The
From
Earth
by Robert A. Heinlein
A SIGNET BOOK from
NEW AMERICAN LIBRARY
To Hermann B.
Deutsch
Copyright 1959
BY ROBERT A. HEINLEIN
All rights
reserved. This book, or parts thereof, may not be reproduced in any form without
permission, except for brief quotations in critical articles and reviews. For
information address Blassingame, McCauley & Wood, 60 East 42nd Street, New
York, New York 10017.
Published as a SIGNET BOOK
By arrangement with The Gnome Press, Inc.,
and
Robert A. Heinlein
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
The Menace from Earth, Fantasy House, Inc. 1957; Water is for Washing, Popular
Publications, Inc. 1947; Project
Nightmare, Ziff-Davis Publishing Co. 1953; Sky
Lift, Greenleaf Publishing Co. 1953;
By His Bootstraps, Street & Smith
Publications,
Inc. 1941; Goldfish Bowl, Street
& Smith Publications, Inc. 1942; Columbus
Was a Dope,
Better
Publications, Inc. 1947; The Year of the
Jackpot, Galaxy Publishing Corp. 1952.
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At first Potiphar Breen did not
notice the girl who was undressing.
She was standing at a bus stop only
ten feet away. He was indoors but that would not have kept him from noticing;
he was seated in a drugstore booth adjacent to the bus stop; there was nothing
between Potiphar and the young lady but plate glass and an occasional
pedestrian.
Nevertheless he did not look up when
she began to peel. Propped up in front of him was a Los Angeles Times;
beside it, still unopened, were the Herald-Express and the Daily News.
He was scanning the newspaper carefully but the headline stories got only a
passing glance. He noted the maximum and minimum temperatures in Brownsville,
Texas and entered them in a neat black notebook; he did the same with the
closing prices of three blue chips and two dogs on the New York Exchange, as
well as the total number of shares. He then began a rapid sifting of minor news
stories, from time to time entering briefs of them in his little book; the
items he recorded seemed randomly unrelated--among them a publicity release in
which Miss National Cottage Cheese Week announced that she intended to marry
and have twelve children by a man who could prove that he had been a life-long
vegetarian, a circumstantial but wildly unlikely flying saucer report, and a
call for prayers for rain throughout Southern California.
Potiphar had just written down the
names and addresses of three residents of Watts, California who had been
miraculously healed at a tent meeting of the God-is-AII First Truth Brethren by
the Reverend Dickie Bottomley, the eight-year-old evangelist, and was preparing
to tackle the Herald-Express, when he glanced over his reading glasses
and saw the amateur ecdysiast on the street comer outside. He stood up, placed
his glasses in their case, folded the newspapers and put them carefully in his
right coat pocket, counted out the exact amount of his check and added
twenty-five cents. He then took his raincoat from a hook, placed it over his arm,
and went outside.
By now the girl was practically down
to the buff. It seemed to Potiphar Breen that she had quite a lot of buff.
Nevertheless she had not pulled much of a house. The corner newsboy had stopped
hawking his disasters and was grinning at her, and a mixed pair of
transvestites who were apparently waiting for the bus had their eyes on her.
None of the passers-by stopped. They glanced at her, then with the
self-conscious indifference to the unusual of the true Southern Californian,
they went on their various ways. The transvestites were frankly staring. The
male member of the team wore a frilly feminine blouse but his skirt was a
conservative Scottish kilt--his female companion wore a business suit and
Homburg hat; she stared with lively interest.
As Breen approached the girl hung a
scrap of nylon on the bus stop bench, then reached for her shoes. A police
officer, looking hot and unhappy, crossed with the lights and came up to them.
"Okay," he said in a tired voice, "that'll be all, lady. Get them
duds back on and clear out of here."
The female transvestite took a cigar
out of her mouth. "Just," she said, "what business is it of
yours, officer?" The cop turned to her. "Keep out of this!" He
ran his eyes over her get up, that of her companion. "I ought to run both
of you in, too."
The transvestite raised her
eyebrows. "Arrest us for being clothed, arrest her for not being. I think
I'm going to like this." She turned to the girl, who was standing still
and saying nothing, as if she were puzzled by what was going on. "I'm a
lawyer, dear." She pulled a card from her vest pocket. "If this
uniformed Neanderthal persists in annoying you, I'll be delighted to handle
him."
The man in the kilt said,
"Grace! Please!"
She shook him off. "Quiet,
Norman—this is our business." She went on to the policeman,
"Well? Call the wagon. In the meantime my client will answer no
questions."
The official looked unhappy enough
to cry and his face was getting dangerously red. Breen quietly stepped forward
and slipped his raincoat around the shoulders of the girl. She looked startled
and spoke for the first time. "Uh—thanks." She pulled the coat about
her, cape fashion.
The female
attorney glanced at Breen then back to the cop. "Well, officer? Ready to
arrest us?"
He shoved his face close to hers.
"I ain't going to give you the satisfaction!" He sighed and added,
"Thanks, Mr. Breen—you know this lady?"
"I’ll take care of her. You can
forget it, Kawonski."
"I sure hope so. If she's with
you, I’ll do just that. But get her out of here, Mr. Breen—please!"
The lawyer interrupted. "Just a
moment—you're interfering with my client."
Kawonski said, "Shut up, you!
You heard Mr. Breen—she's with him. Right, Mr. Breen?"
"Well yes. I’m a friend. I'll
take care of her."
The transvestite said suspiciously,
"I didn't hear her say that."
Her companion said,
"Grace—please! There's our bus."
"And I didn't hear her say she
was your client," the cop retorted. "You look like a—" His words
were drowned out by the bus's brakes, "—and besides that, if you don't
climb on that bus and get off my territory, I'll . . . I'll . . ."
"You’ll what?"
"Grace! We'll miss our
bus."
"Just a moment, Norman. Dear,
is this man really a friend of yours? Are you with him?"
The girl looked uncertainly at Breen,
then said in a low voice, "Uh, yes. That's right."
"Well . . ." The lawyer's
companion pulled at her arm. She shoved her card into Breen's hand and got on
the bus; it pulled away.
Breen pocketed the card. Kawonski
wiped his forehead.
"Why did you do it, lady?"
he said peevishly.
The girl looked puzzled. "I . .
. I don't know."
"You hear that, Mr. Breen?
That's what they all say. And if you pull 'em in, there's six more the next
day. The Chief said—" He sighed. "The Chief said well, if I had arrested
her like that female shyster wanted me to. I'd be out at a hundred and
ninety-sixth and Ploughed Ground tomorrow morning, thinking about retirement.
So get her out of here, will you?"
The girl said, "But—"
"No 'buts,' lady. Just be glad
a real gentleman like Mr. Breen is willing to help you." He gathered up
her clothes, handed them to her. When she reached for them she again exposed an
uncustomary amount of skin; Kawonski hastily gave them to Breen instead, who
crowded them into his coat pockets.
She let Breen lead her to where his
car was parked, got in and tucked the raincoat around her so that she was
rather more dressed than a girl usually is. She looked at him. She saw a
medium-sized and undistinguished man who was slipping down the wrong side of
thirty-five and looked older. His eyes had that mild and slightly naked look of
the habitual spectacles wearer who is not at the moment with glasses; his hair
was gray at the temples and thin on top. His herringbone suit, black shoes,
white shirt, and neat tie smacked more of the East than of California.
He saw a face which he classified as
"pretty" and "wholesome" rather than "beautiful"
and "glamorous," It was topped by a healthy mop of light brown hair.
He set her age at twenty-five, give or take eighteen months. He smiled gently,
climbed in without speaking and started his car. He turned up Doheny Drive and
east on Sunset. Near La Cienega he slowed down. "Feeling better?"
"Uh, I guess so.
Mr.—‘Breen’?"
"Call me Potiphar. What's your
name? Don't tell me if you don't want to,"
"Me? I'm . . . I'm Meade
Barstow."
"Thank you, Meade. Where do you
want to go? Home?"
"I suppose so. I—Oh my no! I
can't go home like this." She clutched the coat tightly to her.
"Parents?"
"No. My landlady. She'd be
shocked to death."
"Where, then?"
She thought. "Maybe we could
stop at a filling station and I could sneak into the ladies' room."
"Mmm. . . maybe. See here,
Meade, my house is six blocks from here and has a garage entrance. You could
get inside without being seen." He looked at her.
She stared back. "Potiphar you
don't look like a wolf?"
"Oh, but I am! The worst
sort." He whistled and gnashed his teeth. "See? But Wednesday is my
day off from it." She looked at him and dimpled. "Oh, well! I'd
rather wrestle with you than with Mrs. Megeath. Let's go."
He turned up into the hills. His
bachelor diggings were one of the many little frame houses clinging like fungus
to the brown slopes of the Santa Monica Mountains. The garage was notched into
this hill; the house sat on it. He drove in, cut the ignition, and led her up a
teetery inside stairway into the living room. "In there," he said,
pointing. "Help yourself." He pulled her clothes out of his coat
pockets and handed them to her.
She blushed and took them, disappeared
into his bed- room. He heard her turn the key in the lock. He settled down in
his easy chair, took out his notebook, and opened the Herald-Express.
He was finishing the Daily News
and had added several notes to his collection when she came out. Her hair was
neatly rolled; her face was restored; she had brushed most of the wrinkles out
of her skirt. Her sweater was neither too tight nor deep cut, but it was
pleasantly filled. She reminded him of well water and farm breakfasts.
He took his raincoat from her, hung
it up, and said, "Sit down, Meade."
She said uncertainly, "I had
better go."
"Go if you must—but I had hoped
to talk with you."
"Well—" She sat down on
the edge of his couch and looked around. The room was small but as neat as his
necktie, clean as his collar. The fireplace was swept; the floor was bare and
polished. Books crowded bookshelves in every possible space. One corner was
filled by an elderly flat-top desk; the papers on it were neatly in order. Near
it, on its own stand, was a small electric calculator. To her right, French
windows gave out on a tiny porch over the garage. Beyond it she could see the
sprawling city; a few neon signs were already blinking.
She sat back a little. "This is
a nice room—Potiphar. It looks like you."
"I take that as a compliment.
Thank you." She did not answer; he went on, "Would you like a
drink?"
"Oh, would I!" She
shivered. "I guess I've got the jitters."
He got up. "Not surprising.
What'll it be?"
She took Scotch and water, no ice;
he was a Bourbon-and-ginger-ale man. She had soaked up half her highball in
silence, then put it down, squared her shoulders and said,
"Potiphar?"
"Yes, Meade?"
"Look—if you brought me here to
make a pass, I wish you'd go ahead and make it. It won't do you a bit of good,
but it makes me nervous to wait for it."
He said nothing and did not change
his expression. She went on uneasily, "Not that I'd blame you for
trying—under the circumstances. And I am grateful. But . . . well it's
just that I don't—"
He came over and took both her
hands. "My dear, I haven't the slightest thought of making a pass at you.
Nor need you feel grateful. I butted in because I was interested in your
case."
"My case? Are you a doctor? A
psychiatrist?"
He shook his head. "I'm a
mathematician. A statistician, to be precise."
"Hub? I don't get it."
"Don't worry about it. But I would like to ask some questions. May
I?"
"Uh, sure, sure! I owe you that
much—and then some."
"You owe me nothing. Want your
drink sweetened?"
She gulped it and handed him her
glass, then followed him out into the kitchen. He did an exact job of measuring
and gave it back. "Now tell me why you took your clothes off?"
She frowned. "I don't know. I don't
know. I don't know. I guess I just went crazy." She added round-eyed,
"But I don't feel crazy. Could I go off my rocker and not know it?"
"You're not crazy . . . not more so than the rest of us," he amended.
"Tell me, where did you see someone else do this?"
"Huh? But I never have."
"Where did you read about
it?"
"But I haven't. Wait a
minute—those people up in Canada. Dooka-somethings."
"Doukhobors. That's all? No
bareskin swimming parties? No strip poker?"
She shook her head. "No. You
may not believe it but I was the kind of a little girl who undressed under her
nightie." She colored and added, "I still do--unless I remember to
tell myself it's silly."
"I believe it. No news
stories?"
"No. Yes, there was too! About
two weeks ago, I think it was. Some girl in a theater, in the audience, I mean.
But I thought it was just publicity. You know the stunts they pull here."
He shook his head. "It wasn't.
February 3rd, the Grand Theater, Mrs. Alvin Copley. Charges dismissed."
"Huh? How did you
know?"
"Excuse me." He went to
his desk, dialed the City News Bureau. "Alf? This is Pot Breen. They still
sitting on that story? . . . yes, yes, the Gypsy Rose file. Any new ones
today?" He waited; Meade thought that she could make out swearing.
"Take it easy, Alf—this hot weather can't last forever. Nine, eh? Well,
add another—Santa Monica Boulevard, late this afternoon. No arrest." He
added, "Nope, nobody got her name—a middle-aged woman with a cast in one
eye. I happened to see it . . . who, me? Why would I want to get mixed up? But
it's rounding up into a very, very interesting picture." He put the phone
down.
Meade said, "Cast in one eye,
indeed!"
"Shall I call him back and give
him your name?"
"Oh, no!"
"Very well. Now, Meade, we
seemed to have located the point of contagion in your case--Mrs. Copley. What
I'd like to know next is how you felt, what you were thinking about, when you
did it?"
She was frowning intently.
"Wait a minute, Potiphar--do I understand that nine other girls
have pulled the stunt I pulled?"
"Oh, no—nine others today.
You are—" He paused briefly. "—the three hundred and nineteenth case
in Los Angeles county since the first of the year. I don't have figures on the
rest of the country, but the suggestion to clamp down on the stories came from
the eastern news services when the papers here put our first cases on the wire.
That proves that it's a problem elsewhere, too."
"You mean that women all over
the country are peeling off their clothes in public? Why, how shocking!"
He said nothing. She blushed again
and insisted, "Well, it is shocking, even if it was me, this time."
"No, Meade. One case is
shocking; over three hundred makes it scientifically interesting. That's why I
want to know how it felt. Tell me about it."
"But—All right, I'll try. I
told you I don't know why I did it; I still don't. I—"
"You remember it?"
"Oh, yes! I remember getting up
off the bench and pulling up my sweater. I remember unzipping my skirt. I
remember thinking I would have to hurry as I could see my bus stopped two
blocks down the street. I remember how good it felt when I finally, uh—"
She paused and looked puzzled. "But I still don't know why."
"What were you thinking about
just before you stood up?"
"I don't remember."
"Visualize the street. What was
passing by? Where were your hands? Were your legs crossed or uncrossed? Was
there anybody near you? What were you thinking about?"
"Uh . . . nobody was on the
bench with me. I had my hands in my lap. Those characters in the mixed-up
clothes were standing near by, but I wasn't paying attention. I wasn't thinking
much except that my feet hurt and I wanted to get home-and how unbearably hot
and sultry it was. Then--" Her eyes became distant, "--suddenly I
knew what I had to do and it was very urgent that I do it. So I stood up and I
. . . and I--" Her voice became shrill.
"Take it easy!" he said.
"Don't do it again."
"Huh? Why, Mr. Breen! I
wouldn't do anything like that."
"Of course not. Then
what?"
"Why, you put your raincoat
around me and you know the rest." She faced him. "Say, Potiphar, what
were you doing with a raincoat? It hasn't rained in weeks--this is the driest,
hottest rainy season in years."
"In sixty-eight years, to be
exact."
"Huh?"
"I carry a raincoat anyhow. Uh,
just a notion of mine, but I feel that when it does rain, it's going to rain
awfully hard." He added, "Forty days and forty nights, maybe."
She decided that he was being
humorous and laughed.
He went on, "Can you remember
how you got the idea?"
She swirled her glass and thought.
"I simply don't know."
He nodded. "That's what I
expected."
"I don't understand you--unless
you think I'm crazy. Do you?"
"No. I think you had to do it
and could not help it and don't know why and can't know why."
"But you know." She
said it accusingly.
"Maybe. At least I have some
figures. Ever take any interest in statistics, Meade?"
She shook her head. "Figures
confuse me. Never mind statistics--I want to know why I did what I did!"
He looked at her very soberly.
"I think we're lemmings, Meade."
She looked puzzled, then horrified.
"You mean those little furry mouselike creatures? The ones that--"
"Yes. The ones that
periodically make a death migration, until millions, hundreds of millions of
them drown themselves in the sea. Ask a lemming why he does it. If you could
get him to slow up his rush toward death, even money says he would rationalize
his answer as well as any college graduate. But he does it because he has
to--and so do we."
"That's a horrid idea,
Potiphar."
"Maybe. Come here, Meade. I'll
show you figures that confuse me, too." He went to his desk and opened a
drawer, took out a packet of cards. "Here's one. Two weeks ago a man sues
an entire state legislature for alienation of his wife's affection--and the
judge lets the suit be tried. Or this one--a patent application for a device to
lay the globe over on its side and warm up the arctic regions. Patent denied,
but the inventor took in over three hundred thousand dollars in down payments
on South Pole real estate before the postal authorities stepped in. Now he's
fighting the case and it looks as if he might win. And here--prominent bishop
proposes applied courses in the so-called facts of life in high schools."
He put the card away hastily. "Here's a dilly: a bill introduced in the
Alabama lower house to repeal the laws of atomic energy--not the present
statutes, but the natural laws concerning nuclear physics; the wording makes
that plain." He shrugged. "How silly can you get?"
