ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Parts of this book were
previously published:
"Rammer," Galaxy
Magazine. Copyright (c) 1971 by UPD Publishing Corporation.
"The Alibi Machine,"
Vertex. Copyright (c) 1973 by Mankind Publishing company.
"A Kind of Murder,"
Analog. Copyright (c) 1974 by The Condé Nast Publications, Inc. All rights
reserved.
"All the Bridges
Rusting," Vertex. Copyright (c) 1973 by Mankind Publishing Company.
"There is a Tide,"
Galaxy Magazine. Copyright (r) 1968 by Galaxy Publishing Corporation.
"Bigger Than Worlds,"
Analog. Copyright (c) 1974 by The Condé Nast Publications, Inc. All rights
reserved.
"$16,940.00," Alfred
Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine. Copyright (c) H.S.D. Publications Inc., 1974. All
rights reserved.
"The Hole Man,"
Analog. Copyright (c) 1973 by the Condé Nast Publications, Inc. All rights
reserved.
"The Fourth
Profession," Quark. Copyright (c) 1971 by Coronet Communications, Inc. All
rights reserved.
Copyright (c) 1974 by Larry
Niven
All rights reserved under
International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions.
SBN 345-24011-1-125
First Printing: June, 1974
Second Printing: November, 1974
Cover painting by Dean Ellis
Printed in the United States of
America
BALLANTINE BOOKS
A Division of Random House,
Inc.
201 East 50th Street, New York,
N.Y. 10022
I started writing ten years ago. I wrote for a solid
year and collected nothing but rejection slips.
Most beginning writers can't afford to do that. They
take an honest job and write in their spare time, and it takes them five years
to make their mistakes, instead of one. Me, I lived off a trust fund.
The trust fund was there because my great-grandfather
once made a lot of money in oil. He left behind him a large family of nice
people, and we all owe him.
To EDWARD LAWRENCE DOHENY
Contents
Rammer
The Alibi Machine
The Last Days of the Permanent
Floating Riot Club
A Kind of Murder
All the Bridges Rusting
There Is a Tide
Bigger Than Worlds
$16,94O.OO
The Hole Man
The Fourth Profession
RAMMER
I
Once there was a dead man.
He had been waiting for two hundred years inside a
coffin, suitably labeled, whose outer shell held liquid nitrogen. There were
frozen clumps of cancer all through his frozen body. He had had it bad.
He was waiting for medical science to find him a
cure.
He waited in vain. Most varieties of cancer could be
cured now, but no cure existed for the billions of cell walls ruptured by
expanding crystals of ice. He had known the risk. He had gambled anyway. Why
not? He'd been dying.
The vaults held over a million of these frozen
bodies. Why not? They'd been dying.
Later there came a young criminal. His name is
forgotten and his crime is secret, but it must have been a terrible one. The
State wiped his personality for it.
Afterward he was a dead man: still warm, still
breathing, even reasonably healthy-but empty.
The State had use for an empty man.
Corbell woke on a hard table, aching as if he had
slept too long in one position. He stared incuriously at a white ceiling.
Memories floated up to him of a double-wailed coffin, and sleep and pain.
The pain was gone.
He sat up at once.
And flapped his arms wildly for balance. Everything
felt wrong. His arms would not swing right. His body was too light. His head
bobbed strangely on a thin neck. He reached frantically for the nearest
support, which turned out to be a blond young man in a white jumpsuit. Corbell
missed his grip; his arms were shorter than he had expected. He toppled on his
side, shook his head and sat up more carefully.
His arms. Scrawny, knobby-and not his.
The man in the jumpsuit said, "Are you all
right?"
"Yeah," said Corbell. My God, what have
they done to me? I thought I was ready for anything, but this- He fought
rising panic. His throat was rusty, but that was all right. This was certainly
somebody else's body, but it didn't seem to have cancer, either. "What's
the date? How long has it been?"
A quick recovery. The checker gave him a plus.
"Twenty-one ninety, your dating. You won't have to worry about our
dating."
That sounded ominous. Cautiously Corbell postponed
the obvious next question: What's happened to me? and asked instead,
"Why not?"
"You won't be joining our society."
"No? What, then?"
"Several professions are open to you-a limited
choice. If you don't qualify for any of them we'll try someone else."
Corbell sat on the edge of the hard operating table.
His body seemed younger, more limber, definitely thinner, not very clean. He
was acutely aware that his abdomen did not hurt no matter how he moved.
He asked, "And what happens to me?"
"I've never learned how to answer that question.
Call it a problem in metaphysics," said the checker. "Let me detail
what's happened to you so far and then you can decide for yourself."
There was an empty man. Still breathing and as
healthy as most of society in the year 2190. But empty. The electrical patterns
in the brain, the worn paths of nervous reflex, the memories, the person
had all been wiped away as penalty for an unnamed crime.
And there was this frozen thing.
"Your newspapers called you people corpsicles,"
said the blond man. "I never understood what the tapes meant by
that."
"It comes from popsicle. Frozen sherbet."
Corbell had used the word himself before he became one of them. One of the
corpsicles, the frozen dead.
Frozen within a corpsicle's frozen brain were
electrical patterns that could be recorded. The process would warm the brain
and destroy most of the patterns, but that hardly mattered, because other
things must be done too.
Personality was not all in the brain. Memory RNA was
concentrated in the brain, but it ran all through the nerves and the blood. In
Corbell's case the clumps of cancer had to be cut away. Then the RNA could be
leeched out of what was left. The operation would have left nothing like a
human being, Corbell gathered. More like bloody mush.
"What's been done to you is not the kind of
thing that can be done twice," the checker told him. "You get one
chance and this is it. If you don't work out we'll terminate and try someone
else. The vaults are full of corpsicles."
"You mean you'd wipe my personality,"
Corbell said unsteadily. "But I haven't committed a crime. Don't I have
any rights?"
The checker looked stunned. Then he laughed. "I
thought I'd explained. The man you think you are is dead. Corbell's will was
probated long ago. His widow-"
"Damn it, I left money to myself!"
"No good." Though the man still smiled, his
face was impersonal, remote, Unreachable. A vet smiles reassuringly at a cat
due to be fixed. "A dead man can't own property. That was settled in the
courts long ago. It wasn't fair to the heirs."
Corbell jerked an unexpectedly bony thumb at his bony
chest. "But I'm alive now!"
"Not in law. You can earn your new life. The
State will give you a new birth certificate and citizenship if you give the
State good reason."
Corbell sat for a moment, absorbing that. Then he got
off the table. "Let's get started then. What do you need to know about
me?"
"Your name."
"Jerome Branch Corbell."
"Call me Pierce." The checker did not offer
to shake hands. Neither did Corbell, perhaps because he sensed the man would
not respond, perhaps because they were both noticeably overdue for a bath.
"I'm your checker. Do you like people? I'm just asking. We'll test you in
detail later."
"I get along with the people around me, but I
like my privacy."
The checker frowned. "That narrows it more than
you might think. The isolationism you called privacy was-well, a passing fad.
We don't have the room for it . . . or the inclination, either. We can't send
you to a colony world-"
"I might make a good colonist. I like
travel."
"You'd make terrible breeding stock. Remember,
the genes aren't yours. No. You get one choice, Corbell. Rammer."
"Rammer?"
"I'm afraid so."
"That's the first strange word you've used since
I woke up. In fact-hasn't the language changed at all? You don't even have an
accent."
"Part of my profession. I learned your speech
through RNA training, many years ago. You'll learn your trade the same way if
you get that far. You'll be amazed how fast you learn with RNA shots to help
you along. But you'd better be right about liking your privacy, Corbell, and
about liking to travel, too. Can you take orders?"
"I was in the army."
"What does that mean?"
"Means yes."
"Good. Do you like strange places and faraway
people, or vice versa?"
"Both." Corbell smiled hopefully.
"I've raised buildings all over the world. Can the world use another
architect?"
"No. Do you feel that the State owes you
something?"
There could be but one answer to that.
"No."
"But you had yourself frozen. You must have felt
that the future owed you something."
"Not at all. It was a good risk. I was
dying."
"Ah." The checker looked him over
thoughtfully. "If you had something to believe in, perhaps dying wouldn't
mean so much."
Corbell said nothing.
They gave him a short word-association test in
English. That test made Corbell suspect that a good many corpsicles must date
from near his own death in 1970. They took a blood sample, then exercised him
to exhaustion and took another blood sample. They tested his pain threshold by
direct nerve stimulation-excruciatingly unpleasant-then took another blood
sample. They gave him a Chinese puzzle and told him to take it apart.
Pierce then informed him that the testing was over.
"After all, we already know the state of your health."
"Then why the blood samples?"
The checker looked at him for a moment. "You
tell me."
Something about that look gave Corbell the creepy
feeling that he was on trial for his life. The feeling might have been caused
only by the checker's rather narrow features, his icy blue gaze and abstracted
smile. Still . . . Pierce had stayed with him all through the testing, watching
him as if Corbell's behavior was a reflection on Pierce's judgment. Corbell
thought carefully before he spoke.
"You have to know how far I'll go before I quit.
You can analyze the blood samples for adrenalin and fatigue poisons to find out
just how much I was hurting, just how tired I really was."
"That's right," said the checker.
Corbell had survived again.
He would have given up much earlier on the pain test.
But at some point Pierce had mentioned that Corbell was the fourth corpsicle
personality to be tested in that empty body.
He remembered going to sleep that last time, two
hundred and twenty years ago.
His family and friends had been all around him,
acting like mourners. He had chosen the coffin, paid for vault space, and made
out his Last Will and Testament, but he had not thought of it as dying.
He had been given a shot. The eternal pain had drifted away in a soft haze. He
had gone to sleep.
He had drifted off wondering about the future,
wondering what he would wake to. A vault into the unknown. World government?
Interplanetary spacecraft? Clean fusion power? Strange clothing, body paints,
nudism? New principles of architecture, floating houses, arcologies?
Or crowding, poverty, all the fuels used up, power
provided by cheap labor? He'd thought of those, but they didn't worry him. The
world could not afford to wake him if it was that poor. The world he dreamed of
in those last moments was a rich world, able to support such luxuries as Jaybee
Corbell.
It looked like he wasn't going to see too damn much
of it.
Someone led him away after the testing. The guard,
walked with a meaty hand wrapped around Corbell's thin upper arm. Leg irons
would have been no more effective had Corbell thought of escaping. The guard
took him up a narrow staircase to the roof.
The noon sun blazed in a blue sky that shaded to
yellow, then brown at the horizon. Green plants grew in close-packed rows on
parts of the roof. Elsewhere many sheets of something glassy were exposed to
the sunlight.
Corbell caught one glimpse of the world from a bridge
between two roofs. It was a cityscape of close-packed buildings, all of the
same cold cubistic design.
And Corbell was impossibly high on a narrow strip of
concrete with no guardrails at all. He froze. He stopped breathing.
The guard did not speak. He tugged at Corbell's arm,
not hard, and watched to see what he would do. Corbell pulled himself together
and went on.
The room was all bunks: two walls of bunks with a gap
between. The light was cool and artificial, but outside it was nearly noon.
Could they be expecting him to sleep? But jet lag had never bothered Corbell. .
.
The room was big, a thousand bunks big. Most
of the bunks were full. A few occupants watched incuriously as the guard showed
Corbell which bunk was his. It was the bottommost in a stack of six. Corbell
had to drop to his knees and roll to get into it. The bedclothes were strange:
silky and very smooth, even slippery-the only touch of luxury about the place.
But there was no top sheet, nothing to cover him. He lay on his side, looking
out at the dormitory from near floor level.
Now, finally, he could let himself think:
I'm alive.
Earlier it might have been a fatal distraction. He'd
been holding it back:
I made it!
I'm alive!
And young! That wasn't even in the contract.
But, he thought reluctantly, because it would not
stay buried, who is it that's alive? Some kind of composite? A criminal
rehabilitated with the aid of some spare chemicals and an electric brainwashing
device. . . ? No. Jaybee Corbell is alive and well, if a trifle confused.
Once he had had that rare ability: He could go to
sleep anywhere, anytime. But sleep was very far from him now. He watched and
tried to learn.
Three things were shocking about that place.
One was the smell. Apparently perfumes and deodorants
had been another passing fad. Pierce had been overdue for a bath. So was the
new, improved Corbell. Here the smell was rich.
The second was the loving bunks, four of them in a
vertical stack, twice as wide as the singles and with thicker mattresses. The
doubles were for loving, not sleeping. What shocked Corbell was that they were
right out in the open, not hidden by so much as a gauze curtain.
The same was true of the toilets.
How can they live like this?
Corbell rubbed his nose and jumped-and cursed at
himself for jumping. His own nose had been big and fleshy and somewhat
shapeless. But the nose he now rubbed automatically when trying to think was
small and narrow with a straight, sharp edge. He might very well get used to the
smell and everything else before he got used to his own nose.
Eventually he slept.
Some time after dusk a man came for him. A broad,
brawny type wearing a gray jumper and a broad expressionless face, the guard
was not one to waste words. He found Corbell's bunk, pulled Corbell out by one
arm and led him stumbling away. Corbell was facing Pierce before he was fully
awake.
In annoyance he asked, "Doesn't anyone else
speak English?"
"No," said the checker.
Pierce and the guard guided Corbell to a comfortable
armchair facing a wide curved screen. They put padded earphones on him. They
set a plastic bottle of clear fluid on a shelf over his head. Corbell noticed a
clear plastic tube tipped with a hypodermic needle.
"Breakfast?"
Pierce missed the sarcasm. "You'll have one meal
each day-after learning period and exercise." He inserted the needle into
a vein in Corbell's arm. He covered the wound with a blob of what might have
been Silly Putty.
Corbell watched it all without emotion. If he had
ever been afraid of needles the months of pain and cancer had worked it out of
him. A needle was surcease, freedom from pain for a while.
"Learn now," said Pierce. "This knob
controls speed. The volume is set for your hearing. You may replay any section
once. Don't worry about your arm; you can't pull the tube loose."
"There's something I wanted to ask you, only I
couldn't remember the word. What's a rammer?"
"Starship pilot."
Corbell studied the checker's face, without profit.
"You're kidding."
"No. Learn now." The checker turned on
Corbell's screen and went away.
II
A rammer was the pilot of a starship.
The starships were Bussard ramjets. They caught
interstellar hydrogen in immaterial nets of electromagnetic force, compressed
and guided it into a ring of pinched force fields, and there burned it in
fusion fire. Potentially there was no limit at all on the speed of a Bussard
ramjet. The ships were enormously powerful, enormously complex, enormously
expensive.
Corbell thought it incredible that the State would
trust so much value, such devastating power and mass to one man. To a man two
centuries dead! Why, Corbell was an architect, not an astronaut! It was news to
him that the concept of the Bussard ramjet predated his own death. He had watched
the Apollo XI and XIII flights on television, and that had been the extent of
his interest in space flight, until now.
Now his life depended on his "rammer"
career. He never doubted it. That was what kept Corbell in front of the screen
with the earphones on his head for fourteen hours that first day. He was afraid
he might be tested.
He didn't understand all he was supposed to learn.
But he was not tested, either.
The second day he began to get interested. By the
third day he was fascinated. Things he had never understood-relativity and
magnetic theory and abstract mathematics-he now grasped intuitively. It was
marvelous!
And he ceased to wonder why the State had chosen
Jerome Corbell. It was always done this way. It made sense, all kinds of sense.
The payload of a starship was small and its operating
lifetime was more than a man's lifetime. A reasonably safe life-support system
for one man occupied an unreasonably high proportion of the payload. The rest
must go for biological package probes. A crew of more than one was out of the
question.
A good, capable, loyal citizen was not likely to be
enough of a loner. In any case, why send a citizen? The times would change
drastically before a seeder ramship could return. The State itself might change
beyond recognition. A returning rammer must adjust to a whole new culture.
There was no way to tell in advance what it might be like.
Why not pick a man who had already chosen to adjust
to a new culture? A man whose own culture was already two centuries dead when
the trip started?
And a man who already owed the State his life.
The RNA was most effective. Corbell stopped wondering
about Pierce's dispassionately possessive attitude. He began to think of
himself as property being programmed for a purpose.
And he learned. He skimmed microtaped texts as if
they were already familiar. The process was heady. He became convinced that he
could rebuild a seeder ramship with his bare hands, given the parts. He had
loved figures all his life, but abstract math had been beyond him until now.
Field theory, monopole field equations, circuitry design. When to suspect the
presence of a gravitational point source how to locate it, use it, avoid it.
The teaching chair was his life. The rest of his
time-exercise, dinner, sleep-seemed vague, uninteresting.
He exercised with about twenty others in a room too
small for the purpose. Like Corbell, the others were lean and stringy, in sharp
contrast to the brawny wedge-shaped men who were their guards. They followed
the lead of a guard, running in place because there was no room for real
running, forming in precise rows for scissors jumps, push-ups, sit-ups.
After fourteen hours in a teaching chair Corbell
usually enjoyed the jumping about. He followed orders. And he wondered about the
stick in a holster at each guard's waist. It looked like a cop's baton. It
might have been just that-except for the hole in one end. Corbell never tried
to find out.
Sometimes he saw Pierce during the exercise periods.
Pierce and the men who tended the teaching chairs were of a third type: well
fed, in adequate condition, but just on the verge of being overweight. Corbell
thought of them as Old American types.
From Pierce he learned something of the other
professions open to a revived corpsicle/reprogrammed criminal. Stoop labor:
intensive hand cultivation of crops. Body servants. Handicrafts. Any easily
taught repetitive work. And the hours! The corpsicles were expected to work
fourteen hours a day. And the crowding!
Not that his own situation was much different.
Fourteen hours to study, an hour of heavy exercise, an hour to eat, and eight
hours to sleep in a dorm that was two solid walls of people.
"Time to work, time to eat, time to sleep!
Elbow-to-elbow every minute! The poor bastards," he said to Pierce.
"What kind of a life is that?"
"It lets them repay their debt to the State as
quickly as possible. Be reasonable, Corbell. What would a corpsicle do with his
off hours? He has no social life. He has to learn one by observing citizens.
Many forms of felon's labor involve proximity to citizens."
"So they can look up at their betters while they
work? That's no way to learn. It would take. . . I get the feeling we're
talking about decades of this kind of thing."
"Thirty years' labor generally earns a man his
citizenship. That gets him a right to work, which then gets him a guaranteed
base income he can use to buy education shots and tapes. And the medical
benefits are impressive. We live longer than you used to, Corbell."
"Meanwhile it's slave labor. Anyway, none of
this applies to me-"
"No, of course not. Corbell, you're wrong to
call it slave labor. A slave can't quit. You can change jobs anytime you like.
There's a clear freedom of choice."
Corbell shivered. "Any slave can commit
suicide."
"Suicide, my ass," the checker said
distinctly. If he had anything that could be called an accent it lay in the
precision of his pronunciation. "Jerome Corbell is dead. I could have
given you his intact skeleton for a souvenir."
"I don't doubt it." Corbell saw himself
tenderly polishing his own white bones. But where could he have kept such a
thing? In his bunk?
"Well, then. You're a brain-wiped criminal,
justly brain-wiped, I might add. Your crime has cost you your citizenship, but
you still have the right to change professions. You need only ask for another-
urn, course of rehabilitation. What slave can change jobs at will?"
"It would feel like dying."
"Nonsense. You go to sleep, only that. When you
wake up you've got a different set of memories."
The subject was an unpleasant one. Corbell avoided it
from then on. But he could not avoid talking to the checker. Pierce was the
only man in the world he could talk to. On the days Pierce failed to show up he
felt angry, frustrated.
Once he asked about gravitational point sources.
"My time didn't know about those."
"Yes, it did. Neutron stars and black holes. You
had a number of pulsars located by 1970, and the mathematics to describe how a
pulsar decays. The thing to watch for is a decayed pulsar directly in your
path. Don't worry about black holes. There are none near your course."
"Okay. . ."
Pierce regarded him in some amusement. "You
really don't know much about your own time, do you?"
"Come on, I was an architect. What would
I know about astrophysics? We didn't have your learning techniques." Which
reminded him of something. "Pierce, you said you learned English with RNA
injections. Where does the RNA come from?"
Pierce smiled and walked away.
He had little time to remember. For that he was
almost grateful. But very occasionally, lying wakeful in his bunk, listening to
the shshsh of a thousand people breathing and the different sounds from
the loving bunks, he would remember. . . someone. It didn't matter who.
At first it had been Mirabelle, always Mirabelle.
Mirabelle at the tiller as they sailed out of San Pedro Harbor: tanned, square
face, laughing mouth, extravagantly large dark glasses. Mirabelle, older and
marked by months of strain, saying good-bye at his. . . funeral. Mirabelle on
their honeymoon. In twenty-two years they had grown together like two touching
limbs of a tree.
But now he thought of her, when he thought of her, as
two hundred years dead.
And his niece was dead, though he and Mirabelle had
barely made it to her confirmation; the pains had been getting bad then. And
his daughter Ann. And all three of his grandchildren: just infants they
had been! It didn't matter who it was that floated up into his mind. Everyone
was dead. Everyone but him.
Corbell did not want to die. He was disgustingly
healthy and twenty years younger than he had been at death. He found his rammer
education continually fascinating. If only they would stop treating him like
property.
Corbell had been in the army, but that was twenty
years ago. Make that two hundred and forty. He had learned to take orders, but
never to like it. What had galled him then was the basic assumption of his
inferiority. But no army officer in Corbell's experience had believed in
Corbell's inferiority as completely as did Pierce and Pierce's guards.
The checker never repeated a command, never seemed
even to consider that Corbell might refuse. If Corbell refused, even once, he
knew what would happen. Pierce knew that he knew. The atmosphere better fitted
a death camp than an army.
They must think I'm a zombie.
Corbell was careful not to pursue the thought. He was
a corpse brought back to life-but not all the way. What did they do with the
skeleton? Cremate it?
The life was not pleasant. His last-class citizenship
was galling. There was nobody to talk to-nobody but Pierce, whom he was
learning to hate. He was hungry much of the time. The single daily meal filled
his belly, but it would not stay full. No wonder he had wakened so lean.
More and more he lived in the teaching chair. In the
teaching chair he was a rammer. His impotence was changed to omnipotence.
Starman! Riding the fire that feeds the suns, scooping fuel from interstellar
space itself, spreading electromagnetic fields like wings hundreds of miles
out.
Two weeks after the State had wakened him from the
dead, Corbell was given his course.
He relaxed in a chair that was not quite a contour
couch. RNA solution dripped into him. He no longer noticed the needle. The
teaching screen held a map of his course, in green lines in three-space.
Corbell had stopped wondering how the three-dimensional effect was achieved.
The scale was shrinking as he watched.
Two tiny blobs, and a glowing ball surrounded by a
faintly glowing corona. This part of the course he already knew. A linear accelerator
would launch him from the Moon, boost him to Bussard ramjet speeds and hurl him
at the sun. Solar gravity would increase his speed while his electromagnetic
fields caught and burned the solar wind itself. Then out, still accelerating.
In the teaching screen the scale shrank horrendously.
The distances between stars were awesome, terrifying. Van Maanan's Star was
twelve light-years away.
He would begin deceleration a bit past the midpoint.
The matching would be tricky. He must slow enough to release the biological
package probe-but not enough to drop him below ram speeds. In addition he must
use the mass of Van Maanan's Star for a course change. There was no room for
error here.
Then on to the next target, which was even further
away. Corbell watched . . . and he absorbed . . . and a part of him seemed to
have known everything all along even while another part was gasping at the
distances. Ten stars, all yellow dwarfs of the Sol type, an average of fifteen
light-years apart-though he would cross one gap of fifty-two light-years. He
would almost touch lightspeed on that one. Oddly enough, the Bussard ramjet
effect would improve at such speeds. He could take advantage of the greater
hydrogen flux to pull the fields closer to the ship, to intensify them.
Ten stars in a closed path, a badly bent and battered
ring leading him back to the solar system and Earth. He would benefit from the
time he spent near lightspeed. Though three hundred years would have passed on
Earth, Corbel would only have lived through two hundred years of ship's
time-which still implied some kind of suspended-animation technique.
It didn't hit him the first time through, nor the
second; but repetition had been built into the teaching program. It didn't hit
him until he was on his way to the exercise room.
Three hundred years?
Three hundred years!
III
It wasn't night, not really. Outside it must be
midafternoon. Indoors, the dorm was always coolly lit, barely bright enough to
read by if there had been books. There were no windows.
Corbell should have been asleep. He suffered every
minute he spent gazing out into the dorm. Most of the others were asleep, but a
couple made noisy love on one of the loving bunks. A few men lay on their backs
with their eyes open. Two women talked in low voices. Corbell didn't know the
language. He had been unable to find anyone who spoke English.
Corbell was desperately homesick.
The first few days had been the worst.
He had stopped noticing the smell. If he thought of
it, he could sniff the traces of billions of human beings. Otherwise the odor
was part of the background noise.
But the loving bunks bothered him. When they were in
use he watched. When he forced himself not to watch he listened. He couldn't
help himself. But he had turned down two sign-language invitations from a small
brunette with straggly hair and a pretty, elfin face. Make love in public? He
couldn't.
He could avoid using the loving bunks, but not the
exposed toilets. That was embarrassing. The first time he was able to force
himself only by staring rigidly at his feet. When he pulled on his jumper and
looked up, a number of sleepers were watching him in obvious amusement. The
reason might have been his self-consciousness or the way he dropped his jumper
around his ankles, or he may have been out of line. A pecking order determined
who might use the toilets before whom. He still hadn't figured out the details.
Corbell wanted to go home.
The idea was unreasonable. His home was gone and he
would have gone with it if it weren't for the corpsicle crypts. But reason was
of no use in this instance. He wanted to go home. Home to Mirabelle. Home to
anywhere: Rome, San Francisco, Kansas City, Brasilia-he had lived in all those
places, all different, but all home. Corbell had been at home anywhere-but he
was not at home here and never would be.
Now they would take here away from him. Even
this world of four rooms and two roofs, elbow-to-elbow people and utter
slavery, this world which they would not even show him, would have vanished
when he returned from the stars.
Corbell rolled over and buried his face in his arms.
If he didn't sleep he would be groggy tomorrow. He might miss something
essential. They had never tested his training. Not yet, not yet.
He dozed.
He came awake suddenly, already up on one elbow,
groping for some elusive thought.
Ah.
Why haven't I been wondering about the biological
package probes?
A moment later he did wonder.
What are the biological package probes?
But the wonder was that he had never wondered.
He knew what and where they were: heavy fat cylinders
arranged around the waist of the starship's hull. Ten of these, each weighing
almost as much as Corbell's own life-support system. He knew their mass
distribution. He knew the clamp system that held them to the hull and he could
operate and repair the clamps under various extremes of damage. He almost knew
where the probes went when released; it was just on the tip of his tongue. . .
which meant that he had had the RNA shot but had not yet seen the instructions.
But he didn't know what the probes were for.
It was like that with the ship, he realized. He knew
everything there was to know about a seeder ramship, but nothing at all about
the other kinds of starships or interplanetary travel or ground-to-orbit
vehicles. He knew that he would be launched by linear accelerator from the
Moon. He knew the design of the accelerator-he could see it, three hundred and
fifty kilometers of rings standing on end in a line across a level lunar mare.
He knew what to do if anything went wrong during launch. And that was all he
knew about the Moon and lunar installations and lunar conquest, barring what he
had watched on television over two hundred years ago.
What was going on out there? In the two weeks since
his arrival (awakening? creation?) he had seen four rooms and two rooftops,
glimpsed a rectilinear cityscape from a bridge, and talked to one man who was
not interested in telling him anything. What had happened in two hundred years?
These men and women who slept around him. Who were
they? Why were they here? He didn't even know if they were corpsicle or
contemporary. Contemporary, probably; not one of them was self-conscious about the
facilities.
Corbell had raised buildings in all sorts of strange
places, but he had never jumped blind. He had always brushed up on the language
and studied the customs before he went. Here he had no handle, nowhere to
start. He was lost.
Oh, for someone to talk to!
He was learning in enormous gulps, taking in volumes
of knowledge so broad that he hadn't realized how rigidly bounded they were.
The State was teaching him only what he needed to know. Every bit of
information was aimed straight at his profession.
Rammer.
He could see the reasoning. He would be gone for
several centuries. Why should the State teach him anything at all about today's
technology, customs, politics? There would be trouble enough when he came back,
if he-come to that, who had taught him to call the government the State?
How had he come to think of the State as all powerful? He knew nothing of its
power and extent.
It must be the RNA training. With data came attitudes
below the conscious level, where he couldn't get at them.
That made his skin crawl. They were changing him
around again!
Sure, why shouldn't the State trust him with a seeder
ramship? They were feeding him State-oriented patriotism through a silver
needle!
He had lost his people. He had lost his world. He
would lose this one. According to Pierce, he had lost himself four times
already. A condemned criminal had had his personality wiped four times.
Corbell's goddamned skeleton had probably been ground up for phosphates. But
this was the worst: that his beliefs and motivations were being lost bit by bit
to the RNA solution while the State made him over into a rammer.
There was nothing that was his.
He failed to see Pierce at the next exercise period.
It was just as well. He was somewhat groggy. As usual he ate dinner like a
starving man. He returned to the dorm, rolled into his bunk and was instantly
asleep.
He looked up during study period the next day and
found Pierce watching him. He blinked, fighting free of a mass of data on the
attitude jet system that bled plasma from the inboard fusion plant that was
also the emergency electrical power source, and asked, "Pierce, what's a
biological package probe?"
"I would have thought they would teach you that.
You know what to do with the probes, don't you?"
"The teaching widget gave me the procedures two
days ago. Slow up for certain systems, kill the fields, turn a probe loose and
speed up again."
"You don't have to aim them?"
"No. I gather they aim themselves. But I have to
get them down below a certain velocity or they'll fall right through the
system."
"Amazing. They must do all the rest of it
themselves." Pierce shook his head. "I wouldn't have believed it.
Well, Corbell, the probes steer for an otherwise terrestrial world with a
reducing atmosphere. They outnumber oxygen-nitrogen worlds about three to one
in this region of the galaxy and probably everywhere else too-as you may know,
if your age got that far."
"But what do the probes do?"
"They're biological packages. A dozen different
strains of algae. The idea is to turn a reducing atmosphere into an oxygen
atmosphere, just the way photosynthetic life forms did for Earth, something
like fifteen-limes-ten-to-the-eighth years ago." The checker smiled,
barely. His small narrow mouth wasn't built to express any great emotion.
"You're part of a big project."
"Good Lord. How long does it take?"
"We think about fifty thousand years. Obviously
we've never had the chance to measure it."
"But, good Lord! Do you really think the State
will last that long? Does even the State think it'll last that long?"
"That's not your affair, Corbell. Still-"
Pierce considered. "I don't suppose I do. Or the State does. But humanity
will last. One day there will be men on those worlds. It's a Cause, Corbell.
The immortality of the species. A thing bigger than one man's life. And you're
part of it."
He looked at Corbell expectantly.
Corbell was deep in thought. He was running a
fingertip back and forth along the straight line of his nose.
Presently he asked, "What's it like out
there?"
"The stars? You're-"
"No, no, no. The city. I catch just a glimpse of
it twice a day. Cubistic buildings with elaborate carvings at the street
level-"
"What the bleep is this, Corbell? You don't need
to know anything about Selerdor. By the time you come home the whole city will
be changed."
"I know, I know. That's why I hate to leave
without seeing something of the world. I could be going out to die. . ."
Corbell stopped. He had seen that considering look before, but he had never
seen Pierce actually angry.
The checker's voice was flat, his mouth pinched
tight. "You think of yourself as a tourist."
"So would you if you found yourself two hundred
years in the future. If you didn't have that much curiosity you wouldn't be human."
"Granted that I'd want to look around. I
certainly wouldn't demand it as a right. What were you thinking when you
foisted yourself off on the future? Did you think the future owed you a debt?
It's the other way around, and time you realized it!"
Corbell was silent.
"I'll tell you something. You're a rammer
because you're a born tourist. We tested you for that. You like the unfamiliar;
it doesn't send you scuttling back to something safe and known. That's
rare."
The checker's eyes said: And that's why I've decided
not to wipe your personality yet. His mouth said, "Was there anything
else?"
Corbell pushed his luck. "I'd like a chance to
practice with a computer like the ship's autopilot-computer."
"We don't have one. But you'll get your chance
in two days. You're leaving then."
IV
The next day he received his instructions for
entering the solar system. He had been alive for seventeen days.
The instructions were understandably vague. He was to
try anything and everything to make contact with a drastically changed State,
up to and including flashing his attitude jets in binary code. He was to start
these procedures a good distance out. It was not impossible that the State
would be at war with. . . something. He should be signaling: NOT A WARSHIP.
He found that he would not be utterly dependent on
rescue ships. He could slow the ramship by braking directly into the solar wind
until the proton flux was too slow to help him. Then, whip around Sol and back
out, slowing on attitude jets, using whatever hydrogen was left in the inboard
tank. That was emergency fuel. Given no previous emergencies, a nearly full
tank would actually get him to the Moon and land him there.
The State would be through with him once he dropped
his last probe. It was good of the State to provide for his return, Corbell
thought-and then he shook himself. The State was not altruistic. It wanted the
ship back.
Now, more than ever, Corbell wanted a chance at the
autopilot computer.
He found one last opportunity to talk to the checker.
"A three-hundred-year round trip-maybe two
hundred, ship's time," Corbell said. "I get some advantage from
relativity. But, Pierce, you don't really expect me to live two hundred years,
do you? With nobody to talk to?"
"The cold-sleep treatment-"
"Even so."
Pierce frowned. "You've been briefed on the
cold-sleep procedure, but you haven't studied medicine. I'm told that cold
sleep has a rejuvenating effect over long periods. You'll spend perhaps twenty
years awake and the rest in cold sleep. The medical facilities are automatic;
you've been instructed how to use them. Do you think we'd risk your dying out
there between the stars, where it would be impossible to replace you?"
"Was there anything else you wanted to see me
about?"
"Yes." He had decided not to broach the
subject. Now he changed his mind. "I'd like to take a woman with me. The
life-support system would hold two of us. I worked it out. We'd need another
cold-sleep chamber, of course."
For two weeks this had been the only man Corbell
could talk to. At first he had found Pierce unfathomable, unreadable, almost
inhuman. Since then he had learned to read the checker's face to some extent.
Pierce was deciding whether to terminate Jerome
Corbell and start over.
It was a close thing. But the State had spent
considerable time and effort on Jerome Corbell. It was worth a try. And so
Pierce said, "That would take up some space. You would have to share the
rest between you. I do not think you would survive."
"But-"
"What we can do is this. We can put the mind of
a woman in your computer. The computer is voice-controlled, and her voice would
be that of a woman, any type of woman you choose. A subplot enclosing the
personality of a woman would leave plenty of circuitry for the computer's vital
functions."
"I don't think you quite get the point of-"
"Look here, Corbell. We know you don't need a
woman. If you did you would have taken one by now and we would have wiped you
and started over. You've lived in the dormitory for two weeks and you have not
used the mating facilities once."
"Damn it, Pierce, do you expect me to make love
in public? I can't!"
"Exactly."
"But-"
"Corbell, you learned to use the toilet, didn't
you? Because you had to. You know what to do with a woman but you are one of
those men fortunate enough not to need one. Otherwise you could not be a
rammer."
If Corbell had hit the checker then he would have
done it knowing that it meant his death. And knowing that, he would have killed
Pierce for forcing him to it.
Something like ten seconds elapsed. Pierce watched
him in frank curiosity. When he saw Corbell relax he said, "You leave
tomorrow. Your training is finished. Good-bye."
Corbell walked away clenching and unclenching his
fists.
The dormitory had been a test. He knew it now. Could
he cross a narrow bridge with no handrails? Then he was not pathologically
afraid of falling. Could he spend two hundred years alone in the cabin of a
starship? Then the silent people around him, five above his head, hundreds to either
side, must make him markedly uncomfortable. Could he live twenty waking years
without a woman? Surely he must be impotent.
He returned to the dorm after dinner. They had
replaced the bridge with a nearly invisible slab of glass. Corbell snarled and
crossed ahead of the guard. The guard had to hurry to keep up.
He stood between two walls of occupied bunks, looking
around him. Then he did a stupid thing.
He had already refrained from killing the checker. He
must have decided to live. What he did, then, was stupid. He knew it.
He looked about him until he found the slender
dark-haired girl with the elfin face watching him curiously from near the
ceiling. He climbed the rungs between the bunks until his face was level with
hers.
The gesture he needed was a quick, formalized one;
but he didn't know it. In English he asked, "Come with me?"
She nodded brightly and followed him down the ladder.
By then it seemed to Corbell that the dorm was alive with barely audible
voices.
The odd one, the rammer trainee.
Certainly a number of the wakeful turned on their
sides to watch.
He felt their eyes on the back of his neck as he
zipped open his gray jumpsuit and stepped out of it. The dormitory had been a
series of tests. At least two of those eyes would record his doings for Pierce.
But to Corbell they were just like all the others, all the eyes curiously
watching to see how the speechless one would make out.
And sure enough, he was impotent. It was the eyes,
and he was naked. The girl was at first concerned, then pitying. She stroked
his cheek in apology or sympathy and then she went away and found someone else.
Corbell lay listening to them, gazing at the bunk
above him.
He waited for eight hours. Finally a guard came to
take him away. By then he didn't care what they did with him.
V
He didn't start to care until the guard's floating
jeep pulled up beneath an enormous .22 cartridge standing on end. Then he began
to wonder. It was too small to be a rocket ship.
But it was. They strapped him into a contour couch,
one of three in a cabin with a single window. There were the guard, and
Corbell, and a man who might have been Pierce's second cousin once removed: the
pilot. He had the window.
Corbel's heartbeat quickened. He wondered how it
would be.
It was as if he had suddenly become very heavy. He
heard no noise except right at the beginning, a sound like landing gear being
raised on an airplane. Not a rocket, Corbell thought. Possibly the ferry ship's
drive was electromagnetic in nature. He remembered the tricks a Bussard ramjet
could play with magnetic fields.
He was heavy and he hadn't slept last night. He went
to sleep.
When he woke he was in free-fall. Nobody had tried to
tell him anything about free-fall. The guard and pilot were watching.
"Screw you," said Corbell.
It was another test. He got the straps open and
pushed himself over to the window. The pilot laughed, caught him and held him
while he closed a protective cover over the instruments. Then he let go and
Corbell drifted in front of the window.
His belly was revolving eccentrically. His inner ear
was going crazy. His testicles were tight up against his groin and that didn't
feel good either. He was falling, FALLING!
Corbell snarled within his mind and tried to
concentrate on the window. But the Earth was not visible. Neither was the Moon.
Just a lot of stars, bright enough-quite bright, in fact-even more brilliant
than they had been above a small boat anchored off Catalina Island on many
nights long ago. He watched them for some time.
