M.D.

ellsworth: And a lot of water's gone over the dam since then, hasn't
it? Brebeuf Academy is very proud of you, Denis. I shouldn't admit
this, but we haven't been exactly diffident about letting endowment
prospects know that you were one of our early alumni.

remillard: Oh, that's perfectly all right, Jared. It makes me feel less
guilty about not doing more for the Academy myself.

ellsworth: Nonsense. We've appreciated your generous
contribu­tions. You'll be glad to know that Brebeuf's gimmick has
been copied in other parts of the world. Now there are a dozen or
so other free schools for the gifted children of low-income families.
But I haven't heard that any of them harbored a really wild talent like
you! Merely normal geniuses. [Laughs.]

remillard: You might be interested to know that the operant
popu­lation has about the same IQ spread as the normal. Just as
many dummies among us as smartasses.

ellsworth: That could lead to problems.

remillard: It has. We don't talk about it very much publicly. A
German team just completed a study, a metapsychic assay of
prison­ers and inmates of institutions for the criminally insane. A
dispro­portionate percentage of the incarcerated con men and
bunco artists show traits of suboperancy in the coercive and
telepathic modes. The percentage of psychopaths with operant
traits is also higher than ex­pected.

ellsworth: [whistles] Any theories about that?

remillard: The psychos might have kept their sanity if their fragile
minds hadn't been burdened with the additional load of operant
function - with all the stress that entails. Mental evolution is bound
to leave a lot of maladaptive souls fallen by the wayside. The
operant crooks who kept their marbles adapted - but the wrong
way. They used the mind-powers opportunistically. It's a big
temptation, even among the high-minded. The less intelligent
metacriminals got caught, probably not even realizing that they had
the powers. They thought the mind reading was just keen insight
and the coercion a gonzo personality. The more intelligent operant
crooks would still be at large, of course. No doubt highly regarded
by their beneficiaries and damned by their enemies as financial
wizards...

ellsworth: It makes you wonder about the charismatic leaders of
sleazy cults. And certain great and magnetic villains of history such
as Hitler and Stalin.

remillard: Someday, when we know more about the genotypes for
operancy, there'll be some fascinating research done. But today,
we're more concerned about this - this lower stratum of operants
for prag­matic reasons.

ellsworth: Mm'm. I can imagine. Bound to be baddies among you,
of course, as in any other human population. But it's a thing not too
many normals thought about prior to Dr. Weinstein's trial - not that
he could be classed among your common or garden variety of
delinquent. [Takes out a pipe and begins to pack it with tobacco.]
The criminal operant will pose tricky legal problems. I suppose the
really powerful ones would be able to coerce juries and witnesses
as well as read the minds of the prosecuting attorneys.

remillard: Probably. But the real difficulty isn't in the courtroom
antics. After all, the authorities can always do as the Scottish Lord
of Justiciary did in the Weinstein case: bring in a watchdog operant
as an amicus curiae to be on the lookout for mental hanky-panky.
No... the problem is going to be getting the goods on operant
crooks in the first place. Superior metacriminals would be able to
cover their tracks in any number of mind-bending ways.
Posthypnotic suggestion, for instance. This has great limitations
and probably wouldn't work at all in blatant cases like first-degree
murder in front of witnesses, but it might very well succeed in less
emotionally charged crimes. Frauds and conspiracies and other
kinds of white-collar shenanigans. You're no doubt aware that the
financial world is still in an uproar over its theoretical loss of
transaction secrecy. Objectively, the financiers know that the
chance of a crooked operant spying on them is close to zero. Now.
But what about later, as operants become more numerous? The
global economy is in a much shakier condition than most people
realize due to the impact of operancy. Not many economic analysts
have written about the matter. They're afraid of making the situation
worse. It was bad enough when all they had to worry about was
Psi-Eye investigations of KGB and CIA bank accounts in
Switzerland. This new recognition of potential operant criminality
has thrown them into a real swivet. And there's no remedy yet.
We'll have to wait until more operants are trained for oversight work
- and are willing to take it on. It's not going to be the most popular
career choice among idealistic young heads.

ellsworth: Thought police! Good heavens, what an idea.

remillard : [laughs hollowly] You should see my hate mail! The
com­mon folks aren't quite so sure anymore that operants belong
to the League of Superheroes. Have you ever watched that
Alabama TV evangelist, Brother Ernest? According to him, we're
nothing less than the vanguard of Antichrist, the mystery of iniquity,
with all power and signs and lying wonders... and the Last
Judgment is only five years away! It's to laugh - until you realize
how many viewers the man has. And there are other antioperant
movements poking their noses out of the woodwork. That outfit in
Spain, Los Hijos de la Tierra, the Sons of Earth. And the Muslim
fundamentalists are fully convinced we're the agents of El Shaitan.
You know, Jared, operancy will bring about a profound social
revolution during the Third Millennium - but only if we operants
manage to survive the Second! There's a real possibility that
militant normals might opt for the easy way out of the dilemma we
pose...

ellsworth : [waving out a match and snorting smoke] Don't give me
that eschatological bullshit! Defeatism? From somebody who had
the finest Jebbie education lavished on him? [Gestures to photo
portrait of Teilhard de Chardin by Karsh of Ottawa.] From
somebody who sopped up Papa Pierre's nostalgie de l'unité and
global consciousness and optimistic expectation of Omega like a
thirsty young sponge? Don't talk poppycock! You swelled heads
are a challenge for us normals, but we're going to work it out. This
isn't the Dark Ages, and the hysterical fools don't rule.

remillard: No. Thank God, they don't. You'll have to make
allow­ances for me, Jared. I'm afraid I've always had a tendency to
fall into negativism and intellectual agonizing when the going gets
tough. That's more or less why I came to see you.

ellsworth: And here I thought it was to atone for your shameful
neglect of your old teacher all these years.

remillard: I need a very specialized kind of moral advice. None of
the ethicists at Dartmouth had the foggiest notion of what I was
talking about. Their counsel was worthless.

ellsworth: Was it really! Oh, the arrogance of the intellectual elite.
Nobody has problems like you have problems. I always think of
John von Neumann on his deathbed, deciding to convert. Is he
thinking humbly about making his peace? Is he awed at the
imminence of the Infinite? No. He says, "Get me a smart priest. "

remillard: [smiling] So they brought him a Jesuit, of course.

ellsworth: [sighs] I'll bet it still cost him an extra half hour in
pur­gatory. But never mind that. What's your bitch?

remillard: There are two of them, Jared, with both universal and
particular application. The first goes under the seal of confession.

ellsworth: Uh-huh.

remillard : It concerns a matter we've already touched on. Suppose
I know the identity of a metapsychic criminal. But the way I found
this person out was by mental intrusion: reading the secret
thoughts. A deliberate violation of which our crook was unaware.

ellsworth: This is your great moral dilemma ? Same thing as
stealing a letter that incriminates. The theft is wrong.

remillard: I acknowledge the guilt. That's not the problem. If it was
a letter I stole, I could send it to somebody in authority who could
take action. When you steal thoughts things aren't so easy.

ellsworth: No.

remillard: Aside from my reading this person's mind and
discover­ing the general fact of wrongdoing, there is no proof
whatsoever of the person's guilt. He was not fantasizing, because I
can see the effects of his crimes quite clearly. But the perpetrator
is ordinarily an excellent screener - you know about that? okay -
and most probably no other honest operant person has the least
inkling what he has been up to. There is no corroborating evidence
of crime, nothing that would stand up in a court of law. Some of the
things he's done wouldn't even fall under our present criminal
code. For instance, there's no law against mind-to-mind mayhem;
at most, our courts would view it as simple or aggravated assault,
with the injury not provable. So what am I going to do?

ellsworth: [expels smoke slowly] Neat.

remillard: I thought you'd like it. Objectively, that is. It's Shit City
when you're on the inside looking out.

ellsworth: This metapsychic monster of depravity. He's intimately
known to you? I mean, you're close enough so that there's
absolutely no possibility that you've misunderstood the situation?

remillard: The person is a relative.

ellsworth: Uh-huh. And we are dealing with very serious moral
matters?

remillard: The most serious.

ellsworth: Obviously, you can't haul this person down to your local
police station and - uh - turn his mind inside out.

remillard: Obviously not. Firstly, he would probably kill me if I tried
it. Secondly, even if I did succeed in wringing a confession out of
him - say with the help of operant friends - it would be inadmissi­ble
evidence. In the United States, one may not be forced to
incrim­inate oneself.

ellsworth: The only logical recourse is to try to nail him with some
evidence that's concrete. Do as the government snoops do: use
the illegally obtained information to scratch up other stuff that will
hold up in court. You understand - hem! - that I'm not advising you
to do anything sinful.

remillard: But... I couldn't.

ellsworth: You couldn't, or you wouldn't? Do you mean you're too
busy to see justice done? You've got other things to do?

remillard: [doggedly] Yes. I have duties. Obligations to the
metapsychic operant community. To evolving humanity as a whole.
To find evidence against this one miserable bastard might be
impos­sible. There might not be any. Searching for it could alert
him and endanger me. Endanger my work.

ellsworth: You seriously believe he'd try to kill you?

remillard: Or do me grave mental damage.

ellsworth: You are never morally obligated to put yourself in danger
in order to do good. Caritas non obligat cum tanto incommodo.
One can assume such an obligation freely, as officers of the law
do, but a private individual does not have such a duty.

remillard: [sighs] I thought not.

ellsworth: On the other hand, Christ told us we're blessed when we
give up our life for our friends. It is the ultimate magnification of
love. Of course, he was propounding a behavioral ideal... The
valiant thing is not always the prudent thing. As you say, you have
your work, and it is undoubtedly important.

remillard: I - I can't just stand by and let him get away with what he's
done! He may do it again.

ellsworth: You could be patient. Bide your time and watch.

remillard: I'm so distracted by other things. This is... so small
compared to the other problems I have to deal with. So damned
per­sonal. I pushed it aside earlier when all I had were suspicions,
and that was wrong. My negligence cost lives. Now that I'm certain
about him, there doesn't seem to be anything I can do.

ellsworth: You think you're the only one who ever faced this? It's
old, Denis! Old as the human race. Listen to King David: "Be not
vexed over evildoers. Trust in the Lord and do good. Commit to
the Lord your way; trust in him and he will act. He will make justice
dawn for you like the sun; bright as the noonday shall be your
vin­dication. "

remillard: This evildoer is my brother.

ellsworth: Oh, son.

remillard: It may be my fault he's like this. I never liked him. I never
tried to show him that what he was doing was wrong. When I was a
kid, I was relieved to get away from home and come here, away
from him. When I was a grown man I still avoided him, even though
I knew he had deliberately suppressed the mind-powers of my
other young brothers and sisters. I was afraid. I still am.

ellsworth: You should get your siblings away from his influence.

remillard: I tried. Only one of them is legally an adult, and she won't
come. He's mesmerized her. The others... I tried to convince my
mother to come away with them. I know she wanted to, but she still
refused. He's influenced her, too. I can't force them.

ellsworth: Then you've done all you can for now. Keep working on
your mother and the older sister but don't do anything to endanger
them... You really do think there's further danger from this brother
of yours?

remillard: I suspect that he's killed certain individuals who were a
threat to his business. I know for a certainty that he killed three of
my sisters who defied him.

ellsworth: Oh, my God. If I was in your shoes, I expect I'd go for
the sonuvabitch with a shotgun and a bag of rifled slugs.

remillard: No, you wouldn't. Neither would I. That's the hell of it ...
All right, Jared, let's table this one. All I can do is follow your advice
and wait. Now this second problem is by no means as grave, so
let's discuss it ex confessio -

ellsworth: Don't you want your absolution?

remillard: Oh... I didn't really think of this dialog as an actual
confession. I only put you under the seal to protect you from any
hazardous obligation you might otherwise have felt constrained to
assume.

ellsworth: The mention of grace embarrasses the learned
psychia­trist! It never occurs to you to accept the forgiveness of
Christ. You're like millions of other educated Catholics, Denis.
You've kept the sense of guilt but not the sense of sin, and
absolution without solu­tion looks like a cop-out to you. It seems
too damned easy.

remillard: Maybe.

ellsworth: But that's what grace is all about. It's a gift and a
mys­tery. We're allowed to take it if we're sorry - even if we can't
undo the evil we've done. A psychiatrist tries to offer solutions to
guilt, but very often, as in your case, there are no solutions. That's
where we priests have the advantage. We can channel the grace
even if you feel you don't deserve it.

remillard: [laughs softly] A spatiotemporal sexternion.

ellsworth: Say what?

remillard: God can be coerced. Never mind. It's just a dynamic-
field-theory in-joke.

ellsworth: You want the absolution or not? For the neglect and the
violation.

remillard: Lay it on me.

ellsworth: [Prays in a low voice and gestures.] All right, what's the
second problem?

remillard: Do I have an obligation to reproduce? To have
offspring?

ellsworth: You're serious?

remillard: It's been pointed out to me - by my busybody Uncle
Rogi, as well as by an esteemed Soviet colleague named Tamara
Sakhvadze - that inasmuch as I'm going to be twenty-eight years
old next week, I should marry and father children in order to
propagate my undeniably superior genes.

ellsworth: Uh - the idea doesn't appeal to you?

remillard: Not really. I've always been much more interested in
intellectual stimulation than sex. The occasional biological urge
dis­tracted me, but it was easily squelched. I've never felt
passionately attracted to a woman - or to a man, either. Frankly, the
whole sexual thing seems rather a nuisance. You squander so
much energy in it that could be devoted to more productive
pursuits. God knows, I don't seem to have enough hours in the day
for the work that has to be done!

ellsworth: The Jews of the Old Testament were given the solemn
duty to increase and multiply. But this part of the Old Law wasn't
carried over into the New. No one is obliged to procreate now.

remillard: Two persons whose opinion I value highly think
other­wise. One is Tamara, who is a Neo-Marxist. The other is
Urgyen Bhotia, who was a Tibetan lama and now professes an
idealistic hu­manism.

ellsworth: I can see why both of them might believe as they do.
The good of society, as opposed to that of the individual, is
paramount in both their faiths. Christianity - and Western civilization
as a whole - gives the individual sovereignty in reproductive
matters. On the other hand, having disposed of obligation, let us
proceed to the more delicate matter of the most perfect choice...
Let me ask you a question that's cheeky but not impertinent: Just
how special are you?

remillard: My metapsychic armamentarium has been rather
pains­takingly assayed. It was compared with that of known
metapsychics all over the world in a study just completed by the
University of Tokyo. My higher faculties exceed those of everyone
else by several orders of magnitude. I am fertile, and there's a
reasonable expectation that I would pass my alleles for powerful
metafunction on to my offspring - particularly if my mate were
highly endowed mentally herself.

ellsworth: [breaks off in coughing fit and sets pipe aside] Well! In
general, one might compare your case to that of certain royal
alliances in the old days. When marriages were made for
beneficial political considerations. Peacemaking and the like. I
recall that Queen Jadwiga of Poland was deeply in love with a
certain prince but married Jagiello, the Grand Duke of Lithuania, in
order to unite the two countries, bring the pagan Lithuanians to
Christianity, and save her kingdom from the threat of the Teutonic
Knights. Her act was self-sacrificing - the more perfect choice. She
had no moral obligation to do it, though.

remillard: And what about me? I'm a free man, not a goddam
opti­mal phenotype!

ellsworth: You have a right to your individuality. If marriage is
repugnant, you may certainly remain single. On the other hand -

remillard: Well?

ellsworth: Your preference for the solitary life may be selfish. Even

unhealthy. You were always too cerebral as a boy, and now -
forgive me - you've grown up to be a rather atypical man.

remillard : Tamara and Glenn Dalembert say I'm a cold fish.
Urgyen says I have an unfortunate proclivity for the inward-trending
spiritu­ality of the East, which is contrary to the loving globalism that
must characterize those in the forefront of mental evolution.

ellsworth: Good heavens... I wonder if your lama has read
Teilhard?

remillard: It wouldn't surprise me a damn bit.

ellsworth: I won't belabor an obvious point. But much is expected
of those to whom much is given. In the matter of the more perfect
choice. And there is the love. Your Tibetan friend was right about
that. I'm sure you feel that you love humanity in the abstract, Denis.
Your sense of duty testifies to it. But a person like you... you need
to know love in the concrete sense as well. Marriage and family life
are the most usual pathway to love's fulfillment. But if you are
cer­tain it would be impossible for you -

remillard: I'm - I'm not certain.

ellsworth: Perhaps you're only afraid.

remillard: My uncle, the matchmaker, has even suggested a
woman he felt would be the perfect mate. She's a colleague of
mine at Dartmouth. I laughed at him, of course. But then I checked
out her assay, and it was amazing how her metafunctions were
strong in areas where my own are weakest. Psychocreativity, for
example. She's a brilliant woman. She's my temperamental
opposite, however, and - and sexually experienced, whereas I am
not.

ellsworth: Oh. Does the poor girl have any notion that you're
consid­ering her as the royal consort in this grand eugenic
scheme?

remillard: Certainly not. I did the analysis with complete objectivity
and discussed it with my closest colleagues, who concurred as to
the young woman's suitability. My - my larger obligations to
evolving humanity were also a subject of discussion. My genes.
There is an undeniable tendency of evolution to proceed in jumps,
rather than small, gradual increments. And I'm one of the jumps.

ellsworth: Are you, by George! Denis, there's something terribly
surreal about this conversation. You aren't a set of privileged
gonads and this young woman you evaluated is not a mere source
of superior ova. You can't ask her to marry you if you don't love her.

remillard: Why not? Arranged marriages have been the rule among
most human societies from time immemorial. She would have to
agree, of course. But I presume that she would see the genetic
advan­tages of our union as readily as my other colleagues did.

ellsworth: Denis! Listen to me. You're not prize cattle. You'll have to
live and work together and raise children.

remillard : I don't know why one couldn't research marriage just like
any other subject. There have been intensive studies of the
psychodynamics of stable, mutually satisfying conjugal
relationships. The most questionable factor would be Lucille's
sexual sophistica­tion. We'd have to deal frankly with its potentially
inhibitory influ­ence upon my libido.

ellsworth: Lucille! So she does have a name. And do you think
she's attractive?

remillard: [surprised] Well, yes. I guess she is, in a rather austere
way. Funny - her character isn't austere at all. I think one might call
her passionate. She has a temper, too. I'd have to - to modify
some of my mannerisms. I'm kind of a snot, you know.

ellsworth: [laughs] By all means, modify. Does Lucille like you at
all?

remillard : She used to actively despise me... I was a trifle tactless
in urging her to join our group in the early days. We hit it off better
now. She's accepted her own operancy, which was quite a
problem for her when she was younger. She may still be somewhat
afraid of me. I'd have to work on that.

ellsworth : Denis - you've made your decision. Just let love be part
of it.

remillard: I'm sure we'll work very hard learning to love one
an­other. The children will help. It'll be fascinating to analyze the
penetrance of the various metapsychic traits in the offspring. And
she and I would begin operant conditioning of the fetuses in utero,
of course, and evaluate preceptorial techniques as we train the
infants. It'll be the metapsychic equivalent of Piaget's research.
Lucille should be fascinated.

ellsworth: I'm going to pray my head off for your poor little kids.
And for you and Lucille, too.

remillard : Do better than that, Jared. Marry us. I'll let you know the
date just as soon as Lucille and I work everything out. It shouldn't
take long.



8

FROM THE MEMOIRS OF ROGATIEN REMILLARD



on the face of it, their marriage should have been a disaster.

Decreed by inhuman entities from another star, sordidly abetted by
me, arranged in a coolly rational agreement between two mature
young persons who were not even faintly fond of one another, and
undertaken for the sake of an abstraction, the union of Denis
Remillard and Lucille Cartier, when judged by the sentimental
criteria of the late twentieth century in the United States of America,
was peculiar to the nth degree.

The media came breathlessly scurrying to chronicle what they
hoped was the first great metapsychic affaire d'amour... only to
have the principals dismiss all inquiry into the romantic aspects of
their be­trothal and dwell instead upon the heritability of mental
traits. The eyes of the interviewers glazed over as the putative
lovebirds discussed assortative mating, the differentiation between
penetrance and expres­sivity on the one hand and dominance and
epistasis on the other, and the uncertainty of positive eugenics.
Confronted with such esoterica, gossip columnists and "human
interest" video scavengers beat a hasty retreat. A sedate article
dealing with the genetic rationale of the Remillard-Cartier nuptials
eventually appeared in Nature.

On 22 July 1995, Lucille and Denis were wed in Hanover's quaint
fieldstone-Gothic Catholic church. The ceremony was attended in
per­son by the families and colleagues of the couple, and viewed
through excorporeal excursion by an undisclosed number of
operants scattered throughout the globe. The bride wore a tailleur
suit of pale blue linen and the groom a two-button lounge suit of
navy summer worsted. They were attended by Dr. Glenn
Dalembert and Dr. Ume Kimura. A wed­ding supper took place at
the Hanover Inn, after which the bridal couple departed for a
symposium on operant educational techniques being held in
Brussels. The bride's diminutive bouquet of forget-me-nots and
white mignonette was caught by Dr. Gerard Tremblay, the
Metapsychology

Department's ingenious public-relations maven, and he married an
op­erant colleague named Emilie Bouchard later that year.

When Denis and Lucille returned from their brief academic
honey­moon, they lived for some months in the Dartmouth faculty
apart­ments. Early in 1996, at my suggestion, they bought the big
old house at 15 East South Street, near my bookshop. After
furnishing it to their taste and organizing what they called a
Preliminary Metapsychic Pre­natal Curriculum, they began to make
babies with the same compe­tence that they brought to their
experimental work. Philip was born in 1997 and Maurice in 1999. A
stillbirth in 2001 was the occasion of great sorrow; but the couple
assuaged their disappointment by doing a revi­sion and update of
the Prenatal Curriculum and the first outline for their joint opus,
Developmental Metapsychology. The next child, Severin, was born
in 2003; two years later came Anne, then another miscarriage, then
Catherine in 2009 and Adrien in 2011 - at which point Denis and
Lucille prematurely judged their reproductive duty to be completed.
The six offspring were all metapsychic prodigies as well as healthy
and scrappy Franco-American kids nurtured by parents who loved
them dearly.

And loved each other.

Oh, yes. Denis had maintained all along that love could be learned
if both parties were determined, and he was right. I never pried into
their sex life - which one presumes they managed as efficiently as
they did everything else - but I did spend many hours each month
in their com­pany and in that of their growing brood. They came to
love each other devotedly as husband and wife, and each was the
other's best friend - which is much rarer.

If I were asked to point out the principal factor leading to the
success of their unorthodox union, I would say the politeness.
From the begin­ning, they adhered to a self-imposed rule that they
would always behave toward each other with care and
consideration, as though one spouse were the honored guest of
the other. All disagreements would be de­bated logically, with as
much heat as necessary, but without personal reproaches or fits of
sulking. There would be no casual rudeness, no flippancy, no
baiting or other psychological game-playing at the other's expense,
and absolutely no taking the other person for granted. In the early
part of their marriage, when they were still adapting, their
rela­tionship seemed to me to have a "more charitable than thou"
artificiality - even a comical Alphonse-and-Gaston aspect. After all,
at this point in history one expected a certain breezy camaraderie
between husband and wife. Yet here were these two highly
idiosyncratic scientists - the one capable of freezing the ballocks
of a brass baboon with his coercion, the other possessed of a
temper that could literally set a house afire - conducting their
domestic affairs in an atmosphere of courtly gentility that Queen
Victoria might have thought a trifle extreme.

I called it weird; but then I had been brought up in the rough-and-
tumble menage of Onc' Louie and Tante Lorraine. I was further
amazed when Denis and Lucille carried their exquisite civility over
into their relationship with their children. Later, I understood what a
brilliant behavioral ploy the courtesy was. (And of course a highly
structured family and social system has characterized the majority
of human op­erants ever since the Intervention.) In a home where
emotional nuances are almost continually broadcast by the minds
of operant family mem­bers (shielding requiring effort and being an
art only gradually learned by the young), there is a "crowded"
ambiance that demands individual restraint and a reserved manner
of action. Ume Kimura explained to me that in Japan, which in
those days had an enormous population crammed into a very small
area, similar extremes of politeness prevailed. Eti­quette, some
wag has said, is just an effective way to keep people from killing
each other. Strong operants such as Denis and Lucille knew
instinctively that they would have to live by more formal rules than
normals, and so would their children.

The politesse, far from putting walls between my nephew and his
wife, smoothed what might otherwise have been a stormy or even
ca­lamitous first year of marriage. In the beginning they had only
profes­sional respect for one another, a goal mutually agreed
upon, and a listing of theoretically compatible character traits that
Denis wryly dubbed "Sonnet from the Portuguese, Computer-
Enhanced. " They were telepaths, bound to attain the deepest
knowledge of each other's virtues and flaws, and so for them there
was no glamour-tinged first phase of wedded life, no seeing the
Beloved Other as a marvel of perfection; conversely, there was no
posthoneymoon letdown. Since they were both mature and
motivated, they worked hard to modify grating mannerisms and
habits, made allowances for irreconcilable frailties, and strove
con­tinually to bolster the ego of the partner. From this initial effort
soon came an easing of friction, and also, I have no doubt, the
intense plea­sure of sexual mutuality - the same as Ume and I
enjoyed during our time together.

Later, when Lucille and Denis began to really know one another,
there was fondness - and still later, love. They never experienced
the consuming thunderbolt that struck me when I first saw Elaine;
nor could their love compare in intensity to Marc's helpless
physical pas­sion for Cyndia Muldowney, or Jon's consummate
metapsychic union with Dorothea Macdonald, the woman known to
Milieu historians as Illusio Diamond Mask. Instead, Denis and
Lucille seemed to grow slowly together. Their minds plaited,
remaining individual but each supporting and enhancing the other
with shared strength - almost like the myth­ical red brier and white
brier that entwined and grew in a straight dual trunk toward the sun,
blooming in arboreal splendor rather than in a tangled thorny sprawl
upon the earth, as lesser roses did.

Lucille was always the braver; Denis was wiser. He was glacially
efficient and just; she was fervently high-minded, with a greater
cre­ative insight. In later life he was retiring and scholarly; she
became the grande dame of metapsychic society, as brilliant (and
controversial) as their last child Paul, who was conceived after the
Intervention and nurtured in utero on the exotic mental precepts of
the Galactic Milieu.

Together, Denis and Lucille wrote six landmark studies of human
metapsychology. They were personally instrumental in bringing
about the Intervention itself. Denis died as a martyr to Unity without
really having known Unity. Lucille lives on in this Centennial
Intervention Year, an honored pioneer and formidable clan
matriarch. Their legacy is enormous, but its undoubted culmination
is in their descendants - justifying the great gamble they embarked
upon back in 1995. Their children became the Seven Founding
Magnates of the Human Polity. Among their grandchildren were
Jon, who was called a saint by both exotic and human minds, and
Marc, who was called the Angel of the Abyss.

And now there are two more generations - Marc's children, Hagen
and Cloud, and their newborn offspring - all carrying the precious
genes for superlative metafunction as well as self-rejuvenation -
which Denis never dreamt of in his wildest fancies as he and
Lucille exchanged their vows.

I dedicate this memoir to all Remillards, living and dead, and most
especially to the one who is both.



9

NEW YORK CITY, EARTH

6  NOVEMBER  1996



kieran o'connor was old enough to remember when presidential
candidates made their victory or concession speeches on the day
following the election. But here it was, only 11:45 P.M. at the
General's campaign headquarters in San Francisco, and the race
was decided already. The Republican candidate - Kieran
O'Connor's candidate - had been defeated. But Kieran was well
content.

The four quadrants of the Sony split screen on the wall of Warren
Griffith's Manhattan townhouse switched from varied depictions of
network pundits commenting on the 292 electoral votes safely in
Dem­ocrat hands to a single image of a handsome, silver-haired
man. CBS, NBC, ABC, and SNN were opting to telecast Lloyd
Baumgartner's con­cession speech live.

Kieran reached for the remote control. It lay between his
stockinged feet on the littered cabriole cocktail table. When Kieran
canceled the mute, the measured accents of General Baumgartner
filled the room. He delivered his brief announcement in perfect
extempore style, his eyes unwavering as he looked directly into the
cameras, his manner tranquil in defeat. He thanked the voters who
had given him a majority of the popular vote and nearly carried him
to an upset victory. He thanked the party that had chosen him as its
standard-bearer, thanked his devoted campaign staff, and thanked
his gentle-faced wife Nell, who stood at his right shoulder, smiling
with tears in her eyes. Baumgartner did not say that he would be
back in the running again for the fateful presidential race in the year
2000, but his partisans and political opponents alike took that fact
for granted. His rival, Stephen Piccolomini, had won the presidency
riding on the coattails of the retiring incumbent, but he had not
rolled up the expected landslide; his margin was a precarious
twelve electoral votes, and his party retained only a two-seat
majority in the Senate.

"Next time, " muttered Warren Griffith. "Next time you're in,
Gen­eral. And so are we. "

The speech ended to applause and the split screen showed pan
shots as the network cameras swept over Baumgartner's
campaign workers, who packed the ballroom of the famous old St.
Francis Hotel. Some of the people were weeping, but others
stomped and cheered as if for a victory, and dozens of hand-
lettered signs waved on high, proclaiming:



THE   BEST   IS   YET   TO   COME!



When the vice-presidential candidate approached the lectern for
his turn at the microphone, Kieran flicked the remote's instant-
replay pad, programmed it for five minutes, and watched
Baumgartner once again declare himself defeated. Then Kieran
turned off the Sony and the wall-screen went back to being an
excellent counterfeit of Fuseli's The Nightmare, 1781 version.
Griffith, who was the chairman of Roggenfeld Acquisitions and one
of Kieran's principal strategists, liked that LCD projection so much
that he'd had it on for nearly six months. There had been jokes
about it when Kieran and Viola Northcutt arrived early in the evening
for the election-night vigil.

Now Griffith got up from his chair and said, "We still deserve to
celebrate!" He padded off into the kitchen and returned with a
bottle of Pol Roger and three glasses. The two guests pretended
to be surprised, just as socially proper telepaths all over the world
did under similar circumstances. Griffith said, "Our candidate did
not lose. He merely didn't win emphatically enough. " Untwisting the
wire, he eased out the cork and restrained the overflow with
psychokinetic expertise. Then he made a respectful mental
gesture to Kieran, calling for a toast.

Kieran O'Connor nodded and his severe features softened as he
watched the bubbles rise. Catching an unvoiced hint, Warren
Griffith flopped back into the wingback chair he had occupied
throughout most of the evening. Viola Northcutt was curled up in
the corner of the leather sofa opposite Kieran, unshod feet neatly
tucked under her camel's-hair skirt. Somewhere in the townhouse
an antique clock chimed three in quavery deadened tones.

I liked the placards that Baumgartner's people made, said Kieran.
Let's drink to that: "The best is yet to come. "

The others repeated his spoken words. Kieran sipped his
champagne, but Griff and Viola tossed theirs down and went for
refills.

"I'll hand it to the General, " Viola said. "He was strong. A lot better
than we ever dared hope. "

"That viewing-with-alarm speech fingering the Meta Brain Trust's
influence on the Democrats struck just the right note," Griff said.
"Shot our boy up a good sixteen percent in the polls. It was a
gamble, but we really proved that America's love affair with the
operant clique is just about kaput. Before this campaign, I doubt
that one voter in a hundred knew what metacoercion was - or
redactive probing either."

"Neither did the General, " Northcutt put in with a cynical grin. She
was a heavyset blond woman in her late forties, one of Kieran's
earliest recruits, who had become his best operant head-hunter.
Viola had vetted all the presidential campaign personnel, both
operant and normal, to make certain that only loyalists would be
able to exert influence on Baumgartner. Even so, the General had
proved less psychologically mal­leable than they had hoped.

"Before we lock Baumgartner in as our millennial candidate, "
Kieran said, "we're going to have to make certain that he has no
suspicion that his mind was manipulated during this campaign. We
may have pressed too hard when he balked at the anti-Soviet
speech in October. "

Viola shrugged. "Len and Neville felt it was important that the
Gen­eral express doubt about the Kremlin's commitment to peace.
We had the posthypnotic suggestion done prudently. Doc
Presteigne handled it when the General had gas for some root-
canal work. "

"But it didn't work, " Kieran said. "You forgot that Baumgartner was
a warm chum of the cosmonauts back in the pre-Mars days. He
sin­cerely believes that the Russians have abandoned their
expansionist philosophy. You can't depend upon a posthyp to
overcome a strong conviction any more than you can coerce over
the long term. "

"How will we convince him, then?" Viola asked.

Kieran extracted his feet from among the mess of coffee cups,
empty beer and seltzer bottles, and snack food that crowded the
cocktail table. "When the hard-liners on the Politburo take charge,
Baumgartner won't need convincing. "

"Hard-liners?" exclaimed Griff. "Take over when?"

Kieran poked through a platter of ravaged deli noshes until he
found a whole-meal cracker with a hard-boiled egg slice and a
shaving of lox. He dabbed it artistically with mustard. "When the
present General Secretary dies... and civil war breaks out in
Uzbekistan. "

Viola and Griff stared at him. He showed them a mental schematic
with a number of key elements blanked out.

"Jesus God, " whispered Griffith.

"It's nothing you two have to concern yourselves about for a while
yet, " Kieran said. He popped the tidbit into his mouth and chewed
it up, then downed the remainder of the champagne. "What you will
have to deal with is Baumgartner's immediate future. Griff, I want
you to find him a sinecure position on one of our foundations - say
the Irons-Conrad. I want him completely divorced from the military-
industrial complex and big business in the public mind. Our lad is a
political philosopher now, asking questions and providing answers.
"

"Speaking of which, " Viola interposed, "we still have that matter of
Baumgartner possibly suspecting that he's being manipulated. It's
going to be tricky doing a deep-scan without his cooperation, you
know. We've never tried it on a person who wasn't being - actively
recruited to the inner circle. "

"We've got to know, " Kieran insisted. "Whatever it takes. It's
imper­ative that Baumgartner have no inkling of our own operancy.
He'll only carry conviction in the next phases of our political
campaigning if he firmly believes that operants are dangerous - a
threat to normal hu­manity. "

Viola was frowning as she thought. "For a proper ream-job, the
sub­ject has to be rendered unconscious for something like thirty-
six hours. No way to handle that without hospitalizing him. We'll
have to come up with something that will satisfy him and the PR
people. Nothing psychiatric. We don't want to risk an Eagleton
fuck-up. "

"Eyes, " said Griffith. "I had an uncle, had some kind of eye thing.
Terrible headaches, then lost the sight of one eye. The docs fixed
him, he was good as new. "

"Sounds usable, " Viola said. "Presteigne would know what the
ail­ment is and how to simulate the symptoms. Very likely both the
head­aches and the blindness can be voodooed - by Greta,
maybe. Baumgartner won't suspect a thing when we bring in our
own eye spe­cialist... "

Kieran nodded. "Work it out as soon as you can. I want to keep him
newsworthy. I can see him doing lecture tours and hosting fund-
raisers for the by-elections in '98. There are at least four Senate
seats that could go Republican in the Bible Belt if we play our
cards right and pick up on the antioperant sentiment building there.
"

"It'll build a lot faster, " Viola muttered, "once we get good old
Senor Arana on line!"

Griffith said: ?

Viola looked guiltily at Kieran, but he lifted a dismissive hand. "I
was going to tell Griff about it anyhow. "

"A step-up in the antioperant crusade?" Griffith asked.

"Exactly, " said Kieran. "You know that my overriding concern is to
insure that operants not loyal to us are barred from government
service or political office. Even more important is to stir up
grassroots senti­ment against the metapsychic clique. I suppose
you noticed the article in the Times this weekend about the Swiss
banking group's plans to hire telepathic investigators. "

"No! God - if they do it, the Japanese'll be next. And next thing you
know, the Justice Department or the Treasury'll want their own
Metasnooper Corps, and our organization will be up the well-known
excremental watercourse!"

"Not if I can help it, " said Kieran O'Connor. "Fortunately, we still
have a Republican-packed Supreme Court. Next year my people in
Chi­cago will engineer a test case to get a ruling that any form of
operant screening of employees by private corporations is an
invasion of privacy and unconstitutional. That will lay the
groundwork for further action ... such as the efforts of Arana. Why
don't you tell Griff why we happen to be in New York, Viola?"

She grinned as she fished her suede boots out from under the
cocktail table and began to put them on. "Our great and good
buddy, The Fab­ulous Finster, has bagged us a very big fish
indeed, and he is arriving tomorrow at Kennedy with this recruit
figuratively tucked under his arm. The man's name is Carlos Maria
Arana, and he is an unfrocked Dominican, late of Madrid, where the
authorities were only too willing to be rid of him. "

"Arana?" Griffith blinked. "Hey - didn't he start that fanatical
antioperant movement in Spain? What was its name - Hijos de
Putas?"

Viola Northcutt guffawed. "Come on! Hijos de la Tierra, Griff. The
Sons of Earth. Kier figured it was time for them to open a North
Amer­ican branch. " She stood up, stamped her feet the rest of the
way into her footgear, and brushed the crumbs from her skirt.
"We're going to play off Arana's fanaticism against Baumgartner's
reasoned opposition to operant influence. The Spaniard will play
dirty and Baumgartner will deplore his intolerance. I mean, we don't
really want to burn the con­fessed operants at the stake, do we?
Not yet... Where'd you hide our coats, Griff? Kieran and I have to
get back to our platonic little nest at the Plaza and get some sleep.
Our cucaracha is coming in on Iberia's early flight tomorrow and
poor Finster's going to need all the help he can get. "

Kieran stood up, yawned, and laughed. "Don't you worry about a
thing, Vi. Fabby's tamed Señor Araña very thoroughly. It was a
tough assignment - perhaps the toughest he's ever had to handle.
But he's delivered the goods. "

"They don't call him Fabulous for nothing, eh?" Warren Griffith
helped Viola on with her coat, then assisted Kieran. "I wouldn't
mind meeting this Finster, Kier. If it wouldn't compromise your
security arrangements, of course. "

Kieran smiled. His mind touched that of his associate, giving both
reassurance and warning. "Maybe another time, Griff. Fabby will be
dead beat, and I have other matters to discuss with him before he
leaves for Moscow on Friday. "

Moscow! Kier don't tell me that's the way -

"I wouldn't dream of telling you, Griff. You're a man who thinks for
himself. That's why you're part of my organization. I'll be getting in
touch with you soon on the Petro-Pascua acquisition. "

But Kier the man's a moderate the first reasonable Russian leader
we've ever dealt with you can't -

I can. Make no mistake about it Griff if it suits my purposes and it
does I can. "Thanks a lot for playing host. Don't bother to see us
out. Vi and I can find our own way. "



10

ALMA-ATA, KAZAKH  SSR, EARTH

15 SEPTEMBER  1997



A chill settled quickly over the plaza in front of the Lenin Palace of
Culture once the sun dropped behind the parched hills. Yellow
leaves, prematurely fallen in the great drought that had plagued
Central Asia that year, were swirled by the sharp breeze around the
dusty shoes of Colonel Sergei Arkhipov, who sat on a bench near
the Abai monument, waiting.

From time to time as his ulcer gnawed, Sergei would slip an
antacid tablet into his mouth. What he really needed was food; but
he could not leave his post until the first afternoon session of the
Sixth Congress on Metapsychology ended, and Donish furnished a
report upon his fellow delegates' state of mind.

Finally, people began to emerge, hurrying down the palace steps
as if eager for their own suppers. Most of the longbrains went off
into the park on the left, on their way to the Kazakhstan Hotel where
the for­eigners were being lodged. Numbers of locals, heading for
the buses, came straight down Abaya Prospekt and passed
directly in front of Sergei's bench. One of these was a compact
young man in a green windbreaker who carried a canvas briefcase.
His hair and complexion were dark and he wore a squarish black
skullcap with white embroi­dered designs on the sides.

Deliberately, Sergei projected a thought as this man approached:
Move faster blackarsed longbrain my poor stomach is devouring
itself I was sure you would stay in your fucking meeting all night.

"And good evening to you, Comrade Colonel!" The young KGB
agent, Kamil Donish, smiled good-humoredly and sat down on the
bench. "An outstanding panel on psychoenergetic projection's
more benign aspects went a bit overtime. There was this Italian,
Franco Brixen, who reported that his people at the University of
Torino have been able to inhibit the growth of malignant neoplasms
in rats -"

"Tishe!" hissed Sergei irritably. "What do I care about such trivia?
Tell me the mood of the operant delegates - their feelings on the
mat­ter of the Islamic riots, especially - so that I can pass the
information on to the General Secretary's aides before his speech
tonight. "

"They regret our use of extreme force. But you can hardly expect
them to side with Muslim fanatics who label them allies of Satan. "

"Don't play your longbrain games with me, Kamil. I'm not feeling
well and I want straight answers. Are the foreign operants satisfied
that we have acted properly? Do they accept our reassurances that
the up­risings were isolated occurrences, and that the situation is
now under control?"

Kamil's black eyes flashed. "Comrade Colonel, you remain
obsti­nately a man of your time. Of course they don't! The whole
world can see what is going on in Uzbekistan through the mental
vision of their EE adepts. The only reason that the global news
reports have downplayed the matter is that there is voluntary
restraint being exercised by the operants themselves. They give
their local journalists the bare details of our troubles, but without
sensational embellishment that might in­flame world opinion. The
Soviet Union is being given the benefit of the doubt! Oh, yes -
there are some bleeding-hearts among the delegates who deplore
our killing of the so-called innocent bystanders during the storming
of the Bukhara airfield. But most of the Congress attendees are
politically   sophisticated   persons   who   realize   the   gravity   of
the situation - the danger of civil war. Most nations of the world are
on our side, Comrade Colonel. They have no wish to see the
Central Asian Republics explode like Iran and Pakistan. " "But do
they worry about their safety here in Alma-Ata?"

"Certainly not, " Kamil said. "They know that the nearest fighting is
more than a thousand air-kilometers away. They are also aware that
this is a modern city, with a minimal number of Shiite fanatics
among the populace. Operants who had any doubts about their
personal wel­fare stayed at home. The majority accepted the
assurances of Academi­cian Tamara Gawrys-Sakhvadze that
Alma-Ata welcomes them even more eagerly than it did in 1992.
The Comrade General Secretary can make his little speech tonight
without fear of any hostile response. "

"Well, that's a relief. You longbrains are all the Secretary's dar­lings
- the showpiece of his much vaunted policy of Otkroveyinost'. If he
got a cold reception from the foreign delegates at the Con­gress,
certain persons in Moscow would be encouraged in their attempts
to discredit him. " Sergei's mind showed an image of a tightrope-
walker.

"Discredit him - and us. " Somberness spread over Kamil's face.
"You are not part of the Twentieth Directorate, Comrade Colonel,
but you are quite aware of our critical role in the New Soviet
Openhearted Society that the Secretary has championed. All loyal
citizens have re­joiced in the new freedoms and the acceptance of
personal responsibil­ity for progress. But Otkroveyinost' would be
impossible without the EE monitoring function of the KGB
Twentieth. "

"Oh, you are all certified heroes, " Sergei agreed archly. "Just do
your job efficiently and pinpoint the terrorist reactionaries without at
the same time scaring the simple-minded to death! Especially the
Muslim simple-minded. "

"Some of my coreligionists are deficient in social consciousness, "
Kamil admitted. "This modern Age of the Mind has come too
quickly for them to assimilate. According to the Prophet, magic is
one of the Seven Ruinous Sins - and we operant metapsychics are
accused of its practice. Furthermore, it is being said that the Last
Days are upon the earth, and our appearance is one of the signals
thereof. The KGB's reli­ance upon EE monitors inflames the
reactionaries and makes even loyal Muslim citizens fearful. "

"And so the powder keg at the southern belly of the USSR grows
hotter each day - and I, for one, do not see any simple solution to
the mess, " Sergei said. "Thus far, the General Secretary has been
lucky. The outbreaks have been small enough to be put down by
the militia or by the KGB's own Border Regiments. But if the
antioperant paranoia grows, the jihad movement may spread from
the Shiites to the vast numbers of Sunni Muslims in Soviet Central
Asia. Then nothing less than the Red Army will suffice to control
the insurrection - and we will all be in a very deep arsehole. "

Sergei's imagination drew a portrait of Marshal Yegor
Kumylzhensky, the hard-liner Minister of Defense and longtime
Politburo opponent of the General Secretary. The figure had horns,
wolfish teeth, and bran­dished a tactical missile as an erection.

Kamil giggled. "You are getting very good at that for a shortbrain,
Comrade Colonel. You should take the operancy exam again
some­time. "

Sergei swore and spat on the pavement. A pretty young woman
pass­ing by frowned at the uncultured behavior.

"She labels you a crude old fart, " Kamil whispered slyly.

"I can read her mind well enough, " Sergei growled. "As for you,
you are an insubordinate blackarse who would have been shot for
speaking to your superior in such a way back in the old days. "

"Old days! If those old days still prevailed, you would be waiting for
American missiles to blast your family to bits. And the Soviet
citizenry would be drinking itself to death instead of reveling in
Japanese VCRs and North American movies and British silver-disc
music and satellite-transmitted sports programs from half the
countries of the globe. Cheer up, Comrade Colonel. It's not such a
bad brave new world! Who would ever have thought that the KGB
would be applauded as good guys?"