"They're crazy."
"No, Meade. One such is crazy;
a lot of them is a lemming death march. No, don't object--I've plotted them on
a curve. The last time we had anything like this was the so-called Era of
Wonderful Nonsense. But this one is much worse." He delved into a lower
drawer, hauled out a graph. "The amplitude is more than twice as great and
we haven't reached peak. What the peak will be I don't dare guess three
separate rhythms, reinforcing."
She peered at the curves. "You
mean that the laddy with the artic real estate deal is somewhere on this
line?"
"He adds to it. And back here
on the last crest are the flag- pole sitters and the goldfish swallowers and
the Ponzi hoax and the marathon dancers and the man who pushed a peanut up
Pikes Peak with his nose. You're on the new crest—or you will be when I add you
in."
She made a face. "I don't like
it."
"Neither do 1. But it's as
clear as a bank statement. This year the human race is letting down its hair,
flipping its lip with a finger, and saying, 'Wubba, wubba, wubba."'
She shivered. "Do you suppose I
could have another drink? Then I'll go."
"I have a better idea. I owe
you a dinner for answering questions. Pick a place and we'll have a cocktail
before."
She chewed her lip. "You don't
owe me anything. And I don't feel up to facing a restaurant crowd. I might . .
. I might—"
"No, you wouldn't," he
said sharply. "It doesn't hit twice."
"You're sure? Anyhow, I don't
want to face a crowd." She glanced at his kitchen door. "Have you
anything to eat in there? I can cook."
"Urn, breakfast things. And
there's a pound of ground round in the freezer compartment and some rolls. I
sometimes make hamburgers when I don't want to go out."
She headed for the kitchen.
"Drunk or sober, fully dressed or—or naked, I can cook. You’ll see."
He did see. Open-faced sandwiches
with the meat married to toasted buns and the flavor garnished rather than
suppressed by scraped Bermuda onion and thin-sliced dill, a salad made from
things she had scrounged out of his refrigerator, potatoes crisp but not
vulcanized. They ate it on the tiny balcony, sopping it down with cold beer.
He sighed and wiped his mouth.
"Yes, Meade, you can cook."
'"Some day I’ll arrive with
proper materials and pay you back. Then I’ll prove it."
"You've already proved it.
Nevertheless I accept. But I tell you three times, you owe me nothing."
"No? If you hadn't been a Boy
Scout, I'd be in jail."
Breen shook his head. "The
police have orders to keep it quiet at all costs—to keep it from growing. You
saw that. And, my dear, you weren't a person to me at the time. I didn't even
see your face; I—"
"You saw plenty else!"
"Truthfully, I didn't look. You
were just a—a statistic."
She toyed with her knife and said
slowly, "I'm not sure, but I think I've just been insulted. In all the
twenty-five years that I've fought men off, more or less successfully, I've
been called a lot of names—but a 'statistic'—why I ought to take your slide
rule and beat you to death with it."
"My dear young lady—"
"I’m not a lady, that's for
sure. But I'm not a statistic."
"My dear Meade, then. I wanted
to tell you, before you did anything hasty, that in college I wrestled varsity
middleweight."
She grinned and dimpled.
"That's more the talk a girl likes to hear. I was beginning to be afraid
you had been assembled in an adding machine factory. Potty, you're rather a
dear."
"If that is a diminutive of my
given name, I like it. But if it refers to my waist line, I resent it."
She reached across and patted his
stomach. "I like your waist line; lean and hungry men are difficult. If I
were cooking for you regularly, I'd really pad it."
"Is that a proposal?"
"Let it lie, let it lie—Potty,
do you really think the whole country is losing its buttons?"
He sobered at once. "It's worse
than that."
"Huh?"
"Come inside. I’ll show
you." They gathered up dishes and dumped them in the sink, Breen talking
all the while. "As a kid I was fascinated by numbers. Numbers are pretty
things and they combine in such interesting configurations. I took my degree in
math, of course, and got a job as a junior actuary with Midwestern Mutual—the
insurance outfit. That was fun—no way on earth to tell when a particular man is
going to die, but an absolute certainty that so many men of a certain age group
would die before a certain date. The curves were so lovely—and they always
worked out. Always. You didn't have to know why; you could predict with
dead certainty and never know why. The equations worked; the curves were right.
"I was interested in astronomy
too; it was the one science where individual figures worked out neatly,
completely, and accurately, down to the last decimal point the instruments were
good for. Compared with astronomy the other sciences were mere carpentry and
kitchen chemistry.
"I found there were nooks and
crannies in astronomy where individual numbers won't do, where you have to go
over to statistics, and I became even more interested. I joined the Variable
Star Association and I might have gone into astronomy professionally, instead
of what I'm in now—business consultation—if I hadn't gotten interested in
something else."
'"Business consultation'?"
repeated Meade. "Income tax work?"
"Oh, no—that's too elementary.
I'm the numbers boy for a firm of industrial engineers. I can tell a rancher
exactly how many of his Hereford bull calves will be sterile. Or I tell a
motion picture producer how much rain insurance to carry on location. Or maybe
how big a company in a particular line must be to carry its own risk in
industrial accidents. And I’m right, I’m always right."
"Wait a minute. Seems to me a
big company would have to have insurance."
"Contrariwise. A really big
corporation begins to resemble a statistical universe."
"Huh?"
"Never mind. I got interested
in something else—cycles. Cycles are everything, Meade. And everywhere. The
tides. The seasons. Wars. Love. Everybody knows that in the spring the young
man's fancy lightly turns to what the girls never stopped thinking about, but
did you know that it runs in an eighteen-year-plus cycle as well? And that a
girl born at the wrong swing of the curve doesn't stand nearly as good a chance
as her older or younger sister?"
"What? Is that why I'm a
doddering old maid?"
"You're twenty-five?" He
pondered. "Maybe—but your chances are picking up again; the curve is
swinging up. Anyhow, remember you are just one statistic; the curve applies to
the group. Some girls get married every year anyhow."
"Don't call me a
statistic."
"Sorry. And marriages match up
with acreage planted to wheat, with wheat cresting ahead. You could almost say
that planting wheat makes people get married."
"Sounds silly."
"It is silly. The whole
notion of cause-and-effect is probably superstition. But the same cycle shows a
peak in house building right after a peak in marriages, every time."
"Now that makes sense."
"Does it? How many newlyweds do
you know who can afford to build a house? You might as well blame it on wheat
acreage. We don't know why; it just is."
"Sun spots, maybe?"
"You can correlate sun spots
with stock prices, or Columbia River salmon, or women's skirts. And you are
just as much justified in blaming short skirts for sun spots as you are in
blaming sun spots for salmon. We don't know. But the curves go on just the
same."
"But there has to be some reason
behind it."
"Does there? That's mere
assumption. A fact has no 'why.' There it stands, self demonstrating. Why did
you take your clothes off today?"
She frowned. "That's not
fair."
"Maybe not. But I want to show
you why I'm worried."
He went into the bedroom, came out
with a large roll of tracing paper. "We'll spread it on the floor. Here
they are, all of them. The 54-year cycle—see the Civil War there? See how it
matches in? The 18 & 1/3 year cycle, the 9-plus cycle, the 41-month shorty,
the three rhythms of sunspots—everything, all combined in one grand chart.
Mississippi River floods, fur catches in Canada, stock market prices,
marriages, epidemics, freight-car loadings, bank clearings, locust plagues,
divorces, tree growth, wars, rainfall, earth magnetism, building construction
patents applied for, murders—you name it; I've got it there."
She stared at the bewildering array
of wavy lines. "But, Potty, what does it mean?"
"It means that these things all
happen, in regular rhythm, whether we like. it or not. It means that when
skirts are due to go up, all the stylists in Paris can't make 'em go down. It
means that when prices are going down, all the controls and supports and
government planning can't make 'em go up." He pointed to a curve.
"Take a look at the grocery ads. Then turn to the financial page and read
how the Big Brains try to double-talk their way out of it. It means that when
an epidemic is due, it happens, despite all the public health efforts. It means
we're lemmings."
She pulled her lip. "I don't
like it. 1 am the master of my fate,' and so forth. I've got free will, Potty.
I know I have—I can feel it."
"I imagine every little neutron
in an atom bomb feels the same way. He can go spung! or he can sit
still, just as he pleases. But statistical mechanics work out anyhow. And the
bomb goes off—which is what I'm leading up to. See anything odd there, Meade?"
She studied the chart, trying not to
let the curving lines confuse her. "They sort of bunch up over at the
right end."
"You're dern tootin' they do!
See that dotted vertical line? That's right now—and things are bad enough. But
take a look at that solid vertical; that's about six months from now and that's
when we get it. Look at the cycles—the long ones, the short ones, all of them.
Every single last one of them reaches either a trough or a crest exactly on—or
almost on—that line."
"That's bad?"
"What do you think? Three of
the big ones troughed in 1929 and the depression almost ruined us . . . even
with the big 54-year cycle supporting things. Now we've got the big one
troughing—and the few crests are not things that help. I mean to say, tent caterpillars
and influenza don't do us any good, Meade, if statistics mean anything, this
tired old planet hasn't seen a jackpot like this since Eve went into the apple
business. I'm scared."
She searched his face.
"Potty—you're not simply having fun with me? You know I can't check up on
you."
"I wish to heaven I were. No,
Meade, I can't fool about numbers; I wouldn't know how. This is it. The Year of
the Jackpot."
She was very silent as he drove her
home. As they approached West Los Angeles, she said, "Potty?"
"Yes, Meade?"
"What do we do about
it?"
"What do you do about a
hurricane? You pull in your ears. What can you do about an atom bomb? You try
to out-guess it, not be there when it goes off. What else can you do?"
"Oh." She was silent for a
few moments, then added, "Potty? Will you tell me which way to jump?"
"Hub? Oh, sure! If I can figure
it out."
He took her to her door, turned to
go. She said, "Potty!"
He faced her. "Yes,
Meade?"
She grabbed his head, shook it—then
kissed him fiercely on the mouth. "There—is that just a statistic?"
"Uh, no."
"It had better not be,"
she said dangerously. "Potty, I think I'm going to have to change your
curve."
II
"RUSSIANS REJECT UN NOTE"
"MISSOURI FLOOD DAMAGE EXCEEDS
1951 RECORD"
"MISSISSIPPI MESSIAH DEFIES
COURT"
"NUDIST CONVENTION STORMS
BAILEY'S BEACH"
"BRITISH-IRAN TALKS STILL
DEAD-LOCKED"
"FASTER-THAN-LIGHT WEAPON
PROMISED"
"TYPHOON DOUBLING BACK ON
MANILA"
"MARRIAGE SOLEMNIZED ON FLOOR
OF HUDSON—New York, 13 July, In a specially-constructed diving suit built
for two, Merydith Smithe, cafe society headline girl, and Prince Augie
Schleswieg of New York and the Riviera were united today by Bishop Dalton in a
service televised with the aid of the Navy's ultra-new—"
As the Year of the Jackpot
progressed Breen took melancholy pleasure in adding to the data which proved
that the curve was sagging as predicted. The undeclared World War continued its
bloody, blundering way at half a dozen spots around a tortured globe. Breen did
not chart it; the headlines were there for anyone to read. He concentrated on
the odd facts in the other pages of the papers, facts which, taken singly,
meant nothing, but taken together showed a disastrous trend.
He listed stock market prices,
rainfall, wheat futures, but it was the "silly season" items which
fascinated him. To be sure, some humans were always doing silly things—but at
what point had prime damfoolishness become commonplace? When, for example, had
the zombie-like professional models become accepted ideals of American
womanhood? What were the gradations between National Cancer Week and National
Athlete's Foot Week? On what day had the American people finally taken leave of
horse sense?
Take transvestism—male-and-female
dress customs were arbitrary, but they had seemed to be deeply rooted in the
culture. When did the breakdown start? With Marlene Dietrich's tailored suits?
By the late forties there was no "male" article of clothing that a
woman could not wear in public—but when had men started to slip over the line?
Should he count the psychological cripples who had made the word
"drag" a byword in Greenwich Village and Hollywood long before this
outbreak? Or were they "wild shots" not belonging on the curve? Did
it start with some unknown normal man attending a masquerade and there
discovering that skirts actually were more comfortable and practical than
trousers? Or had it started with the resurgence of Scottish nationalism
reflected in the wearing of kilts by many Scottish-Americans?
Ask a lemming to state his motives!
The outcome was in front of him, a news story. Transvestism by draft-dodgers
had at last resulted in a mass arrest in Chicago which was to have ended in a
giant joint trial—only to have the deputy prosecutor show up in a pinafore and
defy the judge to submit to an examination to determine the judge's true sex.
The judge suffered a stroke and died and the trial was postponed—postponed
forever in Breen's opinion; he doubted that this particular blue law would ever
again be enforced.
Or the laws about indecent exposure,
for that matter. The attempt to limit the Gypsy-Rose syndrome by ignoring it
had taken the starch out of enforcement; now here was a report about the All
Souls Community Church of Springfield: the pastor had reinstituted ceremonial
nudity. Probably the first time this thousand years, Breen thought, aside from
some screwball cults in Los Angeles. The reverend gentleman claimed that the
ceremony was identical with the "dance of the high priestess" in the
ancient temple of Kamak.
Could be—but Breen had private
information that the "priestess" had been working the burlesque &
nightclub circuit before her present engagement. In any case the holy leader
was packing them in and had not been arrested. Two weeks later a hundred and
nine churches in thirty- three states offered equivalent attractions. Breen
entered them on his curves.
This queasy oddity seemed to him to
have no relation to the startling rise in the dissident evangelical cults
throughout the country. These churches were sincere, earnest and poor—but
growing, ever since the War. Now they were multiplying like yeast. It seemed a
statistical cinch that the United States was about to become godstruck again.
He correlated it with Transcendentalism and the trek of the Latter Day Saints—hmm
. . . yes, it fitted. And the curve was pushing toward a crest.
Billions in war bonds were now
falling due; wartime marriages were reflected in the swollen peak of the Los
Angeles school population. The Colorado River was at a record low and the towers
in Lake Mead stood high out of the water. But the Angelenos committed slow
suicide by watering lawns as usual. The Metropolitan Water District
commissioners tried to stop it—it fell between the stools of the police powers
of fifty "sovereign" cities. The taps remained open, trickling away
the life blood of the desert paradise.
The four regular party
conventions—Dixiecrats, Regular Republicans, the other Regular Republicans, and
the Democrats—attracted scant attention, as the Know-Nothings had not yet met.
The fact that the "American Rally," as the Know-Nothings preferred to
be called, claimed not to be a party but an educational society did not detract
from their strength. But what was their strength? Their beginnings had been so
obscure that Breen had had to go back and dig into the December 1951 files—but
he had been approached twice this very week to join them, right inside his own
office, once by his boss, once by the janitor.
He hadn't been able to chart the
Know-Nothings. They gave him chills in his spine. He kept column-inches on
them, found that their publicity was shrinking while their numbers were
obviously zooming.
Krakatau blew up on July i8th. It
provided the first important transpacific TV-cast; its effect on sunsets, on
solar constant, on mean temperature, and on rainfall would not be felt until
later in the year. The San Andreas fault, its stresses unrelieved since the
Long Beach disaster of 19331 continued to build up imbalance—an unhealed wound
running the full length of the West Coast. Pelee and Etna erupted; Mauna Loa
was still quiet.
Flying saucers seemed to be landing
daily in every state. No one had exhibited one on the ground—or had the
Department of Defense sat on them? Breen was unsatisfied with the
off-the-record reports he had been able to get; the alcoholic content of some
of them had been high. But the sea serpent on Ventura Beach was real; he had
seen it. The troglodyte in Tennessee he was not in a position to verify.
Thirty-one domestic air crashes the
last week in July. . .was it sabotage? Or was it a sagging curve on a chart?
And that neo-polio epidemic that skipped from Seattle to New York? Time for a
big epidemic? Breen's chart said it was. But how about B.W.? Could a chart know
that a Slav biochemist would perfect an efficient virus-and-vector at the right
time? Nonsense!
But the curves, if they meant
anything at all, included "free will"; they averaged in all the
individual "wills" of a statistical universe—and came out as a smooth
function, Every morning three million "free wills" flowed toward the
center of the New York megapolis; every evening they flowed out again—all by
"free will," and on a smooth and predictable curve.
Ask a lemming! Ask all the
lemmings, dead and alive—let them take a vote on it! Breen tossed his notebook
aside and called Meade, "Is this my favorite statistic?"
"Potty! I was thinking about
you."
"Naturally. This is your night
off."
"Yes, but another reason, too.
Potiphar, have you ever taken a look at the Great Pyramid?"
"I haven't even been to Niagara
Falls. I'm looking for a rich woman, so I can travel."
"Yes, yes, I'll let you know
when I get my first million, but—"
"That's the first time you've
proposed to me this week."
"Shut up. Have you ever looked
into the prophecies they found inside the pyramid?"
"Huh? Look, Meade, that's in
the same class with astrology—strictly for squirrels. Grow up."
"Yes, of course. But Potty, I
thought you were interested in anything odd. This is odd."
"Oh. Sorry. If it's 'silly
season' stuff, let's see it."