Trying to keep his mind off that falling-elevator
sensation.
He wasn't about to get himself disqualified now…
They ate aboard in free-fall. Corbell copied the
others, picking chunks of meat and potatoes out of a plastic bag of stew,
pulling them through a membrane that sealed itself behind his pick.
"Of all the things I'm going to miss," he
told the broad-faced guard, "I'm going to enjoy missing you most. You and
your goddamn staring eyes." The guard smiled placidly and waited to see if
Corbell would get sick.
They landed a day after takeoff on a broad plain
where the Earth sat nestled among sharp lunar peaks. One day instead of three:
The State had expended extra power to get him here. But an Earth-Moon flight
must be a small thing these days.
The plain was black with blast pits. It must have
been a landing field for decades. Transparent bubbles clustered near the runway
end of the linear accelerator. There were buildings and groves of trees inside
the bubbles. Spacecraft of various shapes and sizes were scattered about the
plain.
The biggest was Corbel's ramship: a silver skyscraper
lying on its side. The probes were in place, giving the ship a thick-waisted
appearance. To Corbell's trained eye it looked ready for takeoff.
He was awed, he was humbled, he was proud. He tried
to sort out his own reactions from RNA-inspired emotions, and probably failed.
Corbell donned his suit first, while the pilot and
guard watched to see if he would make a mistake. He took it slow. The suit came
in two pieces: a skintight rubbery body stocking, and a helmet attached to a
heavy backpack. On the chest was a white spiral with tapered ends: the sign of
the State.
An electric cart came for them. Apparently Corbell
was not expected to know how to walk on an airless world. He thought to head
for one of the domes, but the guard steered straight for the ship. It was a
long way off.
It had become unnervingly large when the guard
stopped underneath. A fat cylinder the size of a house swelled above the jeep:
the life-support section, bound to the main hull by a narrower neck. The
smaller dome at the nose must be the control room.
The guard said, "Now you inspect your
ship."
"You can talk?"
"Yes. Yesterday, a quick course."
"Oh."
"Three things wrong with your ship. You find all
three. You tell me. I tell him."
"Him? Oh, the pilot. Then what?"
"Then you fix one of the things, we fix the
others. Then we launch you."
It was another test, of course. Maybe the last.
Corbell was furious. He started immediately with the field generators and
gradually he forgot the guard and the pilot and the sword still hanging over
his head. He knew this ship. As it had been with the teaching chair, so it was
with the ship itself. Corbell's impotence changed to omnipotence. The power of
the beast, the intricacy, the potential, the-the hydrogen tank held far too
much pressure. That wouldn't wait.
"I'll slurry this now," he told the guard.
"Get a tanker over there to top it off." He bled hydrogen gas slowly
through the valve, lowering the fuel's vapor pressure without letting fuel boil
out the valve itself. When he finished the liquid hydrogen would be slushy with
frozen crystals under near-vacuum pressure.
He finished the external inspection without finding
anything more. It figured: The banks of dials would hold vastly more
information than a man's eyes could read through opaque titan-alloy skin.
The airlock was a triple-door type, not so much to
save air as to give him an airlock even if he lost a door somehow. Corbell shut
the outer door, used the others when green lights indicated he could. He looked
down at the telltales under his chin as he started to unclamp his helmet.
Vacuum?
He stopped. The ship's gauges said air. The suit's
said vacuum. Which was right? Come to that, he hadn't heard any hissing. Just
how soundproof was his helmet?
Just like Pierce to wait and see if he would take off
his helmet in a vacuum. Well, how to test?
Hah! Corbell found the head, turned on a water
faucet. The water splashed oddly in lunar gravity. It did not boil.
Did a flaw in his suit constitute a flaw in the ship?
Corbell doffed his helmet and continued his
inspection.
There was no way to test the ram-field generators
without causing all kinds of havoc in the linear accelerator. He checked out
the tell-tales, then concentrated on the life-support mechanisms. The tailored
plants in the air system were alive and well. But the urea absorption mechanism
was plugged somehow. That would be a dirty job. He postponed it.
He decided to finish his inspection. The State might
have missed something. It was his ship, his life.
The cold-sleep chamber was like a great coffin, a
corpsicle coffin. Corbell shuddered, remembering two hundred years spent
waiting in liquid nitrogen. He wondered again if Jerome Corbell were really
dead-and then he shook off the thought and went to work.
No flaws in the cold-sleep system. He went on.
The computer was acting vaguely funny.
He had a hell of a time tracing the problem. There
was a minute break in one superconducting circuit, so small that some current
was leaking through anyway, by inductance. Bastards. He donned his suit and
went out to report.
The guard heard him out, consulted with the other
man, then told Corbell, "You did good. Now finish with the topping-off
procedure. We fix the other things."
"There's something wrong with my suit,
too."
"New suit aboard now."
"I want some time with the computer. I want to
be sure it's all right now."
"We fix it good. When you top off fuel you leave."
That suddenly, Corbell felt a vast sinking sensation.
The whole Moon was dropping away under him.
They launched him hard. Corbell saw red before his
eyes, felt his cheeks dragged far back toward his ears. The ship would be all
right. It was built to stand electromagnetic eddy currents from any direction.
He survived. He fumbled out of his couch in time to
watch the moonscape flying under him, receding, a magnificent view.
There were days of free-fall. He was not yet moving
at ramscoop speeds. But the State had aimed him inside the orbit of Mercury,
straight into the thickening solar wind. Protons. Thick fuel for the ram fields
and a boost from the sun's gravity.
Meanwhile he had most of a day to play with the
computer.
At one point it occurred to him that the State might
monitor his computer work. He shrugged it off. Probably it was too late for the
State to stop him now. In any case, he had said too much already.
He finished his work with the computer and got
answers that satisfied him. At higher speeds the ram fields were
self-reinforcing- they would support themselves and the ship. He could find no
upper limit to the velocity of a seeder ramship.
With all the time in the world, then, he sat down at
the control console and began to play with the fields.
They emerged like invisible wings. He felt the
buffeting of badly controlled bursts of fusing hydrogen. He kept the fields
close to the ship, fearful of losing the balance here, where the streaming of
protons was so uneven. He could feel how he was doing. He could fly this
ship by the seat of his pants, with RNA training to help him.
He felt like a giant. This enormous, phallic,
germinal flying thing of metal and fire! Carrying the seeds of life for worlds
that had never known life, he roared around the sun and out. The thrust dropped
a bit then, because he and the solar wind were moving in the same direction.
But he was catching it in his nets like wind in a sail, guiding it and burning
it and throwing it behind him. The ship moved faster every second.
This feeling of power-enormous masculine power-had to
be partly RNA training. At this point he didn't care. Part was him, Jerome
Corbell.
Around the orbit of Mars, when he was sure that a
glimpse of sunlight would not blind him, he instructed the computer to give him
a full view. The walls of the spherical control room seemed to disappear; the
sky blazed around him. There were no planets nearby. All he saw of the sky was
myriads of brilliant pinpoints, mostly white, some showing traces of color. But
there was more to see. Fusing hydrogen made a ghostly ring of light around his
ship.
It would grow stronger. So far his thrust was low,
somewhat more than enough to balance the thin pull of the sun.
He started his turn around the orbit of Jupiter by
adjusting the fields to channel the proton flow to the side. That helped him
thrust, but it must have puzzled Pierce and the faceless State. They would
assume he was playing with the fields, testing his equipment. Maybe. His curve
was gradual; it would take them a while to notice.
This was not according to plan. Originally he had
intended to be halfway to Van Maanan's Star before he changed course. That
would have given him fifteen years' head start, in case he was wrong, in case the
State could do something to stop him even now.
That would have been wise; but he couldn't do it.
Pierce might die in thirty years. Pierce might never know what Corbell had
done-and that thought was intolerable.
His thrust dropped to almost nothing in the outer
reaches of the system. Protons were thin out here. But there were enough to
push his velocity steadily higher, and that was what counted. The faster he
went, the greater the proton flux. He was on his way.
He was beyond Neptune when the voice of Pierce the
checker came to him, saying, "This is Peerssa for the State, Peerssa for
the State. Answer, Corbell. Do you have a malfunction? Can we help? We cannot
send rescue but we can advise. Peerssa for the State, Peerssa for the
State-"
Corbell smiled tightly. Peerssa? The checker's
name had changed pronunciation in two hundred years. Pierce had slipped back to
an old habit, RNA lessons forgotten. He must be upset about something.
Corbell spent twenty minutes finding the moon base
with his signal laser. The beam was too narrow to permit sloppy handling. When
he had it adjusted he said, "This is Corbel for himself, Corbell for
himself. I'm fine. How are you?"
He spent more time at the computer. One thing had
been bothering him: the return to Sol system. He planned to be away longer than
the State would have expected. Suppose there was nobody on the Moon when he
returned?
It was a problem, he found. If he could reach the
Moon on his remaining fuel (no emergencies, remember), he could reach the
Earth's atmosphere. The ship was durable; it would stand a meteoric re-entry.
But his attitude jets would not land him, properly speaking.
Unless he could cut away part of the ship. The
ram-field generators would no longer be needed then. . . . Well, he would work
it out somehow. Plenty of time. Plenty of time.
The answer from the Moon took nine hours.
"Peerssa for the State. Corbell, we don't understand. You are far off
course. Your first target was to be Van Maanan's Star. Instead you seem to be
curving around toward Sagittarius. There is no known Earthlike world in that
direction. What the bleep do you think you're doing? Repeating. Peerssa for the
State, Peerssa-"
Corbell tried to switch it off. The teaching chair
hadn't told him about an off switch. Finally, and it should have been sooner,
he told the computer to switch the receiver off.
Somewhat later, he located the lunar base with his
signal laser and began transmission.
"This is Corbel for himself, Corbell for
himself. I'm getting sick and tired of having to find you every damn time I
want to say something. So I'll give you this all at once.
"I'm not going to any of the stars on your list.
"It's occurred to me that the relativity
equations work better for me the faster I go. If I stop every fifteen light-years
to launch a probe, the way you want me to, I could spend two hundred years at
it and never get anywhere. Whereas if I just aim the ship in one direction and
keep it going, I can build up a ferocious Tau factor.
"It works out that I can reach the galactic hub
in twenty-one years, ship's time, if I hold myself down to one gravity
acceleration. And, Pierce, I just can't resist the idea. You were the one who
called me a born tourist, remember? Well, the stars in the galactic hub aren't
like the stars in the arms. And they're packed a quarter to a half light-year
apart, according to your own theories. It must be passing strange in there.
"So I'll! go exploring on my own. Maybe I'll
find some of your reducing-atmosphere planets and drop the probes there. Maybe
I won't. I'll see you in about seventy thousand years, your time. By then your
precious State may have withered away, or you'll have colonies on the seeded
planets and some of them may have broken loose from you. I'll join one of them.
Or-"
Corbell thought it through, rubbing the straight,
sharp line of his nose. "I'll have to check it out on the computer,"
he said. "But if I don't like any of your worlds when I get back, there
are always the Clouds of Magellan. I'll bet they aren't more than twenty-five
years away, ship's time."
The Alibi Machine
McAllister left the party around eight o’clock.
“Out of tobacco,” he told his host apologetically.
The police, if they got that far, would discover that that had been a little white
lie. There were other parties in Greenwich Village on a Saturday night, and he
would be attending one in about, he estimated, twenty minutes.
He took the elevator down. There was a displacement
booth in the lobby. He dropped a coin in the slot, smiling fleetingly at
himself—he had almost forgotten to take coins— and dialed. A moment later he
was outside his own penthouse door in Queens.
He had saved himself the time to let himself in, by
leaving his briefcase under a potted plant earlier this evening. He tipped the
pot, picked up the briefcase and stepped back into the booth. His conservative
paper business suit made him look as if he had just come from work, and the
briefcase completed the picture nicely.
He dialed three times. The first number took him to
Kennedy International. The second to Los Angeles International. Long distance
flicks required the additional equipment available only at what had once been
airports: equipment to compensate for the difference in rotational velocity
between different points on the Earth. The third number took him to Lucas
Anderson’s home in the high Sierras.
It was five o’clock here, and the summer sun was
still high. McAllister found himself gasping as he left the booth. Why would
Anderson want to live at eight thousand feet?
For the view, he supposed; and because Anderson, a
freelance writer, did not have to leave his home as often as normal people did.
But there was also his love of privacy— and distrust of people.
He rang the bell.
Anderson’s look was more surprised than welcoming.
“It was tomorrow. After lunch, remember?”
“I know, but—” McAllister hefted the briefcase. “Your
royalty accounts arrived this afternoon. A day earlier than we expected. I got
to thinking, why not have it out now? Why let you go on thinking you’ve been
cheated a day longer than—”
“Uh huh.” Anderson had an imposing scowl. He gave no
indication that he was ready to change his mind—and McAllister had nothing to
change it with anyway. Publishing companies had always fudged a little on their
royalty statements. Sometimes they took a bit too much, and then a writer might
rear back on his hind legs and demand an audit.
The difference here was that Brace Books didn’t know
what McAllister had been doing with Lucas Anderson’s accounts.
“Let’s just go over these papers,” he said with a
trace of impatience.
Anderson nodded without enthusiasm, and stepped back,
inviting him in.
Did he have company? A glance into the dining
nook told McAllister that he did not. A dinner setting for one, laid out with
mathematical precision by one or another of Anderson’s machines. Anderson’s
house was a display case of labor saving devices.
How to get him into the living room? But
Anderson was leading him there. It was not a big house, and a hostile
publishers assistant would not be invited into the semisacred writing room.
Anderson stopped in the middle of the room. “Spread
it on the coffee table.”
McAllister circled Anderson as he reached into the
briefcase. His fingers brushed papers, and then the Gyrojet, and suddenly his
pulse was thundering in his ears. He was afraid.
He’d spent considerable time plotting this. He’d even
typed outlines, as for a mystery novel, and burned them afterward. He could
produce the royalty statements; they were there in his briefcase, though they
would not stand up. Or ... His hand, unseen within the briefcase, clenched into
a fist.
He was between Anderson and the picture window when
he produced the Gyrojet.
The Gyrojet: an ancient toy or weapon, depending. It
was a rocket pistol, made during the 1960s, then discontinued. This one had
been stolen from someone’s house and later sold to McAllister, secretly, a full
twelve years ago.
A rocket pistol. How could any former Buck Rogers fan
have turned down a rocket pistol? He had never shown it to anyone. He had had
the thought, even then, that it would be untraceable should he ever want to
kill somebody…
The true weapon was the rocket slug. The gun looked
like a toy, flimsy aluminum, perforated down the barrel. Anderson might have
thought it was a toy—but Anderson was bright. He got the point immediately. He
turned to run.
McAllister shot him twice in the back.
He left by the front door. He grinned as he passed
the displacement booth. Fifteen years ago there had been people who put their
displacement booths inside, in the living room, say. But it made burglaries
much too easy.
The alibi machine, the newspapers had called
it then. They still did. The advent of the displacement booths had produced one
hell of a crime wave. When a man in, say, Hawaii could commit murder in Chicago
and be back in the time it would take him to visit the men’s room, it did make
things a bit difficult for the police. McAllister himself would be at a party
in New York ten minutes from now. But first...
He walked around to the back of the house and stood a
moment, looking into the picture window.
He’d thrown a paper tablecloth over Anderson’s body.
Glass particles on the body would be a giveaway. He’d take the tablecloth with
him; and how were the police to know that it was the third bullet, rather than
the first, that had shattered the picture window? But if it was the first
bullet, then the killer must have been someone Anderson would not let into the
house.
McAllister fired into the picture window.
Glass showered inward. There was the scream of an
alarm.
McAllister stood rooted. It was a terrible sound, and
in these quiet hills it would carry forever! He hadn’t expected alarms. There must
be a secondary system, continually in operation—Hell with it. McAllister ran
into the house, picked up the tablecloth and ran out. Glass particles all over
his shoes. Never mind. His shoes and everything else he was wearing were paper,
and there was a change of clothing in the briefcase. He’d dump gun and all at
the next number he dialed.
The altitude was getting to him. He was panting like
a bloodhound when he closed the booth door and dialed. Los Angeles
International, then a lakeside resort in New Mexico; the police could hardly
search every lake in the country.
Nothing happened.
He dialed again. And again, while the alarm screamed
to the hills, Help! I am being robbed. When his hand was shaking too
badly to dial, he backed out of the glass door and stood looking at the booth.
This hadn’t been in any of the outlines.
The booth wouldn’t let him out. In all this vastness
he was locked in, locked in with the body.
It was two hours before the helicopter from Fresno
arrived. Even so, they made good speed. Only a police organization could get a
copter in the air that fast. Who else dealt with situations in which one could
not simply flick in?
The copter landed in front of the Anderson house,
after some trouble picking it out of the wild landscape. Police Lieutenant
Richard Donaho climbed out carefully as soon as the dust had stopped swirling.
For the benefit of the pilot his face was unnaturally blank. The fear of death
had taken him the instant the blades started whirling around, and it was only
now leaving him.
With the motor off, the alarm from the house was an
intolerable scream. Lieutenant Donaho moved around to the side of the machine,
opened a hatch and switched in the portable JumpShift unit.
He stood back as men and equipment began pouring through.
Uniformed men moved toward the house, spreading out. Donaho didn’t interfere.
He wasn’t expecting anything startling. It was going to be cold burglary, the
burglar vanished quite away.
It was a smallish one-story house in a wild and
beautiful setting, halfway up a mountain. The sun was still bright, though it
had almost touched the western peaks. The sky was dark blue, almost lavender.
Houses were scarce upslope, and far scarcer downslope. There were no roads. No
roads at all. This place must have been uninhabited until twenty years ago,
when jumpShift Inc. had revolutionized transportation.
The shrill of the alarm stopped.
In the sudden silence a policeman walked briskly from
around the side of the house. “Lieutenant!” he called. “It’s not burglary. It’s
murder. There’s a dead man on the living room rug.”
“All right,” said Donaho. He called Homicide.
Captain Hennessey flicked in with the hot summer air
of Fresno around him. It puffed out when he opened the door, and he felt the
dry chill of the mountains. His ears popped. He stepped out of the belly of the
copter, looking for the nearest man. “Donaho! What’s happening?”
Dopaho nodded at the uniformed man, whose name was
Fisher. Fisher said, “It’s around in back. Picture window shattered. Man inside,
dead, with two holes in his back. That’s as far as we’ve got. Want to come
look, sir?”
“In a minute. What was wrong with the displacement
booth? Never mind, I see it.”
It was obvious even from here. The displacement booth
was a standard model, a glass cylinder rounded at the top, with a dial system
set in the side. Its curved door was blocked open by a chunk of granite.
“So that’s why you needed the copter,” said
Hennessey, “Hmm.” He hadn’t expected that.
It was an old trick. Any burglar knew enough to block
the displacement booth door before trying to rob a house. If he set off an
alarm the police couldn’t flick in, and he could generally run next door and
use the displacement booth there. But here…
“I wonder how he got out?” said Hennessey. “He couldn’t
set the rock and then use the booth. Maybe he couldn’t use the booth anyway.
Some alarms lock the transmitter on the booth, so people can still flick in but
nobody can flick out.”
Donaho shifted impatiently. This was a murder
investigation, and he had not yet so much as seen the body. Hennessey looked
down a rocky, wooded slope, darkening with dusk. “Hikers would call this
leg-breaker country,” he said. “But that’s how he did it. There’s no other way
he could get out. When the booth wouldn’t send him anywhere, he blocked the
door open and set out for. . . hmm.”
The nearest house was half a mile away. It was bigger
than Anderson’s house, with a pool and a stretch of lawn and a swing and a
slide, all clearly visible in miniature from this vantage point.
‘To there, I think. He’d rather go down than up. He’d
have to circle that stretch of chaparral...”
“Captain, do you really think so? I wouldn’t try
walking through that.”
“You’d stay here and wait for the fuzz? It’s not that
bad. You’d make two miles an hour without a backpack. Hell, he might even have
planned it this way. I hope he left footprints.
We’ll want to know if he wore
hiking boots.” Hennessey scowled. “Not that it’ll do us any good. He could have
reached the nearest house a good hour ago.”
“That doesn’t mean he could use the booth. Someone
might have seen him.”
“Hmm. Right. Or...he might have broken an ankle
anyway, mightn’t he? Donaho, get that copter up and start searching the area.
We’ll have someone in Fresno question the neighbors. With the alarm blaring
like that, they might have been more than usually alert.”
Lieutenant Donaho had not
greatly enjoyed his first helicopter flight, which had ended twenty minutes
ago. Now he; was in the air again, and, the slender wings were beating round
and round over his head, and the ground was an uncomfortable distance below.
“You don’t like this much,” the pilot said
perceptively. He was a stocky man of about forty.
“Not much,” Donaho agreed. It would have been nice if
he could close his eyes, but he had to keep watching the scenery. There were
trees a man could hide in, and a brook a man might have drunk from. He watched
for movement; he watched for footprints. The scenery was both too close and too
far down, and it wobbled dizzyingly.
“You’re too young,” said the pilot. “You young ones
don’t know anything about speed.”
Donaho was amused. “I can go anywhere in the world at
the speed of light.”
“Hell, that isn’t speed. Ever been on a motorcycle?”
“No!”
“I was using a chopper when they started putting up
the JumpShift booths all over the place. Man, it was wonderful. It was like all
the cars just evaporated! It took years, but it, didn’t seem that way. They
left all those wonderful freeways for just us. You know what the most dangerous
thing was about riding a chopper? It was cars.”
“Yah.”
“Same with flying. I don’t own a plane. God knows I
haven’t got the money, but I’ve got a friend who does. It’s a lot more fun now
that we’ve got the airfields to ourselves. No more big planes. No more problem
refueling either. We used to worry about running out of gas.”
“Uh huh.” A thought struck Donaho. “What do you know
about off-the-road vehicles?”
“Not that much. They’re still made. I can’t think of
one small enough to fit into a displacement booth, if that’s what you’re
thinking.”
“I was. Hennessey thinks the killer might have set
off the alarm deliberately. If he did, he might have brought an off-the-road
vehicle along. Are you sure he couldn’t get one into a booth?”
“No, I’m not.” The pilot looked down, considering.
“It’s too damn steep far a ground-effect vehicle. He’d leave tire tracks.”
“What would they look like?”
“Oh, God. You mean it, don’t you? Look for two parallel
lines, say three to six feet apart. Most tires are corrugated and you’d see
that too.”
There was nothing like that in sight.
“Then, I know guys who might try to take a chopper
across this. Might break their stupid necks, too. That’d leave a trail like a
caterpillar track, but corrugated.”
“I can’t believe anyone would walk across this. It
looked like half a mile of bad stairs back there. And how would he get through
those bushes?”
“Crawl. Not that I’d try it myself. But they don’t
want me for the gas chamber.” The pilot laughed. “Can you see the poor bastard,
standing in the booth, dialing and dialing—”
Lucas Anderson had been a big man. He had left a big
corpse sprawled across a sapphire-blue rug, his arms stretched way out, big
hands clutching. Anderson’s arms had been dragging a dead weight. One of the
holes in his back was high up, just over the spine.
And men moved about him, doing things that would not
help him and probably would not catch his killer.
Someone had come here expressly to kill Lucas
Anderson. He would have some connection with him, in business or friendship or
enmity. He might have left traces of himself, and if he had, these men would
find him.
But the alibi machine might have put him anywhere by
now. With a valid passport he could be in Algiers or Moscow.
Anderson’s bookshelf of his own works showed some
science fiction titles. His killer could have been a spaceman—and then he could
be in Mars orbit by now, or moving toward Jupiter at lightspeed as a kind of
superneutrino.
Yet they were learning things about him.
The cleaning machines had come on as soon as the
alarm had been switched off. An alert policeman had got to them before they
could do anything about the mess.
There was no glass on the body.
There was no glass under the body either.
“Now, that’s not particularly odd,” the man in the
white coat said to Hennessey. “I mean, the pattern of explosion might have done
that. But it means we can’t say one way or another.”
“He could have been dead when the shot was fired.”
“Sure, or the other way around. No glass on him could
mean he came running in when he heard all the noise. Just a minute,” the man in
the white coat said quickly, and he stooped far down to examine Anderson’s big
shoes with a magnifying glass. “I was wrong. No glass here.”
“Hmm. Anderson must have let him in. Then he shot out
the window to fox us, and set off the alarm. That wasn’t too bright.” In a
population of three hundred million Americans you could usually find a dozen
suspects for any given murder victim. An intelligent killer would simply risk
it.
Someday, Hennessey thought when the black mood was on
him, someday murder would be an accepted thing. It was that hard to stop. But
this one might not have escaped yet
“I’d like to get the body to the lab,” said the man
in the white coat. “Can’t do an autopsy here. I want to probe for the bullets.
They’d tell us how far away he was shot from, if we can get a gun like it, to
do test firing.”
“If? Unusual gun?”
The man laughed. “Very. The slug in the wail was a
solid-fuel rocket, four nozzles the size of pinholes, angled to spin the thing.
Impact like a .45.”
“Hmm.” Hennessey asked of nobody in particular, “Get
any footprints?”
Someone answered. “Yessir, in the grass outside.
Paper shoes. Small feet. Definitely not Anderson’s.”
“Paper shoes.” Could he have planned to hike out?
Brought a pair of hiking boots to change into? But it began to look like the
killer hadn’t planned anything so elaborate.
The dining setup would indicate that Anderson hadn’t
been expecting visitors. If premeditated murder could be called casual, this
had been a casual murder, except for the picture window. Police had searched
the house and found no sign of theft. Later they could learn what enemies
Anderson had made in life. For now... ‘
For now, the body should be moved to Fresno. “Call
the copter back,” Hennessey told someone. They’d need the portable JumpShift
unit in the side.
When the wind from the copter had died Hennessey
stepped forward with the rest, with the team that carried the stretcher. He
asked of Donaho, “Any luck?”
“None,” said Lieutenant Donaho. He climbed out, stood
a moment to feel solid ground beneath his feet. “No footprints, no tracks,
nobody hiding where we could see him. There’s a lot of woods where he could be
hiding, though. Look, it’s after sunset, Captain. Get us an infrared scanner
and we’ll go up again when it gets dark.”
“Good.” More time for the killer to move—but there
were only half a dozen houses be could try for, Hennessey thought. He could get
permission from the owners to turn off their booths for awhile. Maybe.
“But I don’t believe it,” Donaho was saying. “Nobody
could travel a mile through that. And the word from Fresno is that the only
unoccupied house is two miles off to the side!”
“Never a boy scout, were you?”
“No. Why?”
“We used to hike these hills with thirty pounds of
backpack. Still...hmm.” He seemed to be studying Donaho’s face. “Is Anderson’s
booth back in operation?”
“Yes. You were right, Captain. It was hooked to the
alarm.”
“Then we can send the copter home and use that.
Listen, Donaho, I may have been going at this wrong. Let me ask you something .
. .”
Most of the police were gone by ten. The body was
gone. There was fingerprint powder on every polished surface, and glass all
over the living room.
Hennessey and Donabo and the uniformed man named
Fisher sat at the dining table, drinking coffee made in the Anderson kitchen.
“Guess I’ll be going home,” Donaho said presently. He
made no reference to what they had planned.
They watched through the window, as Lieutenant
Donaho, brilliantly lighted, vanished within the glass booth.
After that they drank coffee, and talked, and
watched. The stars were very bright.
It was almost midnight before anything happened.
Then, i rustling sound—and something burst into view from upslope; a shadowy
figure in full flight. It was in the displacement booth before Hennessey and
Fisher had even reached the front door.
The booth light showed every detail of a lean dark
man in a rumpled paper business suit, one hand holding a briefcase, the other
dialing frantically. Dialing again, while one eye in a shyly averted face
watched two armed men strolling up to the booth.
“No use,” Hennessey called pleasantly. “Lieutenant
Donaho had it cut off as soon as he flicked out.”
The man released a ragged sigh.
“We want the gun.”
The man considered. Then he handed out the briefcase.
The gun was in there. The man came out after it. He had a beaten look.
“Where were you hiding?” Hennessey asked.
“Up there in the bushes, where I could see you. I
knew you’d turn the booth back on sooner or later.”
“Why didn’t you just walk down to the nearest house?”
The lean man looked at him curiously. Then he looked
down across a black slope, to where a spark of light showed one window still
glowing in a distant house. “Oh my God. I never thought of that.”
The Last Days of the Permanent
Floating Riot Club
In its heyday the Club had numbered around ninety,
and it was the most exclusive club in the world. Now a third of its members had
quit, and a third were in prison or awaiting trial, and the remaining
thirty-odd active members had lost a crucial something: confidence, enthusiasm,
esprit de corps, call it what you will.
“We always knew it was coming,” said Benny Sherman.
He was a thick-set man, short and broad, made mostly of black hair and muscle.
He waved a big, stubby-fingered hand at the south wall of the main room, where
a commentator was spreading news of the outside world across a wall-sized
screen. “It was all over that screen, for years. Central Riot Control in
Nebraska. Pictures of the building going up. They told us just how it was gonna
work. They gave us a completion date. Twenty of us quit that same day.”
Nobody said anything. The voice of the commentator
came through at low volume, speaking of the rumor that the Soviets had
developed a self-teleporting spy cloak. The teevee screen was never off in the
Permanent Floating Riot Club.
“That spy cloak,” James Get-It-All (Goethals) said
wistfully. “That’d be nice to have when a flash crowd goes sour. I wonder what
are the chances of stealing one.”
“Sure,” said Willie Lordon. He was a featherweight,
pinchfaced man, all birdlike bones and acid sarcasm. “Cops coming at you from
all directions: What do you do? You roll yourself up in your spy cloak, and as
soon as it forms a closed surface it’s a displacement booth. Where are you
now?” He paused for effect. “In a top secret headquarters in the Kremlin! You
idiot.”
“Better that than Central Riot Control.”
Willie snorted.
“I’ve been there,” said Benny Sherman. “Inside it’s
like a Rose Bowl without seats. Receiver booths, all around ,the lip of the
bowl. You try to flick out of a place where the riot control is on, and you
wind up dropping out the bottom of the booth. You slide all the way down to the
bottom of the bowl, and you wait there with everyone else till the cops get
around to you. I got out by the skin of my teeth.”
“By throwing away your take,” said Willie Lordon.
Clearly the idea disgusted him.
“It hurt, too. I had a diamond the size of an almond,
if it was real, and a half dozen good watches...and there wasn’t any way to
tell we’d gone on riot control. I just had to guess the flash crowd had gone on
long enough.”
“You’re a genius,” said Willie.
“I’m losing my nerve,” Benny said mournfully. “Six
times this past year we’ve flicked into flash crowds, and three times I threw
away everything I had because it looked like the cops had time to put us under
riot control. Once I was right. Twice I was wrong. That’s just not good
enough.” He braced himself, “I think I’ll quit.” There, he’d said it.
“Shh,” said Lou Garcia, waving them to silence. He turned
the volume control louder. The teevee newscaster was saying, “... flash crowd
in downtown Topeka seems to have developed due to a heavily advertised sale at
Bloomingdale’s..."
“Shh, Hell. I quit!” Benny bellowed over the racket.
“We made a lot of money the last ten years. I want to stay outside to enjoy
it!”
Most of the members were on their feet, eyes on the
screen. A flash crowd meant business. James Get-It-All was at the computer
terminal getting the numbers of displacement booths in the affected area. An
endless strip of paper ran from the slot: thirty-odd copies of the list.
Lou Garcia favored Benny with a sardonic look.
"You’re giving up your share of the treasury?”
That was a low blow. Benny stood a moment,
considering.
Then, “You can have it,” he said, and walked out.
He turned for one last look at the Club before going
on. It seemed likely that he would never see it again.
The Club was a three story brick building of
prestressed concrete made to look like old brick. The brick/concrete was
chipped in spots and dark with age: one among several blocks of older
buildings. The luxuries were inside: luxuries bought with Club dues.
Now other members were filing out the entrance and
dividing there, heading for street-corner displacement booths half a block away
in each direction. Willie Lordon was flexing his fingers as he walked. He
carried a small electric knife that would slice out the bottom of a citizen’s
lock pocket, without alerting him if there was sufficient noise and jostling to
distract him. James Get-It-All jogged along with the tense, serious look of a
player who knows that his team depends on him. Lou Garcia stood at the
entrance, grinning broadly as he watched them go.
They filed into glass cylinders with rounded tops,
dialed and disappeared, one by one.
Benny watched them wistfully. He had helped to found
the Club, and they didn’t even know he was gone.
He remembered a September night ten years ago, the
night Orrie Black had proposed the idea. He and Orrie and Lou Garcia and some others
who had gotten their start when the booths were new. In those days you could
get the booth number of a house and just flick into the living room or entrance
hall. You could make a strike just by dialing at random until you hit. But the
citizens had wised up and started putting their booths outside, and now half a
dozen ex-burglars had gathered at a topless beer and pool place.
“Think it out,” Orrie Black had said. “Any time
something interesting happens, anywhere in the country, some newstaper is going
to report it. If it’s interesting enough, people are going to flick in to see
it, from all over the country. Now just think about that. With these
long distance booths you can get. from anywhere to anywhere else just by
dialing three numbers.
“If the crowd gets big enough a lot more people flick
in just to see a flash crowd, plus more newstapers, plus any kind of agitator
looking to shove his sign in front of a camera, plus looters and pickpockets
and cops. Before anyone knows it you’ve got a riot going, with everypne
breaking windows and grabbing what’s in them. So why shouldn’t we be the ones
breaking windows?’
“The key, the crucial thing, is for there to be
enough of us to help each other out. We should all be flicking in at once . .
." And they’d tried it out in the Third Watts Riot, which had lasted a
full day and a half.
These days you were lucky if a flash crowd lasted two
hours. And Orrie Black was in prison, and the others had gone their ways—all
but Benny and Lou Garcia.
The Club dues. Not everyone had liked that idea,
Benny included. Half your take! But it had paid off, and not just for the
Clubhouse. The treasury had paid defense lawyers and hospital fees. Flicking
into a riot was dangerous, even for a pro.
There must be a lot of it left in Lou Garcia’s care.
Quitting had cost Benny his share of that.
Still—he shuddered, remembering the last one. Despite
previous experience, he hadn’t expected it to grow so big so fast. Something
trivial had started it, as usual. A line of people
waiting for tickets to a top
game show had gotten out of hand. Too many people, not enough seats, somebody
getting pushy, and Wham! A pocket riot, until it hit the news, and then a few
hundred more flicked in to see the damn fools fighting.
Benny had flicked into the middle of it, already
looking around for the stores—and the cops. The cops had learned something in
past years. It wasn’t that there were so many of them: it was their deployment.
They tended to guard the most valuable store windows. Benny had spotted a
furrier’s, a small jewelry display, a home appliance store—all guarded by cops.
He had seen clerks moving within the furrier’s window, trying to get the goods
out of harm’s way.
He had pushed his way out into the swarm: newstapers
with gyrostabilized cameras, a scattering of hand-lettered signs held high, and
a hell of a lot of people caught up in it somehow, unable to flick out because
the displacement booths filled with incoming passengers before anyone could get
in. A lot of incoming passengers had been Club members. A normal enough crowd,
but so thick!
The crowd had surged suddenly, downing the cops in
front of Van Cleef and Arpel’s. Benny had seen the small, wiry man who smashed
the window, and scooped, and began pushing his way frantically toward the
nearest booth. Toward Benny. And he was not a Club member.
As he passed Benny, Benny had hit him in the stomach
and rifled the man’s pockets while he was still doubled over. He’d had to fight
to keep his feet, but the crowding was such that nobody had noticed what he was
doing.
The crowd had surrounded the booth before he turned
around. Benny had glimpsed a pair of cops holding back the crowd, letting them
into the booth one at a time.
The next nearest booth was a block away, through an
incredible sea of feet and elbows. His squat, massive body had been an
advantage as he plowed through it. Long before he reached the booth Benny had
noticed that nobody was flicking in any more. He had dropped the rings and
watches then. Regretfully.
He remembered the sickening moment just after
dialing, when the hinged bottom dropped out of the booth and he was sliding
downhill. Others were sliding after him, all around the rim of the bowl, and
there were hundreds at the bottom picking themselves up, some looking relieved,
some furious. The cops had been on a raised, railed platform at the center of
the bowl. A loudspeaker had been telling the crowd what they already knew: that
they were at United States Central Riot Control, that they would be processed
as fast as possible and released.
The police had searched him, photographed him, and
sent off the photos for comparison with records of previous riots. His face was
on record: he had been in other flash crowds. They had held him. They had held
quite a lot of people, many of whom weren’t even Club members.
“Just a coincidence,” he had told the police. “It’s
funny how many flash crowds I run into. Never been hurt in one, though. I guess
I’m lucky.”
They couldn’t prove different. They’d had to let him go.
But they knew. Benny hunched his big shoulders,
remembering the contempt in their eyes. They knew. And his face and
fingerprints had been caught in one more flash crowd. They’d get him if he kept
it up.
It was time to quit.
What about the treasury? When most of the members had
quit or been caught and sent up, would it be divided by the last few? Lou
Garcia must think so. That was why he had gone with the others. That was why he
was grinning.
Benny couldn’t bring himself to like the idea. He had
collected his share of the treasury. But what could he do? If he stayed in the
Club but avoided the flash crowds, the others would get tired of collecting his
share of the dues for him. They’d beat him up and kick him out.
It had happened before. Club activities depended tm
there being enough members in a flash crowd to help each other. Goldbricks were
not tolerated.
He stood in a corner booth, coin in hand, wondering
where he wanted to go. Where to go, when a career has ended? What difference
does it make? The flash crowd at Bloomingdale’s was actually in walking
distance, and he was tempted to go watch. The police barricades must be up by
now. He could look across them, watch the Club in action.
No flash crowd had ever happened this close to the
Club. A good thing it hadn’t happened nearer...
The idea came to him that suddenly.
For Jerryberry Jansen, home was two rooms knocked
together in what had once been a motel on the Pacific Coast Highway. The rooms
sold as apartments now. They were cheap, and there was a swimming pool and
access to the ocean. The concrete walk between the two rows of doors still had
fading white diagonal lines on it.
Five o’clock found Jerryberry flopped bonelessly
across the double bed.
For six years Jerryberry had been one of CBA’s
wandering newstapers, whose profession it is to flick about Los Angeles without
leaving the booths, carrying a hand-held camera in hope of finding something
interesting to report. He had developed legs like tree trunks. These days he
went out on assignment: a step up, but it still involved legwork. Some day, he
thought as he put his feet up on the pillows, JumpShift Inc. would start
putting seats in the booths. But first they’d have to figure out how to flick
the passenger out without flicking the seats out too.
The phone rang.
First he cursed. Then he heaved himself upright and
put on a smile to answer. The smile sagged when the screen remained blank. A
voice said, “Barry Jerome Jansen?”
“Speaking.”