Sergei shook his head and took another antacid tablet.

Chuckling, Kamil unsnapped his briefcase and took out a
minicorder. "Here are my hushaphone comments on the opening
session of the Congress and the afternoon panels. There is really
nothing extraordi­nary going on that the General Secretary need be
concerned about. We operants are worried about our image
worldwide, and about the unreli­ability of our techniques for
detecting clever psychopaths among us. We are concerned about
the U. S. government's proposal to ban operants from seeking
political office. The Congress is not, by and large, worry­ing about
the status of operants in the Soviet Union. Our nation is looked
upon by most of the delegates as a progressive place, ascending
rapidly into high-tech prosperity after shelving an ill-considered
polit­ical experiment. Our successful juvenile suboperant
screening program is admired, as are the new schools for
accelerated EE and telepathic training. The Japanese think that
their operant teaching techniques are superior. Perhaps they are.
Tomorrow is education day and there should be lively discussion. "

"Fuck the lot of you and your discussions, " said Sergei wearily.
"All I care about is smooth sailing for the General Secretary's
speech tonight - and then two weeks' rest cure in Sochi for my
poor aching gut. "

Kamil Donish arose from the bench. "Do svedanya, then, Comrade
Colonel. I'll look for you in the audience tonight. Try to calm your
tummy with some nice yogurt or rice pudding before you come,
though. You don't want to make your sensitive longbrain neighbors
uncomfort­able. "

Sergei threw an obscene mental menu suggestion of his own after
the departing young agent. It was blithely ignored. Longbrains!
What an arrogant and nonconformist lot they were - more loyal to
each other and their global clique of do-gooders than to any
motherland! The Gen­eral Secretary was taking a colossal risk,
pinning his policy to them. By far the majority of Soviet longbrains
were not even Slavs! Look at Kamil -a Tadzhik, one of the fast-
breeding Asian groups that now outnumbered the true ethnic
Russians. The Twentieth Directorate of the KGB and the academic
metapsychic groups swarmed with blackarses, Caucasians, and
Mongoloid riffraff... but then, so did every other segment of Soviet
society, operant or normal. What a hell of a world...

Not caring who overheard his dark thoughts, Colonel Sergei
Arkhipov walked along Lenin Prospect to the Arman Cafe. He had
only forty-five minutes to grab a bite to eat, and then he would have
to go out to the Alma-Ata KGB HQ and liaise with the locals prior to
the General Secretary's arrival at the air terminal. His opposite
number had issued a supper invitation that Sergei had declined. He
wanted to coddle his stomach in peace.

He peered into the café. There was a waiting line, of course, and
many of the persons standing there wore the red and green
delegate badges of the Sixth Congress on Metapsychology.
Sergei pushed past them, ready to flash his KGB card, confident
of being shown immediately to an empty table.

And so he was. But as he settled down with the menu he was
as­tounded to see another man approach his table, grinning in a
cocksure fashion, and pull out a chair.

Sergei opened his mouth to put the upstart in his place. It was a
dapper little fellow, obviously a foreigner, whose badge read: J.
smith - simon fraser univ. - vancouver canada. His two upper
incisors were comically large, like those of a squirrel.

Sergei closed his mouth. He had to. J. Smith's coercion had taken
control of him as though he were a wooden marionette.

"Hey there, Sergei! How you doing, old hoss?" The Fabulous
Finster snapped his fingers and a waitress rushed over with
another menu be­fore he even drew his chair up to the table. "Been
a few years since we pub-crawled in Edinburgh, eh? We've got a
whole lotta catching up to do ... By the way, you heard the sad
news from Tashkent? The Grand Mufti of Central Asia was
assassinated. Terrible thing. The poor old guy's head burst into
flame just as he was going into the Barak-Khana Mosque and the
whole goddam city's gone ape. They think some per­verted
metapsychic operant musta been responsible. I couldn't get out
fast enough this afternoon, I'll tell you. I was lucky to get a plane...
Well! Enough of that. What d'you say we order, eh?"

"Yes. Certainly." Sergei heard the voice coming from far away.
Surely, he thought, it could not be his own.



Dr. Pyotr Sakhvadze regarded the enormous silver platter and its
con­tents with undisguised consternation.

"But this is a great honor for you!" the mâitre d' insisted. His
Kazakh mustachios bristled and he was slightly miffed. It was
obvious that the kitchen staff of the big hotel had gone to
considerable trouble to pro­duce the special tribute. "You are the
aksakal, the Whitebeard of the Feast! You must carve the dish and
distribute it to the other guests, who have ordered this traditional
delicacy in celebration of your eighty-third birthday. Bon appétit!"

He placed the carving tools in front of Pyotr and withdrew, full of
dignity. Most of the others at the table - his grandchildren, his
daughter Tamara and her colleagues the Kizims, and the three
foreign guests - were applauding and laughing. Telepathic jests
crackled in the aether so energetically that Pyotr could almost (but
not quite) understand them.

On the platter, the braised whole lamb's head seemed to stare at
him with an air of jaunty mockery. One ear was up and the other
down. Quail eggs stuffed with ripe olives formed its eyes, and it
had a peeled ruby pomegranate in its mouth and a collar of lacy
gold paper. The head perched upon a steaming bed of
besbarmak, the famous Kazakh lamb and noodle stew. Pyotr, as
designated aksakal, was not only expected to serve this outlandish
culinary triumph, but he was also obliged to ac­company each
portion of head-meat with a suitable witticism.

"We operants only think we've got troubles, " Pyotr said to the
lamb's head. "You, in your position, you know you've got troubles. "

Everybody laughed and radiated sympathy except for his oldest
grand­son Valery, whom Pyotr had teased mercilessly last week
for mooning over a young woman who would have nothing to do
with him. Now innocence poured from Valya's mind like watered
honey, but his close-set Polish blue eyes had a suspicious gleam.
So! He was the one respon­sible for this, was he?

Pyotr cleared his throat and continued. "I am only a decrepit
psychiatrist, not a faciocephalic surgeon. If I were to serve this
head, I fear I would do it so slowly that we would be here all
evening and miss the distinguished speakers who will honor us
with their presence later in the Palace of Culture. And so it is with
pleasure - to say nothing of relief - that I delegate the carving of
this pièce de résistance to the founder of the feast, Valery
Yurievich, whose idea it was to honor me in this unusual way. It is
the custom, I know, for the aksakal to cut off and present to a
favored guest that anatomical portion of meat most appropriate to
his nature. But alas, I cannot give my dear grandson the part he
deserves. The chef has cooked for us the wrong end of the sheep.
"

He bowed and sat down to uproarious laughter and clapping.
Valery had turned red to the tips of his ears.

Tamara, who sat at the foot of the table, addressed her son. "I left
the arrangements to you, and you play undergraduate pranks! Now
how are we going to eat this monstrosity?"

The American, Denis Remillard, sitting on Pyotr's right, had his
strange compelling glance fixed on the swinging doors of the
restaurant kitchen. He said gently, "Allow me." And then there was
a miracle. The two sturdy waitresses who had brought the
besbarmak in the first place came out again, pushing a serving cart
loaded with side dishes. After distributing these, they transferred
the silver platter to the cart and began to carve and fill the plates of
the dinner party with the besbarmak, which turned out to be
delicious. Besides the meat stew with its diamond-shaped
noodles, there were bowls of fragrant broth with floating herbs,
feather-light rounds of bread, spicy palov, pickled mush­rooms,
melon rind, and a salad of cucumbers, tomatoes, scallions, and
exotic green stuff. The wine, which Valery had preselected with a
good deal more seriousness, was a Château Latour that brought
tears of rapture to Pyotr's eyes. He forgave his grandson, and
Valery led the birthday toast; and then Pyotr proposed a toast to
Denis, and Denis proposed a toast to the Sixth Congress, and
Tamara proposed a toast to the Seventh, which would be held the
following year in Boston.

"You must go with us there, Papa, " Tamara said to Pyotr. "We will
celebrate your birthday in the American style. "

"No feasts!" Pyotr pleaded.

"If you came up to New Hampshire," said Denis, "we could cook
you a traditional ham and baked-bean supper with pumpkin pie and
whipped cream. "

The old man leaned toward the American. Being unable to
converse telepathically on the intimate mode, he simply whispered.
"I think it would be a great improvement over this boiled lamb's
head. I am a Georgian, you see, and our cuisine is celebrated
throughout the Soviet Union. My grandchildren have been
barbarized by their resi­dence in this way station of Marco Polo...
My dear Professor, I am so grateful to you for salvaging the dinner.
None of the others would have had the mind-power to coerce the
waitresses over such a distance. "

"You must call me Denis. And it was my pleasure. But I think that
any one of your grandchildren, had they thought of it, would have
been able to do as I did. "

Valery, Ilya, and Anna protested: Oh NO Professor!

Pyotr did not hear, but the expressions on the young faces were
eloquent enough. "It's true. They are growing up to be mental
bullies, all three, too clever by half. They are - are - oy! I don't know
the English word for what they are!"

"Whippersnappers," Denis offered.

Pyotr was delighted. "Yes! They think the world will leap as they
snap their marvelous mental whips. You must take care, Denis, that
your own new baby son does not grow up so disrespectful of his
short-brained elders. "

"We attempted a simple form of ethical guidance even before the
baby was born, " Denis said seriously. "I'll be describing the new
pre­natal educational techniques that my wife Lucille and I devised
for Philip in a paper I'm delivering tomorrow. "

There were expressions of interest from the other academics
around the table. Urgyen Bhotia said, "I find it fascinating that you
would include ethics in your prenatal curriculum. Newborns are, of
course, completely self-centered. And the infant human is
egotistical in its evaluation of right and wrong. "

"When the infant is a normal, that's acceptable, " Denis said. "It
may even be acceptable for the weaker operants. But" - he
shrugged - "Lucille and I weren't sure just how strong-minded our
offspring would be. You may have - er - read the article in Nature."

Alla and Mukar Kizim, who were friends and close associates of
Tamara at the university, exchanged meaningful looks. "It is a
matter that perplexed us as well, " Alla admitted. "We have held off
having children, wishing to give their young minds the best
possible guidance both before and after birth. But I think we also
were somewhat fearful of not being able to control them. There
have been instances among our colleagues... "

"In America, too, " Denis said.

"I don't think we've had much trouble in Scotland, " said Jamie
MacGregor. "Even normal Celtic parents are coercers from the
word go. You hardly find a spoiled brat among us. " He hesitated,
then added, "There are crazies, though. And I have a paper on
that. "

"Children are very precious to our people, " Tamara said. "It is
always so in lands where nature is cruel and young life is
vulnerable. It has been said by some psychologists that we have
been too kind... that our children grow up lacking in initiative and
inner strength because they were coddled. And when they become
adults, and find how harsh life is, they either strike back and
become cruel themselves or else bend dumbly to the yoke. "

"Each nation, " Urgyen said, "has its own strength and weakness.
The roots of both are in the relationship of parents and children. I
think Denis's talk of ethical training for the infant mind will be among
the most significant to be delivered at this Congress. It will be my
pleasure to lead a symposium on operant-nonoperant moral
relationships. In light of the Tashkent tragedy, the subject is
appropriate. "

There was an uncomfortable silence. Finally, Annushka Gawrys
said impulsively, "It couldn't have been one of us who did that awful
thing! It's not possible!"

Jamie MacGregor said, "Lassie, I'm sorry. But it is possible. My
dear friend Nigel Weinberg has had to retire from active
metapsychic work just because it's possible. "

"It could have been a provocateur, " Tamara said. She switched to
mental speech, even though it would exclude her father: Our
internal politics... you visitors see only the bright new face of the
Soviet Union the Secretary's sweeping changes in the economy
the unrestricted flow of information the new pride taken by workers
inspired by Otkro­veyinost'... but there is a faction in the Kremlin
bitterly opposing the Secretary as a traitor to Marxist-Leninist
ideology and they are allied with senior militarists who resent their
drastic budget cuts and dimin­ished power... Marshal
Kumylzhensky aspires to head the Politburo himself and has deep
hatred for Kirill Pazukhin Chairman KGB and General Secretary it is
suspected that some of the Islamic rioting was fomented by
agents Glavnoye Razvedyvatelnoye Upravleniye so as to discredit
the Twentieth Directorate assassination of Grand Mufti would fit in
with such a scheme...

Urgyen Bhotia was incredulous: This Marshal would toy with civil
war just to bring down a political enemy? He would cause the death
of thousands of citizens merely to consolidate his power in
Moscow?

Mukar Kizim said: It is only non-Slavic people the blackarses like
us who die.

Jamie MacGregor asked: What'll stop this fool Marshal?

Tamara said: He is 73 years old... But his lackey Vadim Terekhov
head of the GRU is only 56 and a Politburo aspirant. The
consensus is that the General Secretary himself a man loved and
respected by almost all the proletariat is the greatest bulwark
against the militarists and diehard Marxist ideologues.

Denis Remillard said: I hope he has good bodyguards... especially
tonight.

Tamara said: Tonight the nine of us the strongest minds I am able
to trust utterly will guard him.



The General Secretary was showing signs of winding down now.
He had set aside his notes to address the Congress delegates
less formally, and Finster whispered, "It won't be long now. I hope
those TV cameras stay on close-up for the big finale. We want this
to be the zap seen round the world. "

Colonel Sergei Arkhipov was incapable of vocal response. He was
a skull-prisoner, no longer in control of his own body and knowing
he would soon die. Nevertheless he watched the Killer Squirrel's
profes­sional modus operandi with fascinated detachment through
the win­dows of his own eye sockets; and from time to time he
even asked mental questions, which his captor answered quite
frankly.

At supper, the Squirrel had given a brief account of his life - the
creepy child, the third-rate entertainer and drug addict, the
obscene "redemption" through bonding to the American
megalomaniac, the progression from psychic spy to blackmailing
suborner to specialist in wet affairs... It appealed to Sergei's
mordant Russian sense of humor that the Squirrel's master, the
archcapitalist exploiter O'Connor, should be the great enemy of
metapsychic globalism. And in Moscow the zealous Marxist
ideologue Kumylzhensky shared the identical viewpoint! If this
crucial mission of the Killer Squirrel succeeded, both O'Connor
and Kumylzhensky would win. Everyone else would lose. Oh, it was
rich.

Four other KGB agents stood there in the wings of stage right with
Sergei and Fabian Finster, and all including the Squirrel wore on
their lapels the golden shield with stylized sword and red star,
surmounted by the black IV of the Ninth Directorate. It was the
insignia of the unit assigned to the security of top Party leaders. To
any casual observer backstage in the Lenin Palace of Culture, the
men - including the rather undersized one in the flashy double-
breasted glen plaid - were part of the General Secretary's
bodyguard.

To the subordinate four, the Killer Squirrel was simply invisible.
This was a most useful faculty for an assassin to have, but Finster
had ex­plained to Sergei that there were limitations. The mental
exertion re­quired to project the illusion increased with the cube of
the distance from the operant's brain. Thus it was very easy to
render oneself invis­ible (or psychically disguised) when close to a
normal observer, but relatively difficult to manage when the
observer was farther away. Finster was also limited by having to
retain his coercive hold on Sergei himself. Effectively, this limited
his invisibility radius to less than nine meters. Thus he could not
simply walk out onto the palace stage and terminate the General
Secretary without being detected. Nor could he fulfill the special
purpose of his assignment by means of an ambush. It was
O'Connor's plan to incite antioperant feeling by making the
assas­sinations seem to be an operant conspiracy, and so Finster
had to play a part.

Sergei had been very surprised to learn that Finster was armed. He
assumed that the longbrain would kill with astral fire, generated by
mind-power alone. As all the world knew, this was the way that the
Scottish operant had worked. But no. The Squirrel had explained
that he was quite impotent in the conjuring up of mental fire. It was
a knack, and his talents ran along other lines. Nor could he kill by
cooking brains or stopping hearts, lethal aptitudes possessed by
his master, O'Connor, among others. Finster explained that these
killing methods, while tidy and much more efficient than
psychocreative flaming, would not have the propaganda impact of
the latter. So Finster intended to use an in­genious infernal device
to simulate astral fire, and the General Secre­tary would - as the
Grand Mufti before him - seem to die from the assault of an
operant terrorist.

Tell me something belkushka, Sergei asked now. Were you there
in Edinburgh to kill Professor MacGregor?

Yes, said Finster. But not at the press conference. By then it was
too late, and I only went to provide a firsthand account of the affair
to my principal. I tried to kill MacGregor six times during the months
preceding his announcement. Each time I failed. He was being
guarded.

By his metapsychic compères?

No... By somebody else. It was worrying. I never told the Boss
about that bit.

This Boss. Why do you serve him? Kill for him?

Irony. I love him.

Now do not balls about with me! Why?

Why do you work for the KGB?

At first I was patriotic. Then I enjoyed the power. Then I was stuck
in the shit like everybody else. Then... [laughter] when we were
trans­formed it was just a job. Just a job...

You don't enjoy it now that you're respectable cops?

No.

That's where we differ then Sergei. I've always liked my job! This
assignment's the biggest kick yet.

Belkushka. Little killer squirrel.

Laughter.

Out in the auditorium, the delegates were laughing, too. There was
a smattering of applause for a particularly well-chosen piece of
comic relief delivered by the General Secretary as he approached
the end of his speech.

Finster pinched off the KGB colonel's maundering thoughts and
con­centrated on the matter at hand. Behind the Commie leader,
seated at a long table decorated with red bunting and bouquets of
autumn flowers, were ten or a dozen people - high mucky-mucks of
the Metapsychic

Congress with a few odd spouses and older kids. One seat was
empty. The head lady, after introducing the Comrade Secretary,
had gone off into the left wings. She was a plump, auburn-haired
woman with a distracted overcast to her well-guarded mind, but
she did not project the dangerous vibes Finster had learned to
beware of. Most of the others seated on the platform seemed
similarly harmless: an old guru type, four assorted Russkies, Jamie
MacGregor, a Russky couple, and three kids in their late teens or
early twenties who had to be the offspring of Madame
Chairperson. No threat in the lot, for all their vigilance. He'd take
care of them with the mind-buster, his great projection of sensory
confusion.

The only potential joker in the pack sat at the far end of the table.
Unlike the others, he was dressed formally in a dinner jacket and
had a cold, uptight little smile on his face. Oh, yeah. Give Denis
Remillard a guitar and a mike, take away the chromalloy bear-trap
mind, and you'd have a young John Denver! Talk about a monster
in wimp's clothing... Remillard would have to be handled. He was at
extreme coercion range and probably uncoercible anyway. So stick
to the mind-buster, but thicken it to max between Remillard and the
podium. Then? Would the prof try a hit? He wasn't a known
antiaggression freak like MacGregor or Madame Sakhvadze. Fact
was, he almost never demonstrated his faculties in public, or even
talked about them. Which was bad.

All right, just go for it. Speed and surprise and fwoosh and then
haul ass for dear life to the big ZIL ticking over outside the stage
door of the palace.

Ready...

"You have changed the course of world history, " the General
Secre­tary told the Metapsychic Congress. "In six short years you
have given fresh hope and a vision of a golden Third Millennium to
all nations, large and small. Thanks to you - and to others who had
the good sense to understand and implement your dream - we
have seen the end of the suicidal arms race and the beginning of
true globular social think­ing. But let us not deceive ourselves.
There are still grave problems confronting humanity in many parts
of the world, and some of them pose as great a threat to civilization
as the late, unlamented nuclear deterrent. There is a terrible plague
in Africa. There is continued blood­shed and terrorism in parts of
the Islamic world. There is hunger and suffering caused by
extremes of weather. There is a growing shortage of energy. And,
yes... there is even controversy over the proper role of operant
persons in relation to the larger human community. We must
confront these problems honestly and openly, and work together to
solve them. We must never lose sight of the fact that we all belong
to the human family. All of us share the wish that the future will
bring to us and our children peace, prosperity, and mutual respect.
I thank you. I thank you for everything. "

The delegates rose for a standing ovation and Finster turned to the
four agents standing behind him. He held a silvery cylinder. The
sounds it made were nearly inaudible and its needles coated with
poison killed in a subtle way. The four agents, blinded and
voiceless, crumpled slowly to the floor.

Sergei realized that he was next. A sudden spurt of adrenalin
ener­gized him, weakening Finster's coercive hold. Clumsily,
Sergei fell against the killer and knocked the needle-gun to the
floor. Finster's arm scythed out and he broke Sergei's neck with a
single karate chop. Then a swift-moving foot crushed Sergei's
larynx.

Paralyzed and silenced, but with his mind free, Sergei watched
Finster take up a huge bouquet of red roses from a folding table
near the proscenium arch. Out on the stage, the General Secretary
was bowing and smiling. He waved to the continuing thunder of
applause. Finster approached, his mind radiating homage and
loyalty, and the leader of the Soviet Union held out his hands to
accept the flowers.

Sergei's lips moved. He managed a small, useless sound. His
eyes caught sight of Academician Sakhvadze in the opposite
wings and he thought at her. She started as though electrically
shocked and hesitated. Fool! Sergei raged. He thought at the
American - but, ah! Holy Mother! A mind-numbing surge of
sensation smote him, obliterating pain and darkening his vision.
Was he dead? No, not yet! He saw a flash of brilliant orange and
felt an unspoken shriek of disbelief. His nervous system - that
fragment of it still precariously connected to his brain - shrank from
another mental assault emanating not from one mind but from
thousands.

Sergei seemed to hear two titanic voices shouting. NO! NO! NO!
The formally dressed American and Tamara Petrovna had paid for
their in­decision and together they were trying to support a terrible
headless figure. Cowards, Sergei told them. Cowards.

NO! NO! NO! the man and Tamara begged the raging audience.
The anger and sorrow swelled into a vital thing; the minds of the
delegation meshed spontaneously into metaconcert and focused
on the hated tar­get.

Something was running toward Sergei.

NO! NO! NO!

It was a man, brighter than the sun. A flaming angel come for him
and his sins.

NO...

Not an angel. Only a small man enveloped in seething energy, and
then tumbling bones glowing red-hot on the boards of the stage.

From each, Sergei thought, according to his abilities. To each
accord­ing to his needs.

He closed his eyes for the last time, smiling.



11

LACONIA, NEW HAMPSHIRE, EARTH

7  FEBRUARY  1998



As the critical years of coadunating consciousness dawned for the
indigenes of planet Earth, the Milieu stepped up its psychosocial
surveillance. Ever larger numbers of field-workers went planetside
to track firsthand the irruptions of operancy among different
population groups, gathering data on the numbers of
metapsychically talented children being born, the spectrum of the
various functions, and their potential strength - given optimum
nurture and education.

The results of these late studies were a source of both enthusiasm
and anxiety among the exotic observers. It had been known even
in Earthly prehistoric times that the race had an exceptional
creative component to its Mind; but the most recent samplings had
begun to show just how awesome human psychocreativity might
eventually prove to be. Ana­lysts among the Krondaku were finally
able to verify what the Lylmik had cavalierly stated at the inception
of the Intervention scheme: humanity's mental potential
undoubtedly exceeded that of any other race in the galaxy -
coadunate or noncoadunate. Whether the puerile Earthlings would
survive to manifest the potential was as questionable a point as
ever.

Exotic field-workers on Earth were usually Simbiari or Poltroyans,
since they had the most humanoid form and so required the least
ex­penditure of psychic effort in projecting illusory bodies. Often
the Poltroyans did not even bother with mental disguise. They were
a trifle short in stature compared to average humans, but with wigs,
a dab of Pancake make-up to lighten their purplish-gray skin, and
contact lenses over their ruby irises they could pass as natives
among many Earth populations.

Fritiso-Prontinalin, who called himself Fred during his sojourn on
Earth, and his colleague Vilianin-Tinamikadin, who was known as
Willy, were young Poltroyan psychogeomorphologists on their first
assignment as xenosurveyors. Their project, a rather tedious one
that had them tending automated data accumulators in widely
separated parts of the world, attempted to correlate operancy in
the farsensory spectrum with long-term population residence in the
proximity of granitic lithoforms. The hypothesis wasn't working out
too well in any sampling area except New Hampshire - and here
the correlates were so high that the two researchers suspected a
fudging factor. Discouraged and very much in need of a break,
they decided to drive down to Laconia from their secret base camp
in Waterville Valley and take a holiday. Primed for a weekend of
alien thrills, they joined the crowd that had packed Laconia for the
annual World Championship Sled-Dog Derby.

The sky was heavily overcast and the temperature hovered around
the freezing point of a saline solution - glorious weather for
Poltroyans, who generally hail from wintry planets - and Fred and
Willy mingled happily with the mob. In recent weeks they had done
extensive field-work in Norway, and they had brought souvenirs
with them to New Hampshire - distinctive Samish "caps of the four
winds" - which they wore to cover their bald mauve skulls.
Otherwise their garb was ordi­nary American winter gear,
comfortable enough but skimpy and drab when compared to the
gem-studded fish-fur parkas and mukluks of their home world.
They told curious natives that they were Lapps. This helped to
explain away their shortness and also made them some quick
friends, since many of the mushers and fans were of Scandinavian
de­scent.

On Saturday morning Fred and Willy caught the first round of
Husky-drawn sled races in the hard-charging sprint classification.
When their favorite dog-team did poorly, they went around
afterward to offer con­dolences to the driver, a petite lavender-
eyed blonde named Marcie Nyberg who reminded them very much
of certain girls they had left behind them.

She was quite ready to commiserate. "Just my luck! I didn't bring
the right kind of wax for the runners, and none of the places in
Laconia stock it. It's called Totally Mean Extra Green. I don't
suppose you guys ever heard of it. "

"Well, no, " Fred admitted. "In Norway we use another kind. "

But Willy was rummaging in the kangaroo pouch of his anorak and
murmuring, "Wait a minute! Wait a minute!" And then, triumphantly,
he pulled out a flat container of pinkish metal with a soft pad at one
end. "Marcie, you're not going to believe this, but I remembered
that I had this defrictionizer stowed away in here from the last time I
was on - from Norway. I think it would be just the thing for snow
condi­tions today. Please try it. "

Marcie examined the container dubiously. "Gee, I never saw this
kind of wax before. Is this writing on the side? I thought
Norwegians used the same alphabet as we do -"

Hastily, Willy said, "That's Samish. You know, the Lapp language.
The stuff is simple to use. You just stroke it on, using the pad end.
It's not like crayon wax. It's - it's new. "

Marcie grinned. "Okay, Willy. I'll give it a try this afternoon. Thanks
a whole bunch. "

She had to tend to her dogs' feet then, so the Poltroyans said
goodbye and went to watch a weight-pulling event. Malamute dogs,
much more massive than the rangy Huskies, strained eagerly to
move sledges loaded with weights up to a ton per animal. Fred and
Willy were overwhelmed at the strength of the furry quadrupeds -
and especially interested to note that the handler of the
heavyweight Grand Prize winner had un­consciously exercised a
telepathic rapport with his dog, aiding its per­formance.

When the contest was over, Fred went to the man and offered
hearty congratulations. But when he offhandedly added a remark
about tele­pathic encouragement, the musher let loose a blast of
profanity that nearly took off the Poltroyan's quaint four-cornered
cap.

"Use telepathy? Me? You accusing me of being one of them
goddam cheating heads? Well, lemme tell you, pipsqueak, I run
my dogs honest, and any guy that says different can taste a
knuckle sandwich!"

He was a black-browed bruiser with a stubbly jaw and the number
22 pinned to his down jacket. Several other dog-handlers crowded
around, looking none too friendly, and the prize-winning Malamute
took a lunge at Willy with its lips curled back from enormous teeth.
Fortunately, its owner had a good grip on its chain.

Fred quickly apologized. "I'm sorry! I didn't understand! We're
visi­tors from Norway, you see. We didn't know that - er - that kind
of thing was considered improper here. "

The animosity of the bystanders dwindled and Number 22 seemed
slightly mollified. "Well... so long as you're foreigners and don't
know better, I won't take offense. But you better watch it, fella.
Calling some­body a head won't make you any friends in this part
of the U. S. and A. "

"No, sirree, " the others chimed in. "Damn tootin'!"

Number 22 squinted at the Poltroyans in suspicion. "You two
wouldn't be heads yourself, would you?"

"Oh, my, no, " Willy said. "We're Samish. You know - Laplanders.
The people who used to herd reindeer. "

"Reindeer!" humphed Number 22, "Mighta known. "

"Oh, we're very interested in dogs, too, " Fred said. "Ours are
called spitz. They're something like small Huskies. "

The Malamute handler was patently unenthusiastic and his dog, a
huge gray and white creature with black eyes, continued to growl.
"You see this?" The musher indicated a big round button pinned
beside the cloth square with the numerals 22. "You wanta stay outa
trouble, you better know what it means. "

Fred and Willy took a closer look. The button was a depiction of
Earth as seen from space, a blue disk splashed with white. "It's
very attrac­tive, " Fred said.

The man gave an unpleasant laugh. "It means I'm one of the Sons
of Earth, shorty. A normal human being, and proud of it! You ever
heard of us?"

"Yes, " said Willy, keeping a neutral expression.

"Well, then you know where I'm comin' from. As far's I'm
concerned, God made this Earth for normal human folks - not for
freako heads who break the laws of nature and try to lord it over the
rest of us like they're some kind of fuckin' master race. "

"Yeah!" members of the crowd affirmed. "You said it, Jer! Damn
right on!"

Number 22 slackened the dog chain a fraction and the Malamute
reared. "I don't know what goes on in Norway, but in this country
we're gonna make sure that real people stay in charge of things -
not freaks. You get what I'm saying?"

"Oh, yes, " said Fred, backing away. There were quite a few of the
big blue buttons being worn by the crowd. Neither Poltroyan had
taken any note of them before.

"Well, thanks for explaining, " Willy said. "And congratulations
again on winning the Golden Bone. You've got a really fine dog
there. " And with that, Fred and Willy fled, hurried along by hostile
and contemp­tuous aetheric vibrations. They stopped near a
refreshment stand to catch their breaths.

"Half-masticated lumpukit!" Fred swore. "That was a nasty one. "

"The buttons must be a new fad here in America. I certainly don't
recall seeing them in New Hampshire last year at the ski jumps. It
seems to me that the Sons of Earth were still a disreputable fringe
movement then. Membership was quite furtive. "

"Not anymore. " Fred was looking about. "Love's Oath - every third
or fourth person seems to be wearing one of those buttons. We'll
have to send notification to the Oversight Authority. "

"They're probably aware of the situation. But we'll do it. "

It was almost time for the next heat of sprints that Marcie was
scheduled to participate in, so the Poltroyans decided to get
something to eat and go cheer on their new friend. Willy dug in his
pocket for a credit card and ordered two hot dogs with sauerkraut
and mustard and two Classic Cokes. Then the exotics wandered
over to the racecourse, sipping and munching. The beverage's
alkaloid was invigorating even if it wasn't quite sweet enough, so
they tossed in three or four maple-sugar candies to saccharify it.
The delicious sulfur taste of the shredded hot vegetable mingled
nicely with the speckled buff condiment's bite. Too bad that the
proteinoid was too highly nitrified for really safe metabolization - but
an occasional treat wouldn't kill them.

When the heats began they forgot the unpleasant incident with the
Sons of Earth and reveled in the excitement of the racing. Dogs
howled, mushers yelled, the spectators cheered on their favorites,
and a diamond-dust snow sifted down on everything. It was
glorious! And when the final times were posted, Marcie and her
team had won.

Fred and Willy ran to her, shouting their congratulations.

"Your wax! Your wax!" She swept the pair of them into her arms like
a mother embracing her children. "The wax made all the
difference! I love you guys, do you know that?"

She was covered with crusted rime thrown up by the galloping
dogs, and one could almost forget she was the wrong color and
chromosomally incompatible. Fred and Willy pressed lips with her
because that was what her mind told them she wanted. Then she
brushed herself off and untied the vivid Day-Glo racing vest with
her number, 16, and pulled it over her head.

On the jacket underneath was a big blue button.

Marcie was bubbling over as she began to load her dogs into her
truck. "Listen, you guys. Tonight there's a Musher's Ball with beer
and chili and a live band. I want you to come. My treat! You can
meet the whole gang and tell them about the crazy wax and the
whole Laplander thingypop!"

"We'd love to, " Fred said sadly.

"But we really have to go now, " Willy concluded. "Please keep the
wax. I wish I had more, but - it's in short supply. "

Marcie's face fell. "Oh, guys. What a shame you can't come.
Maybe you could catch me later? The Adirondack's two weeks off
-"

"We're finishing our work in the States very soon, " Fred said.

"We're really sorry, " Willy added.

"Well, " Marcie said, "it was awfully nice knowing you. I'll always
remember you two."

The Poltroyans turned and walked away. All around were mushers
tinkering with sleds or adjusting harnesses and traces. The
loudspeakers announced the start of another event and the dogs
began to yelp, eager to be off and away.

"Let's go home, " Fred said.

"I wish we could, " Willy muttered.

"Oh, you know what I mean, " said Fred.

Together, they headed for the place where they had left their car.



12

FROM THE MEMOIRS OF ROGATIEN REMILLARD



we were not yet pariahs, only suspect.

The terrible murder and instant retribution that had taken place in
Alma-Ata were played and replayed on the television screens of
the world. The implications - perceived almost instinctively by every
nor­mal person - were argued in heat and in cold blood, but then
rational­ized away because humanity was not yet prepared to turn
upon and repudiate the operants.

After an investigation that took more than a year, Soviet forensic
scientists, assisted by experts from many other countries,
determined that the assassinations of the General Secretary and
the Grand Mufti were not accomplished by psychocreative energy
at all, but by a chemical explosive device that was almost but not
quite without traceless residue. That the agent provocateur had
been operant himself was verified by the testimony of the
delegate-witnesses there in the Lenin Palace of Culture,
particularly those who had been on stage. The killer had used a
quasi-hypnotic technique to stun and confuse those close to the
General Secretary. Only Denis and Tamara had been able to resist
the mind-paralysis; but they could not prevent the murder.

The killer's true identity was never discovered. His image was
shown distinctly on the tapes of the video cameras recording the
event; but the face was obscured by the large bouquet of flowers
at first, and then by the miniature explosion. He had turned away as
he started to flee, again hiding his face from the cameras, and his
subsequent cremation oblit­erated any other clues to his identity.

The cremation, not the murder of the Soviet leader, was what really
gave the world pause.

After months of hedging, a special investigatory committee of
"blue-ribbon" metapsychologists called by the United Nations
issued a lengthy analysis of the so-called Retributory Incident. Its
findings can be com­pactly summarized:

1.  The assassin of the Soviet General Secretary met his death
through a process of incineration by psychoenergetic projection.

2.  The energy projected came from the brains of the operant
delegates who had just witnessed the assassination.

3.   The energy was focused and amplified by means of a
maneuver known as "metapsychic concert, " in which numbers of
operant brains act as one synergistically, the whole being capable
of an output greater than the sum of the parts.

4.  It was not possible to calculate with total accuracy the amount of
energy focused upon the assassin, since its characteristics were
anom­alous. (For example, there were no auditory manifestations
as there had been when the General Secretary's head was
vaporized by the explosive device. ) Furthermore, it was not
possible to calculate the percentage of psychoenergy generated
by individual delegates.

5.   The metafaculty of psychocreativity, which may generate
energy, is at present poorly understood. Except for the Weinstein
case, there is no previous  record  of a fatality resulting from  the
projection of psychic energy. Metapsychic concert is also poorly
understood. Its manifestation has been experimentally verified by
magnetoenceph­alography; but in no instance have researchers
ever encountered an effect even remotely approaching the
magnitude of the Retributory Incident.

6.  In the opinion of the investigatory committee, the Incident was
the result of an unconscious velleity on the part of the delegate-
minds, without true volition. In lay language, the delegates were so
shocked and angered by the General Secretary's murder that their
mutual loath­ing of the perpetrator generated the blast that killed
him.

7.   On the advice of the committee, no action at law against the
delegate-perpetrators was contemplated by the Soviet judiciary. It
was felt that the principle of diminished responsibility applied to
their actions  in  view  of  the  heinousness  of  the  crime  they had
just witnessed.

8.   Repetitions of Retributory Incidents could not be ruled out,
given similar provocatory circumstances.

9.   The committee recommended strongly that legal scholars,
ethi­cists, and moral theologians address themselves to the unique
problems of culpability devolving upon metapsychic operancy. The
ancient ques­tion of whether the law should take the will for the
deed would have to be reopened when, ipso facto, the will was the
deed.



Debate over the philosophical and legal implications of operancy
would beget an avalanche of articles, monographs, and books off
and on over the next fifteen years, until the topic received its
ultimate resolu­tion in the Intervention. Of course Denis did not
serve on the investi­gating committee. (The fact of his
nonparticipation in the destructive metaconcert was proved when
the Simbiari Proctorship reopened the inquiry into the Incident in
2017, at Denis's insistence.) Lucille, who had not attended the
Sixth Congress because of her confinement with her first son,
Philip, did serve. It should be noted that she laid open her personal
psychocreative case history to assist the committee in its
de­liberations, an action that required great courage at the time.
Fortu­nately for her, the committee decided that it was not
necessary to in­clude that history in the public record.

You, the entity reading these memoirs, should not get the
impression that reaction to the Retributory Incident was as
reasoned and high-minded as this chapter may have thus far
implied. On the contrary, there was a royal rumpus kicked up in the
United States, where the media hashed and rehashed the affair ad
nauseam, bringing the term "psychozap" into slang usage, together
with the pejorative "head, " ap­plied to operants - which was
perversely embraced by us and later used as an innocent
appellation. As the Third Millennium approached, cranks and
fanatics of every sort crept out of the woodwork - most notably the
Sons of Earth movement, which claimed worldwide adherents by
1999 and succeeded in disrupting part of the Eighth Metapsychic
Con­gress in London.

The Great California Earthquake gave new life to the prophecies of
Nostradamus. Never mind that the prophet's dating for the quake
was so ambiguous that it might have referred to any century
following the sixteenth, with the locale of the seismic disaster
unspecified. Two other pertinent quatrains from Nostradamus were
dusted off and presented to the gullible as portents of things to
come:



L'an mil neuf cens nonante neuf sept mois,

Du ceil viendra un grand Roi deffraieur.

Resusciter le grand Roi d'Angolmois.

Avant que Mars regner par bonheur.



Apres grand troche humaine plus grande s'appreste,

Le grand moteur des Siecles renouvelle.

Pluie, sang, laict, famine, fer et peste

Au feu ciel veu courant longue estincelle.



Which can be roughly translated:



In the seventh month of the year 1999,

A great King of Terror will come.

He will revive the great King of the Mongols.

Before that Mars will run riot.



After great human suffering, even greater comes,

When the great motive power of the Centuries is renewed.

Rain, blood, milk, famine, iron [war], and disease

In the heavens is seen a fire, a long flow of sparks.



The hysterical could equate the new, bellicose leader of the Soviet
Union, Marshal Kumylzhensky, with the King of Terror. By a long
stretch of the imagination, the new Genghis Khan could be seen in
the insurrections flaring up in Soviet Central Asia. (No one yet had
any inkling that the Chinese were watching the accelerating
dissolution of the USSR with keen interest. ) The continued fighting
throughout the Islamic world was certainly a source of suffering,
and the crazy weather that had rotted the crops in some parts of
the world while parching others also seemed to fit. As to the milk,
there remained the legacy of the Armageddon fallout, poisoning
both milk and "blood" in a wide swath of the Middle East and the
Balkans for seven years now. The fateful Seventh Month of 1999
came and went without any signal disaster; but in August, the total
eclipse of the sun that was visible in Europe, the most embattled
regions of the Middle East, and the Indian subcontinent wreaked
havoc among the superstitious, who were certain that the end of
the world had come. After that crisis had passed, there was
another to be endured on 11 November, when Earth passed
through the great Leonid meteor "storm, " a Nostradamic fiery flow
of sparks if there ever was one. But once again Earth abided, the
day of wrath was unaccountably postponed, and the eschatologists
went back to their original prediction of doomsday at the actual turn
of the Millennium.



Sadly enough, certain of the Remillards did meet their end during
those days. Their tragedy went virtually unnoticed because of the
gaud­ier events that Milieu historians have concentrated on; but I
will tell it here as part of the family chronicle.

In the months following the Alma-Ata affair, Denis brooded over
the misuse of operant metafaculties. He discussed this subject at
length with both Tamara Sakhvadze and Urgyen Bhotia, and was
convinced that resolute pacifism was the only ethical course open
to persons with higher mind-powers. There remained, however, the
odious problem of Victor. Denis had told Lucille what he knew and
what he suspected about his younger brother, and she was
simultaneously outraged and wary. Lucille was particularly
concerned for Sunny and the nonoperant siblings left under
Victor's influence, and pressed Denis to do some­thing to help
them, even if it meant a direct confrontation that might end in
violence. But Denis refused, countering her reproaches with both
logic and his espousal of the superChristian ethic. No course short
of engineering Victor's demise was likely to resolve the terrible
stalemate - and Denis would not kill his brother in cold blood even
to save the lives of his mother and the others.

Denis stood by, apparently impotent, while his younger twin
brothers Louis and Leon, who turned twenty-one in 1999, were
brainwashed by Victor and joined him in Remco Industries as
nonoperant factotums. Both young men were ruthless and
intelligent, and they were also com­pletely trustworthy, unlike many
of Victor's operant associates. That left only George, who was
nineteen, and Pauline, two years younger, still living with Sunny.
George was an unprepossessing young man, very unassertive,
who was studying computer technology under Vic­tor's orders. I
had always thought him a poor stick. Paulie, the youngest of Don
and Sunny's big brood, was an exquisite creature. Except for her
dark eyes, she was the image of her mother as a young woman -
and when I saw her that year at the family Easter get-together,
suddenly matured into radiant femininity, my heart stood still.

Their older sister Yvonne had been married in 1996 to the middle-
aged operant crook Robert Fortier, whose sinister mother still
acted as Sunny's nominal housekeeper, all the while contriving to
dominate her utterly. Over the years, by use of ingenious
metapsychic variants on old-fashioned racketeering, Victor and
Fortier had converted Remco into an international operation that
now owned not only pulpwood harvest­ing companies but a large
paper mill in New Brunswick, a chemical plant in Maine, and other
forest-product industries in cities scattered across upper New
England and southeastern Canada. Having succeeded so well in
his first dynastic ploy, Victor now decided to attempt a much more
audacious variation on the theme.

One of my nephew's underhanded acquisitions was a small
genetic-engineering firm in Burlington, Vermont. This outfit had
perfected and patented a bacterial organism called a lignin
degrader, that broke down (i. e., "ate") a common waste product of
the pulpwood industry, con­verting it into a host of valuable
chemicals that had heretofore been obtained from increasingly
scarce petroleum. The process utilizing the superior bug was very
nearly ready to be put into production, and it was going to be a gold
mine; but Victor's Remco Industries faced a dilemma well known
to medium-sized corporations - it did not have enough capital to
develop a lignin-chemistry company of its own, which would reap
huge profits. Rather, it would have to license the process to giant
petrochemical conglomerates and settle for a much smaller piece
of the pie.

Naturally, Victor balked at this. The golden bug and its princi­pal
nurturer had been stolen from a famous Michigan university at
considerable risk to Victor's own hide, and he had invested a good
deal of money in the perfecting of the process. Having won game
and set, as it were, he wasn't going to let outsiders rob him of the
match.

There was only one font of finance he felt he could safely
approach for additional capitalization, a money source that had
earlier approached him, only to be repulsed. Now, Victor decided,
the time was ripe for reconsideration. And so he made a telephone
call to Kieran O'Connor's Chicago office, waited patiently while his
name was passed from buffer zone to buffer zone in the corporate
hierarchy until it reached the Boss of Bosses, and then made his
proposition.

A merger, to their mutual profit. To seal the deal, Victor would
marry Shannon O'Connor and Kieran would take Pauline Remillard.

O'Connor laughed his head off at the raw Franco chutzpah of it all.
It was primitive. It was damn near Sicilian! Still, Kieran had kept his
eye on Victor over the years and had been impressed. At the
callow age of twenty-nine, Victor was worth upward of sixty-two
million dollars - peanuts when compared to Kieran's own empire,
but not too shabby when you remembered that the kid had started
out with nothing but his drunken daddy, a '74 Chevy pickup truck,
and two Jonsered chain saws boosted from a local logging-
equipment supplier. And this lignin-gobbling bacterium had
possibilities. Kieran's facile mind hatched a scenario in which the
process could be used as a fulcrum in a scheme to corner the
world's energy supply. As for Victor himself, he would either have
to be made an ally or eliminated. The dynastic link-up opened the
way for either option.

After their telephone conversation had gone on for some ten
minutes, Kieran told Victor that he was inclined to accept the
proposition. There were, however, two small matters that would
have to be clarified. First, did Victor have his sister Pauline under
complete control, as Kieran did Shannon?... and was she really
beautiful and unsophisticated?

Of course!

Kieran hoped that was true, because they couldn't coerce the girl
permanently. The second matter was more delicate. Kieran did not
want Pauline as his wife or mistress. He would possess her only
once (for reasons not explained to Victor), and after that she would
be married to Kieran's close associate Warren Griffith, who had
recently lost his third wife under tragic circumstances. There was,
however, this thing about Griff. He was brilliant, both in coercive
talent and business acu­men, but he had special personal needs.
Pauline, as his wife, would live in a ménage à trois, and the third
party was a young man of rather stern disposition. Did Victor
understand?