"All right. Am I cooking for
you tonight?"
"It's Wednesday, isn't
it?"
"How soon?"
He glanced at his watch. "Pick
you up in eleven minutes." He felt his whiskers. "No, twelve and a
half."
"I'll be ready. Mrs. Megeath
says that these regular dates mean that you are going to marry me."
"Pay no attention to her. She's
just a statistic. And I'm a wild datum."
"Oh, well, I've got two hundred
and forty-seven dollars toward that million. 'Bye!"
Meade's prize was the usual
Rosicrucian come-on, elaborately printed, and including a photograph
(retouched, he was sure) of the much disputed line on the corridor wall which
was alleged to prophesy, by its various discontinuities, the entire future.
This one had an unusual time scale but the major events were all marked on
it—the fall of Rome, the Norman Invasion, the Discovery of America, Napoleon,
the World Wars.
What made it interesting was that it
suddenly stopped—now.
"What about it. Potty?"
"I guess the stonecutter got
tired. Or got fired. Or they got a new head priest with new ideas." He
tucked it into his desk. "Thanks. I'll think about how to list it."
But he got it out again, applied dividers and a magnifying glass. "It says
here," he announced, "that the end comes late in August—unless that's
a fly speck."
"Morning or afternoon? I have
to know how to dress."
"Shoes will be worn. All God's
chilluns got shoes." He put it away.
She was quiet for a moment, then
said, "Potty, isn't it about time to jump?"
"Huh? Girl, don't let that
thing affect you! That's 'silly season' stuff."
"Yes. But take a look at your
chart."
Nevertheless he took the next
afternoon off, spent it in the reference room of the main library, confirmed
his opinion of soothsayers. Nostradamus was pretentiously silly, Mother Shippey
was worse. In any of them you could find what you looked for.
He did find one item in Nostradamus
that he liked: "The Oriental shall come forth from his seat . . . he shall
pass through the sky, through the waters and the snow, and he shall strike each
one with his weapon."
That sounded like what the
Department of Defense expected the commies to try to do to the Western Allies.
But it was also a description of every invasion that had come out of the
"heartland" in the memory of mankind. Nuts!
When he got home he found himself
taking down his father's Bible and turning to Revelations. He could not find
anything that he could understand but he got fascinated by the recurring use of
precise numbers. Presently he thumbed through the Book at random; his eye lit
on: "Boast not thyself of tomorrow; for thou knowest not what a day may
bring forth." He put the Book away, feeling humbled but not cheered.
The rains started the next morning.
The Master Plumbers elected Miss Star Morning "Miss Sanitary
Engineering" on the same day that the morticians designated her as
"The Body I would Like Best to Prepare," and her option was dropped
by Fragrant Features. Congress voted $1.37 to compensate Thomas Jefferson Meeks
for losses incurred while an emergency postman for the Christmas rush of 1936,
approved the appointment of five lieutenant generals and one ambassador and
adjourned in eight minutes. The fire extinguishers in a midwest orphanage
turned out to be filled with air. The chancellor of the leading football institution
sponsored a fund to send peace messages and vitamins to the Politburo. The
stock market slumped nineteen points and the tickers ran two hours late.
Wichita, Kansas, remained flooded while Phoenix, Arizona, cut off drinking
water to areas outside city limits. And Potiphar Breen found that he had left
his raincoat at Meade Barstow's rooming house.
He phoned her landlady, but Mrs.
Megeath turned him over to Meade. "What are you doing home on a
Friday?" he demanded.
"The theater manager laid me
off. Now you'll have to marry me."
"You can't afford me.
Meade—seriously, baby, what happened?"
"I was ready to leave the dump
anyway. For the last six weeks the popcorn machine has been carrying the place.
Today I sat through I Was A Teen-Age Beatnik twice. Nothing to do."
"I'll be along."
"Eleven minutes?"
"It's raining. Twenty—with
luck."
It was more nearly sixty. Santa
Monica Boulevard was a navigable stream; Sunset Boulevard was a subway jam.
When he tried to ford the streams leading to Mrs. Megeath's house, he found
that changing tires with the wheel wedged against a storm drain presented
problems.
"Potty! You look like a drowned
rat."
"I'll live," But presently
he found himself wrapped in a blanket robe belonging to the late Mr. Megeath
and sipping hot cocoa while Mrs. Megeath dried his clothing in the kitchen.
"Meade . . . I'm 'at liberty,'
too."
"Hub? You quit your job?"
"Not exactly. Old Man Wiley and
I have been having differences of opinion about my answers for months—too much
'Jackpot factor' in the figures I give him to turn over to clients. Not that I
call it that, but he has felt that I was unduly pessimistic."
"But you were right!"
"Since when has being right
endeared a man to his boss? But that wasn't why he fired me; that was just the
excuse. He wants a man willing to back up the Know-Nothing program with
scientific double-talk. And I wouldn't join." He went to the window.
"It's raining harder."
"But they haven't got any
program."
"I know that."
"Potty, you should have joined.
It doesn't mean anything—I joined three months ago."
"The hell you did!"
She shrugged. "You pay your
dollar and you turn up for two meetings and they leave you alone. It kept my
job for another three months. What of it?"
"Uh, well—I'm sorry you did it;
that's all. Forget it. Meade, the water is over the curbs out there."
"You had better stay here
overnight."
"Mmm . . . I don't like to
leave 'Entropy' parked out in this stuff all night. Meade?"
"Yes, Potty?"
"We're both out of jobs. How
would you like to duck north into the Mojave and find a dry spot?"
"I'd love it. But look,
Potty—is this a proposal, or just a proposition?"
"Don't pull that 'either-or'
stuff on me. It's just a suggestion for a vacation. Do you want to take a
chaperone?"
“No.”
"Then pack a bag."
"Right away. But look,
Potiphar—pack a bag how? Are you trying to tell me it's time to jump?"
He faced her, then looked back at
the window. "I don't know," he said slowly, "but this rain might
go on quite a while. Don't take anything you don't have to have—but don't leave
anything behind you can't get along without."
He repossessed his clothing from
Mrs. Megeath while Meade was upstairs, She came down dressed in slacks and
carrying two large bags; under one arm was a battered and rakish Teddy bear.
"This is Winnie."
"Winnie the Pooh?"
"No, Winnie Churchill. When I
feel bad he promises me 'blood, toil, tears, and sweat'; then I feel better.
You said to bring anything I couldn't do without?" She looked at him
anxiously.
"Right." He took the bags.
Mrs. Megeath had seemed satisfied with his explanation that they were going to
visit his (mythical) aunt in Bakersfield before looking for jobs; nevertheless
she embarrassed him by kissing him good-by and telling him to "take care
of my little girl."
Santa Monica Boulevard was blocked
off from use. While stalled in traffic in Beverly Hills he fiddled with the car
radio, getting squawks and crackling noises, then finally one station nearby:
"—in effect," a harsh, high, staccato voice was saying, "the
Kremlin has given us till sundown to get out of town. This is your New York
Reporter, who thinks that in days like these every American must personally
keep his powder dry. And now for a word from—" Breen switched it off and
glanced at her face. "Don't worry," he said. "They've been
talking that way for years,"
"You think they are
bluffing?"
"I didn't say that. I said,
'don't worry.' "
But his own packing, with her help,
was clearly on a "Survival Kit" basis—canned goods, all his warm
clothing, a sporting rifle he had not fired in over two years, a first-aid kit
and the contents of his medicine chest. He dumped the stuff from his desk into
a carton, shoved it into the back seat along with cans and books and coats and
covered the plunder with all the blankets in the house. They went back up the
rickety stairs for a last check.
"Potty—where's your
chart?"
"Rolled up on the back seat
shelf. I guess that's all—hey, wait a minute!" He went to a shelf over his
desk and began taking down small, sober-looking magazines. "I dern near
left behind my file of The Western Astronomer and of the Proceedings
of the Variable Star Association."
"Why take them?"
"Huh? I must be nearly a year
behind on both of them. Now maybe I'll have time to read."
"Hmm . . . Potty, watching you
read professional journals is not my notion of a vacation."
"Quiet, woman! You took Winnie;
I take these."
She shut up and helped him. He cast
a longing eye at his electric calculator but decided it was too much like the
White Knight's mouse trap. He could get by with his slide rule.
As the car splashed out into the
street she said, "Potty, how are you fixed for cash?"
"Huh? Okay, I guess."
"I mean, leaving while the
banks are closed and everything." She held up her purse. "Here's my
bank. It isn't much, but we can use it."
He smiled and patted her knee.
"Stout fellow! I’m sitting on my bank; I started turning everything to
cash about the first of the year."
"Oh. I closed out my bank
account right after we met."
"You did? You must have taken
my maunderings seriously."
"I always take you
seriously."
Mint Canyon was a five-mile-an-hour
nightmare, with visibility limited to the tail lights of the truck ahead. When
they stopped for coffee at Halfway, they confirmed what seemed evident: Cajon
Pass was closed and long-haul traffic for Route 66 was being detoured through
the secondary pass. At long, long last they reached the Victorville cut-off and
lost some of the traffic—a good thing, as the windshield wiper on his side had
quit working and they were driving by the committee system. Just short of
Lancaster she said suddenly, "Potty, is this buggy equipped with a
snorkel?"
"Nope."
"Then we had better stop. But I
see a light off the road."
The light was an auto court. Meade
settled the matter of economy versus convention by signing the book herself;
they were placed in one cabin. He saw that it had twin beds and let the matter
ride. Meade went to bed with her Teddy bear without even asking to be kissed
goodnight. It was already gray, wet dawn.
They got up in the late afternoon
and decided to stay over one more night, then push north toward Bakersfield. A
high pressure area was alleged to be moving south, crowding the warm, wet mass
that smothered Southern California. They wanted to get into it. Breen had the
wiper repaired and bought two new tires to replace his ruined spare, added some
camping items to his cargo, and bought for Meade a .32 automatic, a lady's
social-purposes gun; he gave it to her somewhat sheepishly.
"What's this for?"
"Well, you're carrying quite a
bit of cash."
"Oh. I thought maybe I was to
use it to fight you off."
"Now, Meade—"
"Never mind. Thanks,
Potty."
They had finished supper and were
packing the car with their afternoon's purchases when the quake struck. Five
inches of rain in twenty-four hours, more than three billion tons of mass
suddenly loaded on a fault already overstrained, all cut loose in one subsonic,
stomach-twisting rumble.
Meade sat down on the wet ground
very suddenly; Breen stayed upright by dancing like a logroller. When the
ground quieted down somewhat, thirty seconds later, he helped her up. "You
all right?"
"My slacks are soaked."
She added pettishly, "But, Potty, it never quakes in wet weather. Never."
"It did this time."
"But—"
"Keep quiet, can't you?"
He opened the car door and switched on the radio, waited impatiently for it to
warm up. Shortly he was searching the entire dial. "Not a confounded Los
Angeles station on the air!"
"Maybe the shock busted one of
your tubes?"
"Pipe down." He passed a
squeal and dialed back to it: "—your Sunshine Station in Riverside,
California. Keep tuned to this station for the latest developments. It is as of
now impossible to tell the size of the disaster. The Colorado River aqueduct is
broken; nothing is known of the extent of the damage nor how long it will take
to repair it. So far as we know the Owens River Valley aqueduct may be intact,
but all persons in the Los Angeles area are advised to conserve water. My
personal advice is to stick your washtubs out into this rain; it can't last
forever. If we had time, we'd play Cool Water, just to give you the
idea. I now read from the standard disaster instructions, quote: 'Boil all
water. Remain quietly in your homes and do not panic. Stay off the highways.
Cooperate with the police and render—' Joe! Joe! Catch that phone! '—render aid
where necessary. Do not use the telephone except for—' Flash! an unconfirmed
report from Long Beach states that the Wilmington and San Pedro waterfront is
under five feet of water. I re- peat, this is unconfirmed. Here's a message
from the commanding general, March Field: 'official, all military personnel
will report—' "
Breen switched it off. "Get in
the car."
"Where are we going?"
"North."
"We've paid for the cabin.
Should we—“
"Get in!"
He stopped in the town, managed to
buy six five-gallon-tins and a jeep tank. He filled them with gasoline and
packed them with blankets in the back seat, topping off the mess with a dozen
cans of oil. Then they were rolling.
"What are we doing, Potiphar?"
"I want to get west on the
valley highway."
"Any particular place
west?"
"I think so. We’ll see. You
work the radio, but keep an eye on the road, too. That gas back there makes me
nervous."
Through the town of Mojave and
northwest on 466 into the Tehachapi Mountains—Reception was poor in the pass
but what Meade could pick up confirmed the first impression—worse than the
quake of '06, worse than San Francisco, Managua, and Long Beach taken together.
When they got down out of the
mountains it was clearing locally; a few stars appeared. Breen swung left off
the highway and ducked south of Bakersfield by the county road, reached the
Route 99 superhighway just south of Greenfield. It was, as he had feared,
already jammed with refugees; he was forced to go along with the flow for a
couple of miles before he could cut west at Greenfield to- ward Taft. They
stopped on the western outskirts of the town and ate at an all-night truckers'
joint.
They were about to climb back into
the car when there was suddenly "sunrise" due south. The rosy light
swelled almost instantaneously, filled the sky, and died; where it had been a
red-and-purple pillar of cloud was mounting, mountingspreading to a mushroom
top.
Breen stared at it, glanced at his
watch, then said harshly, "Get in the car."
"Potty—that was . . . that
was"
"That was—that used to be—Los
Angeles. Get in the car!"
He simply drove for several minutes.
Meade seemed to be in a state of shock, unable to speak. When the sound reached
them he again glanced at his watch. "Six minutes and "nineteen
seconds. That's about right."
"Potty—we should have
brought Mrs. Megeath."
"How was I to know?" he
said angrily. "Anyhow, you can't transplant an old tree. If she got it,
she never knew it."
"Oh, I hope so!"
"Forget it; straighten out and
fly right. We're going to have all we can do to take care of ourselves. Take
the flashlight and check the map. I want to turn north at Taft and over toward
the coast."
"Yes, Potiphar."
"And try the radio."
She quieted down and did as she was
told. The radio gave nothing, not even the Riverside station; the whole
broadcast range was covered by a curious static, like rain on a window. He
slowed down as they approached Taft, let her spot the turn north onto the state
road, and turned into it. Almost at once a figure jumped out into the road in
front of them, waved his arms violently. Breen tromped on the brake.
The man came up on the left side of
the car, rapped on the window; Breen ran the glass down. Then he stared
stupidly at the gun in the man's left hand. "Out of the car," the
stranger said sharply. "I've got to have it." He reached inside with
his right hand, groped for the door lever.
Meade reached across Breen, stuck
her little lady's gun in the man's face, pulled the trigger. Breen could feel
the flash on his own face, never noticed the report. The man looked puzzled,
with a neat, not-yet-bloody hole in his upper lip—then slowly sagged away from
the car.
"Drive on!" Meade said in
a high voice.
Breen caught his breath. "Good
girl—"
"Drive on! Get rolling!"
They followed the state road through
Los Padres National Forest, stopping once to fill the tank from their cans.
They turned off onto a dirt road. Meade kept trying the radio, got San
Francisco once but it was too jammed with static to read. Then she got Salt
Lake City, faint but clear: "—since there are no reports of anything
passing our radar screen the Kansas City bomb must be assumed to have been
planted rather than delivered. This is a tentative theory but—" They passed
into a deep cut and lost the rest.
When the squawk box again came to
life it was a new voice: "Conelrad," said a crisp voice, "coming
to you over the combined networks. The rumor that Los Angeles has been hit by
an atom bomb is totally unfounded. It is true that the western metropolis has
suffered a severe earthquake shock but that is all. Government officials and
the Red Cross are on the spot to care for the victims, but—and I repeat—there
has been no atomic bombing. So relax and stay in your homes. Such wild
rumors can damage the United States quite as much as enemy's bombs. Stay off
the highways and listen for—" Breen snapped it off.
"Somebody," he said
bitterly, "has again decided that 'Mama knows best.' They won't tell us
any bad news."
"Potiphar," Meade said
sharply, "that was an atom bomb . . . wasn't it?"
"It was. And now we don't know
whether it was just Los Angeles—and Kansas City—or all the big cities in the
country. All we know is that they are lying to us."
"Maybe I can get another station?"
"The hell with it." He
concentrated on driving. The road was very bad.
As it began to get light she said,
"Potty—do you know where we're going? Are we just keeping out of
cities?"
"I think I do. If I'm not
lost." He stared around them.
"Nope, it's all right. See that
hill up forward with the triple gendarmes on its profile?"
"Gendarmes?"
"Big rock pillars. That's a
sure landmark. I'm looking for a private road now. It leads to a hunting lodge
belonging to two of my friends—an old ranch house actually, but as a ranch it
didn't pay."
"Oh. They won't mind us using
it?"
He shrugged. "If they show up,
we'll ask them. If they show up. They lived in Los Angeles, Meade."
"Oh. Yes, I guess so."
The private road had once been a
poor grade of wagon trail; now it was almost impassable. But they finally
topped a hogback from which they could see almost to the Pacific, then dropped
down into a sheltered bowl where the cabin was. "All out, girl. End of the
line."
Meade sighed. "It looks
heavenly."