“The newstaper?”
“Right again. Who’s this?” Jerryberry wondered if it
was a crank call. The voice belonged on a bad actor playing the role of a
tough.
“It doesn’t matter who I am. How would you like the
address of the Permanent Floating Riot Club?”
Jerryberry checked his first response, which would
have been, “I’d love it.” He said, “There isn’t any such thing." That
response was justified too. Nobody had ever proved the existence of a Permanent
Floating Riot Gang. Every flash crowd attracted a certain proportion of
looters. So what?
But he flipped a switch to record the call. The voice
had said Club, not Gang.
“There is too,” it said impatiently. “It’s at 225
East Lindon, Topeka.”
“You’re not trying to sell it?”
“I’m giving it to you, baby. Did you get it? 225 East
Lindon Drive, Topeka, Kansas.” The caller hung up.
Jerryberiy flopped back on the bed. He was tired. It
could be a gag. Topeka, Kansas. Who would be telling Jerryberry Jansen about
it? Jerryberry’s beat was Los Angeles.
Oh, well. He heaved himself upright and called the
police.
The Topeka police were spending all their time
answering the phone. “We know,” said Detective Sergeant Hirohito. “That’s the
same address he gave everyone. Thank you for calling; we’re already on it.” He
hung up. “Another one. Los Angeles. He must have called every newscaster in the
country.”
“God, I hope not, They won’t all keep their mouths
shut. We’ve got to have time to check this out.”
Hirohito drummed his fingers on the desk. “There’s
only one way to get it. We’ll have to put the whole area under riot control.”
“What? No. If it’s a false alarm, we could get sued
for obstructing business! There are a lot of mail order houses in the area, not
to mention a messenger service—”
“Calm down, Jack. Now we both know this is going to
hit the news sooner or later, probably about now. What’s going to happen then?”
Jack Shorter grinned; “Sure. Flash crowd!”
“It’ll be the first time we ever put the riot control
on before the riot started. The newstapers’ll probably call it the Riot Club
Riot.”
Most of the news programs reported the incident along
with a bulletin from the Topeka Police Force. We have not yet had time to
erect barricades, and the suspects could be armed. We strongly advise citizens
to stay out of the affected area …
“They always say that,” CBA’s commentator, Wash
Evans, told his audience. “But you never pay any attention. This time they mean
it. There’s no telling what kind of weaponry a Looters’ Club might have picked
up in the last ten years. We know they’ve raided a few sporting goods stores in
there, and there have been a few shoot-outs. Do not go to see the riot. You get
a better view on teevee.”
Nobody paid any attention.
Central Riot Control. The theory was simple enough.
You divided all of the municipal areas in’ the United States into areas of
approximately four blocks by four blocks. Outside the cities the areas were far
bigger, the flash crowds far less likely. When a flash crowd gathered, there
were switches at the police stations that would affect all of the displacement
booths in one or more riot control areas. With riot control going, the booths
in the area would not admit incoming passengers except from the police
stations. They would send only to the huge Central Riot Control Building in
Nebraska.
The Permanent Floating Riot Club kept maps of most of
the riot control areas in the country. There were tens of thousands of them,
and they were stored in an expensive computer on the third floor of the Club.
In simple curiosity, Benny had once looked up the
area the Club itself was situated in. He had been amused to find that Lou
Garcia—who lived three blocks away—was in the same riot control area. Lou may
have done that deliberately. If the Club was ever put under Riot Control, he
could simply stroll home.
He was going to regret that bit of cleverness.
Benny had not called every newscaster in the country.
It would have taken too long. He had called about twenty of the most famous.
Now he hung up and strolled out into the street.
This area hadn’t changed much over the past decade.
In fact, that was true of most municipal areas. The new buildings were all
going up in rural and desert areas, where men could work and live with more
elbow room and prettier scenery than their city cousins, without sacrificing
anything in the way of mobility. Here in the civic center the buildings just
sat there growing older: brick and concrete darkening with smog, small
buildings growing grimy. The people were generally older too. Benny had once
noticed that you could tell a citizen’s age further away than you could tell
his sex, by the tenacity with which he hugged the sidewalk instead of strolling
down the center of the street, or by whether he looked both ways for phantom
cars before crossing.
As he crossed an intersection Benny glimpsed the Club
building three blocks down. Nothing happening there. And there were no
barricades yet. But there were people leaving nearby booths, flicking in at a
good rate, it seemed, and they all walked like young men.
He entered Lou Garcia’s apartment building and rang
Garcia’s bell in the lobby.
It seemed pretty well foolproof at this stage. If
Garcia wasn’t home, then he was either at the Club or elsewhere. If lie was at
the Club, they’d hold him. If he was somewhere else, he wouldn’t be able to
flick in. The cops must have put this area under riot control by now. In either
case, Benny would have time to search his apartment. He had been in Garcia’s
apartment many times. There was a hall closet that Garcia always kept locked...
“Yah?” The intercom.
“Benny. Can I see you?”
Hesitation. Then, “Sure. Come on up.” The main door
buzzed open.
Well, he was home, and it was going to be a little
sticky. It would still work out. Lou couldn’t flick out now even if he got past
Benny.
Benny had a gun in his hand as the elevator opened.
There was nobody in the hall. Benny walked down to Lou’s door and rapped.
“Just a minute,” Lou Garcia sang out from inside.
Benny’s mind flashed ahead. Suppose the money wasn’t
in Lou’s apartment? Well, that would be that. But Garcia wouldn’t keep the
money in a bank. He wouldn’t dare. And there was that permanently locked
closet. And he’d always had the money available when needed. And...well, it was
a gamble.
He mumbled words under his breath, rehearsing what
amounted to a speech. “Someone blew the whistle on us,” he would say...
“Someone gave the cops the Club address. I’ll tell them it was you. Hell,
they’ll probably figure that out for themselves. You’re the only one who had
anything to gain. I’ll tell them you were running off with the Club treasury.
Yost can’t flick out,” he would say. “Half the Club must have been at the
Bloomingdale’s flash crowd when the riot control came on. They’ll come
trickling in looking for you. But if you give me half the treasury—” Better
settle for a third. Damn, if Lou had been out he could have searched the
apartment and had it all. He could still do that if he were to shoot Garcia.
But he’d known Lou too long for that.
“A third of the treasury, and we just wait till riot
control goes off. Then we flick out in separate directions. Dial at random,
settle wherever we land, live on the money the rest of our lives. Who could
find us?”
It was taking Garcia a long time.
Benny kicked at the door. “Open up, Lou!” He kicked
harder, and the door flew wide, and Benny ducked to the side just in case. No
bullets. He went through fast, but nothing happened. Lou Garcia wasn’t in
sight.
He wasn’t in either bathroom. He wasn’t in the
kitchen or on the balcony. Benny tried the closets last. The one that had
always been locked opened easily, and there was nothing inside at all.
So. Lou had gotten out. (How? There was only the one
door.) Which left Benny to search the apartment in peace. Unless Lou bad taken
the treasury...
Benny peered over the balcony. Lou could have reached
the street by now. . . but he wasn’t in sight. He might have been hidden by the
milling crowd below. The flash crowd was developing nicely. As Benny had
expected, they had come flicking in from all over, arriving outside the affected
riot control areas and strolling in to see the excitement.
If the cops found Benny now, he’d claim he was one of
them. He’d flicked in to watch the arrests. But the same went for Lou, unless
Lou was carrying the treasury, in which case he might have some explaining to
do.
So. It might still be here. Benny started his search
... and stopped, bewildered. There were other peculiarities. Things missing.
Like: the big reading chair was still here, and the heavy coffee table. But the
little fold-up chairs and the water bed were gone, and the tall reading lamp
... Benny looked around, trying to puzzle it out. It was as if Lou were halfway
through moving ... as if he had been taking only those things that would fit
into a displacement booth.
Benny saw it then, and he ran for the closet.”
The closet that had always been locked. A closet like
a cylinder with a rounded top, the curve continued on the inside of the door.
And nothing at all inside.
It was a displacement booth.
Benny started to laugh. Lou had thought of it first.
He was planning to disappear with the treasury; but he didn’t know the area was
under riot control.
Of course Benny could search the apartment anyway.
But Lou wouldn’t have left the money behind, not with Benny standing on the
other side of the door.
Benny set the gun down on the remaining table. Where
he expected to be going, it was a danger to him. He stepped into the closet and
closed the door. There was no dial in here. It must have a preset destination.
Light flashed in his eyes, and the floor opened
beneath him. Benny had been through this before. He took the fall like an
amusement park ride, and stood up when it was over.
Central Riot Control was crowded today. Citizens
milled about the floor of the great bowl, making angry noises, hampered by the
attempts of Club members to look inconspicuous among them. There were too many
Club members and not enough citizens. It took Benny only a moment to find Lou.
Lou was in a clump of people to one side of the big
central platform where the cops waited. He was trying to hold onto a sizeable
metal attaché case, and four members of the Permanent Floating Riot Club were
trying to take it from him. The cops on the platform watched with interest.
Benny sighed. It grieved him to see ten years of
history ending. But he still had fifty percent of ten years earnings and it had
been worth a try.
A Kind of Murder
"You are constantly coming to my home!" he
shouted.
"You never think of calling first. Whatever I'm
doing, suddenly you're there. And where the hell do you keep getting keys to my
door?"
Alicia didn't answer. Her face, which in recent years
had taken on a faint resemblance to a bulldog's, was set in infinite patience
as she relaxed at the other end of the couch. She had been through this before,
and she waited for Jeff to get it over with.
He saw this, and the dinner he had not quite finished
settled like lead in his belly. "There's not a club I belong to that you
aren't a member too. Whoever I'm with, you finagle me into introducing you. If
it's a man, you try to make him, and if he isn't having any you get nasty. If
it's a woman, there you are like the ghost at the feast. The discarded woman.
It's a drag," he said. He wanted a more powerful word, but he couldn't
think of one that wouldn't sound overdramatic, silly.
She said, "We've been divorced six years. What
do you care who I sleep with?"
"I don't like looking like your pimp!"
She laughed.
The acid was rising in his throat.
"Listen," he said, "why don't you give up one of the clubs? We,
we belong to four. Give one up. Any of them." Give me a place of refuge,
he prayed.
"They're my clubs too," she said with
composure. "You change clubs."
He'd joined the Lucifer Club four years ago, for just
that reason. She'd joined too. And now the words clogged in his throat, so that
he gaped like a fish.
There were no words left. He hit her.
He'd never done that before. It was a full-arm swing,
but awkward because they were trying to face each other on the couch. She rode
with the slap, then sat facing him, waiting.
It was as if he could read her mind. We've been
through this before, and it never changes anything. But it's your
tantrum. He remembered later that she'd said that to him once, those same
words, and she'd looked just like that: patient, implacable.
The call reached Homicide at 8:36 P.M., July 20,
2019. The caller was a round-faced man with straight black hair and a stutter.
"My ex-wife," he told the desk man. "She's dead. I just got home
and f-found her like this. S-someone seems to have hit her with a c-c-cigarette
box."
Hennessey (Officer-2) had just come on for the night
shift. He took over. "You just got home? You called immediately?"
"That's right. C-c-could you come right
away?"
"We'll be there in ten seconds. Have you touched
anything?"
"No. Not her, and not the box."
"Have you called a hospital?"
His voice rose. "No. She's dead."
Hennessey took down his name-Walters--and booth
number and hung up. "Line, Fisher, come with me. Torrie, will you call the
City Hospital and have them send a 'copter?" If Walters hadn't touched her
he could hardly be sure she was dead.
They went through the displacement booth one at a
time, dialing and vanishing. For Hennessey it was as if the Homicide room
vanished as he dialed the last digit, and be was looking into a porch light.
Jeffrey Walters was waiting in the house. He was
medium sized, a bit overweight, his light brown hair going thin on top. His
paper business suit was wrinkled. He wore an anxious, fearful look-which
figured, either way, Hennessey thought.
And he'd been right. Alicia Walters was dead. From
her attitude she had been sitting sideways on the couch when something crashed
into her head, and she had sprawled forward. A green cigarette box was sitting
on the glass coffee table. It was bloody along one edge, and the blood had
marked the glass.
The small, bloody, beautifully marked green malachite
box could have done it. It would have been held in the right hand, swung
full-armed. One of the detectives used chalk to mark its position on the table,
then nudged it into a plastic bag and tied the neck.
Walters had sagged into a reading chair as If worn
out. Hennessey approached him. "You said she was your ex-wife?"
"That's right. She didn't give up using her
married name."
"What was she doing here, then?"
"I don't know. We had a fight earlier this
evening. I finally threw her out and went back to the Sirius Club. I was half
afraid she'd just follow me back, but she didn't. I guess she let herself back
in and waited for me here."
"She had a key?"
Walters' laugh was feeble. "She always had a
key. I've had the lock changed twice. It didn't work. I'd come home and find
her here. 'I just wanted to talk,' she'd say." He stopped abruptly.
"That doesn't explain why she'd let someone else
in."
"No. She must have, though, mustn't she? I don't
know why she did that."
The ambulance helicopter landed in the street
outside. Two men entered with a stretcher. They shifted Alicia Walters' dead
body to the stretcher, leaving a chalk outline Fisher had drawn earlier.
Walters watched through the picture window as they
walked the Stretcher into the portable JumpShift unit in the side of the
'copter. They closed the hatch, tapped buttons in a learned rhythm on a phone
dial set in the hatch. When they opened the hatch to check, it was empty. They
closed it again and boarded the 'copter.
Walters said, "You'll do an autopsy immediately,
won't you?"
"Of course. Why do you ask?"
'Well...it's possible I might have an alibi for the
time of the murder."
Hennessey laughed before he could stop himself.
Walters looked puzzled and affronted.
Hennessey didn't explain. But later, as he was
leaving the station house for home and bed, he snorted. "Alibi," he
said. "Idiot."
The displacement booths had come suddenly. One year,
a science fiction writer's daydream. The next, A.D. 1992, an experimental
reality. Teleportation. Instantaneous travel. Another year and they were being
used for cargo transport. Two more, and the passenger displacement booths were
springing up everywhere in the world.
By luck and the laws of physics, the world had had
time to adjust. Teleportation obeyed the Laws of Conservation of Energy and
Conservation of Momentum. Teleporting uphill took an energy input to match the
gain in. potential energy. A cargo would lose potential energy going downhill.
And it was over a decade before JumpShift Inc. learned how to compensate for
that effect. Teleportation over great distances was even more heavily
restricted by the Earth's rotation.
Let a passenger flick too far west, and the
difference between his momentum and the Earth's would smack him down against
the floor of the booth. Too far east, and he would be flung against the
ceiling. Too far north or south, and the Earth would be rotating faster or
s1ower; he would flick in moving sideways, unless he had crossed the equator.
But cargo and passengers could be displaced between
points of equal longitude and opposite latitude. Smuggling had become
impossible to stop. There was a point in the South Pacific to correspond to any
point in the United States, most of Canada, and parts of Mexico.
Smuggling via the displacement booths was a new
crime. The Permanent Floating Riot Gangs were another. The booths would allow a
crowd to gather with amazing rapidity.
Practically any news broadcast could start a flash
crowd. And with the crowds the pickpockets and looters came flicking in.
When the booths were new, many householders had taken
to putting their booths in living rooms or entrance halls. That had stopped
fast, after an astounding rash of burglaries. These days only police stations
and hospitals kept their booths indoors.
For twenty years the booths had not been feasible
over distances greater than ten miles. If the short-distance booths had changed
the nature of crime, what of the long distance booths? They had been in
existence only four years. Most were at what had been airports, being run by
what had been airline companies. Dial three numbers and you could be anywhere
on Earth.
Flash crowds were bigger and more frequent.
The alibi was as dead as the automobile.
Smuggling was cheaper. The expensive, illegal
transmission booths in the South Pacific were no longer needed. Cutthroat
competition had dropped the price of smack to something the Mafia wouldn't
touch.
And murder was easier, but that was only part of the
problem. There was a new kind of murder going around.
Hank Lovejoy was a tall, lanky man with a lantern jaw
and a ready smile. The police had found him at his office-real estate-and be
bad agreed to come immediately.
"There were four of us at the Sirius Club before
Alicia showed up," he said. "Me, and George Larimer, and Jeff
Walters, and Jennifer-wait a minute-Lewis. Jennifer was over at the bar, and
we'd like asked her to join us for dinner. You know how it is in a continuity
club: you can talk to anyone. We'd have picked up another girl sooner or
later."
Hennessey said, "Not two?"
"Oh, George is a monogamist. His wife is eight
months pregnant, and she didn't want to come, but George just doesn't. He's not
fey or anything, he just doesn't. But Jeff and I were both sort of trying to
get Jennifer's attention. She was loose, and it looked likely she'd go home
with one or the other of us. Then Alicia came in."
"What time was that?"
"Oh, about six fifteen. We were already eating.
She came up to the table, and we all kind of waited for Jeff to introduce her
and ask her to sit down, she being his ex-wife, after all." Lovejoy
laughed. "George doesn't really understand about Jeff and Alicia. Me, I
thought it was funny."
"What do you mean?"
"Well, they've, been divorced about six years,
but it seems he just can't get away from her. Couldn't, I mean," he said,
remembering. Remembering that good old Jeff had gotten away from her, because
someone had smashed her skull.
Hennessey was afraid Lovejoy would clam up. He played
stupid. "I don't get it. A divorce is a divorce, isn't it?"
"Not when it's a quote friendly divorce unquote.
Jeff's a damn fool. I don't think he gave up sleeping with her, not right after
the divorce. He wouldn't live with her, but every so often she'd, well, she'd
seduce him, I guess you'd say. He wasn't used to being alone, and I guess he
got lonely. Eventually he must have given that up, but he still couldn't get
her out of his hair."
"See, they belonged to all the same clubs and
they knew all the same people, and as a matter of fact they were both in
routing and distribution software; that was how they met. So if she came on the
scene while he was trying to do something else, there she was, and he had to
introduce her. She probably knew the people he was dealing with, if it was
business. A lot of business gets done at the continuity clubs. And she wouldn't
go away. I thought it was funny. It worked out fine for me, last night."
"How?"
"Well, after twenty minutes or so it got through
to us that Alicia wasn't going to go away. I mean, we were eating dinner, and
she wasn't, but she wanted to talk. When she said something about waiting and
joining us for dessert, Jeff stood up and suggested they go somewhere and talk.
She didn't look too pleased, but she went."
"What do you suppose be wanted to talk
about?" Lovejoy laughed. "Do I read minds without permission? He
wanted to tell her to bug off, of course! But he was gone half an hour, and by
the time he came back Jennifer and I had sort of reached a decision. And George
had this benign look he gets, like Bless you my children. He doesn't
play around himself, but maybe he likes to think about other couples getting
together. Maybe he's right; maybe it brightens up the marriage bed."
"Jeff came back alone?"
"That he did. He was nervous, jumpy. Friendly
enough; I mean, he didn't get obnoxious when he saw how it was with me and
Jennifer. But he was sweating, and I don't blame him."
"What time was this?"
"Seven twenty."
"Dead on?"
"Yah."
"Why would you remember a thing like that?"
"Well, when Jeff came back he wanted to know how
long he'd been gone. So I looked at my' watch. Anyway, we stayed another
fifteen minutes and then Jennifer and I took off."
Hennessey asked, "Just how bad were things
between Jeff and Alicia?"
"Oh, they didn't fight or anything. It
was just ... funny. For one thing; she's kind of let herself go since the
divorce. She used to be pretty. Now she's gone to seed. Not many men chase her
these days, so she has to do the chasing. Some men like that,"
"Do you?"
"Not particularly ... I've spent some nights
with her, if that's what you're asking. I just like variety. I'm not a
heartbreaking man; I run with girls who like variety too."
"Did Alicia?"
"I think so. The trouble was, she slept with a
lot of gays Jeff introduced her to. He didn't like that. It made him look bad.
And once she played nasty to a guy who turned her down, and it ruined a
business deal."
"But they didn't fight."
"No. Jeff wasn't the type. Maybe that's why they
got divorced. She was just someone he couldn't avoid. We all know people like
that."
"After he came back without Alicia, did be leave
the table at any time?"
"I don't think so. No. He just sat there, making
small talk. Badly."
George Larimer was a writer of articles, one of the
few who made good money at it. He lived in Arizona. No, he didn't mind a quick
trip to the police station, he said, emphasizing the quick. Just let him finish
this paragraph-and he breezed in five minutes later.
"Sorry about that. I just couldn't get the damn
wording right. This one's for Viewer's Digest, and I have to explain
drop ship technology for morons without talking down to them or the minimal
viewer won't buy it. What's the problem?"
Hennessey told him.
His face took on an expression Hennessey recognized:
like he ought to be feeling something, and he was trying, honest. "I just
met her that night," he said. "Dead. Well."
He remembered that evening well enough. "Sure,
Jeff Walters came back about the time we were finishing coffee. We had brandy
with the coffee, and then Hank and, ah, Jennifer left. Jeff and I sat and
played dominos over Scotch and sodas. You can do that at the Sirius, you know.
They keep game boxes there, and they'll move up side tables at your elbows so
you can have drinks or lunch."
"How did you do?"
"I beat him. Something was bothering him; he
wasn't playing very well. I thought he wanted to talk, but he wouldn't talk
about whatever was bugging him."
"His ex-wife?"
"Maybe. Maybe not. I'd only just met her, and
she seemed nice enough. And she seemed to like Jeff."
"Yah. Now, Jeff left with Alicia. How long were
they gone?"
"Half an hour, I guess. And he came back without
her."
"What time?"
"Quarter past seven or thereabouts. Ask Hank. I
don't wear a watch." He said this with a certain pride. A writer doesn't
need a watch~ he sets his own hours. "As I said, we had dessert and coffee
and then played dominos for an hour, maybe a little less. Then I bad to go home
to see how my wife was getting along."
"While you were having dessert and coffee and
playing dominos, did Jeff Walters leave the table at any time?"
"Well, we switched tables to set up the
game." Larimer shut his eyes to think. He opened them. "No, he didn't
go to the bathroom or anything."
"Did you?"
"No. We were together the whole time, if that's
what you want to know."
Hennessey went out for lunch after Larimer left.
Returning, he stepped out of the Homicide Room booth just ahead of Officer-I
Fisher, who had spent the morning at Alicia Walters' place.
Alicia had lived in the mountains, within shouting
distance of Lake Arrowhead. Property in that area was far cheaper than property
around the Lake itself. The high rent district in the mountains is near streams
and lakes. Her own water supply had come from a storage tank kept filled by a
small JumpShift unit.
Fisher was hot and sweaty and breathing hard, as if
he had been working. He dropped into a chair and wiped his forehead and neck.
"There wasn't much point in going," he said.
"We found what was left of a bacon and tomato
sandwich sitting on a placemat. Probably her last meal. She wasn't much of a
housekeeper. Probably wasn't making much money, either."
"How so?"
"All her gadgetry is old enough to be going to
pieces. Her, Dustmaster skips corners and knocks things off tables. Her chairs
and couches are all blow-ups, inflated plastic. Cheap, but they have to be
replaced every so often, and she didn't. Her displacement booth must be ten
years old. She should have replaced it, living in the mountains."
"No- roads in that area?"
"Not near her house, anyway. In remote areas
like that they move the booths in by helicopter, then bring the components for
the house out through the booth. If her -booth broke down she'd 'have had to
hike out, unless she could find a neighbor home, and her neighbors aren't
close. I like that area," Fisher said suddenly. "There's elbow
room."
"She should have made good money. She was in
routing and distribution software." Hennessey pondered. "Maybe she
spent all her time following her ex-husband around."
The autopsy report was waiting on his desk. He read
through it.
Alicia Walters had indeed been killed by a single
blow to the side of the head, almost certainly by the malachite box. Its hard
corner had crushed her skull around the temple. Malachite is a semiprecious
stone, hard enough that no part of it had broken off in the wound; but there
was blood and traces of bone and brain tissue on the box itself.
There was also a bruise on her cheek. Have to ask
Walters about that, he thought.
She had died about 8:00 P.M.,
given the state of her body, including body temperature. Stomach contents
indicated that she had eaten about 5:30 P.M.: a bacon and tomato sandwich.
Hennessey shook his head. "I was right. He's
still thinking in terms of alibis."
Fisher heard. "Walters?"
"Sure, Walters. Look: he came back to the Sirius
Club at seven twenty, and he called attention to the time. He stayed until around
eight thirty, to hear Larimer tell it, and he was always in someone's company.
Then he went home, found the body and called us. The woman was killed around
eight, which is right in the middle of his alibi time. Give or take fifteen
minutes for the lab's margin of error, and it's still an alibi."
"Then it clears him."
Hennessey laughed. "Suppose he did go to the
bathroom. Do you think anyone would remember it? Nobody in the world has had an
alibi for anything since the JunipShift booths took over. You can be at a party
in Near York and kill a man in the California Sierras in the time it would take
to go out for cigarettes. You can't use displacement booths for an alibi."
"You could be jumping to conclusinns,"
Fisher pointed out.
"So he's not a cop. So he reads detective
stories. So someone murdered his wife in his own living room. Naturally
he wants to know if he's got an alibi."
Hennessey shook his head.
"She didn't bleed- a lot," said Fisher.
"Maybe enough, maybe not. Maybe she was moved."
"I noticed that too."
"Someone who knew she had a key to Walters'
house killed her and dumped her there. He would have hit her with the cigarette
box in the spot where he'd already hit her- with something else."
Hennessey shook his head again. "It's not just
Walters. It's a kind of murder. We get more and more of these lately. People
kill each other because they can't move away from each other. With the long
distance booths everyone in the country lives next door to everyone else. You
live a block away from your ex-wife, your mother-in-law, the girl you're trying
to drop, the guy who lost money in your business deal and blames you. Any
secretary lives next door to her boss, and if he needs something done in a
hurry she's right there. Cod help the doctor if his patients get his home
number. I'm not just pulling these out of the air. I can name you an assault
rap for every one of these situations."
"Most people get used to it," said Fisher.
"My mother used to flick in to visit me at work, remember?"
Hennessey grinned. He did. Fortunately, she'd given
it up. "It was worse for Walters," he said.
"It didn't really sound that bad. Lovejoy said
it was a friendly divorce. So he was always running into her. So what?"
"She took away his clubs."
Fisher snorted. But Fisher was young. He had grown up
with the short-distance booths.
For twenty years passenger teleportation had been
restricted to short hops. People had had time to get used to the booths. And in
those twenty years the continuity clubs had come into existence.
The continuity club was a guard against future shock.
Its location was ... ubiquitous: hundreds of buildings in hundreds of cities,
each building just like all the others, inside and out. Wherever a member moved
in this traveling society, the club would be there. Today even some of the
customers would be the same: everyone used the long distance booths to some
extent.
A man had to have some kind of stability in his life.
His church, his marriage, his home, his club. Any man might need more or less
stability than the next. Walters had belonged to four clubs ...and they were no
use to him if he kept meeting Alicia there. And his marriage had broken up, and
he wasn't a churchgoer, and a key to his house had been found in Alicia's
purse. She should at least have left him his clubs.
Fisher spoke, interrupting his train of thought.
"You've been talking about impulse murders, haven't you? Six years of not
being able to stand his ex-wife and not being able to get away from her. So
finally he hits her with a cigarette box."
"Most of them are impulse murders, yes."
"Well, this wasn't any impulse murder. Look at
what h~ had to do to bring it about. He'd have had to ask her to wait at home
for him. Then make some excuse to get away from Larimer, shift home, kill her
fast and get back to the 'Sirius Club before Larimer wonders where he's gone.
Then he's got to hope Larimer will forget the whole thing. That's not just
cold-blooded, it's also stupid."
"Yah. So far it's worked, though."
"Worked, hell. The only evidence you've got
against Walter is that he had good reason to kill her. Listen, if she got on
his nerves that much, she may have irritated some other people too."
Hennessey nodded. "That's the problem, all right." But he didn't mean
it the way Fisher did.
Walters had moved to a hotel until such time as the
police were through with his house. Hennessey called him before going off duty.
"You can move home," he told him.
"That's good," said Walters. "Find out
anything?" "Only that your wife was murdered with that selfsame
cigarette box. We found no sign of anyone in the house except her, and
you." He paused, but Walters only nodded thoughtfully. He asked, "Did
the box look familiar to you?"
"Oh, yes, of course. It's mine. Alicia and I
bought it on our honeymoon, in Switzerland. We divided things during the
divorce, and that went to me."
"All right. Now, just how violent was that
argument you had?"
He flushed. "As usual. I did a lot of shouting,
and she just sat there letting it go past her ears. It never did any
good."
"Did you strike her?"
The flush deepened, and he nodded. "I've never
done that before."
"Did you by any chance hit her with a malachite
box?"
"Do I need a lawyer?"
"You're not under arrest, Mr. Walters. But if
you feel you need a lawyer, by all means get one." Hennessey hung up.
He had asked to be put on the day shift today, in
order to follow up this case. It was quitting time now, but he was reluctant to
leave.
Officer.1 Fisher had been eavesdropping. He said,
"So?"
"He never mentioned the word alibi," said
Hennessey. "Smart. He's not supposed to know when she was killed."
"You're still sure he did it."
"Yah. But getting a conviction is something else
again. We'll find more people with more motives. And all we've got is the
laboratory." He ticked items off on his fingers. "No fingerprints on
the box. No blood on Walters or any of his clothes, unless he had paper clothes
and ditched 'em. No way of proving Walters let her in or give her the key . . .
though I wonder if he really had that much trouble keeping her out of the
house.
"We'd be asking a jury to believe that Walters
left the table and Larimer forgot about it. Larimer says no. Walters is pretty
sure to get the benefit of the doubt. She didn't bleed much; a good defense
lawyer is bound to suggest that she was moved from somewhere else."
"Its possible."
"She wasn't dead until she was hit. Nothing in
the stomach but food. No drugs or poisons in the bloodstream. She'd have had to
be killed by someone who-" He ticked them off. "Knew she hid Walters'
key. Knew Walters' displacement booth number. And knew Walters wouldn't be
home.
"Maybe. How about Larimer or Lovejoy?"
Hennessey spread his hands in surrender. "It's
worth asking Larimer's alibi is as good as Walters', for all that's worth. And
we've still got to interview Jennifer . . . Lewis."
"Then again, a lot of people at the Sirius Club
knew Walter. Some of them must have been involved with Alicia. Anyone who saw
Walters halfway through a domino game would know he'd be stuck there for
awhile."
"True. Too true." Hennessey stood up.
"Guess I'll be getting dinner."
Hennessey came out of the restaurant feeling
pleasantly stuffed and torpid. He turned left toward the nearest booth, a block
away.
The Walters case had haunted him all through dinner.
Fisher had made a good deal of sense ... but what bugged him was something
Fisher hadn't said. Fisher hadn't said that Hennessey might be looking for easy
answers.
Easy? If Walters had killed Alicia during a game of
dominos at the Sirius Club, then there wouldn't be any case until Larimer
remembered. Aside from that, Walters would have been an idiot to try such a
thing. Idiot, or desperate.
But if someone else had killed her, it opened up a
bag of snakes. Restrict it to members of the Sirius-Club who were there that
night, and how many were left? They'd both done business there. How many of
Jeffrey Walters' acquaintances had shared Alicia's bed? Which one would have
killed her, for reason or no reason? The trouble with sharing too many beds was
that-one's chance of running into a really bad situation was improved almost to
certainty.
If Walters had done it, things became simpler. But
she hadn't bled much.
And Walters couldn't have had reason to move the body
to his home. Where could he have killed her that would be worse than that?
Walters owned the murder weapon. . . no, forget that.
She could have been hit with anything, and if she were in Walters' house
fifteen seconds later she might still be breathing when the malachite box
finished the job.
Hennessey slowed to a stop in front of the booth.
Something Fisher had said, something that had struck him funny. What was it?
"Her displacement booth must be ten years
old-" That was it. The sight of the booth must have sparked that memory.
And it was funny. How had he known?
JumpShift booths were all alike. They had to be. They
all had to hold the same volume, because the air in the receiver had to be
flicked hack -to the transmitter. When JumpShift improved a booth, it was the
equipment they jmproved, so that the older booths could still be used.
Ten years old. Wasn't that-yes. The altitude shift.
Pumping energy into a cargo, so that it could be flicked a mile or a hundred miles
uphill, had been an early improvement. But a transmitter that could absorb the
lost potential energy of a downhill shift, had not become common until ten
years ago.
Hennessey stepped in and dialed the police station.
Sergeant Sobel was behind the desk. "Oh, Fisher left an hour ago," he
said. 'Want his number?"
"Yes. . . No. Get me Alicia Walters'
number."
Sobel got it for him. "What's up?"
"Tell you in a minute," said Hennessey, and
he flicked out.
It was black night. His ears registered the drop in
pressure. His eyes adjusted rapidly, and he saw that there were lights in
Alicia Walters' house. He stepped out of the booth. Whistling, he walked a slow
circle around it.
It was a JumpShiftbooth. What more was there to say?
A glass cylinder with a rounded top, big enough for a tall man to stand upright
and a meager amount of baggage to stand with blur-or for a man holding a dead
woman in his arms, clenching his teeth while he tried to free one finger for
dialing. The machinery that made the magic was buried beneath the booth. The dial,
a simple push-button phone dial. Even the long distance booths looked just like
this one, though the auxiliary machinery was far more complex.
"But he was sweating-" Had Lovejoy meant it
literally?
Hennessey was smiling ferociously as he stepped back
into the booth.
The lights of the Homicide room flashed In his eyes.
Hennessey. came out tearing at his collar. Sweat started from every pore.
Living in the mountains like that, Alicia should certainly have had her booth
replaced. The room felt like a furnace, but it was his own body temperature
that had jumped seven degrees in a moment. Seven degrees of randomized energy,
to compensate for the drop in potential energy between here and Lake Arrowhead.
Walters sat slumped, staring straight ahead of him.
"She didn't understand and she didn't care. She was taking it like we'd
been all through this before but we had to do it again but let's get it over
with." He spoke in a monotone, but the nervous stutter was gone.
"Finally I hit her. I guess I was trying to get her attention. She just
took it and looked at me and waited for me to go on."
Hennessey said, "Where did the malachite box
come in?"
"Where do you think? I hit her with it."
"Then it was hers, not yours."
"It was ours. When we broke up, she took it.
Look, I don't want you to think I wanted to kill her. I wanted to scar
her."
"To scare her?"
"No! To scar her!" His voice rose. "To
leave a mark she'd remember every time she looked in a mirror, so she'd know I
meant it, so she'd leave me alone! I wouldn't have cared if she sued. Whatever
it cost, it would have been worth it. But I hit her too hard, way too hard. I
felt the crunch."
"Why didn't you report it?"
"But I did! At least, I tried. I picked her up
in my arms and wrestled her out to the booth and dialed for the Los Angeles
Emergency Hospital. I don't know if there's anyplace closer, and I wasn't
thinking too dear. Listen, maybe I can prove this. Maybe an intern saw me in
the booth. I flicked into the Hospital, and suddenly I was broiling. Then I
remembered that Alicia had an old booth, the kind that can't absorb a
difference in potential energy."
'We guessed that much."
"So I dialed quick and flicked right out again.
I had to go back to Alicia's for the malachite box and to wipe off the sofa,
and my own booth is a new one, so I got the temperature shift again. Cod, ft
was hot. I changed suits before I went back to the Club. I was still
sweating."
"You thought that raising her temperature would
foul up our estimate of when she died."
"That's right." Walters' smile was wan.
"Listen, I did try to get her to a hospital. You'll remember that, won't
you?"
"Yah. But you changed your mind."
All the Bridges Rusting
Take a point in space.
Take a specific point near the star system Alpha
Centaurus, on the line linking the center of mass of that system with Sol.
Follow it as it moves toward Sol system at lightspeed. We presume a particle in
this point.
Men who deal in the physics of teleportation would
speak of it as a "transition particle." But think of it as a kind of
super-neutrino. Clearly it must have a rest mass of zero, like a neutrino. Like
a neutrino, it must be fearfully difficult to find or stop. Despite several
decades in which teleportation has been in common use, nobody has ever directly
demonstrated the existence of a "transition particle." It must be
taken on faith.
Its internal structure would be fearfully complex in
terms of energy states. Its relativistic mass would be twelve thousand two
hundred tons.
One more property can be postulated. Its location in
space is uncertain: a probability density, thousands of miles across as it
passes Proxima Centauri, and spreading. The mass of the tiny red dwarf does not
bend its path significantly. As it approaches the solar system the particle may
be found anywhere within a vaguely bounded wave front several hundred thousand
miles across. This vagueness of position is part of what makes teleportation
work. One's aim need not be so accurate.
Near Pluto the particle changes state.
Its relativistic mass converts to rest mass within
the receiver cage of a drop ship. Its structure is still fearfully complex for
an elementary particle: a twelve-thousand-two-hundred-ton spacecraft, loaded
with instruments, its hull windowless and very smoothly contoured. Its presence
here is the only evidence that a transition particle ever existed. Within the
control cabin, the pilot's finger is still on the TRANSMIT button.
Karin Sagan was short and stocky. Her hands were
large; her feet were small and prone to foot trouble. Her face was square and
cheerful, her eyes were bright and direct, and her voice was deep for a
woman's. She bad been thirty-six years old when Phoenix left the
transmitter at Pluto. She was three months older now, though nine years had
passed on Earth.
She had seen a trace of the elapsed years as Phoenix
left the Pluto drop ship. The shuttlecraft that had come to meet them was of a
new design, and its attitude tets showed the color of fusion flame. She had
wondered how they made fusion motors that small.
She saw more changes now, among the gathered
newstapers. Some of the women wore microskirts whose hems were cut at angles. A
few of the men wore assymetrical shirts-the left sleeve long, the right sleeve
missing entirely. She asked to see one man's left cuff, her attention caught by
the glowing red design. Sure enough, it was a functional wristwatch; but the
material was soft as cloth.
"It's a Bulova Dali," the man said.
He was letting his amusement show. "New to you? Things change in nine
years, Doctor."
"I thought they would," she, said lightly.
"That's part of the fun."
But she remembered the shock of relief when the heat
struck. She had pushed the TRANSMIT button a light-month out from Alpha
Centaurus B. An instant later sweat was running from every pore of her body.
There had been no guarantee. The probability density
that physicists called a transition particle could have gone past the drop ship
and out into the universe at large, beyond rescue forever. Or ... a lot could
happen in nine years. The station might have been wrecked or abandoned.
But the heat meant that they had made it. Phoenix had
lost potential energy entering Sol's gravitational field and had gained it back
in heat. The cabin felt like a furnace, but it was their body temperature that
had jumped from 98.6° to 102°, all in an instant.
"How was the trip?" The young man asked.
Karin Sagan returned to the present. "Good, but
it's good to be back. Are we recording?"
"No. When the press conference starts you'll
know it. That's the law. Shall we get it going?"
