ROBERT SHECKLEY
EMISSARY FROM A GREEN AND YELLOW WORLD
Of late, Bob Sheckley has been
writing mostly mystery novels, including Soma
Blues and Draconian New York. He's currently
finishing up a new fantasy entitled
Godshome. Of course, Bob has also been entertaining us
with skewed short stories
for four decades now, and it's nice to see he's not letting up.
Witness this
story of a visit to a blue and white world.
ONE THING ABOUT PRESIDENT Rice. He
was able to make up his mind. When Ong came
to Earth with his contention, Rice believed
him. Not that it made any difference
in the end.
It began when the Marine guard came into
the Oval Office, his face ashen.
"What is it:." said President Rice, looking up from his
papers.
"Someone wants to see you," the guard said.
"So? A lot of people want to see the
President of the United States. Is his name
on the morning list?"
"You don't understand,
sir. This guy -- he just -- materialized! One moment he
wasn't there and the next moment,
there he was, standing in front of me in the
corridor. And he isn't a man, sir. He stands
on two legs but he isn't a man.
He's --he's -- I don't know what he is!"
And the guard burst
into tears.
Rice had seen other men cave in from the pressures of government. But what did
a
Marine guard have to do with pressures?
"Listen, son," Rice said.
The guard hastily rubbed
tears out of his eyes. "Yes, sir." His voice was shaky,
but it wasn't hysterical.
"What I
want you to do," Rice said, "is take the rest of the day off. Go home.
Get some rest. Come
back here tomorrow refreshed. If your supervisor asks about
it, tell him I ordered it. Will
you do that for me?"
"Yes, sir."
"And on your way, send in that fellow you met in the
corridor. The one you say
doesn't look human. Don't talk to him. Just tell him I'm waiting
to see him."
The fellow was not long in coming. He was about six feet tall. He wore a
silver
one-piece jump suit that shimmered when you looked at it. His features were
difficult
to describe. All you could say for sure was, he didn't look human.
"I know what you're
thinking," the fellow said. "You are thinking that I don't
look human."
"That's right," Rice
said.
"You're correct. I'm not human. Intelligent, yes. Human, no. You can call me
Ong. I'm
from Omair, a planet in the constellation you call Sagittarius. Omair
is a yellow and green
world. Do you believe me?"
"Yes, I believe you," Rice said.
"May I ask why?"
"It's just a
hunch," Rice said. "I think that if you stayed around here and
submitted to an examination
by a team of our scientists, they'd conclude that
you were an alien. So let's get right to
it. You're an alien. I accept that
you're from a green and yellow world named Oreair. Now
what?"
"You're asking, I suppose, why I've come here, at this time?"
"That's right."
"Well,
sir, I've come to warn you that your sun is going to go nova in about one
hundred and fifty
of your years."
"You're sure?"
"Quite sure."
"Why'd you wait so long to get around to telling
us?"
"We just found out ourselves. As soon as it was confirmed, my people sent me as
emissary
to give your planet the information and offer what assistance we
could."
"Why did they pick
you?"
"I was chosen at random for off-planet service. It could have been any of US."
"If you
say so."
"Now I have delivered the message. How can we help?"
Rice was feeling very
peculiar. He didn't understand it, but he really did
believe the emissary. But he also knew
his belief was futile in terms of saving
Earth's people. Ong's contention would have to be
submitted to scientific proof.
Before any conclusions could be reached, the Earth would
vaporize in the
expanding sun. Rice knew that if he wanted to do anything about it, it
would
have to begin now.
Rice said, "Some of our scientists have made similar conjectures as
to our
eventual doom."
"They're right. Within approximately one hundred and fifty years this
planet
will no longer be habitable. May I be blunt? You're going to have to get off.
All of
you. And you must begin immediately."
"Great," President Rice said. "Oh, that's just
great."
"Is something wrong?"
"I'm just having a little trouble assimilating this." Rice put
a hand to his
forehead. "This is a nightmare situation. But I have to deal with it as if
it's
real. Because it probably is." He wiped his forehead again. "Let's say I believe
you.
How could we do anything about it?"
"We of Omair are ready to help. We will give you
detailed plans explaining what
you must do to make starships for all Earth's people. There
will be further
instructions for getting all the people together and into the ships in an
orderly manner. Please understand, we're just trying to help, not impose
ourselves on you."