"Think you can rustle breakfast
while I unload? There's probably wood in the shed. Or can you manage a wood
range?"
"Just try me."
Two hours later Breen was standing
on the hogback, smoking a cigarette, and staring off down to the west. He
wondered if that was a mushroom cloud up San Francisco way? Probably his
imagination, he decided, in view of the distance. Certainly there was nothing
to be seen to the south.
Meade came out of the cabin.
"Potty!"
"Up here."
She joined him, took his hand, and
smiled, then snitched his cigarette and took a deep drag. She expelled it and
said, "I know it's sinful of me, but I feel more peaceful than I have in
months and months."
"I know."
"Did you see the canned goods
in that pantry? We could pull through a hard winter here."
"We might have to."
"I suppose. I wish we had a
cow."
"What would you do with a
cow?"
"I used to milk four cows
before I caught the school bus, every morning. I can butcher a hog, too."
"I'll try to find one."
"You do and I’II manage to
smoke it." She yawned. "I'm suddenly terribly sleepy."
"So am I. And small
wonder."
"Let's go to bed."
"Uh, yes. Meade?"
"Yes, Potty?"
"We may be here quite a while.
You know that, don't you?"
"Yes, Potty."
"In fact it might be smart to
stay put until those curves all start turning up again. They will, you
know."
"Yes. I had figured that
out."
He hesitated, then went on,
"Meade . . . will you marry me?"
"Yes." She moved up to
him.
After a time he pushed her gently
away and said, "My dear, my very dear, uh—we could drive down and find a
minister in some little town?"
She looked at him steadily.
"That wouldn't be very bright, would it? I mean, nobody knows we're here
and that's the way we want it. And besides, your car might not make it back up
that road."
"No, it wouldn't be very
bright. But I want to do the right thing."
"It's all right. Potty. It's all
right."
"Well, then . . . kneel down
here with me. Well say them together."
"Yes, Potiphar." She knelt
and he took her hand. He closed his eyes and prayed wordlessly.
When he opened them he said,
"What’s the matter?"
"Uh, the gravel hurts my
knees."
"Well stand up, then."
"No. Look, Potty, why don't we
just go in the house and say them there?"
"Hub? Hells bells, woman, we
might forget to say them entirely. Now repeat after me: I, Potiphar, take thee,
Meade—"
"Yes, Potiphar. I, Meade, take
thee, Potiphar—"
III
"OFFICIAL:
STATIONS WITHIN RANGE RELAY TWICE. EXECUTIVE BULLETIN NUMBER NINE—ROAD LAWS
PREVIOUSLY PUBLISHED HAVE BEEN IGNORED IN MANY INSTANCES. PATBOLS ARE ORDERED
TO SHOOT WITHOUT WARNING AND PROVOST MARSHALS ABE DIBECTED TO USE DEATH PENALTY
FOR UNAUTHORIZED POSSESSION OF GASOLINE. B.W. AND RADIATION QUARANTINE
REGULATIONS PREVIOUSLY ISSUED WILL BE RIGIDLY ENFORCED. LONG LIVE THE UNITED STATES!
HARLEY J. NEAL, LIEUTENANT GENERAL, ACTING CHIEF OF GOVERNMENT. ALL STATIONS
RELAY TWICE."
"THIS
IS THE FREE RADIO AMERICA RELAY NETWOBK. PASS THIS ALONG, BOYS! GOVERNOR
BRANDLEY WAS SWORN IN TODAY AS PRESIDENT BY ACTING CHIEF JUSTICE ROBERTS UNDER
THE RULE-OF-SUCCESSION. THE PRESIDENT NAMED THOMAS DEWEY AS SECRETARY OF STATE
AND PAUL DOUGLAS AS SECRETARY OF DEFENSE. HIS SECOND OFFICIAL ACT WAS TO STRIP
THE RENEGADE NEAL OF RANK AND TO DIRECT HIS ARREST BY ANY CITIZEN OR OFFICIAL.
MORE LATER. PASS THE WORD ALONG.
"HELLO,
CQ, CQ, CQ. THIS IS W5KMR, FREEPORT, QRR, QRR! ANYBODY READ ME? ANYBODY? WE'RE
DYING LIKE FLIES DOWN HERE. WHAT'S HAPPENED? STARTS WITH FEVER AND A BURNING
THIRST BUT YOU CAN'T SWALLOW. WE NEED HELP. ANYBODY BEAD ME? HELLO, CQ 75, CQ
75 THIS IS W5 KILO METRO ROMEO CALLING QRR AND CQ 75. BY FOR SOMEBODY. ...
ANYBODY!!!"
"THIS
IS THE LORD'S TIME, SPONSORED BY SWAN'S ELIXIR, THE TONIC THAT MAKES WAITING
FOR THE KINGDOM OF GOD WORTHWHILE. YOU ARE ABOUT TO HEAR A MESSAGE OF CHEER
FROM JUDGE BROOMFIELD, ANOINTED VICAR OF THE KINGDOM ON EABTH. BUT FIRST A
BULLETIN: SEND YOUR CONTRIBUTIONS TO 'MESSIAH,' CLINT, TEXAS. DON'T TRY TO MAIL
THEM: SEND THEM BY A KINGDOM MESSENGER OR BY SOME PILGRIM JOURNEYING THIS WAY.
AND NOW THE TABERNACLE CHOIR FOLLOWED BY THE VOICE OF THE VICAR ON EARTH—"
"—THE
FIRST SYMPTOM IS LITTLE RED SPOTS IN THE ARMPITS. THEY ITCH. PUT 'EM TO BED AT
ONCE AND KEEP 'EM COVERED UP WARM. THEN GO SCRUB YOUBSELF AND WEAR A MASK: WE
DON'T KNOW YET HOW YOU CATCH IT. PASS IT ALONG, ED."
"—NO
NEW LANDINGS REPORTED ANYWHERE ON THIS CONTINENT. THE PARATROOPERS WHO ESCAPED
THE ORIGINAL SLAUGHTER ARE THOUGHT TO BE HIDING OUT IN THE POCONOS. SHOOT—BUT
BE CAREFUL; IT MIGHT BE AUNT TESSIE. OFF AND CLEAR, UNTIL NOON TOMORROW—"
The curves were turning up again.
There was no longer doubt in Breen's mind about that. It might not even be
necessary to stay up here in the Sierra Madres through the winter—though he
rather thought they would. He had picked their spot to keep them west of the fallout;
it would be silly to be mowed down by the tail of a dying epidemic, or be shot
by a nervous vigilante, when a few months' wait would take care of everything.
Besides, lie had chopped all that
firewood. He looked at his calloused hands—he had done all that work and, by
George, he was going to enjoy the benefits!
He was headed out to the hogback to
wait for sunset and do an hour's reading; he glanced at his car as he passed
it, thinking that he would like to try the radio. He suppressed the yen; two thirds
of his reserve gasoline was gone already just from keeping the battery charged
for the radio—and here it was only December. He really ought to cut it down to
twice a week. But it meant a lot to catch the noon bulletin of Free America and
then twiddle the dial a few minutes to see what else he could pick up.
But for the past three days Free
America had not been on the air—solar static maybe, or perhaps just a power
failure. But that rumor that President Brandley had been assassinated—while it
hadn't come from the Free radio . . . and it hadn't been denied by them,
either, which was a good sign. Still, it worried him.
And that other story that lost
Atlantis had pushed up during the quake period and that the Azores were now a
little continent—almost certainly a hang-over of the "silly season"
but it would be nice to hear a follow-up.
Rather sheepishly he let his feet
carry him to the car. It wasn't fair to listen when Meade wasn't around. He
warmed it up, slowly spun the dial, once around and back. Not a peep at full
gain, nothing but a terrible amount of static. Served him right.
He climbed the hogback, sat down on
the bench he had dragged up there—their "memorial bench," sacred to
the memory of the time Meade had hurt her knees on the gravel—sat down and
sighed. His lean belly was stuffed with venison and corn fritters; he lacked
only tobacco to make him completely happy. The evening cloud colors were
spectacularly beautiful and the weather was extremely balmy for December; both,
he thought, caused by volcanic dust, with perhaps an assist from atom bombs.
Surprising how fast things went to
pieces when they started to skid! And surprising how quickly they were going
back together, judging by the signs. A curve reaches trough and then starts
right back up. World War III was the shortest big war on record—forty cities
gone, counting Moscow and the other slave cities as well as the American
ones—and then whoosh! neither side fit to fight. Of course, the fact
that both sides had thrown their ICBMs over the pole through the most freakish
arctic weather since Peary invented the place had a lot to do with it, he
supposed. It was amazing that any of the Russian paratroop transports had
gotten through at all.
He sighed and pulled the November
1951 copy of the Western Astronomer out of his pocket. Where was he? Oh,
yes, Some Notes on the Stability of G-Type Stars with Especial Reference to
Sol, by A. G. M. Dynkowski, Lenin Institute, translated by Heinrich Ley, F.
R. A. S. Good boy, Ski—sound mathematician. Very clever application of harmonic
series and tightly reasoned. He started to thumb for his place when he noticed
a footnote that he had missed. Dynkowski's own name carried down to it:
"This monograph was denounced by Pravda as romantic reactionariism
shortly after it was published. Professor Dynkowski has been unreported since
and must be presumed to be liquidated,"
The poor geek! Well, he probably
would have been atomized by now anyway, along with the goons who did him in. He
wondered if they really had gotten all the Russki paratroopers? Well, he had
killed his quota; if he hadn't gotten that doe within a quarter mile of the
cabin and headed right back, Meade would have had a bad time. He had shot them
in the back, the swine! and buried them beyond the woodpile—and then it had
seemed a shame to skin and eat an innocent deer while those lice got decent
burial. Aside from mathematics, just two things worth doing—kill a man and love
a woman. He had done both; he was rich.
He settled down to some solid
pleasure. Dynkowski was a treat. Of course, it was old stuff that a G-type
star, such as the sun, was potentially unstable; a G-O star could explode,
slide right off the Russell diagram, and end up as a white dwarf. But no one
before Dynkowski had defined the exact conditions for such a catastrophe, nor
had anyone else devised mathematical means of diagnosing the instability and
describing its progress.
He looked up to rest his eyes from
the fine print and saw that the sun was obscured by a thin low cloud—one of those
unusual conditions where the filtering effect is just right to permit a man to
view the sun clearly with the naked eye. Probably volcanic dust in the air, he
decided, acting almost like smoked glass.
He looked again. Either he had spots
before his eyes or that was one fancy big sun spot. He had heard of being able
to see them with the naked eye, but it had never happened to him. He longed for
a telescope.
He blinked. Yep, it was still there,
upper right. A big spot—no wonder the car radio sounded like a Hitler
speech. He turned back and continued on to the end of the article, being
anxious to finish before the light failed. At first his mood was sheerest
intellectual pleasure at the man's tight mathematical reasoning. A 3% imbalance
in the solar constant—yes, that was standard stuff; the sun would nova with
that much change. But Dynkowski went further; by means of a novel mathematical
operator which he had dubbed "yokes" he bracketed the period in a
star's history when this could happen and tied it down further with secondary,
tertiary, and quaternary yokes, showing exactly the time of highest
probability. Beautiful! Dynkowski even assigned dates to the extreme limit of
his primary yoke, as a good statistician should.
But, as he went back and reviewed the
equations, his mood changed from intellectual to personal. Dynkowski was not
talking about just any G-O star; in the latter part he meant old Sol himself,
Breen's personal sun, the big boy out there with the oversized freckle on his
face.
That was one hell of a big freckle!
It was a hole you could chuck Jupiter into and not make a splash. He could see
it very clearly now.
Everybody talks about "when the
stars grow old and the sun grows cold"—but it's an impersonal concept,
like one's own death. Breen started thinking about it very personally. How long
would it take, from the instant the imbalance was triggered until the expanding
wave front engulfed earth? The mechanics couldn't be solved without a
calculator even though they were implicit in the equations in front of him.
Half an hour, for a horseback guess, from incitement until the earth went phutt!
It hit him with gentle melancholy.
No more? Never again? Colorado on a cool morning . . . the Boston Post road
with autumn wood smoke tanging the air . . . Bucks county bursting in the
spring. The wet smells of the Fulton Fish Market—no, that was gone already.
Coffee at the Morning Call. No more wild strawberries on a hillside in Jersey,
hot and sweet as lips. Dawn in the South Pacific with the light airs cool
velvet under your shirt and never a sound but the chuckling of the water
against the sides of the old rust bucket—what was her name? That was a long
time ago—the S. S. Mary Brewster.
No more moon if the earth was gone.
Stars—but no one to look at them.
He looked back at the dates
bracketing Dynkowski's probability yoke. "Thine Alabaster Cities gleam,
undimmed by—“
He suddenly felt the need for Meade
and stood up.
She was coming out to meet him.
"Hello, Potty! Safe to come in now—I've finished the dishes."
"I should help."
"You do the man's work; I'll do
the woman's work. That's fair." She shaded her eyes. "What a sunset!
We ought to have volcanoes blowing their tops every year."
"Sit down and we'll watch
it."
She sat beside him and he took her
hand. "Notice the sun spot? You can see it with your naked eye."
She stared. "Is that a sun
spot? It looks as if somebody had taken a bite out of it."
He squinted his eyes at it again.
Damned if it didn't look bigger!
Meade shivered. "I'm chilly.
Put your arm around me."
He did so with his free arm,
continuing to hold hands with the other. It was bigger—the thing was growing.
What good is the race of man?
Monkeys, he thought, monkeys with a spot of poetry in them, cluttering and
wasting a second-string planet near a third-string star. But sometimes they
finish in style.
She snuggled to him. "Keep me
warm."
"It will be warmer soon. I mean
I'll keep you warm."
"Dear Potty."
She looked up. "Potty—something
funny is happening to the sunset."
"No darling—to the sun."
"I’m frightened."
"I'm here, dear."
He glanced down at the journal,
still open beside him. He did not need to add up the two figures and divide by
two to reach the answer. Instead he clutched fiercely at her hand, knowing with
an unexpected and overpowering burst of sorrow that this was
The End
Bob Wilson did not see the circle grow.
Nor, for that matter, did he see the stranger who stepped
out of the circle and stood staring at the back of Wilson’s neck—stared, and
breathed heavily, as if laboring under strong and unusual emotion.
Wilson had no reason to
suspect that anyone else was in his room; he had every reason to expect the
contrary. He had locked himself in his room for the purpose of completing his
thesis in one sustained drive. He had to—tomorrow was the last day for
submission, yesterday the thesis had been no more than a title: “An
Investigation Into Certain Mathematical Aspects of a Rigor of Metaphysics.”
Fifty-two cigarettes, four pots of coffee and thirteen
hours of continuous work had added seven thousand words to the title. As to
the validity of his thesis he was far too groggy to give a damn. Get it done,
was his only thought, get it done, turn it in, take three stiff drinks and
sleep for a week.
He glanced up and let his
eyes rest on his wardrobe door, behind which he had cached a gin bottle, nearly
full. No, he admonished himself, one more drink and you’ll never finish it,
Bob, old son.
The stranger behind him said nothing.
Wilson resumed typing. “—nor is it valid to assume that a
conceivable proposition is necessarily a possible proposition, even when it is
possible to formulate mathematics which describes the proposition with
exactness.
A
case in point is the concept ‘time travel.’ Time travel may be imagined and its
necessities may be formulated under any and all theories of time, formulae
which resolve the paradoxes of each theory. Nevertheless, we know certain
things about the empirical nature of time which preclude the possibility of the
conceivable proposition. Duration is an attribute of consciousness and not of
the plenum. It has no Ding an Sich. Therefore—”
A
key of the typewriter stuck, three more jammed up on top of it. Wilson swore
dully and reached forward to straighten out the cantankerous machinery. “Don’t
bother with it,” he heard a voice say. “It’s a lot of utter hogwash anyhow.”
Wilson
sat up with a jerk, then turned his head slowly around. He fervently hoped that
there was someone behind him. Otherwise— He perceived the stranger with relief.
“Thank God,” he said to himself.
“For
a moment I thought I had come unstuck.” His relief turned to extreme annoyance.
“What the devil are you doing in my room?” he demanded. He shoved back his
chair, got up and strode over to the one door. It was still locked, and bolted
on the inside.
The
windows were no help; they were adjacent to his desk and three stories above a
busy street. “How did you get in?” he added.
“Through
that,” answered the stranger, hooking a thumb toward the circle. Wilson noticed
it for the first time, blinked his eyes and looked again. There it hung between
them and the wall, a great disk of nothing, of the color one sees when the eyes
are shut tight.
Wilson
shook his head vigorously. The circle remained. “Gosh,” he thought, “I was
right the first time. I wonder when I slipped my trolley?” He advanced toward
the disk, put out a hand to touch it.
“Don’t!”
snapped the stranger.
“Why
not?” said Wilson edgily. Nevertheless he paused.
“I’ll
explain. But let’s have a drink first.” He walked directly to the wardrobe,
opened it, reached in and took out the bottle of gin without looking.
“Hey!”
yelled Wilson. “What are you doing there? That’s my liquor.”
“Your liquor—”
The stranger paused for a moment. “Sorry. You don’t mind if I have a drink, do
you?”
“I
suppose not,” Bob Wilson conceded in a surly tone. “Pour me one while you’re
about it.”