"Fine." She smiled around the room. It was
good to see strange faces again. Three months with three other people in a
closed environment...it was enough.
The young man led her to a dais. Cameras swiveled to
face her, and the conference started.
Q: How was the trip?
"Good. Successful, I should say. We learned
everything we wanted to know about the Centaurus systems. In addition, we
learned that our systems work. The drop-ship method is feasible. We reached the
nearest stars, and we came back, with no ill effects."
Q: What about the Centaurus planets? Are they
habitable?
"No." It hurt to say that. She saw the
disappointment around her.
Q: Neither of them checked out?
"That's right. There are six known planets
circling Alpha Centaurus B. We may have missed a couple that were too small or
too far out. We had to do all our looking from a light-month away. We had good
hopes for B-2 and B-3-- remember, we knew they were there before we set out-but
B-2 turns out to be a Venus-type with too much atmosphere, and B-3's got a
reducing atmosphere, something like Earth's atmosphere three billion years
ago."
Q: The colonists aren't going to like that, are they?
"I don't expect they will. We messaged the drop
ship Lazarus II to turn off its JumpShift unit for a year. That means
that the colony ships won't convert to rest mass when they reach the receiver.
They'll be reflected back to the solar system. They should appear in the Pluto,
drop ship about a month from now."
Q: Having lost nine years.
"That's right. Just like me and the rest of the
crew of Phoenix. The colonists left the Pluto transmitter two months after we
did."
Q: What are the chances of terraforming B-3 someday?
Karin was glad to drop the subject of the colony
ships. Somehow she felt that she had failed those first potential colonists of
another star system. She said, 'Pretty good, someday. I'm just talking off the
top of my head, you understand. I imagine it would take thousands of years, and
would involve seeding the atmosphere with tailored bacteria and waiting for
them to turn methane and ammonia and hydrocarbons into air. At the moment it'll
pay us better to go on looking for worlds around other stars. It's so bloody
easy, with these interstellar drop ships."
Them was nodding among the newstapers. They knew
about drop ships, and they had been briefed. In principle there was no
difference between Lazarus II and the drop ships circling every planet
and most of the interesting moons and asteroids in the solar system. A drop
ship need not be moving at the same velocity as its cargo. The Phoenix, at rest
with respect to Sol and the Centaurus suns, had emerged from Lazarus II's
receiver cage at a third of lightspeed.
"The point is that you can use a drop ship more
than once," Karin went on. "By now Lazarus II is one and a
third light-years past Centaurus. We burned most of its fuel to get the ship up
to speed, but there's still a maneuver reserve. Its next target is an
orange-yellow dwarf, Epsilon Indi. Lazarus II will be there in about
twenty eight years. Then maybe we'll send another colony group."
Q: Doctor Sagan, you were as far from Sol as anyone
in history has ever gotten. What was it like out there?
Karen giggled. 'We were as far from any star as
anyone's ever gotten. It was a long night. Maybe it was getting to us. We had a
bad moment when we thought there was an alien ship coming up behind us."
She sobered, for that moment of relief had cost six people dearly. "It
turned out to be Lazarus. I'm afraid that's more bad news. Lazarus
should have been decelerating. It wasn't. We're afraid something's happened to
their drive."
That caused some commotion. It developed that many of
the newstapers had never heard of the first Lazarus. Karin started to
explain...and that turned out to be a mistake.
The first interstellar spacecraft had been launched
in 2004, thirty-one years ago.
Lazarus had been ten years in the building,
but far more than ten years of labor had gone into her. Her life-support
systems ran in a clear line of development back to the first capsules to orbit
Earth. The first fusion-electric power plants had much in common with her main
drive, and her hydrogen fuel tanks were the result of several decades of trial
and error. Liquid hydrogen is tricky stuff. Centuries of medicine had produced
suspended-animation treatments that allowed Lazarus to carry six crew
members with life-support supplies sufficient for two.
The ship was lovely-at least, her re-entry system was
lovely, a swing-wing streamlined exploration vehicle as big as any hypersonic
passenger plane. Fully assembled, she looked like a haphazard collection of
junk. But she was loved.
There had been displacement booths in 2004: the network
of passenger teleportation had already replaced other forms of transportation
over most of the world. The cargo ships that lifted Lazarus' components into
orbit had been fueled in flight by JumpShift units in the tanks. It was a pity
that Lazarus could not, take advantage of such a method. But
conservation of momentum held. Fuel droplets entering Lazarus's tanks at
a seventh of lightspeed would tear them apart.
So Lazarus had left Earth at the end of the Corliss
accelerator, an improbably tall tower standing up from a flat asteroid a mile
across. The fuel tanks-most of Lazarus's
mass-had been launched first. Then the ship itself, with enough maneuvering
reserve to run them down. Lazarus had left Earth like a string of toy
balloons, and telescopes had watched as she assembled herself in deep space.
She had not been launched into the unknown. The
telescopes of Ceres Base had found planets orbiting Alpha Centaurus B. Two of
these might be habitable. Failing that, there might at least be seas from which
hydrogen could be extracted for a return voyage.
"The first drop ship was launched six years
later," Karin told them. "We should have waited. I was five when they
launched Lazarus, but I've been told that everyone thought that
teleportation couldn't possibly be used for space exploration because of
velocity differences. If we'd waited we could have put a drop ship receiver
cage on Lazarus and taken out the life-support system. As it was, we
didn't launch Lazarus II until-" She stopped to add up dates.
"Seventeen years ago. 2018."
Q: Weren't you expecting Lazarus to pass you?
"Not so soon. In fact, we had this timed pretty
well. If everything had gone right, the crew of Lazarus I would have
found a string of colony ships pouring out of Lazarus II as it fell
across the system. They could have joined up to explore the system, and later
joined the colony if that was feasible, or come home on the colony return ship
if it wasn't."
Q: As it is, they're in deep shit.
"I'm afraid so. Can you really say that on
teevee?"
There were chuckles at her naiveté.
Q: What went wrong? Any idea?
"They gave us a full report with their distress
signal. There was some trouble with the plasma pinch effect, and no parts to do
a full repair. They tried running it anyway-they didn't have much choice, after
all. The plasma stream went wrong and blew away part of the stem. After that
there wasn't anything they could do but set up their distress signal and go
back into suspended animation."
Q What are your plans for rescue?
Karin made her second error. "I don't know. We
just got back two days ago, and we've spent that time traveling. It's easy
enough to pump energy into an incoming transition particle to compensate for a
jump in potential energy, but the only drop ship we've got that can absorb
potential energy is at Mercury. We couldn't just flick in from Pluto; we'd have
been broiled. We had to flick in to Earth orbit by way of Mercury, then go down
in a shuttlecraft." She closed her eyes to think. "It'll be
difficult. By now Lazarus must be half a light-year beyond Alpha
Centaurus, and Lazarus II more than twice that far. We probably can't
use Lazarus II in a rescue attempt."
Q: Couldn't you drop a receiver cage from Lazarus II, then wait until Lazarus
has almost caught up with it?
She smiled indulgently. At least they were asking
intelligent questions. "Won't work. Lazarus II must have changed
course already for Epsilon Indi. Whatever happens is likely to take a long
time."
Teevee was mostly news these days. The entertainment
programs had been largely taken over by cassettes, which could be sold devoid
of advertisements, and which could be aimed at more selective audiences.
And newspapers had died out; but headlines had not.
The announcers were saying things like Centaurus planets devoid of life ...
colony ships to return ... failure of Lazarus scout ship engines... rescue
attempts to begin ... details in a moment, but first this word...
Jerryberry Jansen of CBA smiled into the cameras. The
warmth he felt for his unseen audience was genuine: he regarded himself as a
combination of entertainer and teacher, and his approximately twelve million
students were the measure of his success. "The Centaurus expedition was by
no means a disaster," he told them. "For one thing, the colony fleet
which cost you, the taxpayer, about six hundred and sixty million new dollars
nine years ago-can be re-used as is, once the UN Space Authority finds a
habitable world. Probably the colonists themselves will not want to wait that
long. A new group may have to be retrained.
"As for the interstellar drop ship concept, it
works. This has been the first real test, and it went without a hitch. Probably
the next use of drop ships will not be a colony expedition at all, but an
attempt to rescue the crew of Lazarus. The ship was sending its distress
signal. There is good reason to think that the crew is still alive.
"Doctor Karin Sagan has pointed out that any
rescue attempt will take decades. This is reasonable, in that the distances to
be covered are to be measured in light-years. But today's ships are
considerably better than Lazarus could ever have been."
"You idiot," said Robin Whyte, PhD. He
twisted a knob with angry force, and the teevee screen went blank. A few
minutes later he made two phone calls.
Karin was sightseeing on Earth.
The UN Space Authority had had a new credit card
waiting for her, a courtesy she appreciated. Otherwise she would have had to
carry a sackful of chocolate dollars for the slots. Her hands quickly fell into
the old routine: insert the card, dial, pull it out, and the displacement booth
would send her somewhere else.
It was characteristic of Karin that she had not been
calling old friends. The impulse was there, and the worn black phone book with
its string of nine-year-old names and numbers. But the people she had known
must have changed. She was reluctant to face them.
There had been a vindictive impulse to drop in on her
ex-husband. Here I am at thirty-six, and you-Stupid. Ron knew where she
had been for nine years, so why bug the man?
She had cocktails at Mr. A's in San Diego, lunch at
Scandia in Los Angeles, and dessert and coffee at Ondine in Sausalito. The
sight of the Golden Gate Bridge sparked her to flick in at various booths for
various views of all the bridges in the Bay area. For Karin, as for most of
humanity, Earth was represented by a small section of the planet.
There had been changes. She got too close to the Bay
Bridge and was horrified at the rust. It had never occurred to her that the San
Francisco citizenry might let the bridges decay. Something could be done
with them: line them with shops a la London Bridge, or landscape them over for
a park, or run drag races. . . They would make horribly obtrusive corpses. They
would ruin the scenery. Still, that had happened before...
Some things had not changed. She walked for an hour
in King's Free Park, the landscaped section of what had been the San Diego
Freeway. The trees had grown a little taller, but the crowds were the same,
always different yet always the same. The shops and crowds in the Santa Monica
Mall hadn't changed ... except that the city had filled in the space between
the curbs, where people had had to step down into the empty streets.
She did some shopping in the Mall. To a saleslady in
Magnin's West she said, "Dress me." That turned out to be a
considerable project, and it cost. When she left, her new clothes felt odd on
her, but they seemed to blend better with the crowds around her.
She did a lot of flicking around without ever leaving
the booth-the ubiquitous booth that seemed to be one instead of millions, that
seemed to move with her as she explored. It took her longer to find the right
numbers than it did to dial.
But she flicked clown the length of Wilshire
Boulevard in jumps of four blocks, from the coast to central Los Angeles, by
simply dialing four digits higher each time.
She stopped off at the Country Art Museum in Fresno
and was intrigued by giant sculptures in plastic foam. She was wandering
through these shapes, just feeling them, not yet trying to decide whether she
liked them, when her wrist phone rang.
She could have taken the call then and there, but she
went to a wall phone in the lobby. Karin preferred to see who she was talking to.
She recognized him at once.
Robin Whyte was a round old man, his face pink and
soft and cherubic, his scalp bare but for a fringe of white hair over his ears
and a single tuft at the top of his head. Karin was surprised to see him now.
He was the last living member of the team that had first demonstrated
teleportation in 1992. He had been president of JumpShift, Inc., for several
decades, but he had retired just after the launching of Lazarus II.
"Karin Sagan?" His frown gave him an almost
petulant look. "My congratulations on your safe return."
"Thank you." Karin's smile was sunny. An
impulse made her add, "Congratulations to you, too."
He did not respond in kind. "I need to see you.
Urgently.
Can you come immediately?"
"Concerning what?"
"Concerning the interview you gave this
morning."
But the interview had gone so well. What could be
bothering the man? She said, "All tight."
The number he gave her had a New York prefix.
It was evening in New York
City. Whyte's apartment was the penthouse floor of a half-empty building. The
city itself had lost half its population during the past forty years, and it
showed in the walls of dark windows visible through Whyte's picture windows.
"The thing I want to emphasize," said
Whyte, "is that I didn't call you here as a representative of JumpShift.
I'm retired. But I've got a problem, and pretty quick I'm going to have to take
it up with someone in JumpShift. I still own enough JumpShift stock to want to
protect it."
His guests made no comment on his disclaimer. They
watched as he finished making their drinks and served them. Karin Sagan was
curious and a bit truculent at being summoned so abruptly. Jerryberry Jansen
had known Whyte too long for that. He was only curious.
"You've put JumpShift in a sticky
situation," said Whyte. "Both of you, and the rest of the news media
too. Karin, Jerryberry, how do you feel about the space program?"
"I'm for it. You know that," said Jerryberry.
"I'm in it," said Karin. "I feel no
strong urge to quit and get an honest job. Is this a preliminary to firing
me?"
"No. I do want to know why you went into so much
detail on Lazarus."
"They asked me. If someone had asked me to keep
my mouth shut on the subject I might have. Might not."
"We can't rescue Lazarus," said
Whyte.
There was an uncomfortable silence. Perhaps it was in
both their minds, but it was Jerryberry who said it. "Can't or
won't?"
"How long have you known me?"
Jerryberry stopped to count. "Fourteen years, on
and off. Look, I'm not saying you'd leave a six-man crew in the lurch if it
were feasible to rescue them. But is it economically infeasible? Is that
it?"
"No. It's impossible." Whyte glared at
Karin, who glared back. "You should have figured it out, even if he
didn't." He transferred the glare to Jansen. "About that rescue
mission you proposed on nationwide teevee. Did you have any details worked
out?"
Jerryberry sipped at his Screwdriver. "I'd think
it would be obvious. Send a rescue ship. Our ships are infinitely better than
anything they had in 2004." "They're
moving at a seventh of lightspeed. What kind of ship could get up the velocity
to catch Lazarus and still get back?"
"A drop ship, of course! A drop ship burns all its
fuel getting up to speed. Lazarus II is doing a third of lightspeed, and
it cost about a quarter of what Lazarus cost-it's so much simpler. You
send a drop ship. When it passes Lazarus you drop a rescue ship
through."
"Uh huh. And how fast is the rescue ship
moving?"
"...Oh." Lazarus would flash past
the rescue ship at a seventh of lightspeed.
"We've got better ships than the best they could
do in 2004. Sure we do. But, censored dammit, they don't travel the same
way!"
"Well, yes, but there's got to be-"
"You're cheating a little," Karin said.
"A rescue ship of the Lazarus type could get up to speed and still
have the fuel to get home. Meanwhile you send a drop ship to intercept Lazarus.
The rescue ship drops through the receiver cage, picks them up-hmm."
"It would have to be self-teleporting, wouldn't
it? Like Phoenix."
"Yah. Hmmm."
"If you put a transmitter hull around something
the size of Lazarus, fuel tanks included, you'd pretty near double the
weight. It couldn't get up to speed and then decelerate afterward. You'd need
more fuel, more weight, a bigger hull. Maybe it couldn't be done at all, but
sure as hell we're talking about something a lot bigger than Lazarus."
There had never been another ship as big as Lazarus.
Karin said, "Yah. You'd ditch a lot of fuel
tanks getting up to speed, but still-hmmm. Fuel to get home. Dammit, Whyte, I
left Earth nine years ago. You've had nine years to improve your space
industry! What have you done?"
"We've got lots better drop ships," Whyte
said quietly. Then, "Don't you understand? We're improving our ships, but
not in the direction of a bigger and better Lazarus."
Silence.
"Then there's the drop ship itself. We've never
built a receiver cage big enough to take another Lazarus. Phoenix isn't
big; it doesn't have to go anywhere. I won't swear it's impossible to build a
drop ship that size, but I wouldn't doubt it either. It doesn't matter. We
can't build the rescue ship. We don't even have the technology to build Lazarus
again! It's gone, junked when we started building drop ships!"
"Like those damn big bridges in San Francisco
Bay," whispered Karin. "Sorry, gentlemen. I hadn't thought it
out."
Jerryberry said, "You've still got the Corliss
accelerator. And we still use reaction drives."
"Sure. For interplanetary speeds. And drop
ships."
Jerryberry drained his Screwdriver in three swallows.
With his mind's eye he saw six coffins, deathly still, and six human beings
frozen inside. Three men, three women. Someone must have thought that a scout
crew might just decide to colonize the Centunrus system without waiting. Fat
chance of that now. Three men, three women, frozen, falling through
interplanetary space forever. They couldn't possibly have been expecting
rescue. Could they?
"So we don't get them back," he said.
"What are we holding, a wake?"
"They knew the risks they were taking,"
said Whyte. "They knew, and they fought for the chance. We had over a
thousand volunteers at the start of training, and that was after the preliminary
weeding-out. Jerryberry, I asked you before about how you felt about the space
program."
"I told you. In fact-" He stopped.
"Publicity."
"Right."
"I thought I was doing you some good. Public
support for the space program isn't heavy right now, and frankly, Doctor Sagan,
your report didn't help much."
She flared up. "What were we supposed to do, build
a planet?"
"Failure of the first expedition. No planets. A
whole colony fleet on its way home without ever having so much as seen Alpha
Centaurus! I know, it's safer for them, and better not to waste the time, but
dammit!" Jerryberry was on his feet and pacing. There was an odd glow in
his eyes, an intensity that could communicate even through a teevee screen.
"I tried to emphasize the good points. Now-I damn near promised the world
a rescue mission, didn't I?"
"Just about. You weren't the only one."
He paced. "I'm pretty good at explaining. I have
to be. I'll just have to tell them-no, let's do it right. Robin, will you go on
teevee?"
Whyte looked startled.
"Tell you what," said Jerryberry.
"Don't just tell them why we can't rescue Lazarus. Show them. Set
up a cost breakdown, in dollars and years. We all know-"
"I tell you it isn't cost. It-"
'We both know that it could be done, If we
gave up the rest of the space industry and concentrated solely on rescuing Lazarus
for enough years. R and D, rebuilding old hardware-"
"Censored dammit! The research alone on a drop
ship that size-" Whyte cocked his head as if listening to an inner voice.
"That is one way to put it. It would cost us everything we've built up in
the past thirty years. Jerryberry, is this really the way to get it
across?"
"I don't know. It's one way. Set up a cost
estimate you can defend. It won't end with just one broadcast. You'll be
challenged, whatever you say. Can you be ready in two days?"
Karin gave a short, barking laugh.
Whyte smiled indulgently. "Are' you out of your
mind? A valid cost estimate would take months, assuming I can get anyone
interested in doing a cost estimate of something nobody really wants
built."
Jerryberry paced. "Suppose we do a cost
estimate. CBA, I mean. Then you wouldn't have anything to defend. It wouldn't
be very accurate, but I'm sure we could get within a factor of two."
"Better give yourselves a week. I'll give you
the names of some people at JumpShift; you can go to them for details.
Meanwhile I'll have them issue a press release saying we're not planning a
rescue mission for Lazarus at this time."
JumpShift Experimental Laboratory, Building One, was
a tremendous pressurized Quonset hut. On most of his previous visits Jerryberry
had found it nearly empty; too many of JumpShift's projects are secret. Once he
had come here with a camera team, and on that occasion the polished, smoothly
curved hull of Phoenix had nearly filled the building.
He had never known exactly where the laboratory was.
Its summers and winters matched the Northern Hemisphere, and the sun beyond the
windows now stood near noon, which put it on Rocky Mountain time.
Gemini Jones was JumpShift's senior research
physicist, an improbably tall and slender black woman made even taller by a
head of hair like a great white dandelion. "We get this free," she
said, rapping the schematic diagrams spread across the table. "The Corliss
accelerator. Robin wants to build another of these. We don't have the money
yet. Anyway, we can use it for the initial boost."
On a flattish disk of asteroidal rock a mile across,
engineers of the past generation had raised a tower of metal rings. The
electromagnetic cannon had been firing ships from Earth orbit since A.D. 2004.
Today it was used more than ever, to accelerate the self-transmitting ships
partway toward the orbital velocities of Mars, Jupiter, Mercury.
Jerryberry studied the tower of rings, wider than any
ship ever built. "Is it wide enough for what we've got in mind?"
"I think so. We'd fire the rescue ship in
sections, then put it together in space. But we'd still have to put a
transmitter hull around it."
"Okay, we've got the accelerator, and we'd use
standard tanks. Beyond that-"
"Now hold up," said Gem. "There's an
easier way to do this. I thought of it this morning. If we do it my way we
won't need any research at all."
"Oh? You interest me strangely."
"See, we've still got this problem of building a
ship big enough to make the rescue and then decelerate, and a drop cage big
enough to take it. But we already know we can build self-transmitting hulls the
size of Phoenix. What we can do is put the deceleration fuel in Phoenix hulls.
We wouldn't need an unreasonably big drop cage that way."
Jerryberry whistled. He knew what Phoenix had cost.
Putting a rescue ship together would be like building a fleet of Phoenixes. And
yet- "Robin was wrong. We could do that. We've got the hardware."
"That's exactly right I figure maybe twenty
Phoenix hulls full of slurried hydrogen, plus a Phoenix-type ship for the
rescue, plus a couple more hulls to hold the drive and the rigging to string it
all together. You'd have to assemble it after launch and accelerate it to a
seventh of lightspeed, using a couple hundred standard tanks. Then take it
apart, stow the rigging, and send everything through a Lazarus II drop
ship one hull at a time."
"We could do it. Does Robin know about this?"
"Who's had time to call him? I only just thought
of this an hour ago. I've been working out the math."
'We could do it," Jerryberry said, his eyes
afire. "We could' bring 'em back. All it would take would be time and
money."
She smiled indulgently down at him; at least she
always seemed to, though her eyes were level with his own. "Don't get too
involved. Who's going to pay for all this? You might talk your bemused public
into it if you were extending man's dominion across the stars. But to rescue six
failures?"
"You don't really think of them that way."
"Nope. But somebody's going to say it."
"I don't know. Maybe we should go for it. Those
self-trammitting hulls could be turned into ships afterward."
"No. You'd drop them on the way back."
Jerryberry ran a hand through his hair. "I guess
you're right. Thanks, Gem. You've done a lot of work for something that isn't
ever going to get built."
"Good practice. Keeps my brain in shape,"
said Gem.
He was at home, doggedly working out a time-and-costs
schedule for the rescue of Lazarus, when Karin Sagan called. She said,
"I've been wondering if you need me for the broadcast."
"Good idea," said Jerryberry, "if
you're willing. We could tape an interview any time you're ready. I'll ask you
to describe the circumstances under which you found Lazarus, and use
that to introduce the topic."
"Good."
Jerryberry was tired and depressed. It took him a
moment to see that Karin was too. "What's wrong?"
"Oh...a lot of things. We aren't just going to
forget about those six astronauts, are we?"
His laugh was brittle. "I think it unlikely.
They aren't decently dead. They're in limbo, falling across our sky
forever."
"That's what I mean. We could wake them any time
in the next thousand years, if we could get to them."
"That's my problem. We can."
"What?"
"But it'd cost the Moon, so to speak. Come on
over, Doctor. I'll show you."
Lazarus cost N$ 2,000,000,000
Lazarus II cost N$ 500,000,000
Phoenix cost N$ 110,000,000
Colony (six ships adequately
equipped) cost N$ 660,000,000
Support systems in solar system N$ 250,000,000
TOTAL COLONY PACKAGE, IN
CLUDING COLONY AND
PHOENIX AND SUPPORT SYSTEMS IN
SOLAR SYSTEM: N$ 1,520,000,000
Twenty-two self-transmitting
hulls cost N$ 1,540,000,000
(One self-transmitting hull
costs N$70,000,000)
Interstellar drop ship costs N$ 900,000,000
Phoenix-type rescue ship costs N$ 110,000,000
R & D costs nothing
Support systems in solar system N$ 250,000,000
TOTAL COST OF RESCUE N$ 2,000,000,000
"...which is just comfortably more than it cost
to build Lazarus in the first place, and a lot more than it cost us to
not colonize Alpha Centaurus. It wouldn't be impossible to go get them. Just
inconvenient and expensive."
"In spades," said Karin. "You'd tie up
the Corliss accelerator for a week solid. The whole trip would take about
thirty four years starting from the launching of the drop ship."
"And if it could be done now it could always be
done; we couldn't ever forget it until we'd done it. And it would get more
difficult every year because Lazarus would be getting further
away."
"It'll nag us the rest of our lives." Karin
leaned back in Jerryberry's guest chair. His apartment was not big: three
rooms, with doors knocked between them, in a complex that had been a motel on
the Pacific Coast Highway thirty years ago. "There's another thing. What
are we really doing if we do it Whyte's way? We're talking the public into not
backing a space project. Suppose they got the habit? I don't know about
you-"
"I just plain like rocket ships," said
Jerryberry.
"Okay. Can you really talk the public into
this?"
"No. Lazarus didn't even cost this much,
and Lazarus almost didn't get built, they tell me. And Lazarus
failed, and so did the colony project. So: no. But I'm not sure I can bring
myself to talk them out of it."
"Jansen, just how bad is public support for the
Space Authority?"
"Oh . . . it isn't even that, exactly. The
public is getting unhappy about JumpShift itself."
"What? 'What for?"
"CBA runs a continuous string of public opinion
polls. The displacement booths did genuinely bring some unique problems with
them-"
"They solved some too. Maybe you don't
remember."
Jerryberry smiled. "I'm not old enough. Neither
are you. Slums, traffic jams, plane crashes-nobody's that old except Robin
Whyte, and if you try to tell him the booths brought problems of their own, he
thinks you're an ungrateful bastard.
But they did. You know they did."
"Like flash crowds?"
"Sure. Any time anything interesting happens
anywhere, some newstaper is going to report it. Then people flick in to see it
from all over the United States. If it gets big enough you get people flicking
in just to see the crowd, plus pickpockets, looters, cops, more newstapers,
anyone looking for publicity.
"Then there's the drug problem. There's no way
to stop smuggling. You can pick a point in the South Pacific with the same
longitude and opposite latitude as any given point in the USA and most of
Canada, and teleport from there without worrying about the Earth's rotational
velocity. All it takes is two booths. You can't stop the drugs from coming in.
I remember one narcotics cop telling me to think of it as evolution in
action."
"God."
"Oh, and the ecologists don't like the booths.
They make wilderness areas too available. And the cops have their problems. A
man used to be off the hook if he could prove he was somewhere else when a
crime happened. These days you have to suspect anyone, anywhere. The real
killer gets lost in the crowd.
"But the real beef is something else. There are
people you have to get along with, right?"
"Not me," said Karin.
'Well, you're unusual. Everyone in the world lives
next door to his boss, his mother-in-law, the girl he's trying to drop, the guy
he's fighting for a promotion. You can't move away from anyone. It bugs
people."
"What can they do? Give up the booths?"
"No. There aren't any more cars or planes or
railroads. But they can give up space."
Karin thought about that. Presently she gave her
considered opinion. "Idiots."
"'No. They're just like all of us: they want
something for nothing. Have you ever solved a problem without finding another
problem just behind it?"
"Sure. My husband . . . well, no, I was pretty
lonely after we split up. But I didn't sit down and cry about it. When someone
hands me a problem, I solve it. Jansen, we're going at this wrong. I feel
it."
"Okay, so we're doing it wrong. What's the right
way?"
"I don't know. We've got better ships than
anyone dreamed of in 2004. That's fact."
"Define ship."
"Ship! Vehicle! Never mind, I see the point.
Don't push it."
So he didn't ask her what a 747 circling the sinking
Titanic could have done to help, or whether a Greyhound bus could have crossed
the continent in 1849. He said, "We know how to rescue Lazarus.
What's the big decision? We do or we don't."
"Well?"
"I don't know. We watch the opinion polls. I
think ... I think we'll wind up neutral. Present the project as best we can
finagle it up. Tell 'em the easiest way to do it, tell 'em what it'll cost, and
leave it at that."
The opinion polls were a sophisticated way to read
mass minds. Over the years sampling techniques had improved enormously, raising
their accuracy and 1owering their cost. Public thinking generally came in
blocks:
JumpShift's news release provoked no immediate waves.
But one block of thinking began to surface. A significant segment of humanity
was old enough to have watched teevee coverage of the launching of Lazarus.
A smaller, still significant segment had helped to pay for it with their taxes.
It had been the most expensive space project of all
time. Lazarus had been loved. Nothing but love could have pushed the
taxpayer into paying such a price. Even those who had fought the program
thirty-one years ago now remembered Lazarus with love.
The reaction came mainly from older men and women,
but it was worldwide. Save Lazarus.
Likewise there were those dedicated to saving the
ecology from the intrusion of Man. For them the battle was never-ending. True,
industrial wastes were no longer dumped into the air and water the worst of
these were flicked through a drop ship in close orbit around Venus, to
disappear into the atmosphere of that otherwise useless world. But the ultimate
garbage-maker was himself the most dangerous of threats. Hardly a wilderness
was left on Earth that was not being settled by men with JumpShift booths.
They would have fought JumpShift on any level.
JumpShift proposed to leave three men and three women falling across the sky
forever. To hell with their profit margin: save Lazarus.
There were groups who would vote against anything
done in space. The returns from space exploration had been great, admittedly,
but they all derived from satellites in close orbit around Earth:
observatories, weather satellites, teevee transmitters, solar power plants.
These were dirt cheap these days, and their utility had surely been obvious to
any moron since Neanderthal times.
But what use were the worlds of other stars? Even the
worlds of the solar system had given no benefit to Man, except for Venus, which
made an excellent garbage dump. Better to spend the money on Earth. Abandon
Lazarus.
But most of the public voted a straight Insufficient
Data. And of course they were right.
Robin Whyte was nervous. He was trying not to show
it, but he paced too much and he smiled too much and he kept clasping his hands
behind his back. "Sit down, for Christ's sake," said Jerryberry.
"Relax. They can't throw tomatoes through their teevee screens."
Whyte laughed. "We're working on that in the
research division. Are you almost ready?"
"An hour to broadcast. I've already done the
interview with Doctor Sagan. It's on tape." "Let's see what you've got."
What CBA had for this broadcast was a fully detailed
rescue project, complete with artist's conceptions. Jerryberry spread the
paintings along a wall. "Using your artists, whom we hired for a week with
JumpShift's kind permission. Aren't they beautiful? We also have a definite
price tag. Two billion three hundred million new dollars."
Whyte's laugh was still shaky. "That's right on
the borderline. Barely feasible." He was looking at an artist's conception
of the launching of the rescue mission: a stream of spherical fuel tanks and
larger, shark-shaped Phoenix hulls pouring up through the ringed tower of the
Corliss accelerator. More components rested on flat rock at~ the launch end.
"So Gem thought of it first. I must be getting old."
"You don't expect to think of everything, do
you? You once told me that your secretary thought of the fresh-water tower
gimmick during a drunken office party."
"True, too. I paid her salary for thirty years,
hoping she'd do it again, but she never did ... Do you think they'll buy
it?"
"No."
"I guess not." 'Whyte seemed to shake
himself. "'Well, maybe we'll use it some other time. It's a useful
technique, shipping fuel in Phoenix hulls. We'll probably need it to explore,
say, Barnard's Star, which is moving pretty censored fast with respect to
Sol."
"We don't have to tell them they can't do it.
Just tell 'em the price tag and let them make up their own minds."
"Listen, I had a hand in launching Lazarus.
The launching boosters were fueled by JumpShift units."
"I know."
Whyte, prowling restlessly, was back in front of the
launching scene. "I always thought they should have drilled right through
the asteroid. Leave the Corliss accelerator open at both ends."
Activity in the sound studio had diminished. Against
a white wall men had placed a small table and two chairs, and a battery of
teevee cameras and lights were aiming their muzzles into the scene.
Jerryberry touched Whyte's arm. "Let's go sit
down over there." Whyte might freeze up if confronted by the cameras too
suddenly. Give him a chance to get used to it.
Whyte didn't move. His head was cocked to one side,
and his lips moved silently.
"What's the matter?"
Whyte made a
shushing motion.
Jerryberry waited.
Presently Whyte looked up. "You'll have to scrap
this. How much time have we got?"
"But- An hour. Less. What do you mean, scrap
it?"
Whyte smiled. "I just thought of something. Get
me to a telephone, will you? Has Gem still got the schematics of the Corliss
accelerator?"
An hour to broadcast time, and Jerryberry began to
shake.
"Robin, are we going to have a broadcast or
not?"
Whyte patted him on the arm. "Count on it."
Gen Jones's big white-on-blue schematic had been
thumbtacked to the white wall over the table and chairs. Below it, Jerryberry
Jansen leaned back, seemingly relaxed, watching Whyte move about with a piece
of chalk.
A thumbtacked blueprint and a piece of chalk. It was
slipshod by professional standards. Robin Whyte had not appeared on teevee in a
couple of decades. He made professional mistakes: he turned his back on the
audience, he covered what he was drawing with the chalk. But he didn't look
nervous. He grinned into the cameras as if he could see old friends out there.
"The heart of it is the Corliss accelerator,"
he said, and with the chalk he drew an arc underneath the tower's launch
cradle, through the rock itself. "We excavate here, carve out a space to
get the room. Then-" He drew it in.
A JumpShift drop ship receiver cage.
"The rescue ship is self-transmitting, of
course. As it leaves the accelerator it transmits back to the launch end. What
we have then is an electromagnetic cannon of infinite length. We spin it on its
axis so it doesn't get out of alignment. We give the ship an acceleration of one
gee for a bit less than two months to boost it to the velocity of Lazarus,
then we flick it out to the drop ship.
"This turns out to be a relatively cheap
operation," Whyte said. "We could put some extra couches in Phoenix
and use that. We could even use the accelerator to boost the drop ship up to
speed, but that would take four months, and we'd have to do it now. It would
mean building another Corliss accelerator, but-", Whyte grinned into the
cameras, "we should have done that anyway, years ago. There's enough
traffic to justify it.
"Return voyage is just as simple. After they
pick up the crew of Lazarus, they flick to the Pluto drop ship, which is
big enough to catch them, then to the Mercury drop ship to lose their potential
energy, then back to the Corliss accelerator drop cage. We use the accelerator
for another two months to slow it down. The cost of an interstellar drop ship
is half a billion new dollars. A new Corliss accelerator would cost us about
the same, and we can use it commercially. Total price is half of what Lazarus
cost." Whyte put down the chalk and sat.
Jerryberry said, "When can you go ahead with
this, Doctor?"
"JumpShift will submit a time-and-costs schedule
to the UN Space Authority. I expect it'll go to the world vote."
"Thank you, Doctor Whyte, for . . ." It was
a formula. When the cameras were off Jerryberry sagged in his chair. "Now
I can say it. Boy, are you out of practice."
"What do you mean? Didn't I get it across?"
"I think you did. I hope so. You smiled a lot
too much. On camera that makes you look self-satisfied."
"I know, you told me before," said Whyte.
"I couldn't help it. I just felt so good."
There Is a Tide
THEN, THE PLANET had no name. It circles a star which
in 2830 lay beyond the fringe of known space, a distance of nearly forty
light-years from Sol. The star is a G3, somewhat redder than Sol, somewhat
smaller. The planet, swinging eighty million miles from its primary in a
reasonably circular orbit, is a trifle cold for human tastes.
In the year 2830 one Louis Gridley Wu happened to be
passing. The emphasis on accident is intended. In a universe the size of ours
almost anything that can happen, will. Take the coincidence of his meeting-
But we'll get to that.
Louis Wu was one hundred and eighty years old. As a
regular user of boosterspice, he didn't show his years. If he didn't get bored
first, or broke, he might reach a thousand.
"But," he sometimes told himself, "not
if I have to put up with any more cocktail parties, or Bandersnatch hunts, or
painted flatlanders swarming through an anarchy park too small for them by a
factor of ten. Not if I have to live through another one-night love affair or
another twenty-year marriage or another twenty-minute wait for a transfer booth
that blows its zap just as it's my turn. And people. Not if I have to live with
people, day and night, all those endless centuries."
When he started to feel like that, he left. It had
happened three times in his life, and now a fourth. Presumably, it would keep
happening. In such a state of anomie, of acute anti-everything, he was no good
to anyone, especially his friends, most especially himself. So he left. In a
small but adequate spacecraft, his own, he left everything and everyone,
heading outward for the fringe of known space. He would not return until he was
desperate for the sight of a human face, the sound of a human voice.
On the second trip he had gritted his teeth and waited
until he was desperate for the sight of a Kzinti face.
That was a long trip, he remembered. And, because he
had only been three and a half months in space on this fourth trip, and because
his teeth still snapped together at the mere memory of a certain human voice
... because of these things, he added, "I think this time I'll wait till
I'm desperate to see a Kdatlyno. Female, of course."
Few of his friends guessed the wear and tear these
trips saved him. And them. He spent the months reading, while his library
played orchestrated music. By now he was well clear of known space. Now he
turned the ship ninety degrees, beginning a wide circular arc with Sol at its
center.
He approached a certain G3 star. He dropped out of
hyperdrive well clear of the singularity in hyperspace which surrounds any
large mass. He accelerated into the system on his main thruster, sweeping the
space ahead of him with the deep-radar. He was not looking for habitable
planets. He was looking for Slaver stasis boxes.
If the pulse returned no echo, we would accelerate
until he could shift to hyperdrive. The velocity would stay with him and he
could use it to coast through the next system he tried, and the next, and the
next. It saved fuel.
He had never found a Slaver stasis box. It did not
stop him from looking.
As he passed through the system, the deep-radar
showed him planets like pale ghosts, light gray circles on the white screen.
The G3 sun was a wide gray disk, darkening almost to black at the center. The
near-black was degenerate matter, compressed past the point where electron
orbits collapse entirely.
He was well past the sun, and still accelerating when
the screen showed a tiny black fleck.
"No system is perfect, of course," he
muttered as he turned off the drive. He talked to himself a good deal out here
where nobody could interrupt him.
"It usually saves fuel," he told himself a
week later. By then he was out of the singularity, in clear space. He took the
ship into hyperdrive, circled halfway round the system, and began decelerating.
The velocity he'd built up during those first two weeks gradually left him.
Somewhere near where he'd found a black speck in the deep-radar projection, he
slowed to a stop.
Though he had never realized it until now, his system
for saving fuel was based on the assumption that he would never find a Slaver
box. But the fleck was there again, a black dot on the gray ghost of a planet.
Louis Wu moved in.
The world looked something like Earth. It was nearly
the same size, very much the same shape, somewhat the same color. There was no
moon.
Louis used his telescope on the planet and whistled
appreciatively. Shredded white cloud over misty blue ... faint continental
outlines ... a hurricane whorl near the equator. The ice caps looked big, but
there would be warm climate near the equator. The air looked sweet and
noncarcinogenic on the spectrograph. And nobody on it. Not a soul!
No next door neighbors. No voices. No faces.
"What the hell," he chortled.