Different strokes for different folks, Victor said. But Kieran would
have to make damn certain that Paulie didn't end up like the third
wife.

Kieran would see to it personally.

Then there was no problem.

And so this decidedly curious arrangement was agreed upon. But
Victor made the mistake of explaining the situation very carefully to
Pauline while she was under his coercive hold. He talked to her for
three hours one late October afternoon when the sky was clear and
the trees were in full color on the hillsides surrounding Berlin, and
then he left her in the back yard of Sunny's big house on Sweden
Street, sitting on a rustic bench under an incandescent maple tree.
When her brother George came home that day from computer
college, she asked him to take her for a ride in his car along the
Androscoggin River, and while they drove she told him without any
emotion at all (for that was the way Vic's brainwashing affected the
forcibly latentized) what was in store for her.

George thought about it in his nerdish way. And he thought about
his own future as a superhacker under Vic's mental thumb, and his
older brother Denis's apparent inability to help any of them. Then
he told Paulie not to worry. They drove up to Dave's Gun Shop in
Milan, where George bought a handsome Marlin 120 shotgun with
a twenty-six-inch barrel and a genuine American walnut stock and
forend, all hand-checkered, because George didn't want to wind
things up in a sleazy way. After that they found a nice spot where
Paulie could watch the river and the trees reflected in it and not
notice a thing. There was string in the glove compartment that
George tied cleverly around the trigger and guard of the gun to
take care of himself.

Vic knew at once when they died and so did I; but for some reason
he did not receive the farspoken truth of the affair that was
transmitted to me in the split second of George's final agony.
Instead, Victor went to the car and found the note, which he
destroyed before calling the State Police to report the double
tragedy. He was mad as hell. Kieran O'Connor took the news more
calmly and said that he would think things over, and doubtless
something could be worked out between them after all. He
promised to get back to Victor early next year, after the Millennial
hysteria cooled and the financial world returned to normal.

Sunny's link to a reality that had become insupportable was
shattered by this final trauma. She smiled a great deal at the
double funeral and said that Don and the five dead children spoke
to her from heaven, saying she would soon be joining them. Victor
now had no objection to her going to Hanover to live, so Sunny
spent her last months in the pleasant house on East South Street
with Denis and Lucille, rocking newborn Maurice and reading
storybooks to little Philip.

I saw her nearly every day. She remembered who I was when I
would address her as Marie-Madeleine, as I had done when we
first met in the Berlin Public Library thirty-eight years earlier. We
often spoke about those days. At other times, her drifting mind
perceived young Maurice as baby Denis, and she and I would re-
enact some of the simple metapsychic teaching games I had
devised so long ago. Such charades soothed her even as they
tortured me, but at any rate they did not last long. She died the next
spring, in March, impatient for the flowers to bloom.



13

MOUNT WASHINGTON, NEW HAMPSHIRE, EARTH

31 DECEMBER  1999



there was the question of where to spend the Turn of the
Millennium... Her father was going to an opulent masked ball in
Vienna where the international set was prepared to outdo the
twilight of Byzantium, and he invited her to accompany him. She
declined. It wasn't her style to waltz away the fateful hours in the
company of tipsy financiers and diamond-crusted media stars, and
then at midnight link arms to sing "Brüderlein und Schwesterlein"
and "Auld Lang Syne, " awash in sentimental tears and vintage
champagne.

No. She wanted something different... just in case the world did
end, as the crazies kept predicting. Something incomparably
dramatic.

Kieran laughed indulgently, but then went all serious and reminded
her that she would have to be with him in Zurich without fail on
Monday January 3 for the signing session establishing their new
Euro­pean satellite consortium, in which she was a nominal officer.
Perhaps, he suggested offhandedly, she could spend the holiday
weekend skiing. She would be welcome to use Darmstadter's
chalet at Gstaad, since he and his family would be going to the ball.

She thought about that. She was a superb skier, and her operancy
gave her unusual talents that added zest to the sport. But she
would not go to Gstaad. For one thing, her father had suggested it.
For another, it was crowded and artificial and she might meet
people she knew. Her fancy painted a very different picture of the
Millennial Eve: a precipitate slope of powder snow, virgin in the
moonlight, and herself flying downhill, a streaming torch in her
hand, into the blackness below. Yes!

And then she had another great idea. The perfect place - and an
appropriate companion.

She telephoned him and invited him to be her guest in the
Bugaboos. He did ski, didn't he?

"Yes, " he said.

"Then let me send the family Learjet for you and we can meet in
Banff. Our chopper and a private guide will be waiting. We'll have
to see one another eventually. Why not do it this way, without him
even knowing?"

"He doesn't know?"

"He's in Europe. That's why I'm... free. "

There was a pause on the other end of the line, and then he said,
"If you'd like something really climactic, an even bigger thrill -"

"Bigger than skiing the Bugaboos?"

He told her what he had in mind and this time it was her turn to
hesitate. "Is it possible?"

"If you're black diamond... and if you have some PK, it's quite
possible. I've done it twice. "

"I suppose it's illegal or something. "

"Oh, yes, definitely. " He laughed.

"Tell me where to meet you!" she demanded.

And so he had; and early the next morning she had driven out to
DuPage County Airport and taken the Lear herself. It took her a
little over two hours to get to North Conway, New Hampshire, from
north­ern Illinois, since she had to detour around some bad
weather over Buffalo. But when she touched down at White
Mountain Airport she found bright sunshine, fresh powder, and a
throng of like-minded ski nuts overflowing the resort town, all
determined to await Gabriel's trump schussing their brains out.
There were no rental cars to be had, but she coerced the young
man at the Hertz office into giving her the keys of his own nifty little
BMW sports coupe. Then she drove north to Wildcat Mountain,
where she spent what was left of the day and the early evening
warming up her muscles on the rather modest slopes of Upper
Lynx and Lower Catapult, all the while eyeing the real challenge
that loomed to the west, dazzling in its deepest snow-cover in
decades.

Could they get up there without a chopper? He'd said they could, in
spite of the fact that it was deadly dangerous as well as prohibited.
That, of course, made it perfect.

Along about seven she was ravenous so she drove down to
Jackson, to a well-known country inn on the Thorn Hill Road. There
she dined alone on lobster bisque, a salad of spinach, endive, and
red onions with mustard-vinaigrette dressing, veal scallops with
black mushrooms and cognac sauce, potatoes rösti, and steamed
baby green beans. She drank a single glass of a fine Souveraine
California Cabernet and left the rest (to the scandal of the host),
and finished with a pumpkin-pecan tartlet and a pony of calvados.

Then it was time to meet Victor Remillard.

Following his instructions, she drove to the deserted parking lot of
the Mount Washington Carriage Road. Its gate was open and she
turned off her headlights and went in, following a plowed track
through very deep snow that was sometimes drifted higher than the
roof of her car. The sky to the south had a warm glow from the
lighted slopes at Wild­cat, three kilometers away, but aside from
that the only illumination was from starlight. The moon, four days
past its full, had not yet risen above the eastern heights. Near a
deserted ticket-taker's shack was a cleared space where a peculiar
vehicle was parked. It looked like a boxy van precariously perched
above four very wide tractor treads. She parked beside it and
studied it with fascination.

Only a few minutes passed before he came, driving a big four-
wheeler that he slewed around smartly, throwing up a plume of
snow that glit­tered under the stars. He parked a few meters away,
then got out and came crunching toward her. Pulling up her hood
and slipping on her gloves, she stepped out of the BMW and went
to meet him.



Shannon O'Connor I presume.

Victor Remillard ... I know.

Hey good screen!

And yours.

Lots to hide?

Haven't you?

Touché.

Pas du tout.

Ready fun?

Believe it.

Good sky.

No wind.

Headwall powder!

Super!

PK OK?

?? Yes. ??

Sure you can drive this thing?                    Homing.

Marchons!          No hands babe!            Not in SnoGo?

Ready when you are.        I'm valuable. UP only DOWN XC.

Epatant!                            To Papa!                Oo!

Mg fusees!!                        Not you?                Treeslalom.

Torches X 2?                We'll see.           Ace hi!

Wired for stereo.     LET'S GO!              Mogulbomber?

Hardhat?                                   Yo!

And deepvision                            Aerials too?

Nightvision?                      Only 720&Möebius!

!Hotdog hotdamn hotdog hotdamn hotdog!

! Hotdog!



So they were off in a roar of monster twin diesels, charging up the
famous road leading to the summit of Mount Washington. But they
weren't going to the top; they were going, by ingenious and
unlawful routes, to the lip of the Headwall of Tuckerman Ravine, a
steep glacial cirque that had been scooped into the southeastern
flank of the peak during the past ice age. The ravine was a natural
trap for snow blasted off the Presidential Range by the hurricane
winds of the region. In this final winter of the Second Millennium,
one of the coldest and stormiest in decades, the vast bowl of
Tuckerman Ravine was filled with snow more than twenty-five
meters deep. People normally skied Tuckerman in the spring,
when most of the snow in the country surrounding it had melted
and it was possible to hike up through the woods from Pinkham
Notch to the Hermit Lake camping shelters on the ravine floor. The
only way to get to the Headwall from Hermit was to slog with your
skis on your back - up and up and up. At the rim of the declivity - if
you got that far on the fifty-five-degree slope - you skied down. The
great challenge was to schuss, to ski straight to the bottom. The
feat had last been accomplished by Toni Matt in 1939. Once down
the Headwall, it was possible to take the precipitous Sherburne Ski
Trail back to the Notch and the highway. In the dead of winter,
however, nobody skied Tuckerman Ravine. The powder was
bottomless and the scene magnif­icent, but the upper reaches of
the mountain were off-limits to the public. It was deadly up there,
with some of the fiercest winter weather on Earth.

But not on that New Millennium's Eve.

"Did you lay on the Sno-Crawler just for me?" Shannon asked.

"Not on your life. It belongs to the contractor who services the
weather observatory and the TV and microwave transmitters on the
summit. During the winter the Carriage Road is closed halfway up
and unplowed. Once a week this crawler goes up with supplies and
the relief crew. "

"And you can just hop into the thing and make free with it whenever
you fancy a little jaunt?"

He laughed. "Not by a damn sight. But I have my methods. "

They sat side by side in bucket seats, strapped in with sturdy web
harnesses. Shannon had erected her heaviest mental screen, the
dual-layer one with the false substrate that she used to defeat her
father's probing. Victor had made a perfunctory stab at it during
their initial encounter, then backed off; but she could still feel the
searing power of him, like a searchlight held at steady focus
against a window blind; and when they had faced each other in the
dark parking lot she had seen his ghostly aura - vermilion laced with
steely flashes of blue, the colors of potency and danger.

Inside the surging vehicle, studying the electronic displays on its
console, Victor Remillard hardly seemed to be the black mental
menace her father had described. His bare head was a mass of
tight dark curls. He wore a one-piece Thermatron ski-suit with all
the high-tech options - temperature control, spot massage, com-
unit, stereo sound-surround, and locator beacon - ready for
anything. (But she wore her old red North Face jacket and pants
with the Ski Patrol patch from Snowbird! One up. )

She said, "My father's off in Vienna, where the Third Millennium has
already come. He and his plutocratic friends are at a fancy-dress
ball like the last act of some Strauss operetta. Next week he takes
control of the Dione satellite-engineering consortium - the one
that's to build the European section of Zap-Star. "

"Nice for him. "

"I'm to be its nominal CEO. "

"Nice for you. "

"Daddy expects me to be a figurehead. " She smiled, letting just a
bit of her supposed scheme to seize control of the consortium
seep beneath the margin of her outermost screen. Victor jumped
on it, just as she knew he would, and crashed the frangible barrier
for a thorough scan of what lay behind. He was sure that he'd laid
her mind wide open - just as her father was always sure. But
Shannon's true self was secure behind the secondary shield,
letting the intruder see only what she permitted him to; and as
Victor sorted through what he believed were the plans and dreams
of Kieran O'Connor's daughter, he himself lay vulnerable to her...
and she entered softly.

God - he was strong! By no means as intelligent and demonic as
her father, and with ambitions predictably narrow in scope. But what
a coercer, and what brutal unformed creativity was there, waiting
only to be molded and directed! He would do. Oh, yes, he would
do.

She finished her lightning penetration long before his scan was
com­plete. He had noticed nothing, and when he finally withdrew,
smiling in a patronizing way at her callow scheme to rule the
consortium, she simulated dismay at the mental violation and then
pretended to sulk.

"You'll have to do a lot better than that if you expect to put one over
on your old man. "

She let him wait, repaired outer barrier back in place, and then said,
"I suppose you could think of a better plan. "

"I might. " His eyes were fixed on the snow-depth-and-density
mon­itor and he throttled back. They had passed the dark bulk of
the shut­tered Halfway House and come into the open. There were
great drifts blocking the way now, some of them six meters high.
Victor studied their contour and composition and the nature of the
rocky terrain bur­ied beneath them, then geared down to clamber
over. An unsecured boot-bag tumbled toward the rear of the cabin
as they ascended a steep incline, zigzagged, then came back
more or less to horizontal and pro­ceeded up the invisible road.

Shannon said, "Nicely done... So my little plots interest you, do
they? I thought you wanted to form an alliance with my father. You
could report my contemplated subversion to him, you know, and
score. "

"Perhaps I'm playing an altogether different game. Just like you. "

The powerful headlights of the Sno-Crawler lit a hairpin section of
the way that doubled back along a precipice skirting the Great Gulf,
another big cirque on the north side of the mountain. They had
passed above the tree line now, but rime-coated scrub decorated
the crags and sparkled as though it were coated with sugar. Victor
accelerated, con­quered a small avalanche fall, and headed up the
icy Five-Mile Grade, an exposed section that had been swept clear
of loose snow by the nor'easter winds. Tonight the air was still.
Victor punched a control button de­ploying the tread spikes and the
crawler chewed its way upward.

Shannon said, "My father thinks he has control of my mind. My
loyalties. From the very beginning, he's used this - this technique to
bond his associates to him irrevocably. "

"It's pretty obvious the technique didn't work on you. "

"It does when I'm with him. Then I'm like all the others, under his
spell... Even at other times I can belong to him. When I'm lonely
and afraid of myself and everything else and want it all to end, then
I'm caught in his vision of the Absolute, and I know Daddy's way is
the only way that makes sense... But then he loosens his hold.
Perhaps he's too caught up in other things to bother with the little
satellite minds or­biting him and worshiping... And I remember how
he bound me. The fire racing up my spine and exploding my
senses and burning my resis­tance to ashes. It should have taken -
the bonding. But it didn't, not fully. I think Daddy may have been
inhibited because I was his daugh­ter, and his will didn't finalize the
personality conjunction. It took me a long time to remember. To
know why my own world had died along with the honest love -
daughter's love - I had felt for him. Now, when I love him, he's not
my father. When I'm myself, and I know who he is and what he did
to me, I hate him. "

The sudden explosion of approval - of kinship - that escaped him
was a profound shock to her and a revelation. He said, "Hate.
That's your antidote. Mine, too. But I've known it forever. "

She had the ski gloves in her lap and she pulled each finger
carefully, straightening it, before rolling the gloves and tucking
them into her jacket. "He'll try to bond you, too. It's the only way
he'll allow operants to be associated with him. "

Victor let out a harsh bark of laughter. "Y a pas de danger!... Or as
you micks might say - in a pig's eye! I'd like to see him break into
my skull-"

"He doesn't. That's not his way at all. He makes us love him. With
those who aren't - aren't naturally inclined to accept him, he uses a
hypnagogic drug to weaken their psychic defenses, then seduces
them. If the person recognizes what's being done, he kills them.
He's killed one hundred and eighty-three natural operants and
bonded forty-six. He finds most suitable ones when they commit
certain crimes. Scams. Conspiracies. There's a kind of suboperant
signature that he recognizes. The people themselves don't realize
that they have the powers. In the seduction, he shows them what
they can be, with his help. It's won­derful. That's why we'll do
anything for him, commit any atrocity. The man who assassinated
the Russian Premier and the Grand Mufti of Central Asia was one
of his. Daddy has a lot of reasons for wanting to foment war. His
Zap-Star satellite defense system needs concrete global villains
as targets - not just scattered groups of Islamic hotheads. "

"He's got it right, " Victor conceded. His knuckles tightened on the
wheel as the vehicle entered the Cutoff Track, bypassing another
notch that was full of deeply drifted snow. "He's done a damn good
job con­solidating power. My operation is small potatoes in
comparison. But it won't stay that way. "

"If you oppose him directly, " Shannon said, "he'll kill you. If you try
to join him, you'll end as I have. Bound. "

He was silent for several minutes, guiding the big machine through
a chaos of compacted white ice blocks. Despite the strut
suspension that dampened the worst of the lurching, the cabin
bounced and tilted and flung its occupants against their seat
harnesses like rag dolls until they finally exited the Cutoff and came
back onto the buried Carriage Road proper.

Victor said, "They all want to bind us, Shannon. Starting with our
parents, of course, at the very beginning. They say they love us
and then make conditions. They try to hold us back, to keep us
from climbing above their own puny level. They want to live through
us - on us! - like some kind of psychic vampires. That's what love
is. At least your father's version makes no bones about it. "

"I never thought about it that way. "

"Well, start. Your unconscious mind knew and you started to hate
and you started to free yourself. I've always hated them all and I've
never been bound. I take the little empty ones and use them, and
crush the mind-fucking lovers. I'll crush your father someday, and
my brother Denis, who's even worse. "

"Daddy'll get you if you let him near you. I know what your scheme
is. You think you can marry me and hold him off long enough to
take what he has. But you won't be able to help yourself. I can
sense it in your soul. The - the attraction. Daddy wouldn't have to
drug you. You'd find him irresistible. "

He was scowling, punching up snow-depth read-outs as the vehicle
crept through looming blue-white corridors. "Maybe I'd bond him to
me! Suppose you tell me just how he works it. "

Shannon opened her mind instead and showed him.

Merde et contremerde! Loathing spilled from Victor's mind before
he sealed off.

She said: The bliss of it and the welcome pain are long gone and
now the Absolute is formless and dry and all that drives me is the
need to bring him down to take the power away and have him know
that I did and for that I need your cooperation.

Victor swore again in French. He superimposed the snow-
condition analog on the true-terrain display and discovered that the
blip of the crawler was off-course. Somewhere they had missed
the Alpine Garden Link just above the Six-Mile Post of the road. It
was only a simple hiker's track cutting in a southerly direction
across the windswept up­per shoulder of the mountain. The
crawler reversed, growled slowly backward in its own tread-prints.
The headlights withdrawing made the snow-plastered crags seem
weirdly artificial, like stage sets fading out.

Shannon said: You must help me. I warned you in time. I saved you
from him.

Shut up! Let me think!

He saw the way on the right, rough as hell but open, along a gentle
slope below Nelson Crag. He began to smile, retracted the ice-
spikes, and deployed the flanges. The Sno-Crawler roared as he
gunned the engine. "Only two kilometers left to go... Tell me: how
much is your old man really worth?"

"I don't know. I doubt that he does. He controls more than a
hundred big corporations, a TV network, two airlines, a major oil
company, five big aerospace contractors - and that's only in North
America. He has links to conglomerates in Europe, Japan, and
Korea. "

"What about this political thing? Does he really control the
Repub­lican Party?"

"Not the whole thing. That'd be impossible - even for him. He does
own four Senators and nineteen Representatives from key states.
The politicians aren't operants, of course. Some are bought and
paid for, some know they're the tools of special interest but don't
realize that their strings are pulled by Daddy, and a few believe
they've managed to retain their integrity even though they've
accepted Daddy's help. Like the President of the United States. "

"President Piccolomini? My ass!"

"President Baumgartner. He'll win the Millennial election next fall.

Daddy's troupe of media consultants and PR hotshots and
political-action committee fronts have it all worked out.
Baumgartner is a force­ful spokesman for law and order. He's
hawkish on the Arab countries that have cut off our petroleum
supplies and he's wary of Russia and China. He's willing to accept
Daddy's antioperant strategy in order to exploit the backlash
against President Pic. You know how antsy the normals have been
getting, worrying about operants turning into thought police and that
kind of malarky. The Sons of Earth thing was started deliberately in
this country by Daddy's agents just to work up tensions for the
upcoming election. "

"Your old man is antioperant? I don't get it. "

"Daddy sees Pic's Brain Trust and all the public-spirited operants
as a personal threat. And they are, Victor. If there is ever any
organized metapsychic education program in this country and
operants become numerous and powerful, Daddy is bound to be
exposed as an operant himself. A maverick one. He'll be ruined.
Not financially - he's be­yond that. But his edge will be lost. His
source of power. "

They drove on and on, over a surface that was now much
smoother, tumbled granite rubble almost completely buried in
deep, crusted snow, and wind-scoured slabs of rock that had been
planed by the ice-age glaciers. In the hollows and in the lee of the
occasional crag were drifts. Glittering spicules of ice danced in the
crawler's headlights. On their left, the whiteness fell away to black
and they began to skirt the top of Tuckerman Ravine at last. They
could see the Headwall itself, a pre­cipitous apron of untouched
silver under the waning moon, which had risen above the crest of
Wildcat and Carter Dome.

Victor decelerated, changed course to avoid a dangerous cornice
of snow, then headed for the rim again. A moment later they
stopped. He cut the engine and extinguished the exterior and
interior illumination. Side by side, still imprisoned in their
harnesses, they sat looking over the drop-off. There were sparkling
strings and clusters of tiny building lights in the Wildcat Ski Area
and along Pinkham Notch, where houses and roadside
establishments lined the highway. Only a few cars and trucks were
abroad. Most of the drivers had evidently found some con­genial
place to wait the Millennium out.

Victor unfastened his straps and hers. They went into the back of
the cab to put on their ski boots and other equipment. Shannon
unpacked the flares and checked her wristwatch. It was four
minutes until mid­night. Together, they climbed onto a rippled ice
crust, carrying their skis. Victor had left the keys of the crawler in
the ignition and now he slammed the door shut without locking it.

"Are you just going to leave the thing here?" she asked.

He gestured toward the summit. The antenna complex and other
small structures were barely visible against a velvet sky dusted with
incredible numbers of stars. In one of the buildings shone a little
yellow light.

"Somebody from the weather station will put on fangy showshoes
and come down for the machine in the morning. It's a good thing
the weather's calm. Some of the windblasts across this rock pile
could blow our little ten-ton ice-buggy clear to Massachusetts. "

They bent to their bindings and put on hard hats with heated visors.
Neither had poles. Psychokinetics, whose minds are able to exert
mo­tive power affecting their own bodies, rarely have need of
them.

Shannon peeled the wrapper from her magnesium flare, activated
the ignitor, and held the smoky white light aloft. In an instant it
cleared and blazed brightly. Over to the east, fireworks were
exploding above Wild­cat's slopes and a river of golden
luminescence had begun to flow down­hill. The new year had
arrived and skiing torchbearers celebrated the unabated progress
of time.

Shannon said, "Happy New Millennium, Victor. "

He lifted his unwrapped cylinder. The tip lit with a loud concussion,
activated by his own psychocreativity. "Happy postponement of
doom, Shannon. For a little while, anyway. "

She said: Will you help me? Not merely to kill him you understand
he must be taken down at the peak of his hopes when he thinks the
black Absolute is within his grasp.

When?

It's years away... but I'll let you know. Go your own way for now
never act to threaten Daddy directly and you'll be safe from him.
He's afraid of you at the same time that he's attracted. He'll wait. I
have a plan of my own worked out. I'll explain it at the bottom of the
slope after the schuss going back through the woods...

All right.

They maneuvered to the lip of the chasm. The descent was not
ver­tical, it only seemed to be - a perfect expanse of powder,
unimaginably deep, fresh, and clean.

GO.

Their minds pushed them off. They were on their way, flares held
high, training twin plumes of nebulous white like a pair of comets
on straight parallel paths into the dark.



14

STOCKHOLM, SWEDEN, EARTH

10 DECEMBER 2003



trumpets played a fanfare and the orchestra began the national
anthem. Queen Victoria Ingrid and her entourage entered the
assembly hall of the Konserthuset and the audience, including
Lucille Remillard and Gerard Tremblay up in the loges, rose to its
feet. The ceremony had begun and the honors would be
bestowed, too late to do any good.

Lucille's dark-green velvet gown was heavy, and she adjusted its
folds unobtrusively with her PK. The metafaculty also served to
hoist the tops of the wretched long white gloves, which persisted in
slithering unmodishly down toward her elbows. Her feet, crushed
into high-heeled pumps, ached in spite of her distrait attempts at
self-redaction and so did her full breasts, deprived of baby
Severin's milking for this one day of vain celebration. Some of her
discomfort must have been evident, for Gerry Tremblay took her
left arm to steady her, projecting his usual solicitude.

Oh Gerry never mind I'm all right.

None of your bitching darling I can tell when I'm needed your
faithful esquire at your service m'lady Prop-Ups & Resuscitations
Our Spe­cialty.

Will you at least stay on the intimate mode or do you want every
meta in the place to know the laureate's wife has sore feet and
bursting boobs? There! Her Majesty's seated and down we go...
aah.

Pauvre de toi.

Oh shut up... Goodness what a lot of diamonds! And furs do you
suppose that's a sable it must be good grief what a difference
from the ceremony for Jamie and Tamara at Oslo last year so
friendly and modest -

- excepting the bomb scare!

Oh for heaven's sake you know what I mean even the King was as
friendly and downtoearth as anyone but this crowd LordLord
ostenta­tion to the eyeballs I've never seen anything like - mate-
moi ça! Can those be real emeralds let me deepsee... goodGod
they are I see the inclusions and they're like walnuts!

There goes the brass section again darling afraid we'll have to rise
again for the entrance of the heroes -

"No, madame and monsieur, " came a whispered voice. "That will
not be necessary. "

Lucille turned in surprise. The seat on her right, which had been
empty during the entrance of the Queen of Sweden, was now
occupied by a distinguished-looking older man in white tie.

"This time," he continued softly, "only the Queen rises to honor the
laureates as they enter. On this night, you see, they are mental
royalty. Her equals. "

"How charming, " Lucille murmured. The music swelled as the
lau­reates, paired with members of the Swedish institutions who
had voted them the honor, entered the auditorium. To Lucille, the
scene was unreal: the gilded hall with its statuary, rich drapery,
sconces, and flags, the young Monarch in her sparkling white dress
and tiara, standing at stage left giving anachronistic homage, and,
above all - her husband. Yes, there was Denis, looking insignificant
beside the Valkyrie splendor of a female professor of psychiatry of
the Karolinska Institute, who would introduce and laud him. She
scarcely noticed the other honorees of the evening; but behind
them were seated rows of laureates from years past - including
Jamie MacGregor and Tamara Sakhvadze, who had received the
Peace Prize in 2002. Lucille would never have intruded her mind
upon Denis at that moment; but she did not hesitate to call out to
Tamara and Jamie on their intimate modes. Both looked up toward
the loges where relatives of the laureates and other dignitaries
were seated. Tamara smiled and projected understanding and
comfort. Jamie projected an image of a winking eye and a species
of mental cartoon, in which a rather tatty figure with a Nobel
medallion hung about its neck sat on a snowy street corner
proffering a beggar's cup; behind it was a sign: brother, can you
spare a grant?

The laureates and the others bowed their heads respectfully to the
Queen and took their seats as the music played on, and then there
was applause, and the Nobel Foundation chairman approached the
lectern to give his salutatory address.

The man beside Lucille said, "It is an occasion for metapsychic
op­erants to celebrate, is it not? There is your supremely talented
husband, finally receiving the recognition he has long deserved,
and his two great colleagues among the previously honored
laureates, and the Prize in physics goes to Professor Xiong Ping-
yung, for his formulation of the new Universal Field Theory
incorporating life and mind into the math­ematical fabric of the
universe. "

"And he's probably asking, just like we are, " Gerry Tremblay put in,
"whether anyone but a handful of academics and this overdressed
Swed­ish mob scene cares. "

The old gentleman chuckled quietly. "Things are that bad in your
country?"

"And in most others, " Lucille said. "It's a grand gesture being
made here tonight, but one would appreciate it more if the pickets
outside the Concert House went away. "

"My country is a free one, as is yours, madame. But very many of
us welcome you wholeheartedly. " He bent minimally over her
hand. "I am Dr. M. A. Paulson of the Karolinska. You are known to
all, Madame la Doctoresse, and also the famous Dr. Tremblay."

"Not so famous as some, " Gerry said, with a light laugh.

"It is well known that you are an eminent colleague of the
Remillards, Doctor. Your own researches into coercivity are a
foundation-stone upon which other researchers have erected many
a scholarly edifice. Includ­ing tonight's Laureate in Medicine.
Professor Remillard has been unstinting in his praise for your work,
and his debt to you. "

"We're members of the same team, " Tremblay said. "Everything I
am, I owe to Denis." His eyes were on the platform. "I'm the one
who feels honored that he was able to make use of my findings. "

Lucille said, "Gerry and Professor Glenn Dalembert have worked
with my husband almost from the beginning, Dr. Paulson. And
there've been many other colleagues at Dartmouth making their
own invaluable contributions to the field of metapsychology. " She
smiled. "Even I. "

"But the synthesis, " Paulson whispered. "That is always the critical
matter, is it not? So many workers, all adding their share to the
growing body of knowledge - and then the one brilliant mind
fashions of the bits and pieces a coherent whole. "

"That's Denis, all right, " said Gerry Tremblay. "And tonight he's
finally being honored for it. It's a scandal that it's taken this long. "

"Some of us on the Committee think so, too, Dr. Tremblay, " the
Swedish scientist said. "But the Karolinska, especially, is a most
con­servative body. We do not honor persons for a single
discovery so much as for a continuing career of excellence. "

"Oh, come on!" said Gerry archly. "It's all politics, and you know it.
Denis's seminal work was Metapsychology, and that was published
thirteen years ago. Since then he's just been elaborating on the
theme. We all know why you waited so long, even though he's
been nominated a dozen times - and we know why the Norwegians
took ten years to cough up the Peace Prize for Jamie and Tamara.
They're the real scan­dal. Everybody in the whole damn world
knows they deserved to get the Nobel years ago, but the petty
politicians hesitated to set a precedent by honoring superior
mentalities. That's been Denis's problem, too - and even old
Xiong's. He's been plugging away at his theory for damn near
twenty years out there in Wuhan University. He was even
nominated in 1988! But when the operants acknowledged their
powers publicly, he did, too. Just a bit of telepathy and creativity,
hardly enough to bother about when the rest of his brain - the
conventional part - has Einstein beat six ways from Sunday. But
that was enough to put your Royal Academy of Science in a snit,
wasn't it? Old Professor Xiong wasn't playing fair - he was a
superbrain!"

Heads were turning as Tremblay's passionate whispering became
more and more audible. The elderly Swede listened with his head
bowed. A burst of applause signaled the end of the Nobel
Chairman's address and Gerry sat back, lips tight. Lucille's gloved
hand stole over the armrest and squeezed Gerry's hand.

Simmer down Don Quixote...

And the Committee only coughed up the Prizes out of guilt now
that the metas are being persecuted now that the normals have
turned on us...

Gerry. You're off intimate again and there must be other metas in
the audience. Please.

"What you have said is sadly true, Dr. Tremblay, " Paulson
admitted. "But we have tried to make amends, as the Norwegian
Nobel Commit­tee did in the case of Professor MacGregor and
Academician Sakhvadze. We are dismayed by the disgraceful
enmity that operants have had to suffer. Much of it has been due to
fear and misunderstanding. Can you believe that normal-minded
persons of goodwill have come to appreci­ate your predicament
more fully with the coming of public demonstra­tions of
intolerance?"

"We would like to believe it, " Lucille said softly.

Down on the stage, a member of the Royal Academy of Science
was proclaiming the merits of Xiong Ping-yung in Swedish. When
he con­cluded his remarks, he addressed a few sentences of
recapitulation in Chinese, addressing the old mathematician
directly. Then the laureate rose from his seat, crossed the stage to
the Queen, and bobbed his white head. Unlike most members of
the glittering assembly, Xiong was dressed only in a simple black
suit with a high collar. With their farsenses, Lucille and Gerry
Tremblay could perceive the exchange of remarks between the
laureate and the young Queen.

"I bow to you, Queen Victoria Ingrid, not as one who kowtows to
royalty, but to honor the beautiful living symbol of a great nation that
has honored me. "

The Queen shook his hand, a glint of humor in her eyes. "I
congrat­ulate you, dear Professor Xiong. Here is your citation, and
your medal­lion. Later, when you sit beside me at dinner in the
Stadshuset, you must explain your Theory to me. If you can help
me to make head or tail of it, I will gladly bow again to you. "

The old man laughed delightedly, made a second obeisance, and
re­turned to his seat amid applause.

"In years gone by, " Dr. Paulson whispered, "the poor old chap
would have had to go down off the stage via a flight of stairs to
greet the mon­arch - then go up those stairs backward in order to
show the proper re­spect! Our late King Gustaf abolished the
custom. We Swedes do progress, you see, but slowly. It is the
same all over the world. Old ways make way for the new, but often
only after precarious and tentative transitions. "

The winners of the Literature Prize and the Chemistry Prize were
proclaimed, but Lucille watched and listened with a distracted
mind. Paulson was right, of course. Right about the dangerous
transition pe­riod. But could he also be right about the normals
beginning to under­stand? The metapsychic backlash had only
intensified since President Baumgartner took office. His abolition
of the Brain Trust and sponsor­ship of the Benson Act prohibiting
operants from seeking public office or serving on law-enforcement
bodies was a savage piece of prejudice that the Supreme Court
was debating even now. Of course the law was unconstitutional! It
had to be...

Chin up Luce darling illegitimis non carborundum.

I'm sorry Gerry I know it's stupid of me to be brooding here.

The Nobel Prizes are going to give operants increased status you
know help us to face down Baumgartner and the witch-burning
yahoos the Court will rule in our favor it's got to we're citizens and
the Benson Act is de facto disenfranchisement.

Of course it is. Why can't the normals get it through their heads that
operancy is only relative? Its seeds are in every human mind! We
can't go back to the Dark Ages operancy IS and it will continue to
be. The trait has evolved and now it's becoming manifest in the
population and you might as well try to outlaw brown eyes!

That's becoming plainer and plainer to them but they still hold the
power and are afraid of losing it... And we're going to do something
about that too.

? Gerry ? Is this another one of her great notions?

She has a name. You'll have to use it eventually when she
becomes my wife I know you disapprove of her ideas but she's
right the only way to avoid being oppressed is to have clout.
Power.

... You are serious about her then.

Emilie agreed to a no-fault divorce last week. I didn't want to
distract you or Denis with it. You were so excited about Stockholm.
We're doing it as amicably as possible. Em will keep the house in
Hanover and the kids and continue her part-time work at the
Department. As for me... I didn't want to bother you with that either
but I'll be leaving Dartmouth. Leaving academia. Shannon and I will
be moving down to Cambridge. When the Benson Act is struck
down, I'll run for Congress.

My God!

We operants have a lot to offer to normal society. But we're
imbeciles if we sit by like pacifistic fools and let them set up the
scaffolds. Mas­sachusetts! Home of that old American custom
burning witches! It's going to be our rallying point -

Another of Shannon O'Connor's ideas?

She's operant too... even if only a little bit.

Sometimes I wonder about that!... Gerry please don't present this
to Denis as a fait accompli leave your options open for just a little
while longer discuss it with him with Glenn and Sally and Mitch and
the others we NEED you -

Not anymore you don't. What I had to give Denis took. And good
luck to him.

!!...

"I have the honor to present now our Nobel Laureate in Medicine,
Professor Denis Remillard of Dartmouth College in the United
States of America. "

The elderly Swedish doctor was nudging her gently, breaking her
out of her distraction and pointing to the glittering stage. Denis was
advancing toward the Queen, bowing in the graceful Japanese
fashion, from the waist, as Ume Kimura had taught him, speaking
to Her Majesty with smiling lips and grave, shadowed eyes. He
received the leather box with the medal and the portfolio containing
the citation, bowed again, and returned to his place. Lucille
applauded wildly, realizing that she hadn't farsensed a thing her
husband had said to the Queen.

The ovation continued as the final honoree of the evening retired,
and then a few brief words from the chairman closed the
ceremony. The trumpets blared for the last time, the Queen
withdrew, and the musi­cians played a sprightly Hugo Alfvén piece
as a recessional for the lau­reates and the others on stage. Cars
would be waiting outside to carry them, their relatives, and other
honored guests to the gala dinner at the City Hall.

Lucille realized with a start that her cheeks were wet. "Gerry, wait
for me while I go to the powder room. I'm a mess. "

She fled, leaving Tremblay standing in the aisle behind the loges
with Dr. Paulson.

"Will you be going to the dinner?" Tremblay inquired politely.

"No, I have had quite enough excitement for tonight. I will bid you
adieu, Doctor. But before I go, please accept a bit of advice from
an old man. "

Gerry tried to look receptive.

"You feel in your heart that Denis Remillard wronged you by not
granting you sufficient credit for your work. Whether he did or not is
immaterial. Do not let your envy and disappointment drive you to a
reckless course of action that may bring disaster upon you and all
of your operant associates. "

"I don't know what the hell you're talking about, " Gerry laughed.
"And I'm afraid you don't either. "

"It is hard to work with genius. I really cannot blame you for fleeing.
You know that in the laboratory you will only be competent and so
you turn the beacon of your ambition in another direction. Be
careful. You think falsely that Remillard used you. He did not - but
certain others will. "

Gerry Tremblay's face was immobile. He looked into the old man's
gray eyes, probing with all his power, and met stone.

"I didn't think you'd change your mind," Paulson said. "But I thought
I would make the try as long as I was here tonight anyway. It has
been an evening to remember. Please give my fondest regards to
Madame Remillard... and it may be some small consolation to you
to know that even the great Xiong Ping-yung owes something of
his monumental formulation to the thoughts of others. The germ of
the Universal Field Theory was suggested to him by none other
than I myself! But that was long ago and far away, and I have long
since forgotten most of my higher mathematics. A bientôt, Dr.
Tremblay. " He walked off.

A nut, Gerry told himself. A salty old Swedish nut! He probably
creeps out of the woodwork every year and makes a pest of
himself at the Prize ceremony.

Forcing himself to believe this, he went off to find Lucille.



15

CHICAGO, ILLINOIS, EARTH

27 FEBRUARY 2004



kieran o'connor: Come in, Gerry. I'm glad you could get here on
such short notice. I wouldn't have torn you two lovebirds apart so
soon after the honeymoon if it wasn't important... Shannon getting
settled in the new place?

gerard tremblay: The house is crawling with interior decorators and
carpet-layers. I'm glad to be out of the war zone for a little while.

o'connor: Got your offices all set up in Cambridge?

tremblay: Pretty well. Still trying to find the right staff.

o'connor: Don't be in a rush. Where are you recruiting? My old
Alma Mama, Harvard?

tremblay: [laughs] I'm running as a Democrat, sir.

o'connor: I understand there are still a few liberals lurking in the ivy
... Sit down, for heaven's sake, man. And don't call me "sir. " If you
can't manage "Dad, " try Kier. How about a drink? Cheer the
cockles on a cold afternoon.

tremblay: Thank you... Kier. [Looks around in awed admiration.] My
God, what a view from this office! On a clear day -

o'connor: You can see Milwaukee. Less smog than there used to
be. One good by-product of the energy shortage, at any rate...
Scotch? Sherry? Campari?

tremblay: Campari and soda would be fine.

o'connor: Did you enjoy Nuku Hiva?

tremblay: It was fantastic, sir - Kier. I don't have the EE faculty, you
see, so I've never been able to indulge in mental globe trotting. Or
the regular kind, either, on an Associate Professor's salary!

o'connor: That'll change.

tremblay: I'm looking forward to it.

o'connor: No false pride, eh? That's a healthy sign.

tremblay: Shannon and I understand each other. Her money will be
a means to an end. An end that both of us feel is infinitely
worth­while.

o'connor: That end of yours is the reason I asked you to come
here to confer with me. We don't know one another very well yet,
Gerry. That is... you don't know me. I've been interested in your
political aspirations, and I'll confess that I watched you there in
New Hamp­shire even before you and my little girl worked together
on the Millennial Democratic presidential campaign. Both of you
have made friends in the Party who'll do you a lot of good now that
you've decided to seek office yourself.

tremblay: I have Shannon's good advice to thank for any success I
might have had as a campaign aide. And of course, she funded
our caucus's effort. That took a lot of courage when the whole
country knew you were for Baumgartner.

o'connor: Shannon is a grown woman with a right to her own
opin­ions and political loyalties. Having metafaculties herself - even
though they're very modest ones - she was very upset when
Baumgartner's campaign took on an antioperant stance. She broke
with the Republican people here in Illinois over the issue and
decided to go all-out for Kennedy. And what better state to do it in
than New Hampshire?

tremblay: It was great for a gesture. But to really do something in
the political arena, one needs a state with a bigger population
base.

o'connor: [laughs] More clout! You don't have to tell me. I was born
in Massachusetts. You made a wise change of domicile, Gerry,
and I wish you good luck in your campaign... But wishes are a
penny a peck, right? I want to help you in a concrete fashion as
well. Not with money, because Shannon's got more than you need,
but with people. I want you to accept the services of two of the
finest political advisers in the country - Len Windham of
Research/Market/Data, and Neville Garrett, whose agency handles
media liaison for top people in both parties.

tremblay: Kier... I don't know what to say!

o'connor: Just say yes. They'll send people up to Cambridge
tomor­row to begin coordinating your campaign.

tremblay: Well, of course! My God, I never dreamed... a
conserva­tive like you... but why? It can't be because I'm your son-
in-law. I'm not a fool...

o'connor: Can't you read my mind, Gerry?

tremblay: No, sir! For a normal, you're one of the most opaque
men­talities I've ever run across. And we operants don't read
minds with the facility that normals credit us with. That's just one of
the myths - the misunderstandings that have got to be cleared up if
this antioperant hysteria isn't to balloon into a national tragedy.

o'connor: Exactly my own feeling. Partisan politics and
fundamen­talist bullshit shouldn't dictate national policy on an issue
as sensi­tive as metapsychic operancy. Dammit - my own little girl
is a head! I can't stand by while fanatical assholes call her and
people like her freaks or servants of Satan! This is the United
States of America, not some benighted camel-jockey theocracy
run by ayatollahs! I was deeply disturbed by the antioperant
position Baumgartner took in his last campaign and by his support
of the Benson legislation. We can thank God that the Supreme
Court tied a can to that piece of mad­ness.

tremblay: But Senator Benson has been one of your protégés for
years -

o'connor: No more, by Christ! Man's turned into some kind of
re­ligious nut in his old age. A senile Gray Eminence. I blame him
for pushing the antioperant position on Baumgartner. I don't
believe that the President sincerely espouses the vicious canards
being circulated about you people. I think he's uninformed, and
he's been influenced by bad advice.

tremblay: His antioperant stance helped win him the Millennial
election. Whether Baumgartner acted out of conviction or from
expediency -

o'connor: Yes, yes, I see what you're driving at. But what I'm trying
to say is that Baumgartner's not a lost cause! Gerry, I don't believe
Kennedy has a hope in hell of unseating the President this fall.
We're going to have another four years of Baumgartner, for better
or worse. But with you in the House of Representatives, you'll be in
a legiti­mate position to counter the antioperants. Baumgartner's
my friend. When I talk, he listens! I'll admit he hasn't been listening
lately... but we have a good chance of changing that now that the
Supreme Court has struck down the Benson Act. Baumgartner's
no fool. He'll change if it seems politic to do so. Your job - our job!
- is to upgrade the operant image so he'll be forced to repudiate
the fanatics.

tremblay: And bring back the Brain Trust?

o'connor: Mm'mm... have to go slow on that, Gerry. The old Trust
was dominated by academics who were totally out of touch with the
prevailing mood of normal voters. There was an elitist smell to
them that didn't sit well with the American psyche. It was ridiculous
for Copeland to plump for Cabinet status for what was merely a
presiden­tial advisory commission. And downright suicidal for Ellen
Morrison and those Stanford people to persist in lobbying for
universal meta­psychic testing when it was plain that the mind of
the country was against it. Once the nuclear menace was out of the
way, the Psi-Eye pro­gram began to seem more of a threat than a
benefit. You know! An American equivalent of the KGB's Twentieth
Directorate...

tremblay: When I'm elected, I'm going to push for programs that
will use operants in ways clearly beneficial to the normal majority.
No elite corps... no thought police... concentrate on good powers...
how about redaction, f'rinstance? Psychic healing works! But
wha'd'you hear about it? Nothing. EE got all the funding... yeah, and
now none of the meta programs got funding... my field, coercivity
... take delinquent kids and turn them around... funny... kind of
dizzy...

o'connor: Are you feeling all right, Gerry? You look a bit pale.

tremblay: Maybe... maybe I'm coming down with a bug. Feel
lightheaded.

o'connor: And I called you halfway across the country when you
belong in bed! Gerry, you should have told me.

tremblay: Felt... felt all right this morning... funny...

o'connor: Easy, my boy. Give me the glass. Good. Just relax.
Close your eyes for a minute or two. Close your eyes. Rest. Rest,
Gerry.

tremblay: Rest...

o'connor: Rest, Gerry. [Touches intercom.]

arnold pakkala: Yes, sir?

o'connor: Dr. Tremblay and I will be here for a while longer, Arnold.
But there's no need for you and the rest of the staff to wait.

pakkala: Whatever you say, sir.

o'connor: [after an interval] Gerry. Can you hear me? No? Can you
hear me now Gerry?

tremblay: Yes.

o'connor: Good. Relax Gerry. Relax with your eyes closed. I'm
go­ing to turn off the lights and then I want you to open your eyes
and look at me. Do you understand?

tremblay: Yes... God! The colors the colors singing purple and
gold sungold bittersweet cloud the liquid depths the colors and the
per­fume and the ambrosia O God...

o'connor: Fly away into it Gerry let me lift you fly away.

tremblay: BeautifulbeautifulGodsowonderfulamazing... God! J'ai
besoin de toi...

o'connor: Of course you need me and I need you. Fly Gerry. Fly.

tremblay: Who are you what are you don't leave me...

o'connor: Je suis ton papa ta maman ton amour ton extase!

tremblay: Extase!

o'connor: Look closely at me. Beyond the colored light.

tremblay: Bright too bright the light hurts my eyes Papa...

o'connor: There my son close your poor pained eyes see how
com­forting the black. But I had to see all of you Gerry how special
you are so much better than all the others the mind elaborated into
full trained operancy sensitive and subtle an educated mind a
psychol­ogist with professional insight into secrets hidden from
small minds yes my son my beautiful one you'll understand I'll have
so much to show you and it will bring joy to you as you serve.

tremblay: Papa why are you black now?

o'connor: The Absolute is black and I reside there. When there
was neither sun nor moon nor earth nor planets nor starry universe
there was the dark and in it was calm and an end and there will be
again.

tremblay: Black the deep black the inaccessible black from which
all things come and to which they go...

o'connor: Yes! Clever son beautifulbrained son to see in the dark
the form of the Formless the meaning of the enigma yes yes the
source of life is death and all light finds its end in deep night in the
negation of the Absolute.

tremblay: God?

o'connor: He is light we reject him and his burning.

tremblay: No no no LIGHT CREATION LIFE GROWTH DIFFER-

ENTIATION COMPLEXIFICATION MENTATION
COADUN­ATION UNITY LIGHT...

o'connor: A sham a joke a cruel hoax they lead only to pain.
Cre­ation groans! He is a God of pain we are born in it live in it die
in it he wills it for all his creatures for all growth is pain inescapable.
But there is a secret way I know a way I share with my beloved
ones in a great antithesis! We do not create we destroy the dark is
our birth­right our Black Mother whose belly is a void that takes us
in... dam dham nam tam tham dam dham nam pam pham... to
consumma­tion.

tremblay: Papa Papa I don't understand I'm afraid of the dark!

o'connor: Darkness is fearful only when viewed by the fleeing turn
around accept it embrace it know it love it.

tremblay: But how?

o'connor: Make your own darkness behind closed eyes follow me
along the Left-Hand Path an old neglected way but one that
anni­hilates the corrupting Light the painful Light follow me into the
Black and together we will know a moment of ineffable beauty the
one perfect and final joy: leading all into the void.

tremblay: I understand. It's true. I'm tired of pain. Show me. Papa
show me...

o'connor: Come.

o'connor: ... Gerry? Can you hear me, boy? Gerry?

tremblay: God. Kier? What happened. Jesus, did I pass out?

o'connor: Seems like it. How do you feel now?

tremblay: A little woozy. But I think I'm okay. Dammit, there's this flu
thing going around back East...

o'connor: I'm going to take you out to the house and we'll have Doc
Presteigne check you out.

tremblay: Listen, I'm feeling okay. Really!... Now, this lobbying you
wanted me to do on President Baumgartner. You realize that a
freshman Congressman's influence on a President of the
opposition party is going to be just about nil -

o'connor: Not so. He's going to like you, Gerry. And listen to you!
He will do as you want as I want just as you will...

tremblay: You want me to coerce him.

o'connor: That's an ugly word. Persuade him!... And the message
you'll be getting across is a very important one. We were
discussing it just before you dozed off on me, boy. Do you
remember? We want Baumgartner to keep pressing for
antioperant legislation. The Benson Act is dead, but we can lobby
for other laws that will be in our best interests. Laws restricting
operants. Who is in a better position to warn the country about
operancy's dangers than you, Gerry? You've seen them conspiring
to take power... You know what mischief ambitious or evil-minded
heads are capable of.... Don't you Gerry? Don't you?

tremblay: Yes.

o'connor: President Baumgartner has begun to get soft. We put
him in the White House and now that he's a shoo-in for a second
term the bastard's forgotten who his friends are! His mind is
normal, but he's a tough nut, Gerry. He was an astronaut and a
corporation president, you know. Nobody's patsy.

tremblay: Your other people can no longer handle him...

o'connor: So you're going to work on him. Subtly. Using
posthyp­notic suggestion and subliminal hints most of the time and
saving direct coercion for critical situations. He must never have
the remot­est notion of what you're up to. You'll have to be artful in
the pre­sentation of your public persona as well. On the face of it,
you'll be a liberal Democrat championing the rights of operant
metapsychics and other minorities.

tremblay: Yes.

o'connor: You see my overall plan, don't you Gerry! The rightness
of it the brilliance the inevitability?

tremblay: Yes yes oui oui mon cher Papa...

o'connor: Fine! Now let's get our coats. The rush-hour traffic on the
East-West Freeway should be past now, and we'll have an easy
trip out to the house. [Touches office-garage key-pad.] Frankie?
You want to bring the Bentley around? Thanks a lot.