“Okay,”
agreed the stranger, “then I’ll explain.”
“It had better be good,” Wilson said ominously.
Nevertheless he drank his drink and looked the stranger over.
He saw a chap about the same size as himself and much the
same age—perhaps a little older, though a three-clay growth of beard may have
accounted for that impression. The stranger had a black eye and a freshly cut
and badly swollen upper lip. Wilson decided he did not like the chaps’ face.
Still, there was something familiar about the face; he felt that he should have
recognized it, that he had seen it many times before under different
circumstances.
“Who are you?” he asked suddenly.
“Me?” said his guest. “Don’t you recognize me?”
“I’m not sure,” admitted Wilson. “Have I ever seen you
before?”
“Well—not exactly,” the other temporized. “Skip it—you
wouldn’t know about it.”
“What’s your name?”
“My name? Uh . . . just call me Joe.”
Wilson set down his glass. “Okay, Joe
Whatever-your-name-is, trot out that explanation and make it snappy.”
“I’ll do that,” agreed Joe. “That dingus I came
through”—he pointed to the circle—”that’s a Time Gate.”
“A what?”
“A Time Gate. Time flows along side by side on each side
of the Gate, but some thousands of years apart—just how many thousands I don’t
know. But for the next couple of hours that Gate is open. You can walk into the
future just by stepping through that circle.” The stranger paused.
Bob drummed on the desk. “Go ahead. I’m listening. It’s a
nice story.”
“You don’t believe me, do you? I’ll show you.” Joe got
up, went again to the wardrobe and obtained Bob’s hat, his prized and only hat,
which he had mistreated into its present battered grandeur through six years of
undergraduate and graduate life. Joe chucked it toward the impalpable disk.
It struck the surface, went on through with no apparent
resistance, disappeared from sight.
Wilson got up, walked carefully around the circle and
examined the bare floor. “A neat trick,” he conceded. “Now I’ll thank you to
return to me my hat.”
The stranger shook his head. “You can get it for yourself
when you pass through”
“That’s right. Listen—” Briefly the stranger repeated his
explanation about the Time Gate. Wilson, he insisted, had an opportunity that
comes once in a millennium—if he would only hurry up and climb through that
circle. Furthermore, though Joe could not explain in detail at the moment, it
was very important that Wilson go through.
Bob Wilson helped himself to a second drink, and then a
third. He was beginning to feel both good and argumentative. “Why?” he said
flatly.
Joe looked exasperated. “Dammit, if you’d just step
through once, explanations wouldn’t be necessary. However—” According to Joe,
there was an old guy on the other side who needed Wilson’s help. With Wilson’s
help the three of them would run the country. The exact nature of the help Joe
could not or would not specify. Instead he bore down on the unique possibilities
for high adventure. “You don’t want to slave your life away teaching numskulls
in some freshwater college,” he insisted. “This is your chance. Grab it!”
Bob Wilson admitted to himself that a Ph.D. and an
appointment as an instructor was not his idea of existence. Still, it beat
working for a living. His eye fell on the gin bottle, its level now deplorably
lowered. That explained it. He got up unsteadily.
“No, my dear fellow,” he stated, “I’m not going to climb
on your merry-go-round. You know why?”
“Why?”
“Because I’m drunk, that’s why. You’re not there at all. That
ain’t there.” He gestured widely at the circle. “There ain’t anybody here
but me, and I’m drunk. Been working too hard,” he added apologetically. “I’m
goin’ to bed.”
“You’re not drunk.”
“I am drunk. Peter Piper pepped a pick of pippered
peckles.” He moved toward his bed.
Joe grabbed his arm. “You can’t do that,” he said.
“Let him alone!”
They both swung around. Facing them, standing directly in
front of the circle was a third man. Bob looked at the newcomer, looked back at
Joe, blinked his eyes and tried to focus them. The two looked a good bit alike,
he thought, enough alike to be brothers. Or maybe he was seeing double. Bad
stuff, gin. Should ‘ave switched to rum a long time ago. Good stuff, rum. You
could drink it, or take a bath in it. No, that was gin—he meant Joe.
How
silly! Joe was the one with the black eye. He wondered why he had ever been
confused.
Then who was this other lug?
Couldn’t a couple of friends have a quiet drink together without people butting
in?
“Who
are you?” he said with quiet dignity.
The
newcomer turned his head, then looked at Joe. “He knows me,” he said
meaningly.
Joe
looked him over slowly. “Yes,” he said, “yes, I suppose I do. But what the
deuce are you here for? And why are you trying to bust up the plan?”
“No
time for long-winded explanations. I know more about it than you do—you’ll
concede that—and my judgment is bound to be better than yours. He doesn’t go
through the Gate.”
“I
don’t concede anything of the sort—”
The
telephone rang.
“Answer
it!” snapped the newcomer.
Bob
was about to protest the peremptory tone, but decided he wouldn’t. He lacked
the phlegmatic temperament necessary to ignore a ringing telephone. “Hello?”
“Hello,”
he was answered. “Is that Bob Wilson?”
“Yes.
Who is this?”
“Never
mind. I just wanted to be sure you were there. I thought you would be.
You’re right in the groove, kid, right in the groove.”
Wilson
heard a chuckle, then the click of the disconnection. “Hello,” he said.
“Hello!” He jiggled the bar a couple of times, then hung up.
“What
was it?” asked Joe.
“Nothing.
Some nut with a misplaced sense of humor.” The telephone bell rang again.
Wilson added, “There he is again,” and picked up the receiver. “Listen, you
butterfly-brained ape! I’m a busy man, and this is not a public
telephone.”
“Why,
Bob!” came a hurt feminine voice.
“Huh?
Oh, it’s you, Genevieve. Look—I’m sorry. I apologize—”
“Well,
I should think you would!”
“You
don’t understand, honey. A guy has been pestering me over the phone and I
thought it was him. You know I wouldn’t talk that way to you, babe.”
“Well,
I should think not. Particularly after all you said to me this afternoon, and
all we meant to each other”
“Huh? This afternoon? Did you say this afternoon?”
“Of course. But what I called up about was this: you left
your hat in my apartment. I noticed it a few minutes after you had gone and
just thought I’d call and tell you where it is. Anyhow,” she added coyly, “it
gave me an excuse to hear your voice again.”
“Sure. Fine,” he said mechanically. “Look, babe, I’m a
little mixed up about this. Trouble I’ve had all day long, and more trouble
now. I’ll look you up tonight and straighten it out. But I know I didn’t
leave your hat in my apartment—”
“Your hat, silly!”
“Huh? Oh, sure! Anyhow, I’ll see you tonight. ‘By.” He
rang off hurriedly. Gosh, he thought, that woman is getting to be a problem.
Hallucinations. He turned to his two companions.
“Very well, Joe. I’m ready to go if you are.” He was not
sure just when or why he had decided to go through the time gadget, but he had.
Who did this other mug think he was, anyhow, trying to interfere with a man’s
freedom of choice?
“Fine!” said Joe, in a relieved voice. “Just step
through. That’s all there is to it.”
“No, you don’t!” It was the ubiquitous stranger. He
stepped between Wilson and the Gate.
Bob Wilson faced him. “Listen, you! You come butting in
here like you think I was a bum. If you don’t like it, go jump in the lake—and
I’m just the kind of guy who can do it! You and who else?”
The stranger reached out and tried to collar him. Wilson
let go a swing, but not a good one. It went by nothing faster than parcel post.
The stranger walked under it and let him have a mouthful of knuckles—large,
hard ones. Joe closed in rapidly, coming to Bob’s aid. They traded punches in a
free-for-all, with Bob joining in enthusiastically but inefficiently. The only
punch he landed was on Joe, theoretically his ally. However, he had intended it
for the third man.
It was this faux pas which gave the stranger an
opportunity to land a clean left jab on Wilson’s face. It was inches higher
than the button, but in Bob’s bemused condition it was sufficient to cause him
to cease taking part in the activities.
Bob Wilson came slowly to awareness of his surroundings.
He was seated on a floor which seemed a little unsteady. Someone was bending
over him. “Are you all right?” the figure inquired.
“I guess so,” he answered thickly. His mouth pained him;
he put his hand to it, got it sticky with blood. “My head hurts.”
“I should think it would. You came through head over
heels. I think you hit your head when you landed.”
Wilson’s thoughts were coming back into confused focus.
Came through? He looked more closely at his succorer. He saw a middle-aged man
with gray-shot bushy hair and a short, neatly trimmed beard. He was dressed in
what Wilson took to be purple lounging pajamas.
But the room in which he found himself bothered him even
more. It was circular and the ceiling was arched so subtly that it was
difficult to say how high it was. A steady glareless light filled the room from
no apparent source. There was no furniture save for a high dais or
pulpit-shaped object near the wall facing him. “Came through? Came through
what?”
“The Gate, of course.” There was something odd about the
man’s accent. Wilson could not place it, save for a feeling that English was
not a tongue he was accustomed to speaking.
Wilson looked over his shoulder in the direction of the
other’s gaze, and saw the circle.
That made his head ache even more. “Oh, Lord,” he
thought, “now I really am nuts. Why don’t I wake up?” He shook his head to
clear it.
That was a mistake. The top of his head did not quite
come off—not quite. And the circle stayed where it was, a simple locus hanging
in the air, its flat depth filled with the amorphous colors and shapes Of
no-vision. “Did I come through that?”
“Yes.”
“Where am I?”
“In the Hall of the Gate in the High Palace of Norkaal.
But what is more important is when you are. You have gone forward a
little more than thirty thousand years.”
“Now I know I’m crazy,” thought Wilson. He got up
unsteadily and moved toward the Gate.
The older man put a hand
on his shoulder. “Where are you going?”
“Back!”
“Not so fast. You will go back all right—I give you my
word on that. But let me dress your wounds first. And you should rest. I have
some explanations to make to you, and there is an errand you can do for me when
you get back—to our mutual advantage. There is a great future in store for you
and me, my boy—a great future!”
Wilson
paused uncertainly. The elder man’s insistence was vaguely disquieting. “I
don’t like this.”
The other eyed him narrowly.
“Wouldn’t you like a drink before you go?”
Wilson
most assuredly would. Right at the moment a stiff drink seemed the most
desirable thing on Earth—or in time. “Okay.”
“Come
with me.” The older man led him back of the structure near the wall and through
a door which led into a passageway. He walked briskly; Wilson hurried to keep
up.
“By
the way,” he asked, as they continued down the long passage, “what is your
name?”
“My
name? You may call me Diktor—everyone else does.
“Okay,
Diktor. Do you want my name?”
“Your
name?” Diktor chuckled. “I know your name. It’s Bob Wilson.”
“Huh?
Oh—I suppose Joe told you.”
“Joe?
I know no one by that name.”
“You
don’t? He seemed to know you. Say—maybe you aren’t that guy I was supposed to
see.”
“But
I am. I have been expecting you—in a way. Joe . . . Joe—Oh!” Diktor chuckled.
“It had slipped my mind for a moment. He told you to call him Joe, didn’t he?”
“Isn’t
it his name?”
“It’s
as good a name as any other. Here we are.” He ushered Wilson into a small, but
cheerful, room. It contained no furniture of any sort, but the floor was soft
and warm as live flesh. “Sit down. I’ll be back in a moment.”
Bob
looked around for something to sit on, then turned to ask Diktor for a chair.
But Diktor was gone, furthermore the door through which they had entered was
gone. Bob sat down on the comfortable floor and tried not to worry.
Diktor
returned promptly. Wilson saw the door dilate to let him in, but did not catch
on to how it was done. Diktor was carrying a carafe, which gurgled pleasantly,
and a cup. “Mud ~n your eye,” he said heartily and poured a good four fingers.
“Drink up.”
Bob
accepted the cup. “Aren’t you drinking?”
“Presently.
I want to attend to your wounds first.”
“Okay.”
Wilson tossed off the first drink in almost indecent haste— it was good stuff,
a little like Scotch, he decided, but smoother and not as dry—while Diktor
worked deftly with salves that smarted at first, then soothed. “Mind if I have
another?”
“Help yourself.”
Bob drank more slowly the second cup. He did not finish
it; it slipped from relaxed fingers, spilling a ruddy, brown stain across the
floor. He snored.
Bob Wilson woke up feeling fine and completely rested. He
was cheerful without knowing why. He lay relaxed, eyes still closed, for a few
moments and let his soul snuggle back into his body. This was going to be a
good day, he felt. Oh, yes—he had finished that double-damned thesis. No, he
hadn’t either! He sat up with a start.
The sight of the strange walls around him brought him
back into continuity. But before he had time to worry—at once, in fact—the door
relaxed and Diktor stepped in. “Feeling better?”
“Why, yes, I do. Say, what is this?”
“We’ll get to that. How about some breakfast?”
In Wilson’s scale of evaluations breakfast rated just
after life itself and ahead of the chance of immortality. Diktor conducted him
to another room—the first that he had seen possessing windows. As a matter of
fact half the room was open, a balcony hanging high over a green countryside. A
soft, warm, summer breeze wafted through the place. They broke their fast in
luxury, Roman style, while Diktor explained.
Bob Wilson did not follow the explanations as closely as
he might have done, because his attention was diverted by the maidservants who
served the meal. The first came in bearing a great tray of fruit on her head.
The fruit was gorgeous. So was the girl. Search as he would he could discern no
fault in her.
Her costume lent itself
to the search.
She came first to Diktor, and with a single, graceful
movement dropped to one knee, removed the tray from her head, and offered it to
him. He helped himself to a small, red fruit and waved her away. She then
offered it to Bob in the same delightful manner.
“As I was saying,” continued Diktor, “it is not certain where the High Ones came from or where they went when they left Earth. I am inclined to think they went away into Time. In any case they ruled more than twenty thousand years and completely obliterated human culture as you knew it. What is more important to you and to me is the effect they had on the human psyche. One twentieth-century style go-getter can accomplish just about anything he wants to accomplish around here—Aren’t you listening?”
“Huh? Oh, yes, sure. Say, that’s one mighty pretty girl.”
His eyes still rested on the exit through which she had disappeared.
“Who? Oh, yes, I suppose so. She’s not exceptionally
beautiful as women go around here.”
“That’s hard to believe. I could learn to get along with
a girl like that.”
“You like her? Very well, she is yours.”
“Huh?”
“She’s a slave. Don’t get indignant. They are slaves by
nature. If you like her, I’ll make you a present of her. It will make her
happy.” The girl had just returned. Diktor called to her in a language strange
to Bob. “Her name is Arma,” he said in an aside, then spoke to her briefly.
Arma giggled. She composed her face quickly, and, moving
over to where Wilson reclined, dropped on both knees to the floor and lowered
her head, with both hands cupped before her. “Touch her forehead,” Diktor
instructed.
Bob did so. The girl arose and stood waiting placidly by
his side. Diktor spoke to her. She looked puzzled, but moved out of the room.
“I told her that, notwithstanding her new status, you wished her to continue
serving breakfast.”
Diktor resumed his explanations while the service of the
meal continued. The next course was brought in by Arma and another girl. When
Bob saw the second girl he let out a low whistle. He realized he had been a
little hasty in letting Diktor give him Arma. Either the standard of
pulchritude had gone up incredibly, he decided, or Diktor went to a lot of
trouble in selecting his servants.
“—for that reason,” Diktor was saying, “it is necessary
that you go back through the Time Gate at once. Your first job is to bring this
other chap back. Then there is one other task for you to do, and we’ll be
sitting pretty. After that it is share and share alike for you and me. And
there is plenty to share, I—You aren’t listening!”
“Sure I was, chief. I heard every word you said.” He
fingered his chin. “Say, have you got a razor I could borrow? I’d like to
shave.”
Diktor swore softly in two languages. “Keep your eyes off
those wenches and listen to me! There’s work to be done.”
“Sure, sure. I understand that—and I’m your man. When do
we start?” Wilson had made up his mind some time ago—just shortly after Arma
had entered with the tray of fruit, in fact. He felt as if he had walked into
some extremely pleasant dream. If cooperation with Diktor would cause that
dream to continue, so be it. To hell with an academic career!
Anyhow,
all Diktor wanted was for him to go back where he started and persuade another
guy to go through the Gate. The worst that could happen was for him to find
himself back in the twentieth century. What could he lose?
Diktor
stood up. “Let’s get on with it,” he said shortly, “before you get your
attention diverted again. Follow me.” He set off at a brisk pace with Wilson
behind him.
Diktor
took him to the Hall of the Gate and stopped. “All you have to do,” he said,
“is to step through the Gate. You will find yourself back in your own room, in
your own time. Persuade the man you find there to go through the Gate. We have
need of him. Then come back yourself.”
Bob
held up a hand and pinched thumb and forefinger together. “It’s in the bag,
boss. Consider it done.” He started to step through the Gate.
“Wait!”
commanded Diktor. “You are not used to time travel. I warn you that you are
going to get one hell of a shock when you step through. This other chap—you’ll
recognize him.”
“Who
is he?”
“I
won’t tell you because you wouldn’t understand. But you will when you see him.
Just remember this—There are some very strange paradoxes connected with time
travel. Don’t let anything you see throw you. You do what I tell you to and
you’ll be all right.”
“Paradoxes
don’t worry me,” Bob said confidently. “Is that all? I’m ready.”