"I've got my box. I'll just spend the rest of my
vacation here. No men. No women. No children." He frowned and rubbed the
fringe of hair along his jaw. "Am I being hasty? Maybe I should
knock."
But he scanned the radio bands and got nothing. Any
civilized planet radiates like a small star in the radio range. Moreover, here
was no sign of civilization, even from a hundred miles up.
"Great! Okay, first I'll get that old stasis
box... He was sure it was that. Nothing but stars and stasis boxes were dense
enough to show black in the reflection of a hyperwave, pulse.
He followed the image around the bulge of the planet.
It seemed the planet had a moon after all. The moon was twelve hundred miles
up, and it was ten feet across.
"Now why," he wondered aloud, "would
the Slavers have put it in orbit? It's too easy to find. They were in a war,
for Finagle's sake! And why would it stay here?"
The little moon was still a couple of thousand miles
away, invisible to the naked eye. The scope showed it clearly enough. A silver
sphere ten feet through, with no marks on it.
"A billion and a half years it's been
there," said Louis to himself, said he. "And if you believe that,
you'll believe anything. Something would have knocked it down. Dust, a meteor,
the solar wind. Tnuctip soldiers. A magnetic storm. Nah." He ran his
fingers through straight black hair grown too long. "It must have drifted
in from somewhere else. Recently. Wha--"
Another ship, small and conical, had appeared behind
the silvery sphere. Its hull was green, with darker green markings.
II
"Damn," said Louis. He didn't recognize the
make. It was no human ship. "Well, it could be worse. They could have been
people." He used the comm laser.
The other ship braked to a stop. In courtesy, so did
Louis.
"Would you believe it?" be demanded of
himself. "Three years total time I've spent looking for stasis boxes. I
finally find one, and now something else wants it too!"
The bright blue spark of another laser glowed in the
tip of the alien cone. Louis listened to the autopilot-computer chuckling to
itself as it tried to untangle the signals in an unknown laser beam. At least
they did use lasers, not telepathy or tentacle-waving or rapid changes in skin
color.
A face appeared on Louis's screen.
It was not the first alien he had seen. This, like
some others, had a recognizable head: a cluster of sense organs grouped around
a mouth, with room for a brain. Trinocular vision, he noted; the eyes set deep
in sockets, well protected, but restricted in range of vision. Triangular
mouth, too, with yellow, serrated bone knives showing their edges behind three
gristle lips.
Definately, this was an unknown species.
"Boy, are you ugly," Louis refrained from
saying. The alien's translator might be working by now.
His own autopilot finished translating the alien's
first message. It said, "Go away. This object belongs to me."
"Remarkable," Louis sent back.
"Are you a Slaver?" The being did not in
the least resemble a Slaver, and the Slavers had been extinct for eons.
"That word was not translated," said the
alien. "I reached the artifact before you did. I will fight to keep
it."
Louis scratched at his chin, at two week's growth of
bristly beard. His ship had very little to fight with. Even the fusion plant
which powered the thruster was designed with safety in mind. A laser battle,
fought with comm lasers turned to maximum, would be a mere endurance test; and
he'd lose, for the alien ship had more mass to absorb more heat. He had no
weapons per se. Presumably the alien did.
But the stasis box was a big one.
The Tnuctipun-Slaver war had wiped out most of the
intelligent species of the galaxy, a billion and a half years ago. Countless
minor battles must have occurred before a Slaver-developed final weapon was
used. Often the Slavers, losing a battle, had stored valuables in a stasis box,
and hidden it against the day they would again be of use. No time passed inside
a closed stasis box. Alien meat a billion and a half years old had emerged
still fresh from its hiding place. Weapons and tools showed no trace of rust.
Once a stasis box had disgorged a small, tarsierlike sentiment being, still
alive. That former slave had lived a strange life before the aging process
claimed her, the last of her species.
Slaver stasis boxes were beyond value. It was known that
the Tnuctipun, at least, had known the secret of direct conversion of matter.
Perhaps their enemies had too. Someday, in a stasis box somewhere outside known
space, such a device would be found. Then fusion power would be as obsolete as
internal combustion.
And this, a sphere ten feet in diameter, must be the
largest stasis box ever found.
"I too will fight to keep the artifacts"
said Louis. "But consider this. Our species has met once, and will meet
again regardless of who takes the artifact now. We can be friends or enemies.
Why should we risk this relationship by killing?"
The alien sense-cluster gave away nothing. "What
do you propose?"
"A game of chance, with the risks even on both
sides. Do you play games of chance?"
"Emphatically yes. The process of living is a
game of chance. To avoid chance is insanity."
"That it is. Hmmm." Louis regarded the
alien head that seemed to be all triangles. He saw it abruptly whip around,
flick, to face straight backward, and snap back in the same instant. The sight
did something to the pit of his stomach.
"Did you speak?" the alien asked.
"No. Won't you break your neck that way?"
"Your question is interesting. Later we must
discuss anatomy. I have a proposal."
"Fine."
"We shall land on the world below us. We will
meet between our ships. I will do you the courtesy of emerging first. Can you
bring your translator?"
He could connect the computer with his suit radio.
"Yes."
"We will meet between our ships and play some
simple game, familiar to neither of us, depending solely on chance.
Agreed?"
"Provisionally. What game?"
The image on the screen rippled with diagonal lines.
Something interfering with the signal? It cleared quickly. "There is a
mathematics game," said the alien. Our mathematics will certainly be
similar."
"True." Though Louis had heard of some
decidedly peculiar twists in alien mathematics.
"The game involves a screee--" Some word
that the autopilot couldn't translate. The alien raised a threeclawed hand,
holding a lens-shaped object. The alien's mutually opposed fingers turned it so
that Louis could see the different markings on each side. "This is a
screee. You and I will throw it upward six times each. I will choose one of the
symbols, you will choose the other. If my symbol falls looking upward more
often than yours, the artifact is mine. The risks are even."
The image rippled, then cleared.
"Agreed," said Louis. He was a bit
disappointed in the simplicity of the game.
"We shall both accelerate away from the artifact.
Will you follow me down?"
"I will," said Louis.
The image disappeared.
III
Louis Wu scratched at a week's growth of beard. What
a way to greet an alien ambassador! In the worlds of men Louis Wu dressed
impeccably; but out here he felt free to look like death warmed over, all the
time.
But how was a Trinoc supposed to know that he should
have shaved? No, that wasn't the problem.
Was he fool or genius?
He had friends, many of them, with habits like his
own. Two had disappeared decades ago; he no longer remembered their names. He
remembered only that each had gone hunting stasis boxes in this direction and
that each had neglected to come back.
Had they met alien ships?
There were any number of other explanations. Half a
year or more spent alone in a single ship was a good way to find out whether
you liked yourself. If you decided you didn't, there was no point in returning
to the worlds of men.
But there were aliens out here. Armed. One rested in
orbit five hundred miles ahead of his ship, with a valuable artifact halfway
between.
Still, gambling was safer than fighting. Louis Wu
waited for the alien's next move.
That move was to drop like a rock. The alien ship
must have used at least twenty gees of push. After a moment of shock, Louis
followed under the same acceleration, protected by his cabin gravity. Was the
alien testing his maneuverability?
Possibly not. He seemed contemptuous of tricks.
Louis, trailing the alien at a goodly distance, was now much closer to the
silver sphere. Suppose he just turned ship, ran for the artifact, strapped it
to his hull and kept running?
Actually, that wouldn't work. He'd have to slow to
reach the spere the alien wouldn't have to slow to attack. Twenty gees was
close to his ship's limit.
Running might not be a bad idea, though. What
guarantee had he of the alien's good faith? What if the alien
"cheated"?
That risk could be minimized. His pressure suit had
sensors to monitor his body functions. Louis set the autopilot to blow the
fusion plant if his heart stopped. He rigged a signal button on his suit to
blow the plant manually.
The alien ship burned bright orange as it hit air. It
fell free and then slowed suddenly, a mile over the ocean. "Showoff,"
Louis muttered and prepared to imitate the maneuver.
The conical ship showed no exhaust. Its drive must be
either a reactionless drive, like his own, or a kzin-style induced-gravity
drive. Both were neat and clean, silent, safe to bystanders and highly advanced.
Islands were scattered across the ocean. The alien
circled, chose one at seeming random and landed like a feather along a bare
shoreline.
Louis followed him down. There was a bad moment while
he waited for some unimaginable weapon to fire from the grounded ship, to tear
him flaming from the sky while his attention was distracted by landing
Procedures. But he landed without a jar, several hundred yards from the alien
cone.
"An explosion will destroy both our ships if I
am harmed," he told the alien via signal beam.
"Our species seem to think alike. I will now
descend."
Louis watched him appear near the nose of the ship,
in a wide circular airlock. He watched the alien drift gently to the sand. Then
he clamped his helmet down and entered the airlock.
Had he made the right decision?
Gambling was safer than war. More fun, too. Best of
all, it gave him better odds.
"But I'd hate to go home without that box,"
he thought. In nearly two hundred years of life, he had never done anything as
important as finding a stasis box. He had made no discoveries, won no elective
offices, overthrown no governments. This was his big chance.
"Even odds," he said, and turned on the
intercom as he descended.
His muscles and semicircular canals registered about
a gee. A hundred feet away waves slid hissing up onto pure white sand. The
waves were green and huge, perfect for riding; the beach a definite beer party
beach.
Later, perhaps he would ride those waves to shore on
his belly, if the air checked out and the water was free of predators. He
hadn't had time to give the planet a thorough checkup.
Sand tugged at his boots as he went to meet the
alien.
The alien was five feet tall. He had looked much
taller descending from his ship, but that was because he was mostly leg. More
than three feet of skinny leg, a torso like a beer barrel, and no neck.
Impossible that his neckless neck should be so supple. But the chrome yellow
skin fell in thick rolls around the bottom of his head, hiding anatomical
details.
His suit was transparent, a roughly alien-shaped
balloon, constricted at the shoulder, above and below the complicated elbow
joint, at the wrist, at hip and knee. Air jets showed at wrist and ankle. Tools
hung in loops at the chest. A back pack hung from the neck, under the suit.
Louis noted all these tools with trepidation; any one of them could be a
weapon.
"I expected that you would be taller," said
the alien.
"A laser screen doesn't tell much, does it? I
think my translator may have mixed up right and left, too. Do you have the
coin?"
"The screee?" The alien produced it.
"Shall there be no preliminary talk? My name is
screee."
"My machine can't translate that. Or pronouce
it. My name is Louis. Has your species met others besides mine?"
"Yes, two. But I am not an expert in that field
of knowledge."
"Nor am I. Let's leave the politenesses to the
experts. We're here to gamble."
"Choose your symbol," said the alien, and
handed him the coin.
Louis looked it over. It was a lens of platinum or
something similar, sharp-edged, with the three-clawed hand of his new gambling
partner stamped on one side and a planet, with heavy ice caps outlined,
decorating the other. Maybe they weren't ice caps, but continents.
He held the coin as if trying to choose. Stalling.
Those gas jets seemed to be attitude jets, but maybe not. Suppose he won? Would
he win only the chance to be murdered?
But they'd both die if his heart stopped. No alien
could have guessed what kind of weapon would render him helpless without
killing him.
"I choose the planet. You flip first."
The alien tossed the coin in the direction of Louis's
ship. Louis' eyes followed it down, and he took two steps to retrieve it. The
alien stood beside him when he rose.
"Hand," he said.
"My turn." He was one down. He tossed the
coin. As it spun gleaming, he saw for the first time that the alien ship was
gone.
"What gives?" he demanded.
"There's no need for us to die," said the
alien. It held something that had hung in a loop from its chest.
"This is a weapon, but both will die if I use
it. Please do not try to reach your ship."
Louis touched the button that would blow his power
plant.
"My ship lifted when you turned your head to
follow the screee. By now my ship is beyond range of any possible explosion you
can bring to bear. There is no need for us to die, provided you do not try to
reach your ship."
"Wrong. I can leave your ship without a
pilot." He left his hand where it was. Rather than be cheated by an alien
in a gambling game--
"The pilot is still on board, with the
astrogator and the screee. I am only the communications officer. Why did you
assume I was alone?"
Louis sighed and let his arm fall. "Because I'm
stupid," he said bitterly. "Because you used the singular pronoun, or
my computer did. Because I thought you were a gambler."
"I gambled that you would not see my ship take
off, that you would be distracted by the coin, that you could see only from the
front of your head. The risks seemed better than one-half."
Louis nodded. It all seemed clear.
"There was also the chance that you had lured me
down to destroy me." The computer was still translating into the first
person singular. "I have lost at, least one exploring ship that flew in
this direction."
"Not guilty. So have we." A thought struck
him and he said, "Prove that you hold a weapon."
The alien obliged. No beam showed, but sand exploded
to Louis's left, with a vicious crack! and a flash the color of lightning. The
alien held something that made holes.
So much for that. Louis bent and picked up the coin.
"As long as we're here, shall we finish the game?"
"To what purpose?"
"To see who would have won. Doesn't your species
gamble for pleasure?"
"To what purpose? We gamble for survival."
"Then Finagle take your whole breed!" he
snarled and flung himself to the sand. His chance for glory was gone, tricked
away from him. There is a tide that governs men's affairs... and there went the
ebb, carrying statues to Louis Wu, history books naming Louis Wu, jetsam on the
tide.
"Your attitude is puzzling. One gambles only
when gambling is necessary."
"Nuts."
"My translator will not translate that
comment."
"Do you know what that artifact is?"
"I know of the species who built that artifact.
They traveled far."
"We've never found a stasis box that big. It
must be a vault of some kind."
"It is thought that that species used a single
weapon to end their war and all its participants."
The two looked at each other. Possibly each was
thinking the same thing. What a disaster, if any but my own species should take
this ultimate weapon!
But that was anthropomorphic thinking. Louis knew
that a Kzin would have been saying: Now I can conquer the universe, as is my
right.
"Finagle take my luck!" said Louis Wu
between his teeth. "Why did you have to show at the same time I did?"
"That was not entirely chance. My instruments
found your craft as you backed into the system. To reach the vicinity of the
artifact in time, it was necessary to use thrust that damaged my ship and killed
one of my crew. I earned possession of the artifact."
"By cheating, damn you!" Louis stood up...
And something meshed between his brain and his
semicircular canals.
IV
One gravity.
The density of a planet's atmosphere depended on its
gravity, and on its moon. A big moon would skim away most of the atmosphere,
over the billions of years of a world's evolution. A moonless world the size
and mass of Earth should have unbreathable air, impossibly dense, worse than
Venus.
But this planet had no moon. Except--
The alien said something, a startled ejaculation that
the computer refused to translate.
"Secree! Where did the water go?"
Louis looked. What he saw puzzled him only a moment.
The ocean had receded, slipped imperceptibly away, until what showed now was
half a mile of level, slickly shinning sea bottom.
"Where did the water go? I do not
understand."
"I do."
"Where did it go? Without a moon, there can be
no tides. Tides are not this quick in any case. Explain, please."
"It'd be easier if we use the telescope in my
ship."
"In your ship there may be weapons."
"Now pay attention," said Louis. "Your
ship is very close to total destruction. Nothing can save your crew but the
comm laser in my ship."
The alien dithered, then capitulated. "If you
have weapons, you would have used them earlier. You cannot stop my ship now.
Let us enter your ship. Remember that I hold my weapon."
The alien sood beside him in the small cabin, his
mouth working disturbingly around the serrated edges of his teeth as Louis
activated the scope and screen. Shortly a starfield appeared. So did a conical
spacecraft, painted green with darker green markings. Along the bottom of the
screen was the blur of thick atmosphere.
"You see? The artifact must be nearly to the
horizon. It moves fast."
"That fact is obvious even to low
intelligence."
"Yah. Is it obvious to you that this world must
have a massive satellite?"
"But it does not, unless the satellite is
invisible."
"Not invisible. Just too small to notice. But
then, it must be very dense."
The alien didn't answer.
"Why did we assume the sphere was a Slaver
stasis box? Its shape was wrong; its size was wrong. But it was shiny, like the
surface of a stasis field, and spherical, like an artifact. Planets are spheres
too, but gravity wouldn't ordinarily pull something ten feet wide into a
sphere. Either it would have to be very fluid, or it would have to be very
dense. Do you understand me?"
"No."
"I don't know how your equipment works. My
deepradar uses a hyperwave pulse to find stasis boxes. When something stops a
byperwave pulse, it's either a stasis box, or it's something denser than
degenerate matter, the matter inside a normal star. And this object is dense
enough to cause tides."
A tiny silver bead had drifted into view ahead of the
cone. Telescopic foreshortening seemed to bring it right alongside the ship.
Louis reached to scratch at his beard and was stopped by his faceplate.
"I believe I understand you. But how could it
happen?"
"That's guesswork. Well?"
"Call my ship. They would be killed. We must
save them!"
"I had to be sure you wouldn't stop me."
Louis Wu went to work. Presently a light glowed; the computer had found the
alien ship with its comm laser.
He spoke without preliminaries. "You must leave
the spherical object immediately. It is not an artifact. It is ten feet of
nearly solid neutronium, probably torn loose from a neutron star."
There was no answer, of course. The alien stood
behind him but did not speak. Probably his own ship's computer could not have
handled the double translation. But the alien was making one two-armed gesture,
over and over.
The green cone swung sharply around, broadside to the
telescope.
"Good, they're firing lateral," said Louis
to himself. "Maybe they can do a hyperbolic past it." He raised his
voice. "Use all the power available. You must pull away."
The two objects seemed to be pulling apart. Louis
suspected that that was illusion, for the two objects were almost in
line-of-sight. "Don't let the small mass fool you," he said,
unnecessarily now. "Computer, what's the mass of a ten-foot neutronium
sphere?--Around two times ten to the minus six times the mass of this world,
which is pretty tiny, but if you get too close... Computer, what's the surface gravity?--I
don't believe it."
The two objects seemed to be pulling together again.
Damn, thought Louis. If they hadn't come along, that'd be me.
He kept talking. It wouldn't matter now, except to
relieve his own tension. "My computer says ten million gravities at the
surface. That may be off. Newton's formula for gravity. Can you hear me?"
"They are too close," said the alien.
"By now it is too late to save their lives." It was happening as he
spoke. The ship began to crumble a fraction of a second before impact. Impact
looked no more dangerous than a cannonball striking the wall of a fort. The
tiny silver bead Simply swept through the side of the ship. But the ship closed
instantly, all in a moment, like tinsel paper in a strong man's fist. Closed
into a bead glowing yellow with heat. A tiny sphere ten feet through or a bit
more.
"I mourn," said the alien.
"Now I get it," said Louis. "I
wondered what was fouling our laser messages. That chunk of neutronium was
right between our ships, bending the light beams."
"Why was this trap set for us?" cried the
alien. "Have we enemies so powerful that they can play with such
masses?"
A touch of paranoia? Louis wondered. Maybe the whole
species had it. "Just a touch of coincidence. A smashed neutron
star."
For a time the alien did not speak. The telescope,
for want of a better target, remained focused on the bead. Its glow had died.
The alien said, "My pressure suit will not keep
me alive long."
"We'll make a run for it. I can reach Margrave
in a couple of weeks. If you can hold out that long, we'll set up a tailored
environment box to hold you until we think of something better. It only takes a
couple of hours to set one up. I'll call ahead."
The alien's triple gaze converged on him. "Can
you send messages faster than light?"
"Sure."
"You have knowledge worth trading for. I'll come
with you."
"Thanks a whole lot." Louis Wu started
punching buttons. "Margrave. Civilization. People. Faces. Voices.
Bah." The ship leapt upward, ripping atmosphere apart. Cabin, gravity
wavered a little, then settled down.
"Well," he told himself. "I can always
come back."
"You will return here?"
"I think so," he decided.
"I hope you will be armed."
"What? More paranoia?"
"Your species is insufficiently
suspicious," said the alien. "I wonder that you have survived.
Consider this neutronium object as a defense. Its mass pulls anything that
touches it into smooth and reflective spherical surface. Should any vehicle
approach this world, its crew would find this object quickly. They would assume
it is an artifact. What other assumption could they make? They would draw
alongside for a closer examination."
"True enough, but that planet's empty. Nobody to
defend."
"Perhaps."
The planet was dwindling below. Louis Wu swung his
ship toward deep space.
Bigger Than Worlds
Just because you’ve spent all your life on one
planet, doesn’t mean that everyone always will. Already there are alternatives
to worlds. The Apollo spacecraft have an excellent record; they have never
killed anyone in space. The Soviet space station may have killed its
inhabitants, but the American Skylab didn’t.
Alas, they all lack a certain something. Gravity.
Permanence. We want something to live on, or in, something superior to what
we’ve got: safer, or more mobile, or roomier. Otherwise, why move?
It’s odd how much there is to be said about
structures larger than worlds, considering that we cannot yet begin to build
any one of them. On- the basis of size, the Dyson sphere—a spherical shell
around a sun—comes about in the middle. But let’s start small and work our way
up.
The Multi-Generation Ship
Robert Heinlein’s early story “Universe” has been
imitated countless times by most of the writers in the business.
The idea was this: Present-day physics poses a limit
on the speed of an interstellar vehicle. The ships we send to distant stats
will be on one-way journeys, at least at first. They will have to carry a
complete ecology they couldn’t carry enough food and oxygen in tanks. Because
they will take generations to complete their journeys, they must also carry a
viable and complete society.
Clearly we’re talking about quite a large ship, with
a population in the hundreds at least: high enough to prevent genetic drift.
Centrifugal force substitutes for gravity. We’re going to be doing a lot of
that. We spin the ship on its axis, and put all the things that need full
gravity at the outside, along the hull. Plant rooms, exercise rooms, et cetera.
Things that don’t need gravity, like fuel and guidance instruments, we line
along the axis. If our motors thrust through the same axis, we will have to
build a lot of the machinery on tracks, because the aft wall will be the floor
when the ship is under power
The “Universe” ship is basic to a discussion of life
in space. We’ll be talking about much larger structures, but they are designed
to do the same things on a larger scale: to provide a place to live, with as
much security and variety and pleasure as Earth itself offers—or more.
Gravity
Gravity is basic to our lifestyle. It may or may not
be necessary to life itself, but we’ll want it if we can get it, whatever we
build.
I know of only four methods of generating gravity aboard
spacecraft.
Centrifugal force looks much the most likely. There
is a drawback: coriolis effects would force us to re-learn how to walk, sit
down, pour coffee, throw a baseball. But its effects would decrease with
increasing moment arm, that is, with larger structures. On the Ring City you’d
never notice it.
Our second choice is to use actual mass: plate the
floor with neutronium, for instance at a density of fifty quadrillion tons per
cubic foot, or build the ship around a quantum black hole, invisibly small and
around as massive as, say, Phobos. But this will vastly increase our fuel
consumption if we expect the vehicle to go anywhere.
Third choice is to generate gravity waves. This may
remain forever beyond our abilities. But it’s one of those things that people
are going to keep trying to build forever, because it would be so damn useful.
We could launch ships at a million gravities, and the passengers would never
feel it. We could put laboratories on the sun, or colonize Jupiter. Anything.
The fourth method is to accelerate all the, way,
making turnover at the midpoint and decelerating the rest of the way. This
works fine. Over interstellar distances it would take an infinite fuel
supply—and by God we may have it, in the Bussard ramjet. A Bussard ramlet would
use an electromagnetic field to scoop up the interstellar hydrogen ahead of
it—with an intake a thousand miles or more in diameter—compress it, and burn it
as fuel for a fusion drive. Now the multi-generation ship would become
unnecessary as relativity shortens our trip time: four years to the nearest
star, twenty.àne years to the galactic hub, twenty-eight to Andromeda
galaxy—all at one gravity acceleration.
The Bussard ramjet looks unlikely. It’s another
ultimate, like generated gravity. Is the interstellar medium sufficiently
ionized for such finicky control? Maybe not. But it’s worth a try.
Meanwhile; our first step to other worlds is the
“Universe” ship—huge, spun for gravity, its population in the hundreds, its
travel time in generations.
Flying Cities
James Blish used a variant of generated gravity in
his tales of the Okie titles.
His “spindizzy” motors used a little-known law of
physics (*Still undiscovered) to create their own gravity and their own motive
force. Because the spindizzy motors worked better for higher mass, his vehicles
tended to be big. Most of the stories centered around Manhattan Island, which
had been bodily uprooted from its present location and flown intact to the
stars. Two of the stories involved whole worlds fitted out with spindizzies.
They were even harder to land than the flying cities.
But we don’t really need spindizzies or generated
gravity to build flying cities.
In fact, we don’t really need to fill out Heinlein’s
“Universe” ship. The outer hull is all we need. Visualize a ship like this:
(1) Cut a strip of Los Angeles, say, ten miles long
by a mile wide.
(2) Roll it in a hoop. Buildings and streets face
inward.
(3) Roof it over with glass or something stronger.
(4) Transport it to space. (Actually we’ll build it
in space.)
(5) Reaction motors, air and water recycling systems,
and storage areas are in the basement, outward from the street level. So are
the fuel tanks. Jettisoning an empty fuel tank is easy. We just cut it loose,
and it falls into the universe.
(6) We’re using a low-thrust, high-efficiency drive:
ion jets, perhaps. The axis of the city can be kept clear. A smaller ship can
rise to the- axis for sightings before a course change; or we can set the
control bridge atop a slender fin. A ten mile circumference makes the fin a
mile and a half tall if the bridge is at the axis; but the strain on the
structure would diminish approaching the axis.
What would it be like aboard the Ring City? One
gravity everywhere, except in the bridge. We may want to enlarge the bridge to
accommodate a schoolroom; teaching physics would be easier in free fall.
Otherwise it would be a lot like the Generation ship.
The populace would be less likely to forget their destiny, as Heinlein’s people
did. They can see the sky from anywhere in the city; and the only fixed stars
are Sol and the target star.
It would be like living anywhere, except that great
attention must be paid to environmental quality. This can be taken for granted
throughout this article. The more thoroughly we control our environment, the
more dangerous it is to forget it.
Inside Outside
The next step up in size is the hollow planetoid. I
got my designs from a book of scientific speculation, Islands in Space, by
Dandrige M. Cole and Donald W. Cox.
STEP ONE: Construct a giant
solar mirror. Formed under zero gravity conditions, it need be nothing more
than an Echo balloon sprayed with something to harden it, then cut in half and
silvered on the inside. It would be fragile as a butterfly, and huge.
STEP TWO: Pick a planetoid.
Ideally, we need an elongated chunk of nickel-iron, perhaps one mile in
diameter and two miles long.
STEP THREE: Bore a hole down
the long axis.
STEP FOUR: Charge the hole with
tanks of water. Plug the openings, and weld the plugs, using the solar mirror.
STEP FIVE: Set the planetoid
spinning slowly on its axis. As it spins, bathe the entire mass in the
concentrated sunlight from the solar mirror. Gradually the flying iron mountain
would be heated to melting all over its surface. Then the heat would creep
inward, until the object is almost entirely molten.
STEP SIX: The axis would be the
last part to reach melting point. At that point the water tanks explode. The
pressure blows the planetoid up into an iron balloon some ten miles in diameter
and twenty miles long, if everybody has done their jobs right.
The hollow world is now ready for tenants. Except
that certain things have to be moved in: air, water, soil, living things. It
should be possible to set up a closed ecology. Cole and Cox suggested setting
up the solar mirror at one end and using it to reflect sunlight back and forth
along the long axis. We might prefer to use fusion power, if we’ve got it.
Naturally we spin the thing for gravity.
Living in such an inside-out world would be odd in
some respects. The whole landscape is overhead. Our sky is farms and houses and
so forth. If we came to space to see the stars, we’ll have to go down into the
basement.
We get our choice of gravity and weather. Weather is
easy. We give the asteroid a slight equatorial bulge, to get a circular central
lake. We shade the endpoints of the asteroid from the sun, so that it’s always
raining there, and the water runs downhill to the central lake. If we keep the
gravity low enough, we should be able to fly with an appropriate set of
muscle-powered wings; and the closer we get to the axis, the easier it becomes.
(Of course, if we get too close the wax melts and the wings come apart...)
Macro-Life
Let’s back up a bit, to the Heinlein “Universe” ship.
Why do we want to land it?
If the “Universe” ship has survived long enough to
reach its target star, it could probably survive indefinitely; and so can the
nth-generation society it now carries. Why should their descendants live out
their lives on a primitive Earthlike world? Perhaps they were born to better
things.
Let the “Universe” ship become their universe, then.
They can mine new materials from the asteroids of the new system, and use them
to enlarge the ship when necessary, or build new ships. They can loosen the
population control laws. Change stars when convenient. Colonize space itself,
and let the planets become mere way-stations. See the universe!
The concept is called Macro life. Macro-life is
large, powered, self-sufficient environments capable of expanding or
reproducing. Put a drive on the inside-outside asteroid bubble and it becomes a
Macro life vehicle. The ring-shaped flying city can be extended indefinitely
from the forward rim. Blish’s spindizzy cities were a step away from being
Macro-life; but they were too dependent on planet based society.
A Macro-life vehicle would have to carry its own
mining tools and chemical laboratories, and God knows what else. We’d learn
what else accidentally, by losing interstellar colony ships. At best a
Macro-life vehicle would never be as safe as a planet, unless it was as big as
a planet, and perhaps not then. But there are other values than safety. An
airplane isn’t as safe as a house, but a house doesn’t go anywhere. Neither
does a world.
Worlds
The terraforming of worlds is the next logical step
up In size. For a variety of reasons, I’m going to skip lightly over it. We
know both too much and too little to talk coherently about what makes a world
habitable.
But we’re learning fast, and will learn faster. Our
present pollution problems will end by telling us exactly how to keep a
habitable environment habitable, how to keep a stable ecology stable, and how
to put it all back together again after it falls apart. As usual, the universe
will learn us or kill us. If we live long enough to build ships of the
“Universe” type, we will know what to put inside them. We may even know how to
terraform a hostile world for the convenience of human colonists, having tried
our techniques on Earth itself.
Now take a giant step.
Dyson Spheres
Freeman Dyson’s original argument went as follows,
approximately.
No industrial society has ever reduced its need for
power, except by collapsing. An intelligent optimist will expect his own
society’s need for power to increase geometrically, and will make his plans
accordingly. According to Dyson, it will not be an impossibly long time before
our own civilization needs all the power generated by our sun. Every last erg
of it. We will then have to enclose the sun so as to control all of its output.
What we use to enclose the sun is problematic. Dyson
was speaking of shells in the astronomical sense: solid or liquid, continuous
or discontinuous, anything to interrupt the sum light so that it can be turned
into power. One move might be to convert the mass of the solar system into as
many little ten-by-twenty-mile hollow iron bubbles as will fit. The smaller we
subdivide the mass of a planet, the more useful surface area we get. We put all
the-little asteroid bubbles in circular orbits at distances of about one Earth orbit
from the sun, but differing enough that they won’t collide. It’s a gradual
process. We start by converting the existing asteroids. When we run out, we
convert Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus ... and eventually, Earth.
Now, aside from the fact that our need for power
increases geometrically, our population also increases geometrically. If we
didn’t need the power, we’d still need the room in those bubbles. Eventually
we’ve blocked out all of the sunlight. From outside, from another star, such a
system would be a great globe radiating enormous energy in the deep infrared.
What some science fiction writers have been calling a
Dyson sphere is something else: a hollow spherical shell, like a ping pong ball
with a star in the middle. Mathematically at least, it is possible to build
such a shell without leaving the solar system for materials. The planet Jupiter
has a mass of 2 x lO^30 grams, which is most of the mass of the solar system
excluding the sun. Given massive transmutation of elements, we can convert Jupiter
into a spherical shell 93 million miles in radius and maybe ten to twenty feet
thick. If we don’t have transmutation, we can still do it, with a thinner
shell. There are at least ten Earth masses of building material in the solar
system, once we throw away the useless gasses.
The surface area inside a Dyson sphere is about a
billion times that of the Earth. Very few galactic civilizations in science
fiction have included as many as a billion worlds. Here you’d have that much
territory within walking distance, assuming you were immortal.
Naturally we would have to set up a biosphere on the
inner surface. We’d also need gravity generators. The gravitational attraction
inside a Uniform spherical shell is zero. The net pull would come from the sun,
and everything would gradually drift upward into it.
So. We spot gravity generators all over the shell, to
hold down the air and the people and the buildings. “Down” is outward, toward
the stars.
We can control the temperature of any locality by
varying the heat-retaining properties of the shell. In fact, we may want to
enlarge the shell, to give us more room or to make the permanent noonday sun
look smaller. All we need do is make the shell a better insulator: foam the
material, for instance. If it holds heat too well, we may want to add radiator
fins to the outside.
Note that life is not necessarily pleasant in a Dyson
sphere. We can’t see the stars. It is always noon. We can’t dig mines or
basements. And if one of the gravity generators ever went out, the resulting
disaster would make the end of the Earth look trivial by comparison.
But if we need a Dyson sphere, and if it can be
built, we’ll probably build it.
Now, Dyson’s assumptions (expanding population,
expanding need for power) may hold for any industrial society, human or not. If
an astronomer were looking for inhabited stellar systems, he would be missing
the point if he watched only the visible stars. The galaxy’s most advanced
civilizations may be spherical shells about the size of the Earth’s orbit,
radiating as much power as a Sol-type sun, but at about 1O angstroms
wavelength-in the deep infrared...
...assuming that the galaxy’s most advanced
civilizations are protoplasmic. But beings whose chemistry is based on molten
copper, say, would want a hotter environment. They might have evolved faster,
in temperatures where chemistry and biochemistry would move far faster.
There might be a lot more of them than of us. And their red-hot Dyson spheres
would look deceptively like red giant or supergiant stars. One wonders.
In The Wanderer, novelist Fritz Leiber
suggested that most of the visible stars have already been surrounded by shells
of worlds. We are watching old light, he suggested, light that was on its way
to Earth before the industrial expansion of galactic civilization really hit
its stride. Already we see some of the result: the opaque dust clouds
astronomers find in the direction of the galactic core are not dust clouds, but
walls of Dyson spheres blocking the stars within.
I myself have dreamed up an intermediate step between
Dyson spheres and planets. Build a ring 93 million miles in radius—one Earth
orbit—which would make it 600 million miles long. If we have the mass of
Jupiter to work with, and if we make it a million miles wide, we get a
thickness of about a thousand meters. The Ringworld would thus be much sturdier
than a Dyson sphere.
There are other advantages. We can spin it for
gravity. A rotation on Its axis of 770 miles/second would give the Ringworld
one gravity outward. We wouldn’t even have to roof itover. Put walls a thousand
miles high at each rim, aimed inward at the sun, and very little of the air
will leak over the edges.
Set up an inner ring of shadow squares—light orbiting
structures to block out part of the sunlight—and we can have day-and-night
cycles in whatever period we like. And we can see the stars, unlike the
inhabitants of a Dyson sphere.
The thing is roomy enough; three million times the
area of the Earth. It will be some time before anyone-complains of the
crowding.
As with most of these structures, our landscape is
optional, a challenge to engineer and artist alike. A look at the outer surface
of a Ringworld or Dyson sphere would be most instructive. Seas would show as
bulges, mountains as dents. River beds and river deltas would be sculpted in;
there would be no room for erosion on something as thin as a Ringworld or a
Dyson sphere. Seas would be flat-bottomed—-as we use only the top of a sea
anyway—and small, with convoluted shorelines. Lots of beachfront. Mountains
would exist only for scenery and recreation.
A large meteor would be a disaster on such a
structure. A hole in the floor of the Ringworld, if not plugged, would
eventually let all the air out, and the pressure differential would cause
storms the size of a world, making repairs difficult.
The Ringworld concept is flexible. Consider:
(1) More than one Ringworld can circle a sun. Imagine
many Ringworlds, noncoplanar, of slightly differing radii—or of widely
differing radii, inhabited by very different intelligent races.
(2) We’d get seasons by bobbing the sun up and down.
Actually the Ring would do the bobbing; the sun would stay put. (One Ring to a
sun for this trick.)
(3) To build a Ringworld when all the planets in the
system are colonized to the hilt (and, baby, we don’t need a Ringworld until
it’s gotten that bad!) pro tem structures are needed. A structure the size of a
world and the shape of a pie plate, with a huge rocket thruster underneath and
a biosphere in the dish, might serve to house a planet’s population while the
planet in question is being disassemb1ed. It circles the sun at 770
miles/second, firing outward to maintain its orbit. The depopulated planet
becomes two more pie plates, and we wire them in an equilateral triangle and
turn off the thrusters, evacuate more planets and start building the Ringworld.
Dyson Spheres 2
I pointed out earlier that gravity generators look
unlikely. We may never be able to build them at all. Do we really need to
assume gravity generators on a Dyson sphere? There are at least two other
solutions.
We can spin the Dyson sphere. It still picks up all
the energy of the sun as planned; but the atmosphere collects around the
equator, and the rest is in vacuum. We would do better to reshape the structure
like a canister of movie film; it gives us greater structural strength. And we
wind up with a closed Ringworld.
Or, we can live with the fact that we can’t have
gravity. According to the suggestion of Dan Aiderson, Ph.D., we can built two
concentric spherical shells, the inner shell transparent, the outer transparent
or opaque, at our whim. The biosphere is between the two shells.
It would be fun. We can build anything we like within
the free fall environment. Buildings would be fragile as a butterfly. Left to
themselves they would drift up against the inner shell, but a heavy thread
would be enough to tether them against the sun’s puny gravity. The only
question is, can humanity stand long periods of free fall?
Hold it A Minute
Have you reached the point of vertigo? These
structures are hard to hold in your bead. They’re so flipping big It might help
if I tell you that, though we can’t begin to build any of these things,
practically anyone can handle them mathematically. Any college freshman can
prove that the gravitational attraction inside a spherical shell is zero. The
stresses are easy to compute (and generally too strong for anything we make).
The mathematics of a Ringworld are those of a suspension bridge with
no-endpoints.
Okay, go on with whatever you were doing.
The Disc
What’s bigger than a Dyson sphere? Dan Alderson,
designer of the Alderson Double Dyson Sphere, now brings you the Alderson Disc.
The shape is that of a phonograph record, with a sun situated in the little
hole. The radius is about that of the orbit of Mars or Jupiter. Thickness: a
few thousand miles.
Gravity is uniformly vertical to the surface
(freshman physics again) except for edge effects.. Engineers do have to worry
about edge effects; so we’ll build a thousand-mile wall around the inner well
to keep the atmosphere from drifting into the sun. The outer edge will take
care of itself.
This thing is massive. It weighs far more than the
sun. We ignore problems of structural strength. Please note that we can inhabit
both sides of the structure.
The sun will always be on the horizon, unless we bob
it, which we do. (This time it is the sun that does the bobbing.) Now it is
always dawn, or dusk, or night.