16

WASHINGTON, DC, EARTH

20 JANUARY 2005



with her way cleared by the Secret Service bodyguard, Nell
Baumgartner rushed into the Capitol Rotunda. To be late for her
husband's second inauguration! Oh, please, God, she begged.
Not that ... And the news! How would Lloyd react? Should she tell
him now or wait until after the swearing-in ceremony?

Agent Rasmussen, holding her arm, said, "It's going to be okay,
Mrs. Baumgartner. The Chief Justice is just coming up to the
platform. You're going to make it. "

The huge white-marble chamber was chilly even though it was
packed with people - members of Congress, White House
staffers, influential Republicans, and personal friends and relatives
of the First Couple. Outside a blizzard was raging, and so the
inauguration was being held indoors for the first time since 1985.
The blizzard had delayed the First Lady's dash from Reagan
Jetport. She had landed in Washington only a half hour earlier after
flying from the bedside of her two-year-old grand­daughter,
Amanda Denton.

The Marine Band finished playing as Agent Rasmussen and the
First Lady reached the platform. She composed herself, took a
deep breath, and smiled radiantly at her husband. His returning
smile echoed relief. The child was going to be all right.

She was dimly aware of people standing close by - the Vice
President and his wife; the Senate Majority Leader, Benjamin T.
Scrope; the Speaker of the House, Elijah Scraggs Benson; and
there was the Party Chairman, Jason Cassidy, and beside him their
old friend and long-time supporter, Kieran O'Connor, with his
daughter Shannon and his son-in-law Congressman Tremblay.
Shannon Tremblay's eyes were wide with concern. Had she heard
about little Amanda's crisis? Nell Baumgartner gave the young
woman what she hoped was a reassuring wink. An instant later she
forgot Shannon as a Bible was placed in her hands - the one she
would hold while the President took his Oath of Office.

The Chief Justice of the Supreme Court stepped forward, her face
solemn. The President placed his left hand upon the book, which
was opened to Psalm 8, the prayer he had recited years ago when
he first set foot on the Moon. He raised his right hand.

"I do solemnly swear that I will faithfully execute the Office of the
President of the United States and will to the best of my ability
pre­serve, protect and defend the Constitution of the United
States. "

Then the band was playing, and he was moving to the lectern
where he would deliver the Inaugural Address, and she only had
seconds to tell him, and she thought, Should I? And it seemed that
a voice was warning her to forbear, to let it be... but she knew what
was in the speech Lloyd was about to deliver and she could not let
him go ahead without knowing -

The music was drawing to a close. Swiftly, she stepped up to him
and touched his sleeve. He turned.

"Little Amanda is all right, Lloyd, " she whispered. "The
neurologists at Johns Hopkins say it isn't epilepsy at all. Lloyd - our
granddaughter is going to be a metapsychic operant. It was the
spontaneous break­through from latency that caused the
convulsions. "

The President said only, "They're certain?" And Nell nodded, then
stepped back.

The music stopped. All eyes in the Rotunda were on the President.
He folded the sheets of paper he had just moments before placed
in front of the microphones, and put them into his inside breast
pocket. "My friends, " he began, "the Inaugural Address I had
prepared no longer seems appropriate. In order for you to
understand why, I'm going to share with you some very startling
news that my wife Nell has just brought to me... "

He paused, passing his hand across his forehead, and there were
mur­murs of amazement from the audience. But then he
straightened and spoke resolutely for ten minutes, and at the end
there was a shocked silence, and then subdued applause with a
rising undercurrent of voices that the Marine Band finally drowned
out with "Hail to the Chief. "

Shannon O'Connor Tremblay said: Well Daddy?

And her father replied: It will be up to Gerry and he damn well
better not let us down.



17

FROM THE MEMOIRS OF ROGATIEN REMILLARD

halloween 2007.



I have a zapshot here before me to jog my memories of that day. It
shows three cunning little devils - my great-nephews Philip,
Maurice, and Severin, aged ten, eight, and four at the time -
costumed as imps for the holiday, in a blatant piece of typecasting,
by their long-suffering nanny Ayeesha.

Thanks to Ghostly confidences, I knew at the time that the boys
would grow up to be Founding Magnates of the Concilium. Thanks
to Ghostly compassion, I did not know that one of them would
perish in the Metapsychic Rebellion of 2083, fighting to extricate
the human race from the Galactic Milieu... But that is another story
that must wait to be told. I will write now of events that led to the
Intervention, and my own peculiar role as a bit player in them...

All that day, my bookshop had been under siege by poltergeists,
for by then Hanover crawled with the offspring of operant
metapsychics. Ev­ery Halloween, in the old American tradition,
local merchants endured an endless stream of costumed
youngsters extorting treats, the donation of which was supposed to
render one immune from tricks. In my youth, trick-or-treat
escapades were tame: soaped windows, upset trash cans,
demounted garden gates, toilet-paper festoons on shrubs and - in
the case of notorious neighborhood ogres - walks and porches
defiled with smashed jack-o'-lanterns and rotten eggs. In the new
Age of the Mind, however, Halloween had become the one day in
the year when operant youngsters could release their inhibitions
more or less with impunity. Reined in by parental coercion the rest
of the time, the kids tended to go bananas once they put on their
costumes and set out to pillage and plunder. By unwritten law the
deviltry was restricted to those under the age of twelve, and no
property was to be destroyed or rendered so befouled or bollixed
as to require expensive repairs. Aside from that, the sky was the
limit.

My bookshop, as I have mentioned, primarily suffered the
onslaught of poltergeists. The books on the shelves would dance
and tumble to the floor; the window displays (of expendable
volumes) were in a perpetual state of manic frenzy; the little
customer reading area in the front right-hand part of the store had
chairs and ashtrays dancing and rag rugs curling and writhing on
the floor. Poor Marcel LaPlume, my huge Maine Coon cat, had
retreated to the basement storage room after being har­assed one
time too many by hailstorms of Cat Chow levitated from his dish
and mind-generated static charges that set his fur crackling. I had a
big bowl of Snickers candy bars as tribute to the invaders, but as
often as not the operant children would thank me for the treat - then
pull off the trick anyhow on their way out of the shop.

Another unwritten rule was that the depredations should cease by
2200 hours. My shop was not ordinarily open so late on weekdays,
but only a madman would have closed up early on Halloween and
left the premises unguarded. That year, as the evening of pranks
came to a close, I wondered why I had not yet been visited by
Denis and Lucille's children. As it drew on toward quarter to ten, I
concluded that they were saving me until last, and had planned
some particularly gross piece of mischief for poor old Uncle Rogi.

My farsense tingled. I looked up from the catalog I had been
perusing and caught a glimpse of disappearing horns and red
grease-painted small faces outside. My deep-vision identified the
lurkers and I braced myself.

The door opened by itself and the chime rang eerily. Three
telepathic voices sang:



Did you ever think, as a hearse goes by,

That you might be the next to die?

They wrap you up in a long white sheet,

And bury you down about six feet deep!



Giggles, instantly squelched, came from the mind of four-year-old
Sevvy. The songsters paused... and I saw coming in the door and
inching along the polished floorboards a flood of white, slimy little
things - hundreds of them - glistening as they looped and squirmed
into my shop. And the inevitable chorus of the old children's song:



The worms crawl in! The worms crawl out!

The worms play pinochle in your mouth!

Your body turns a mossy green,

And pus runs out like thick ice cream!



The three juvenile devils, shepherding their obscene cohort, came
bounding in, squealing and laughing.

Trick or treat Uncle Rogi!

The books danced a fandango. The drawer of my antique cash
register flew open with a jangling crash and the bills and loose
change fountained up, then rained down into the midst of the
wriggling maggoty mass on the floor.

"Call them off!" I bellowed.

Promise to teach us dirty French!

"Jamais!"

The worms crawl in the worms crawl out...

"That does it, " I intoned ominously. "There's only one way to deal
with this situation. " I reached into my trouser pocket. "Beware!
Be­ware, all you alien invaders! Beware the power of the Great
Carbuncle!"

I held up my key chain, with its dangling fob of a red-glass marble
caught in a little metal cage. Using an old trick of creativity that had
long delighted the children, I made the thing glow. At the same
time, I smote the three young minds with my adult coercion,
freezing them in the midst of their capers and cutting off the PK
motive-power of the lolloping larvae.

The boys screamed. Their tongues protruded and their eyes
bugged out of their grotesquely painted faces, and one after
another they fell to the floor - at a safe distance from the now
motionless melange of icky lucre and nameless white things.

I waved the Great Carbuncle over the lot of them in a coup de
grâce, then laughed and canceled the coercion. The boys jumped
up shrieking with mirth and I told them to wait while I loaded my
still-video camera with a fresh floppy disk. They posed, grimacing,
while I took their zapshot.

"Let's see it! Let's see it!" they shouted, and would have raced into
the back room of the shop where the computer and video-printer
were if I hadn't once again stopped them in their tracks.

"Who, " I demanded sternly, "is going to clean up this disgusting
mess?"

Little Severin grinned up at me winsomely. "It's only cut-up
spa­ghetti, Uncle Rogi. Didn't it make great worms?"

"Great, " I sighed, wondering how many of my fellow merchants on
Main Street had been similarly victimized.

"Let's print the picture!" Philip said.

"Do it quick, Uncle Rogi, " Maury added. "Mom'll kill us if we don't
get home by twenty-two. "

I took a plastic sack and three pieces of cardboard out of my
wrapping supplies. "First you take these, and scoop up the worms
and the money. When you get home tonight I expect you to sort
the money out, wash it, and bring every nickel of it back to me
tomorrow after school. "

The telephone rang. Admonishing the imps to get cracking, I
an­swered. It was Denis, not wanting to trust my telepathy.

"We've had some bad news. " Immediately he added, "Not any of
the family. But I want you to come over to the house. This new
develop­ment makes the damn Coercer Flap look like a practical
joke. "

"The kids are here. I'll bring them. " I hung up. "Leave that! Bas les
pattes, kids, we're going home. "

Their minds caught my serious intent instantly and they changed
from devils into obedient operant children. I turned off the shop
lights and we hustled out and around the corner and down South
Street a block and a half to the family home. There were only a few
costumed children still abroad. We hurried past the library, where
the collection of pumpkins carved by Hanover youngsters and
displayed in the forecourt was a predictable shambles. I was
surprised to see five cars parked in front of Denis and Lucille's
place. As we tramped up the front steps the door opened and the
nanny, Ayeesha Al-Joaly, who was strongly suboperant, shooed
the children upstairs and indicated to me mentally that I should join
the others in the living room.

Most of the Coterie was there. Glenn and his wife Colette, Sally
and Tater McAllister, and big Eric Boutin, who had taken over as
Denis's chief PR person with the defection of Gerry Tremblay,
were gathered around a bound atlas open on the coffee table,
talking in low voices.

Denis, Tukwila Barnes, and Mitch Losier were seated on dining-
room chairs, side by side, with Lucille hovering behind them. All
three were in a state of EE trance. The TV set on the wall had its
audio turned off and the picture showed a murky aerial view of
some city on a plain with a considerable mountain range in the
background. Many of the city buildings were in flames and others,
broken and devastated, poured out clouds of black smoke.

"My God, what's happened?" I cried.

Lucille hurried to me, her finger to her lips, mentally indicating the
excorporeals who were obviously in the process of farsensing the
disas­ter. She said:

Alma-Ata. And other places as well. It looks as though full-scale
civil war has broken out in Soviet Central Asia, abetted by
outsiders. They targeted Alma-Ata especially because of the
operant educational facility at the university.

Tamara - ?

Safe! After the Congress in Montreal she and the three children
and Pyotr stopped off on the way home to stay for a time with
Jamie in Edinburgh... You knew that Tamara's middle son Ilya and
Katie MacGregor announced their engagement last week?

No.

Well they did. And the pair made a trip to Islay to see Jamie's old
grandmother who's 96 and they took their time because you know
how grim things have been in Alma-Ata this year with the fighting so
close by. They were to leave for home two days from now it's
some kind of miracle that they escaped but the others the best of
the Soviet academic operants the cream of the researchers oh
Rogi the PEACEMAKERS so many of them concentrated there
the top minds God the university area is a fire-storm Tucker is
scanning the situation but we're afraid we're so afraid...

What time is it in Alma-Ata?

Early morning. Everyone was on the commute in the streets
students and teachers and all the university people the planes
came from Peshawar in Pakistan over the high ranges Stealthed of
course and So­viet Muslim sympathizers sabotaged phased-array
radars in Pamirs and a key detector-satellite relay of course
Moscow scrambled their inter­ceptors but it was too late suicidal
Muslim pilots screaming Din! Din! Din! certain they were on their
way to Paradise -

Tukwila Barnes, the Native American who was probably the most
talented EE adept in the Coterie, opened his eyes and made a
small moaning sound. Lucille turned away from me and rushed to
help him. He was ashen and trembling and his black eyes spilled
tears. He began to twitch and flail his arms involuntarily then, as
though he were falling into some kind of epileptic fit. I strode over
and helped Lucille hold him while Colette Roy gave him a shot of
something. When the medication hit him he crumpled, but he was a
lightweight and I caught him easily and carried him to one of the
couches. Somebody brought an afghan to cover him and Colette
propped his head with cushions. We all stood there waiting for him
to pull out of it. When he did, there was no need for him to speak.
From his shocked mind poured images of holocaust, broadcast at
an awful psychic amplification. From elsewhere in the house I
heard the little Remillard boys shriek out loud and the baby, two-
year-old Anne, begin a panicky wailing.

"Shit, " whispered Glenn Dalembert. He knelt beside Tucker and
placed a hand on his forehead. He was the most powerful coercer
in the group aside from Denis, and as he took hold of the EE
adept's mind the cataract of nightmare sensations chopped off.

He said, "Got him. Colette, you and Lucille see to the kids. "

Slowly, Barnes responded to the sedative. His eyes calmed and
when he finally said, "Okay, " Glenn turned him loose. Sally Doyle
proffered a glass of water. Tucker shook his head. "Not now...
might barf... God, I don't see how any of them could have
escaped. "

"Did they drop nukes?" Eric Boutin asked.

Barnes shook his head. "Conventional high explosives - but top-of-
the-line. Alma's not that big a city. Eleven planes got through and it
was enough. The university is just gone. "

Nobody said anything. Nobody even seemed to be thinking
anything.

Finally, Glenn said to Tucker, "J ust lie there. We're still waiting for
Denis and Mitch to get back. Denis is overviewing and Mitch went
to check out the Kremlin. Soviet news says that the whole goddam
Cen­tral Asian region erupted in simultaneous armed revolt. They
claim to be on top of things - but about twenty minutes ago CNN
reported that there had been a big Iranian attack on the Soviet oil
fields and refineries around Baku on the Caspian Sea. "

"Supported by a ground insurrection, " said Denis.

Everybody turned around.

He had risen from his chair, and although his face was pinched and
pale and his eyes seemed to peer from deep inside his skull, he
was in full control of both body and mind. He went to the fireplace,
where a blaze had been kindled in honor of the holiday, and
warmed his hands. Colorful gourds, pumpkins, and corn dollies
were displayed on the man­tel.

"First I did a broad scan, roughly below the forty-fifth parallel, "
Denis said. He watched the leaping flames. "I tried to farsense
massive stress emanations from among the normal populace.
There seemed to be a dozen or more distinct foci between the
Tien Shan and the Caspian:

Alma-Ata, Frunze, Tashkent, Dushanbe... Let me see that atlas. "
He went to the coffee table and bent over the map, stabbing with
his finger. "Here, here, here - all these cities east of Tashkent
where the Uzbek revolt was concentrated. Up for grabs again. " He
turned to another page showing the Caspian region. "I did a closer
scan in here, around Baku and up the west coast of the sea. This is
the Azerbaidzhan Republic, a tough bunch of Turks with a history
of resistance to Moscow rule. What evidently happened was that a
flight of B-1Ds from Tehran came in at near water-level and
bombed hell out of Baku itself, its two big pipelines and the railroad
and highway links to the west, and the other pipeline and refinery
complex up the coast at Makhachkala. The local insurgents
simultaneously set off blasts in just about every refinery, pumping
sta­tion, and airfield from Makhachkala south to the Iranian border.
"

"Christ, " said Tater McAllister. "Coupled with the oil losses from
the Uzbek fields, this new strike really puts the Soviets in deep shit.
"

Denis said, "The Azerbaidzhan region will be very hard for Moscow
to pacify using ground forces. They've already sent in paratroops
and gunboats from the naval base at Astrakhan on the Volga, but
the Uzbek revolt left the Red Army short of reliable infantry and
armor units. This new flare-up may be more than Kumylzhensky
can handle without heavy air-strikes against the insurgent cities - or
even the tactical use of neutron bombs... "

I said, "The damn country's falling apart!"

"Not quite, " Denis said. "It can cut its losses by abandoning the
Central Asian republics and concentrating on regaining the really
crit­ical Azerbaidzhan region... It's only a matter of time, I'm afraid,
before Moscow declares war on Iran and Pakistan. " He glanced at
Mitch Losier, who was still sitting in his straight chair, lost in the EE
aether. "When Mitch gets back, he may have some information
about that. "

Lucille and Colette returned from dealing with the children, and
Denis flashed them a detailed recap of his discoveries. We all
found places to sit down. (I was on the floor in a corner, keeping
my mouth and mind shut now as became one who was only an
honorary member of the Coterie.) Eric Boutin deftly served coffee
and tea from the Krupps unit built into the low table. The
conversation fragmented.

Lucille told Denis that the children had been calmed and a
redactive wipe-job performed upon their trauma, which was
fortunately shallow. Ayeesha had taken a tranquilizer and was
saying her worry beads. Tukwila Barnes declared that he was
famished and brought in the bas­ket of candy treats that had been
left in the front hallway to serve the neighborhood urchins. Tater,
Glenn, and Colette discussed the latest developments in the
Coercer Flap, starring the black sheep of the Co­terie, Gerard
Tremblay. The Congressman from Massachusetts now stood
charged with the crime of aggravated assault upon the President of
the United States and interfering with a federal official in the
perfor­mance of his official duties. Justice Department lawyers
were wrangling over what other charges might apply in the case.
Gerry had done the dirty deed on Monday. This was Wednesday.
One might wonder what other surprises the week had in store...

And one would not have long to wait before finding out.

Mitch Losier coughed, opened his eyes, and sighed. He was the
most solid and comfortable-looking of the Coterie, which ran to
ectomorphic cerebral types. His tonsure of graying hair gave him
the air of a kindly pastor or a country doctor. With the attention of
the group now riveted on him - for he had excursed to Moscow - he
stood up, stretched, and went to the table to accept a cup of tea
from Eric. He added sugar and then made his contribution to the
roster of catastrophe.

"Moscow has declared war against each and every Islamic nation
of the world. While reserving the right to retaliate in response to
today's attacks, it will forbear force of arms temporarily and attempt
to resolve the conflict through peaceful means, in consultation with
the heads of state of Iran, Pakistan, Turkey, and the Kashmiri
Republic. "

"Thank God!" Lucille cried.

"That's the good news. " Mitch stirred his tea and sipped. "The bad
news is, that motherfucker Kumylzhensky has arrested every
metapsychic operant in the Soviet Union. In the light of today's
surprise strike, he feels their loyalty to the nation is deeply suspect.
They are to be interrogated and held in custody until the state of
internal emer­gency has passed, and then put on trial for treason. "



In those dark days, when even persons of goodwill were soul-
burdened with the malign aetheric resonances of hatred, fear, and
suffering, there were many people in the United States who
watched the disintegration of the Soviet Union with righteous
triumphalism: the godless Commies had finally got what was
coming to them. For the Sons of Earth move­ment, however, the
Soviet misfortune had an ironic twist. To the Sons - who had very
nearly become respectable among the American underclass by
that time - all operants, including most especially the Soviets, were
involved in a conspiracy to destroy religion, freedom, and the
sovereign rights of individuals. Yet here was the Red military
dictator himself denouncing the superminds as "the greatest
menace the Communist Revolution has ever faced. " As
Kumylzhensky thundered on about the alleged misdeeds of the
Twentieth Directorate, it became evident to world observers that
the KGB as a whole had been acting to bring about the downfall of
Party and military right-wingers, and restore the impetus toward an
open society in the Soviet Union that had been so trag­ically
reversed following the death of Kumylzhensky's predecessor. Ex-
corporeal excursions by outsiders into the cells of the purged
operants revealed their motivation to the world. The EE adepts of
dozens of nations became witnesses for the defense - at least in
the forum of public opinion. Even the most naive and fearful
normals eventually came to believe that the imprisoned Soviet
operants had been a force for good, not evil.

In America, the hard-core membership of the Sons of Earth would
eventually talk their way around this ideological paradox; but the
movement had lost much of its momentum, along with any
semblance of a moral base for its antioperant position. All over the
world religious leaders - even some Muslims - made resounding
statements in favor of operant civil rights. The Pope finally got
around to issuing an encyc­lical, Potestates Insolitae Mentis,
affirming that human metapsychic powers are a part of the natural
order, by no means devilish, and as "good" in the eyes of God as
any other part of his creation - provided those powers are not
abused.

It was a watershed time, even though we operants did not realize it.
From then on, even in spite of the Coercer Flap and other operant
high crimes and misdemeanors, the surge of blind antioperant
prejudice be­gan to decline. The reversal was not an overnight
affair. Pockets of antioperant fanaticism remained in the United
States and would be exploited on the very eve of the Intervention.
But the majority of oth­erwise worthy people who had been
infected by fear and the prejudice of ignorance slowly experienced
a change of heart that would bear unex­pected fruit just when the
most valiant champions of operancy faced their darkest hour.



18

BAIE  COMEAU, QUEBEC, EARTH

5   FEBRUARY 2008



"WE have all waited a long time for this!" Victor Remillard was
speaking his Yankee version of Canuckois into a loud-hailer. "And
it seemed as though the damned process was never going to work
right, and some of us were tempted to abandon the project, and
dump the holy bacteria and their dedicated keepers into the Saint-
Laurent... I know I was tempted. "

The bundled-up audience of refinery workers and gaugers and
tanker crew members yelled and whistled their appreciative
unbelief, and their thoughts were plain to read: You, boss? Give
up? Tu te fiches de nous! Don't try to kid us!

Victor gave a comical shrug and joined in the laughter. He was
wear­ing an old mangy raccoon coat and a long knitted muffler and
a white hard hat like those of the workers - only dirtier and more
dented. Standing beside him, Shannon O'Connor could not have
been more of a contrast, swathed in ankle-length arctic fox and
holding an empty silver champagne bucket. It was her tanker
waiting at dockside to take on the cargo.

"When we conquered the production problems, we discovered we
had distribution problems, " Victor declaimed. "And we solved that,
too. And today this refinery of ours is ready to ship its first batch of
lignin-derived gasohol fuel to energy-starved Europe!"

Everybody cheered.

"I know you're wondering why we're standing out here freezing our
petards off, while inside the plant all those pampered germs are
gobbling pulpwood in nice warm vats and shitting liquid gold. So I'll
cut the speechmaking short and show you just what we've been
waiting for - and what Mme. Tremblay's tanker's been waiting for!"

There were more cheers while Shannon handed him the silver
bucket in exchange for the hailer. Victor positioned the container
under a huge flexible hose that had been jury-rigged for the
occasion and yelled, "Dupuis - open 'er up! But easy, for the love
of God!"

The Chief Chemical Engineer of the facility, who was stationed at a
redundant manual valve manifold outside the control shed, gripped
a big wheel. He turned it a fraction of a centimeter and pinkish
liquid dribbled into the champagne cooler. An acrid organic odor
spread through the frigid air.

"Yo!" Victor hollered, and the flow ceased. He carried the bucket
over to a venerable black Mercedes, his official vehicle during his
supervi­sory visits to the Baie Comeau plant of Remco
International. The car had been decorated in honor of the day's
festivities with Canadian and American flags and bunches of
multicolored balloons. The manager of the refinery slipped a
plastic funnel into the fuel tank. Victor poured the liquid to loud
applause.

"And now, my friends - we come to the moment of truth! Have we
really manufactured a revolutionary new fuel... or is it only bug pee
after all?"

While the workers were laughing he slipped behind the wheel. The
engine started up with a roar, and the renewed cheers were
drowned out when the tanker that towered above the pumping
station sounded its great diaphone horn.

Everybody knew that the car had been all warmed up and primed
to go, but the symbolism was all that counted. Victor jumped out,
leav­ing the engine running, opened the other door for Shannon,
and bowed her in during a final bout of clapping. Then they drove
off the quay and the ceremony was over. The crowd dispersed and
the hose-handling derrick on the ship lowered its cable to begin the
cargo-loading process.



They drove out of town toward the new airport, for she would have
to go directly to Washington to confer with the eminent criminal
lawyers who were preparing Gerry's case. Victor slowed the
Mercedes and pulled off the road into a deserted log-scaling yard
where trees hid them from passing traffic. He stripped the
decorations off the car, dumping the flags into the trunk and letting
the helium-filled balloons waft away into the leaden sky. Then he
got back in and they sat there.

"Why did your father let you do it?" he asked.

"He thinks he's fattening you for acquisition. He's been watching
your situation very keenly in spite of the fireworks in Washington.
The way you weathered the capital crunch - squeaked through
without losing control of the process - impressed him no end.
Beware of sharks trolling bait. "

"Just let him try... Is this scandal of your husband's some of your
doing? Are you using him to set your father up?"

Shannon laughed, a throaty, appetite-laden sound. "Why don't you
read my mind?"

"I've done that already. "

He pulled her toward him and his icy lips and tongue possessed
her hot mouth. Her white fox toque fell from her head and the long
auburn hair flamed against the pale fur of her coat. His hand
tightened, cupping her skull, and she moaned, her mind crying her
need. Victor's other hand nearly encircled her neck. The fingertips
against her upper spine seemed to be drawing energy from her
supercharged pelvic nerves, draining -

No please Vic not that way damn you not that way let's try it for
once my way please please!

No.

It's not love you fool there's no real loss no bonding why won't you
there's nothing of him only me why not please oh do it -

I'll give you your pleasure I owe you that but in my own way...

Bastard!... Oh God how I hate you how I hate you

Hold on to that. Guard it very carefully until you're ready to
exchange him for me.

"At least he's human, " she wept aloud. "But you..." She screamed
then as the orgasms began, and was lost to warmth.



19

FROM THE MEMOIRS OF ROGATIEN REMILLARD



Now I shall have to tell you about Gerry Tremblay, once a valued
member of Denis's Coterie, whose spectacular disgrace was one
of those backhanded blessings that seem to prove God's sense of
humor.

The Pope's encyclical dealt frankly with the great sources of
tempta­tion that must accompany powerful operancy - a sinister
fact of life that the American metapsychic establishment, in
particular, had long tried to sweep under the rug. This ostrich
attitude, a tendency to discount the possibility of disaster until it
smacks you in the teeth, was probably quintessentially American.
Even in the worst of times, we were a people who hoped for the
best and believed that good intentions covered a multitude of sins.
Because we were a young nation, because we skimmed the cream
of the planetary Mind, and because our land was unarguably the
richest and most fortunate on Earth, Americans had the arrogance
of the golden adolescent upon whom fate smiles. We thought we
were invincible as well as stronger and smarter than everyone else.
We suffered a periodic comeuppance but bounced back as
triumphalistic as ever. Even today, citizens of the Human Polity of
the Galactic Milieu who are of American extraction tend to display a
tiresome smugness about their heritage.

At the turn of the twenty-first century, the American metapsychic
establishment shared the national flaw. It had deplored the Nigel
Weinstein affair, but explained it away as a piece of temporary
insanity. The atrocities of the Flaming Assassin were more patently
criminal - but they, too, could be attributed to a madman. In other
parts of the world, where there were fewer cultural inhibitions
against the public avowal of operancy, there had been crimes
committed in which metapsychic powers were used with obvious
malice aforethought. In America - for reasons that became clear
only after the Intervention - few such crimes were ever prosecuted;
and none of them, until Tremblay's, had the aspect of a cause
célèbre. American operant leaders had tended to sidestep the
ethical aspects of their gifts and concentrate instead on the
scientific and social applications of them. The few per­sons, such
as Denis, who knew of the existence of evil and exploitative
operants found themselves hamstrung by gaps in our legal
system. American law, with its reverence for individual rights,
makes no pro­vision for the mental examination of suspected
criminals. The very idea is contrary to the Fifth Amendment to the
Constitution, which says that no person shall be compelled in a
criminal case to be a witness against himself. However, if this
principle holds, certain types of oper­ant criminal activity can never
be proved beyond a reasonable doubt. The Scottish jurors had
come to this conclusion in the Weinstein case. It seems likely that
Kieran O'Connor and Representative Gerard Tremblay (D-Mass. )
counted upon escaping retribution in a similar manner when they
conspired to coerce the President. O'Connor's role in the affair
was never proved. Poor Gerry got what was coming to him - and
forced a fundamental revision of operant ethics at the same time
that he became the ultimate cause of Kieran O'Connor's undoing.

As I have stated earlier, I never really liked Gerry Tremblay. One
might credit prescience or redactive insight - or perhaps just the
old Franco instinct for smelling a rat. Psychoanalysts would
doubtless point out that it was Gerry's deep-seated insecurity and
envy that laid him wide open to O'Connor's peculiar brand of
sorcery. He was certainly besotted with his wife Shannon, who
pretended to mold Gerry to her father's specifications at the same
time that she was planning the ru­ination of both of them.

After Gerry was elected to his first two-year term in 2004, he
served on the House Special Committee on Metapsychic Affairs,
where his unique position as the only operant congressman
assured him of con­tinuing publicity and growing influence. The
stance he took was sur­prisingly conservative, dismaying the
operant establishment. He helped kill a measure that would have
set up federally funded training schools for operant children. In a
speech that was widely televised, he pointed out that this very sort
of program - which was being followed in a number of liberal
countries such as Japan, West Germany, Great Brit­ain, the
Netherlands, and the Scandinavian nations - was leading to the
formation of elite groups of operant children, the same kind of
group that had tried and failed to take political control of the Soviet
Union. While the Soviet operants had evidently worked on the side
of the angels, could one assume that all operants would inevitably
be so high-minded? Representative Tremblay, an operant himself,
counseled great caution. He declared that Americans should
remain aloof from any schemes that would distance operant
youngsters from normals and fos­ter unhealthy illusions of
superiority. While he was not in favor of having obstacles put in the
way of operant training per se, he hoped that it would always be
seen as an adjunct to regular public or private schooling - with
operant and normal children educated together. This was the
American way, avouched the Gentleman from Massachusetts, and
the best way - for the sake of the young operants themselves and
the nation as a whole.

Gerry's speech was a smash, and he was well on the road to the
big time. Progressive operants tried in vain to point out that federal
funding of their programs was vital. In those depressed times, the
states had no tax revenues to spare for operant training; private
facilities for operants, except at institutions such as Dartmouth,
MIT, Stanford, and the Uni­versities of Texas, Virginia, and
California-Davis, where there were long-standing Departments of
Metapsychology - were too expensive for the majority of gifted
children. Minds would be wasted, the operants warned.

Not so, replied Tremblay. In time, when the nation could afford it,
Congress would reconsider funding a generalized operant
education pro­gram. But these were perilous days. America was
threatened not only by unemployment, inflation, and shortages, but
also by the escalating Holy War of the fundamentalist Muslims,
which now had spread further into Africa, India, and the East
Indies; and China had taken a mysterious turn toward isolationism
that alarmed both its neighbors and the United States. Tremblay
told his fellow operants to be patient - and to ask not what their
country could do for them, but what they could do for their country.

As the agent of Kieran O'Connor, Gerry Tremblay was given two
important assignments. The first was to influence both the
President and Democratic members of Congress in favor of
O'Connor's military-industrial contractors, especially those
connected to the Zap-Star sat­ellite defense system, the new ON-1
Space Habitat, and the proposed Lunar Base. Gerry was
successful in this area because Baumgartner was committed to a
strong military posture and to the American space pro­gram, and
liberal Democrats who favored the latter could rather easily be
made to see the high-tech side benefits of the former.

Gerry's second assignment was to discourage Baumgartner from
granting special privileges to operants, thus denying a power base
to the operant establishment. The defeat of the Operant Education
Bill was a great start for Gerry... but immediately after that he
realized that O'Connor's second mandate was a no-hoper.

The factor that disrupted the carefully laid scheme was a small
one: the President's grandchild, Amanda Denton. Baumgartner's
antioperant feelings, never too firmly grounded in personal
conviction, were shaken by the religious leaders' statements on the
matter - and then utterly shattered by the little girl. She was a
resident in the White House, along with her parents and two older
brothers. Ernie Denton, the husband of Baumgartner's only
daughter, served as a presidential aide; and when­ever the Chief
Executive felt depressed, he'd send Ernie off to fetch Amanda.
The child was both charming and good for what ailed the
President. (She grew up to be a Grand Master Redactor, a
superlative metapsychic healer. ) And with Amanda cavorting about
the Oval Of­fice, Gerry Tremblay didn't have a prayer of
reinstituting the antioperant mood that had characterized
Baumgartner's first term.

This was a serious worry to O'Connor. In 2006, Gerry was re-
elected to the House... but so were seven other operants from
liberal states. Bills were introduced to reorganize and upgrade the
EE Service of the Defense Department, which had been starved
for funds during the past four years. The FBI, concerned that
Islamic terrorists might once again target American cities, pressed
for the recruitment of operant agents. There was a predictable
outcry from conservatives; but such agents were widely used now
in other countries and had proved effective - if unpopular.

And then came the greatest threat thus far to O'Connor's schemes.
He had been grooming his creature, Senator Scrope, to run for
president in 2008, since Baumgartner was restricted to two terms
by the XXII Amendment to the Constitution. But the country now
perceived the charismatic Baumgartner to be the Man on a White
Horse who would save it from the maelstrom engulfing the rest of
the world. In spite of all O'Connor's lobbying efforts, Congress
passed a repeal of Article XXII in May 2007, and by the middle of
October the necessary three-fourths of the state legislatures had
ratified it. Baumgartner was free to run again, if he chose to do so.
And if he did, the next four years boded ill for O'Connor and his
secret operant cabal.

On 27 October, a delegation of the Republican National
Committee (not including Chairman Cassidy, who had lost control
of the organi­zation) was scheduled to call on the President and
formally request him to run for a third term. O'Connor's instructions
to Gerry Tremblay were explicit. There could be no more subtlety.
Gerry was the only O'Connor partisan with free access to the West
Wing having the mental muscle for a full coercive thrust. He was to
arrange for an appointment with the President immediately
following that of the delegation, so he could station himself in the
Oval Office's anteroom. From there he would eavesdrop
telepathically, and at the critical moment compel the Presi­dent to
say that he believed the repeal of Article XXII to be an unwise and
dangerous move - and that under no circumstances would he run
again.

It was a desperate scheme and it might have worked, for
Baumgartner would have contradicted his own public image of firm
decisiveness if he repudiated the statement - and to charge that he
had been coerced would put him in an even worse position. He
would know his mind had been tampered with; but he would not
know who had done it - or when it might happen again - and
O'Connor was certain that sublim­inal follow-up thrusts by Gerry
over the next few weeks would demor­alize him and force him to
accept the inevitable. At worst, Baumgartner would seem to be
suffering a nervous breakdown and his allegations of mental
compulsion would be unprovable.

The day came. Gerry arrived early for his appointment and was
shown into the anteroom to wait by a White House usher who fell
victim to his more subtle coercive wiles. Gerry watched as another
usher shepherded in the delegation, together with a single minicam
video journalist who would record the historic moment. Gerry
suffered a brief qualm when he recognized an operant among the
delegates, Dr. Beatrice Fairweather of the University of Virginia;
but there seemed to be little danger of her detecting the coercive
impulse. Her metafaculties were not strong, and she would have no
reason to suspect that Baumgartner was being men­tally
manipulated.

The door to the Oval Office closed, leaving Gerry seated as close
to it as he could get. Two oblivious aides worked at desks on the
opposite side of the room. He exerted his farsenses and
summoned a close-up image of the President.

There was a spate of greetings and preliminary chitchat, and then
the delegation spokesman, the former Governor of Delaware, got
to the heart of the matter:

"Mr. President, we have brought to you a request of the most
critical importance, dictated by the Republican Party and also by
millions of American citizens who have flooded our offices with
their letters, videograms, and phone calls. The Twenty-Second
Amendment to the Constitution was repealed for one reason and
for one reason only - so that you would not have to step down from
the presidency at this time when our beleaguered nation needs
your continuing guidance so des­perately. So I put the question to
you frankly. Will you accept the nomination in 2008?"

Gerry took hold of Lloyd Baumgartner's mind in that instant. He saw
from the President's eyes, heard with the President's ears, spoke
with the President's mouth and vocal cords.

"Ladies and gentlemen, this is an extraordinary honor that you offer
me, and I want to assure you that over the past week I have been
thinking and praying over it -"

WHAT ARE YOU DOING TO MY GRANDPA?

"- so that this decision I give you today represents my carefully
considered judgment, what I believe will best serve the needs of
our great nation. I must decline - I must decline -"

GRANDPA! GRANDPA! YOU LET GRANDPA OUT OF HIS
HEAD!

Through the President's eyes, Gerry saw the door of the Oval
Office fly open and Amanda, like a pinafore-clad avenging angel,
dash directly toward the desk where her grandfather sat. Far
behind her, out in the anteroom, Ernie Denton stood gaping at the
enormity of his five-year-old daughter's presumption.

"- I must decline -"

Baumgartner was fighting the hold. And the damn child was
slashing at him with all her raw infant strength. Gerry's sight of her
and of all the others inside the office dimmed as the captive mind
began to slip away. Gerry lurched to his feet, knowing that if he
could only manage eye contact with the President he could
reassert control. The little girl screeched and pointed at him
standing there in the doorway. The six members of the delegation
and the goddam cameraman, too, turned to look at him. The child
cried out loud:

"That's not Grandpa talking. That's him! He's inside Grandpa's
head. Uncle Gerry is making Grandpa say things he doesn't want to
say!"

The Secret Service men materialized out of nowhere, pinioning

Gerry's arms. In a last-ditch effort, he forced Baumgartner to say,
"De­cline... decline..."

Then the linkage broke. Dr. Beatrice Fairweather, a little old lady
with a kindly face, stepped up to Gerry and put her fingers on his
forehead and opened his faltering mind like a sardine can.

"Oh, dear, " she said. "I'm afraid the child is right. "

The President slumped back into his big leather chair. He said
hoarsely, "You bet your sweet ass she's right! Arrest that man!"

Gerry Tremblay relaxed then, and even managed a rueful little
smile for the camera as the Secret Service agents led him away.



In July 2008 Tremblay went on trial. The evidence of Beatrice
Fairweather was disallowed under the statutes prohibiting self-
incrim­ination, but little Amanda Denton was a telling witness for the
prose­cution. Her testimony, together with that of the President,
was suffi­cient to convict Representative Gerard Tremblay of
aggravated assault and battery, and interfering with a federal
official. A count of kidnaping was thrown out. Tremblay's appeal of
the verdict eventually reached the Supreme Court, which upheld
his conviction. He was impeached and expelled from the House of
Representatives and served two years and six months of a
concurrent three-to-twenty-five-year sentence.

In 2012, both houses of Congress passed the XXIX Amendment
to the Constitution, which would permit defendants in criminal trials
(oper­ant or not) to be cross-examined mentally by a three-person
group of forensic redactors - one for the defense, one for the
prosecution, and one acting as amicus curiae. The Amendment
was submitted to the state legislatures but had not been ratified by
the requisite three-quarters of the United States by the time the
Intervention took place.

Upon his parole in 2012, Gerry Tremblay became an officer in
Roggenfeld Acquisitions, a firm specializing in the leveraged buy-
outs of aerospace contractors. Five months after his release from
prison, his wife Shannon presented him with a baby girl, Laura, who
was destined for a spectacular role in the private life of a certain
Magnate of the Concilium forty years into the future. Tremblay
complaisantly acknowl­edged Laura as his own.