“One
minute.” Diktor stepped behind the raised dais. His head appeared above the
side a moment later. “I’ve set the controls. Okay. Go!”
Bob
Wilson stepped through the locus known as the Time Gate. There was no
particular sensation connected with the transition. It was like stepping
through a curtained doorway into a darker room. He paused for a moment on the
other side and let his eyes adjust to the dimmer light. He was, he saw, indeed
in his own room.
There
was a man in it, seated at his own desk. Diktor had been right about that.
This, then, was the chap he was to send back through the Gate. Diktor had said
he would recognize him. Well, let’s see who it is.
He
felt a passing resentment at finding someone at his desk in his room,
then thought better of it. After all, it was just a rented room; when he
disappeared, no doubt it had been rented again. He had no way of telling how
long he had been gone—shucks, it might be the middle of next week! The chap did
look vaguely familiar, although all he could see was his back. Who was it?
Should he speak to him, cause him to turn around? He felt vaguely reluctant to
do so until he knew who it was. He rationalized the feeling by telling himself
that it was desirable to know with whom he was dealing before he attempted
anything as outlandish as persuading this man to go through the Gate.
The man at the desk continued typing, paused to snuff out
a cigarette by laying it in an ash tray, then stamping it with a paper weight.
Bob Wilson knew that gesture.
Chills trickled down his back. “If he lights his next
one,” he whispered to himself, “the way I think he is going to—”
The man at the desk took out another cigarette, tamped it
on one end, turned it and tamped the other, straightened and crimped the paper
on one end carefully against his left thumbnail and placed that end in his
mouth.
Wilson felt the blood beating in his neck. Sitting
there with his back to him was himself, Bob Wilson!
He felt that he was going
to faint. He closed his eyes and steadied himself on a chair back. “I knew it,”
he thought, “the whole thing is absurd. I’m crazy. I know I’m crazy. Some sort
of split personality. I shouldn’t have worked so hard.”
The sound of typing continued.
He pulled himself together, and reconsidered the matter.
Diktor had warned him that he was due for a shock, a shock that could not be
explained ahead of time, because it could not be believed. “All right— suppose
I’m not crazy. If time travel can happen at all, there is no reason why I can’t
come back and see myself doing something I did in the past. If I’m sane, that
is what I’m doing.
“And if I am crazy, it doesn’t make a damn bit of
difference what I do!
“And furthermore,” he added to himself, “if I’m crazy,
maybe I can stay crazy and go back through the Gate! No, that does not make
sense. Neither does anything else—the hell with it!”
He crept forward softly and peered over the shoulder of
his double. “Duration is an attribute of the consciousness,” he read, “and not
of the plenum.”
“That tears it,” he thought, “right back where I started,
and watching myself write my thesis.”
The typing continued. “It has no Ding an Sich. Therefore—”
A key stuck, and others piled up on top of it. His double at the desk swore and
reached out a hand to straighten the keys.
“Don’t bother with it,” Wilson said on sudden impulse.
“It’s a lot of utter hogwash anyhow.”
The other Bob Wilson sat up with a jerk, then looked
slowly around. An expression of surprise gave way to annoyance. “What the devil
are you doing in my room?” he demanded. Without waiting for an answer he got
up, went quickly to the door and examined the lock. “How did you get in?”
“This,” thought Wilson, “is going to be difficult.”
“Through that,” Wilson answered, pointing to the Time
Gate. His double looked where he had pointed, did a double take, then advanced
cautiously and started to touch it.
“Don’t!” yelled Wilson.
The other checked himself. “Why not?” he demanded.
Just why he must not permit his other self to touch the
Gate was not clear to Wilson, but he had had an unmistakable feeling of
impending disaster when he saw it about to happen. He temporized by saying,
“I’ll explain. But let’s have a drink.” A drink was a good idea in any case.
There had never been a time when he needed one more than he did right now.
Quite automatically he went to his usual cache of liquor in the wardrobe and
took out the bottle he expected to find there.
“Hey!” protested the other. “What are you doing there?
That’s my liquor.”
“Your liquor—” Hell’s bells! It was his liquor. No,
it wasn’t; it was— their liquor. Oh, the devil! It was much too mixed up
to try to explain. “Sorry. You don’t mind if I have a drink, do you?”
“I suppose not,” his double said grudgingly. “Pour me one
while you’re about it.”
“Okay,” Wilson assented, “then I’ll explain.” It was
going to be much, much too difficult to explain until he had had a drink, he
felt. As it was, he couldn’t explain it fully to himself.
“It had better be good,” the other warned him, and looked
Wilson over carefully while he drank his drink.
Wilson watched his younger self scrutinizing him with
confused and almost insupportable emotions. Couldn’t the stupid fool recognize
his own face when he saw it in front of him? If he could not see what
the situation was, how in the world was he ever going to make it clear to him?
It had slipped his mind that his face was barely recognizable in any case,
being decidedly battered and unshaven. Even more important, he failed to take
into account the fact that a person does not look at his own face, even in
mirrors, in the same frame of mind with which he regards another’s face. No
sane person ever expects to see his own face hanging on another.
Wilson could see that his companion was puzzled by his
appearance, but it was equally clear that no recognition took place. “Who are
you?” the other man asked suddenly.
“Me?” replied Wilson. “Don’t you recognize me?”
“I’m not sure. Have I ever seen you before?”
“Well—not exactly,” Wilson stalled. How did you go about
telling another guy that the two of you were a trifle closer than twins? “Skip
it—you wouldn’t know about it.”
“What’s your name?”
“My name? Uh—” Oh, oh! This was going to be sticky! The
whole situation was utterly ridiculous. He opened his mouth, tried to form the
words “Bob Wilson,” then gave up with a feeling of utter futility. Like many a
man before him, he found himself forced into a lie because the truth simply
would not be believed. “Just call me Joe,” he finished lamely.
He felt suddenly startled at his own words. It was at
this point that he realized that he was in fact, “Joe,” the Joe whom he
had encountered once before. That he had landed back in his own room at the
very time at which he had ceased working on his thesis he already realized, but
he had not had time to think the matter through. Hearing himself refer to
himself as Joe slapped him in the face with the realization that this was not
simply a similar scene, but the same scene he had lived through once
before—save that he was living through it from a different viewpoint.
At least he thought it was the same scene. Did it differ
in any respect? He could not be sure as he could not recall, word for word,
what the conversation had been.
For a complete transcript of the scene that lay dormant
in his memory he felt willing to pay twenty-five dollars cash, plus sales tax.
Wait a minute now—he was under no compulsion. He was sure
of that. Everything he did and said was the result of his own free will. Even
if he couldn’t remember the script, there were some things he knew “Joe”
hadn’t said. “Mary had a little lamb,” for example. He would recite a nursery
rhyme and get off this damned repetitious treadmill. He opened his mouth—
“Okay, Joe Whatever-your-name-is,” his alter ego remarked, setting down a glass
which had contained, until recently, a quarter pint of gin, “trot out that
explanation and make it snappy.”
He
opened his mouth again to answer the question, then closed it. “Steady, son,
steady,” he told himself. “You’re a free agent. You want to recite a nursery
rhyme—go ahead and do it. Don’t answer him; go ahead and recite it—and break
this vicious circle.”
But
under the unfriendly, suspicious eye of the man opposite him he found himself
totally unable to recall any nursery rhyme. His mental processes stuck on dead
center.
He
capitulated. “I’ll do that. That dingus I came through—that’s a Time Gate.”
“A
what?”
“A Time Gate. Time flows along side by side on each
side—” As he talked he felt sweat breaking out on him; he felt reasonably sure
that he was explaining in exactly the same words in which explanation had first
been offered to him. “—into the future just by stepping through that
circle.” He stopped and wiped his forehead.
“Go ahead,” said the other implacably. “I’m listening.
It’s a nice story.”
Bob suddenly wondered if the other man could be
himself. The stupid arrogant dogmatism of the man’s manner infuriated him. All
right, all right! He’d show him. He strode suddenly over to the wardrobe, took
out his hat and threw it through the Gate.
His opposite number watched the hat snuff out of
existence with expressionless eyes, then stood up and went around in back of
the Gate, walking with the careful steps of a man who is a little bit drunk,
but determined not to show it. “A neat trick,” he applauded, after satisfying
himself that the hat was gone, “now I’ll thank you to return to me my hat.”
Wilson shook his head. “You can get it for yourself when
you pass through,” he answered absentmindedly. He was pondering the problem of
how many hats there were on the other side of the Gate.
“Huh?”
“That’s right. Listen—” Wilson did his best to explain
persuasively what it was he wanted his earlier persona to do. Or rather
to cajole. Explanations were out of the question, in any honest sense of the
word. He would have preferred attempting to explain tensor calculus to an
Australian aborigine, even though he did not understand that esoteric
mathematics himself.
The other man was not helpful. He seemed more interested
in nursing the gin than he did in following ‘Wilson’s implausible
protestations.
“Why?” he interrupted pugnaciously.
“Dammit,” Wilson answered, “if you’d just step through
once, explanations wouldn’t be necessary. However—” He continued with a
synopsis of Diktor’s proposition. He realized with irritation that Diktor had
been exceedingly sketchy with his explanations. He was forced to hit
only the high spots in the logical parts of his argument, and bear down on the
emotional appeal. He was on safe ground there—no one knew better than he did
himself how fed up the earlier Bob Wilson had been with the petty drudgery and
stuffy atmosphere of an academic career. “You don’t want to slave your life
away teaching numskulls in some freshwater college,” he concluded. “This is
your chance. Grab it!”
Wilson watched his companion narrowly and thought he
detected a favorable response. He definitely seemed interested. But the other
set his glass down carefully, stared at the gin bottle and at last replied:
“My dear fellow, I am not going to climb on your
merry-go-round. You know why?”
“Why?”
“Because I’m drunk, that’s why. You’re not there at all. That
ain’t there.” He gestured widely at the Gate, nearly fell and recovered
himself with effort. “There ain’t anybody here but me, and I’m drunk. Been
working too hard,” he mumbled, “‘m goin’ to bed.”
“You’re not drunk,” Wilson protested unhopefully.
“Damnation,” he thought, “a man who can’t hold his liquor shouldn’t drink.”
“I am drunk. Peter Piper pepped a pick of pippered
peckles.” He lumbered over toward the bed.
Wilson grabbed his arm. “You can’t do that.”
“Let him alone!”
Wilson swung around, saw a third man standing in front of
the Gate—recognized him with a sudden shock. His own recollection of the
sequence of events was none too clear in his memory, since he had been somewhat
intoxicated—damned near boiled, he admitted—the first time he had experienced
this particular busy afternoon. He realized that he should have anticipated the
arrival of a third party. But his memory had not prepared him for who the third
party would turn out to be.
He recognized himself—another carbon copy.
He stood silent for a minute, trying to assimilate this
new fact and force it into some reasonable integration. He closed his eyes
helplessly. This was just a little too much. He felt that he wanted to have a
few plain words with Diktor.
“Who the hell are you?” He opened his eyes to find that
his other self, the drunk one, was addressing the latest edition. The newcomer
turned away from his interrogator and looked sharply at Wilson.
“He knows me.”
Wilson took his time about replying. This thing was
getting out of hand. “Yes,” he admitted, “yes, I suppose I do. But what the
deuce are you here for? And why are you trying to bust up the plan?”
His facsimile cut him short. “No time for long-winded
explanations. I know more about it than you do—you’ll concede that—and my
judgment is bound to be better than yours. He doesn’t go through the Gate.”
The offhand arrogance of the other antagonized Wilson. “I
don’t concede anything of the sort—” he began.
He was interrupted by the telephone bell. “Answer it!”
snapped Number Three.
The tipsy Number One looked belligerent but picked up the
handset. “Hello. . .Yes. Who is this?...Hello . . . Hello!” He tapped the bar
of the instrument, then slammed the receiver back into its cradle.
“Who was that?” Wilson asked, somewhat annoyed that he
had not had a chance to answer it himself.
“Nothing. Some nut with a misplaced sense of humor.” At
that instant the telephone rang again. “There he is again!” Wilson tried to
answer it, but his alcoholic counterpart beat him to it, brushed him aside.
“Listen, you butterfly-brained ape! I’m a busy man and this is not a
public telephone. . . . Huh? Oh, it’s you, Genevieve. Look—I’m sorry. I
apologize. . . You don’t understand, honey. A guy has been pestering me over
the phone and I thought it was him. You know I wouldn’t talk to you that way,
babe. . . . Huh? This afternoon? Did you say this afternoon? Sure. Fine.
Look, babe, I’m a little mixed up about this. Trouble I’ve had all day long and
more trouble now. I’ll look you up tonight and straighten it out. But I know
I didn’t leave your hat in my apartment—. . . Huh? Oh, sure! Anyhow, I’ll
see you tonight. ‘By.”
It almost nauseated
Wilson to hear his earlier self catering to the demands of that clinging
female. Why didn’t he just hang up on her? The contrast with Arma—there was a
dish!—was acute; it made him more determined than ever to go ahead with the
plan, despite the warning of the latest arrival.
After hanging up the phone his earlier self faced him,
pointedly ignoring the presence of the third copy. “Very well, Joe,” he
announced. “I’m ready to go if you are.”
“Fine!” Wilson agreed with relief. “Just step through.
That’s all there is to it.”
“No, you don’t!” Number Three barred the way.
Wilson started to argue, but his erratic comrade was
ahead of him. “Listen, you! You come butting in here like you think I was a
bum. If you don’t like it, go jump in the lake—and I’m just the kind of a guy
who can do it! You and who else?”
They started trading punches almost at once. Wilson
stepped in warily, looking for an opening that would enable him to put the slug
on Number Three with one decisive blow.
He should have watched his drunken ally as well. A wild
swing from that quarter glanced off his already damaged features and caused him
excruciating pain. His upper lip, cut, puffy and tender from his other
encounter, took the blow and became an area of pure agony. He flinched and
jumped back.
A sound cut through his fog of pain, a dull smack! He
forced his eyes to track and saw the feet of a man disappear through the Gate.
Number Three was still standing by the Gate. “Now you’ve done it!” he said
bitterly to Wilson, and nursed the knuckles of his left hand.
The obviously unfair allegation reached Wilson at just
the wrong moment. His face still felt like an experiment in sadism. “Me?” he
said angrily. “You knocked him through. I never laid a finger on him.”
“Yes, but it’s your fault. If you hadn’t interfered, I
wouldn’t have had to do it.”
‘Me interfere? Why, you bald faced hypocrite—you butted in
and tried to queer the pitch. Which reminds me—you owe me some explanations
and I damn well mean to have ‘em. What’s the idea of—”
But his opposite number cut in on him. “Stow it,” he said
gloomily. “It’s too late now. He’s gone through.”
“Too late for what?” Wilson wanted to know.
“Too late to put a stop to this chain of events.”
“Why should we?”
“Because,” Number Three said bitterly, “Diktor has played
me—I mean has played you. . . us—for a dope, for a couple of dopes. Look, he
told you that he was going to set you up as a big shot over there”—he indicated
the Gate—”didn’t he?”
“Yes,” Wilson admitted.
“Well, that’s a lot of malarkey. All he means to do is to
get us so incredibly tangled up in this Time Gate thing that we’ll never get
straightened out again.”
Wilson felt a sudden doubt nibbling at his mind. It could
be true. Certainly there had not been much sense to what had happened so
far. After all, why should Diktor want his help, want it bad enough to offer to
split with him, even-steven, what was obviously a cushy spot? “How do you
know?” he demanded.
“Why go into it?” the other answered wearily. “Why don’t
you just take my word for it?”
“Why should I?”
His companion turned a look of complete exasperation on
him. “If you can’t take my word, whose word can you take?”
The inescapable logic of the question simply annoyed
Wilson. He resented this interloping duplicate of himself anyhow; to be asked
to follow his lead blindly irked him. “I’m from Missouri,” he said. “I’ll see
for myself.” He moved toward the Gate.
“Where are you going?”
“Through! I’m going to look up Diktor and have it out
with him.”
“Don’t!” the other said. “Maybe we can break the chain
even now.” Wilson felt and looked stubborn. The other sighed. “Go ahead,” he
surrendered. “It’s your funeral. I wash my hands of you.”
Wilson paused as he was about to step through the Gate.
“It is, eh? H-m-m-m—how can it be my funeral unless it’s your funeral,
too?”
The other man looked blank, then an expression of
apprehension raced over his face. That was the last Wilson saw of him as he
stepped through.
The Hall of the Gate was empty of other occupants when
Bob Wilson came through on the other side. He looked for his hat, but did not
find it, then stepped around back of the raised platform, seeking the exit he
remembered. He nearly bumped into Diktor.
“Ah, there you are!” the older man greeted him. “Fine!
Fine! Now there is just one more little thing to take care of, then we will be
all squared away. I must say I am pleased with you, Bob, very pleased indeed.”
“Oh, you are, are you?” Bob faced him truculently. “Well,
it’s too bad I can’t say the same about you! I’m not a damn bit pleased. What
was the idea of shoving me into that. . . that daisy chain without warning me?
What’s the meaning of all this nonsense? Why didn’t you warn me?”
“Easy,
easy,” said the older man, “don’t get excited. Tell the truth now—if I had told
you that you were going back to meet yourself face to face, would you have
believed me? Come now, ‘fess up.”