The Disc would be a wonderful place to stage a Gothic
or a swords-and-sorcery novel. The atmosphere is right, and there are real
monsters. Consider: we can occupy only a part of the Disc the right distance
from the sun. We might as well share the Disc and the cost of its construction
with aliens from hotter or colder climes. Mercurians and Venusians nearer the
sun, Martians out toward the rim, aliens from other stars living wherever it
suits them best. Over the tens of thousands of years, mutations and adaptations
would migrate across the sparsely settled borders. If civilization should fall,
things could get eerie and interesting.
Cosmic Macaroni
Pat Gunkel has designed a structure analogous to the
Ringworld. Imagine a hollow strand of macaroni six hundred million miles long
and not particularly thick—say a mile in diameter. Join it in a loop around the
sun.
Pat calls it a topopolis. He points out that we could
rotate the thing as in the illustration—getting gravity through centrifugal
force—because of the lack of torsion effects. At six hundred million miles long
and a mile wide, the curvature of the tube is negligible. We can set up a biosphere
on the inner surface, with a sunlight tube down the axis and photoelectric
power sources on the outside. So far, we’ve got something bigger than a world
but smaller than a Ringworld.
But we don’t have to be satisfied with one loop! We
can go round and round the sun, as often as we like, as long as the strands
don’t touch. Pat visualizes endless loops of rotating tube, shaped like a hell
of a lot of spaghetti patted roughly into a hollow sphere with a star at the
center (and now we call it an aegagropilous topopolis.) As the madhouse
civilization that built it continued to expand, the coil would reach to other
stars. With the interstellar links using power supplied by the inner coils, the
tube city would expand through the galaxy. Eventually our aegagropilous
galactotopopolis would look like all the stars in the heavens had been embedded
in hair.
The Megasphere
Mathematically at least, it is possible to build a
really big Dyson sphere, with the. heart of a galaxy at its center. There
probably aren’t enough planets to supply us with material. We would have to
disassemble some of the star of the galactic arms. But we’ll be able to do it
by the time we need to.
We put the biosphere- on the outside this time.
Surface. gravity is minute, but the atmospheric gradient is infinitesimal. Once
again, we assume that it is possible for human beings to adapt to free fall. We
live in free fall, above a surface area of tens of millions of light years,
within an atmosphere that doesn’t thin out for scores of light years.
Temperature control is easy: we vary the heat
conductivity of the sphere to pick up and hold enough of the energy from the
stars within. Though the radiating surface is great, the volume to hold heat is
much greater. Immustrial power would come from photoreceptors inside the shell.
Within this limitless universe of air we can build
exceptionally large structures, Ringworld-sized and larger. We could even spin
them for gravity. They would remain aloft for many times the lifespan of any
known civilization before the gravity of the Core stars pulled them down to
contact the surface.
The Megasphere would be a pleasantly poetic place to
live. From a flat Earth hanging in space, one could actually reach a nearby
moon via a chariot drawn by swans, and stand a good chance of finding selenites
there. There would be none of this nonsense about carrying bottles of air
along.
One final step to join two opposing life styles, the
Macrolife tourist types and the sedentary types who prefer to restructure their
home worlds.
The Ringworld rotates at 770 miles/second. Given
appropriate conducting surfaces, this rotation could set up enormous magnetic
effects. These could be used to control the burning of the sun, to cause it to
fire off a jet of gas along the Ringworld axis of rotation. The sun becomes its
own rocket. The Ringworld follows, tethered by gravity.
By the time we run Out of sun, the Ring is moving
through space at Bussard ramjet velocities. We continue to use the magnetic
effect to pinch the interstellar gas into a fusion flame, which now becomes our
sun and our motive power.
The Ringworld makes a problematical, vehicle. What’s
it for? You can’t land the damn thing anywhere. A traveling Ringworld. is not
useful as a tourist vehicle, anything you want to see, you can put on the
Ringworld itself. . . unless it’s a lovely multiple star system like Beta Lyrae
but you just can’t get that close on a flying Ringworld.
A Ringworld in flight would be a bird of ill omen. It
could only be fleeing some galaxy-wide disaster.
Now, galaxies do explode. We have pictures of it
happening. The probable explanation is a chain reaction of novae in the
galactic core. Perhaps we should be maintaining a space watch for fleeing
Ringworlds ... except that we couldn’t do anything about it.
We live on a world: small, immobile, vulnerable, and
unprotected. But it will not be so forever.
$16,949.00
When the phone rings late at night, there is a limit
to who it can be. I had three guesses as I picked it up: a wrong number (all
wrong numbers are the same person), or Lois, or—I didn’t bother to think his
name. It isn’t his anyway.
“Hello?”
“Hello,” he said. “You know who this is?”
“Kelsey.” It’s the name he tells me. “What is it,
Kelsey? You’re not due for another four months.”
“I need an advance. Are you sitting down?”
‘Tm in bed, you son of a bitch.” Reading a book, but
I didn’t tell him that. Better he should be off balance.
“Sorry. I just wanted you braced. I need sixteen
thousand—”
“Bug off!” I slammed the phone down.
There was no point in picking up the book. He’d call
again. Sometimes he waits a few minutes to make me nervous. This time the phone
started ringing almost immediately, and
I snatched it up in the same
instant and held it to my ear without saying anything. It’s a kind of bluffing
game, a game I always lose.
“Kelsey again, and I’m not kidding. I need sixteen thousand,
nine hundred and forty dollars. I need it by the end of the week.”
“You know perfectly well I can’t do that! I can’t
make that much money disappear without somebody noticing: Lois, the bank, the
Bureau of Internal Revenue. Dammit, Kelsey, we’ve worked this out before.”
“The best laid plans of mice and men—”
“Go to hell.” Something hit me then. “That’s a funny
number. As long as I can’t pay anyway, why not make it seventeen thousand, or
twenty? Why, uh, sixteen thousand nine hundred and forty?”
“It just worked out that way.” He sounded defensive.
I probed. “What way?”
“You aren’t my only client.”
“Client? I’m a blackmail victim! At least be honest
with yourself, Kelsey.”
“I am. Shall I tell you what you are?”
“No.” Someone might be listening, which was the point
he was trying to make. “You’ve got other clients, huh? Go to one of them.”
“I did. It was a mistake.” He hesitated, then, “Let’s
call him Horatio, okay? Horatio was a bank teller, long ago. He owns a hardware
store now. I’ve known him about five years. I had to trace him myself, you
understand. He embezzled some money while he was a teller.”
“What did he do, die on you when the mortgage was
due?” I put sarcastic sympathy in my voice.
“I wish he would. No, he waited for my usual call,
which I make on April Fools Day. Not my idea; his. I call him once a year, just
like you. So I called him and told him he was due, and he said he couldn’t
afford it any more. He got kind of brave-panicky, you know how it goes—”
“Don’t I just, damn you.”
“—and he said he wouldn’t pay me another red cent if
he had to go to prison for it. I got him to agree to meet me at a bar and
grill. I hate doing that, Carson. I thought he might try to kill me.”
“Occupational hazard. I may return to this subject.”
I had threatened to kill Kelsey before this.
He sounded disspirited. “It won’t help you. I’m
careful, Carson. I took a gun, and it was a public place, and I got there
first. Besides, there are my files. If I die the cops’ll go through those.”
I was going to need that information, someday, maybe.
But it wasn’t fun to hear. “So you met him in this bar and grill. What then?”
“Well,” he had the money right with him. He put it
right out on the table, and I grabbed it quick because someone might be
watching. Someone was, too. I saw the flashbulb go off, and by the time my eyes
had stopped watering whoever it was was out the door. Ra—” He caught himself.
“Horatio stopped me from getting out. He said, ‘Do you know what the statute of
limitations is for embezzlement?”
“I remembered then. It was seven years, and Horatio
had me by the balls. Blackmail. He figures I’ve taken him for sixteen thousand
nine hundred dollars and no cents, plus forty bucks for the guy with the
camera. He wants it back or he turns me in to the police, complete with
photographs.”
Kelsey had never heard me laugh before and mean it.
“That’s hilarious. The Biter Bit bit. If you turn in your files it’ll just be
more evidence against you. You’ll just have to fight it out in court, Kelsey.
Tell ‘em it’s a first offense.”
“I’ve got a better idea. I’ll get the money from
you.”
“Nope. If I make that much money disappear, too many
people would start wondering why. If they find out, I’m dead. Dead. Now I want
you to remember that word, Kelsey, because it’s important.”
“Files, Carson. I want you to remember that word,
because it’s important. If I die, somebody will go through my files and then
call the cops.”
Well, it hadn’t worked. Poor hard-luck Kelsey. “Okay,
Kelsey. I’ll have the money. Where can we meet?”
“No need. Just get it to me the usual way.”
“Now, don’t be a damn fool. I probably can’t get it
until Saturday, which means I’ll have to get it to you Sunday. There isn’t any
mail Sunday.”
He didn’t answer for awhile. Then, “Are you thinking
of killing me?”
I kept it light. “I’m always thinking of killing you,
Kelsey.”
“Files.”
“I know. Do you want the, money or don’t you?”
I listened to the scared silence on the other end.
Dammit, now I didn’t want him scared. I was going to kill him. I’d have to find
out where the files were first, and for that I’d have to have him alone,
somewhere far away, for several bouts. He was going to be too wary for that. I
could sense it.
“Listen, there’s a third way,” he said suddenly. “If
you move the money someone’s likely to notice. If you kill me someone’s sure to
notice. But there’s a third way.”
“Let’s hear it.”
“Kill Horatio.”
I yelped. “Kelsey, what do you think I am, Murder
Incorporated? I made one mistake. One.”
“You’re not thinking. Carson, there is no connection
between you and Horatio. None! Zilch! You can’t even be suspected!”
“Um.” He was right.
“You’ve got to do this for me, Carson. I’ll never tap
you for another dime . . .“ He went on talking, but now I was way ahead of him.
If I could get Horatio’s photograph of Kelsey, I’d have Kelsey. No more
payments. We’d have each other by the throats.
Poor hard luck Horatio.
THE HOLE MAN
One day Mars will be gone.
Andrew Lear says that it will start with violent
quakes, and end hours or days later, very suddenly. He ought to know. It’s all
his fault.
Lear also says that it won’t happen for from years to
centuries. So we stay, Lear and the rest of us. We study the alien base for
what it can tell us, while the center of the world we stand on is slowly eaten
away. It’s enough to give a man nightmares.
It was Lear who found the alien base.
We had reached Mars: fourteen of us, in the cramped
bulbous life-support system of the Percival Lowell. We were circling in orbit,
taking our time, correcting our maps and looking for anything that thirty years
of Mariner probes might have missed.
We were mapping mascons, among other things. Those
mass concentrations under the lunar maria were almost certainly left by
good-sized asteroids, mountains of rock falling silently out of the sky until
they struck with the energies of thousands of fusion bombs. Mars has been
cruising through the asteroid belt for four billion years. Mars would show
bigger and better mascons. They would affect our orbits.
So Andrew Lear was hard at work, watching pens twitch
on graph paper as we circled Mars. A bit of machinery fell alongside the
Percival Lowell, rotating. Within its thin shell was a weighted double lever
system, deceptively simple: a Forward Mass Detector. The pens mapped its
twitchings.
Over Sirbonis Palus, they began mapping strange
curves.
Another man might have cursed and tried to fix it.
Andrew Lear thought it out, then sent the signal that would stop the
free-falling widget from rotating.
It had to be rotating to map a stationary mass.
But now it was mapping simple sine waves.
Lear went running to Captain Childrey.
Running? It was more like trapeze artistry. Lear
pulled himself along by handholds, kicked off from walls, braked with a hard
push of hands or feet. Moving in free fall is hard work when you’re in a hurry,
and Lear was a forty-year-old astrophysicist, not an athlete. He was blowing
hard when he reached the control bubble.
Childrey—who was an athlete—waited with a patient,
slightly contemptuous smile while Lear caught his breath.
He already thought Lear was crazy. Lear’s words only
confirmed it. “Gravity for sending signals? Dr. Lear, will you please quit
bothering me with your weird ideas. I’m busy. We all are.”
This was not entirely unfair. Some of Lear’s
enthusiasms were peculiar. Gravity generators. Black holes. He thought we
should be searching for Dyson spheres: stars completely enclosed by an
artificial shell. He believed that mass and inertia were two separate things:
that it should be possible to suck the inertia Out of a spacecraft, say, so
that it could accelerate to near lightspeed in a few minutes. He was a
wide-eyed dreamer, and when he was flustered he tended to wander from the
point.
“You don’t understand,” he told Childrey. “Gravity
radiation is harder to block than electromagnetic waves. Patterned gravity
waves would be easy to detect. The advanced civilizations in the galaxy may all
be communicating by gravity. Some of them may even be modulating
pulsars—rotating neutron stars. That’s where Project
Ozma went wrong: they were only
looking for signals in the electromagnetic spectrum.”
Childrey laughed. “Sure. Your little friends are
using neutron stars to send you messages. What’s that got to do with us?”
“Well, look!” Lear held up the strip of flimsy,
nearly weightless paper he’d torn from the machine. “I got this over Sirbonis
Palus. I think we ought to land there.”
“We’re landing in Mare Cimmerium, as you perfectly
well know. The lander is already deployed and ready to board. Dr. Lear, we’ve
spent four days mapping this area. It’s flat. It’s in a green-brown area. When
spring comes next month, we’ll find out whether there’s life there! And
everybody wants it that way except you!”
Lear was still holding the graph paper before him
like a shield. “Please. Take one more circuit over Sirbonis Palus.”
Childrey opted for the extra orbit. Maybe the sine waves
convinced him. Maybe not. He would have liked inconveniencing the rest of us in
Lear’s name, to show him for a fool.
But the next pass showed a tiny circular feature in
Sirbonis Palus. And Lear’s mass indicator was making sine waves again.
The aliens had gone. During our first few months we
always expected them back any minute. The machinery in the base was running
smoothly and perfectly, as if the owners had only just stepped out.
The base was an inverted pie plate two stories high,
and windowless. The air inside was breathable, like Earth’s air three miles up,
but with a bit more oxygen. Mars’s air is far thinner, and poisonous. Clearly
they were not of Mars.
The walls were thick and deeply eroded. They leaned
inward against the internal pressure. The roof was somewhat thinner, just heavy
enough for the pressure to support it. Both walls and roof were of fused
Martian dust.
The heating system still worked—and it was also the
lighting system: grids in the ceiling glowing brick red. The base was always
ten degrees too warm. We didn’t find the off switches for almost a week: they
were behind locked panels. The air system blew gusty winds through the base
until we fiddled with the fans.
We could guess a lot about them from what they’d left
behind. They must have come from a world smaller than Earth, circling a red
dwarf star in close orbit. To be close enough to be warm enough, the planet
would have to be locked in by tides, turning one face always to its star. The
aliens must have evolved on the lighted side, in a permanent red day, with
winds constantly howling over the border from the night side.
And they had no sense of privacy. The only doorways
that had doors in them were airlocks. The second floor was a hexagonal metal
gridwork. It would not block you off from your friends on the floor below. The
bunk room was an impressive expanse of mercury-filled waterbed, wall to wall.
The rooms were too small and cluttered, the furniture and machinery too close
to the doorways, so that at first we were constantly bumping elbows and knees.
The ceilings were an inch short of six feet high on both floors, so that we
tended to walk stooped even if we were short enough to stand upright. Habit.
But Lear was just tall enough to knock his head if he stood up fast, anywhere
in the base.
We thought they must have been smaller than human.
But their padded benches seemed human-designed in size and shape. Maybe it was
their minds that were different: they didn’t need psychic elbow room.
The ship had been bad enough. Now this. Within the
base was instant claustrophobia. It put all of our tempers on hair triggers.
Two of us couldn’t take it.
Lear and Childrey did not
belong on the same planet.
With Childrey, neatness was a compulsion. He had
enough for all of us. During those long months aboard Percival Lowell, it was
Childrey who led us in calisthenics. He flatly would not let anyone skip an
exercise period. We eventually gave up trying.
Well and good. The exercise kept us alive. We weren’t
getting the healthy daily exercise anyone gets walking around the living room
in a one-gravity field.
But after a month on Mars, Childrey was the only man
who still appeared fully dressed in the heat of the alien base. Some of us took
it as a reproof, and maybe it was, because Lear had been the first to doff his
shirt for keeps. In the mess Childrey would inspect his silverware for water
spots, then line it up perfectly parallel.
On Earth, Andrew Lear’s habits would have been no
more than a character trait. In a hurry, he might choose mismatched socks. He
might put off using the dishwasher for a day or two if he were involved in
something interesting. He would prefer a house that looked “lived in.” God help
the maid who tried to clean up his study. He’d never be able to find anything
afterward.
He was a brilliant but one-sided man. Backpacking or
skin diving might have changed his habits—in such pursuits you learn not to
forget any least trivial thing— but they would never have tempted him. An
expedition to Mars was something he simply could not turn down. A pity, because
neatness is worth your life in space.
You don’t leave your fly open in a pressure suit.
A month after the landing, Childrey caught Lear doing
just that.
The “fly” on a pressure suit is a soft rubber tube
over your male member. It leads to a bladder, and there’s a spring clamp on it.
You open the clamp to use it. Then you close the clamp and open an outside
spigot to evacuate the bladder into vacuum.
Similar designs for women involve a catheter, which
is hideously uncomfortable. I presume the designers will keep trying. It seems
wrong to bar half the human race from our ultimate destiny.
Lear was addicted to long walks. He loved the Martian
desert scene: the hard violet sky and the soft blur of whirling orange dust,
the sharp close horizon, the endless emptiness. More: he needed the room. He
was spending all his working time on the alien communicator, with the ceiling
too close over his head and everything else too close to his bony elbows.
He was coming back from a walk, and he met Childrey
coming out. Childrey noticed that the waste spigot on Lear’s suit was open, the
spring broken. Lear had been out for hours. If he’d had to go, he might have
bled to death through flesh ruptured by vacuum.
We never learned all that Childrey said to him out
there. But Lear came in very red about the ears, muttering under his breath. He
wouldn’t talk to anyone.
The NASA psychologists should not have put them both
on that small a planet. Hindsight is wonderful, right? But Lear and Childrey
were each the best choice for competence coupled to the kind of health they
would need to survive the trip. There were astrophysicists as competent and as
famous as Lear, but they were decades older. And Childrey had a thousand
spaceflight hours to his credit. He had been one of the last men on the moon.
Individually, each of us was the best possible man.
It was a damn shame.
The aliens had left the communicator going, like
everything else in the base. It must have been hellishly massive, to judge by
the thick support pillars slanting outward beneath it. It was a bulky tank of a
thing, big enough that the roof had to bulge slightly to give it room. That
gave Lear about a square meter of the only head room in the base.
Even Lear had no idea why they’d put it on the second
floor. It would send through the first floor, or through the bulk of a planet.
Lear learned that by trying it, once he knew enough. He beamed a dot-dash
message through Mars itself to the Forward Mass Detector aboard Lowell.
Lear had set up a Mass Detector next to the
communicator, on an extremely complex platform designed to protect it from
vibration. The Detector produced waves so sharply pointed that some of us
thought they could feel the gravity radiation coming from the communicator.
Lear was in love with the thing.
He skipped meals. When he ate he ate like a starved
wolf. “There’s a heavy point-mass in there,” he told us, talking around a
mouthful of food, two months after the landing. “The machine uses
electromagnetic fields to vibrate it at high speed. Look—” He picked up a
toothpaste tube of tuna spread and held it in front of him. He vibrated it
rapidly. Heads turned to watch him around the zigzagged communal table in the
alien mess. “I’m making gravity waves now. But they’re too mushy because the
tube’s too big, and their amplitude is virtually zero. There’s something very
dense and massive in that machine, and it takes a hell of a lot of field
strength to keep it there.”
“What is it?” someone asked. “Neutronium? Like the
heart of a neutron star?”
Lear shook his head and took another mouthful. “That
size, neutronium wouldn’t be stable. I think it’s a quantum black hole. I don’t
know how to measure its mass yet.”
I said, “A quantum black hole?”
Lear nodded happily. “Luck for me. You know, I was
against the Mars expedition. We could get a lot more for our money by exploring
the asteroids. Among other things, we might have found if there are really
quantum black holes out there. But this one’s already captured!” He stood up,
being careful of his head. He turned in his tray and went back to work.
I remember we stared at each other along the zigzag
mess table. Then we drew lots . . . and I lost.
The day Lear left his waste
spigot open, Childrey had put a restriction on him. Lear was not to leave the
base without an escort.
Lear had treasured the aloneness of those walks. But
it was worse than that. Childrey had given him a list of possible escorts: half
a dozen men Childrey could trust to see to it that Lear did nothing dangerous
to himself or others. Inevitably they were the men most thoroughly trained in
space survival routines, most addicted to Childrey’s own compulsive neatness,
least likely to sympathize with Lear’s way of living. Lear was as likely to ask
Childrey himself to go walking with him.
He almost never went out any more. I knew exactly
where to find him.
I stood beneath him, looking up through the gridwork
floor.
He’d almost finished dismantling the protective
panels around the gravity communicator. What showed inside looked like parts of
a computer in one spot, electromagnetic coils in most places, and a square
array of pushbuttons that might have been the aliens’ idea of a typewriter.
Lear was using a magnetic induction sensor to try to trace wiring without
actually tearing off the insulation.
I called, “How you making out?”
“No good,” he said. “The insulation seems to be one
hundred per cent perfect. Now I’m afraid to open it up. No telling how much
power is running through there, if it needs shielding that good.” He smiled
down at me. “Let me show you something.”
“What?”
He flipped a toggle above a dull gray circular plate.
“This thing is a microphone. It took me a while to find it. I am Andrew Lear,
speaking to whoever may be listening.” He switched it off, then ripped paper
from the Mass Indicator and showed me squiggles interrupting smooth sine waves.
“There. The sound of my voice in gravity radiation. It won’t disappear until
it’s reached the edges of the universe.”
“Lear, you mentioned quantum black holes there.
What’s a quantum black hole?”
“Um. You know what a black hole is.”
“I ought to.” Lear had educated us on the subject, at
length, during the months aboard Lowell.
When a not too massive star has used up its nuclear
fuel, it collapses into a white dwarf. A heavier star—say, 1.44 times the mass
of the sun and larger—can burn out its fuel, then collapse into itself until it
is ten kilometers across and composed solely of neutrons packed edge to edge:
the densest matter in this universe.
But a big star goes further than that. When a really
massive star runs its course
when the radiation pressure within is no longer
strong enough to hold the outer layers against the star’s own ferocious gravity
. . . then it can fall into itself entirely, until gravity is stronger than any
other force, until it is compressed past the Schwarzchild radius and
effectively leaves the universe. What happens to it then is problematical. The
Schwarzchild radius is the boundary beyond which nothing can climb out of the
gravity well, not even light.
The star is gone then, but the mass remains: a
lightless hole in space, perhaps a hole into another universe.
“A collapsing star can leave a black hole,” said
Lear. “There may be bigger black holes, whole galaxies that have fallen into
themselves. But there’s no other way a black hole can form, now.”
“So?”
“There was a time when black holes of all sizes could
form. That was during the Big Bang, the explosion that started the expanding
universe. The forces in that blast could have compressed little local vortices
of matter past the Schwarzchild radius. What that left behind—the smallest
ones, anyway—we call quantum black holes.”
I heard a distinctive laugh behind me as Captain
Childrey walked into view. The bulk of the communicator would have hidden him
from Lear, and I hadn’t heard him come up. He called, “Just how big a thing are
you talking about? Could I pick one up and throw it at you?”
“You’d disappear into one that size,” Lear said seriously.
“A black hole the mass of the Earth would only be a centimeter across. No, I’m
talking about things from ten-to-the-minus-fifth grams on up. There could be
one at the center of the sun—”
“Eek!”
Lear was trying. He didn’t like being kidded, but he didn’t
know how to stop it. Keeping it serious wasn’t the way, but he didn’t know that
either. “Say ten-to-the-seventeenth grams in mass and ten-to-the-minus-eleven
centimeters across. It would be swallowing a few atoms a day.”
“Well, at least you know where to find it,” said
Childrey. “Now all you have to do is go after it.”
Lear nodded, still serious. “There could be quantum
black holes in asteroids. A small asteroid could capture a quantum black hole
easily enough, especially if it was charged; a black hole can hold a charge,
you know—”
“Ri-ight.”
“All we’d have to do is check out a small asteroid
with the Mass Detector. If it masses more than it should, we push it aside and
see if it leaves a black hole behind.”
“You’d need little teeny eyes to see something that
small. Anyway, what would you do with it?”
“You put a charge on it, if it hasn’t got one
already, and electromagnetic fields. You can vibrate it to make gravity; then
you manipulate it with radiation. I think I’ve got one in here,” he said,
patting the alien communicator.
“Ri-ight,” said Childrey, and he went away laughing.
Within a week the whole base
was referring to Lear as the Hole Man, the man with the black hole between his
ears.
It hadn’t sounded funny when Lear was telling me about
it. The rich variety of the universe. . . But when Childrey talked about the
black hole in Lear’s Anything Box, it sounded hilarious.
Please note: Childrey did not misunderstand anything
Lear had said. Childrey wasn’t stupid. He merely thought Lear was crazy. He
could not have gotten away with making fun of Lear, not among educated men,
without knowing exactly what he was doing.
Meanwhile the work went on.
There were pools of Marsdust, fascinating stuff, fine
enough to behave like viscous oil, and knee-deep. Wading through it wasn’t
dangerous, but it was very hard work, and we avoided it. One day Brace waded
out into the nearest of the pools and started feeling around under the dust.
Hunch, he said. He came up with some eroded plastic-like containers. The aliens
had used the pool as a garbage dump.
We were having little luck with chemical analysis of
the base materials. They were virtually indestructible. We learned more about
the chemistry of the alien visitors themselves. They had left traces of themselves
on the benches and on the communal waterbed. The traces had most of the
chemical components of protoplasm, but Arsvey found no sign of DNA. Not
surprising, he said, There must be other giant organic molecules suitable for
gene coding.
The aliens had left volumes of notes behind. The
script was a mystery, of course, but we studied the photographs and diagrams. A
lot of them were notes on anthropology!
The aliens had been studying Earth during the first
Ice Age.
None of us were anthropologists, and that was a damn
shame. We never learned if we’d found anything new. All we could do was
photograph the stuff and beam it up to Lowell. One thing was sure: the aliens
had left very long ago, and they had left the lighting and air systems running
and the communicator sending a carrier wave.
For us? Who else?
The alternative was that the base had been switched
off for some six hundred thousand years, then come back on when something
detected Lowell approaching Mars. Lear didn’t believe it. “If the power had
been off in the communicator,” he said, “the mass wouldn’t be in there any
more. The fields have to be going to hold it in place. It’s smaller than an
atom; it’d fall through anything solid.”
So the base power system had been running for all
that time. What the hell could it be? And where? We traced some cables and
found that it was under the base, under several yards of Marsdust fused to
lava. We didn’t try to dig through that.
The source was probably geophysical: a hole deep into
the core of the planet. The aliens might have wanted to dig such a hole to take
core samples. Afterward they would have set up a generator to use the
temperature difference between the core and the surface.
Meanwhile, Lear spent some time tracing down the
power sources in the communicator. He found a way to shut off the carrier wave.
Now the mass, if there was a mass, was at rest in there. It was strange to see
the Forward Mass Detector pouring out straight lines instead of drastically
peaked sine waves.
We were ill-equipped to take advantage of these
riches. We had been fitted out to explore Mars, not a bit of civilization from
another star. Lear was the exception. He was in his element, with but one thing
to mar his happiness.
I don’t know what the final argument was about. I was
engaged on another project. The Mars lander still had fuel in it. NASA had
given us plenty of fuel to hover while we looked for a landing spot. After some
heated discussion, we had agreed to take the vehicle up and hover it next to
the nearby dust pool on low thrust.
It worked fine. The dust rose up in a great soft
cloud and went away toward the horizon, leaving the pond bottom covered with
otherworldly junk. And more! Arsvey started screaming at Brace to back off.
Fortunately Brace kept his head. He tilted us over to one side and took us away
on a gentle curve. The backblast never touched the skeletons.
We worked out there for hours, being very finicky
indeed. Here was another skill none of us would own to, but we’d read about how
careful an archaeologist has to be, and we did our best. Traces of water had
had time to turn some of the dust to natural cement, so that some of the
skeletons were fixed to the rock. But we got a couple free. We put them on
stretchers and brought them back. One crumbled the instant the air came hissing
into the lock. We left the other outside.
The aliens had not had the habit of taking baths.
We’d set up a bathtub with very tall sides, in a room the aliens had reserved
for some incomprehensible ritual. I had stripped off my pressure Suit and was
heading for the bathtub, very tired, hoping that nobody would be in it.
I heard voices before I saw them.
Lear was shouting.
Childrey wasn’t, but his voice was a carrying one. It
carried mockery. He was standing between the supporting pillars. His hands were
on his hips, his teeth gleamed white, his head was thrown back to look up at
Lear.
He finished talking. For a time neither of them
moved. Then Lear made a sound of disgust. He turned away and pushed one of the
buttons on what might have been an alien typewriter keyboard.
Childrey looked startled. He slapped at his right
thigh and brought the hand away bloody. He stared at it, then looked up at
Lear. He started to ask a question.
He crumpled slowly in the low gravity. I got to him
before he hit the ground. I cut his pants open and tied a handkerchief over the
blood spot. It was a small puncture, but the flesh was puckered above it on a
line with his groin.
Childrey tried to speak. His eyes were wide. He
coughed, and there was blood in his mouth.
I guess I froze. How could I help if I couldn’t tell
what had happened? I saw a blood spot on his right shoulder, and I tore the
shirt open and found another tiny puncture wound.
The doctor arrived.
It took Childrey an hour to die, but the doctor had
given up much earlier. Between the wound in his shoulder and the wound in his
thigh, Childrey’s flesh had been ruptured in a narrow line that ran through one
lung and his stomach and part of his intestinal tract. The autopsy showed a
tiny, very neat hole drilled through the hipbones.
We looked for, and found, a hole in the floor beneath
the communicator. It was the size of a pencil lead, and packed with dust.
“I made a mistake,” Lear told the rest of us at the
inquest. “I should never have touched that particular button. It must have
switched off the fields that held the mass in place. It just dropped. Captain
Childrey was underneath.”
And it had gone straight through him, eating the mass
of him as it went.
“No, not quite,” said Lear. “I’d guessed it massed
about ten-to-the-fourteenth grams. That only makes it ten-to-the-minus-sixth
Angstrom across, much smaller than an atom. It wouldn’t have absorbed much. The
damage was done to Childrey by tidal effects as it passed through him. You saw
how it pulverized the material of the floor.”
Not surprisingly, the subject of murder did come up.
Lear shrugged it off. “Murder with what? Childrey
didn’t believe there was a black hole in there at all. Neither did many of
you.” He smiled suddenly. “Can you imagine what the trial would be like?
Imagine the prosecuting attorney trying to tell a jury what he thinks happened.
First he’s got to tell them what a black hole is. Then a quantum black hole.
Then he’s got to explain why he doesn’t have the murder weapon, and where he
left it, freely falling through Mars! And if he gets that far without being
laughed out of court, he’s still got to explain how a thing smaller than an
atom could hurt anyone!”
But didn’t Dr. Lear know the thing was dangerous?
Could he not have guessed its enormous mass from the way it behaved?
Lear spread his hands. “Gentlemen, we’re dealing with
more variables than just mass. Field strength, for instance. I might have
guessed its mass from the force it took to keep it there, but did any of us
expect the aliens to calibrate their dials in the metric system?”
Surely there must have been safeties to keep the
fields from being shut off accidentally. Lear must have bypassed them.
“Yes, I probably did, accidentally. I did quite a lot
of fiddling to find out how things worked.”
It got dropped there. Obviously there would be no
trial. No ordinary judge or jury could be expected to understand what the
attorneys would be talking about. A couple of things never did get mentioned.
For instance: Childrey’s last words. I might or might
not have repeated them if I’d been asked to. They were: “All right, show me!
Show it to me or admit it isn’t there!”
As the court was breaking up I spoke to Lear with my
voice lowered. “That was probably the most unique murder weapon in history.”
He whispered, “If you said that in company I could
sue for slander.”
“Yeah? Really? Are you going to explain to a jury
what you think I implied happened?”
“No, I’ll let you get away with it this time.”
“Hell, you didn’t get away scot-free yourself. What
are you going to study now?
The only known black hole in
the universe, and you let it drop through your fingers.”
Lear frowned. “You’re right. Partly right, anyway.
But I knew as much about it as I was going to, the way I was going. Now. . . I
stopped it vibrating in there, then took the mass of the entire setup with the
Forward Mass Sensor. Now the black hole isn’t in there any more. I can get the
mass of the black hole by taking the mass of the communicator alone.”
“And I can cut the machine open, see what’s inside.
How they controlled it. Damn it, I wish I were six years old.”
“What? Why?”
“Well. . . I don’t have the times straightened out.
The math is chancy. Either a few years from now, or a few centuries, there’s
going to be a black hole between Earth and Jupiter. It’ll be big enough to
study. I think about forty years.”
When I realized what he was implying, I didn’t know
whether to laugh or scream. “Lear, you can’t think that something that small
could absorb Mars!”
“Well, remember that it absorbs everything it comes
near. A nucleus here, an electron there . . . and it’s not just waiting for
atoms to fall into it. Its gravity is ferocious, and it’s falling back and
forth through the center of the planet, sweeping up matter. The more it eats,
the bigger it gets, with its volume going up as the cube of the mass. Sooner or
later, yes, it’ll absorb Mars. By then it’ll be just less than a millimeter
across—big enough to see.”
“Could it happen within thirteen months?”
“Before we leave? Hmm.” Lear’s eyes took on a faraway
look. “I don’t think so. I’ll have to work it out. The math is chancy...
The Fourth Profession
The doorbell rang around noon on Wednesday.
I sat up in bed and—it was the oddest of hangovers.
My head didn’t spin. My sense of balance was quiveringly alert. At the
same time my mind was clogged with the things I knew: facts that wouldn’t
relate, churning in my head.
It was like walking the high wire while
simultaneously trying to solve an Agatha Christie mystery. Yet I was doing
neither. I was just sitting up in bed, blinking.
I remembered the Monk, and the pills. How many pills?
The bell rang again.
Walking to the door was an eerie sensation. Most
people pay no attention to their somesthetic senses. Mine were clamoring for
attention, begging to be tested—by a backflip, for instance. I resisted. I
don’t have the muscles for doing backflips.
I couldn’t remember taking any acrobatics pills.
The man outside my door was big and blond and blocky.
He was holding an unfamiliar badge up to the lens of my spy-eye, in a wide hand
with short, thick fingers. He had candid blue eyes, a square, honest face—a
face I recognized. He’d been in the Long Spoon last night, at a single table in
a corner.
Last night he had looked morose, introspective, like
a man whose girl had left him for Mr. Wrong. A face guaranteed to get him left
alone. I’d noticed him only because he wasn’t drinking enough to match the
face.
Today he looked patient, endlessly patient, with the
patience of a dead man.
And he had a badge. I let him in.
“William Morris,” he said, identifying himself.
“Secret Service. Are you Edward Harley Frazer, owner of the Long Spoor Bar?”
“Part-owner.”
“Yes, that’s right. Sony to bother you, Mr. Frazer. I
see you keep bartender’s hours.” He was looking at the wrinkled pair of
underpants I had on.
“Sit down,” I said, waving at the chair. I badly
needed to sit down myself. Standing, I couldn’t think about anything but
standing. My balance was all-conscious. My heels would not rest solidly on the
floor. They barely touched. My weight was all on my toes; my body insisted on
standing that way.
So I dropped onto the edge of the bed, but it felt
like I was giving a trampoline performance. The poise, the grace, the polished
ease! Hell. “What do you want from me, Mr. Morris? Doesn’t the Secret Service
guard the President?”
His answer sounded like rote-memory. “Among other
concerns, such as counterfeiting, we do guard the President and his immediate
family and the President-elect, and the Vice President if he asks us to.” He
paused. “We used to guard foreign dignitaries too.”
That connected. “You’re here about the Monk.”
“Right.” Morris looked down at his hands. He should
have had an air of professional self-assurance to go with the badge. It wasn’t
there. “This is an odd case, Frazer. We took it because it used to be our job
to protect foreign visitors, and because nobody else would touch it.”
“So last night you were in the Long Spoon guarding a
visitor from outer space.”
“Just so.”
“V/here were you night before last?”
“Was that when he first appeared?”
“Yah,” I said, remembering. “Monday night...”
He came in an hour after opening time. He seemed to
glide, with the hem of his robe just brushing the floor. By his gait he might
have been, moving on wheels. His shape was wrong, in a way that made your eyes
want to twist around to straighten it out.
There is something queer about the garment that gives
a Monk his name. The hood is open in front, as if eyes might hide within its
shadow, and the front of the robe is open too. But the loose cloth hides more
than it ought to. There is too much shadow.
Once I thought the robe parted as he walked toward
me. But there seemed to be nothing inside.
In the Long Spoon was utter silence. Every eye was on
the Monk as he took a stool at one end of the bar, and ordered.
He looked alien, and was. But he seemed
supernatural.
He used the oddest of drinking systems. I keep my
house brands on three long shelves, more or less in order of type. The Monk
moved down the top row of bottles, right to left, ordering a shot from each
bottle. He took his liquor straight, at room temperature. He drank quietly,
steadily, and with what seemed to be total concentration.
He spoke only to order.
He showed nothing of himself but one hand. That hand
looked like a chicken’s foot, but bigger, with lumpy-looking, very flexible
joints, and with five toes instead of four.
At closing time the Monk was four bottles from the
end of the row. He paid me in one dollar bills, and left, moving steadily, the
hem of his robe just brushing the floor. I testify as an expert: he was sober.
The alcohol had not affected him at all.
“Monday night,” I said. “He shocked the hell out of
us. Morris, what was a Monk doing in a bar in Hollywood? I thought all the
Monks were in New York.”
“So did we.”
“Oh?”
‘We didn’t know he was on the West Coast until it hit
the newspapers yesterday morning. That’s why you didn’t see more reporters
yesterday. We kept them off your back. I came in last night to question you,
Frazer. I changed my mind when I saw that the Monk was already here.”
“Question me. Why? All I did was serve him
drinks.”
“Okay, let’s start there. Weren’t you afraid the
alcohol might kill a Monk?”
‘It occurred to me.”
“Well?”
“I served him what he asked for. It’s the Monks’ own
doing that nobody knows anything about Monks. We don’t even know what shape
they are, let alone how they’re put together. If liquor does things to a Monk,
it’s his own lookout. Let him check the chemistry.”
“Sounds reasonable.”
“Thanks.”
“It’s also the reason I’m here,” said Morris. “We
know too little about the Monks. We didn’t even know they existed until something
over two years ago.”
“Oh?” I’d only started reading about them a month
ago.