"I believe you," Rice said, and he did.
"There's a lot to be done," the emissary said.
"It's a big task, but you humans
are just as smart as we Omairians -- we checked on that,
no use wasting our time
on dummies. With your present level of technology, and with our
assistance, you
can do this and be away within the next hundred years."
"It's a tremendously
exciting prospect," Rice said.
"We thought you'd feel that way. You aren't the only
planetary civilization
we've been able to rescue."
"That is very much to your credit."
"Nothing
to praise. This is how we Omairians are."
"I'm going to have to ask something that may
sound a little strange," Rice said.
"But this is Earth so I have to ask it. Who's going to
pay for all this?"
"If it's necessary," Ong said, "we of Omair are willing to defray the
costs."
"Thank you. That's very good of you."
"We know."
"So what will be necessary?"
"To
begin with, you'll need to clear out the center of one of your continents
for the
launchingpads. But that's not too difficult, because you can distribute
the people in the
other continents. That will disrupt commerce and farming, of
course. But we will supply
whatever food is needed."
Rice could imagine it now -- the slow convening of experts from
all over the
globe, the quarreling, the demands for more and more proofs. And even if a
consensus
of scientists came to agreement after many years, what about the
population at large?
Before any sizeable portion of the Earth's people could be
convinced, the Earth would long
since have vaporized in the expanding sun.
"Simultaneous to the building of the starships,"
the emissary went on, "you'll
have to get your populations indoctrinated, innoculated
-we'll supply the
medicines -- and in general prepared for a long journey by starship.
During the
transition period you'll require temporary housing for millions. We can help
there."
"Is the indoctrination really necessary? Earth people hate that sort of thing."
"Absolutely
essential. Your people will not be prepared for a lifetime of
shipboard life. Hypnotherapy
may be needed in many cases. We can supply the
machines. I know your people won't like it,
being uprooted this way. But it's
either that or perish in about a hundred years."
"I'm
convinced," Rice said. "The question is, can I sell it?"
"I beg your pardon?"
"Well, it's
not just a case of convincing me, you know. There are tens of
millions of people out there
who won't believe you."
"But surely if you order them to take the necessary measures for
their own
good..."
"I'm just the ruler of one country, not the whole planet. And I can't
even order
my own countrymen to do what you're suggesting."
"You don't have to order it.
Just suggest it and show the proofs. Humans are
intelligent. They'll acccept your view."
Rice shook his head. "Believe me, they won't believe me. Most of them will think
this is a
diabolical plot on the part of government, or some church, or the
Islamic Conspiracy, or
some other. Some will think little gray aliens are trying
to trick us into captivity.
Others will believe it's the work of a long-vanished
Elder Race, here to do us in. Whatever
the reason, everyone will be sure it's a
plot of some kind."
"A plot to do what?" Ong asked.
"To enslave us."
"We of Omair don't do that sort of thing. We have a perfect record in that
regard. I can offer proofs."
"You keep on talking about proofs," Rice said. "But most
humans are
proof-proof."
"Is that really true?."
"Sad to say, it's true."
"It goes against
accepted theory. We have always believed that intelligence
invariably produces
rationality."
"Not in these parts. Not with us."
"I'm sorry to hear that. We Omairians
thought this was just a matter of one
colleague calling on another and warning him of a
danger, then advising him on
what steps to take. I had no idea humans might resist
believing. It's not
rational, you know. Are you quite sure of this?"
"That's how humans are.
And above all, they're conditioned from earliest age
against taking orders from aliens."
"I wouldn't be giving any orders."
"You'd be advising the government. In people's minds,
that would be the
equivalent of giving orders."
"I don't know what to tell you," the
emissary said. "Is there really no way you
could convince people otherwise?"
"I can tell you
here and now, it'll never work."
Ong gave a slight inclination of his head. "Well, it has
been nice meeting you.
Have a nice day."
The emissary turned to go.
"Just one moment," Rice
said.
The alien paused, turned. "Yes?"
"What about just taking those of us who do believe,
who want to go?"
"It's unprecedented," the emissary said. "In all our experience, races
either
can change their thinking and get away from their doomed worlds by their own
efforts,
or they cannot."
"We're different," Rice said.
"All right," the emissary said. "I'll do it.