He never learned - unlike his father-in-law, Kieran O'Connor - that it
had been Shannon who sent little Amanda to visit her grandfather
on 29 October 2007, and also arranged for Dr. Fairweather to join
the nom­inating delegation at the last moment.



20

OVERSIGHT AUTHORITY VESSEL

SADA [Simb 220-0000]

PODKAMENNAYA TUNGUSKA BASIN USSR, EARTH

20 JUNE 2008



the huge simbiari Authority flagship and its attendant fleet of
twenty-six smaller observation vessels descended slowly and
openly, in broad daylight, over the event site. By order of the Lylmik
Supervisors, the commemoration was to be deliberately
conspicuous, reminding the populace of this war-torn Earth nation
of a truth they had once championed - that human beings were not
alone in the starry universe.

On the bridge of the Sada, Captain Chassatam, his Executive
Officer Madi Ala Assamochiss, and Senior Oversight Magnate
Adassti watched the view-screen, which was in terrain-proper
mode, as the wilderness of verdant bogs and conifer thickets drew
closer and closer.

"Approaching stasis altitude, " said the Exec.

"Very well, " said Captain Chassatam. A fast farsight sweep told
him that the formation was perfectly organized, and seconds later it
hovered motionless some six hundred meters above the taiga.
One level of his mind commanded the attention of all crews, while
another signaled the Simbiari chaplain stationed in the topside
bubble to organize and ener­gize the solemn metaconcert aimed
at coercing God.

O Source and Sustainer of Life! Our minds and the Mind of the
Simbiari Polity in all the far-flung reaches of the Galaxy praise you
this day at the site where your martyrs, the crew and survey
personnel of the Observation Vessel Risstimi, did one hundred
planetary orbits ago choose to sacrifice themselves rather than
bring great harm upon the innocent people of a world placed under
their care. Help us to under­stand and appreciate your martyrs'
extraordinary act of love. Console the bereaved among us who lost
kin and dear friends in the event. If it should be your will, give us
the courage to emulate their selfless action freely and without fear,
confident as they were confident that you will receive our undying
minds into the Great Mind even as our bodies perish. We trust that
you will welcome us one day as you welcomed them into your
Divine Milieu of unending peace and light, love and joy. Praise to
you, Author of the Universe and exemplar of perfect Unity! Praise
throughout all space and time! We Simbiari say this with one Mind.

WE SAY IT!

"A chopper approaches from Vanavara, " the Exec noted, inserting
its image into a corner of the view-screen. All three Simbiari
scrutinized the tiny craft with their farsight and did a surface probe
of the humans within. Lettering on the body of the helicopter
indicated that it be­longed to the local reindeer-herders' collective.

"I'd hoped for a higher-status set of eyewitnesses than this, " the
Mag­nate said rather peevishly. She mopped green mucus from
her face. As the senior personage present it had been her duty to
express ritual sor­row during the prayer.

"They've closed down the air bases at Ust'-Ilimisk and Tura, " the
Captain said. "They'll have to send jets from Krasnoyarsk. "

"Military observers always receive higher credibility ratings from
Earthlings, " Magnate Adassti said. "I hope they're not asleep at
the switch down there at PVOS. "

The Exec said, "The chopper carries a pilot and the local stringer
for the Evenk People's Video Net. The journalist has remembered
to load his camera and take off the lens cap, and he's framing a fair
shot of the fleet. "

"Thanks be to sacred Truth and Beauty, " the Magnate sighed.

The small craft came whop-whopping over the spruces, following
an erratic course. The Magnate turned her thoughts to higher
things, rem­iniscing out loud in what she hoped was a comradely
fashion.

"My sainted Auntie Bami Ala was among the Tunguska martyrs. I
recall her clearly, even though I was a mere toddler when she left
on her first exotic assignment. She was only a TechOne with the
Taxonomical Service, but very keen at the thought of bringing
Milieu enlightenment to a suboperant world. Dear Auntie... She
showed me my first visuals of humans. I had to fight to keep from
gagging at the first sight of them - those horrid dry skins, like
Poltroyans only ranging in pigmen­tation from dusty black to fish-
belly pink. She explained their strange physiology and shocked me
to the toe-webs. No algae symbionts in the epidermis, so they
were constantly eating and excreting through a hypertrophied
gastrointestinal tract - even making a ceremony of foodtaking. And
I had thought that the Gi were uncouth! Auntie told me about the
primitive state of human technology and psychosocial
development, and then scandalized me even more by admitting
that the Lylmik had the highest hopes for Earth. But I'll tell you,
Captain, that even now I can hardly imagine a more unlikely
candidate-world for coadunation of the local Mind. "

"I don't know, " the Captain said. "They may give us a run for the
money in the high-tech field. Their rate of advancement has been
little short of stupefying. " He waved a hand at the wealth of
ingenious mech­anisms that crowded the bridge of the Sada. "Give
humanity a few more decades and they'll have most of this. With
their elaboration of the Universal Field Theory, they've been able to
begin work on gravo-magnetic propulsion. And it's only a fluke that
they haven't tamed fusion yet. Fooling around, wasting their
resources on manned-satellite schemes. If they only knew that we
have nearly eight hundred worlds for them!"

"Captain, " the Executive Officer warned, "the exotic aircraft is
ven­turing too close to the rho-field coronal zone. Shall I push it
off?"

"Do so. We can't have the thing dropping out of the sky like a
zapped mosquito... That's better. Neat work with the pressor, Madi
Ala. We'll give him just a few more minutes and then send him off.
The emotional tone of the pilot is turning flaky. "

"The journalist must make an explicit record of our presence, "
Mag­nate Adassti averred. "The Lylmik were emphatic on that
point. "

The Captain sipped carbonated water from his platinum flask with a
certain air of disdain. "Does the Supervisory Body really believe
this manifestation will divert the Soviets from their internal
conflicts? Frankly, with the way things are going down in
Transcaucasia, I doubt that a mere fleet of starships over the
Stony Tunguska will even make the evening news. "

"Vulgar cynicism is hardly called for, Captain. " The Magnate was
somewhat starchy over his minor breach of decorum. Rehydrating
one­self among equals or in informal situations was certainly
acceptable. But the Captain had not even bothered to ask her
permission before drinking, and the Executive Officer was a
subordinate! Flight crews were a roughhewn lot, regrettably
egalitarian.

The Captain only chuckled at her subliminal rebuke. "It looks to me
as though the Soviet Union is only a half skip away from complete
disintegration. Cynicism seems quite justified. "

"Nonsense. The nation may be battered, but its economy and
gov­ernmental structure are still basically intact. The reports of our
pres­ence here will be sent to Moscow and eventually
disseminated through­out the planet. As to what good the
manifestation will do... we can expect benefits to accrue over the
long term. "

"Earth hasn't got a long term. If the Lylmik hold off Intervention
much longer this whole Second Oversight Phase will be a wasted
effort. We'll find ourselves with a suboperant world again! The
normals are starting to kill off coadunating minds down there, you
know. "

"Unfortunately, this is true, " the Magnate admitted. "If only the
imprisoned Soviet operants had embraced a pacifistic stance, as
their colleagues in other countries advised them. Poor misguided
ones! The military dictator in the Kremlin was badly jolted by the
mass escape attempt of the aggressively empowered adepts.
Nearly fourteen hundred minds lost to the overall coadunation
effort... I fear that an ethic of nonviolence is a tough bolus for many
Earthling operants to swallow. "

"The bunch at Darjeeling stayed peaceful - until the Muslim mob
tore them to pieces. On this planet, metapsychic operants may be
in a no-win situation. It's happened on other worlds. "

"The Lylmik still hold out hope. On the other hand, the revised
schema postulates that Intervention must occur within the next five
years here, or it probably will not occur at all... "

"Captain, the helicopter is retreating, " said the Exec.

"Yes, Madi Ala, I see. The poor pilot's had enough. He's frightened
nearly out of his mind. He didn't have nearly as much to drink today
as the journalist. "

A telltale blinked an alert and the Exec said, "Now we are being
scanned in the infrared by a Soviet satellite surveillance system as
well as by the phased arrays at Krasnoyarsk. Is this allowable?"

The Captain passed the buck to the Magnate, who said,
"Affirmative. But obscure any attempt at configuration fine-scan of
the Sada by light-amplifiers. I don't want us to be too blatantly on
the record. We'll remain in position for a few more minutes and let
EuroSat ZS spot us on its next sweep. Three sightings should
provide modest credibility and give the Earthlings something to
think about besides killing one an­other. "

"Very well, " said the Captain. He was watching the view and
slurping from his flask again, radiating overfamiliarity. "You ever
been landside in Siberia, Magnate Adassti?"

She gave up on any attempt to maintain a refined atmosphere and
hauled out her own water supply, indicating to the Exec that she
should also feel free to imbibe. "No, most of my work here has
been adminis­trative. I have gone abroad during the past five orbits
monitoring the Metapsychic Congresses... Montreal last year after
they decided not to risk Moscow; Paris, Beijing, Edinburgh - all
large cities. And before that I attended the session held in a quaint
rural hostelry in Bretton Woods, New Hampshire. Bizarre!... I
presume, Captain, from your reference to mosquitoes, that you
yourself have visited Siberia. " She shuddered. The insects were
insanely fond of Simbiari body fluids.

"I went down once, not long after the martyrdom. One of my
acad­emy mates crewed on the Risstimi. What a sight it was! The
burnt trees just beneath the blast zone were standing upright, but
all around them was this vast elliptical area of trunks smashed flat
and radiating out­ward. Not a single Earthling was harmed. But if
the crew of the Risstimi hadn't hung on to the failed control system
mentally, the ship would have continued right across the continent
and impacted on Saint Petersburg, where nearly two million people
lived at the time. "

"Truth!" exclaimed the Exec. "I didn't know there were that many. "

"I wonder if this damn planet will ever appreciate what we've
done?" the Captain mused. "Not just what the Risstimi crew did,
but all the rest of it. Sixty thousand years of watching and guiding
and cosseting, all the while praying that the silly clots wouldn't
botch it."

Magnate Adassti had a grim little smile on her emerald lips. "If
In­tervention does take place and we undertake the proctorship,
we'll make sure the Earthlings are properly grateful. Shaping up
minds as barbarous as these for full Concilium participation is
going to require heroic psychocorrectional measures. After what
they've put us through-"

"Captain, " said the Exec. "We have a wing of MiGs zeroing in on
us from Krasnoyarsk. "

"It's about time, " the Magnate snapped.

The officer hesitated, then blurted out, "Farsense Monitoring
reports that the Soviets think we may be a Chinese secret weapon.
"

"Chinese?" blared the Captain. "Chinese? Can't the flaming idiots
recognize a flight of UFOs when they see one?"

Magnate Lashi Ala Adassti dripped green heedlessly over the
shiny instrumentation console as she swallowed great gulps of
charged water. "Up the Cosmic All!" she blasphemed. "The
nincompoops!"

"So much for that brilliant Lylmik ploy, " the Captain told her. "Your
orders, Magnate?"

"Get us back into orbit and invisible. We'll be hearing from the
Su­pervisory Body soon enough. "



21

FROM THE MEMOIRS OF ROGATIEN REMILLARD



the flight of flying saucers detected over Siberia made a very minor
news splash. The videotape of the event - which was sold to
Western news agencies for an enormous sum by the Soviet
government - was exquisitely detailed, so much so that it was
deemed a masterpiece of special effects by the ciné wizards of
Industrial Light and Magic. NASA analysts said that no spacecraft
propulsion system known to science could account for the
movement of the alleged sau­cers. They simply defied Newton's
Laws of Motion. These adverse judg­ments, coupled with the
suspicious date of the sighting, on the anni­versary of the
Tunguska meteorite fall, led most authorities to dismiss the tape as
a hoax.

Over the next couple of years there were other saucer reports from
different parts of the world - none quite so spectacular as the
Siberian affair, but nevertheless impressive in the aggregate. Alas!
The world was so preoccupied with mundane troubles that the
notion of extrater­restrial visitors caused no excitement at all. So
the saucers were back again? Big deal. So was the rain in Spain,
the Dust Bowl in Oklahoma, and Killer Smog in London and Tokyo.

Feeling very low one dreary November evening in 2008 (I had just
finished composing a long and querulous videogram to Ume, who
had moved back to Sapporo the previous summer), I sat in my
apartment above the bookshop, reading and drinking. The book
was an old favor­ite, a peerless historical novel by H. F. M.
Prescott called The Man on a Donkey. The booze was Laphroaig,
a lovely dusky malt that Jamie MacGregor had brought over on his
last visit. Sleet rapped at the storm windows, the fire was low in the
Franklin stove, and my stockinged feet rested on the warm shaggy
belly of my cat Marcel, who was asleep on the claw-shredded
ottoman.

The doorbell rang. It was after 2300. Reluctantly, I sent my farsight
down into the street entryway, where I saw Denis. Setting the
Prescott aside with a sigh, I extracted my feet from their cozy
shelter and padded over to the buzzer.

Come up, I told my nephew. Is anything wrong?

Yes and no. I just want to talk to you if you don't mind.

I am not quite blotto.

I'll redact you sober.

You do and I'll sic Marcel on you...

I opened the hall door and he came in, dripping.

"I walked from the lab, " he said, taking off his raincoat. "What a
rotten night. "

I got another tumbler, splashed in Scotch, and held it out to him.
Denis rarely indulges, but it didn't take telepathy to know what he
needed. He flopped down on the sofa, took a belt, and sighed.

"The President called me earlier today. "

"He should be feeling pretty high, " I opined. "The landslide victory
to end all landslides. He's got his third term - and probably a fourth
and fifth if he wants them -"

"Uncle Rogi, do you remember when I was a kid, and just learning
to do long-distance scanning? We didn't call it EE then. It was just
mind-traveling. "

"Sure, I remember. You'd drag me along. Only way I ever got very
far out of Coos County, mentally speaking. "

"What we were doing was a farsensory metaconcert, a mind-meld.
I didn't know that, either. You know, it's a funny thing. I've never
been able to go metaconcert with anyone except you and Lucille.
Glenn says I'm too wary, too jealous of my mental autonomy to be
a team thinker. Lucille thinks I may just be afraid to trust...
Whatever it is, it's there. And I want to excurse tonight with a
partner - someone who will magnify my own sight. Luce is out. Now
that she's pregnant again I want to keep her as tranquil as possible.
"

The implication was dire. "And this EE's likely to be anything but,
eh?"

"I tripped out myself earlier this evening, right after the President's
call. He told me that the Secretary of Defense had the wind up over
something his Psi-Eye people had spied. He asked me to check it
out. "

I poured myself another finger of Scotch and downed it before
Denis could stop me. "What happened? A nuke on the Kremlin?"

"It's in China... whatever it is. I couldn't get any more of a handle on
it than the Washington pEEps. That's why I need you. Minimal
though your solitary output is, when it's yoked with mine I should
experience a magnification up to threefold through synergistic
augmen­tation."

"Your humble servant, " I muttered. Minimal!

Denis dragged the ottoman over to the couch, displacing Marcel,
who hissed bitterly at the imposition and slunk off to the kitchen.
"Sit here beside me. We can put our feet up and it'll be nearly as
good as the barber-chairs at the lab. I suppose I should have
asked you to come down there, but -"

"You knew I wouldn't, and it doesn't make a damn bit of difference
where we do it. "

"No. It doesn't. "

The body contact was unfamiliar and disquieting. Good God, was I
afraid of him? His mind was utterly silent. Wide open. Waiting. I
closed my eyes and still saw the living room through mind-sight,
but I made no move toward him. I turned the kitchen wall
transparent and saw the cat opening the breadbox to steal an
English muffin. I had forgotten to fill his food dish. I kept on going
out through the house wall and saw the oddly unshadowed streets
slick with freezing rain and cars going up and down Main Street with
tires and wiper blades crunching.

Denis said: Come.

I said: All right all right it's just been a hell of a long time since you
were in my skull and you were only a kid then and now tu es un
gros bonnet the Biggest Mindshot of the lot and I do want to help
you but what you ask of me ah Denis a Franco father cannot stand
naked before his son -

No no it won't be like that metaconcert among adults isn't that kind
of merging please don't worry. This will not be like your
experiences with Ume or Elaine those were an altogether different
type of mental intercourse believe me trust me I am only Denis the
same little Denis et tu es mon vrai père! Ça va Uncle Rogi?

Ça va ça va mais allez-y doucement dammit!

He took me away...

I am not much of a head. I use telepathy without a qualm, of
course, and do everyday things such as deep-scanning letters
before opening them and tracking potentially light-fingered
customers around the shop and anticipating the moves of idiot
drivers. But the larger faculties I use grudgingly (except with the
ladies!) and there is almost always a sense of uneasiness after the
fact, as if I had indulged a secret vice. Excorporeal excursion is
ordinarily very difficult for me. I can "call" over fairly long distances,
but to "see" - much less use other ultrasenses - is an exhausting
piece of work when it is not completely impossible. I had braced
myself for the joint trip with Denis, expecting the usual exertion. But
what a difference! I hardly know what to compare that mind-flight
to. There are certain dreams, where one does not really fly but
rather takes giant steps, one after the other, each one covering the
proverbial seven leagues. Long ago, when I had eavesdropped on
the mind of little Denis as he slowly scanned New Hampshire for
other operants, I had seen on the eerie mindscape the jewel-like
clusters of "light" that mark the positions of living human brains -
the latents glowing dimly, the operants blazing like tiny stars. There
was something of this effect as Denis and I loped westward
across the continent, each heroic bound covering a greater
distance and attaining a greater height than the last, until at the
Pacific Coast we soared up without pausing and described a vast
arc above the mindless dark of the northern ocean. But was it
mindless? There were none of the starlike concentrations, but
there was something else: an intricate whispering coming not from
below but from all around me, as if millions upon millions of
infinitesimal voices were carrying on conversations - or even
singing, since the sensation had a rhythmic pulsation to it, a tempo
that was ever changing and yet somehow orchestrated...

It is the vital field of the world, Denis said. Life and Mind interacting.
The biosphere forms a latticework that is entire but the noösphere
the World Mind permeates it only imperfectly as yet and so the
field is sensed by our minds only as a whisper.

I asked: When this World Mind finishes weaving itself together
what will there be?

And my nephew said: A song.

We came to Japan and touched its shimmering arc. But there was
no time for me to seek Ume, although I thought of it; and a moment
later we were decelerating over China, flying low above the great
Yangzi River basin, one of the most populous regions of the world.
It was full daytime there, of course - and the minds blazed. The
perception was overwhelming to me and I lost all sense of
direction and differentiation; but Denis bore me onward, his goal
now in view, and in another instant we were poised above the
metropolis of Wuhan and ready to get down to business.

Denis said: Now we must do the real metaconcert Uncle Rogi. The
flight was only a peripheral linkage a kind of piggyback ride. What I
want you to do now primarily is relax. We are going to fuse our wills
so that we have a single purpose. That's what metaconcert is. ONE
WILL one vector for the channeled faculty in this case the close
inspection of a thing inside a small laboratory in a modest building
of the university. When I ask it you must help me to penetrate using
all the strength you have. Do you understand?

Yes.

You may feel yourself fainting don't be concerned I'll hold you the
vision will be mine even if you fail but hold out as best you can for
as long as you can.

Yes.

Now.

It seemed that the sun rose. What had been drab was fully colored
and what had been merely bright now became supersaturated with
a bril­liance that would be intolerable to physical eyes. At that time
there were some six million people living in close proximity in the
Wuhan tri-city area, and about ten thousand of them had some
degree of operancy. Naturally most of these were concentrated in
the university district, which lay east of the Yangzi near a small lake.
We seemed to plummet out of the sky. Abruptly the mind-
constellation effect was gone and we were there, wafting along a
modernistic concourse where crowds of students and academics
streamed in and out of buildings, rode bicycles, or lounged about
under leafless trees soaking up a bit of late-autumn sunshine.

Denis knew where to go. We passed through the white-stone outer
wall of a smallish structure, entered offices where people worked
at computer terminals or shuffled papers, much as they do in any
univer­sity, and then we reached the lab. There were three men
and two women inside, and from the paraphernalia I knew at once
that it was a metapsychology establishment. The so-called barber-
chair, with its ap­paratus for measuring the brain activity of a
"performing" operant, was virtually identical to similar devices at
Dartmouth. Around the chair on the bare concrete floor was a ring
about three meters in diameter, stud­ded with little gadgets all
wired together, the whole attached by several heavy cables to a
bank of equipment racks. Some of the front panels were
demounted and electronic guts hung out, which the scientists
tinkered with.

Denis said: When I was here earlier I examined this stuff and
recorded the gross details of the circuitry. Now I want to try
microscrutiny. Hang onto your hat Uncle Rogi. I'll try to be as quick
as I can...

He zeroed in, and I felt as though my eyes were being torn out of
my skull - but of course my physical eyes had nothing to do with
the ultrasensory scan; the pain was somewhere in my nervous
system where farsight impulses only partially belonging to the
physical universe were being amplified in some terrible esoteric
fashion by my nephew's supermind. The brightness was awful. In it
detailed pictures of God knew what were flickering like flipped
pages in an old-fashioned book. I saw them distorted, sometimes
whole and then fragmented like jigsaw puzzles. They made no
sense and the rapidity of the image-change was indescribably
sickening. I think I was trying to scream. I know I yearned to let go
of Denis, to stop the agony, but I'd promised. I'd promised...

It ended.

Somewhere, somehow I was weeping and racked with spasms. I
knew that - and yet another part of my mind stood aside, upright
and proud of itself for having successfully endured. The suffering
faded and my farsight once again perceived the Chinese
laboratory.

Denis said: That was very good. The test subject has arrived. I'm
going to break concert for a moment and check her out.

The supernal vividness of the scene faded to a washed-out pastel.
I saw that only one of the scientists in the room was an operant. His
aura was a pale yellowish-green, like a firefly. And then the door
opened and in came a young woman with an aura like a house
afire, stuffing the last of a sweet rice cake into her mouth and
licking her fingers. She wore a smart red leather jumpsuit and white
boots with high heels, and greeted the scientific types in a bored
fashion before plopping down in the barber-chair. One man
hooked her up while the other researchers com­pleted their
equipment adjustment, closed the panels, and went out - leaving
the operant alone.

Denis re-established the metaconcert. Once again every detail of
the place was extravagantly clear and I noticed for the first time a
parabolic dish hanging above the operant's head. It looked
something like a lamp reflector with a complex doodad at the
center.

In an adjacent control room, the crew was powering up. The
operant leader gave a telepathic command and the test subject
began to count steadily in declamatory farspeech. The brain-
monitoring systems were all go.

On the count of ten a mirrored dome sprang into existence, hiding
the woman in the chair from view. Simultaneously, her telepathic
speech cut off. The dome was approximately hemispheric, shaped
like the top half of an egg and apparently as slick as glass. It did
not quite touch the hanging reflector, but the ring of small
components on the floor had been swallowed.

Before I could express my astonishment, Denis said: One more
push Uncle Rogi. The best that you can do... through that mirror
surface!

Our conjoined minds thrust out, and this time I did lose
conscious­ness, after enduring only the briefest flash of mortal
agony. When I recovered my senses, I found I was sitting on the
sofa in my apartment in Hanover, my head throbbing like the
legendary ill-used hamster in the classic dirty joke. I heard the
sound of retching in the bathroom and water running in the sink.
After a few minutes Denis came out, tow­eling his wet hair and
looking like the living dead.

"Did we get through the goddam thing?" I whispered.

"No, " said Denis.

"It was a mechanical mind-screen, wasn't it... The thing they said
couldn't be made?"

"I never said it. " Denis went slowly to the coat closet and dragged
out his Burberry. I had never seen him look so terrible, so vitiated.
His emotions were totally concealed.

"D'you realize they can stop Psi-Eye with a thing like that?" I
nattered.

"The Chinese can do anything they damn well please behind it and
the EE monitors would never know! If you can't punch through it,
then no meta on Earth can... Is there any way at all to open it up?"

"Destroy the generator, " Denis said. "Aside from that - I don't
know. We'll have to build our own and experiment. " He opened the
outer door. "Thank you again for your help, Uncle Rogi. "

"But we're back to square one!" I cried. "The Chinese are paranoid
about the Russians and vice versa. They'll start the arms race all
over again or even pull a pre-emptive strike!"

"Good night, " my nephew said. The door closed.

I spat one obscenity after him on the declamatory farspeech mode
and damned if Marcel didn't stroll out of the kitchen and eye me
with sardonic humor. He leaped to the gate-leg table where the
half-full bottle of Laphroaig still stood, and cocked his great
whiskers at it.

"Best idea I've heard all night, " I told him; and I settled down to
finish off the Scotch while the icy rain lashed the window and the
cat took his place again at my feet.



22

NEW YORK CITY, EARTH

4 MARCH 2012



there were a handful of operants at the Sloan-Kettering Institute, so
Dr. Colwyn Presteigne had kept his mental shield at max­imal
strength during the entire three hours of the consultation. The strain
- to say nothing of the emotional trauma resulting from the
diagnosis - hit him in the taxi. He only regained consciousness at
his destination, with the panicked cabbie yelling at him over the
intercom and the doorman of the Plaza peering anxiously through
the open door. "Oh, for God's sake, it's all right, " Presteigne
growled. "I only dropped off to sleep for a moment. " He pushed
his credit card through the slot in the armored barrier. "Take fifteen.
"

"May I help you, Dr. Presteigne?" The doorman solicitously raised
his umbrella and extended a white-gloved hand.

"Never mind. " The physician retrieved his card, climbed out, and
strode into the hotel. Arnold Pakkala was waiting in the lobby.

He said: ?

Presteigne's features were set again in their habitual cast of
thought­ful benevolence. His mind was impenetrable beneath the
outermost social level. He said: Tell Kier I'm on my way up.

Arnold said: ???

Presteigne turned his back on the executive assistant and headed
for the elevator. He braced himself to resist any coercion; but
Arnold only stood there trying without success to forestall the
escape of inarticulate grief, then turned away toward the house
phones.

Adam Grondin opened the door to the suite when the physician
ex­ited the elevator. More diffident than Arnold, he made no
attempt to seek information. "The Boss is in the sitting room. "

Presteigne nodded, slipped off his topcoat, and took the folder out
of his briefcase. "See that Kier's things are packed up. He'll have
to go in right away. "

"Shit, " Grondin whispered. "Shit shit shit... "

"Put a call through to Mrs. Tremblay and ask her to wait on hold. I
think he'll want to tell her himself. "

"Okay, Doc. "

Presteigne went into the sitting room and carefully closed the door
behind him. Kieran was standing at the window in his dressing
gown, his hands locked behind him.

"Sit down, Col. Take a drink. Don't bother to say it - just open wide.
"

Mute, his vision blurring with tears, the physician obeyed.

Kieran O'Connor looked out over Central Park. Rags of mist
infil­trated the budding trees. A policeman on horseback stopped
at a bench where a vagrant lay covered with newspapers and
began speaking into his walkie-talkie.

"It's interesting, " Kieran said, "that it should have hit me this way.
One could make an interesting case for divine retribution - if it
weren't for the fact that I won't let this stop me. "

"But, Kier, it's metastasized. Both the lymphangiography and the
bone isoenzyme tests show -"

"I don't need that much longer. "

"I've made arrangements to have you admitted immediately under
a fictitious name -"

"No. "

"But you've got to!"

Kieran laughed. "You doctors ... so accustomed to controlling life-
and-death decisions." Don't be a fool Col what do I care for your
damned palliatives your brain-weakening chemicals I've lived with
pain all my life I'll accept this too and keep my power until the Black
Mother takes me in and all the rest as well it's perfect it's even
appropriate Her jest at my expense Her proof that I'm the one
loved most just as She always said where's your faith where's your
love I'll redact the damn thing fend it off mind over matter you know
it can be done you know other oper-ants have done it why not me?

Kier you don't assay that highly in the redactive metafaculty. Some
minds are good at healing and some aren't and self-redaction is
the least-understood aspect of the metahealing process all bound
about with unconscious factors that can enhance or inhibit -

Kieran turned around, halting the doctor's expostulations with a
gen­tle impulse. "Enough, Col. I agreed to your tests because -
because I was interested. I guess I always suspected something
like this would happen as I got down to the wire. It's just another
omen."

"Without any sort of treatment the pain will become unbearable."

"I can bear anything, for good reason." Except disloyalty . . .

Presteigne lowered his head in capitulation. "You're the Boss." He
hesitated. "I asked Adam to put in a call to your daughter. I thought
you'd want her to know. I'm sorry if I presumed."

Kieran's face stiffened. A wraith-image of Shannon, strangely
dis­torted, flickered across his adamantine mental screen. And
then it was gone and he was smiling. "Col, assuming your worst-
case scenario - that any attempt at self-redaction on my part will be
ineffective - how much longer will I be able to raise it?"

"If you're capable now it's some kind of fucking miracle! Please
ex­cuse the morbid pun."

But Kieran was chuckling in appreciation. "All right, that's plain as
the proverbial pikestaff! I think the best thing to do then is to get
back to Chicago. You go out and tell Shannon that all this was a
false alarm. That I'm fine."

Presteigne sighed. "You're the Boss," he said again.

Still laughing quietly, Kieran turned back to the window. "Poor little
girl. She'll be so relieved."



23

excerpts from:

the new york times "science times"

I MAY 2OI2


Sigma-Field Seen as

the Key to Cheap and

Reliable Fusion Power

Application also seen in develop- ment of mechani- cal mind-
screen.


Generator) differs from conventional fu­sion reactors in that it
utilizes a "bottle" formed out of a sigma-field to contain the
intensely hot fusion reaction, rather than currents of
electromagnetism. For more than 50 years, scientists have been
frustrated in attempts to tame fusion by the inherent limitations of
the electro­magnetic confinement system, which re­quires massive
radiation shielding and elaborate safety precautions. Fusion
pow­er-plants have remained uneconomical up until now not only
because of their com­plexity, but also because a typical
deute­rium-tritium fusion plant produces only about one tenth the
power of a nuclear fission reactor of the same size. The new
sigma-field confining system is fail-safe - unlike the magnetic one,
which stores up enough energy to possi-




By BARBARA TRINH Special to The New York Times
PRINCETON,   N.J.- The   long-awaited breakthrough in the
devel­opment  of small  nuclear-fusion power systems was
confirmed with the demonstration last week of MIPPFUG at
Princeton University's Institute for En­ergy Research. MIPPFUG
(the acronym stands for Miniature Proton-Proton Fusion







bly destroy the reactor in a split second in case of a malfunction.
The sigma-field system has the additional advantage of absorbing
the gamma radiation produced in the proton-proton fusion process
uti­lized in MIPPFUG. Where this absorbed radiation "goes" is still
one of the great mysteries of the booming new branch of science
known as dynamic-field physics. According to Dr. George T. Vicks,
who developed the sigma-field mechanism for the MIPPFUG
project, the "bottling" of fusion energy is only the first of what may
eventually be a host of valuable ap­plications of the sigma. "A
sigma is basically what the science-fiction writers like to call a force
field," Vicks says. "It's a six-dimensional thing bound into the
spatial dimensions of our space-time    continuum.    That    sounds
complicated - and it is! But you can un­derstand rather easily what
a sigma can do if you think of it as a kind of invisible wall. There are
different kinds of sigmas. The one for MIPPFUG acts as barrier to
the enormous heat of nuclear fusion." Other types of sigma-fields,
Vicks says, can block out other types of energy - or even matter.
"Sometime in the future," Vicks says, "we'll be able to design
sigmas that act as  roofs  or meteor-barriers  or shields against
radiation or weapons. A sigma-


field might even make a good umbrella! It could form the basis for
those tractor beams that science fiction has spaceships use to
push or pull or grab things out in the void." An even more exotic
application of sigma technology would be in the world's first
effective mechanical thought-screen. "So far," says Carole
McCarthy, an associate of Vicks at Princeton, "no one has been
able to come up with reliable barriers to telepathy or EE or other
men­tal   powers.   This   is   because   thought doesn't propagate
in the four dimensions we call space-time, as sound and other
forms of energy do.  Mental impulses propagate in a six-
dimensional entity we call the aether. The sigma-field, which also
has six dimensions, might just be able to mesh with the aether in a
way that would stop thought impulses cold." This type of thought-
screen was sug­gested by the late Nobel Laureate, Xiong Ping-
yung, shortly before his death in 2006. Xiong was honored for
formulating the Universal Field Theory, upon which sigma research
is based. There has been increasing speculation in the West that
China may be already working on such a device secretly, in
connection with its in­creasingly defensive posture vis-à-vis the
Soviet Union.




24

DU PAGE  COUNTY,  ILLINOIS,  EARTH 4 AUGUST 2OI2



the muggy midwestern air hit Victor Remillard like a hot barber
towel as the door of the Remco jet opened. Shannon Tremblay
was waiting at the foot of the steps, her white cotton caftan
billowing in the wind. Pregnancy became her, heightening her color
and adding needed flesh, but aside from these changes her
condition did not show. Victor could not resist scanning the perfect
tiny body of the fetal girl. It was only five months alive and even
now its mind showed certain familial metapsychic traits. It was
damned spooky.

Shannon felt his touch and laughed. "Laura's going to be the
clincher, you know. The factor to force Daddy to bring you into the
organization - even without bonding. He's really very superstitious.
She's an omen to him. A symbol. He may even think of her as a
superior version of me, to be used ..."

They hurried over the tarmac to the small airport's parking lot. The
temperature must have been far over 40° Celsius and the sunlight
was like blazing bars thrust through rising masses of purplish
thunderheads.

"Have you told Gerry?" Victor asked.

"Of course. Why not? I think he may be relieved. Daddy was
always pressuring us to have children . . . especially a girl. He was
disappointed when nothing happened and blamed me, since
there's no doubt that Gerry's fertile. Of course, you know why I
wouldn't. Not until now. Laura will be our celebration, Victor - not
Daddy's."

Her black Ferrari Automa was running at high revs, keeping cool.
She touched the lock, opening both doors, and said, "You drive.
The guid­ance system is preset for most of the way."

He nodded and slid onto the icy leather seat with a sense of relief.
It had been difficult to control his sweat glands. He could handle
either the heat or the fear-excitement reflex, but it was hell bucking
both of them at once. He checked the routing on the dash map-
display, put up the spoiler, and eased the Ferrari out of the lot onto
the airport frontage road.

"When is Gerry due out?"

"Next week. "

"Is your old man going to stiff him?"

"Certainly not. Gerry's valuable, even if he's tainted. " Her lips
quirked. "He's valuable to us, too, so don't let me hear any more
divorce bullshit. Not until we've won. "

"Suit yourself. " As they came onto the ramp for Route 64, he
punched in the automatic guidance, took his hands from the wheel
and his foot from the accelerator. Cruise control took over,
merging them neatly with the eastbound traffic flow. On a second-
class highway like 64, with only two pilot-stripped lanes in each
direction, their speed was held down to 120 kph with no left-lane
prioritizing; but in a few minutes they turned onto southbound 59, a
three-laner, and the priority function of the guidance system began
to communicate with transponders in other vehicles, sweeping
them out of the Ferrari's way. They accelerated to 200 and in
moments they were swinging onto the East-West Expressway and
roaring toward Oakbrook, well spaced among the other privileged
cars in the innermost of five eastbound lanes.

"I wish to hell we had pilot-strips in my neck of the woods, " Victor
groused. "It's still all manual in northern New Hampshire, except on
the Interstates, and no priority speeding anywhere. New Hampshire
doesn't believe in it. "

"Illinois is glad of the licensing fees - but then, they have a lot more
bills to pay. We all know that New Hampshire keeps costs down by
giving its welfare clients bus fare to Massachusetts. "

Victor chuckled. "An old Yankee custom. No taxes, no frills, and
devil take the hindmost. "

"He just may, " Shannon murmured, "unless we're very, very
careful. But I had to have you see what Daddy's got, Victor. "

The console beeped to warn them that they were approaching their
exit and the termination of programmed cruising. Victor took the
wheel again as they went onto the Midwest Road ramp. He had
never been to Kieran O'Connor's mansion, but the blip on the
dash-map showed the way. The Ferrari slowed to a sedate ninety
and made its way through rolling wooded hills where white-painted
paddock fencing or weathered split rails delineated the boundaries
of large estates. They turned into an unmarked lane and went
another half kilometer, then came to a halt before massive
gateposts of red brick surmounted by bronze lanterns. Wrought-
iron gates four meters high swung open when Shannon zapped
them with a hand-held beamer. Victor saw that the thick bank of
blooming shrub-roses surrounding the property had concealed an
inner double barrier of chain link and electrified mesh. More
fencing bordered the drive and behind it bull mastiffs and
Dobermans watched the Ferrari's progress with silent alertness. A
short distance further along they came to another perimeter of
charged chain link topped with razor-wire. On the other side of a
reinforced steel gate was a guard kiosk with cameras, spotlights,
windows of one-way glass, and several unobtrusive gun-ports. A
rustic sign at the barrier said:



WELCOME. STAY   IN   YOUR   VEHICLE.

OBEY   INSTRUCTIONS   PROMPTLY.



"Sweet shit, " muttered Victor.

Cameras swiveled, inspecting the car and its occupants. An
electronic voice said: "Good day. Please state your name and
business. "

Shannon rolled down her window, leaned out, and waved. "It's me,
guys! And a friend of mine. Call off the dragons. "

"Yes, ma'am, " said the loudspeaker. "You may proceed to the
house. " The gate opened and tire spikes that had protruded from
the roadway sank back into metal receptacles. The Ferrari drove
along a winding landscaped drive.

"God help the poor bastard who has to read the water meter, "
Victor said.

"Don't be silly. That's all done remotely in Illinois. "

"Where does he hide the antiaircraft batteries?"

"In a wing of the stable. "

"You're serious?"

"Don't talk like a fool, " she snapped, "or I may just regret bringing
you out of the New Hampshire boondocks and stick with Gerry
after all. "

Victor stomped on the brakes, turned, and seized her by her upper
arms. Coercion smote her like a cannon shell and she cried out
with hurt and rage. He ripped aside her outer mind-screen as if he
were tearing paper and blasted her strong inner shield to painful
shards that swirled like a dizzy kaleidoscope while she cowered,
furious and de­lighted. He saw her true. Saw the hate for Kieran
O'Connor overarching every other conviction in her soul and her
need of him and him alone tightening the knot of purpose.

"Bitch, " he laughed, setting her free.

They drove on, and the house came into view. It was a modernistic
pile with cantilevered balconies, built partly into the eastern side of
a hill and heavily shrouded with gnarled white oaks and Scotch
pines. Protruding from one part of the roof was a structure like a
blind control tower surmounted by antenna arrays. Victor could see
at least three other big steerable dishes lurking among the trees at
the crest of the hill.

"Is that where it is?" Victor asked, mentally indicating the tower.

"Yes. He calls it his study. To the rest of us, it's the command post.
In the beginning it was only a glorified communications and data-
retrieval center. Over the years Daddy kept modifying and adding
to the equipment. He built a redundant control center in the
subbasement, too - and there are underground cables connecting
his equipment with three commercial satellite uplinks, in case
anything happens to the antennas here on the grounds. "

They pulled up to a side door and Victor switched off the engine.
Shannon's window was still open. A hot wind smelling of roses and
freshly sprinkled grass mingled with the last cool gasp of the
Ferrari's air conditioning.

He said, "Your father would have to be an idiot not to know that our
relationship isn't a simple matter of business. "

"He knows, " she said calmly.

"He knows I'm here today?"

"I'm supposed to be converting you to his point of view. Since my
little white body has thus far proved to be a less than irresistible
in­ducement, I've been ordered to tempt you with more exotic
thrills. "

Victor laughed. "Let's get on with it. "



Inside, the mansion was silent and apparently deserted. Shannon
ex­plained that with her father out of town, the domestic staff did
only routine housekeeping chores. The domestics, the security
people, and the grounds keepers were all bonded operants who
by temperament, intelligence, or education were not suited to
executive positions in O'Connor's organization. They lived in
comfortable homes of their own in what was called The Village, in a
distant corner of the estate. Shannon told Victor that some of the
staff had belonged to the ménage for more than twenty years.

They went up in a big service elevator to the third floor and passed
down a carpeted hallway. From the vantage point they could see
the sky darkening as the storm approached.

"Let me explain the background of what you're going to see, "
Shannon said. "You know that Psi-Eye inspired the superpowers to
end their nuclear arms race. But most of the small nations that had
tactical nukes stashed away balked at giving them up - especially
after Armageddon showed that the network of EE surveillance
couldn't possibly prevent terrorist-type attacks by small forces. The
little nations such as South Africa and India didn't give a hoot
whether Psi-Eye publicized their arsenals or not. They rather
welcomed letting their enemies know they were in a position to
retaliate. "

"Especially after the Jihad got rolling in Asia and Africa, " Victor
acknowledged. "Can't say that I blame them. "

"Some defense analysts in America and the Soviet Union worried
about the situation and proposed a worldwide cooperative satellite
de­fense system. In the States, so long as the Democrats
controlled Con­gress and the White House, there was talk but no
action. The Russians got a system on the drawing boards when
Pakistan and Iran started sponsoring revolts in their Central Asian
republics - but their civil war broke out before they could carry the
plan further. "

Outside the windows, the oak trees were showing the bottoms of
their leaves in the rising wind. A sepulchral rumble was barely
percep­tible through the thick walls of the house.

Shannon said, "When President Baumgartner was elected in 2000,
there was a clear and pressing need for satellite defense.
Everybody knew that South Africa had medium-range ballistic
missiles with neu­tron warheads all emplaced to stave off any black
invasion from the north. And everybody also knew that it was only
the fear of more fallout that kept the Jihad forces from using
regular nukes on Russia. The Jihad didn't have neutron bombs yet,
but it seemed only a matter of time. And with delivery systems
becoming cheaper and more easily available, virtually any little
nation would be in a position to commit nuclear blackmail inside of
a decade or so. "

They stood in front of the armor-plated door that lacked a knob or a
latch. Shannon pressed her right hand against the inset golden
plate and a chime sounded.

"For years now, Daddy's agents have abetted terrorism and acted
as provocateurs, just so this satellite defense system would be
built. His people helped the Armageddon fanatics get their bombs.
They triggered the civil war in the Soviet Union and aided the Jihad
movement in Africa. When Daddy's candidate, Baumgartner, won
the White House, it was politically acceptable for him to resurrect
the part of the old Reagan Strategic Defense Initiative that was
most workable - the ground-laser satellite-mirror system called
Zap-Star."

Shannon addressed the door's voice-print identifier. "Open up!"
The metal panel slid aside and the two of them entered Kieran
O'Connor's sanctum. An enormous banked control console took
up one entire five-meter wall. "When Zap-Star is complete in
another year or so, it will consist of 150 battle-mirror satellites and
twenty ground batteries of multiple excimer lasers. UN peace-
keepers will control the system from a new command center being
built on Christmas Island in the Pacific. The Zap-Star system is
being financed primarily by the United States, Europe, Japan, and
Korea. China has built its own part of the network independently,
twenty mirrors and two ground bases... but all the other satellites
utilize guidance systems manufactured by Daddy's mul­tinational
aerospace conglomerate. And each one has built-in override. "
She indicated the console. "Zap-Star can be accessed from here,
cutting out the Christmas Island syscom. "

"Good God!"

Shannon sat down at the computer. "None of the weaponry is on-
line yet, of course. When it is, the access code will be Daddy's
great secret - the one I presume he'll offer to sell you in exchange
for your soul. " She laughed. "Would you like to see how the thing
works?"

She spoke into a command microphone and summoned graphics
to a big liquid-crystal display. "The white blips on the map
represent the UN's worldwide emplacement of excimer laser
batteries. The green blips are the Chinese bases. Notice the two
red blips!... Those are Daddy's insurance policy - one in
Saskatchewan and one in the Maldive Islands south of India. His
own ground bases, in case the others should be destroyed - say,
by the Chinese. "

"What do the ground lasers do - beam death-rays to the battle-
mirrors?"

"It's not quite like that. In case of a nuclear-missile launching or
other hostile action, the excimer fires bursts of coherent light at the
high-orbit relay mirrors. They're the large blue blips. These transfer
the beams to smaller, highly maneuverable battle-mirrors that have
already locked on to targets. Depending upon the nature of the
beam - and it can be varied from moment to moment - the target
can be pierced or fried or simply have its electronic or electrical
equipment rendered useless. The last option is the most versatile!
A certain type of beam can mutilate the microcircuitry of chips and
turn them into useless junk. It can deactivate missiles, aircraft,
ships, Asats - anything at all with computer guidance. And it can do
more! It can short out auto ignition, radio, video, even light bulbs
and hearing aids and solar-cell watches and calculators. The Zap-
Star system is virtually the perfect defense against any sort of
modern warfare. "

Victor said, "Or the perfect offense. "

"Oh, yes. Just imagine a modern city deprived of all electrical or
electronic equipment. It would be the literal return of the Dark Ages
- the end of modern civilization. "

Victor gestured at the mass of equipment. "What's to prevent us
from blowing the whistle on this setup?"

"You'd never be able to prove that it's anything except a
horrendously expensive control system for some kind of satellite
link. None of the incriminating details - the target cities, for instance
- are accessible. There's no law against having descriptions of
Zap-Star in your data bank - especially when your companies
manufacture the guidance systems for the satellites. As for the
uplinks... they could control any kind of satellites - weather-eyes,
surveyors, comsats, relays. Daddy owns at least forty-six. "

"When will the Zap-Star system be completed?"