Wilson
admitted that he would not have believed it.
“Well,
then,” Diktor continued with a shrug, “there was no point in me telling you,
was there? If I had told you, you would not have believed me, which is another
way of saying that you would have believed false data. Is it not better to be
in ignorance than to believe falsely?”
“I
suppose so, but—”
“Wait!
I did not intentionally deceive you. I did not deceive you at all. But had I
told you the full truth, you would have been deceived because you would have
rejected the truth. It was better for you to learn the truth with your own
eyes. Otherwise—”
“Wait
a minute! Wait a minute!” Wilson cut in. “You’re getting me all tangled up. I’m
willing t’o let bygones be bygones, if you’ll come clean with me. Why did you
send me back at all?”
“‘Let
bygones be bygones,’” Diktor repeated. “Ah, if we only could! But we can’t.
That’s why I sent you back—in order that you might come through the Gate in the
first place.”
“Huh?
Wait a minute—I already had come through the Gate.”
Diktor
shook his head. “Had you, now? Think a moment. When you got back into your own
time and your own place you found your earlier self there, didn’t you?”
“Mmmm—yes.”
He--your
earlier self—had not yet been through the Gate, had he?” No.— “How could you
have been through the Gate, unless you persuaded him to go through
the Gate?”
Bob
Wilson’s head was beginning to whirl. He was beginning to wonder who did what
to whom and who got paid. “But that’s impossible! You are telling me that I did
something because I was going to do something.”
“Well,
didn’t you? You were there.”
“No,
I didn’t—no . . . well, maybe I did, but it didn’t feel like it.”
“Why
should you expect it to? It was something totally new to your experience.”
“But.
. . but—” Wilson took a deep breath and got control of himself. Then he reached
back into his academic philosophical concepts and produced the notion he had
been struggling to express. “It denies all reasonable theories of causation.
You would have me believe that causation can be completely circular. I went
through because I came back from going through to persuade myself to go
through. That’s silly.”
“Well, didn’t you?”
Wilson did not have an answer ready for that one. Diktor
continued with, “Don’t worry about it. The causation you have been accustomed
to is valid enough in its own field but is simply a special case under the
general case. Causation in a plenum need not be and is not limited by a man ~i
perception of duration.”
Wilson thought about that
for a moment. It sounded nice, but there was something slippery about it. “Just
a second,” he said. “How about entropy? You can’t get around entropy.”
“Oh, for heaven’s sake,” protested Diktor, “shut up, will
you? You remind me of the mathematician who proved that airplanes couldn’t
fly.” He turned and started out the door. “Come on. There’s work to be done.”
Wilson hurried after him. “Dammit, you can’t do this to
me. What happened to the other two?”
“The other two what?”
“The other two of me? Where are they? How am I ever going
to get unsnarled?”
“You aren’t snarled up. You don’t feel like more than one
person, do you?”
“No, but—”
“Then don’t worry about it.”
“But I’ve got to worry about it. What happened to the guy
that came through just ahead of me?”
“You remember, don’t you? However—” Diktor hurried on
ahead, led him down a passageway, and dilated a door. “Take a look inside,” he
directed.
Wilson did so. He found himself looking into a small
windowless unfurnished room, a room that he recognized. Sprawled on the floor,
snoring steadily, was another edition of himself.
“When you first came through the Gate,” explained Diktor
at his elbow, “I brought you in here, attended to your hurts and gave you a
drink. The drink contained a soporific which will cause you to sleep about
thirty-six hours, sleep that you badly needed. When you wake up, I will give
you breakfast and explain to you what needs to be done.”
Wilson’s head started to ache again. “Don’t do that,” he
pleaded. “Don’t refer to that guy as if he were me. This is me, standing
here.”
“Have it your own way,” said Diktor. “That is the man you
were. You remember the things that are about to happen to him, don’t
you?”
“Yes, but it makes me dizzy. Close the door, please.”
“Okay,” said Diktor, and complied. “We’ve got to hurry,
anyhow. Once a sequence like this is established there is no time to waste.
Come on.” He led the way back to the Hall of the Gate.
“I want you to return to the twentieth century and obtain
certain things for us, things that can’t be obtained on this side but which
will be very useful to us in, ah, developing—yes, that is the word—developing
this country.”
“What sort of things?”
“Quite a number of items. I’ve prepared a list for
you—certain reference books, certain items of commerce. Excuse me, please. I
must adjust the controls of the Gate.” He mounted the raised platform from the
rear. Wilson followed him and found that the structure was boxlike, open at the
top and had a raised floor. The Gate could be seen by looking over the high
sides.
The controls were unique.
Four colored spheres the size of marbles hung on crystal
rods arranged with respect to each other as the four major axes of a
tetrahedron. The three spheres which bounded the base of the tetrahedron were
red, yellow and blue; the fourth at the apex was white. “Three spatial
controls, one time control,” explained Diktor. “It’s very simple. Using
here-and-now as zero reference, displacing any control away from the center
moves the other end of the Gate farther from here-and-now. Forward or back,
right or left, up or down, past or future—they are all controlled by moving the
proper sphere in or out on its rod.”
Wilson studied the system. “Yes,” he said, “but how do
you tell where the other end of the Gate is? Or when? I don’t see any
graduations.”
“You don’t need them. You can see where you are. Look.”
He touched a point under the control framework on the side toward the Gate. A
panel rolled back and Wilson saw there was a small image of the Gate itself.
Diktor made another adjustment and Wilson found that he could see through the
image.
He
was gazing into his own room, as if through the wrong end of a telescope. He
could make out two figures, but the scale was too small for him to see clearly
what they were doing, nor could he tell which editions of himself were there
present—if they were in truth himself! He found it quite upsetting. “Shut it
off,” he said.
Diktor did so and said, “I must not forget to give you
your list.” He fumbled in his sleeve and produced a slip of paper which he
handed to Wilson. “Here—take it.”
Wilson accepted it mechanically and stuffed it into his
pocket. “See here,” he began, “everywhere I go I keep running into myself. I
don’t like it at all. It’s disconcerting. I feel like a whole batch of guinea
pigs. I don’t half-understand what this is all about and now you want to rush
me through the Gate again with a bunch of half-baked excuses. Come clean. Tell
me what it’s all about.”
Diktor showed temper in his face for the first time. “You
are a stupid and ignorant young fool. I’ve told you all that you are able to
understand. This is a period in history entirely beyond your comprehension. It
would take weeks before you would even begin to understand it. I am offering
you half a world in return for a few hours’ cooperation and you stand there
arguing about it. Stow it, I tell you. Now—where shall we set you down?” He
reached for the controls.
“Get away from those controls!” Wilson rapped out. He was
getting the glimmering of an idea.
“Who are you, anyhow?”
“Me? I’m Diktor.”
“That’s not what I mean and you know it. How did you
learn English?”
Diktor did not answer. His face became expressionless.
“Go on,” Wilson persisted. “You didn’t learn it here;
that’s a cinch. You’re from the twentieth century, aren’t you?”
Diktor smiled sourly. “I wondered how long it would take
you to figure that out.”
Wilson nodded. “Maybe I’m not bright, but I’m not as
stupid as you think I am. Come on. Give me the rest of the story.”
Diktor shook his head. “It’s immaterial. Besides, we’re
wasting time.”
Wilson laughed. “You’ve tried to hurry me with that
excuse once too often. How can we waste time when we have that?” He
pointed to the controls and to the Gate beyond it. “Unless you lied to me, we
can use any slice of time we want to, any time. No, I think I know why you
tried to rush me. Either you want to get me out of the picture here, or there
is something devilishly dangerous about the job you want me to do. And I know
how to settle it—you’re going with me!”
“You don’t know what you’re saying,”
Diktor answered slowly. “That’s impossible. I’ve got to stay here and manage
the controls.”
“That’s just what you aren’t going to do. You could send
me through and lose me. I prefer to keep you in sight.”
“Out of the question,” answered Diktor. “You’ll have to
trust me.” He bent over the controls again.
“Get away from there!” shouted Wilson. “Back out of there
before I bop you one.” Under Wilson’s menacing fist Diktor withdrew from the
control pulpit entirely. “There. That’s better,” he added when both of them
were once more on the floor of the hall.
The idea which had been forming in his mind took full
shape. The controls, he knew, were still set on his room in the boardinghouse
where he lived—or had lived—back in the twentieth century. From what he had
seen through the speculum of the controls, the time control was set to take him
right back to the day in 1952 from which he had started. “Stand there,” he
commanded Diktor, “I want to see something.”
He walked over to the Gate as if to inspect it. Instead
of stopping when he reached it, he stepped on through.
He was better prepared for what he found on the other
side than he had been on the two earlier occasions of time
translation—”earlier” in the sense of sequence in his memory track.
Nevertheless it is never too easy on the nerves to catch up with one’s self.
For he had done it again. He was back in his own room,
but there were two of himself there before him. They were very much preoccupied
with each other; he had a few seconds in which to get them straightened out in
his mind. One of them had a beautiful black eye and a badly battered mouth.
Beside that he was very much in need of a shave. That tagged him. He had been
through the Gate at least once. The other, though somewhat in need of shaving
himself, showed no marks of a fist fight.
He had them sorted out now, and knew where and when he
was. It was all still mostly damnably confusing, but after former—no, not former,
he amended-other experiences with time translation he knew better what to
expect. He was back at the beginning again; this time he would put a stop to
the crazy nonsense once and for all.
The other two were arguing. One of them swayed drunkenly
toward the bed. The other grabbed him by the arm. “You can’t do that,” he said.
“Let him alone!” snapped Wilson.
The other two swung around and
looked him over. Wilson watched the more sober of the pair size him up, saw his
expression of amazement change to startled recognition. The other, the earliest
Wilson, seemed to have trouble in focusing on him at all. “This going to be a
job,” thought Wilson. “The man is positively stinking.” He wondered why anyone
would be foolish enough to drink on an empty stomach. It was not only stupid,
it was a waste of good liquor.
He wondered if they had left a drink for him.
“Who are you?” demanded his drunken double.
Wilson turned to “Joe.” “He knows me,” he said significantly.
“Joe,” studied him. “Yes,” he conceded, “yes, I suppose I
do. But what the deuce are you here for? And why are you trying to bust up the
plan?”
Wilson interrupted him. “No time for long-winded
explanations, I know more about it than you do-you’ll concede that—and my
judgment is bound to be better than yours. He doesn’t go through the Gate.”
“I don’t concede anything of the sort—”
The ringing of the telephone checked the argument. Wilson
greeted the interruption with relief, for he realized that he had started out
on the wrong tack. Was it possible that he was really as dense himself as this
lug appeared to be? Did he look that way to other people? But the time
was too short for self-doubts and soul-searching. “Answer it!” he commanded Bob
(Boiled) Wilson.
The drunk looked belligerent, but
acceded when he saw that Bob (Joe) Wilson was about to beat him to it. “Hello.
. . . Yes. Who is this? Hello. . . . Hello!”
“Who was that?” asked “Joe.”
“Nothing. Some nut with a misplaced sense of humor.” The
telephone rang again. “There he is again.” The drunk grabbed the phone before
the others could reach it. “Listen, you butterfly-brained ape! I’m a busy man
and this is not a public telephone. . . . Huh? Oh, it’s you, Genevieve—”
Wilson paid little attention to the telephone conversation—he had heard it too
many times before, and he had too much on his mind. His earliest persona was
much too drunk to be reasonable, he realized; he must concentrate on some
argument that would appeal to “Joe”—otherwise he was outnumbered. “—Huh? Oh,
sure!” the call concluded. “Anyhow, I’ll see you tonight. ‘By.”
Now was the time, thought Wilson, before this dumb yap
can open his mouth. What would he say? What would sound convincing?
But the boiled edition spoke first. “Very well, Joe,” he
stated, “I’m ready to go if you are.”
“Fine!” said “Joe.” “Just step through. That’s all there
is to it.”
This was getting out of hand, not
the way he had planned it at all. “No, you don’t!” he barked and jumped in
front of the Gate. He would have to make them realize, and quickly.
But he got no chance to do so. The drunk cussed him out,
then swung on him; his temper snapped. He knew with sudden fierce exultation
that he had been wanting to take a punch at someone for some time. Who did they
think they were to be taking chances with his future?
The drunk was clumsy; Wilson stepped under his guard and
hit him hard in the face. It was a solid enough punch to have convinced a sober
man, but his opponent shook his head and came back for more. “Joe” closed in.
Wilson decided that he would have to put his original opponent away in a hurry,
and give his attention to “Joe”—by far the more dangerous of the two.
A slight mix-up between the two allies gave him his
chance. He stepped back, aimed carefully and landed a long jab with his left,
one of the hardest blows he had ever struck in his life. It lifted his target
right off his feet.
As the blow landed Wilson realized his orientation with
respect to the Gate, knew with bitter certainty that he had again played
through the scene to its inescapable climax.
He was alone with “Joe;” their companion had disappeared
through the Gate.
His first impulse was the illogical but quite human and
very common feeling of look-what-you-made-me-do. “Now you’ve done it!” he said
angrily.
“Me?” “Joe” protested. “You knocked him through. I never
laid a finger on him.”
“Yes,” Wilson was forced to admit. “But it’s your fault,”
he added, “if you hadn’t interfered, I wouldn’t have had to do it.”
‘Me interfere? Why, you bald faced hypocrite, you butted
in and tried to queer the pitch. Which reminds me—you owe me some explanations
and I damn well mean to have them. What’s the idea of—”
“Stow it,” Wilson headed him off. He hated to be wrong
and he hated still more to have to admit that he was wrong. It had been
hopeless from the start, he now realized. He felt bowed down by the utter
futility of it. “It’s too late now. He’s gone through.”
“Too late for what?”
“Too late to put a stop to this
chain of events.” He was aware now that it always had been too late, regardless
of what time it was, what year it was or how many times he came back and tried
to stop it. He remembered having gone through the first time, he had seen
himself asleep on the other side. Events would have to work out their weary
way.
“Why should we?”
It was not worthwhile to explain,
but he felt the need for self -justification. “Because,” he said, “Diktor has
played me—I mean has played you—us—for a dope, for a couple of dopes.
Look, he told you that he was going to set you up as a big shot over there,
didn’t he?”
“Yes—”
“Well, that’s a lot of malarkey. All he means to do is to
get us so incredibly tangled up in this Gate thing that we’ll never get
straightened out again.”
“Joe” looked at him sharply. “How do you know?”
Since it was largely hunch, he felt pressed for
reasonable explanation. “Why go into it?” he evaded. “Why don’t you just take
my word for it?”
“Why should I?”
“Why should you? Why, you lunk, can’t you see? I’m
yourself, older and more experienced—you have to believe me.” Aloud he
answered, “If you can’t take my word, whose word can you take?”
“Joe” grunted. “I’m from Missouri,” he said. “I’ll see
for myself.”
Wilson was suddenly aware that “Joe” was about to step
through the Gate. “Where are you going?”
“Through! I’m going to look up Diktor and have it out
with him.”
“Don’t!” Wilson pleaded. “Maybe we can break the chain
even now.” But the stubborn sulky look on the other’s face made him realize how
futile it was. He was still enmeshed in inevitability; it had to happen.
“Go ahead,” he shrugged. “It’s your funeral. I wash my hands of you.”
“Joe” paused at the Gate. “It is, eh? H—m-m-m—how can it
be my funeral unless it’s your funeral, too?”
Wilson stared speechlessly while “Joe” stepped through
the Gate. Whose funeral? He had not thought of it in quite that way. He felt a
sudden impulse to rush through the Gate, catch up with his alter ego and watch
over him. The stupid fool might do anything. Suppose he got himself killed? Where
would that leave Bob Wilson? Dead, of course.
Or would it? Could the death of a man thousands of years
in the future kill him in the year 1952? He saw the absurdity of the
situation suddenly, and felt very much relieved. “Joe’s” actions could not endanger
him; he remembered everything that “Joe” had done—was going to do. “Joe” would
get into an argument with Diktor and, in due course of events, would come back
through the Time Gate. No, had come back through the Time Gate. He was
“Joe.” It was hard to remember that.
Yes, he was “Joe.” As well as the first guy. They would
thread their courses, in and out and roundabout and end up here, with him. Had
to.
Wait a minute—in that case the whole crazy business was
straightened out. He had gotten away from Diktor, had all of his various
personalities sorted out and was back where he started from, no worse for the
wear except for a crop of whiskers and, possibly, a scar on his lip. Well, he
knew when to let well enough alone. Shave, and get back to work, kid.
As he shaved he stared at his face and wondered why he
had failed to recognize it the first time. He had to admit that he had never
looked at it objectively before. He had always taken it for granted.
He acquired a crick in his neck from trying to look at
his own profile through the corner of one eye.
On leaving the bathroom
the Gate caught his eye forcibly. For some reason he had assumed that it would
be gone. It was not. He inspected it, walked around it, carefully refrained
from touching it. Wasn’t the damned thing ever going to go away? It had served
its purpose; why didn’t Diktor shut it off?
He stood in front of it, felt a sudden surge of the
compulsion that leads men to jump from high places. What would happen if he
went through? What would he find? He thought of Arma. And the other one—what
was her name? Perhaps Diktor had not told him. The other maidservant, anyhow,
the second one.