“It wouldn’t be that long, except that all the
astronomers were looking in that direction already, studying a recent nova in
Sagittarius. So they caught the Monk starship a little sooner, but it was
already inside Pluto’s orbit.
“They’ve been communicating with us for over a year.
Two weeks ago they took up orbit around the Moon. There’s only one Monk
starship, and only one ground-to-orbit craft, as far as we know. The ground-to-orbit
craft has been sitting in the ocean off Manhattan Island, convenient to the
United Nations Building, for those same two weeks. Its crew are supposed to be
all the Monks there are in the world.
“Mr. Frazer, we don’t even know how your Monk got out
here to the West Coast! Almost anything you could tell us would help. Did you
notice anything odd about him, these last two nights?”
“Odd?” I grinned. “About a Monk?”
It took him a moment to get it, and then his
answering smile was wan. “Odd for a Monk.”
“Yah,” I said, and tried to concentrate. It was the
wrong move. Bits of fact buzzed about my skull, trying to fit themselves
together.
Morris was saying, “Just talk, if you will. The Monk
came back Tuesday night. About what time?”
“About four-thirty. He had a case-
of—pills—RNA..."
It was no use. I knew too many, things, all at once,
all unrelated. I knew the name of the Garment to Wear Among Strangers, its
principle and its purpose. I knew about Monks and alcohol. I knew the names of
the five primary colors,, so that for a moment I was blind with the memory of
the colors themselves, colors no man would ever see.
Morris was standing over me, looking worried. “What
is it? What’s wrong?”
“Ask me anything.” My voice was high and strange and
breathless with giddy laughter. “Monks have four limbs, all hands, each with a
callus heel behind the fingers. I know their names, Morris. Each hand, each
finger. I know how many eyes a Monk has. One. And the whole skull is an ear.
There’s no word for ear, but medical terms for each of the—resonating
cavities—between the lobes of the brain—”
“You look dizzy. You don’t sample your own wares, do
you,’ Frazer?”
“I’m the opposite of dizzy. There’s a compass in my
head. I’ve got absolute direction. Morris, it must have been the pills.”
“Pills?” Morris bad small, squarish ears that
couldn’t possibly have come to point. But I got that impression.
“He had a sample case full of—education pills-”
“Easy now.” He put a steadying hand on my shoulder. “Take
it easy. Just start at the beginning, and talk. I’ll make some coffee.”
“Good.” Coffee sounded wonderful, suddenly. “Pot’s
ready. Just plug it in. I fix it before I go to sleep.”
Morris disappeared around the partition that marks
off the kitchen alcove from the bedroom/living room in my small apartment. His
voice floated back, “Start at the beginning: He came back Tuesday night.”
“He came back Tuesday night,” I repeated.
“Hey, your coffee’s already perked. You must have
plugged it in in your sleep. Keep talking.” ‘
“He started his drinking where he’d left off, four
bottles from the end of the top row. I’d have sworn he was cold sober. His
voice didn’t give him away...“
His voice didn’t give him away because it was only a
whisper, too low to make out. His translator spoke like a computer, putting
single words together from a man’s recorded voice. It spoke slowly and with
care. Why not? It was speaking an alien tongue.
The Monk had had five tonight. That put him through
the ryes and the bourbons and the Irish whiskeys, and several of the liqueurs.
Now he was tasting the vodkas.
At that point I worked up the courage to ask him what
he was doing.
He explained at length. The Monk starship was a
commercial venture, a trading mission following a daisy chain of stars. He was
a sampler for the group. He was mightily pleased with some of the wares he had
sampled here. Probably he would order great quantities of them, to be
freeze-dried for easy storage. Add alcohol and water to reconstitute.
“Then you won’t be wanting to test all the vodkas,” I
told him. “Vodka isn’t much more than water and alcohol.”
He thanked me.
“The same goes for most gins, except for flavorings.”
I lined up four gins in front of him. One was Tanqueray. One was a Dutch gin
you have to keep chilled like some liqueurs. The others were fairly ordinary
products. I left him with these while I served customers.
I had expected a mob tonight. Word should have
spread. Have a drink in the Long Spoon, you’ll see a Thing from Outer Space.
But the place was half empty. Louise was handling them nicely.
I was proud of Louise. As with last night, tonight
she behaved as if nothing out of the ordinary was happening. The mood was
contagious. I could almost hear the customers thinking: We like our privacy
when we drink. A Thing from Outer Space is entitled to the same consideration.
It was strange to compare her present insouciance
with the way her eyes had bugged at her first sight of a Monk.
The Monk finished tasting the gins. “I am concerned
for the volatile fractions,” he said. “Some of your liquors will lose taste
from condensation.”
I told him he was probably right. And I asked, “How
do you pay for your cargos?”
“With knowledge."
“That’s fair. What kind of knowledge?”
The Monk reached under his robe and produced a flat
sample case. He opened it. It was full of pills. There was a large glass bottle
full of a couple of hundred identical pills; and these were small and pink and
triangular. But most of the sample case was given over to big, round pills of
all colors, individually wrapped and individually labeled in the wandering Monk
script.
No two labels were alike. Some of the notations
looked hellishly complex.
“These are knowledge,” said the Monk.
“Ah,” I said, and wondered if I was being put on. An
alien can have a sense of humor, can’t he? And there’s no way to tell if he’s
lying.
“A certain complex organic molecule has much to do
with memory,” said the Monk. “Ribonucleic acid. It is present and active in the
nervous systems of most organic beings. Wish you to learn my language?”
I nodded.
He pulled a pill loose and stripped, it of its
wrapping, which fluttered to the bar like a shred of cellophane. The Monk put
the pill in my hand and said, “You must swallow it now, before the air ruins it,
now that it is out of its wrapping.”
The pill was marked like a target in red and green
circles. It was big and bulky going down.
“You must be crazy,” Bill Morris said wonderingly.
“It looks that way to me, too, now. But think about
it; This was a Monk, an alien, an ambassador to the whole human race. He
wouldn’t have fed me anything dangerous, not without carefully considering all
the possible consequences.”
"He wouldn’t, would he?”
“That’s the way it seemed.” I remembered about Monks
and alcohol. It was a pill memory, surfacing as if I had known it all my life.
It came too late...
“A language says things about the person who speaks
it, about the way he thinks and the way he lives. Morris, the Monk language says
a lot about Monks.”
“Call me Bill,” he said irritably.
“Okay. Take Monks and alcohol. Alcohol works on a
Monk the way it works on a man, by starving his brain cells a little. But in a
Monk it gets absorbed more slowly. A Monk can stay high for a week on a night’s
dedicated drinking.
“I knew he was sober when he left Monday night By
Tuesday night he must have been pretty high.”
I sipped my coffee. Today it tasted different, and
better, as if memories of some Monk staple foods had worked their way as
overtones into my taste buds.
Morris said, “And you didn’t know it.”
“Know it? I was counting on his sense of
responsibility!” Morris shook his head in pity, except that he seemed to be
grinning inside.
“We talked some more after that . . . and I took some
more pills.”
“Why?”
“I was high on the first one.”
“It made you drunk?”
“Not drunk, but I couldn’t think straight. My head
was full of Monk words all trying to fit themselves to meanings. I was dizzy
with nonhuman images and words I couldn’t pronounce."
“Just how many pills did you take?”
“I don’t remember.”
“Swell.”
An image surfaced. “I do remember saying, ‘But how
about something unusual? Really unusual.’"
Morris was no longer amused. “You’re lucky you can
still talk. The chances you took, you should be a drooling idiot this morning!”
“It seemed reasonable at the time.”
“You don’t remember how many pills you took?”
I shook my head. Maybe the motion jarred something
loose. “That bottle of little triangular pills. I know what they were. Memory
erasers.”
“Good God! You didn’t—”
“No, no, Morris. They don’t erase your whole memory.
They erase pill memories. The RNA in a Monk memory pill is tagged somehow, so
that the eraser pill can pick it out and break it down.”
Morris gaped. Presently he said, “That’s incredible.
The education pills are wild enough, but that—You see what they must do,
don’t you? They hang a radical on each and every RNA molecule in each and every
education pill. The active principle in the eraser pill is an enzyme for just
that radical.”
He saw my expression and said, “Never mind, just take
my word for it. They must have had the education pills for a hundred years
before they worked out the eraser principle.”
“Probably. The pills must be very old.”
He pounced. “How do you know that?”
“The name for the pill has only one syllable, like fork.
There are dozens of words for kinds of pill reflexes, for swallowing the wrong
pill, for side effects depending on what species is taking the pill. There’s a
special word for an animal, training pill, and another one for a slave training
pill. Morris, I think my memory is beginning to settle down.”
“Good!”
“Anyway, the Monks must have been peddling pills to
aliens for thousands of years. I’d guess tens of thousands.”
“Just how many kinds of pill were in that case?”
I tried to remember. My head felt congested.
“I don’t know if there was more than one of each kind
of pill. There were four stiff flaps like the leaves of a book, and each flap
had rows of little pouches with a pill in each one. The flaps were maybe
sixteen pouches long by eight across. Maybe. Morris, we ought to call Louise.
She probably remembers better than I do, even if she noticed less at the time.”
“You mean Louise Schu the barmaid? She might at that.
Or she might jar something loose in your memory.”
“Right.”
“Call her. Tell her we’ll meet her. Where’s she live,
Santa Monica?”
He’d done his homework, all right.
Her phone was still ringing when Morris said,
"Wait a minute. Tell her we’ll meet her at the Long Spoon. And tell her
we’ll pay her amply for her trouble.”
Then Louise answered and told me I’d jarred her out
of a sound sleep, and I told her she’d be paid amply for her trouble, and she
said what the hell kind of a crack was that?
After I hung up I asked, “Why the Long Spoon?”
“I’ve thought of something. I was one of the last
customers out last night. I don’t think you cleaned up.”
“I was feeling peculiar. We cleaned up a little, I
think.”
“Did you empty the wastebaskets?”
‘We don’t usually. There’s a guy who comes in in the
morning and mops the floors and empties the wastebaskets and so forth. The
trouble is, he’s been home with flu the last couple of days. Louise and I have
been going early.”
“Good. Get dressed, Frazer. We’ll go down to the Long
Spoon and Count the pieces of Monk cellophane in the waste’ baskets. They
shouldn’t be too hard to identify. They’ll tell us how many pills you took.”
I noticed it while I was dressing. Morris’s attitude
had, changed subtly. He had become proprietary. He tended to stand closer to
me, as if someone might try to steal me, or as if I might try to steal away.
Imagination, maybe. But I began to wish I didn’t know
so much about Monks.
I stopped to empty the percolator before leaving. Habit.
Every afternoon I put the percolator in the dishwasher before I leave. When I
come home at three A.M. it’s ready to load.
I poured out the dead coffee, took the machine apart,
and stared.
The grounds in the top were fresh coffee, barely damp
from steam. They hadn’t been used yet.
There was another Secret Service man outside my door,
a, tall Midwesterner with a toothy grin. His name was George Littleton. He
spoke not a word after Bill Morris introduced us, probably because I looked
like I’d bite him.
I would have. My balance nagged me like a sore tooth.
I couldn’t forget it for an instant.
Going down in the elevator, I could feel the universe
shifting around me. Thefe seemed to be a four-dimensional map in my head, with
me in the center and the rest of the universe traveling around me at various
changing velocities.
The car we used was a Lincoln continental. George
drove. My map became three times as active, recording every touch of brake and
accelerator.
“We’re putting you on salary,” said Morris, “if
that’s agreeable. You know more about Monks than any living man. We’ll class
you as a consultant and pay you a thousand dollars a day to put down all you
remember about Monks.”
“I’d want the right to quit whenever I think I’m
mined out.”
“That seems all right,” said Morris. He was lying.
They would keep me just as long as they felt like it. But there wasn’t a thing
I could do about it at the moment.
I didn’t even know what made me so sure.
So I asked, “What about Louise?”
“She spent most of her time waiting on tables, as I
remember. She won’t know much. We’ll pay her a thousand a day for a couple of
days. Anyway, for today, whether she knows anything or not.”
“Okay,” I said, and tried to settle back.
“You’re the valuable one, Frazer. You’ve been
fantastically lucky. That Monk language pill is going to give us a terrific
advantage whenever we deal with Monks. They’ll have to learn about us. We’ll
know about them already. Frazer, what does a Monk look like under the cowl and
robe?”
“Not human,” I said. “They only stand upright to make
us feel at ease. And there’s a swelling along one side that looks like
equipment under the robe, but it isn’t. It’s part of the digestive system. And
the head is as big as a basketball, but it’s half hollow.”
"They’re natural quadrupeds?”
“Yah. Four-footed, but climbers. The animal they
evolved from lives in forests of plants that look like giant dandelions. They
can throw rooks with any foot. They’re still around on Center; that’s the home
planet. You’re not writing this down.”
“There’s a tape recorder going.”
“Really?” I’d been kidding.
“You’d better believe it. We can use anything you
happen to remember. We still don’t even know how your Monk got out here to
California.”
My Monk, forsooth.
“They briefed me pretty quickly yesterday. Did I tell
you? I was visiting my parents in Cannel when my supervisor called me yesterday
morning. Ten hours later I knew just about everything anyone knows about Monks.
Except you, Frazer.
“Up until yesterday we thought that every Monk on
Earth was either in the United Nations Building or aboard the Monk
ground-to-orbit ship.
‘We’ve been in that ship, Frazer. Several men have
been through it, all trained astronauts wearing lunar exploration suits. Six
Monks landed on Earth—unless more were hiding somewhere aboard the
ground-to-orbit ship. Can you think of any reason why they should do that?”
“No.”
“Neither can anyone else. And there are six Monks
accounted for this morning. All in New York. Your Monk went home last night.”
That jarred me. “How?”
‘We don’t know. We’re checking plane flights, silly
as that sounds. Wouldn’t you think a stewardess would notice a Monk on her
flight? Wouldn’t you think she’d go to the newspapers?”
“Sure.”
“We’re also checking flying saucer sightings.”
I laughed. But by now that sounded logical.
“If that doesn’t pan out, we’ll be seriously
considering teleportation. Would you—”
“That’s it,” I said without surprise. It had come the
way a memory comes, from the back of my mind, as if it had always been there.
“He gave me a teleportation pill. That’s why I’ve got absolute direction. To
teleport I’ve got to know where in the universe I am.”
Morris got bug-eyed. “You can teleport?”
“Not from a speeding car,” I said with reflexive
fear. “That’s death. I’d keep the velocity.”
“Oh.” He was edging away as if I had sprouted horns.
More memory floated up, and I said, “Humans can’t
teleport anyway. That pill was for another market.”
Morris relaxed. “You might have said that right
away.”
“I only just remembered.”
“Why did you take it, if it’s for aliens?”
“Probably for the location talent. I don’t remember.
I used to get lost pretty easily. I never will again. Morris, I’d be safer on a
high wire than you’d be crossing a street with the Walk sign.”
“Could that have been your ‘something unusual’?”
“Maybe,” I said. At the same time I was somehow sure
that it wasn’t.
Louise was in the dirt parking lot next to the Long
Spoon. She was getting out of her Mustang when we pulled up. She waved an arm
like a semaphore and walked briskly toward us, already talking. “Alien
creatures in the Long Spoon, forsooth!” I’d taught her that word. “Ed, I keep
telling you the customers aren’t human. Hello, are you Mr. Morris? I remember you.
You were in last night. You had four drinks. All night.”
Morris smiled. “Yes, but I tipped big. Call me Bill,
okay?”
Louise Schu was a cheerful blonde, by choice, not
birth. She’d been working in the Long Spoon for five years now. A few of my
regulars knew my name; but they all knew hers.
Louise’s deadliest enemy was the extra twenty pounds
she carried as padding. She had been dieting for some decades. Two years back
she had gotten serious about it and stopped cheating. She was mean for
the next several months. But, clawing and scratching and half-starved every
second, she had worked her way down to one hundred and twenty-five pounds. She
threw a terrific celebration that night and—to hear her tell it afterward.—ate
her way back to one-forty-five in a single night.
Padding or not, she’d have made someone a wonderful
wife. I’d thought of marrying her myself. But my marriage had been too little
fun, and was too recent, and the divorce had hurt too much. And the alimony.
The alimony was why I was living in a cracker box, and also the reason I
couldn’t afford to get married again.
While Louise was opening up, Morris ‘bought a paper
from the coin rack.
The Long Spoon was a mess. Louise and I had cleaned
off the tables and collected the dirty glasses and emptied the ash trays into
waste bins. But the collected glasses were still dirty and the waste bins were
still full.
Morris began spreading newspaper over an area of
floor.
And I stopped with my hand in my pocket.
Littleton came out from behind the bar, hefting both
of the waste bins. He spilled one out onto the newspaper, then the other. He
and Morris began spreading the trash apart.
My fingertips were brushing a scrap of Monk
cellophane.
I’d worn these pants last night, under the apron.
Some impulse kept me from yelling out. I brought my
band out of my pocket, empty. Louise had gone to help the others sift the trash
with their fingers. I joined them.
Presently Morris said, “Four. I hope that’s all.
We’ll search the bar too.”
And I thought: Five.
And I thought: I learned five new professions last
night. What are the odds that I’ll want to hide at least one of them?
If my judgment was bad enough to make me take a
teleport pill intended for something with too many eyes, what else might I have
swallowed last night?
I might be an advertising man, or a superbly trained
thief, or a Palace Executioner skilled in the ways of torture. Or I might have
asked for something really unpleasant, like the profession followed by Hitler
or Alexander the Great.
“Nothing here,” Morris said from behind the bar.
Louise shrugged agreement. Morris handed the four scraps to Littleton and said,
“Run these out to Douglass. Call us from there.
‘We’ll put them through chemical analysis,” he said
to Louise and me. “One of them may be real cellophane off a piece of candy. Or
we might have missed one or two. For the moment, let’s assume there were four.”
“All right,” I said.
“Does it sound right, Frazer? Should it be three, or
five?”
“I don’t know.” As far as memory went, I really
didn’t. “Four, then. We’ve identified two. One was a course in teleportation
for aliens. The other was a language course. Right?”
“It looks that way.”
“What else did he give you?”
I could feel the memories floating back there, but
all scrambled together. I shook my head.
Morris looked frustrated.
“Excuse me,” said Louise. “Do you drink on duty?”
“Yes,” Morris said without hesitation.
And Louise and I weren’t on duty. Louise mixed us
three gin-and-tonics and brought them to us at one of the padded booths Morris
had opened a flattish briefcase that turned out to be part tape recorder. He
said, “We won’t lose anything now. Louise, let’s talk about last night.”
“I hope I can help.”
“Just what happened in here after Ed took his first
pill?”
“Mmm.” Louise looked at me askance. “I don’t know
when he took that first pill. About one I noticed that he was acting strange.
He was slow on orders. He got drinks wrong.
“I remembered that he had done that for awhile last
fall, when he got his divorce—”
I felt my face go stiff. That was unexpected pain,
that memory. I am far from being my own best customer; but there had been a
long lost weekend about a year ago. Louise had talked me out of trying to drink
and bartend too. So I had gone drinking. When it was out of my system I had
gone back to tending bar.
She was saying, “Last night I thought it might be the
same problem. I covered for him, said the orders twice when I had to, watched
him make the drinks so he’d get them right.
“He was spending most of his time talking to the
Monk. But Ed was talking English, and the Monk was making whispery noises in
his throat. Remember last week, when they put the Monk speech on television? It
sounded like that.
“I saw Ed take a pill from the Monk and swallow it
with a glass of water.”
She turned to me, touched my ann. “I thought you were
crazy. I tried to stop you.”
“I don’t remember.”
“The place was practically empty by then. Well, you
laughed at me and said that the pill would teach you not to get lost! I didn’t
believe it. But the Monk turned on his translator gadget and said the same
thing.”
“I wish you’d stopped me,” I said.
She looked disturbed. “I wish you hadn’t said that. I
took a pill myself.”
I started choking. She’d caught me with a mouthful of
gin and tonic.
Louise pounded my back and saved my life, maybe. She
said, “You don’t remember that?”
“I don’t remember much of anything coherent after I
took the first pill.”
“Really? You didn’t seem loaded. Not after I’d
watched you awhile.”
Morris cut in. “Louise, the pill you took. What did
the Monk say it would do?”
“He never did. We were talking about me.” She stopped
to think. Then, baffled and amused at herself, she said, “I don’t know how it
happened. All of a sudden I was telling the story of my young life. To a Monk.
I had the idea he was sympathetic.”
“The Monk?”
“Yes, the Monk. And at some point he picked out a
pill and gave it to me. He said it would help me. I believed him. I don’t know
why, but I believed him, and I took it.”
“Any symptoms? Have you learned anything new this
morning?”
She shook her head, baffled and a little truculent
now. Taking that pill must have seemed sheer insanity in the cold grey light of
afternoon.
“All right,” said Morris. “Frazer, you took three
pills. We know what two of them were. Louise, you took one, and we have no idea
what it taught you.” He closed his eyes a moment, then looked at me. “Frazer,
if you can’t remember what you took, can you remember rejecting anything? Did
the Monk offer you anything—” He saw my face and cut it off.
Because that had jarred something.
The Monk had been speaking his own language, in that
alien whisper that doesn’t need to be more than a whisper because the basic
sounds of the Monk language are so unambiguous, so easily distinguished, even
to a human ear. This teaches proper swimming technique. A _____ can reach
speeds of sixteen to twenty-four ___ per ___ using these strokes. The course
also teaches proper exercises...
I said, “I turned down a swimming course for
intelligent fish.”
Louise giggled. Morris said, “You’re kidding.”
“I’m not. And there was something else.” That
swamped-in-data effect wasn’t as bad as it had been at noon. Bits of data must
be reaching cubbyholes in my head, linking up, finding their places.
“I was asking about the shapes of aliens. Not about
Monks, because that’s bad manners,, especially from a race that hasn’t yet
proven its sentiency. I wanted to know about other aliens. So the Monk offered
me three courses in unarmed combat techniques. Each one involved extensive
knowledge of basic anatomy.”
“You didn’t take them?”
“No. What for? Like, one was a pill to tell me how to
kill an armed intelligent worm, but only if I was an unarmed intelligent worm.
I wasn’t that confused.”
“Frazer, there are men who would give an arm and a
leg for any of those pills you turned down.”
“Sure. A couple of hours ago you were telling me I
was crazy to swallow an alien’s education pill.”
“Sorry,” said Morris.
“You were the one who said they should have driven me
out of my mind. Maybe they did,” I said, because my hypersensitive sense of
balance was still bothering the hell out of me.
But Morris’s reaction bothered me worse. Frazer
could start gibbering any minute. Better pump him for all he’s worth while I’ve
got the chance.
No, his face showed none of that. Was I going
paranoid?
“Tell me more about the pills,” Morris said. “It
sounds like there’s a lot of delayed reaction involved. How long do we have to
wait before we know we’ve got it all?”
“He did say something . . .“ I groped fot it, and
presently it came.
It works like a memory, the Monk had said.
He’d turned off his translator and was speaking his own language, now that I
could understand him. The sound of his translator had been bothering him. That
was why he’d given me the pill.
But the whisper of his voice was low, and the
language was new, and I’d had to listen carefully to get it all. I remembered
it clearly.
The information in the pills will become part of
your memory. You will not know all that you have learned until you need it.
Then it will surface. Memory works by association, he’d said.
And: There are things that cannot be taught by
teachers. Always there is the difference between knowledge from school and
knowledge from doing the work itself.
“Theory and practice,” I told Morris. “I know just
what he meant. There’s not a bartending course in the country that will teach
you to leave the sugar out of an Old Fashioned during rush hour.”
“What did you say?”
“It depends on the bar, of course. No posh bar would
let itself get that crowded. But in an ordinary bar, anyone who orders a
complicated drink during rush hour deserves what he gets. He’s slowing the
bartender down when it’s crucial, when every second is money. So you leave the
sugar out of an Old Fashioned. It’s too much money.”
“The guy won’t come back.”
“So what? He’s not one of your regulars. He’d have
better sense if he were.”
I had to grin. Morris was shocked and horrified. I’d
shown him a brand new sin. I said, “It’s something every bartender ought to
know about. Mind you, a bartending school is a trade school. They’re teaching
you to survive as a bartender. But the recipe calls for sugar, so at school you
put in the sugar or you get ticked off.”
Morris shook his head, tight lipped. He said, “Then
the Monk was warning you that you were getting theory, not practice.”
“Just the opposite. Look at it this way, Morris—”
“Bill.”
“Listen, Bill. The teleport pill can’t make a human
nervous system capable of teleportation. Even my incredible balance, and it is
incredible, won’t give me the muscles to do ten quick backflips. But I do know
what it feels like to teleport. That’s what the Monk was warning me
about. The pills give field training. What you have to watch out for are the
reflexes. Because the pills don’t change you physically.”
“I hope you haven’t become a trained assassin.”
One must be wary of newly learned reflexes,
the Monk had said.
Morris said, “Louise, we still don’t know what kind
of an education you got last night. Any ideas?"
“Maybe I repair time machines.” She sipped her drink,
eyed Morris demurely over the rim of the glass.
Morris smiled back. “I wouldn’t be surprised.”
The idiot. He meant it.
“If you really want to know what was in the pill,”
said Louise, “why not ask the Monk?” She gave Morris time to look startled, but
no time to interrupt. “All we have to do is open up and wait. He didn’t even
get through the second shelf last night, did he, Ed?”
“No, by Cod, he didn’t.”
Louise swept an arm about her. “The place is a mess,
of course. We’d never get it clean in time. Not without help. How about it,
Bill? You’re a government man. Could you get a team to work here in time to get
this place cleaned up by five o’clock?”
“You know not what you ask. It’s three fifteen now!”
Truly, the Long Spoon was a disaster area. Bars are
not meant to be seen by daylight anyway. Just because our worlds had been
turned upside down, and just because the Long Spoon was clearly unfit for human
habitation, we had been thinking in temis of staying closed tonight. Now it was
too late...
“Tip Top Cleaners,” I remembered. “They send out a
four man team with its own mops. Fifteen bucks an hour. But we’d never get them
here in time.”
Morris stood up abruptly. “Are they in the phone
book?”
“Sure.”
Morris moved.
I waited until he was in the phone booth before I
asked, “Any new thoughts on what you ate last night?”
Louise looked at me closely. “You mean the pill? Why
so solemn?”
‘We’ve got to find out before Morris does.”
“Why?”
“If Morris has his way,” I said, “they’ll classify my
head Top Secret. I know too much. I’m likely to be a political prisoner the
rest of my life; and so are you, if you learned the wrong things last night.”
What Louise did then, I found both flattering and
comforting. She turned upon the phone booth where Morris was making his call, a
look of such poisonous hatred that it should have withered the man where he
stood.
She believed me. She needed no kind of proof, and she
was utterly on my side.
Why was I so sure? I had spent too much of today
guessing at other people’s thoughts. Maybe it had something to do with my third
and fourth professions...
I said, "We’ve got to find out what kind of pill
you took. Otherwise Morris and the Secret Service will spend the rest of their
lives following you around, just on the off chance that you know something
useful. Like me. Only they know I know something useful. They’ll be
picking my brain until Hell freezes over.”
Morris yelled from the phone booth. “They're coming!
Forty bucks an hour, paid in advance when they get here!”
“Great!” I yelled.
“I want to call in. New York.” He closed the folding
door. Louise leaned across the table. “Ed, what are we going to do?”
It was the way she said it. We were in it together,
and there was a way out, and she was sure I’d find it—and she said it all in
the sound of her voice, the way she leaned toward me, the pressure of her hand
around my wrist. We. I felt the power and confidence rising in me; and
at the same time I thought: She couldn’t do that yesterday.
I said, ‘We clean this place up so we can open for
business. Meanwhile you try to remember what you learned last night. Maybe it
was something harmless, like how to catch trilchies with a magnetic web.”
“Tril—?”
“Space butterflies, kind of.”
“Oh. But suppose he taught me how to bufld a
faster-than-light motor?”
“We’d bloody have to keep Morris from finding out.
But you didn’t. The English words for going faster than light—hyperdrive, space
warp—they don’t have Monk translations except in math. You can’t even say
‘faster than light’ In Monk.”
“Oh.”
Morris came back grinning like an idiot. “You’ll
never guess what the Monks want from us now.”
He looked from me to Louise to nie, grinning, letting
the suspense grow intolerable. He said, “A giant laser cannon.”
Louise gasped “What?” and I asked, “You mean a
launching laser?”
“Yes, a launching laser! They want us to build it on
the Moon. They’d feed our engineers pills to give them the specs and to teach
them how to build it. They’d pay off in more pills.”
I needed to remember something about launching
lasers. And how had I known what to call it?
“They put the proposition to the United Nations,”
Morris was saying. “In fact, they’ll be doing all of their business through the
UN, to avoid charges of favoritism, they say, and to spread the knowledge as
far as possible.”
“But there are countries that don’t belong to the
UN,” Louise objected.
“The Monks know that. They asked if any of ‘those
nations had space travel. None of them do, of course. And the Monks lost
interest in them.”
“Of course,” I said, remembering. “A species that
can’t develop spaceflight is no better than animals.”
“Huh?”
“According to a Monk.”
Louise said, “But what for? Why would the
Monks want a laser cannon? And on our Moon!”
“That’s a little complicated,” said Morris. “Do you
both remember when the Monk ship first appeared, two years ago?”
“No,” we answered more or less together.
Morris was shaken., “You didn’t notice? It was in all
the papers. Noted Astronomer Says Alien Spacecraft Approaching Earth. No?”
“No.”
“For Christ’s sake! I was jumping up and down. It was
like when the radio astronomers discovered pulsars, remember? I was just
getting out of high school.”
“Pulsars?”
“Excuse me,” Morris said overpolitely. “My mistake. I
tend to think that everybody I meet is a science fiction fan. Pulsars are stars
that give off rhythmic pulses of radio energy. The radio astronomers thought at
first that they were getting signals from outer space.”
Louise said, “You’re a science fiction fan?”
“Absolutely. My first gun was a Gyrojet rocket
pistol. I bought it because I read Buck Rogers.”
I said, “Buck who?” But then I couldn’t keep a
straight face. Morris raised his eyes to Heaven. No doubt it was there that he
found the strength to go on.
“The noted astronomer was Jerome Finney. Of course
he, hadn’t said anything about Earth. Newspapers always get that kind of thing
garbled. He’d said that an object of artificial, extraterrestrial origin had
entered the solar system.
“What had happened was that several months earlier,
Jodrell Bank had found a new star in Sagittarius. That’s the direction of the
galactic core. Yes, Frazer?”
We were back to last names because I wasn’t a science
fiction fan. I said, “That’s right. The Monks came from the galactic hub.” I
remembered the blazing night sky of Center. My Monk customer couldn’t possibly
have seen it in his lifetime. He must have been shown the vision through an
education pill, for patriotic reasons, like kids are taught what the Star
Spangled Banner looks like.
“All right. The astronomers were studying a nearby
nova, so they caught the intruder a little sooner. It showed a strange
spectrum, radically different from a nova and much more constant. It got even
stranger. The light was growing brighter at the same time the spectral lines
were shifting toward the red.
“It was months before anyone identified the spectrum.
“Then one Jerome Finney finally caught wise. He
showed that the spectrum was the light of our own sun, drastically
blue-shifted. Some kind of mirror was coming at us, moving at a hell of a clip,
but slowing as it came.”
“Oh!” I got it then. “That would mean a light-sail!”
“Why the big deal, Frazer? I thought you already
knew.”
“No. This is the first I’ve heard of it. I don’t read
the Sunday supplements.”
Morris was exasperated. “But you knew enough to call
the laser cannon a launching laser!”
“I just now realized why it’s called that.”
Morris stared at me for several seconds. Then he
said, “I forgot. You got it out of the Monk language course.”
“I guess so.”
He got back to business. “The newspapers gave poor
Finney a terrible time. You didn’t see the political cartoons either? Too bad.
But when the Monk ship got closer it started sending signals. It was an
interstellar sailing ship, riding the sunlight on a reflecting sail, and it was
coming here.”
“Signals. With dots and dashes? You could do that
just by tacking the sail.”
“You must have read about it.”
“Why? It’s so obvious.”
Morris looked unaccountably ruffled. Whatever his
reasons, he let it pass. "The sail is a few molecules thick and nearly
five hundred miles across when it’s extended. On light pressure alone they can
build up to interstellar velocities, but it takes them a long time. The
acceleration isn’t high.
“It took them two years to slow down to solar system
velocities. They must have done a lot of braking before our telescopes found
them, but even so they were going far too fast when they passed Earth’s orbit.
They had to go inside Mercury’s orbit and come up the other side of the sun’s
gravity well, backing all the way, before they could get near Earth.”
I said, “Sure. Interstellar speeds have to be above
half the speed of light, or you can’t trade competitively.”
“What?”
“There are ways to get the extra edge. You don’t have
to depend on sunlight, not if you’re launching from a civilized system. Every
civilized system has a moon-based launching laser. By the time the sun is too
far away to give the ship a decent push, the beam from the laser cannon is
spreading just enough to give the sail a hefty acceleration without vaporizing
anything.”
“Naturally,” said Morris, but he seemed confused.
“So that if you’re heading for a strange system,
you’d naturally spend most of the trip decelerating. You can’t count on a
strange system having a launching laser. If you know your destination is
civilized, that’s a different matter.”
Morris nodded.
“The lovely thing about the laser cannon is that if
anything goes wrong with it, there’s a civilized world right there to fix it.
You go sailing out to the stars with trade goods, but you leave your launching
motor safely at home. Why is everybody looking at me funny?”
“Don’t take it wrong,” said Morris. “But how does a
paunchy bartender come to know so much about flying an interstellar trading
ship?”
“What?” I didn’t understand him.
“‘Why did the Monk ship have to dive so deep into the
solar system?”
“Oh, that. That’s the solar wind. You get the same
problem around any yellow sun. With a light-sail you can get push from the
solar wind as well as from light pressure. The trouble is, the solar wind is
just stripped hydrogen atoms. Light bounces from a light-sail, but the solar
wind just hits the sail and sticks.”
Morris nodded thoughtfully. Louise was blinking as if
she had double vision.
“You can’t tack against it. Tilting the sail does
from nothing. To use the solar wind for braking you have to bore straight in,
straight toward the sun,” I explained.
Morris nodded. I saw that his eyes were as glassy as
Louise’s eyes.
“Oh,” I said. “Damn, I must be stupid today. Morris,
that was the third pill.”
“Right,” said Morris, still nodding, still
glassy-eyed. “That must have been the unusual, really unusual profession
you wanted. Crewman on an interstellar liner. Jesus.”
And he should have sounded disgusted, but he sounded
envious.
His elbows were on the table, his chin rested on his
fists. It is a position that distorts the mouth, making one’s expression
unreadable. But I didn’t like what I could read in Morris’s eyes.
There was nothing left of the square and honest man I
had let into my apartment at noon. Morris was a patriot now, and an altruist,
and a fanatic, He must have the stars for his nation and for all mankind.
Nothing must stand in his way. Least of all, me.
Reading minds again, Fraser? Maybe being captain of
an interstellar liner involves having to read the minds of the crew, to be able
to put down a mutiny before some idiot can take a heat point to the mpH glip
habbabub, or however a Monk would say it, it has something to do with straining
the breathing-air.
My urge to acrobatics had probably come out of the
same pill. Free fall training. There was a lot in that pill.
This was the profession I should have hidden. Not the
Palace Torturer, who was useless to a government grown too subtle to need such
techniques; but the captain of an interstellar liner, a prize too valuable to
men who have not yet reached beyond the Moon.
And I had been the last to know it. Too late, Frazer-
“Captain,” I said. “Not crew.”
“Pity. A crewman would know more about how to put a
ship together. Frazer, how big a crew are you equipped to rule?”
“Eight and five.”
“‘Thirteen?’
“Yes.”
“Then why did you say eight and five?”
The question caught me off balance. Hadn’t I...? Oh.
“That’s the Monk numbering system. Base eight., Actually, base two, but they
group the digits in threes to get base eight.”
“Base two. Computer numbers.”
“Are they?”
“Yes. Frazer, they must have been using computers for
a long time. Aeons.”
“All right.” I noticed for the first time that Louise
had collected our glasses and gone to make fresh drinks. Good, I could use one.
She’d left her own, which was half full. Knowing she wouldn’t mind, I took a
swallow.
It was soda water.
With a lime in it. It had looked just like our gin
and tonics. She must be back on the diet. Except that when Louise resumed a
diet, she generally announced it to all and sundry
Morris was still on the subject. “You use a crew of
thirteen. Are they Monk or human or something else?”
“Monk,” I said without having to think.
“Too bad. Are there humans in space?”
“No. A lot of two-feet, but none of them are like any
of the others, and none of them are quite like us.”
Louise came back with our drinks, gave them to us,
and sat down without a word.
“You said earlier that a species that can’t develop
space flight is no better than animals.”
“According to the Monks,” I reminded him.
“Right. It seems a little extreme even to me, but let
it pass. What about a race that develops spaceflight and then loses it?”
“It happens. There are lots of ways a space-going
species can revert to animal. Atomic war. Or they just can’t live with the
complexity. Or they breed themselves out of food, and the world famine wrecks
everything. Or waste products from the new machinery ruins the ecology.”
“'Revert to animal.’ All right. What about nations?
Suppose you have two nations next door, same species, but one has space
flight—”
“Right. Good point, too. Morris, there are just two
countries on Earth that can deal with the Monks without dealing through the
United Nations. Us, and Russia. If Rhodesia or Brazil or France tried it,
they’d be publicly humiliated.”
“That could cause an international incident.”
Morris’s jaw tightened heroically. “We’ve got ways of passing the warning along
so that it won’t happen.”
Louise said, “There are some countries I wouldn’t
mind seeing it happen to.”
Morris got a thoughtful look ... and I wondered if
everybody would get the warning.
The cleaning team arrived then. We’d used Tip Top
Cleaners before, but these four dark women were not our usual team. We had to
explain in detail just what we wanted done. Not their fault. They usually clean
private homes, not bars.
Morris spent some time calling New York. He must have
been using a credit card; he couldn’t have that much change.
“That may have stopped a minor war,” he said when he
got back. And we returned to the padded booth. But Louise stayed to direct the
cleaning team.
The four dark women moved about us with pails and spray
bottles and dry rags, chattering in Spanish, leaving shiny surfaces wherever
they went. And Morris resumed his inquisition.
“What powers the ground-to-orbit ship?”
“A slow H-bomb going off in a magnetic bottle.”
“Fusion?”
“Yah. The attitude jets on the main starship use
fusion power too. They all link to one magnetic bottle. I don’t know just how
it works. You get fuel from water or ice.”
“Fusion. But don’t you have to separate out the
deuterium ‘and tritium?”
“What for? You melt the ice, run a current through
the water, and you’ve got hydrogen.”