"Late 2013. A very unlucky year - or lucky, depending upon your
point of view. "

Victor was frowning, thinking furiously behind his mental barrier.
"There are at least a dozen holes in your father's scheme for using
this thing to conquer the world. The most blatant, of course, is the
Chinese connection. They control their sats and they have their
own excimer batteries. Suppose they were able to use that sigma-
field thing as shield­ing -"

"Daddy doesn't want to conquer the world. "

"Then what -"

She whispered into the microphone. The screen went black.

Victor felt his heart constrict. "But that's lunacy!"

"It's his vision of the Absolute, " Shannon corrected. "He'd tell you
that Zap-Star was a tool for world domination and offer it to you in
exchange for your help in destroying the operant leadership. He
knows that they must be onto him. " She paused, then got up and
smoothed the skirts of her white dress, smiling slightly. "He may
even suspect who has betrayed him. But he's trapped by his love.
He still hopes to convert me to the way he's chosen. And the
child... "

"Love!" Victor made the word an obscenity.

She turned away from him. "I don't come to this room very often.
Just when I need to remember, to strengthen my resolve. He did it
to me here... And always, when it's time to go, I'm afraid. What if
the door won't obey my voice and open? Or what if it does open -
and I find him standing outside, waiting, asking me to reaffirm the
bonding?" Could I deny him? Have I already accepted?

No! he said; and she clung to him, letting the fear and fury drain
into ice-glazed oblivion.

In time, she did open the door. And of course the corridor was
empty. Through the window they could see that the grounds of the
mansion were being wracked by a violent thunderstorm.

"My Ferrari!" she wailed, all the rest of it forgotten. "I left the
win­dow open!"

They ran for the elevator together, laughing.



25

LEWISBURG, PENNSYLVANIA, EARTH

6 AUGUST 2012



the superintendent of the federal prison opened the door to a small
bare room with a metal table and two chairs. "Will this do,
Professor Remillard?"

"Is it bugged?" Denis asked in a level tone.

The superintendent chuckled. "Oh, no. There's the usual window in
the door - but Agent Tabata has already made it quite plain that no
observers will be required during your consultation with the
prisoner. Shall I have him brought in now?"

"Please, " said Denis. He put his briefcase on the table and
opened it. When the superintendent left the room he quickly took
out four objects that looked like featureless gray business cards
and placed one in each corner of the room. If there were bugs,
they were now deaf and blind.

Denis had had to explain to the President that there was no way
that a redactive probe could be accomplished at long distance. In
EE, it required arduous effort to overhear declamatory telepathy -
the "loud­est" kind - passing among persons being observed.
Probing their inner­most thoughts, a virtuoso trick even with the
examinee at arm's length, was totally impossible. The only way that
Denis could check out the amazing accusation of Gerry Tremblay's
wife would be to probe him in person. The probe might or might
not succeed, depending upon the psychological tone of Tremblay.
As to the ethics of the situation... Denis had given the matter
careful thought. Since legislation that would permit mental cross-
examination was in the process of being ratified, Denis would
accept it as de facto - with the understanding that none of the
information he obtained would be used as direct evidence in any
case, nor would Denis himself be called to testify as to his
findings.

The President had complimented him dryly on his prudence and
per­spicacity. Denis had responded that those qualities had taken
on sur­vival value, given the present mood of the country toward
operants. The President had earnestly assured him that the mood
was changing for the better, to which Denis had replied sadly that
he, personally, had seen scant signs of improvement in operant-
normal relations - and if Mrs. Tremblay's accusations of a massive
conspiracy by secret operants could be proved, the Sons of Earth
and other bigots would have a field day, and the operant image
would be tarnished almost beyond redemption. The President had
laid a big hand on Denis's shoulder and urged him to have
courage. After the November election it would be possible to take
ac­tion in a number of important areas. But right now... Tremblay!
Denis had promised to do his best, and report his findings only to
the Presi­dent.

The door opened, and Gerry Tremblay came in.

"Hello, Denis. " Here I am and yes I know I look like hell I've lost
ten kilos and my colitis has turned my ass to a disaster zone and
I'm even starting to go fucking bald and my wife is knocked up with
some un­known operant's brat and my father-in-law says All's
Forgiven What the Hell You Can Be an Arbitrager! and why the
devil did you have to come NOW four days before I get out of this
fucking hole?...

"Gerry, I'm sorry to bother you. I know how you feel. We all do. But
I must ask some important questions. "

SUREyoumust! WhatthefuckgotintomedidIreallythinkIwassavingAll
OperantsfromBAUMGARTNERTHEARCHFIEND? The arrogance!
The lunacy! ThefriggingdipshitBOOBERYofit...

It was Denis's almost invariable custom to veil his eyes from those
he engaged in conversation. His direct gaze tended to paralyze
normals and throw operants into a state of near panicky screen-
slamming. Even his family could be shocked into speechlessness
when he inadvertently let the power flood out instead of reining it
back behind the social mask that the real superminds were still
learning to wear. As Gerry Tremblay's mental speech babbled on,
all fouled with self-pity and mortification, Denis looked at the table
top. He had placed a pen and a jotting pad there, useless props.
The ranting continued and he picked up the pen and drew a
square. Then he drew a star, and a circle, and a cross, and three
parallel wavy lines.

Gerry said, "Oh, hell. The Zener cards!" And then he was laughing
and half crying, remembering the very beginning of their
relationship, thirty-three years ago, when a weird twelve-year-old
kid had come slog­ging down into a dusty granite quarry in Barre,
Vermont, and asked him to put down his jackhammer for a few
minutes and take a little test that could be really important...

Denis said: We used those cards. The old-fashioned ESP pack
that Rhine had made famous. And you called them one hundred
percent Gerry and nearly wet your jeans because you had no idea.
None at all.

Yeahyeahyeah! And the test wasn't for your benefit it was for me
so I'd come away to Dartmouth with you and Glenn and Sally and
Tucker and the rest of the Coterie... Oh God Denis how did it turn
to this shit?

"Listen to me, Gerry. There's still something important you can do.
If you like... do to make up. "

Gerry stiffened. "What I did - I did because I thought it was right.
That's what I'll say until I die, Denis. I won't disgrace us. It was a
hell of a dumb move, maybe even crazy, but no disgrace to
operancy."

Denis lifted his eyes.

Gerry Tremblay's mouth opened in an unvoiced scream. He
covered his face with his hands and his shoulders began to shake.

You know you know God you know -

I don't know all of it Gerry but I must. Shannon has confessed a lot
of it. First to Nell Baumgartner and then to the President himself. Is
it true that Kieran O'Connor is a powerful operant?

Of course not.

Is it true that he's been misusing his powers for years breaking
every law in the book to build up a personal fortune manipulating
politicians even coercing Baumgartner to run and then when he
saw his puppet slipping away in desperation he -

NO NO NO!

Is it true that Kieran O'Connor has set up a clandestine control
center for Zap-Star?

... whattheHELL???

So you didn't know. Gerry sit up. Take your hands away from your
face. Do it.

Yes.

I'm going to probe you. To get the truth of it as you see it. There
will be no follow-up at all as far as you're concerned. When I've
finished I'll wipe out every trace of this visit so O'Connor will never
suspect what's been done. We'll nail him through conventional
investigation. He can't have covered every trace of his manipulation
if it's as massive as Shannon says. Will you consent to the probe?
You know it has to be voluntary.

I -I -

I know O'Connor's done something to you Gerry. I can see it a kind
of command-inhibition compelling absolute loyalty. But I think I can
crack it. I'll be as careful as I can.

I - I - Denis I love him. I love him and he's a filthy swine a madman
-

Be calm Gerry.

Can - can you wipe that out too?

I could try. There's a chance that he'd know and it would be risky
for you because you wouldn't remember any of this. But I think I
could retain a semblance of the bondage. I'll try.

Thank you Denis thank you all right DO IT God do it help me get
him out of me -

"Gerry, I'd like you to sit back in your chair and relax. Take deep
breaths. "

"Okay. "

"Close your eyes now. If you like, you can farsense these Zener
fig­ures I've drawn on the pad. But see nothing but them. Think of
nothing else. "

"All right. "

Gerry Tremblay closed his eyes and summoned up the familiar old
markings.

Only a moment or so later, when he opened his eyes again, a
guard was at his side and he was walking back toward his cell. He
wondered whether he was losing his marbles. For the life of him he
couldn't remember why they'd fetched him out of his cell.

Oh, hell. What difference did it make? Come Friday he'd be out of
here for good, and he could pull his shit back together and make a
brand new start.



26

FROM THE MEMOIRS OF ROGATIEN REMILLARD



I went to the Hanover post office to do my regular first-thing-in-the-
morning pickup. It was just across the street from the bookshop
and, in those days, provided more convenient service than
electronic mail or parcel express -as well as being considerably
cheaper.

It was 24 September 2012, two days after the calamitous
Metapsychic Congress in Oslo. Because it was a Monday the box
was full of letters and cards and junk mail, as well as several
videograms and the inevi­table "Please call at the window for
package" notices. I joined the long line of patrons and began to
sort my stuff, at the same time carrying on half a conversation with
Elijah Shelby who was standing just ahead of me. He ran a desktop
publishing company out of his home on River Ridge Road and
patronized my shop fairly often.

"Tough about the way things fell apart in Norway, " Shelby said.

"Serves the heads right for scheduling a symposium on operant
po­litical activism, " I said. "They asked for a reeraw and they sure
as hell got one. I warned Denis not to force the issue. "

"Reckon your nevvy'll be coming home with his tail between his
legs. Media kinda made mincemeat of him, didn't they?"

"Denis is no coward, " I said shortly. "Takes balls to stand on your
principles... and you don't want to believe everything you read in
the newsplaques, Lije."

"Mf!" said Shelby. My mention of the great innovation in
commu­nication struck a sour note with the publisher. The
programmable liquid-crystal reader-plaques had already spelled
the doom of printed periodicals and paperback ephemera; and the
newer large-format plaques with improved color-imaging that had
just come out of China were bound to take a nasty bite out of
conventional book publication.

One of the videograms addressed to me was from a plaque outfit.
They were haranguing booksellers, urging them to install the latest
top-of-the-line state-of-the-art super-glamorous reader-plaque
recorder-dispenser unit - priced at a mere $189,000.00 if you
hurried to take advantage of this one-time-only special offer. I
deep-sixed the expensive advertising piece in the post office's
waste bin, along with the rest of the junk mail.

The second videogram, a jumbo floppy, was from Denis, origin
Oslo, transmission time last Saturday. He always conscientiously
sent me the proceedings of the Metapsychic Congresses even
though most of the papers and panel discussions were far over my
simple head. I rarely bothered to play them - but I'd play this one,
all right, and bring plenty of popcorn.

The third and last videogram was from Ume Kimura, origin
Sapporo, transmission time 1915 hours tomorrow...

No!

I clutched the little disk in its flimsy envelope with both hands,
letting the rest of my mail tumble to the floor. You didn't. You
couldn't. Not because of what happened at the Congress...

"Hey, Roj?" Elijah Shelby was picking up my stuff and eyeing me
askance. "You okay? You look like you seen a ghost. Bad news?"

But momentary hope burst over me and I thought: Ghost! Ghost!
Stop her stop her you can stop her -

All around me the banalities of a small-town post office crowded
with patrons, and the good old gaffer now radiating anxiety as he
realized that something was really wrong, and I walked away still
mind-shouting, pushed open the door, stood outside in the early
morning sun yelling around the world into tomorrow's night.

Then I ran, through the parking lot and across South Street to my
bookshop, and fumbled with the old-fashioned key, and tripped on
the sill, nearly dropping the precious disk. To the back room.
Power up the player. (No. I couldn't print it. I never could. ) Slip the
videogram into the slot and fall into my old swivel chair. No longer
shouting to the Ghost but pleading to the kind-eyed naked-hearted
Jesus whose picture had hung on Tante Lorraine's bedroom wall.
Don't let her! Don't let her! But I knew she had.

Her image smiled at me. She wore a plain Japanese robe and sat
on her heels in front of a painted paper screen set in some outdoor
courtyard or atrium. A small maple tree with spidery maroon leaves
was visible behind the screen and there was a tinkling of falling
water. Ume spoke to me with formality after the initial smile and
bow of her head.

"Roger, my dear friend... I have just returned from the Congress in
Oslo. You know by now that there is a serious division among the
operant leadership, brought about by our increasing despair over
the unending violence that afflicts the world. The dream we once
shared of leading humanity to permanent peace now stands
revealed as mere arrogant presumption. How did we operants dare
to think that we would succeed, when all throughout history well-
meaning persons have tried again and again to foster peace, only
to fail?

"We tried to show humanity a fellowship of the mind, a new society
where suspicion and fatal misunderstanding could be banished
from political relationships, fostering a climate where peace might
flower. But instead of this, we opened a chasm wider than before -
a gulf be­tween operant and nonoperant. There is no fellowship,
only envy and fear. There is no peace, only ever-spreading war.

"You know how previous Congresses of operants would reaffirm,
at the start of the proceedings, the ethic of love and nonaggression
exem­plified by the illustrious martyr, Urgyen Bhotia. This
philosophy, to­gether with its correlate - that operant minds have an
obligation to love and serve selflessly those minds who stand a
step beneath on ev­olution's ladder - was never seriously
challenged during the twenty years of Metapsychic Congresses
preceding this one.

"O my friend! Now the challenge has been made.

"It seemed so innocent, didn't it, when the symposium on political
activism ended in an implacable deadlock! On the one side were
Denis and Jamie and Vigdis, championing nonaggression, and on
the other side, insisting that operants must now defend themselves
and their countries with mental as well as physical force, were
Tamara and Zhen­yu and - the shame! - Hiroshi. My own
countryman! And Tamara, the mother of us all! My soul turned to
ice as these three revered ones opened their minds to the
assembly and showed the reasoning that had led them to abandon
the precious heritage of Urgyen.

"Yes... one may see the logic. The Soviet operants have suffered
more terribly than any. Now that the dictator is dead and the
Politburo begs them to return and unify their collapsing nation, how
can they say no? They are offered great political power. Once
before they were be­trayed, and they vow it will not happen again.
One may see the logic!

"But from it flow the consequents.

"China fears the Soviet Union. It is rich in food and technology and
its great northern neighbor starves for both as the civil war drags
on in spite of the capitulation of Iran and the coup in Pakistan. And
the rest of Asia contemplates with horror a conflict between the
giants. What can save us? The Zap-Star net is unfinished. Now its
defenses may be turned into weaponry! The EE adepts of every
nation will survey the great laser batteries with increasing
trepidation, wondering which country will first dare attempt the
conversion... Japan fears that China may already possess this
capability - and that it will be used as a pre­emptive strike against
the Soviets...

"Like an avalanche in my Hokkaido mountains, it has begun with a
tiny slippage downhill. Soon it will be an unstoppable monster. We
operants will lend it momentum. Yes. It was already happening in
Oslo as we raised mental walls against one another, feeling the
former mood of trust and goodwill begin sliding into an abyss. All
of us, seeing the logic; forgetting the love and the dream.

"I am saddened and shamed. In my pride I had cultivated tsuki-no-
kokoro - the mind as calm as the moon. I tried to lead and teach. I
never coerced. But I cannot create within myself that selfless
power, that Center of vision that my people call the hara, that would
give me courage to continue. I am a proud and foolish woman who
long ago turned away from her own family, and again and again my
mind shows me a small girl bringing humiliation upon her father. I
must escape this girl and her shame.

"O my friend! The pleasure we shared was good. The comfort we
gave one another must be your remembrance of me, and not this
image of pain. Burn the disk, Roger. Nakanai de kudasai.
Sayonara. "



She knelt silently then. There was no mat beneath her, only
polished flagstones. She closed her eyes and her body tensed
and I knew she was summoning the psychocreativity from what she
called her Center.

There was only a split second of flame before the video recording
went to black.

She had told me to destroy the disk: I could not. She had told me,
in Japanese, not to cry: I did. But I did obey her request to
remember our sharing; and I remember it now and possess, for a
little while, my own tsuki-no-kokoro.



27

PITTSBURG TOWNSHIP, NEW HAMPSHIRE, EARTH

31 JULY 2013



"You wanta wait here on the deck, Mr. O'Connor, Vic should be
back from his swim in a jiff. Coolin' off nicely out here now that the
sun's down. Varmints be comin' down to the water. You might like
to catch a scan of 'em. Visitors often do. "

"Thank you, Mr. Laplace, " Kieran said. "That might be interesting.
What kinds of wildlife do you have in these parts?"

"Moose, bear, panther - Vic even reintroduced woodland caribou
couple years ago, when he first closed off Indian Stream Valley to
the public. These north New Hampshire woods'll soon be back the
way my ancestors knew 'em. Damn good thing, too. "

"You're descended from the voyageurs?" Kieran inquired politely.

"Them - and the Abnaki. Figure I got my long-sight from the
Redskin side of the blanket and my coercion from the Canuck. "
The gray-haired caretaker nodded toward an impressive instrument
mounted on one of the deck railings. "Now some heads - uh -
some operants like to use the spotterscope for spyin' wildlife if
their long-sight gets a mite bewil­dered by the woods and the lake
and all. Feel free. That there's a light-amp with optional warm-body
targeting adjustable to the 'proximate size of the varmint you wanta
scan. Try around four to six hunnerd kilos for moose, seventy to
one-twenty-five for whitetail deer or bear... or a man. "

Limping slightly, Kieran went to examine the scope. "Does Victor
Remillard find much use for this?"

Laplace let out a pitying guffaw. "You gotta be kidding!" Then the
mien of exaggerated civility was back in place and he said, "Well,
you just make yourself t'home while I take care of a few things.
Like I said, Vic'll be along soon. "

He turned and started to shamble away, then turned to say, "Not
that I wanta give you a hard time, since Vic did say he was
expecting you. But you had your orders from Mr. Fortier. Those
heads of yours in the limo - they were told to go all the way back to
the main Pittsburg road and wait. They ain't done that. I think you
better flash 'em your tele­pathic high-sign. "

Kieran said, "I'll do that, Mr. Laplace. A misunderstanding. "

This time the operant yokel's deadpan expression was clearly
contra­dicted by the contempt of his mental undertone. "And while
you're at it, give a shout to them four fellers pussyfootin' this way
through the woods along the south shore. Tell 'em to get their
asses and their arse­nal back the way they come from before they
fall into a bog... or somethin'. "

Imbeciles! Adam Arnie damnyou didn't I tell you I'd handle this on
my own get out and call off those piss-artist commandos!

Kier we only wanted to maximize our options in case -

GET OUT! "Well, I'm sorry about that, Mr. Laplace. An overzealous
subordinate took it upon himself to countermand my explicit
instruc­tions. "

"A damn shame. But no harm done, I reckon. I try to see to that,
Mr. O'Connor. We're just a little two-bit lash-up compared to your
organization - but we get along. "

"I appreciate that. You might say that's why I'm here this evening.
I've transmitted to my people direct orders for withdrawal. I intend
to fulfill Mr. Remillard's conditions to the letter. You will let him know
that?"

Laplace smirked and spat over the rail into the lake. From
somewhere out on the water came an eerie warbling cry like
demented laughter. "An owl?" Kieran asked.

"Nope. Loon. Alias the great northern diver, Gavia immer. Kinda
relic of the late Neogene avifauna. Been yakkin' it up in these parts
purt' near five, six million years. Long time to hold on to a sense of
humor, but I reckon it helps a critter survive. Be seein' you, Mr.
O'Connor. You be sure to tell Vic I was on the job. "

"I'll do that, " Kieran said dryly.

The gangling old fellow clumped off into the lodge's interior and
Kieran let out a long sigh of pain. He closed his eyes, summoning
the soothing black momentarily, and let it cradle him. Serene, he
banished suspicion and anxiety and the gnawing in his groin; and
when he opened his eyes he saw four bulky shapes wading out
from a small heavily wooded cove a hundred meters or so down
the shore to the right.

He flicked on the spotterscope and swung the barrel. A cow
moose and her nearly full-grown triplets were feeding on water
plants. He watched them for nearly ten minutes. The sky had gone
to deep purple and the loons were cackling excitedly over toward
the northern reaches of the lake, so Kieran aimed the light-
amplifying device in that direc­tion after programming the infrared
mode to detect bodies in excess of ninety kilograms mass. The
driving mechanism took over and Kieran kept his eye to the scope
as it scanned the opposite shore, about twelve hundred meters
away.

The target-grid flashed on. Gotcha! And Kieran zoomed in and
found himself looking at another moose. But this was one of the
most un­canny beasts he had ever seen, an enormous male
standing half con­cealed among the dense second growth of
balsam fir. His color was not the usual dark brown but burnished
gray, like pewter; and the great rack of antlers, still dangling shreds
of velvet, was whiter than bleached bone at the pronged edges
and translucent with startling blood-veins in the broad, palmate
centers and toward the base. The moose rubbed his fantastic skull
adornment vigorously against saplings to scratch what must have
been a colossal itch. Then he glared at Kieran from eyes like
smoldering coals.

"I've named him Glaçon. Rather frivolous for such a massive brute,
but it fit when he was a calf. He's a special pet. Genetically
engineered albino. I always wondered what one would look like. "

Kieran continued his calm surveillance through the eyepiece. His
farsight superimposed the image of Victor Remillard's face in the
black forest portion of the visual field. "Glaçon... that means ice
cube, doesn't it?"

"Or a cold-hearted devil of a person, " said Victor Remillard.

Kieran lifted his head from the scope. "He's beautiful. In this forest
preserve of yours, he might even live to a ripe old age. " He didn't
ask Victor if he would like to use the instrument. In farsight, the
younger man was clearly his master. But that was not the
metafaculty that mattered...

They faced off, the burly forty-three-year-old at his physical and
men­tal prime and the dying old man. Kieran O'Connor's once olive
skin was now sallow and deeply furrowed beside the thin-lipped
Celtic mouth. The eyes were sunken, having the same insatiable
ardor as Shannon's eyes; the mind behind them, however, had
none of her fire but instead a beckoning well of unending night.

Come to me, said Kieran.

To me! Victor commanded.

Neither man moved.

The whooping of the loons reflected the laughter that flooded the
aether. They disengaged and stood back.

Kieran shrugged. "We had to try. But it isn't really a stand-off, you
know... You've won."

Victor was wary. "Explain."

"I must sit down, " Kieran said.

They moved to a couple of bogus Barcelona chairs and Kieran
lowered himself with exquisite caution. "You know my physical
condition. I will continue to survive on will power, however, until it
suits me to end what I began. You are also probably aware that
both the FBI and the Justice Department are rooting feverishly
through my data banks, using methods both licit and illicit,
determined to find or fabricate evidence that I am guilty of treason,
conspiracy, racketeering, grand theft, and multiple counts of
murder. "

Victor nodded.

"Do you know that your older brother Denis is responsible for this
embarrassment of legal activism?"

"No... "

Kieran smiled sourly. "He and his partisans are also behind the
recent spate of bills introduced into Congress that will empower
operant in­vestigators to meddle in the affairs of persons like you
and me. The amendment permitting mental cross-examination was
only the begin­ning, you know. "

"I know. All these years, they couldn't touch us. Denis knew what I
was doing, but there was never any way he could prove it. He
couldn't even prove I was operant - much less that I used the
powers to take what I wanted. "

Kieran said, "A mechanical aura-detection device - ostensibly for
use in identifying and classifying the faculties of operant newborns
- is undergoing tests at the University of Edinburgh. Professor
Jamie MacGregor will be demonstrating it at this year's
Metapsychic Con­gress. "

Victor said nothing. But his mind transmitted both a query and an
image of an intricate control console emplaced in a blind tower in
the countryside west of Chicago.

"You want an explanation of that. " Kieran smiled and nodded
almost absently. The pain was far away for the moment. "I should
have thought it would be obvious. It's the key to ultimate victory.
Once the victory would have been mine. Now I'm offering it to you.
"

Kieran spoke on, slowly and simply, clothing the ludicrous notion of
ruling the world through the Zap-Star's threat with a glowing
plausi­bility, but at the same time making certain that Victor
recognized the scheme as the fever-dream of an aging
megalomaniac. The crude brain of the self-centered entrepreneur
would be immediately aware of the gaping flaws in logic. He would
visualize other ways of using Zap-Star, feasible ways. He would
humor the madman, intuitively accepting Kieran's genuine need of
him, but never grasping the hidden motive. As to the goal of the
Absolute... its apprehension was as far beyond Victor Remillard as
were the stars that had begun to twinkle in the summer sky of New
Hampshire.

"It can all be yours. I've completed the instruments of transfer - of
merger, actually, granting you control of everything I own. Once I'm
gone, the feds have nothing. My corporations exist as independent
legal entities and they're as legitimate before the bar of justice as
any Amer­ican business. All you need do is help me finish off our
mutual ene­mies. "

"Denis? His Coterie at Dartmouth?"

"All of them, " Kieran said. "The metapsychic leadership of the
world. The operant meddlers. They'll be right here in New
Hampshire in mid-September having their annual confab. Even the
breakaways from Rus­sia and the Orient have agreed to send
delegates for one last meeting. I can't touch them... but you could.
I could show you how. Help you. My agents will see that the local
chapters of the Sons of Earth are armed and equipped. You and
your people - completely unknown to the gov­ernment agents -
provide the leadership and then disappear, leaving the mob to take
the blame. "

Victor said, "And then?"

"I die. And you take everything I have. I've worked out the details in
a way that should satisfy you. Three of my closest associates - the
men who were with me from the beginning - are prepared to brief
you on the entire operation, beginning to end, mind-screens down.
You have as many of your people sit in as you like. "

"When can these associates of yours be here?"

"They're in the limousine that brought me, " Kieran said, "the one
that your efficient long-sighted caretaker made certain I sent back
to the Pittsburg Junction before you put in your appearance. "

Victor laughed. "Pete Laplace is the best farsensor I've got. Loyal
as a Labrador retriever. With him and his old twelve-gauge hanging
around, I'm as safe out here as a baby in a cradle. It's just a damn
shame that his IQ's only around eighty-six. "

"He seemed sharp enough to me... Well, Victor - what's your
an­swer? Will you put those spoilers away for me and let me die
happy?"

"Kieran, I'm only sorry I didn't think of the idea first! Let me get on
the phone and get a few of my boys up from Berlin. It won't take
more than an hour. Your bunch can follow them back in here.
Meanwhile, you might like to join me in a little snack. "

Kieran closed his eyes. Sequestered behind impregnable walls,
safe in the secret depths, he gave thanks to the Black Mother. In
the end is the beginning. In death the source of life. Let Thy belly
the void take us in. Dam dham nam tam tham dam dham nam pam
pham

"Pete?" Victor was shouting. "Pete, you rapscallion - where are you
hiding? We've got company coming and I need -oh, for God's
sake! Kieran, you want to come in here and get a load of this? He's
out like a light on the sun-porch couch, with the Browning tucked
under his cheek and an empty bottle of Wild Turkey clutched to his
chest! I guess I'll have to do my own cooking. "



28

FROM THE MEMOIRS OF ROGATIEN REMILLARD



IN AUGUST 2013 I encountered the Family Ghost again - at the
White Mountain Resort.

The sprawling white-stucco wedding-cake hotel at the western foot
of Mount Washington seemed hardly to have changed at all from
the days when I had worked there as its convention manager. It
was as ridicu­lously posh and Edwardian as ever and served the
same sumptuous meals, and in spite of America's depressed
economy it was still crowded with virtually the same type of
clientele - upscale young families, hik­ing fanatics with sybaritic
base-camp tastes, and herds of nostalgic old­sters on expensive
guided tours. The latter now arrived by X-wing airbus instead of the
diesel motor coaches of my day; but they still wore lapel badges,
and they were still escorted by pretty young women, and the old
ladies still cheeped and tittered eagerly while the old gents looked
glum and resigned.

I had come to the hotel on business, to consult with the youngster
who occupied my erstwhile position, one Jasper Delacourt. Ten
years earlier the Twelfth Congress on Metapsychology had been
held at the resort and Denis had roped me into making the
arrangements. "Who," he had asked me reasonably, "could do a
better job of it?" And so I did, and the hotel's Olde New England
kitsch had charmed the socks off the foreign scholars, who found it
a refreshing change from the modern university locales that had
characterized most of the other Congresses. The cog railway had
been a big hit, and the more able-bodied operants tramped around
on Mount Washington during their spare time, mar­veling over the
relict ice-age flora and the oddly portentous ambiance around the
summit.

This year's Congress (which many people at Dartmouth feared
would be the last) was also scheduled to be held at the resort, and
so it was only natural that I should do a reprise of my 2003 duties. I
had made most of the arrangements by phone and data-link
months earlier; but as Sep­tember approached I drove over to
wrap things up in person.

Jasper Delacourt bounced up from behind his desk as I entered
his office and wrung my hand. The hotel was extremely happy to
be hosting twenty-eight hundred delegates during the somnolent
post-Labor Day season.

"Roger, you old sonuvagun! God, you look great. Ten years, you
haven't aged a day, my man!"

"You look pretty fit yourself, " I lied. "The Congress committee
over at Dartmouth is really very pleased that you could
accommodate us, given the more modest budget this go-around. "

Jasper sighed. "Things are tough all over. I can level with you
because you used to sit in this seat, right? I have to hustle my ass
off scratching up tours and conferences and sales meetings to
keep this hulk topped off. If we had to depend on straight
vacationers, we'd belly-up. "

I chuckled. "It wasn't all that different in '90, when I left. "

He studied me narrowly and I could see his mind doing
calculations. "Jeez - that long ago? But I thought - How the hell old
are you, any­how?"

"In a week I'll be sixty-eight. "

"Holy moley, " Jasper groaned. "What - d'you get your seltzer from
Pounce de Leeon's fountain, man? I'd of said forty-five ten years
ago and say the same now. I mean, you got that lived-in look and
Miss Clairol never made a dime off those silver curls - but sixty-
eight? No shit?"

I shrugged. "Kind of runs in the family. I reckon I'll fall to pieces all
at once at seventy... But don't let me waste your time. I know
you've got a lot to do. Mainly, I want to noodle with you on the
matter of our big Saturday night banquet on the twenty-first. Our
attendance will be a couple of hundred short of last time, but you
remember how we had tables packed cheek-to-jowl in the Grand
Ballroom, and out in the hall, and even filling up the Fern Salon.
There were closed-circuit TV mon­itors spotted around so the
speeches could be heard by the nonfarsensi­tive. But, Jasper...
metapsychic operants want to experience the full nuance spectrum
when somebody sounds off! Conventional sensory input and
ultrasensory. Is the speaker delivering with a straight tongue and
mind - or is he or she peddling tosh? Listening to a TV just doesn't
cut the mustard with an audience of heads. We've got to think of
some­thing else - and I don't mean a buffet. "

"Roger! Roger!" he chortled. "I'm way ahead of you, my man."

With a flourish, he produced a folder bound in fake leather and
smacked it open on the desk, pressing the upper right-hand
corner. Ta-dah! A twenty-by-thirty plaque, playing a full-color loop
showing a series of lap dissolves of a luxurious mountaintop
restaurant: exteriors at sunset, in sun-drenched daylight, in a
majestic snowy night; interiors showing the place tricked out as a
cabaret, hosting a bar mitzvah, win­ing and dining some affair of
the New England Medical Association; close-ups of Lucullan
feasts and après-hike fireside cheer. The book-plaque even had
background music, for God's sake: Edward MacDowell's New
England Idyls.

"The Summit Chalet!" Jasper declaimed. "Dine in opulent grandeur
far above New Hampshire's White Mountains. Visit the fabled haunt
of the Great Spirit, where even today flying saucers have been
seen waft­ing through the crystalline air!"

"I remember now, " I said. "When they demolished the obsolete
an­tenna farm and transmitter complex four or five years ago, they
granted the hotel a concession to build the chalet. Is it paying its
way?"

"Not yet, " Jasper confided. "We went way over budget on the
envi­ronmental adaptations. You know - to keep it from blowing off
the mountain when the wind's three hundred kloms an hour. The
engineers finally licked it, though. A tornado couldn't budge that
thing now. And what a showplace! Those globetrotting heads of
yours'll eat it up, Roj."

I was dubious. "We're talking about moving nearly three thousand
people up there from the hotel, Jasper. In maybe an hour. And
then getting them back down after the banquet. "

"No problem. We bring in ten X-wing shuttle buses, make three
trips. "

"Who eats the transport costs?"

"Goes with the deluxe dinner package: prime rib or lobster, BP and
veggie, sabayon dessert, nonvintage champers, gratuity included -
ninety bucks a head. "

I whistled. "Jasper - the budget! Do you realize that Dartmouth is
so strapped that they're remerging the Department of
Metapsychology with Psychiatry again? My nephew, the Nobel
laureate, is getting shucked of two thirds of his staff! The research
grants are gone, the endowments are gone, and this will probably
be the last time the Congress meets for Christ knows how long. "

Jasper leaned toward me. "Then make it a whangdoodle. Take 'em
out in style. "

"I don't see how I can justify -"

"Do me one favor. Go up and look the place over. "



A van trundled me half a klom to the X-wing pad, which was tucked
behind a sound-baffle wall hidden amidst greenery. In less than
five min­utes the versatile aircraft that combined the speed of a
fixed-wing with the limited-space landing requirements of a
helicopter whisked me to the top of Mount Washington. We landed
in a bowl newly cut on the eastern shoulder of the summit. I
recalled that environmentalists had bitterly protested both the
landing facility and the new restaurant, demanding that the old
Sherman Adams Summit Building, a graceless structure built in the
1980s, be retained as a historical monument and the rest of the
sum­mit be left "in a state of nature. " However, since virtually the
entire top of Mount Washington was covered with trucked-in
rubble, and had been humanly modified in one way or another
beginning in the 1820s, the nat­ural-staters hadn't had much of a
leg to stand on.

The Summit Chalet was designed to blend with the lichen-crusted
granite and dazzling hoarfrost that characterized New England's
highest point. The building was trifoliate, the three lobes having
armor-glass windows all around, providing maximum windowside
seating. Its rock-strewn roof was surmounted by a wide turret with
an observation deck and open balcony, mobbed with tourists on
that balmy summer after­noon. On the level below the restaurant
were boutiques, souvenir shops, and a small museum, together
with more open balconies. A covered tunnel led to a new sheltered
terminus of the little old cog railway, which was exactly as I had
remembered it. After a short inspection tour I was admitted to one
of the lower balconies by the chalet's manager and left alone to
think things over.

One of the primitive steam locomotives was toiling up-slope from
the vicinity of the White Mountain Hotel, pushing its coach. The
trails crisscrossing the summit had the same yellow-paint blazes.
The grass-like sedges were desiccated, but here and there tufts of
alpine herbiage grew green and indomitable, speckled with tiny
flowers.

... The shivering boy standing at my side, pointing, his mind
detect­ing the first empowered mind not of our own family.

... Hikers ascending in a line from behind the cog track, and little
Denis's farsight lending me a glimpse of the second miracle:
Elaine.

It had all begun right here. It would be an appropriate place for the
farewell.

The wind was stiff that day, blasting in from the west, and my eyes
misted over. I felt again the strange aetheric vibrations and an
eerie sense of looming presence. The mountain that was sacred.
The moun­tain that had killed so many. The mountain that had
heard foolish dreamers crying out to the uncomprehending stars,
and nurtured wild tales of frost-demons and Great Carbuncles and
flying saucers...

Bonjour Rogi!

I started violently. "Est-ce toi?!"

Arrange for the Metapsychic Congress to have its last supper on
the mountain.

"Hah! And should I tell them who decreed the final squandering of
their treasury?"

You will be able to convince Denis that the site is suitable. Your
coercion is more effective than you think. After he has agreed and
all the arrangements are in train... yes, you may tell him about me.

"Grand dieu - you can't mean it!"

Be subtle. Choose your time well. Perhaps you can tell him that
you have long since accepted me as a minor delusion - a harmless
uncon­scious projection of hope. Of reasonable hope, not one
forlorn on the face of it.

"You haven't been around here for a long time, mon fantôme. We
Earthlings have made a botch of it!"

Perhaps... Tell him anyhow. Tell him that he is right in clinging to
the ethic of nonviolence and service. Tell him he is wrong about
want­ing to retreat to a low profile. The Mind of Earth must not
fragment but coadunate - grow and flow together in a sublime
metaconcert of good­will, a renunciation of selfishness that
coerces the Intervention of the Galactic Milieu at long last!

"Now?" I cried. "When it's all fallen apart? You've got a weird
sense of humor. "

The Ghost said: Your nephew Denis can scan your mind and
apper­ceive the reality... if you yourself believe it to be true.

"Go away, " I whispered, looking out over the western valley.
"Leave me in peace. I'm only an old fool and no one listens to me,
and there isn't a hope in hell that Denis or anyone else would take
such a fairy tale seriously. Extraterrestrial redeemers are an old-
fashioned aber­ration to psychiatrists like Denis. Jung even wrote a
book about it! It's the perennial human desire for a fairy godmother
or a deus ex machina to save us from our mortal folly - and I don't
believe in it. So there!"

The invisible thing seemed to sigh in exasperation. It said: I hoped
it would not be this way. Obviously it must be. Le bon dieu, il aime
a plaisanter! Always the humorist... So! Tell me Rogi: Do you still
have the Great Carbuncle?

"The key ring?" I blurted. Digging in my hip pocket, I pulled out the
silvery chain that held my shop and apartment keys. The little red-
glass ball of the fob winked in the powerful sunlight. "This thing?"

That thing... At the Congress, when the moment seems
appropriate, you will once again urge Denis to unite his colleagues
- and the Mind of Earth - in prayerful metaconcert. As a token of
your serious intent, invite him to scrutinize the Carbuncle with his
deep-sight.

"Just like that!" I laughed bitterly. "And how will I know this magic
moment?"

The Ghost said, rather ominously: It will be self-evident. Do it
with­out fail. And now, au revoir, cher Rogi. We may meet again
soon!

A deathly chill smote me. I gasped, and my breath exhaled in a
white cloud, and I realized that the temperature of the air had fallen
precipi­tously. Stumbling, I turned to the sliding glass door behind
me and hauled it open, flinging myself inside as if the frost-
demons themselves were on my tail.

The manager of the chalet was there, and he said, "Oh, there you
are, Mr. Remillard. When you didn't stop in again at my office, I
thought you might have left -"

"We'll have our banquet here, " I said. "I've made up my mind.
Let's go to your office and draw up the contract. "

"Wonderful!" he said. "You'll be glad you made this decision!"

"Somebody will be, " I growled, and followed him back upstairs.



The following week I drove to Concord, where I had made an
appoint­ment with a consulting gemologist. He was understanding
when I said that I'd like an appraisal of the Carbuncle while I waited
- and watched. But as it happened, I was out of luck. He rather
quickly ascertained that the chain wasn't silver, but a platinum-
iridium alloy; it was also easy to determine that the flawless,
transparent ball was not glass, but some other substance with a
hardness of ten on Moh's scale.

"Now, ordinarily, that would suggest that we have a diamond, " the
gemologist said. "But a blood-red diamond would be fabulously
valuable, and no person in his right mind would polish one into a
spherical shape rather than facet it. So this may be some very
unusual synthetic with a similar thermal conductivity. "

My mind had gone numb. "Yes. That's probably just what it is. An
old friend of mine gave me this. A chemist. Dared me to find out
what it was. I think this is his idea of a practical joke. "

The gemologist said, "To tell what this stone is, we'd have to do a
crystallographic analysis with special equipment. That would run
into money and take a while. "

"No, no, " I protested. "Why don't you just put down on your
ap­praisal the bare facts you've told me. No monetary value of the
stone, of course. "

"Well, if that's what you want. You know, if this really were a
dia­mond, it'd weigh upward of twenty-five carats. Because of the
rare color, it'd likely be worth a couple million. "

I forced a laugh. "Well, the joke's on me, isn't it?... Now how much
do I owe you?"

The fee was fifty dollars. I paid it gladly, and tucked the appraisal
paper into my wallet and the Great Carbuncle into my pants pocket.
Then I went back to Hanover to wait for the third week in
September, when the last Metapsychic Congress was scheduled
to begin.

I didn't say anything to Denis about the Family Ghost, not even
when the Carbuncle seemed to burn a hole in my pocket. The
Ghost was welcome to make a fool of me if it could; but I was
damned if I would make a fool of myself.



29

BRETTON WOODS, NEW HAMPSHIRE, EARTH

21 SEPTEMBER 2013



swiftly, before any early risers who shared Ilya and Katie's
apprehensions could spot him and detain him, old Pyotr
Sakhvadze slipped outside the grand hotel into dawn silence. He
hurried across the dry lawn, noting that the absence of dew
probably signified that rain was on the way. The sky was bright with
a high overcast. It would be too bad if lowering clouds spoiled the
view from the Summit Chalet during the banquet that evening, but a
bit of thunder and light­ning might actually liven things up.

Here and there among the beds of chrysanthemums and the
formal evergreen plantations lay incongruous masses of litter -
broken plac­ards, torn banners, scattered leaflets, some beer and
pop cans and snack-food wrappers - mementos of the crowd of
antioperant pickets that had invaded the resort grounds last night.
All throughout the week-long Metapsychic Congress there had
been small groups of Sons of Earth demonstrators parading
outside the main entrance of the complex; but several hundred had
shown up on Friday evening, and the hotel security force had finally
had to call in the State Police to clear them out. Pyotr's grandson
Ilya had been quite alarmed at the sluggish response of the local
authorities. He had warned Pyotr not to go outside alone on the
final day of the Congress, when even more serious confrontations
might be expected. However, the old man had no intention of
forgoing his morning constitutional. The antioperants, he reasoned,
would hardly be up and about at six in the morning. They would be
sleeping off the Friday-night fracas and doubtless renewing their
energies for a more climactic face-off tonight...

Abandoned placards blocked the pathway and Pyotr flicked them
aside with his walking stick, tsking disapproval of the impudent
sentiments. we are human - are YOU? one sign inquired. Pyotr
chuckled at another that proclaimed superbrains invade your inner
space! By far the majority of the professionally printed placards
echoed the Sons of Earth chant, "Off With the Heads" - which was
often abbreviated in a sinister fashion to "Off the Heads!" The
meaning of one slogan, where is kryptonite now that we really need
it?, eluded Pyotr com­pletely. He was relieved when he came to
the turnoff at the X-wing pad and was able to head into the thick
woods along the little Ammonoosuc River, which threaded the
resort grounds.

Down by the brawling stream there were no traces of the
demonstra­tion. Sugar maple trees were just beginning to turn
color in that amaz­ing North American fashion that was - typically! -
so much more spectacular than any Europe or Asia had to offer.
But Pyotr was really hoping to rediscover another tree that he had
taken note of ten years earlier, during his first visit to the White
Mountain Hotel. On and on he walked, without catching sight of it,
and he began to fear that it had perished, perhaps toppling into the
river during a spring freshet. But no ... there it was. A solitary
mountain ash laden with marvelous great bunches of scarlet
berries, the very image of the beloved ryabina trees of Pyotr's
native Caucasus.

He paused and contemplated the scene with a full heart. The
rushing stream, the magic tree, the mighty mountain looming darkly
to the east - all so reminiscent of his old home that it made him
want to weep with the loss.

No, he told himself, and forged on. What a fool you are, Pyotr

Sergeyevich! You have lived ninety-nine years and you are still
vigorous and in control of most of your mental faculties - meager
though they be - and you have a safe home with your loving
grandson Ilya in Ox­ford, and a wealth of memories and
experiences to share with your great-granddaughters. You are as
fortunate as the patriarch Seliac Eshba - even though not so
tranquil, or so wise.

The path turned south, away from the river, and passed along the
boundary of the resort's beautiful golf course, through an open
area where the long rampart of the Presidential Range still hid the
sun. The air was utterly calm. No birds sang and no civilized noises
intruded upon the immense quiet. It seemed almost as if the entire
New Hamp­shire countryside were holding its breath in anticipation.

Pyotr paused with his eyes lifted. The disasters had been many,
but they had come and gone as surely as the seasons turned. In
the future lay fresh perils, especially for his dear Tamara and the
other operants now engaged in the struggle for power in Moscow.
What would the simple Seliac think of such matters? Would he
offer another homely metaphor from the abiding Earth as a symbol
of hope? And why must it always be hope, rather than fruition?
Must the small-souled and the evil always appear to triumph while
the peace-lovers were left with only their dreams?

He walked on, brooding, toward a small pavilion where he thought
he would sit and rest for a time; but the peculiar air of psychic
ten­sion was growing, together with a small but persistent pang just
behind his forehead. He stopped again, rubbing his eyes, and
when he looked back toward the mountain he stiffened and uttered
a gasp of shock.

The rocks on the vast slope shimmered in green and violet, and
the crest of Mount Washington seemed crowned with a golden
tellurian aura.

Pyotr thought: It can't be! These land-forms are ancient and stable.
Surely they don't have earthquakes in New England!

He waited, frozen in place, expecting the tremor; but no seismic
movement occurred. Instead, it was his mind that seemed to
tremble on the brink of some stupendous discovery. What was it?
He strained to­ward the insight that the mountain seemed to hold
out to him, his eyes fixed on the brightening skyline -

And then the first dazzling limb of the sun topped the range, and he
was momentarily blinded. He cried aloud, and when he could see
once again the hallucination of colored light had vanished, along
with the mysterious pregnant tension that had enthralled his brain.