Gather your people. I'll be back in
ten years to take those who want to go. We can't wait
any longer than that."
"We'll be ready."
TEN YEARS LATER, the emissary came to a small,
hand-built house in a corner of
the Oregon Cascade Mountains. A trout stream ran behind the
house, and Rice was
standing beside the stream, fishing. Rice said, "How did you find me
here?"
"Once we Omairians have met you, we can always find you again. But t think you
are
not president any longer."
"No," Rice said. "My term ended and I didn't get reelected. I
tried to convince
people of the destruction that lay ahead. Nearly everyone thought I was a
crackpot. Those who did believe me were worse than those who didn't. A crazy man
tried to
shoot me and killed my wife instead. My children hold me responsible.
They changed their
names and moved away."
"I am sorry to hear that," the emissary said. "But I think you'll
have to admit
that those other people, the ones who despise and disbelieve you, do not have
your grasp, your intelligence, your intuition. You're probably the most unusual
man of your
century, Mr. Rice. You believed in us from the start. You didn't
think we were sent by God
or the devil. You accepted what we said. Evidently you
were the only one."
"Evidently."
"Perhaps
it's for the best," the emissary said. "Your people, in their present
state, could never
have made it out there. But you could."
"Me?"
"Your true place is with us, Mr. Rice, out in
the galaxy. There is still time.
You are not an old man. We have rejuvenation treatments.
We can add many years
to your life. We have women of our species who would be honored to
mate with
you. We have a civilization that would welcome you. I beg of you, leave this
doomed
Earth behind and come away with
"No, I think not," Rice said. "I can still look forward to
living another thirty
or so years on Earth before things get too bad, can't I?"
"Yes, but no
longer."
"It's enough. I'll stay."
"You choose to die here with your people? But they will
perish because of their
own ignorance."
"Yes. But they are Earth's children, as I am. My
place is here with Them."
"I find it difficult to believe you're saying this."
"I did a lot
of thinking about it. It occurred to me that I was really no
different from the other
humans. Not fundamentally. And certainly no better."
"I can't accept that. Anyhow, what is
your inference?"
"It seemed to me that if my species was incapable of believing in its own
doom,
it was not for me to believe in it, either. So I've decided that all that stuff
you
talked about is not going to happen. In fact, I'm pretty sure I've dreamed
all this up."
"It is not intelligence," said the emissary, "to take refuge in solipsism."
"My mind's made
up. I'll stay here with my trout stream. You've never done any
fly fishing, have you,
emissary?"
"Where I come from," the emissary said, "we don't fish. We respect all life."
"Does that mean you don't eat flesh of any kind?"
"That is correct."
"What about vegetables?
They're living things."
"We don't eat vegetables, either. We convert our energy from inert
chemicals,
or, if necessary, we transform it directly from solar radiation. We can
re-engineer
you so you can do that, too."
"I'll just bet you can," Rice said. "I beg your pardon?"
"You
heard me. Or rather, you heard my implication. The sort of life you offer
wouldn't be
human. It would be hellish. It wouldn't be worth living for a fellow
like me, to say
nothing of my friends. I refer to the rest of the human race."
"You mentioned hell. There
is no hell."
"Yes there is. Hell is me talking to you. Now do me a favor and get out of my
face."
The emissary left, and, outside, paused for a moment, looking back at the house.
Would
Rice change his mind? No indication of it. Ong shrugged and returned to
his vehicle. With a
gesture he brought it up to full visibility and got aboard.
Soon he was high in the air,
with the green and blue planet receding below him.
Soon he would put in the faster than
light drive.
But just before he did, he turned back and took a last look. A Good-looking
planet, and intelligent people. A pity to see it all lost.
He brooded for a moment, but
only a moment. Then he consoled himself with the
knowledge that this represented no real
loss to the Cosmos. After all,
intelligent life had evolved again and again on planets all
over the universe.
But what had evolved was intelligent life much like that of Ong and his
people.
That was the standard, the norm. But intelligent life like Earth's? Intelligent
irrational
life? It had to be a fluke, a one-of-a-kind thing, this mating of
intelligence and
irrationality. The emissary didn't think the universe had seen
Earth's like before. It
probably would not again.
He looked down once more at the Earth. It looked like a nice
place. But of
course, there were more where that came from. Sort of. In any event, it was
time
to get back to his own green and yellow world.