“Wow,” Morris said softly. “Wow.”
“The launching laser works the same way,” I
remembered. What else did I need to remember about launching lasers? Something
dreadfully important.
‘Wow. Fraser, if we could build the Monks their
launching laser, we could use the same techniques to build other fusion plants.
Couldn’t we?”
“Sure.” I was in dread. My mouth was dry, my heart
was pounding. I almost knew why. “‘What do you mean, if?”
“And they’d pay us to do it! It’s a damn shame. We
just don’t have the hardware.”
“What do you mean? We’ve got to build the
launching laser!”
Morris gaped. “Frazer, what’s wrong with you?”
The terror had a name now. “My God! What have you
told the Monks? Morris, listen to me. You’ve got to see to it that the Security
Council promises to build the Monks’ launching laser.”
"Who do you think I am, the Secretary-General?
We can’t build it anyway, not with just Saturn launching configurations.”
Morris thought I’d gone mad at last. He wanted to back away through the wall of
the booth.
“They’ll do it when you tell them what’s at stake.
And we can build a launching laser, if the whole world goes in on it. Morris,
look at the good it can do! Free power from seawater! And light-sails work fine
within a system.”
“Sure, it’s a lovely picture. ‘We could sail out to
the moons of Jupiter and Saturn. We could smelt the asteroids for their metal
ores, using laser power. . ." His eyes had momentarily taken on a vague,
dreamy look. Now they snapped back to what Morris thought of as reality. “It’s
the kind of thing I daydreamed about when I was a kid. Someday we’ll do it.
Today—we just aren’t ready.”
“There are two sides to a coin,” I said. “Now, I know
how this is going to sound. Just remember there are reasons. Good reasons.”
“Reasons? Reasons for what?”
“When a trading ship travels,” I said, “It travels
only from one civilized system to another. There are ways to tell whether a
system has a civilization that can build a launching laser. Radio is one. The
Earth puts out as much radio flux as a small star.
“When the ‘Monks find that much radio energy coming
from a nearby star, they send a trade ship. By the time the ship gets there,
the planet that’s putting out all the energy is generally civilized. But not so
civilized that it can’t use the knowledge a Monk trades for.
“Do you see that they need the launching
laser? That ship out there came from a Monk colony. This far from the axis of
the galaxy, the stars are too far apart. Ships launch by starlight and laser,
but they brake by starlight alone, because they can’t count on the target star
having a launching laser. If they had to launch by starlight too, they probably
wouldn’t make it. A plant-and-animal cycle as small as the life support system
on a Monk starship can last only so long.”
“You said yourself that the Monks can’t always count
on the target star staying civilized.”
“No, of course not. Sometimes a civilization hits the
level at which it can build a, launching laser, stays there just long enough to
send out a mass of radio waves, then reverts to animal. That’s the point. If we
tell them we can’t build the laser, we’ll be animals to the Monks.”
“Suppose we just refuse? Not can’t but won’t.”
“That would be stupid. There are too many advantages.
Controlled fusion—”
“Frazer, think about the cost.” Morris looked grim.
He wanted the laser. He didn’t think he could get it. “Think about politicians
thinking about the cost,” he said. “Think, about politicians thinking about
explaining the cost to the taxpayers.”
“Stupid,” I repeated, “and inhospitable. Hospitality
counts high with the Monks. You see, we’re cooked either way. Either we’re dumb
animals, or we’re guilty of a criminal breach of hospitality. And the Monk ship
still needs more light ‘for its light-sail than the sun can put out.”
“So?”
“So the captain uses a gadget that makes the sun
explode.”
“The,” said Morris, and “Sun,” and “Explode?” He
didn’t know what to do. Then suddenly he burst out in great loud cheery guffas,
so that the women cleaning the Long Spoon turned with answering smiles. He’d
decided not to believe me.
I reached across and gently pushed his drink into his
lap.
It was two-thirds empty, but it cut his laughter off
in an instant. Before he could start swearing, I said, “I am not playing games.
The Monks will make our sun explode if we don’t build them a launching laser.
Now go call your boss and tell him so.”
The women were staring at us in horror. Louise
started toward us, then stopped, uncertain.
Morris sounded almost calm. “Why the drink in, my
lap?”
“Shock treatment. And I wanted your full attention.
Are you going to call New York?”
“Not yet.” Morris swallowed. He looked down once at
the spreading stain on his pants, then somehow put it out of his mind.
“Remember, I’d have to convince him. I don’t believe it myself. Nobody and
nothing would blow up a sun for a breach of hospitality!”
“No, no, Morris, They have to blow up the sun to get
to the next system. It’s a serious thing, refusing to build the launching
laser! It could wreck the ship!”
“Screw the ship! What about a whole planet?”
“You’re just not looking at it right—”
“Hold it. Your ship is a trading ship, isn’t it? What
kind of idiots would the Monks be, to exterminate one market just to get on to
the next?”
“If we can’t build a launching laser, we aren’t a
market.”
“But we might be a market on the next circuit!”
“What next circuit? You don’t seem to grasp the size
of the Monks’ marketplace. The communications gap between Center and the
nearest Monk colony is about—” I stopped to transpose. “—sixty-four thousand
years! By the time a ship finishes one circuit, most of the worlds she’s
visited have already forgotten her. And then what? The colony world that built
her may have failed, or refitted the spaceport to service a different style of
ship, or reverted to animal; even Monks do that. She’d have to go on to the
next system for refitting.
“When you trade among the stars, there is no
repeat business.”
“Oh,” said Morris.
Louise had gotten the women back to work. With a
corner of my mind I heard their giggling discussion as to whether Morris would
fight, whether he could whip me, etc.
Morris asked, “How does it work? How do you make a
sun go nova?”
“There’s a gadget the size of a locomotive fixed to
the main supporting strut, I guess you’d call it. It points straight astern,
and it can swing sixteen degrees or so in any direction. You turn it on when you
make departure orbit. The math man works out the intensity. You beam the sun
for the first year or so, and when it blows, you’re just far enough away to use
the push without getting burned.”
“But how does it work?”
“You just turn it on. The power comes from the fusion
tube that feeds the attitude jet system. —Oh, you want to know why does it make
a sun explode. I don’t know that. Why should I?”
“Big as a locomotive. And it makes suns explode.”
Morris sounded slightly hysterical. Poor bastard, he was beginning to believe
me. The shock had hardly touched me, because truly I had known it since last
night.
He said, “When we first saw the Monk light-sail, it
was just to one side of a recent nova in Sagittarius. By any wild chance, was
that star a market that didn’t work out?”
“I haven’t the vaguest idea.”
That convinced him. If I’d been making it up, I’d
have said yes. Morris stood up and walked away without a word. He stopped to
pick up a bar towel on his way to the phone booth.
I went behind the bar to make a fresh drink. Cutty
over ice, splash of soda; I wanted to taste the burning power of it.
Through the glass door I saw Louise getting out of
her car with her arms full of packages. I poured soda over ice; squeezed a lime
in it, and had it ready when she walked in.
She dumped the load on the bar top. “Irish coffee
makings,” she said. I held the glass out, to her and she said, “No thanks, Ed.
One’s enough.”
“Taste it.”
She gave me a funny look, but she tasted what I
handed her. “Soda water. Well, you caught me.”
“Back on the diet?”
"Yes."
“You never said yes to that question in your life.
Don’t you want to tell me all the details?”
She sipped at her drink. “Details of someone else’s
diet are boring. I should have known that a long time ago. To work! You’ll
notice we’ve only got twenty minutes,”
I opened one of her paper bags’ and fed the
refrigerator with cartons of whipping cream. Another bag held fresh ground
coffee. The flat, square package had to be a pizza.
‘Pizza. Some diet,” I said.
She was setting out the glass coffee-makers. “That’s
for you and Bill.”
I tore open the paper and bit into a pie-shaped
slice. It was a deluxe, covered with everything from anchovies to salami. It
was crisp and hot, and I was starving.
I snatched bites as I worked.
There aren’t many bars that will keep the makings for
Irish coffee handy. It’s too much trouble. You’need massive quantities of
whipping cream and ground coffee, a refrigerator, a blender, a supply of those
glass figure-eight-shaped coffee-makers, a line of hot plates, and—most
expensive of all—room behind the bar for all of that. You learn to keep a line
of glasses ready, which means putting the sugar in them at spare moments to
save time later. Those spare moments are your smoking time, so you give that
up. You learn not to wave your arms around because there are hot things that
can burn you. You learn to half-whip the cream, a mere spin of the blender,
because you have to do it over and over again, and if you overdo it the cream
turns to butter.
There aren’t many bars that will go to all that
trouble. That’s why it pays off., Your average Irish coffee addict will drive
an extra twenty minutes to reach the Long Spoon. He’ll also down the drink in
about five minutes, because otherwise it gets cold. He’d have spent half an
hour over a ‘Scotch and soda.
While we were getting the coffee ready, I found time
to ask, “Have you remembered anything?”
“Yes,” she said.
“Tell me.”
“I don’t mean I know what was in the pill. Just ... I
can do things I couldn’t do before. I think my way of thinking has changed. Ed,
I’m worried-”
“Worried?”
She got the words out in a rush. “It feels like I’ve
been falling in love with you for a very long time. But I haven’t. Why should I
feel that way so suddenly?”
The bottom dropped out of my stomach. I’d had
thoughts like this ... and put them out of my mind, and when they came back I
did it again. I couldn’t afford to fall in love. It would cost too much. It
would hurt too much.
“It’s been like this all day. It scares me, Ed.
Suppose I feel like this about every man? What if the Monk thought I’d make a
good call girl?”
I laughed much harder than I should have. Louise was
getting really angry before I was able to stop.
“Wait a minute,” I said. “Are you in love with Bill
Morris too?”
“No, of course not!”
“Then forget the call girl bit. He’s got more money
than I do. A call girl would love him more, if she loved anyone, which she
wouldn’t, because call girls are generally frigid.”
“How do you know?” she demanded.
“I read it in a magazine.”
Louise began to relax. I began to see how tense she
really had been. “All right,” she said, “but that means I really am in love
with you.”
I pushed the crisis away from us. “Why didn’t you
ever get married?”
“Oh . . .“ She was going to pass it off, but she
changed her mind. “Every man I dated wanted to sleep with me. I thought that
was wrong, so—”
She looked puzzled. “Why did I think that was wrong?”
“Way you were brought up.”
“Yes, but.. .“ She trailed off.
“How do you feel about it flow?”
“Well, I wouldn’t sleep with anyone, but if a man was
worth dating he might be worth marrying, and if he was worth marrying he’d
certainly be worth sleeping with, wouldn’t he? And I’d be crazy to marry
someone I hadn’t slept with, wouldn’t I?”
“I did.”
“And look how that turned out! Oh, Ed, I’m sorry. But
you did bring it up.”
“Yah,” I said, breathing shallow.
“But I used to feel that way too. Something’s
changed?’
We hadn’t been talking fast. There had been pauses,
gaps, and we had worked through them. I had had time to eat three slices of
pizza. Louise had had time to wrestle with her conscience, lose, and eat one.
Only she hadn’t done it. There was the pizza, staring
at her, and she hadn’t given it a look or a smell. For Louise, that was
unusual.
Half-joking, I said, “Try this as a theory. Years ago
you must have sublimated your sex urge into an urge for food. Either that or
the rest of us sublimated our appetites into a sex urge, and you didn’t.”
“Then the pill un-sublimated me, hmm?” She looked
thoughtfully at the pizza. Clearly its lure was gone. “That’s what I mean. I
didn’t used to be able to outstare a pizza.”
“Those olive eyes.”
“Hypnotic, they were.”
“A good call girl should be able to keep herself in
shape.” Immediately I regretted saying it. It wasn’t funny. “Sorry,” I said.
“It’s all right.” She picked up a tray of candles in
red glass vases and moved away, depositing the candles on the small square
tables. She moved with grace and beauty through the twilight of the Long Spoon,
her hips swaying just enough to avoid the sharp corners of tables.
I’d hurt her. But she’d known me long enough; she
must know I had foot-in-mouth disease...
I had seen Louise before and known that she was
beautiful. But it seemed to me that she had never been beautiful with so little
excuse.
She moved back by the same route, lighting the
candles as she went. Finally she put the tray down, leaned across the bar and
said, “I’m sorry. I can’t joke about it when I don't know.”
“Stop worrying, will you? Whatever the Monk fed you,
he was trying to help you.”
“I love you.”
“What?”
“I love you.”
“Okay. I love you too.” I use those words so seldom
that they clog in my throat, as if I’m lying, even when it’s the truth.
“Listen, I want to marry you. Don’t shake your head. I want to marry you.”
Our voices had dropped to whispers. ‘In a tormented
whisper, then, she said, “Not until I find out what I do, what was in
the pill. Ed, I can’t trust myself until then!”
“Me too,” I said with great reluctance. “But we can’t
wait. We don’t, have time.”
“What?”
“That’s right, you weren’t in earshot. Sometime
between three and ten years from now, the Monks may blow up our sun.”
Louise said nothing. Her forehead wrinkled.
“It depends on how much time they spend trading. If
we can’t build them the launching laser, we can still con them, into waiting
for awhile. Monk expeditions have waited as long as—”
“Good Lord. You mean it. Is that what you and Bill
were fighting over?”
"Yah."
Louise shuddered. Even in the dimness I saw how pale
she had become. And she said a strange thing.
She said, “All right, I’ll marry you.”
“Good,” I said. But I was suddenly shaking. Married.
Again. Me. Louise stepped up and put her hands on my shoulders, and I kissed
her.
I’d been wanting to do that for ... five years? She
fitted wonderfully into my arms. Her hands closed hard on the muscles of my
shoulders, massaging. The tension went out of me, drained away somewhere.
Married. Us. At least we could have three to ten years.
“Morris,” I said.
She drew back a little. “He can’t hold you. You
haven’t done anything. Oh, I wish I knew what was in that pill I took!
Suppose I’m the trained assassin?”
“Suppose I am? We’ll have to be careful of each other.”
“Oh, we know all about you. You’re a starship
commander, an alien teleport and a translator for Monks.”
“And one thing more. There was a fourth profession. I
took four pills last night, not three.”
“Oh? Why didn’t you tell Bill?”
“Are you kidding? Dizzy as I was last night, I
probably took a course in how to lead a successful revolution, God help me if
Morris found that out.”
She smiled. “Do you really think that was what it
was?”
“No, of course not.”
“Why did we do it? Why did we swallow those pills? We
should have known better.”
“Maybe the Monk took a pill himself. Maybe there’s a
pill that teaches a Monk how to look trustworthy to a generalized alien.”
“I did trust him,” said Louise. “I remember. He
seemed so sympathetic. Would he really blow up our sun?”
“He really would.”
“That fourth pill. Maybe it taught you a way to stop
him.”
“Let’s see. We know I took a linguistics course, a
course in teleportation for martians, and a course in how to fly a lightsail
ship. On that basis ... I probably changed my mind and took a karate course for
worms.”
“It wouldn’t hurt you, at least. Relax.... Ed, if you
remember taking the pills, why don’t you remember what was in them?”
“But I don’t. I don’t remember anything.”
“How do you know you took four, then?”
“Here.” I reached in my pocket and pulled out the
scrap of Monk cellophane. And knew immediately that there was something in it.
Something hard and round.
We were staring at it when Morris came back.
“I must have cleverly put it in my pocket,” I told
them. “Sometime last night, when I was feeling sneaky enough to steal from a
Monk.”
Morris turned the pill like a precious jewel in his
fingers. Pale blue it was, marked on one side with a burnt orange triangle. “I
don’t know whether to get it analyzed or take it myself, now. We need a
miracle. Maybe this will tell us—”
“Forget it. I wasn’t clever enough to remember how
fast a Monk pill deteriorates. The wrapping’s torn. That pill has been bad for
at least twelve hours.”
Morris said a dirty thing.
“Analyze it,” I said. “You’ll find RNA, and you may
even be able to tell what the Monks use as a matrix. Most of the memories are
probably intact. But don’t swallow the damn thing. It’ll scramble your brains.
All it takes is a few random changes in a tiny percentage of the RNA.”
“We don’t have time to send it to Douglass tonight.
Can we put it in the freezer?”
“Good. Give it here.”
I dumped the pill in a sandwich-size plastic Baggy,
sucked the air out the top, tied the end, and dropped it in the freezer. Vacuum
and cold would help preserve the thing. It was something I should have done
last night.
“So much for miracles,” Morris said bitterly. “Let’s
get down to business. We’ll have several men outside the place tonight, and a
few more in here. You won’t know who they are, but go ahead and guess if you
like. A lot of your customers will be turned away tonight. They’ll be told to
watch the newspapers if they want to know why. I hope it won’t cost you too
much business.”
“It may make our fortune. We’ll be famous. Were you
maybe doing the same thing last night?”
“Yes. We didn’t want the place too crowded. The Monks
might not like autograph hounds.”
“So that’s why the place was half empty.”
Morris looked at his watch. “Opening time. Are we
ready?”
“Take a seat at the bar. And look nonchalant,
dammit.”
Louise went to turn on the lights.
Morris took a seat to one side of the middle. One big
square hand was closed very tightly on the bar edge. “Another gin and tonic.
Weak. After that one, leave out the gin.”
“Right.”
“Nonchalant. Why should I be nonchalant? Frazer, I
had to tell the President of the United States of America that the end of the
world is coming unless he does something. I had to talk to him myself!”
“Did he buy it?”
“I hope so. He was so goddam calm and reassuring, I
wanted to scream at him. God, Frazer, what if we can’t build the laser? What if
we try and fail?”
I gave him a very old and classic answer. “Stupidity
is always a capital crime.”
He screamed in my face. “Damn you and your
supercilious attitude and your murdering monsters too!” The next second he was
ice-water calm. “Never mind, Frazer. You’re thinking like a starship captain.”
“I’m what?”
“A starship captain has to be able to make a sun go
nova to save the ship. You can’t help it. It was in the pill.”
Damn, he was right. I could feel that he was
right. The pill had warped my way of thinking. Blowing up the sun that warms
another race had to be immoral. Didn’t it?
I couldn’t trust my own sense of right and wrong!
Four men tame in and took one of the bigger tables. Morris’s men? No. Real
estate men, here to do business.
“Something’s been bothering me,” said Morris. He
grimaced. “Among all the things that have been ruining my composure, such as the
impending end of the world, there was one thing that kept nagging at me.”
I set his gin-and-tonic in front of him. He tasted it
and said, “Fine. And I finally realized what it was, waiting there in the phone
booth for a chain of human snails to put the President on. Frazer, are you a
college man?”
“No. Webster High.”
“See, you don’t really talk like a bartender. You use
big words.”
“I do?”
“Sometimes. And you talked about ‘suns exploding,’
but you knew what I meant when I said ‘nova.’ You talked about ‘H-bomb power,’
but’ you knew what fusion was.”
“Sure.”
“I got the possibly silly impression that you were
learning the words the instant I said them. Parlez-vous français?”
“No. I don’t speak any foreign languages.”
“None at all?”
“Nope. What do you think they teach at Webster High?”
“Je parle la langue un peu, Frazer. Et tu?”
“Merde de cochon! Morris, je vous dit—oops.”
He didn’t give me a chance to think it over. He said,
“What’s fanac?”
My head had that clogged feeling again. I
said, “Might be anything. Putting out a sine, writing to the lettercol, helping
put on a Con—Morris, what is this?”
“That language course was more extensive than we
thought.”
“Sure as hell, it was. I just remembered. Those women
on the cleaning team were speaking spanish, but I understood them.”
“Spanish, French, Monkish, technical languages, even
Fannish. What you got was a generalized course in how to understand languages
the instant you hear them. I don’t see bow it could work without telepathy.”
“Reading minds? Maybe.” Several times today, it had
felt like I was guessing with too much certainty at somebody’s private
thoughts.
“Can you read my mind?”
“That’s not quite it. I get the feel of how
you think, not what you’re thinking. Morris, I don’t like the idea of
being a political prisoner.”
‘Well, we can talk that over later.” When my
bargaining position is better, Morris meant. When I don’t need the
bartender’s good will to con the Monk. “What’s important is that you might
be able to read a Monk’s mind. That could be crucial.”
“And maybe he can read mine. And yours.”
I let Morris sweat over that one while I set drinks
on Louise’s tray. Already there were customers at four tables. The Long Spoon
was filling rapidly and only two of them were Secret Service.
Morris said, “Any ideas on what Louise Schu ate last
night? We’ve got your professions pretty well pegged down. Finally.”
“I’ve got an idea. It’s kind of vague.” I looked
around. Louise was taking more orders. “Sheer guesswork, in fact. Will you keep
it to yourself for awhile?”
“Don’t tell Louise? Sure—for awhile.”
I made four drinks, and Louise took them away. I told
Morris, “I have a profession in mind. It doesn’t have a simple one or two word
name, like teleport or starship captain or translator. There’s no reason why it
should, is there? We’re dealing with aliens.”
Morris sipped at his drink. Waiting.
“Being a woman,” I said, “can be a profession, in a
way that being a man can never be. The word is housewife, but it doesn’t
cover all of it. Not nearly.”
“Housewife. You’re putting me on.”
“No. You wouldn’t notice the change. You never saw
her before last night.”
“Just what kind of change have you got in mind? Aside
from the fact that she’s beautiful, which I did notice.”
“Yes, she is, Morris. But last night she was twenty
pounds overweight. Do you think she lost it all this morning?”
“She was too heavy. Pretty, but also pretty
well padded.” Morris turned to look over his shoulder, casually turned back.
“Damn. She’s still well padded. Why didn’t I notice before?”
“There’s another thing.—By the way. Have some pizza.”
“Thanks.” He bit into a slice. “Cood, it’s still hot.
Well?”
“She’s been staring at that pizza for half an hour.
She bought it. But she hasn’t tasted it. She couldn’t possibly have done that
yesterday.”
“She may have had a big breakfast.”
“Yah.” I knew she hadn’t. She’d eaten diet food. For
years she’d kept a growing collection of diet food, but she’d never actively
tried to survive on it before. But how could I make such a claim to Morris? I’d
never even been in Louise’s apartment.
“Anything else?”
“She’s gotten good at nonverbal communication. It’s a
very womanly skill. She can say things just by the tone of her voice or the way
she leans on an elbow or—”
“But if mind reading is one of your new
skills..."
“Damn. Well. . . it used to make Louise nervous if
someone touched her. And she never touched anyone else.” I felt myself
flushing. I don’t talk easily of personal things.
Morris radiated skepticism. “It all sounds very
subjective. In fact, it sounds like you’re making yourself believe it. Frazer,
why would Louise Schu want such a capsule course? Because you haven’t described
a housewife at all. You’ve described a woman looking to persuade a man to many her.”
He saw my face change. “What’s wrong?”
“Ten minutes ago we decided to get married.”
“Congratulations,” Morris said, and waited.
“All right, you win. Until ten minutes ago we’d never
even kissed. I’d never made a pass, or vice versa. No, damn it, I don’t believe
it! I know she loves me; I ought to!”
“I don’t deny it,” Morris said quietly. "That
would be why she took the pill. it must have been strong stuff; too, Frazer. We
looked up some of your history. You’re marriage-shy.”
It was true enough. I said, “If she loved me before,
I never knew it. I wonder how a Monk could know.”
“How would he know about such a skill at all? Why
would he have the pill on him? Come on, Frazer, you’re the Monk expert!”
“He’d have to learn from human beings. Maybe by interviews,
maybe by—well, the Monks can map an alien memory into a computer space, then
interview that. They may have done that with some of your diplomats.”
“Oh, great.”
Louise appeared with an order. I made the drinks and
set them op her tray. She winked and walked away, swaying deliciously, followed
by many eyes.
“Morris. Most of your diplomats, the ones who, deal
with the Monks; they’re men, aren’t they?”
“Most of them. Why?”
“Just a thought.” It was a difficult thought, hard to
grasp. It was only that the changes in Louise had been all to the good from a
man’s point of view. The Monks must have interviewed many men. Well, why not?
It would make her more valuable to the man she caught—or to the lucky man who
caught her— “Got it.”
Morris looked up quickly. “Well?”
“Falling in love with me was part of her pill
learning. A set. They made a guinea pig of her.”
“I wondered what she saw in you.” Morris’s grin
faded. “You’re serious. Frazer, that still doesn’t answer—”
“It’s a slave indoctrination course. It makes a woman
love the first man she sees, permanently, and it trains her to be valuable to
him. The Monks were going to make them in quantity and sell them to men.”
Morris thought it over. Presently he said, “That’s
awful. What’ll we do?”
“Well, we can’t tell her she’s been made into a
domestic slave! Morris, I’ll try to get a memory eraser pill. If I can’t I’ll
marry her, I guess. Don’t look at me that way,” I said, low and fierce. “I
didn’t do it. And I can’t desert her now!”
“I know. It’s just—oh, put gin in the next one.”
“Don’t look now,” I said.
In the glass’ of the door there was darkness and
motion. A hooded shape, shadow-on-shadow, supernatural, a human silhouette
twisted out of true...
He came gliding in with the hem of his robe just
brushing the floor. Nothing was to be seen of him but his flowing gray robe,
the darkness in the hood and the shadow where his robe parted. The real estate
men broke off their talk of land and stared, popeyed, and one of them reached
for his heart attack pills.
The Monk drifted toward me like a vengeful ghost. He
took the stool we had saved him at one end of the bar.
It wasn’t the same Monk.
In all respects he matched the Monk who had been here
these last two nights. Louise and Morris. must have been fooled completely. But
it wasn’t the same Monk.
“Good evening,” I said.
He gave an equivalent greeting in the whispered Monk
language. His translator was half on, translating my words into a Monk whisper,
but letting his own speech alone. He said,, “I believe we should begin with the
Rock and Rye.”
I turned to pour. The small of my back itched with
danger.
When I turned back with the shot glass in my hand, he
was holding a fist-sized tool that must have come out of his robe. It looked
like a flattened softball, grooved deeply for five Monk claws, with two
parallel tubes poking out in my direction. Lenses glinted in the ends of the
tubes.
“Do you know this tool? It is a “___", and he
named it. I knew the name. It was a beaming tool, a multi-frequency laser. One
tube locked on the target; thereafter the aim was maintained by tiny flywheels
in the body of the device.
Morris had seen it. He didn’t recognize it, and he
didn’t know what to do about it, and I had no way to signal him.
“I know that tool,” I confirmed.
“You must take two of these pills.” The Monk had them
ready in another hand. They were small and pink and. triangular. He said, “I
must be convinced that you have taken them. Otherwise you must take more than
two. An overdose may affect your natural memory. Come closer.”
I came closer. Every man and woman in the Long Spoon
was staring at us, and each was afraid to move. Any kind of signal would have
trained four guns on the Monk. And I’d be fried dead by a narrow beam of
X-rays.
The Monk reached out with a third hand/foot/claw. He
dosed the fingers/toes around my throat, not hand enough to strangle me, but
hard enough.
Morris was cursing silently, helplessly. I could feel
the agony in his soul.
The Monk whispered, “You know of the trigger mechanism.
If my hand should relax now, the device will fire. Its target is yourself. If
you can prevent four government agents from attacking me, you should do so.”
I made a palm-up gesture toward Morris. Don’t do
anything. He caught it and nodded very slightly without looking at me.
“You can read minds,” I said.
“Yes,” said the Monk—and I knew instantly what he was
hiding. He could read everybody’s mind, except mine.
So much for Morris’s little games of deceit. But the
Monk could not read my mind, and I could see into his own soul.
And, reading his alien soul, I saw that I would die
if I did not swallow the pills.
I placed the pink pills on my tongue, one at a time,
and swallowed them dry. They went down hard. Morris watched it happen and could
do nothing. The Monk felt them going down my throat, little lumps moving past
his finger.
And when the pills had passed across the Monk’s
finger, I worked a miracle.
“Your pill-induced memories and skills will be gone
within two hours,” said the Monk. He picked up the shot glass of Rock’ and Rye
and moved it into his hood. When it reappeared it was half empty.
I asked. “Why have you robbed inc of my knowledge?”
“You never paid for it.”
“But it was freely given.”
“It was given by one who had no right,” said the
Monk. He was thinking about leaving. I had to do something. I knew now, because
I had reasoned it out with great care, that the Monk was involved in an evil
enterprise. But he must stay to hear me or I could not convince him.
Even then, it wouldn’t be easy. He was a Monk
crewman. His ethical attitudes had entered his brain through an RNA pill, along
with his professional skills.
“You have spoken of rights,” I said. In Monk. “Let us
discuss rights.” The whispery words buzzed oddly in my throat; they tickled;
but my ears told me they were coming out right.
The Monk was startled. “I was told that you had been
taught our speech, but not that you cbuld speak it.”
“Were you told what pill I was given?”
“A language pill. I had not known that he carried one
in his case.”
“He did not finish his tasting of the alcohols of
Earth. Will you have another drink?"
I felt him guess at my motives, and guess wrong. He
thought I was taking advantage of his curiosity to sell him my wares for cash.
And what had he to fear from me? Whatever mental powers I had learned from Monk
pills, they would be gone in two hours.
I set a shot glass before him. I asked him, “How do
you feel about launching lasers?”
The discussion became highly technical. “Let us take
a special case,” I remember saying. “Suppose a culture has been capable of
starlight for some sixty-fours of years—or even for eights of times that long.
Then an asteroid slams into a major ocean, precipitates an ice age ..." It
had happened once, and well he knew it. “A natural disaster can’t spell the
difference between sentience and nonsentience, can it? Not unless it affects
brain tissue directly.”
At first it was his curiosity that held him. Later it
was me. He couldn’t tear himself loose. He never thought of it. He was a
sailship crewman, and he was cold sober, and he argued with the frenzy of an
evangelist.
“Then take the general case,” I remember saying. “A
world that cannot build a launching laser is a world of animals, yes? And Monks
themselves can revert to animals.”
Yes, he knew that.
“Then build your own launching laser. If you cannot,
then your ship is captained and crewed by animals.”
At the end I was doing all the talking. All in the
whispery Monk tongue, whose sounds are so easily distinguished that even I,
warping a human throat to my will, need only whisper. It was a good thing. I
seemed to have been eating used razor blades.
Morris guessed right. He did not interfere. I could
tell him nothing, not if I had had the power, not by word or gesture or mental
contact. The Monk would read Morris’s mind. But Morris sat quietly drinking his
tonic-and-tonics, waiting for something to happen. While I argued in whispers
with the Monk.
“But the ship!” he whispered. “What of the ship?” His
agony was mine; for the ship must be protected.
At one fifteen the Monk was halfway across the bottom
row of bottles. He slid from the stool, paid for his drinks in one dollar
bills, and drifted to the door and out.
All he needed was a scythe and hour glass, I thought,
watching him go. And what I needed was a long morning’s sleep. And I wasn’t
going to get it.
“Be sure nobody stops him,” I told Morris.
“Nobody will. But he’ll be followed.”
“No point. The Garment to Wear Among Strangers is a
lot of things. It’s bracing; it helps the Monk hold human shape. It’s a shield
and an air filter. And it’s a cloak of invisibility.”
“Oh?”
“I’ll tell you about it if I have time. That’s how he
got out here, probably. One of the crewmen divided, and then one stayed and one
walked. He had two weeks.”
Morris stood up and tore off his sport jacket. His
shirt was wet through. He said, “What about a stomach pump for you?” “No good.
Most of the RNA-enzyme must be in my blood by now. You’ll be better off if you
spend your time getting down everything I can remember about Monks, while I can
remember anything at all. It’ll be nine or ten hours before everything goes.”
Which was a flat-out lie, of course.
“Okay. Let me get the dictaphone going again?’
“It’ll cost you money.”
Morris suddenly had a hard look. “Oh? How much?” I’d
thought about that most carefully. “One hundred thousand dollars. And if you’re
thinking of’ arguing me down, remember whose time we’re wasting.”
“I wasn’t.” He was, but he’d changed his mind.
“Good. We’ll transfer the money now, while I can
still read your mind.”
“All right.”
He offered to make room for me in the booth, but I
declined. The glass wouldn’t stop me from reading Morris’s soul.
He came out silent; for there was something he was
afraid to know. Then: “What about the Monks? What about our sun?”
“I talked that one around. That’s why I don’t want
him molested. He’ll convince others.”
“Talked him around? How?”
“It wasn’t easy.” And suddenly I would have given my
soul to sleep. “The profession pill put it in his genes; he must protect the
ship. It’s in me too. I know how strong it is.”
"Then—”
“Don’t be an ass, Morris. The ship’s perfectly safe
where it is, in orbit around the Moon. A sailship’s only in danger when it’s
between stars, far from help.”
“Oh.”
“Not that that convinced him. It only let him
consider the ethics of the situation rationally.”
“Suppose someone else unconvinces him?”
“It could happen. That’s why we’d better build the
launching laser.”
Morris nodded unhappily.
The next twelve hours were rough.
In the first four hours I gave them everything I
could remember about the Monk teleport system, Monk technology, Monk family
life, Monk ethics, relations between Monks and aliens, details on aliens,
directions of various inhabited and uninhabited worlds . . . everything. Morris
and the Secret Service men who had been posing as customers sat around me like
boys around a campfire, listening to stories. But Louise made us fresh coffee,
then went to sleep in one of the booths.
Then I let myself slack off.
By nine in the morning I was flat on my back, staring
at the ceiling, dictating a random useless bit of information every thirty
seconds or so. By eleven there was a great black pool of lukewarm coffee inside
me, my eyes ached marginally more than the rest of me, and I was producing
nothing.
I was convincing, and I knew it.
But Morris wouldn’t let it go at that. He believed
me. I felt him believing me. But he was going through the routine anyway,
because it couldn’t hurt. If I was useless to him, if I knew nothing, there was
no point in playing soft. What could he lose?
He accused me of making everything up. He accused me
of faking the pills. He made me sit up, and damn near caught me that way. He
used obscure words and phrases from mathematics and Latin and Fan vocabulary.
He got nowhere. There wasn’t any way to trick me.
At two in the afternoon he had someone drive me home.
Every muscle in me ached; but I had to fight to
maintain my exhausted slump. Else my hindbrain would have lifted me onto my
toes and poised me against a possible shift in artificial gravity. The strain
was double, and it hurt. It had hurt for hours, sitting with my shoulders
hunched and my head hanging. But now, if Morris saw me walking like a
trampoline performer...
Morris’s man got me to my room and left me.
I woke in darkness and sensed someone in my room.
Someone who meant me no harm. In fact, Louise. I went back to sleep. .
I woke again at dawn. Louise was in my easy chair,
her feet propped on a corner of. the bed. Her eyes were open. She said,
“Breakfast?”
I said, “Yah. There isn’t much in the fridge.”
“I brought things.”
“All right?’ I closed my eyes.
Five minutes later I decided I was all slept out. I
got up and went to see how she was doing.
There was bacon frying, there was bread already
buttered for toasting in the Toast-R-Oven, there was a pan hot for eggs, and
the eggs scrambled in a bowl. Louise was filling the percolator.
“Give that here a minute,” I said. It only bad water
in it. I held the pot in my hands, closed my eyes and tried to remember.
Ah.
I knew I’d done it right even before the heat touched
my bands. The pot held hot, fragrant coffee.
“We were wrong about the first pill,” I told Louise.
She was looking at me very curiously. “What happened that second night was
this. The Monk had a translator gadget, but he wasn’t too happy with it. It
kept screaming in his ear. Screaming English.
“He could turn off the part that was shouting English
at me, and it would still whisper a Monk translation of what I was saying. But
first be bad to teach me the Monk language. He didn’t have a pill to do that.
He didn’t have a generalized language learning course either, if there is one,
which I doubt.
“He was pretty drunk, but he found something that
would serve. The profession it taught me was something like yours. I mean, it’s
an old one, and it doesn’t have a one-or-two-word name. But if it did, the word
would be prophet.”
‘Prophet,” said Louise. “Prophet?” She was doing a
remarkable thing. She was listening with all her concentration, and scrambling
eggs at the same time.
“Or disciple. Maybe apostle comes closer.
Anyway, it included the Gift of Tongues, which was what the Monk was after. But
it included other talents too.”
“Like turning cold water into hot coffee?”
“Miracles, right. I used the same talent to make the
little pink amnesia pills disappear before they hit my stomach. But an
apostle’s major talent is persuasion.
“Last night I convinced a Monk crewman that blowing
up suns is an evil thing.
“Morris is afraid that someone might convert him
back. I don’t think that’s possible. The mind reading talent that goes with the
prophet pill goes deeper than just reading minds; I read souls. The Monk is my
apostle. Maybe he’ll convince the whole crew that I’m right.
“Or he may just curse the hachiroph shisp, the
little old nova maker. Which is what I intend to do.”
“Curse it?”
“Do you think I’m kidding or something?”
“Oh, no!’ She poured our coffee. “Will that stop it
working?”
“Yes.”
“Good,” said Louise. And I felt the power of her own
faith, her faith in me. It gave her the serenity of an idealized nun.
When she turned back to serve the eggs, I dropped a
pink triangular pill in her coffee.
She finished setting breakfast and we sat down.
Louise said, “Then that’s it. It’s all over.”
“All over.” I swallowed some orange juice. Wonderful,
what fourteen hours’ sleep will do for a man’s appetite. “All over. I can go
back to my fourth profession, the only one that counts.”
She looked up quickly.
“Bartender. First, last, and foremost, I’m a
bartender. You’re going to marry a bartender.”
“Good,” she said, relaxing.
In two hours or so the slave sets would be gone from
her mind. She would be herself again: free, independent, unable to diet, and
somewhat shy.
But the pink pill would not destroy real memories.
Two hours from now, Louise would still know that I loved her, and perhaps she
would marry me after all.
I said, “We’ll have to hire an assistant. And raise
our prices. They’ll be fighting their way in when the story gets out.”
Louise had pursued her own thoughts. “Bill Morris
looked awful when I left. You ought to tell him he can stop worrying.”
“Oh, no. I want him scared. Morris has got to
talk the rest of the world into building a launching laser, instead of just
throwing bombs at the Monk ship. And we need the launching laser.”
“Mmm! That’s good coffee. Why do we need a launching
laser?”
“To get to the stars.”
“That’s Morris’s bag. You’re a bartender, remember?
The fourth profession.”
I shook my head. “You and Morris. You don’t see how
big the Monk marketplace is, or how thin the Monks are scattered. How many
novas have you seen in your lifetime?"
“Damn few,” I said. “There are damn few trading ships
in a godawful lot of sky. There arc things out there besides Monks. Things the
Monks are afraid of, and probably others they don’t know about.
“Things so dangerous that the only protection is to
be somewhere else, circling some other star, when it happens here! The Monk drive
is our lifeline and our immortality. It would be cheap at any price—”
“Your eyes are glowing,” she breathed. She looked
half hypnotized, and utterly convinced. And I knew that for the rest of my
life, I would have to keep a tight rein on my tendency to preach.