"Usrat'sya mozhno!" he cried. His knees threatened to buckle and
he barely caught himself from falling. Leaning heavily upon his
walking stick, he hobbled toward the little summerhouse. In his
frustration and vertigo, he did not notice that the place already had
an occupant.

"Dr. Sakhvadze - is something wrong?"

A tall man who had been sitting in the deep shadows started up
and took him by the arm, guiding him to a bench. Pyotr peered at
him and recognized Denis Remillard's uncle, an enigmatic
personage who acted as the Congress liaison with the hotel, but
otherwise had little to do with operant affairs.

Pyotr sat down heavily, pulled out his pocket handkerchief, and
mopped his face. "A little bad spell. Nothing physical. I am
sensitive, you see... to certain psychodynamic currents in the
geosphere. "

"Ah, " said Remillard, uncomprehending. "You're sure you'll be all
right?" He displayed a miniature telephone unit that he had taken
from inside his jacket. "I can call the hotel and have a golf cart
brought out. No trouble at all. "

"No, " said Pyotr sharply. "You needn't treat me like an invalid! It
was only a passing metapsychic event, I tell you. It shook me up.
I'll be all right again in a moment. "

"Just as you say, " Remillard murmured, tucking the portaphone
away. "You're abroad rather early, Doctor. "

"And so are you, " Pyotr retorted. Then, regretting his
brusqueness, he added, "I felt particularly in need of a ramble
today, to set my juices flowing and sharpen my wits. There are a
number of important papers and talks being delivered that I am
anxious to take in - most particu­larly Jamie MacGregor's
demonstration of the prototype bioenergetic-field detector. Auras
of all types are of great interest to me. And of course, there is
tonight's banquet to look forward to -"

"Along with other unscheduled diversions. "

Pyotr eyed Remillard with trepidation. "You think there will be
se­rious trouble?"

"Some kind of trouble. We're doing our best to make certain that
it's not serious. "

"One would think that in a great and powerful country like the United
States, such threats to public order would not be tolerated. "

Remillard laughed shortly. "We have a saying: 'It's a free country. '
And it is, Dr. Sakhvadze - for better and sometimes for worse. The
Sons of Earth and the other antioperant crazies can demonstrate
against us to their heart's content just as long as they don't
trespass on the private property of the resort. They got a little
overenthusiastic last night, and a few of them ended up in the
slammer, but the mob was still unfocused. Disorganized. What
we're afraid of is that another element may be moving in - a more
professional type of trouble­maker. "

"Why don't your EE operatives investigate and forestall these -
these -"

"Goons, " Remillard supplied. "I'm sure that New Hampshire is
doing its best. And my nephew's people have an informal group of
EE watch­dogs keeping an eye out. But it's the old problem in EE
surveillance, Doctor - given a limited number of pEEps, where do
you look?"

The old psychiatrist rose to his feet. "Quite so. Well, I think I shall
go back to the hotel. It would be prudent of me to return before my
grand­children miss me. The demonstration last night was very
worrying to them. They warned me not to go out alone. "

Remillard still sat on one of the benches, tossing a key ring with a
colorful fob from one hand to the other and frowning thoughtfully.
"They're quite right to worry. It was a nasty moment when the
pickets broke through the outer line of security guards and charged
down the hotel driveway. The mental vibrations scared the hell out
of me, I can tell you... It was really a primitive kind of metaconcert,
that mob mind. A mass mentality with an identity and a will of its
own - just for those few minutes, until the impetus faltered and the
thing shattered into individuals again. Thank God there weren't
more than a couple of hundred out there... I couldn't sleep a wink
last night after it was over. "

"And so you came out here. "

Remillard nodded. "A long time ago I worked for the hotel. This
little shelter out on the golf links used to be one of my favorite
thinking spots. " He flipped the key chain high, snatched it out of
the air with one hand, and stuffed it into his pocket. "But I guess
I've thought enough for this morning! Time for breakfast, and then
I'll have to make arrange­ments for a special power-source for
Professor MacGregor's doohickey. "

"Shall we walk back together?" Pyotr suggested. "Then I will have
complied with my grandchildren's directive at least partially, and
they will have no occasion to scold me. "

Remillard hauled himself up and stretched. "Those young fussbud-
gets give you a hard time, you just send 'em on to me! Let's go. "

Pyotr laughed. "Fussbudgets! Doohickey! What a colorful
language English is. "

"I don't know that those words are English, Doctor - but they're
sure Yankee. Just like me. "

Pyotr's eyes gleamed. "Yes... I do recall now that you are a native
of this region, Mr. Remillard. Perhaps you will be able to tell me
whether or not there are ever any earthquakes hereabouts?"

"Why, yes. We do get one, very rarely. "

"I knew it! I knew it!" Pyotr exulted; and then at the puzzled
expres­sion on the other man's face, he apologized. "I will explain
my strange question in just a moment. But, please - first I have one
other urgent query: What is kryptonite, and why do the Sons of
Earth covet it?"

Rogatien Remillard exploded in laughter.

"But it was on the placards of the demonstrators!"

Still chuckling, Remillard asked, "Have you ever heard of
Superman?"

"Nietzsche's famous Ubermensch? Most certainly. "

Remillard regained his composure with some effort. "Not that
Super­man. Another one, a kind of American legend. "

"I have never heard of him, no. But I would be most interested to
learn about this folkloric hero. I presume there are mythic analogs
to the operant condition in the American Superman's tale?"

"I never really thought about it that way - but I guess there are. "

Together, the two of them started back for the resort hotel, with
Rogi telling the story slowly and carefully so that the old man would
be sure to get the joke.



"The Gi! Of course it was the Gi, " Homologous Trend said. "One
is most vexed with the silly things! What did they think they were
play­ing at?"

"No real harm has been done, " said Asymptotic Essence. "Let
one's tranquillity prevail. There was only a minimal matter-distortion
effect. One doubts whether any seismograph in use among the
Earthlings would have been able to record the anomaly at all."

"How in the world did they do it?" Eupathic Impulse was more
in­trigued than appalled, now that it was plain that no calamity had
taken place.

"The phenomenon was generated by an empathy spasm of the
col­lective Gi conscious," Noetic Concordance explained, "that
took place as they commiserated with the aged Earthling's
poignant meditations. The harmonic passed from the mental
lattices to the consonant geophysical ones, setting off the tremor.
One notes that the reverse of the phenomenon is common
enough. Trust the Gi to come up with a unique twist. "

"Trust them to come up with arrant nincompoopery, " said Trend.
"One is strongly inclined to excuse the Gi Fleet from further
participa­tion in this convocation. Given the delicacy of the
approaching climax, the consequences of its lapse could have
been extremely serious. "

"The Gi are contrite, " Essence said. "They have taken our rebuke
to heart. They pledge that they will henceforth control the racial
tendency to emotional ebullience. "

"They'd jolly well better, " Trend declared, "or they can watch the
finale from the backside of Pluto! Don't they realize that Unifex is in
the process of exerting Its ultimate influences? As It draws the
skeins of probability taut, the slightest skew off the median may
confute the solidifying nodes. "

"Surely not, " Eupathic Impulse protested. "Not on the very
threshold of Intervention!"

"The resolution rests now with the operant Earthlings, " Trend told
the other three, "and possibly with the great Interloper Itself, whose
ways remain as mystifying as ever. The rest of us are permitted
only to watch and pray. Join with me, fellow entities, to remind the
fleet of this solemn fact. "

The four Lylmik minds projected the thought, using the imperative
mode; and it was affirmed by each and every one of the invisible
starships hovering expectantly about the planet Earth - ships of the
Krondak Polity, the Poltroyan, the Simbiari, and even the penitent
Gi -sum­moned from every part of the 14th Sector of the Galactic
Milieu in hopes of hearing the Intervention signal that only Atoning
Unifex might utter.

Together with the great living cruiser of the Lylmik Supervisors, the
convocation of exotic vessels numbered twenty thousand seven
hun­dred and thirty-six.



The main dining room of the hotel was crowded for breakfast; but
because most of the guests were operants who exerted effortless
sub­liminal compulsion upon the hard-working waitrons, things ran
very smoothly. None of the service personnel realized that they
were being gently coerced. Nevertheless, because their minds
were in a receptive frame, they were able to visualize the needs of
the patrons even though they themselves were normals. There
were no miswritten orders, no tables that were neglected while
others were overserviced, no perfectly cooled cups of coffee
topped off on the sly by overzealous pot-wielders. There was not
even much noise, since the delegates who had gathered for this
final day of the Metapsychic Congress did most of their
con­versing on the intimate telepathic mode - cool and smiling on
the outside while they voiced their apprehensions or complaints
mentally.

Rogi came into the dining room after seeing Pyotr safely to the
ele­vator and waved off the maitress d'. "Thanks, Linda. I'll just join
my family. " But send somebody pronto to take my order I'm
starving to death there's a good kid...

Lucille and Denis and their three oldest children were well into their
meal as Rogi slipped into the empty chair at the big round table
near the window, sitting between Philip and Severin. A waiter
appeared at once and Rogi ordered oeufs dans le sirop d'érable
and hot sourdough bread.

Yucko!

The telepathic critique slipped out of the mind of ten-year-old
Severin as the rest of the family greeted Rogi verbally. Lucille
looked at her son and the boy gave a start and sat up very straight.
He said, "I beg your pardon, Uncle Rogi. It was rude of me to
make such a comment. "

"De rien. " Rogi smiled. "Eggs in maple syrup are an old-fashioned
Franco dish. Even though they aren't on the menu, the chef knows
well enough how to prepare them. When I was a child my Aunt
Lorraine used to make them for us on special occasions... when
our spirits were in need of a lift. "

"It's that kind of a day, " Denis conceded.

"The vibes, " Philip observed, "are mucho malific. "

"And two carloads of deadheads just showed up at the main gate
to start picketing!" Severin added.

Lucille said: Sevvy. How many times must I tell you not to use that
epithet particularly in vocal speech when there are normals about
who may hear you...

The little boy sighed. "I'm sorry that I used the insulting expression,
" he mumbled; but his farspeech, imperfectly directed to his two
older brothers, belied the apology:

Well they are dead from the neck up and they hate our guts and
right this minute do you know what they're hollering at the
delegates coming in from the other hotels? they're hollering
FREAKS&HEADS! FREAKS&HEADS! YOUR MA SHOULDA
KNOWED YOU WERE BETTER OFF DEAD! so who's really the
deadhead huh? maybe we are to let 'em get away with that shit we
should do like the Russians and show 'em what Heads can do to
defend themselves if Assholes mess with us -

Denis said: Severin.

Severin said: Oops.

Philip and Maurice, their eyes on their plates and their barriers in
place, sat very still.

Denis said: Severin your Mama and I felt that you were mature
enough to come to this Congress to participate in the life of the
adult operant community at this crucial stage in our evolution.
Some of the input you've experienced here is positive and some is
negative but all of it should nurture mental growth.

"Yes, Papa, " Severin said. But I just wish there was some way we
could make the normals stop hating us make them like us for their
own good and ours too -!

"Learning to like someone, " said Severin's oldest brother Philip
sen­tentiously, "as opposed to the spontaneous goodwill
experienced between compatible personalities, may take
considerable time and require a large expenditure of psychic
energy. Tolerance is particularly difficult for normals - who lack the
insight faculties that we operants tend to take for granted. Normals
almost invariably form value judgments ac­cording to prejudicial or
superficial criteria. "

"For example, " Maurice chimed in, "a normal would look at Severin
and see only a scowling young pipsqueak with egg on his tie...
whereas we, using metapsychic perceptions, can scrutinize his
very soul and realize that beneath his unprepossessing exterior
lurks a truly depraved little pillock. "

I'll get you guys! Severin declared.

Boys! said Lucille.

Rogi laughed. "Yes, they're boys, all right. "

Denis glanced at his watch. "Professor Malatesta's symposium on
psychoeconomic vector theory starts in five minutes in the Gold
Room. Philip and Maurice - you won't want to be late. "

"No, Papa. " Still chortling mentally, the pair bade courteous
farewell and sauntered out of the dining room. At sixteen and
fourteen, they were both already taller than their father. Philip was
doing postgraduate work in bioenergetics at Harvard. Maurice,
winding up his B.A. require­ments at Dartmouth, was toying with the
notion of taking a degree in philosophy before entering medical
school.

Rogi said to Denis and Lucille: There was an ugly undertone in that
little bit of by-play among the boys. I think all three of them are
scared silly.

Denis said: You're right of course.

Lucille said: None of them has ever had to face such a
concentration of enmity before. You know what an operant
sanctuary Hanover is. Philip's had a few disagreeable experiences
at Harvard but that place is really too hypercivilized to permit any
serious incidents. This encoun­ter with the Sons of Earth in all their
deep-dyed yahoo splendor has shaken my babies rather badly.
One's first meeting with hatred en masse is apt to do that.

Rogi said: You might want to consider sending the kids home.

Denis said: The security people will keep the situation under
control. The boys will have to face situations like this sooner or
later. They may as well do it with the support of their mental peers.

Rogi said: Even Sevvy? Denis he's ten!

Denis asked his son, "What do you think about going home from
the Congress a little early? You've had five days' worth. Phil could
drive you and Maury to Hanover -"

Severin's face crumpled. "And miss the banquet on top of the
moun­tain? When it might even storm up there?"

Denis tried not to smile. "I was concerned that the unpleasant
aetheric nuances from the demonstrators might be upsetting. "

Severin glumly stirred his cold scrambled eggs with a fork. "I can
cope, Papa. "... But those ol' Sons better not mess with me!

Lucille said, "If you do stay we'll expect you to behave like an adult,
Sevvy. An operant adult. "

"I promise to do my best, Mama. "

"Good. Finish your breakfast then. " She glanced appealingly at
Rogi, posing a mental question: Would it be too much trouble for
you to keep him with you for a while? Both Denis and I must sit on
a rather boring panel.

Rogi said, "If you two would like to abandon us, feel free. Sevvy
and I will take our time eating and meet you later. "

The waiter arrived with Rogi's meal as Denis and Lucille left. The
boy showed immoderate interest in the big dish of eggs poached
in hot maple syrup. They were accompanied by a goblet of freshly
squeezed pink grapefruit juice and a smoking-hot loaf that sat on
its own minia­ture breadboard. Rogi smacked his lips and tucked
his napkin boldly into his collar. He turned the loaf on its side and
sawed off a couple of aromatic slices, passing one to Severin.

"Look here, young man. Your food's gone stone cold and I've got
more than enough for the two of us. I know these oeufs look weird,
but they smell good, don't they?"

"Yeah... "

Without another word, Rogi divided the eggs and showed the boy
how to moosh them up and eat them with a spoon while sopping
the bread in the delicious mess. Severin was delighted with this
confounding of bourgeois table etiquette. He tied his own napkin
around his neck and fell to.

"I've got an idea for when we're done, " Rogi said. "I have to help
the building engineer fix up the big downstairs meeting room for
Professor Jamie's show-and-tell at one-thirty. We'll bring in high-
voltage power cables from the transformer room and set up an
auxiliary board for the demonstration. You want to help?"

"Wow, yo!" said Severin, through a mouthful of eggs.

Rogi said: Keeping busy is another good way to damp the bad
vibes. At least I've found that it works.

You mean you got the fantods too?

Doggone right. Off-key goblin bassoons whooping in the pit of my
stomach and thousand-leggers skating up the back of my neck.

... Some of those Sons out there really would like to kill us.

I know Sevvy.

Would you let 'em? Rather than hurt them in self-defense?

The Ethic you've been taught tells you the answer.

I know the Altruism Ethic I want to know what you would do.

I'm just a primitive sort of head not in the same league as you and
your parents and the other giantbrains at this Congress -

Answer me straight don't futz me like a little kid!

Nonviolence is a wonderful ideal but dangerous it's amazing that so
many people do opt for it. Me I don't think I'd have the strength.

If those militant doodoodomes aren't fought they get worse!

The dilemma will probably remain academic thank God.

No but the whole thing really bothers me a lot I've tried to
under­stand Phil&Maury say they believe AltruismEthic just like
Mama&Papa but I can see into their minds and they're not sure
either.

Lord I believe help my unbelief...

Sort of. The Ethic does seem right from the point of view of
all­operantstogether because it's noble you know it catches the
attention of the normals FatherAndy calls it moral suasion but it's
not something you have to do is it I don't see what's wrong with the
Russian heads saying they'll defend their country mentally what
good would it do them to be noble and a beautiful example of
nonviolence if they all died?

Tough question. If you ever find a good answer Sevvy tell me.



As Lucille and Denis passed through the crowded lobby she said:
Let me just stop at the newsstand for a moment before we go on
to Vanderlaan's panel... Good heavens! The entire portico of the
hotel is swarming with police!

Denis said: The hotel security chief is calling in virtually every off-
duty officer in northern New Hampshire - and a few from Maine. It
will cost us a bundle but I authorized the expenditure.

... Even though none of the pEEps detected any unusual activity?

Especially because they didn't.

Lucille said to the clerk in the hotel boutique, "I'll take this little
package of aspirin. And do you have a PD of today's Pravda in
Eng­lish?"

"American or Eurasian format?"

"American, please. "

"I'll call it up in a jiff, " the girl said, turning to her register console.

Denis said: I told you I'd excurse to Moscow and check with
Tamara late tonight.

Lucille's tone was irritable: Quick reassurances don't tell me
enough. I want the background. The differing viewpoints.

There's nothing we can do to influence events over there. If the
operants win they win and it will probably be more of a disaster in
the long run than if they are forced into exile.

"Cash or charge?" inquired the clerk brightly.

Lucille handed over her credit card. "Charge. "

Denis said: If the Red Army and the Party survivors agree to a
coali­tion with Tamara's operants it will only be one based on
force... coercion to control a panicking population or to intimidate
the enemies of the state.

"Eight sixty-three, please, no sales tax in New Hampshire but we
have to add excise for the plaque-disk of that particular newspaper.
May I have your thumb here? Thanks a bundle - and you have a
lovely day. " The clerk handed over the purchases and Lucille
tucked them into her purse.

A lovely day! she reiterated ironically. The loveliest sight I can
imag­ine at this moment is the National Guard rolling in the gate
ready to camp on the golf course... But instead there are more
demonstra­tors showing up I don't even have to EE outside to
know it I can feel their thoughts mindlessly massing: Off the heads
off the heads off the heads...

Denis reached out and enveloped her in redactive comfort. The
chant­ing faded, along with the small headache that had plagued
her since rising. Delegates arriving from the other hotels swarmed
all around them, heading for the different function rooms, but they
were sound­less, and even their movements seemed diffident and
ghostly.

Denis said: You are not to worry. By evening it should all be over.
We'll dine among the thunderclouds with serene minds and the
confla­gration of ions will wipe out all remnants of the haters'
farspeech leav­ing us in peace.

You really don't think the demonstrators will try to follow us up the
mountain?

No. They'd have to use the Carriage Road and the State Police are
prepared to barricade it at the first sign of trouble. We'll have to
endure their taunts throughout the day and there may be a few
skirmishes if the pickets try to sneak onto the grounds again but
there's no danger. You want proof? Jamie's daughter Katie claims
to have the Sight you know and when I spoke briefly to Ilya this
morning he said his wife sees nothing but great things happening
today... Now all we - "Damn, " he said out loud. "My pager. "

Full-sensory reality claimed Lucille with painful suddenness. Denis
pressed the stud on his watchband that halted the persistent
prickling, then studied the message crawling across the Omega's
digital strip.

"I'm to call the President, " he said.

Lucille stared at him in blank dismay, then burst out:
Don'tyouDARE go to Washington you're the Chair of this affair you
have to SPEAK tonight I
won'tdoitforyouthistimedamnityoucan'tgoyouhavenomorecleanshirt
s!

He kissed her cheek. "Don't worry. Go to our panel. And try not to
let anybody catch you reading your newsplaque during the dull bits.
"

Then he was off for the hotel manager's office and the secure
landline that had been set up for a certain contingency.



Kieran O'Connor turned up the gain on the painkilling device that
had been spliced into his nervous system, hating himself for the
cow­ardice at the same time that he welcomed the wondrous
semiorgasmic numbness that suffused his lower body, releasing
him. It was ten min­utes until noon and time to pull himself into
shape for the showdown with Victor. Fortunately, that wouldn't take
long.

Forgive me Black Mother soon I will return. Dam dham nam tam
tham dam dham nam pam pham.

His farsensory faculties returned and he was once again able to
expe­rience the crashing waters of Upper Ammonoosuc Falls as it
ramped and plunged over shiny granite ledges and boiled whitely
through the monstrous potholes it had drilled in the tough bedrock.
A blustery wind had sprung up that ripped the cascade's mists into
furious wraiths that would have soaked any tourist brave enough to
venture onto the small observation platform. But nobody was there.
The parking lot of the modest roadside park was empty except for
the silver Mercedes in which Kieran O'Connor sat alone.

He had rented the car at Dorval Airport in Montreal and driven it to
this specified meeting place, along Base Station Road not far from
the Mount Washington cog railway's lower terminus. He was
thankful that all but thirty-five of the 345 kilometers of the drive had
been on pilot-stripped auto-routes or freeways, giving him a
chance to sleep off some of the jet lag. In order to foil the Justice
Department surveillance team he had traveled from Chicago to
New Hampshire via Seattle, Krung Thep, Bombay, Johannesburg,
Fiumicino, Gatwick, and Montreal - shedding the last pEEp agent in
the chaotic concourses of Aeroporto Leonardo da Vinci. He was
certain now that none of the government investigators would be
able to trace him to this Congress - much less uncover his
connection to Victor Remillard or the local branch of the Sons of
Earth. The only potentially weak link had been Shannon - and just
as Kieran had anticipated, she had been painstakingly discreet
since betraying her pathetic dupe of a husband. Even more than
her father, she wanted no hint of Victor's involvement with the
O'Connor empire to come to the attention of the Attorney General.

Kieran's eyes filled, surprising him, and he realized that for the first
time he was mourning her loss. It should have been the daughter
to inherit the night, not the daughter's daughter. But Kali would have
her jest... O Mother of Power, forgive her as you forgive me.

She would be coming, even though he had forbidden it, eager for
the final treachery. So be it. Devouring Mother I would give her to
you myself if I could. But I dare not waste the least spark of my
dwindling powers. Please understand. Dam dham nam tam -

"Are you asleep?"

Kieran opened his eyes. Victor Remillard was standing beside the
closed window of the Mercedes. His dark wool Melton storm coat
and close-cut curly hair glittered with mist droplets. A large orange
van belonging to the New Hampshire Highway Department blocked
the entrance to the waterfall's parking lot.

Kieran pressed the window button. "You're on time. I presume
those are your wheels. "

"The way the cops have the resort area sewed up, I figured
something official might come in handy. Especially later. "

"Everything's in order?"

"I told you it would be and it is. But you're not getting any details,
Kieran. "

"I don't want them... It surprises me, though, to perceive that you
plan to oversee the operation personally. Aren't you concerned
about being recognized?"

Victor laughed. "I can fuzz my identity. You mean you can't?"

"The late Fabulous Finster, a valued associate of mine, once
attempted to impart the technique to me. But I just didn't have the
knack. I've had to make do with other mental expedients. " The old
man's shadowed eyes lifted and barely reined coercion flashed in
their depths. "I thought I told you to meet me here alone."

"I need Pete Laplace. He knows every back road and abandoned
track in these parts and I've got other things to do besides study
road maps. I'm running most of this goddam hit word-of-mouth and
message-to-Garcia. No farspeech, no electronics. Not until the tail
end, when it'll be too late to stop us. "

"You've made the arrangements for my participation?"

"Yes. But I think you're crazy as a fuckin' bedbug. "

"Never mind, " Kieran said amiably. "Humoring me in this final
mat­ter will have no effect at all on your part of the operation. But
it's an old Irish custom to join the dance if you've paid the piper. "

"Which brings us to fork-over time. "

Kieran picked up an attaché case made of black lightweight metal
and passed it through the window. "It's not locked. You'll wish to
program the locking device and the built-in security mechanisms
after checking the bona fides of the instrument of transfer with your
people at Chase Manhattan. But I assure you that everything has
been arranged as we agreed. My assets will become the property
of your dummy Canadian corporation upon the completion of
certain legal formalities at - at four o'clock this afternoon. Sixteen
hundred hours. You see - I trust you to fulfill your part of the
bargain. "

"What about the Big Cherry?" Victor prompted. "And the last
con­dition?"

Kieran lifted one hand in a reassuring gesture. His smile was
pained. "I told you that my final request wouldn't be difficult for you
to fulfill - and a fair exchange for the access code to the override
system of Zap-Star. "

"Well?"

"My daughter Shannon is at the White Mountain Hotel. In spite of
my strictest orders to the contrary. She expects you to kill me, as
you agreed to do in return for her favors. What I want you to do is
show her the documents and the gigadisk data that are in the case
I gave you. Get into the hotel computer and let her see the
corporate transfer con­firmed. And then, use the computer to
confirm your access to Zap-Star as well - but without revealing the
access code to her. Then you may question Shannon tactfully on
what role she plans to play in tonight's operation... "

Victor's gloved hands tightened on the metal case. His mind was
an impregnable fortress. "Why?"

Kieran began to laugh, but then his body convulsed and he
groaned through clenched teeth and fumbled desperately inside
his coat. Victor could see that the old man's shirt was partially
unbuttoned and a flat­tened plastic control mechanism with
numerous electrode wires was taped to his upper chest. For a
brief interval Kieran writhed helplessly, until his fingers reached the
device's key-pad. He summoned maximum analgesia and fell back
in abrupt relief.

Presently, Kieran said, "Sorry. Your question-?"

Victor's face was expressionless. "I don't understand why you want
me to confirm my - my takeover to your daughter. It's only what she
expects. "

"Tell Shannon that she never really had any secrets from me. Tell
her that I knew all along about her duplicate mind-screen and had
access to her secret heart. Tell her she was free only in her
fantasies. My pathetic little girl! I was sadly mistaken about her and
it nearly cost me my - my life's goal. But I was shown another way...
" Thank you Mother thank you dam dham nam tam -

Victor demanded: What do you mean what the hell are you saying
and WHO IS SHE who is that?

"My Mother. I pray her mantra." Kieran's eyes closed and he lay
limp against the soft leather seat. The rain had finally started and
plump silver pearls danced among the lesser misty splatters on the
waxed hood of the Mercedes. Kieran said, "Go away. Do the things
I've told you. Shannon's reaction will show you what my last
request of you is. The Mother has compassion on my weakness
and pardons me from having to do the job myself. And she doesn't
need me to bring the final Black­ness, either. It will all happen as it
must happen. Dam dham nam tam tham dam dham nam pam
pham... "

"The access code! Is that it? The mantra?"

Kieran's eyes opened and blazed. Will you do as I say with
Shannon?

"Yes. " Victor's mind opened to confirm the truth.

Kieran nodded slowly. "Another thing... She also fantasizes that her
child Laura is yours. Disabuse her of that at the end, will you? It will
bring home the point. You may want to take Laura away from Gerry
Tremblay and bring her up yourself... Or perhaps you won't. You
don't want to share, the way I did. " The eyes closed again.
Kieran's face was yellowish-gray and he breathed slowly through
his open mouth. "I loved her, though. I loved them all. But not you
and that's why you are my heir to the night. "

Victor reached out with his coercion, exerting it with delicate care:
Kieran. Don't sleep yet. You must tell me the access code. The
satellite access code. Tell me.

Yes yes this is the phrase without any punctuation FOR BEHOLD
HENCEFORTH ALL GENERATIONS SHALL CALL ME
BLESSED the key to bring about the final death of energy the final
dark... I must sleep now but I'll wake this evening I'll wake in time to
see it through it's all right now Mother I've done it now rest...

The mental image. Victor saw it again in the instant before Kieran
slipped into unconsciousness. It was a great wheel of black petals
with fire at the heart, held within the belly of a barely perceptible
female figure. But Victor Remillard had never heard of Kali, and so
all he did was swear in French as the vision faded.

Then he opened the door of the Mercedes and brought the window
up. He closed the door, locked it, and left Kieran O'Connor to
sleep beside the thundering waterfall until the operation began at
1930 hours that evening.



Shannon Tremblay attended Jamie MacGregor's lecture as openly
as she had the other Congress events that interested her,
confident that a severely tailored suit, eyeglasses with tortoiseshell
rims, and a short black wig hiding her auburn hair rendered her
unrecognizable. The concept of a mental signature, a personal
thought-pattern as distinctive as a fingerprint, was quite unknown to
her; and so she was badly startled when someone called out as
she left the meeting room:

"Oh, there you are, Shan. Would you let me have a word with you
before you go on to the next round of papers?"

It was a tall, balding academic, a man she had never seen before,
and she regarded him frostily and said, "You've mistaken me for
someone else, " and would have walked on. But coercion took hold
of her and forced her to turn and accompany the man into an
alcove, and she did not dare protest and call attention to herself.

"I've been looking all over the hotel for you, " the man said. For a
split second his ascetic face flickered and another underlying set
of features took its place.

Victor!

The coercive grip tightened to the point of pain and she
whimpered.

"Use regular speech, " he ordered in low tones. "Your telepathy
has always been incompetent in focusing along the intimate mode.
"

She winced at the pressure. "Let me go, damn you! What do you
mean by accosting me -"

"You're supposed to be in Cambridge. "

She reseated her glasses and turned away from him. "I can go
where I please. "

"So you couldn't resist being in on the kill, eh? Never mind if
some­body spotted you and put two and two together! Don't you
realize this place is swarming with FBI and Justice Department
agents?"

"They're not looking for me, " she retorted. "They're looking for
Daddy-or his known associates. Daddy disappeared three days
ago, you know. I was the one who put two and two together and
deduced that he must be on his way here, to this final Metapsychic
Congress. It was the perfect occasion for him... and for you. Of
course I wanted to be on the scene for the finale. " She lifted her
chin with a triumphant smile. "Are these Sons of Earth militants
your idea? What will they do - try to burn down the hotel? The old
place is a real tinderbox. I'm staying at the Horse & Hound in
Franconia, so feel -"

"Shut up, " he hissed. "Do you think this is all some entertainment
put on for your benefit?"

She laughed softly. "For both our benefits. " Then her expression
hard­ened. "Daddy has made the deal with you, hasn't he! You
arrange for some convenient Sons-of-Earth-sponsored disaster to
befall this hotel full of operants, and he says he'll hand everything
over. "

"That's right. "

"You're a fool if you trust him. He'll never give up his power until
he's dead, and he won't die until he's ready to. The doctors can't
understand how he's been able to survive this long - but I
understand! He wants to offer a holocaust of operant minds to
appease some horrible fantasy, and if you help him he'll find some
way to finish you off with all the rest. You'll never get the best of
Daddy unless you kill him. I told you that at the beginning. "

"Your father will die tonight. " Victor held up the black metal attaché
case. "And he's already turned over everything to me - including
the access code for Zap-Star. "

She gasped. "I don't believe it! He's lied to you. "

"There is that possibility. Which is why you and I are going to check
things out before my big production number goes any further. "

He took her arm again and guided her up a wide flight of carpeted
stairs to the main lobby. They might have been colleagues chatting
familiarly after a long separation.

"Did Gerry know you were coming here?"

"Of course not, " she said. "He knows better than to question me
about my affairs. "

"What's he doing these days - househusbanding? Baby-sitting,
per­haps?"

"Pulling his head together before going to work for a Boston
branch of Cams, Elsasser, Lehmann, if you must know. He took it
hard when Griffith kicked him out of Roggenfeld Acquisitions. "

Victor chuckled. "Too timid to swim with the sharks, I heard. How
are you two getting along these days?"

"Gerry is civil, and he's afraid of me, and there are times when I'm
certain he's hiding some ghastly secret - but my redaction is no
good against a trained operant like him, and I've never been able
to pry it out. You'll have to. Afterward. "

"How does Gerry get along with your baby, Laura? The kid's about
nine months old, isn't she? And big-brained?"

Shannon said coldly, "Aside from his little character defects
deriving from overweening ambition, Gerry is a decent sort of man.
He knows Laura isn't his, but he doesn't hold it against her. He's
kind. He's cer­tainly more interested in her than you seem to be -"

They had passed out of the lobby into the executive offices of the
hotel and now paused before an unmarked door. Indicating
mentally that Shannon should keep silence, he opened it and
stepped inside. It was a suite of rooms that obviously housed the
computer functions. A young man in shirtsleeves working on a
sheaf of print-outs looked up in surprise and opened his mouth -
then froze as Victor's coercion took control of him. Without saying
a word, the young man got up and led Victor into an inner room
where the equipment was kept. Victor said:

Your work for the day is finished. Go home now without speaking to
anyone. You will not remember having seen us.

The young man turned on his heel and marched out, closing the
door behind him.

Shannon said, "What are you going to do?"

Victor had seated himself at the manual console and began to rap
expertly on the key-pads. The display said: CHASE MANHATTAN
BANK DATACEN. GOOD AFTERNOON MR REMILLARD.
PLEASE BEGIN UPLOAD.

Victor took the thick plastic gigadisk out of the attache case and
slotted it. Then he waited.

Shannon's eyes were glued to the display screen, which now said:
WORKING. She whispered, "He couldn't have. I don't believe it. "
And then the screen said: TRANSACTION VLNX2234-9-21-2013
PRE­LOGGED AND READY FOR FINAL EXECUTION 1600
HRS. DO YOU HAVE INSTRUCTIONS?

Victor typed: PRECIS.

And the computer obliged.

Shannon gave a strangled little joyous shriek. "It's true! He's done
it! My God, it's totally unbelievable!" She would have thrown her
arms around Victor, but his coercion flicked her back as casually
as an insect. "Wait. We have to confirm the other. "

Thanking and dismissing the bank, Victor retrieved his disk and
replaced it in the case. Then he typed out a certain telephone
num­ber with a northern Illinois area code. The screen said: YOU
HAVE REACHED A PRIVATE NUMBER. PLEASE INSERT
ACCESS CODE.

Victor typed: FOR BEHOLD HENCEFORTH ALL GENERATIONS
SHALL CALL ME BLESSED.

The computer said: ENTER.

Victor typed: DIR.

The computer said: ZAP-STAR OVERRIDE 1MARY.KOC. THIS
COMMAND FILE IS VALID BUT NOT OPERATIONAL UNTIL
12-25-2013 AT WHICH TIME THE ZAP-STAR SYSTEM COMES
ON­LINE. DO YOU HAVE INSTRUCTIONS?

Victor typed: NO. GOODBYE. And then he erased all record of
both the calls, using an old hacker's trick, and turned in the seat to
face Shannon.

She said, "It's true. He's capitulated completely... unless he plans
to cheat you some way at the last minute -"

"I don't believe that he does. "

"Then," she said, "all that's left to do is finish him off. "

"And the Metapsychic Congress. "

"Oh, there's no need for that! Only a paranoid like Daddy would
believe that the mass murder of a couple of thousand leading
operants would leave people like us with a clear field. What about
all the rest of the heads in the world? If we kill this lot, others will
eventually take their places. No... Daddy's famous 'edge' is
obsolete, and so is yours, Victor. You should have seen the
apparatus that Professor MacGregor demonstrated at his lecture!
It was the first aura detector. All it does is shine a beam of
something-or-other at a person and analyze the reflection - and it
can tell whether or not that person is hopelessly latent, or
suboperant, or operant. And it even quantizes the degree of
operancy! One of the subjects MacGregor used in his lecture was
the ten-year-old son of Denis Remillard. Would you believe the
boy sent the analyzer right off the scale?... So you see, with a
gadget like this available, it just won't be possible for people to
keep their operancy secret. Even casinos will install these things -"

"There are other edges, " Victor said.

Shannon looked at him mutely, her mind incredulous. Finally she
said, "You can't mean it!"

"I'd call Zap-Star the ultimate edge. Of course, it wouldn't be used
in the clumsy death-ray scenario your father dreamed up. Its use
would be very selective. "

"But it's not necessary, Victor! Any more than killing these operants
is necessary. Once Daddy is dead you'll have all the power and
wealth that any man could want -"

He shook his head. Slowly, he rose from the chair and came to her.
"He said you disappointed him. You've disappointed me, too. "

She didn't try to flee. Proudly, she said, "I see. You don't need
people the way Daddy did. You're self-sufficient. You don't need -
or love - anyone but yourself, do you, Victor? Not me. And certainly
not our child. "

"Laura is not my child. We've never had physical intercourse. You
were quite right to call me self-sufficient. "

"Good God. Not yours... " Her eyes were fixed on him as the truth
of it slowly broke through. "Yes, I see. You're impotent. "

Victor laughed at her. "Not in any way that really matters. Not the
way your father is now, powerless because he still loves you. He
asked me to tell you that you were never really free of him. He was
always able to penetrate your double screen. I suppose he let you
keep the illusion in hopes that it would shore up your ego. Keep
you from sui­ciding. "

"And it suited his plans when I came to you. " Her eyes had gone
dull. "Of course. He had to manipulate both of us. He must have
known he could never bond you... " She straightened, proud again
for a moment.

"Neither of you will use Zap-Star, you know. The government
knows the system is penetrated. "

"All they know is what you - and my brother Denis - have told them.
I'm willing to gamble that the President won't be able to stop the
system's activation on schedule. Not on the word of two dead
heads. "

His farsight roamed the area, then lit on a small storeroom that
opened off the computer room. He compelled her to follow him to
it, opened the door, and flicked on the light.

"This will do. No one will come in here so late on Saturday
afternoon. It won't matter tomorrow. "

She said, "You aren't going to do it quickly."

"I have some time to kill, " he said, laughing, and took off her black
wig so that the long flaming hair tumbled out. Her face and mind
were calm. Eventually he would give her what she wanted.

He asked her to kneel, and she sank down without protest. Then he
cupped her head in both hands and pressed her against him, and
stopped her heart for the first time.



30

FROM THE MEMOIRS OF ROGATIEN REMILLARD



for more than a year, since Denis's interrogation of Gerry
Tremblay, government investigators had sought in vain for hard
evi­dence that would connect Kieran O'Connor to the sort of
grandiose conspiracy that his daughter had accused him of
perpetrating. It was easy enough for EE adepts to search his
offices and his residence - and the presence of the elaborate
satellite uplink equipment was duly noted, but conceded to be
quite legal. The heavily guarded data bank beneath the O'Connor
mansion undoubtedly held the key to the mystery; but EE adepts
could scrutinize its library of disks until doomsday without knowing
what they contained. No search warrant could be served be­cause
no probable cause of felonious action could be demonstrated, and
U. S. law forbade "fishing expeditions" as unwarranted invasions of
pri­vacy.

One of the Zap-Star battle-mirrors was plucked from orbit and
taken to the ON-1 habitat for examination. A problematic chip was
indeed found, one that was unauthorized in the original
specifications. How­ever, engineers of the O'Connor satellite
consortium maintained that the component was entirely innocuous,
designed to improve guidance system response to groundside
commands. If the chip did contain an override, the thing had been
hidden with surpassing cleverness and would probably display its
true colors only when activated by a coded signal.

One could, of course, haul in each and every one of the 130 non-
Chinese battle-mirrors and - using exquisite care - remove the
dubi­ous chip. The fix would take approximately four years and
cost $7.2 billion, and in the meantime the independently operated
Chinese units would remain fully operational.

The allegation of conspiracy was based thus far only upon the
unsup­ported word of Shannon O'Connor Tremblay. Denis's mind-
ream of her husband had yielded only tenuous confirmation - and
that legally in­admissible. Subsequent investigations of the
O'Connor empire had turned up no evidence whatsoever of any
Zap-Star conspiracy - and precious little else that was even
remotely actionable. The only taint was a distant one: back in the
1980s certain O'Connor subsidiaries had been strongly suspected
of laundering Mafia funds. But this had never been proved and the
Mob was dead and gone, while these days the O'Connor
organization seemed guilty only of the immoderate gobbling of
smaller corporate fry...

At least that had been the status of the government's investigation
up until 20 September 2013.

On that day, an alert bureaucrat in the Securities and Exchange
Com­mission took note of a routine notification of a transfer of
assets from an American conglomerate to an obscure Canadian
holding company. The SEC woman was struck by the enormous
size of the transaction, and even more interested when she
recognized the conglomerate to be a key-stone of the intricate
O'Connor organization. A fast check with Montreal (Canada having
less of a penchant for financial confidentiality than the U. S. at that
time) yielded up the name of the man behind the dummy
corporation. The SEC woman informed the Attorney General and
he informed the President of the United States - who in turn called
up Denis to inquire why his younger brother Victor was being
handed control of virtually everything that Kieran O'Connor owned.



"I told him I was just as flabbergasted as he was, " Denis told me.
We had met at the conclusion of MacGregor's lecture, and now he
and I and Lucille stood in the back of the nearly deserted hall
talking the thing over. Naturally the President had asked his people
to brief him on Victor; and he had been dismayed to discover that
the Nobel laureate's family harbored a sheep who, if not exactly
black, looked decidedly grubby around the edges.

And was a familiar of Kieran O'Connor's daughter.

"I'll give Baumgartner credit, " Denis said. "He called me himself
and he was straightforward about Victor. He told me that the
government had a file on him dating way back to when Vic and Dad
first started Remco. Tax fiddling, and later on some quashed
indictments for inter­state transportation of stolen property. The
feds have never been able to get the goods on Vic, primarily
because no one would testify against him. Lately, he's seemed to
be clean - but the feds looked him up again after Shannon sprang
her blockbuster. Naturally she was investigated with her father, and
her relationship with Vic muddied the waters con­siderably. I was
approached last spring and asked to mind-ream both Victor and
Shannon. Of course I refused. "

Lucille and I said nothing and kept our thoughts to ourselves.

"Now the President has personally appealed to me to interrogate
them mentally - especially Shannon - to find out whether the threat
to Zap-Star is real. If I can get confirmation from Victor, it will
preclude the possibility that Shannon is suffering some delusion. "

"But why do the feds think Vic would know anything about it?" I
asked.

Denis said, "Because Kieran O'Connor has terminal testicular
cancer. If he's passing his empire to Vic, as the Canadian
connection seems to prove, he's probably passing the clout along
with the assets. "

"Christ!" I said. "Vic with a handle on Zap-Star?"

Denis said, "O'Connor evaded both EE and normal government
sur­veillance and has disappeared. As far as the feds can tell, Vic
is inno­cently at home in Berlin. Shannon Tremblay was traced to
this Con­gress. The agents are certain she's here in the hotel. "

"And the President wants you to find her, " Lucille said, "and turn
her inside out?"

"That's about it, " said Denis.

"It's monstrous!" she exclaimed indignantly. "The whole thing is
incredible! That wretched woman corrupted Gerry for some
squalid motive of her own, and then when he was caught in the
Coercer Flap she invented this other thing -"

Denis silenced her. "All I know is what was in Gerry's mind. He
doesn't believe she's deluded. His impression - the impression of
a trained psychiatrist - is that she is eminently sane in spite of a
neu­rotic love-hate relationship with her father. Deep in his mental
core, Gerry recognized that Kieran O'Connor was a paramount
metapsychic manipulator, a man who had used his powers for self-
aggrandize­ment all his life. The Zap-Star net wasn't Gerry's
province. He knew O'Connor's consortium built the guidance
systems for the net and he had a kind of instinct that it figured in
some scheme that the old man was cooking up. That was the only
verification I could give the President after my ream of Gerry. It
was sufficient to launch the full-scale investigation, which yielded
nothing... up until now. "

"So where do you go from here?" I asked.

"I did a quick farscan of the place, " Denis said. "I have Shannon's
mental signature - in a rough approximation, I'm afraid - from my
mind-ream of Gerry. I swept the hotel from top to bottom and
found no trace of her. For what it's worth, I found no trace of Vic
either! But that doesn't mean they're not here. Vic's a devil of a
screener and Shannon's probably no slouch either. I'm going to go
very quietly to the top scan­ners attending the Congress and ask
their help in watching out for both Shannon and Vic. They may let
their guard down. "

"You're not thinking of confronting your brother-!" Lucille was
aghast.

"I'd rather not, " Denis replied dryly, "but there seems to be little
choice. If he shows up, I'll play it by ear. But I don't think he will
show. " He looked at his watch. "By now, he's the new owner of
O'Connor's billions, with more profitable ways to occupy his time. "

"And Shannon Tremblay, " I said archly, "is probably helping him
get in the mood to romp through the money-bin. "

Lucille said, "If the government agents tracked Shannon today,
they can track her another day and take her into custody for your
interroga­tion. Denis, you will have fulfilled your promise to the
President when you notify the other scanners to watch out for her. "

I could see that my conscientious nephew was mulling this over,
trying to decide whether to remain in the hotel on farscan alert
rather than join his colleagues at the banquet, where he was certain
to be distracted by his own speechmaking - to say nothing of the
emotion-charged atmosphere.

Impetuously, I said, "Look. My farscan hasn't much range, but I
know every nook and cranny of this old place. Pass me Shannon
Tremblay's mental signature and I'll spend the rest of the afternoon
and the evening combing the hotel from cellar to rafters. Hell - I'll
get a passkey from Jasper Delacourt and search the place
physically when the delegates are out. I'd rather do that than go to
the banquet anyhow. Farewell speeches depress me and
thunderstorms rattling around mountain peaks make me nervous.
Any old backpacker will tell you the same. "

Denis eyed me doubtfully. "Uncle Rogi, if you should find Shannon
- or, God forbid, Vic! - you are to do nothing except notify me
telepath­ically. "

"I swear!" said I, rooting in my hip pocket. I dangled the talisman
and clapped my right hand over my heart. "I swear by the Great
Carbuncle."



All day long the Sons of Earth pickets, a couple of hundred strong,
marched up and down Highway 302, in front of the resort entrance.
They chanted and flourished their placards and banners, and now
and then numbers of the more dedicated lay down on the driveway
when shuttle buses brought in delegates who were lodged at other
hotels in the area. The police didn't bother to arrest the lie-ins; they
just toted them out of the way and deposited them very gently in a
handy culvert flowing with storm run-off. Along about dusk, when
the big X-wing transports came in from their base at Berlin, a band
of more determined activists tried to infiltrate the resort grounds by
moving through the forest that lay be­tween the hotel and the cog's
Base Station Road. Police detection equip­ment sniffed the
invaders out before they had penetrated two hundred meters. A
SWAT team of State Police rounded up the antioperant
com­mandos, who were armed with nothing more lethal than paint-
pistols, and removed them to the hospitality of the county jail over
at Lancaster.

By the time the delegates were ready to depart for the Summit
Chalet, the heavy rain had discouraged all but a handful of diehard
demonstra­tors out on the highway. I had completed my search of
the hotel's lower reaches and was just coming up to the main floor
when Denis trans­mitted a mental hail:

Uncle Rogi... We're almost ready to leave for the banquet I
presume and pray you've found nothing.

In the boiler-room was a poker game that I was strongly tempted to
sit in on and in one of the empty salons a delegate from Sri Lanka
and one from Greece were interrupted in the midst of researches
into compar­ative metanooky. There is no sign of Mrs. Tremblay
and no sign of Vic dieumercibeau'.

None of us has sensed their presence either. Lucille's probably
right when she says they cleared out long ago if they were ever
even here I've notified the President he gave me a goodwill
message to read at the banquet one could almost believe he was
sincere...

Buck up mon fils. Go have your feast my only regret is not getting
to see the boys tricked out in black tie.

[Image: Interior X-wing skybus. Dim flashes of lightning through
rain-streaked small windows. Multiethnic delegates in formal dress
settling into seats. Whispers and apprehensive giggling. Lucille
smiling white-faced TWO GAWKY PENGUINS STRAPPED IN ON
EITHER SIDE OF A SMALL CHUNKY ONE.] There. I'm sorry they
don't look more cheery.

Mille merde Denis what a glum and qualmish crew all you need is a
band playing "Nearer My God to Thee" Go! Go! It will be all right!
Follow your damned gleam my son Follow the Great Carbuncle to
the uttermost height!

Au revoir Uncle Rogi.

Standing there at the head of the stairs in the fast-emptying lobby, I
heard the first of the X-wings take off for the mountain summit. It
was full dark outside and the rain was only moderate, with faint
growlings of thunder. On top of Mount Washington the weather was
bound to be worse; but the transports were so reliable and sturdy
that they could have made the trip safely in a hurricane. The storm
would provide a piquant contrast to the luxurious surroundings and
the good food. After the banquet they could all gather around the
four fireplaces in the cha­let's main lounge and promise to mend
their battered ideals. With a little bit of luck even Tamara
Sakhvadze far away in Moscow would soul-travel to the festivities
and take heart...

Well, it was time for me to renew my futile quest. I checked my
watch and noted that it was nearly seven. The business offices of
the hotel would be nearly empty now, as would the delegates'
rooms. The only dense collections of people would be in the hotel
kitchens, where the cleaners were still at work, and in the two bars
where a few media types and other nondelegate hangers-on had
gravitated. The hotel's Se­curity Chief, Art Gregoire, came in the
main entrance shaking rain­drops from his jacket and spotted me.

"Hey, Art. What d'ya say?"

"Is that you, Roj? Thought you'd be up at the big feed. "

"Got business to take care of. Things looking okay?"

Gregoire shrugged. "Once we get the folks up the hill, we figure it's
pret' near all over. Only a handful of half-drowned pickets left. Me
and my gang'll keep an eye on the X-wing pad and cruise the hotel
to make sure no loony-tune tries to torch 'er. The county mounties
and the rent-a-cops went into town to grab a bite and dry their
socks. We need 'em, we know how to get 'em. "

"Any action over on the other side of the mountain - by the Carriage
Road?"

"State fuzz says there ain't diddly. Nope, the Sons've given you
heads a free pass tonight. You lucked out with the rain. "

He went off to scrounge supper in the kitchen and I headed toward
the executive offices to get on with my search. As if Shannon
Tremblay would be hiding among the file cabinets...

I stood outside the manager's office with my eyes closed and let
my scanning ultrasense rove into the nearest rooms. There was no
trace of any mental emanation on the operant "band" and no clearly
farsensed vision of normal people lurking about, which I would
have perceived had any operant been deliberately suppressing his
aura.

But there was something.

I unlocked the computer center with my passkey and turned the
lights on in the windowless rooms, and at that moment I heard a
noise - a faint scraping sound - and realized that it came from the
storeroom on the far side of computer operations.

I tried to farscan through the storeroom door. I couldn't.

Rooted to the spot, I probed the mysterious obstacle. Behind the
wood and plaster lay psychic energy of an appalling absorptive
kind. It was not a barrier - the little room was filled with it, and it was
opaque and magnetic and colder than death.

I think I knew at once that he was inside. I tried to give telepathic
warning to Denis - to anybody. But as I uttered the mind-shout I
knew it had gone no farther than the boundary of my skull. I walked
without volition down the neat rows of desks with their VDTs and
data cabinets and posture chairs and stood before the closet,
waiting for the door to open. In there was insanity and a lust that
had no relation to any natural human appetite. In there, something
had hungered and fed and still hungered. Even though it wore the
shape of a man it had metamor­phosed into something altogether
different - and done it by its own will.

A barely heard click. The knob turned and a long shadowed streak
grew as the door swung inward. Not a single beam of light from the
computer room penetrated that palpable blackness - but
nevertheless, I saw Victor holding her. Both of their bodies were lit
with a flickering blue-violet halo. Only his lips were bright, drinking
the final dying scarlet radiance from the four-petaled energy-flower
that seemed to be imprinted at the base of her spine.

Then it was finished.

The devouring darkness vanished. Room light shone on Victor,
who regarded me without surprise and beckoned me to come
closer and admire what he'd done. It was as if he knew I would
recognize the pattern as the evil opposite of Ume's fulfillment of
me. He was fully clothed in a gray suit, but every stitch had been
burned from the corpse of the woman who lay at his feet. The body
was charred and crackling, and up the spine and on the head were
seven stigmata of white ash, marking where he had fed from each
psychic energy-font in turn - beginning with the most rarefied and
continuing to the root. I had no doubt that in place of Ume's joy
there had been excruciating pain.

"There'll be more, " he told me calmly. "Only I won't have to exert
myself in the burning. It's interesting that you understand. I want - I
want to know more about what it is. I think you may be able to tell
me. Am I right?"

"Yes." No no no no...

Victor laughed. "Come along with me and watch. "



In my nightmare, I followed him docilely out of the hotel. We went
without being challenged to one of the hotel parking lots at the
north end of the grounds, where a highway department van stood
in the shad­ows. The rain had nearly stopped but there was still a
good deal of lightning flashing in the east, in the direction of the
mountain.

I was dimly aware of another man sitting behind the wheel of the
van. It was old Pete Laplace, who had worked at the cog during my
years at the hotel. I got into the back of the van and we drove off.

Vic said, "The boys ready to take off on sked?"

"Ready as they'll ever be, " said a dour Yankee voice. "Poor stupid
bastards. " He cackled, then swore as the van hit a pothole and
lurched. We turned to the right and I knew we were on the back
road leading to the cog base station.

"We're going to take my Uncle Rogi along with O'Connor, " Vic
said. "You three old gaffers ought to enjoy the fireworks together.
You get steam up okay?"

"I know what I'm doin', " the oldster snapped. "Just hope t'hell you
do, Vic. Still say you shoulda gone in the airyplane. "

"Not on your life, Pete. That mob of heads claim to be pacifists, but
you don't catch me betting my ass on it... Slow down, dammit.
We're almost to the Upper Falls turnoff. "

My personality seemed to have fragmented. One portion was
howling in panic-stricken horror, while another quite calmly
submitted to Vic­tor's continuing coercive hold, acknowledging him
as my master whom I would serve without question. And then there
was a third psychic chunk. This was the smallest and shakiest of
all, stomped to a frazzle and nearly buried in the mental cataclysm
that had overwhelmed me. This part of my mind told me to hang in
there and wait for my chance. It was the damn fool part of my
personality, so of course it won out. I've often wondered whether
other heroes were made that way, too.

The van made a sharp turn and screeched to a halt. Vic and the
poisonous old party climbed out. When they returned they were
supporting a tottering form. Far be it from the richest man in the
world to ride in the back of a muddy van, so they strapped him
securely into Vic's seat, and my nephew came back to sit silently
with me while we traveled the last few kilometers to the cog railway
base station.

The place was dark as the inside of your hat, without a sign of life.
But one of the antique engines had its firebox aglow and the steam
up, and its smokestack threw sparks on both sides of the track that
sizzled as they hit the puddles. Old Pete clambered into the engine
cab, and Vic and O'Connor and I got aboard the unlit coach that
traveled ahead. No blast on the whistle marked the train's
departure. It simply hissed like a fumarole, clanked, and set off
chugging and rattling toward the cloud deck that hid the summit.

Victor and O'Connor ignored me completely as they conversed on
the intimate telepathic mode. I discovered only one of the
infamous secrets that the dying old villain passed on to the hungry
young one. God only knows what other bizarre thoughts they
shared. They were both mad­men by any civilized standard, and
yet sane enough to recognize and still embrace the evil that their
minds created. They were not mistaken, not misguided or deluded;
they were only terribly and mysteriously bent and I have long since
given up trying to understand them. The little train climbed valiantly
into the sky, taking one to death and the other to oblivion. I could
only huddle in my seat, half frozen now that we approached the
tree line, praying that one of the unsuspecting op­erants in the
chalet above us would turn his mind downward, penetrate the
dense granite bulk that blocked line-of-sight view of this part of the
track from the summit, and sound the alarm.



The coach tilted more and more steeply and the little engine
under­took its most severe challenge - a trestled section called
Jacob's Ladder with a grade of more than thirty-seven percent. My
night-sight, dimmed by Victor's coercion, saw that O'Connor was
clinging like a limpet to the seat in front of him, a grimace of what I
took to be excitement distorting his wasted features. We had been
passing through dense cloud ever since beginning our ascent of
the ladder; but now we broke free as we approached the Westside
Trail crossing and there were sudden flashes of lightning from the
towering cumulus massed to the east. In another moment it would
be possible for us to see the Summit Chalet silhou­etted against
the skyline... and the people in the chalet would have a greatly
enhanced chance of farsensing us.

But Victor's elderly henchman knew his stuff. The deafening clatter
of the cogs gripping the steel rack between the tracks diminished
to a portentous clickety-clack, then stopped as the engine ground
to a halt.

The smoke cloud, blasted by high winds, raced uphill ahead of us.
Surely someone would see it -

"It doesn't matter now, " Vic said. The locomotive clunked and
wheezed and in a moment the rear door of the coach opened and
Pete thrust himself in, grumbling about the chill.

"This is it, Vic. Get 'em up here damn quick before we're spotted. "

"Higher!" Kieran O'Connor croaked. "I want to see the chalet go!"

"Shut up, " Victor said. "Look there - to the north. "

O'Connor keened: "Aaah!"

"Now you can get 'er rolling again, Pete!" Victor's voice was
trium­phant. "Our own X's are on their way in!"

The old man dived for the rear door, which was still open. And at
that moment Victor's hold on me eased as he broadcast some
powerful farspoken command to the approaching aircraft. I flung
myself from my seat, rolled downhill toward the door, and was
outside feet-first and tumbling down among the frost-encrusted
granite boulders before Vic could stop me. Somewhere in my
trajectory I had smashed into that aged rascal, Laplace. I heard his
wail echo thinly among the crags, then cut off abruptly.

God - now what? Uphill! Keep as much rock as I could between
me and that young devil, Vic, and yell my brains out:

DENIS!DENISTHEY'RECOMINGFORTHECHALETINAIRCRAFT
! DENISDENISFORGOD'SSAKEVIC&O'CONNORHAVE
ARMEDAIR CRAFTATTACKINGCHALET -

I hear you Uncle Rogi.

Coughing and gasping with the cold, I toiled upward over the rock-
field. Behind me, I heard the engine give a mighty chug, then start
uphill once again. Vic had probably taken the controls himself.
There were two X-wings and neither of them had navigation lights.
Up above the cloud deck, there was enough fitful moonlight shining
between the thunderheads to show the planes approaching fast
around the shoulder of Mount Clay; but they weren't gun-ships, they
were ordinary domes­tic transports, half the size of the ones used
to ferry the Congress del­egates up the mountain.

DENIS THEY'RE GOING TO LAND! STOP THEM! ZAP THEM
SOMEHOW USE CREATIVE METACONCERT!

I heard for the first time other minds - hundreds of them - but the
lightning-fast moral debate was incomprehensible. The pair of X-
wings hovered nearly over my head, their roaring drowning out the
howl of the wind. Only my continued scrambling kept me from
freezing.

DO SOMETHING! I pleaded.

Another mind-voice, one of surpassing power with a signature that
was completely unfamiliar, said:

Together! Hit them together! Let me show you how...

A white fireball soared against the sky, arching over the crest from
the direction of the chalet. It struck the central boss of the X-wing
rotor housing on the lead aircraft and seemed to be absorbed
soundlessly. But the sudden drop in the noise level was the
aircraft's engine cutting out.

That's the way! Join with me again. Together...

NO! another voice pleaded, and I knew it was Denis.

A second ball of psychocreative energy flew up like a meteor and
zapped the other X-wing. Both ships were in uncontrolled descent,
windmilling with the deactivation of their engines. They pranged in
not more than five hundred meters away from me, down the
northwestern flank of the mountain. There were no explosions and
no flames, and although my ultrasenses were impeded by trauma
and the intervening crags, I knew that the occupants of the aircraft
had survived and were pulling themselves together to begin a
ground assault.

I cried: DENIS THEY CRASHLANDED YOU DIDN'T KILL THEM -

He said: I never tried. Most of us didn't.

I was scrambling uphill as fast as I could. Fortunately, at that point
there was a footpath along the right-hand side of the cog track. As I
came out of a hollow I saw the train again, chugging slowly along
the skyline and trailing its spark-shot plume of smoke.

VICTOR IS DIRECTING ATTACK FROM COG! HIT THE TRAIN!

I heard laughter in the aether: Yes. Hit the train. Together with me
now!

Another bolide arose. This time I saw it materialize just above the
chalet roof and move purposefully in a flat trajectory toward the
little train. But it faltered in flight and began to wobble, and instead
of hitting the engine it bounced along the roof of the coach and
then dove down onto the track ahead. There was a sharp flash.
The coach bucked and slewed and fell off to the side. The sound
waves reached me moments later - a detonation followed by a
prolonged grinding crash as the coach left the track and toppled
onto the icy boulders. The engine had slammed on its brakes. It
screamed to a stop before reaching the damaged section of track
and stood silhouetted against moonlit thunderheads on the skyline
above me. Its firebox glowed hellishly and the rising gale blasted
smoke over its trailing tender. A figure jumped from the engine
cab.

UncleRogiDUCK!!

I did - just in time. A bullet fweenged off a rock a few centimeters
above my head. I had completely forgotten the crashed X-wings
and their complement of armed thugs. The warning had come from
little Severin, who now told me:

They're creeping upon you they have infrared GET OFF TRAIL!!
I'll help createdecoybodyglowCOMEUPMOUNTAINHURRY!!
SLEET STORM COMING...

I said: Putain de bordel de merde!

Sevvy said: You can say that again.

Another bullet struck, far off the mark to my left. Bruised and
shiv­ering, I resumed my climb uphill.



31

MOUNT WASHINGTON  NEW HAMPSHIRE, EARTH

21 SEPTEMBER 2013



victor remillard grasped the old man by the coat lapels. The head
lolled and there was a bleeding gash across the fore­head. But
Kieran O'Connor was alive.

"What the hell did you think you were doing?" Victor shouted. "I
should - I should-"

Kieran's eyes opened and he smiled. "You should kill me. But it's
totally unnecessary. Let me warn you, however... one touch of
probe or coercion, and I'll never answer your questions. And you
do want the answers, don't you?"

They saw one another in the shadowless eeriness of mental vision
and ignored the strengthening wind that whistled through the
broken coach. Victor was aware for the first time of a deathly
stench emanating from the body of the dying man. Through the
open shirt, he could see that the telltales of the painkilling
mechanism had gone dark. No agony he could inflict on Kieran
O'Connor could surpass what Kieran had already freely embraced.

"You took charge of those operants when Denis wouldn't. " Victor
was accusative. "You knit them together in some kind of mental unit
and squeezed out those globs of energy that downed the aircraft
and derailed the train. "

"The procedure is called metaconcert, " Kieran told him. "An idea
quite foreign to your mentality. I wasn't at all sure that I could work
it.

With my own people, the results have generally been
unsatisfactory. But these fully operant minds... marvelous!"

"You fucking old bastard! You shot down my men - tried to kill
them!"

"Nonsense. The craft are engineered to soft-land in case of power
failure. Only the incompetence of your pilots and the rough terrain
caused the damage, and most of your people were uninjured. "

"Then why?"

Kieran indicated the Summit Chalet, blazing like a jewel box on the
mountain above them. "They needed teaching, these silly pacifists.
A revelation of their own power. The Russian operants have
already learned the lesson and so have a few other groups. But
these idealist leaders resisted the inevitable. They were too much
influenced by your brother and MacGregor. An aggressive
metaconcert was unthinkable for such minds - until they were given
suitable incentive. "

"We'll knock them out! Your scheme - whatever the hell it is - can't
work. The main vanguard of the local Sons of Earth took out the
State Police barricade at the same time that the X-wings took off
from Berlin. They're coming up the Carriage Road in trucks and
four-wheelers right now. Even if that bunch in the chalet has called
for outside help, it can't get here in time... and you won't pull your
metaconcert trick again. "

Kieran was chuckling soundlessly, his breath forming small puffs of
vapor in the freezing air. He said: Of course not it's no longer
necessary NOW THEY KNOW HOW they are consecrated to the
Mother without realizing it O Her jests O Her infinite wisdom behold
the final genera­tion shall call Her blessed -

Victor let go of the old man's coat. Kieran slumped back against
the cracked windowpane, eyes closed, breathing in raspy bursts.
Victor said, "I'm not going to waste any more time listening to your
crazy shit. Whatever scheme you cooked up - whatever way you
planned to use me and my people - it's not going to work. I'm
calling off my men from the X-wings and we're getting the hell off
this mountain. The Sons can watch their own asses and take the
blame -"

The mind-tone was wheedling, tempting: Don't be a fool my boy do
you want your brother Denis to get away? And the other American
operants the ones who will perfect MacGregor's aura-detector and
use it to bring down you and your associates oh no oh no here they
are to­gether never again such a golden opportunity... I've had my
moment. Now I leave the rest to you.

"What is the rest?" Victor raged. "You bug-fucking old devil - what
have you done?"

The mortal stench was now almost unbearable. Victor shrank away
in the frigid darkness, braced himself against the tilted seats, heard
the first rustle of sleet strike the coach's metal skin. He couldn't
stay here any longer. His inside man at the chalet was supposed to
have sabotaged the delegate transports. Could one of them be
repaired? They could still make the hit and get out before -

His racing thoughts were interrupted by the old man's voice,
sud­denly strong again. "I thought I would be the agent of
destruction. And then it seemed that you would be Her deputy.
Now at the end I see the truth - that humanity will destroy itself
without our impetus. Even these superior minds! We are all
children of the Black Mother dam dham nam tam tham -"

The voice dwindled away to an exhaled breath. And then Kieran
O'Connor's eyes flew open in thunderstruck surprise, and he
screamed and died.



Denis Remillard gripped the lectern. He had to coerce them into
silence, then plead with the ones who had left the main dining room
to return.

He said: You must not leave the chalet! The temperature has
dropped below freezing and another storm front will be here any
minute. Please! Come back to the dining room and we'll decide
what's to be done...

Jamie MacGregor, wearing a borrowed parka, came striding
through the disheveled banquet tables. "Every one of the fewkin'
air-buses is out of commission. Someone got to 'em while the
crews were eating in the lower lounge. Some of the handier
delegates are outside trying to fix things, but it looks bloody
hopeless. There are cars belonging to the chalet staff, but not
nearly enough to evacuate all of us - even if we managed to get
past those buggers who're on the way up... Is help on the way?"

"Not from the police, " Lucille said. She and most of the Coterie
were gathered around the speakers' table. "The officers who had
staked out the road on the Pinkham Notch side of the mountain
were ambushed by the Sons. There's no way the police on the
western side of the mountain can reach us without aircraft. "

Denis said, "The President said he'd send an FBI special team -
but it has to come all the way from Boston. The Governor's called
out the National Guard. It will take two hours to mobilize. "

"Bloody hell!" Jamie exploded. "Why don't they roust out the
Ma­rines or the Army Antiterrorist Unit?"

Lucille said, "Because this country doesn't handle riots that way. "

The Scotsman snorted. "This is no riot, it's a soddin' siege -"

"Jamie, please. " Denis's knuckles were white as he continued to
grip the sides of the lectern. We don't have much time. We must
decide what we are going to do.

Young Severin Remillard, unnoticed in the press of anxious adults,
piped up: "The only thing is to keep on like before - like Uncle Rogi
and that other guy said - and clobber the sonsabitches!"

Lucille took the boy firmly by the shoulder and turned him over to
his older brothers.

The Coterie turned away, returning to their seats. Other delegates
who had dashed up to the observation turret or to other parts of the
mountaintop convention center returned to the dining room as
Denis had requested. Some sat at the tables. Others stood around
the perim­eter of the huge room, their farsight probing the exterior
darkness. The clouds had thickened again and freezing rain ticked
against the thick glass in the western lobe. The corps of servers
and the white-clad kitchen personnel, normals all, huddled in a
separate group.

Presently, Denis spoke into the microphone: "Ladies and
gentlemen, we have called for help, and it is on the way. " There
were murmurs and scattered applause from the normals; but the
operants were under no illusions. "It now seems clear that there
are at least two forces of do­mestic insurgents belonging to the
antioperant Sons of Earth group advancing on this building. About
sixty are coming from the two crashed X-wings on the western
slope. More than a hundred more are on their way up the Carriage
Road on the eastern side, traveling in light trucks and cars. The
motorcade seems to be equipped with rifles, shotguns, and small
arms. Many of them are under the influence of one thing or
another. They can be characterized as a run-of-the-mill lynch mob -
and aside from blocking our escape down that road, they offer a
very minor threat to our safety. "

A voice yelled: "Du gehst mir auf die Eier, Remillard, mit diesem
Scheissdreck! Was können wir tun?"

"He's right! What are we going to do?" another voice shouted.

"That other lot from the aircraft aren't minor! I pEEped automatic
weapons and at least one grenade launcher -"

Again, unwillingly, Denis coerced them to silence.

"Please listen... The airborne group is heavily armed. They have
explosives with them as well as heavy weapons, and the only
reason they aren't outside the chalet already is the sudden change
in the weather ... and they've temporarily lost touch with their
leader. For those of you who don't already know, that leader is my
younger brother, Victor. "

The room vibrated with a blast of wind. Some of the chalet workers
were whispering among themselves.

Denis said, "The real instigator of the attack is a man named Kieran
O'Connor. Many of you know him as a pillar of the multinational
military-industrial complex. O'Connor - like my brother - is a
pow­erful natural operant who has concealed his metafaculties and
used them to his personal advantage. For years O'Connor has
worked se­cretly to destroy the operant establishment - not only
because we might expose him, but also because peace isn't profit-
generating to his line of business. Our globalism threatens him, just
as it has threatened fanatics and dictatorships all over the world.,.
just as it seems to threaten good people frightened of fellow
human beings with higher mind-powers. And the normals do have
good reason to be frightened, as long as operants such as Kieran
O'Connor or my brother Victor exist. "

A Chinese delegate, Zhao Kud-lin, exclaimed, "This is precisely
why operants must be politically active - to ferret out and deal with
such vermin!"

There were some murmurs of agreement. An anonymous mind-
voice shouted! Let's stop this palavering and whomp up another
concert Denis! Come on pull us together again and let's start
picking the dead­heads off!

Denis said, "It was Kieran O'Connor - not I - who led some of you
in the aggressive metaconcert that downed the attacking aircraft. "

Sensation!

A woman delegate cried: "Then three cheers for Kieran
Warbucks!"

"No! No!" others shouted in dismay. "Shame!"

Denis said, "Kieran O'Connor knows we're divided in our attitude
toward psychic aggression. I don't believe that his primary intent is
to trap and destroy us here. He really wants to discredit all
operants ev­erywhere in the eyes of the normals by forcing us to
abandon our Ethic. Some of you who joined his metaconcert
probably reacted instinctively against a perceived danger. Others...
did not. But we must all under­stand that we face the most critical
choice of our lives here and now. We represent the operant
leadership of the world. We will have to choose whether to adhere
to the Ethic that has inspired us ever since our first meeting in
Alma-Ata - or to do as certain of our fellow operants have already
done: use our minds as weapons... I say that if we do this, even in
this situation of obvious self-defense, the normal people of the
world will ultimately condemn us as inhuman, a race apart, a
monstrous minority too dangerous to share the planet with. "

The audience was still. Momentarily, the lights flickered. A few
peo­ple cried out, then fell silent again as the illumination steadied.

"Make no mistake, " Denis said quietly, "we could very easily die in
support of our principles. But I believe there are two honorable
courses open to us. The first is simply to wait for rescue, utilizing
what passive defenses we can muster. The second is to unite in a
very different form of grand metaconcert - not only embracing
those of us here, but also every other operant that we can summon
telepathically from all corners of the world, and even the normals.
Yes! I believe that we must try to gather them under our aegis as
well. The focus of our grand metaconcert must be our enemies,
the enemies of peace and tolerance everywhere. But we won't try
to destroy them or even to coerce them. We'll try to reach their
hearts. "

Out of the stunned hush, Jamie MacGregor's voice was imploring.
"But could it work, lad? It's a brave notion - but could it possibly
move them?"

Denis had lowered his head. "I don't know. I don't even know if we
can put together this type of metaconcert. In aggression, mind-
melding is easy. Mob rule! But this other kind... demands that one
surrender part of one's individual sovereignty to the whole, and to
do so leaves the mind vulnerable. I myself find the idea of
metaconcert frightening. Invasive. I've only conjoined with my wife,
whom I love more than life, and with my uncle, who has acted as a
father to me. I don't know whether I would be able to do it with all of
you or not. There's a potential for damage - very serious damage -
to the coordinator. But I've decided that I'm willing to try, if this
group asks me to do so. If it choses to uphold the Ethic. "

Denis lifted his eyes slowly and swept the room. "Of course, you're
quite free to choose the other way. I know you'll want to think it
over. But please don't take too long. "



Victor had managed to rally most of his scattered force in the lee
of the Gulf Tank, a landmark next to the upper section of the
railway where the cog locomotives once took on water. Sleet
coated the old wooden structure with glistening rime and whitened
the rocks; but little of it stuck to the huddling men, who were
dressed in electrically heated suits and helmets.

The most telepathically talented of the attackers had
eavesdropped upon Denis's speech, and when it was over the
aether clanged with their contemptuous laughter.

Victor shouted into the roaring wind, not caring who heard: A
prayer! That's what they want to zap us with boys! Not mental
lasers or great balls of fire but a goddam prayer!

When all except a few stragglers had assembled, Victor got down
to business. He projected a mental map pinpointing their location -
some six hundred meters from the chalet as the crow flew, if one
would have dared on such a vile night. The disabled transport
aircraft that had carried the delegates up the mountain and the
twenty or so vehicles belonging to the restaurant staff were in a
sheltered bowl on the other side of the summit. One small squad
of men would go around the north slope, secure the vehicles for
the group's escape, and dispose of any persons in the vicinity. The
five-man demolition crew, which Victor planned to lead himself,
would advance on the western side of the chalet under cover-fire
from the rest of the force.

"You guys get up two, three hundred meters from the building, and
make like the Battle of Gettysburg. Never mind trying to hit
anything. Just fire high and fire a lot so those heads don't have
time to think about anything but their precious skins. " Victor
projected a farsight view of the western half of the building, which
jutted shelflike above a small precipice and was supported by stout
piers anchored in bedrock. If these were undermined, the entire
structure would topple downhill into the vast gulf of Ammonoosuc
Ravine.

"Once I'm certain the charges are placed right I'll activate the
tim­ers, " Victor said. "And then I'm going to yell go-go-go over the
helmet intercom, and telepathically too. You hear that, you haul ass
for those cars. You'll have ten minutes from the shout. Whatever
you do, don't mind-yak to each other - especially about the
explosives! Remember these are heavy heads inside the building
and they can use your thoughts to target you if they change their
minds about doing a pray-in. Every­body understand?"

They muttered into their helmets. A few of the men, wearing older
models with low wattage, were already having to scrape ice from
the visors.

One querulous voice asked, "Vic - you sure we can get down the
mountain with that other bunch coming up? Seems to me -"

Victor cut him off. "We got us a shit-trip. Nobody knows it better
than me. But if push comes to shove we can walk off this rock-pile
six different ways. Anybody starts wetting his pants better think
hard about the one million cash he won't be getting if he screws up.
I'm gonna come through this thing and so will you if you do what I
told you. Now get going!"



32

FROM THE MEMOIRS OF ROGATIEN REMILLARD



As I robbed the body, I cursed my late adversary for being built
like an ape instead of a proper beanpole.

This meant that his electric suit would have to be slit around the
upper inseams and crotch in order to fit me - a mutilation that
fortunately did not damage the thermal wiring - and the
embarrassing fore and aft gaps filled in with a ludicrous loincloth
rigged from my cut-up jacket. His high moon-boots closed the
ankle gap nicely, however, and once I had turned up the suit's heat
full blast, pulled on the warm gauntlets, and settled the helmet into
place, I was no longer at imminent risk of death through exposure,
an expedient that had seemed all too likely before I had
encountered this straggling mercenary and chopped him across
the back of the neck with a sharp wedge of granite.

I had managed to bash my head and bruise my left leg severely in
my escape from the train. The injuries, together with the arduous
scramble that had preceded my ambush of the mercenary, had
reduced my mental faculties almost to zero. Not only was I dead
beat and only slowly recovering from hypothermia, but I was
emotionally torpid - certain that nothing I could do would be able to
help the twenty-eight hundred operants trapped in the chalet
above.

I had no farsight and I had no farspeech. The helmet was
equipped with the usual intercom radio, but to use it would only
alert Victor and his minions. I could expect my neurons to revive as
I thawed out - but the storm was intensifying, and with the
increased wind velocity and precipitation the atmosphere was
becoming loaded with wrongo ions. Trained operants could project
their thoughts through such muck, but hardly the likes of me.

I knelt to study my victim's weapon. It was thickly glazed with ice
and unfamiliar in aspect, resembling a cross between a large
electric drill and sections of the chromed exhaust system of a
small motorcycle. I hadn't the faintest notion where the trigger
might be, and the thing's weight was formidable - no doubt the
reason why the desperado had fallen behind his companions, only
to be dispatched by me in very cold blood. I decided to give
further armed combat a miss and concentrate on saving my life.

I began to work my way across the slope in a southerly direction,
having a vague notion of outflanking Victor's force and approaching
the chalet obliquely by way of the main portion of the Appalachian
Trail. On my left, the chalet blazed with lights, and I thought:
Boobies! Don't you realize you're sitting ducks? Blackout!
Blackout!

But then I realized the foolishness of my futile shout. Victor and his
operant henchmen were not handicapped as I was; with their
farsenses, they could perceive the chalet as readily with
illumination as without it. I was the booby, as usual.

I crept into the teeth of the wind, more often than not going on my
hands and knees over the icy, boulder-strewn mountainside. My
mind drifted back to the time so long ago when I had been
marooned in the Mahoosucs in another storm, only to be rescued -
if I really had been - by the Fam­ily Ghost. O ingenious figment of
my imagination! Where are you now - off on some interstellar
jaunt? Or given me up as a bad job?... How could I blame you,
Ghost? I disobeyed your orders. There I was, at least three times
feeling the irresistible compulsion to tell Denis the tale of the Great
Carbuncle, and on each occasion cringing at the banality of it...

O Ghost, you picked a loser. You told me I would know the
appro­priate moment to urge Denis to unite his colleagues and the
Mind of Earth in prayerful metaconcert. And if this isn't the moment,
I don't know what it is! But here I am and there Denis is, and
Lucille, and their three boys, and all the rest of the good-guy
operants, and I've blown it, and so have you.

Ghost, mon ami, let me try to make small amends. I will pause in
the shelter of this blasted crag (since I'm in need of a breather
anyway) and at least attempt to fulfill your esteemed orders. I will
squeak into the hurricane and perchance le bon dieu in his mercy
(if not you in yours) will bring a happy ending to this comedy:

Denis! This is your Uncle Rogi. Listen my son. I have been told to
give you an important message. Unite the minds of your
colleagues in a metaconcert of goodwill. Renounce violence. If
you do this beings from the stars will no longer shun our poor
planet but will come and be our friends... This sounds incredible?
Bien entendu! Nevertheless I have been told many times that it is
true. Denis! Do you hear me? Answer if you do.

I waited.

The first thing that happened was that every light in the chalet went
out.

The next thing was that all hell broke loose.

Victor's men began to fire at the building with their automatic
weapons from a long line of attack strung across the slope just
above me. Tracer bullets stitched the curtains of sleet with scarlet
smudges. I heard the sound of smashing glass, then exploding
grenades. The howl of the wind was almost drowned out by the
racket of the weaponry and I crouched in numb horror for several
minutes - and then unaccountably felt infused with fresh energy
and impelled to get moving.

I came upon some kind of trail. My impaired night-sight showed me
the cairns quite distinctly, together with the slightly less rough rock
surface that passed for a designated pathway on the Spartan
slopes of Mount Washington. The shooting was really nowhere
near me, but to my left. I began to move rapidly uphill, and the trail
slanted away at an angle that put the wind at my back. I judged that
I was probably ap­proaching the chalet by one of the steep short
cuts that gave access to the summit from the southwest. The
thump of grenades had stopped, although fusillades of bullets
continued unabated. I was moving up a gully and could no longer
see the tracers. I had no idea whether Vic's troops were advancing
or standing pat.

Then the gunfire became muted by the lay of the land, and once
again I was acutely aware of the hundred-voiced wailing of the
mountain wind and the hiss of freezing rain. My personal aether
was a tangle of ionic chittering and sibilance, as meaningless as
static on an unten­anted radio frequency. I heard nothing from
Denis, no Ghostly reassur­ances, only my ragged breathing and
the pounding of my pulse. Slipping and sliding on the ice, I climbed
upward. My semiexposed rump, with its inadequate covering long
since soaked through, had lost all sensa­tion. My legs worked
automatically. I had some vague idea, I think, of coming up
beneath the overhang of the building and working my way around
to the service entrance.

The ground began to level out. I was in an area of enormous
jagged rocks, heaped around the massive concrete pillars that
supported the western side of the chalet. My farsight provided a
faint grayish view for a radius of a few meters. Beyond that was
blackness.

Until I saw the blood-red glow.

A frisson of dread passed through me. Had Victor set the chalet
afire? But the patch of radiance was too small for that... and it
moved. Heaven help me, I thought of the real Great Carbuncle, that
will-o'-the-wisp of Mount Washington folklore that lured stormbound
hikers to their doom. But what would it be doing flitting about the
foundation of the chalet? The bulk of the building now loomed
above me, every windward surface plastered with a heavy crust of
rime. I could dimly farsense that most of the western windows
were broken. There were no telepathic thoughts to be discerned.

The magnetic carmine gleam drew me toward it. The worst of the
sleet was behind me now that I was beneath the overhang, but
there was a kind of frozen fog swirling through the cavernous dark
that disguised the source of the red glow until I was nearly on top
of it.

Suddenly, my ultrasense went off like an alarm clock, telling me
that the thing I had perceived wasn't a light at all. It was an
operant's aura, and the mind generating it was powerful, pitiless,
and all too familiar.

I saw Victor.

He was recognizable in spite of the cold-weather gear he wore,
unscreened and heedless, ablaze with anticipated triumph as he
strapped the last of three packages of explosive to one of the
piers of the chalet. Before I fully realized what he was up to he had
finished the job. From a nearly empty backpack laying on the
ground he took a device like a pocket radio, flicked switches, and
tapped out some code. Then his voice was loud in my helmet
phones:

"Go-go-go!"

The gunfire stopped, and at the same moment there was an abrupt
lull in the wind.

Victor turned and saw me standing there, not ten meters away. My
mind was paralyzed by his coercion even before I realized that he
had spotted me.

"It took you long enough to get here, " he said. Carefully, he tucked
the little electronic gadget into the pack. Then he came for me. He
didn't say another word, didn't transmit a farspoken message; but I
knew what he was going to do. During that trip up the mountain in
the cog, Kieran O'Connor had passed on to Victor the terrible
secret of mind-bonding. Kieran had used his body as a tool. Victor
wouldn't have to. The ultimate result on me would be the same...
and if I refused him I'd finish up as Shannon had, incinerated as my
psychic energies revi­talized this creature that had once been a
human being.

Victor had taken his helmet off and cast it aside. His eyes were like
bore-holes into lava. And I thought, Jesus, I can't let him take me
and I won't be a martyr. I'm going to try one last out-spiral -

Victor stopped.

Deep within the mountain was a sound, a slow and swelling
vibra­tion. The rocks around us began to shine with a barely
perceptible greenish fluorescence and there were clashing tinkling
chiming noises everywhere as their ice coating fractured like glass.
The terror and hope­lessness I had felt was wiped from my mind
and in its place came an uncanny sense of warm benevolence: a
beckoning bright calmness. Victor seemed to be feeling it, too. His
raging aura dimmed and he flinched as if he had been struck, then
looked frantically about. The expression on his face was one of a
furious, perplexed child. Poor Victor! Something seemed to urge
me to reach out to him, to show him where help lay. But I was too
old and too wary and I resisted -

The phenomenon cut off as abruptly as it had begun. The banshee
wind, carrying thick snowflakes this time instead of freezing rain,
smote us with renewed vigor. It had gone pitch black except for
Victor's red halo. I cringed before him and before the storm and
heard him laugh.

"So that's the best they can do, is it?"

Then he was coming at me again. One blow of his fist knocked my
own helmet off, and then he clamped my skull between hands like
the jaws of a vise. The deadly eyes! My vision was a flaming blur
and my heart leapt behind my breastbone and I shouted NO and
summoned my body's core-energy and made it spiral around and
around and around and out...

Victor was lying there at my feet. He had no aura but he breathed.
His face was dark, bruised profoundly. His gloved fingers made
small scrab­bling noises in the icy detritus.

A voice said, "Quelle bonne rencontre. "

I gave a violent start and looked behind me. Someone was coming
through the blizzard, carrying a powerful halide lantern that threw
vivid orange reflections on the wild scene. I recognized Victor's
villainous old sidekick, Pete Laplace, and would have ducked away
- but my psychocreative zap had so drained me that I was
incapable of moving a muscle. Pete limped up, shone his lamp
briefly on Victor, then un­wound his Ragg wool muffler and stuffed
it under my nephew's head.

The vibration in the mountain started up again.

Old Pete looked about, smiling thinly. As the rocks went
phospho­rescent he shambled over to Victor's backpack and
began stomping all over it. I heard breaking noises along with a
fresh chorus of glacial tinkling.

"That's enough of that, " old Pete declared. "Now let's see if those
folks upstairs and their brain-pals around the world and a few other
souls on this perverse little planet have got what it takes. "

I felt once again the pervading flood of calmness; but its joy and
serenity no longer invited me - they passed me by. I experienced it
but I was not really a part of it. I seemed to see faces - the
delegates, Lucille and the children, Jamie, Pyotr, members of the
Coterie; and I saw others whom I knew were elsewhere - Oriental
and Slavic faces, blacks and Latins, natives of America and
Australia, the hawk faces of desert tribes, urbane Europeans.
There were Caucasian elders and suboperant school­children from
the Indian plains, academics, operant peace officers, scientists,
government officials. I saw Ayeesha, the kind Syrian nanny of the
Remillard household. I saw Jamie MacGregor's grandmother. I
saw Tamara Sakhvadze, weeping, with her grown children Valery
and Anna. I saw Gerry Tremblay. I saw Elaine...

So many of them in free coadunation, operants and normals, and
Denis extended to his uttermost mental limits holding and guiding
the prayer. I could not hear what they said. It had nothing to do with
the stars and everything to do with Earth. It was not my prayer, nor
was it affirmed by every mind on our proud and stubborn and
foolish world. But it sufficed.

Old Pete came up to me, reached out, and seemed to take
something that I had. He said, "Come on, " and headed out into the
open. The thunderous vibration was gentling and the wind fell so
rapidly that by the time we were out from under the chalet and
heading along the down-slope trail toward the south the air was
dead calm and the snow had dwindled to a few drifting flakes. Pete
had left his lantern behind. The sky was oddly bright, and when I
stopped and looked back at the chalet I saw that the entire
structure was clothed in auroral brilliance.

"This is far enough, " Pete said. He held something up above his
head with one hand. I saw it was the Great Carbuncle.

"You!" I said.

The thing flared like a nova, blinding me. I felt someone take my
gloved hand, slap something into it, and press the fingers shut.

"You can have it back now. But take good care of it. This is only the
beginning, you know. Au 'voir, cher Rogi."

When my vision returned he was gone, and the New Hampshire
sky was filled with the thousands of starships of the Galactic Milieu,
and the Great Intervention had begun.


FINIS VINCULI

EPILOGUE

HANOVER, NEW HAMPSHIRE, EARTH

26 APRIL 2113



rogatien remillard looked at the last words on the display of the
transcriber, hit both PRINT and FILE, and then treated himself to a
luxurious yawn. The cat Marcel, sitting at his elbow on the battered
deal desk, pricked up its ears and stared alertly at an empty corner
of the bookshop's back room.

"Is that you?" Rogi inquired of thin air.

Naturellement!

"Checking up on me, eh? Well, I've finished this bit. Don't think it
was easy, even with your help. "

My congratulations on a satisfactory job.

Rogi grunted. "Let me ask you a question or two off the record.
Were you responsible for Vic not killing me when I found him and
Shannon at the hotel?"

No. He wanted you. In spite of all his power, he was an ignorant
man. He hoped, pathetically, that you would somehow be a mentor
to him, as he perceived you had been to the young Denis.

Rogi shook his head. "Too damn psychological for me... Another
question: Were you always Pete Laplace?"

I assumed the personas of living humans when it was convenient,
setting them... aside until the guise was no longer needed.

"Did you do that kind of thing very often?"

I confess, it did tend to become habit-forming! You must try to
un­derstand that, at the beginning of my direct participation, I was
unsure how much adjustment of the probability lattices would be
required of me. Meddling by an incorporeal Lylmik seemed
marginally riskier than manipulations done in human disguise. In
time, I came to realize that my doubts were merely prideful
resistance to the promptings of the Cosmic Afflatus. My actions,
though quite freely willed, were demon­strably preordained in the
larger Reality, which is mystery. Keeping this in mind, I just got on
with it.

"And even enjoyed yourself!" Rogi's tone was accusing.

The Ghost laughed: We Lylmik take our Olympian pleasures where
we may. I assure you they are few and far between.

"I'll just bet, " said Rogi sardonically. Then he asked, in a more
seri­ous vein, "What really happened to Victor? In retrospect, I
don't hardly see how I could have zapped him without your help. I
was just too far gone. "

I helped.

"Why didn't you kill him outright instead of trapping him inside his
skull? My God, he was blind, deaf, deprived of all tactile sensation
and every metafaculty but self-awareness. And the poor bastard
lived an­other twenty-seven years. "

The tenderhearted may regard cerebral solitary confinement as too
harsh a purgatory for any entity. I assure you that, for a mind such
as Victor's, it was not. He was vouchsafed a period of reflection...
just as I was. Unfortunately, his final choice was the wrong one.
Priez pour nous pécheurs, maintenant et à l'heure de notre mort.

Rogi sighed. "Well, I'm going to take a vacation before I start in on
the next part. Yours. Get in a little skiing before spring strikes with a
vengeance. Might go to Denali. That was one of your favorites, as I
recall. "

The Ghost was chuckling. Marcel flattened his ears as the printed
paper pages in the transcriber's receiving rack riffled, as though
flicked by an invisible finger.

The Ghost said: So you are quite sure now, are you, that you know
me?

Rogi nodded complacently. "Haven't figured the why of it - much
less the how. But I guess I'll worm it out of you eventually along
with some other parts of the story that always mystified me a bit. "
He cut the power to the transcriber, stood up, and stretched. "I'm
outa here and up to bed. "

The Ghost said: Good night, Uncle Rogi.

Rogi said, "Good night, Marc."


THE END OF INTERVENTION