But he restrained himself
and forced himself to sit back down at the desk. If he was going to stay
here—and of course he was, he was resolved on that point—he must finish the
thesis. He had to eat; he needed the degree to get a decent job. Now where was
he?
Twenty minutes later he had come to the conclusion that
the thesis would have to be rewritten from one end to the other. His prime
theme, the application of the empirical method to the problems of speculative
metaphysics and its expression in rigorous formulae, was still valid, he
decided, but he had acquired a mass of new and not yet digested data to
incorporate in it. In rereading his manuscript he was amazed to find how
dogmatic he had been. Time after time he had fallen into the Cartesian fallacy,
mistaking clear reasoning for correct reasoning.
He tried to brief a new version of
the thesis, but discovered that there were two problems he was forced to deal
with which were decidedly not clear in his mind: the problem of the ego and the
problem of free will. When there had been three of him in the room, which one
was the ego—was himself? And how was it that he had been unable to
change the course of events?
An absurdly obvious answer to the first question occurred
to him at once. The ego was himself. Self is self, an unproved and unprovable
first statement, directly experienced. What, then, of the other two? Surely they
had been equally sure of ego-being—he remembered it. He thought of a way to
state it: ego is the point of consciousness, the latest term in a continuously
expanding series along the line of memory duration. That sounded like a general
statement, but he was not sure; he would have to try to formulate it
mathematically before he could trust it. Verbal language had such queer booby
traps in it.
The telephone rang.
He answered it absent mindedly. “Yes?”
“Is that you, Bob?”
“Yes. Who is this?”
“Why, it’s Genevieve, of course, darling. What’s come
over you today? That’s the second time you’ve failed to recognize my voice.”
Annoyance and frustration rose up in him. Here was
another problem he had failed to settle—well, he’d settle it now. He ignored
her complaint. “Look here, Genevieve, I’ve told you not to telephone me while
I’m working. Good-by!”
“Well, of all the—You can’t talk that way to me, Bob
Wilson! In the first place, you weren’t working today. In the second place,
what makes you think you can use honey and sweet words on me and two hours
later snarl at me? I’m not any too sure I want to marry you.”
“Marry you? What put that silly idea in your head?”
The phone sputtered for several seconds. When it had
abated somewhat he resumed with, “Now just calm down. This isn’t the Gay
Nineties, you know. You can’t assume that a fellow who takes you out a few
times intends to marry you.”
There was a short silence. “So that’s the game, is it?”
came an answer at last in a voice so cold and hard and completely shrewish that
he almost failed to recognize it. “Well, there’s a way to handle men like you.
A woman isn’t unprotected in this state!”
“You ought to know,” he answered savagely. “You’ve hung
around the campus enough years.”
The receiver clicked in
his ear.
He wiped the sweat from his
forehead. That dame, he knew, was quite capable of causing him lots of trouble.
He had been warned before he ever started running around with her, but he had
been so sure of his own ability to take care of himself. He should have known
better—but then he had not expected anything quite as raw as this.
He tried to get back to work on his thesis, but found
himself unable to concentrate. The deadline of ten AM. the next morning seemed
to be racing toward him. He looked at his watch. It had stopped. He set it by
the desk clock—four fifteen in the afternoon. Even if he sat up all night he
could not possibly finish it properly.
Besides there was Genevieve— The
telephone rang again. He let it ring. It continued; he took the receiver off
the cradle. He would not talk to her again.
He thought of Arma. There was a proper girl with the
right attitude. He walked over to the window and stared down into the dusty,
noisy street. Half-subconsciously he compared it with the green and placid
countryside he had seen from the balcony where he and Diktor had breakfasted.
This was a crummy world full of crummy people. He wished poignantly that Diktor
had been on the up-and-up with him.
An
idea broke surface in his brain and plunged around frantically. The Gate was
still open. The Gate was still open! Why worry about Diktor? He was his
own master. Go back and play it out—everything to gain, nothing to lose.
He
stepped up to the Gate, then hesitated. Was he wise to do it? After all, how
much did he know about the future?
He
heard footsteps climbing the stairs, coming down the hall, no-yes, stopping at
his door. He was suddenly convinced that it was Genevieve; that decided him. He
stepped through.
The
Hall of the Gate was empty on his arrival. He hurried around the control box to
the door and was just in time to hear, “Come on. There’s work to be done.” Two
figures were retreating down the corridor. He recognized both of them and
stopped suddenly.
That
was a near thing, he told himself; I’ll just have to wait until they get clear.
He looked around for a place to conceal himself, but found nothing but the
control box. That was useless; they were coming back. Still— He entered the
control box with a plan vaguely forming in his mind.
If he
found that he could dope out the controls, the Gate might give him all the
advantage he needed. First he needed to turn on the speculum gadget. He felt
around where he recalled having seen Diktor reach to turn it on, then reached
in his pocket for a match.
Instead he pulled out a piece of paper. It was the list
that Diktor had given him, the things he was to obtain in the twentieth
century. Up to the present moment there had been too much going on for him to
look it over.
His eyebrows crawled up his forehead as he read. It was a
funny list, he decided. He had subconsciously expected it to call for technical
reference books, samples of modern gadgets, weapons. There was nothing of the
sort. Still, there was a sort of mad logic to the assortment. After all, Diktor
knew these people better than he did. It might be just what was needed.
He revised his plans, subject to
being able to work the Gate. He decided to make one more trip back and do the
shopping Diktor’s list called for—but for his own benefit, not Diktor’s. He
fumbled in the semi-darkness of the control booth, seeking the switch or
control for the speculum. His hand encountered a soft mass. He grasped it, and
pulled it out.
It was his hat.
He placed it on his head, guessing idly that Diktor had
stowed it there, and reached again. This time he brought forth a small
notebook. It looked like a find—very possibly Diktor’s own notes on the
operation of the controls. He opened it eagerly.
It was not what he had hoped. But it did contain page
after page of handwritten notes. There were three columns to the page; the
first was in English, the second in international phonetic symbols, the third
in a completely strange sort of writing. It took no brilliance for him to
identify it as a vocabulary. He slipped it into a pocket with a broad smile; it
might have taken Diktor months or even years to work out the relationship
between the two languages; he would be able to ride on Diktor’s shoulders in
the matter.
The third try located the control and the speculum
lighted up. He felt again the curious uneasiness he had felt before, for he was
gazing again into his own room and again it was inhabited by two figures. He
did not want to break into that scene again, he was sure. Cautiously he touched
one of the colored beads.
The scene shifted, panned
out through the walls of the boardinghouse and came to rest in the air, three
stories above the campus. He was pleased to have gotten the Gate out of the
house, but three stories was too much of a jump. He fiddled with the other two colored
beads and established that one of them caused the scene in the speculum to move
toward him or away from him while the other moved it up or down.
He wanted a reasonably inconspicuous place to locate the
Gate, some place where it would not attract the attention of the curious. This
bothered him a bit; there was no ideal place, but he compromised on a blind
alley, a little court formed by the campus powerhouse and the rear wall of the
library. Cautiously and clumsily he maneuvered his flying eye to the
neighborhood he wanted and set it down carefully between the two buildings. He
then readjusted his position so that he stared right into a blank wall. Good
enough!
Leaving the controls as they were, he hurried out of the
booth and stepped unceremoniously back into his own period.
He bumped his nose against the brick wall. “I cut that a
little too fine,” he mused as he slid cautiously out from between the confining
limits of the wall and the Gate. The Gate hung in the air, about fifteen inches
from the wall and roughly parallel to it. But there was room enough, he decided
—no need to go back and readjust
the controls. He ducked out of the areaway and cut across the campus toward the
Students’ Co-op, wasting no time. He entered and went to the cashier’s window.
“Hi, Bob.”
“H’lo, Soupy. Cash a check for me?” “How much?”
“Twenty dollars.”
“Well—I suppose so. Is it a good check?”
“Not very. It’s my own.”
“Well, I might invest in it as a curiosity.” He counted
out a ten, a five and five ones.
“Do that,” advised Wilson. “My autographs are going to be
rare collectors’ items.” He passed over the check, took the money and
proceeded to the bookstore in the same building. Most of the books on the list
were for sale there. Ten minutes later he had acquired title to:
The Prince, by Niccolô Machiavelli.
Behind the Ballots, by James Farley.
Mein Kampf (unexpurgated), by Adolf Schicklgruber.
How to Make Friends
and Influence People, by Dale
Carnegie.
The other titles he wanted were not available in the
bookstore; he went from there to the university library where he drew out Real
Estate Broker‘s Manual, History of Musical Instruments and a quarto titled
Evolution of Dress Styles. The latter was a handsome volume with
beautiful colored plates and was classified as reference. He had to argue a
little to get a twenty-four hour permission for it.
He was fairly well-loaded down by then; he left the
campus, went to a pawnshop and purchased two used, but sturdy, suitcases into
one of which he packed the books. From there he went to the largest music store
in the town and spent forty-five minutes in selecting and rejecting phonograph
records, with emphasis on swing and torch—highly emotional stuff, all of it. He
did not neglect classical and semi-classical, but he applied the same rule to
those categories—a piece of music had to be sensuous and compelling, rather
than cerebral. In consequence his collection included such strangely assorted
items as the “Marseillaise,” Ravel’s “Bolero,” four Cole Porters and “L’Après-midi
d’un Faune.”
He insisted on buying the best mechanical reproducer on
the market in the face of the clerk’s insistence that what he needed was an
electrical one. But he finally got his own way, wrote a check for the order,
packed it all in his suitcases and had the clerk get a taxi for him.
He had a bad moment over the check. It was pure rubber,
as the one he had cashed at the Students’ Co-op had cleaned out his balance. He
had urged them to phone the bank, since that was what he wished them not to do.
It had worked. He had established, he reflected, the all-time record for kiting
checks—thirty thousand years.
When the taxi drew up opposite the court where he had
located the Gate, he jumped out and hurried in.
The Gate was gone.
He stood there for several minutes, whistling softly and
assessing— unfavorably—his own abilities, mental processes, et cetera. The
consequences of writing bad checks no longer seemed quite so hypothetical.
He felt a touch at his
sleeve. “See here, Bud, do you want my hack, or don’t you? The meter’s still
clicking.”
“Huh? Oh, sure.” He followed the driver, climbed back in.
“Where to?”
That was a problem. He glanced at his watch, then
realized that the usually reliable instrument had been through a process which
rendered its reading irrelevant. “What time is it?”
“Two fifteen.” He reset his watch.
Two fifteen. There would be a jamboree going on in his
room at that time of a particularly confusing sort. He did not want to go there—not
yet. Not until his blood brothers got through playing happy fun games with
the Gate.
The Gate!
It would be in his room until
sometime after four fifteen. If he timed it right—”Drive to the corner of
Fourth and McKinley,” he directed, naming the intersection closest to his
boardinghouse.
He paid off the taxi driver there, and lugged his bags
into the filling station at that corner, where he obtained permission from the
attendant to leave them and assurance that they would be safe. He had nearly
two hours to kill. He was reluctant to go very far from the house for fear some
hitch would upset his timing.
It occurred to him that
there was one piece of unfinished business in the immediate neighborhood—and
time enough to take care of it. He walked briskly to a point two streets away,
whistling cheerfully and turned in at an apartment house.
In response to his knock the door of Apartment 211 was
opened a crack, then wider. “Bob darling! I thought you were working today.”
“Hi, Genevieve. Not at all—I’ve got time to burn.”
She glanced back over her shoulder. “I don’t know whether
I should let you come in—I wasn’t expecting you. I haven’t washed the dishes,
or made the bed. I was just putting on my make-up.”
“Don’t be coy.” He pushed the door open wide, and went on
in.
When he came out he glanced at his watch. Three
thirty—plenty of time. He went down the street wearing the expression of the
canary that ate the cat.
He thanked the service station salesman and gave him a
quarter for his trouble, which left him with a lone dime. He looked at this
coin, grinned to himself and inserted it in the pay phone in the office of the
station. He dialed his own number.
“Hello,” he heard.
“Hello,” he replied. “Is that Bob Wilson?”
“Yes. Who ‘is this?”
“Never mind,” he chuckled. “I just wanted to be sure you
were there. I thought you would be. You’re right in the groove, kid,
right in the groove.” He replaced the receiver with a grin.
At four ten he was too nervous to
wait any longer. Struggling under the load of the heavy suitcases he made his
way to the boardinghouse. He let himself in and heard a telephone ringing
upstairs. He glanced at his watch—four fifteen. He waited in the hall for three
interminable minutes, then labored up the stairs and down the upper hallway to
his own door. He unlocked the door and let himself in.
The room was empty, the Gate still there.
Without stopping for anything,
filled with apprehension lest the Gate should flicker and disappear while he
crossed the floor, he hurried to it, took a firm grip on his bags and strode
through it.
The Hall of the Gate was empty, to his great relief. What
a break, he told himself thankfully. Just five minutes, that’s all I ask. Five
uninterrupted minutes. He set the suitcases down near the Gate to be ready for
a quick departure. As he did so he noticed that a large chunk was missing from
a corner of one case. Half a book showed through the opening, sheared as neatly
as with a printer’s trimmer. He identified it as “Mein Kampf.”
He did not mind the loss of the book but the implications
made him slightly sick at his stomach. Suppose he had not described a clear arc
when he had first been knocked through the Gate, had hit the edge, half in and
half out? Man Sawed in Half—and no illusion!
He wiped his face and went to the
control booth. Following Diktor’s simple instructions he brought all four
spheres together at the center of the tetrahedron. He glanced over the side of
the booth and saw that the Gate had disappeared entirely. “Check!” he thought.
“Everything on zero—no Gate.” He moved the white sphere slightly. The Gate
reappeared. Turning on the speculum he was able to see that the miniature scene
showed the inside of the Hall of the Gate itself. So far so good—but he would
not be able to tell what time the Gate was set for by looking into the hall. He
displaced a space control slightly; the scene flickered past the walls of the
palace and hung in the open air. Returning the white time control to zero he
then displaced it very, very slightly. In the miniature scene the sun became a
streak of brightness across the sky; the days flickered past like light from a
low frequency source of illumination. He increased the displacement a little,
saw the ground become sear and brown, then snow covered and finally green
again.
Working cautiously, steadying his right hand with his
left, he made the seasons march past. He had counted ten winters when he became
aware of voices somewhere in the distance. He stopped and listened, then very
hastily returned the space controls to zero, leaving the time control as it
was—set for ten years in the past—and rushed out of the booth.
He hardly had time to grasp his bags, lift them and swing
them through the Gate, himself with them. This time he was exceedingly careful
not to touch the edge of the circle.
He found himself, as he had planned
to, still in the Hall of the Gate, but, if he had interpreted the controls
correctly, ten years away from the events he had recently participated in. He
had intended to give Diktor a wider berth than that, but there had been no time
for it. However, he reflected, since Diktor was, by his own statement and the
evidence of the little notebook Wilson had lifted from him, a native of the
twentieth century, it was quite possible that ten years was enough. Diktor
might not be in this era. If he was, there was always the Time Gate for a
getaway. But it was reasonable to scout out the situation first before making
any more jumps.
It suddenly occurred to him that Diktor might be looking
at him through the speculum of the Time Gate. Without stopping to consider that
speed was no protection—since the speculum could be used to view any time
sector—he hurriedly dragged his two suitcases into the cover of the control
booth. Once inside the protecting walls of the booth he calmed down a bit.
Spying could work both ways. He found the controls set at zero; making use of
the same process he had used once before, he ran the scene in the speculum
forward through ten years, then cautiously hunted with the space controls on
zero. It was a very difficult task; the time scale necessary to hunt through
several months in a few minutes caused any figure which might appear in the
speculum to flash past at an apparent speed too fast for his eye to follow.
Several times he thought he detected flitting shadows which might be human
beings but he was never able to find them when he stopped moving the time
control.
He wondered in great exasperation why whoever had built
the double-damned gadget had failed to provide it with graduations and some
sort of delicate control mechanism—a vernier, or the like. It was not until
much later that it occurred to him that the creator of the Time Gate might have
no need of such gross aids to his senses. He would have given up, was about to
give up, when, purely by accident, one more fruitless scanning happened to
terminate with a figure in the field.
It was himself, carrying two suitcases. He saw himself
walking directly into the field of view, grow large, disappear. He looked over
the rail, half expecting to see himself step out of the Gate.
But nothing came out of the Gate. It puzzled him, until
he recalled that it was the setting at that end, ten years in the
future, which controlled the time of egress. But he had what he wanted; he sat
back and watched. Almost immediately Diktor and another edition of himself
appeared in the scene. He recalled the situation when he saw it portrayed in
the speculum. It was Bob Wilson Number Three, about to quarrel with Diktor and
make his escape back to the twentieth century.
That was that—Diktor had not seen him,
did not know that he had made unauthorized use of the Gate, did not know that
he was hiding ten years in the “past,” would not look for him there. He
returned the controls to zero, and dismissed the matter.
But other matters needed his
attention—food, especially. It seemed obvious, in retrospect, that he should
have brought along food to last him for a day or two at least. And maybe a gun.
He had to admit that he had not been very foresighted. But he easily forgave
himself—it was hard to be foresighted when the future kept slipping up behind
one. “All right, Bob, old boy,” he told himself aloud, “let’s see if the
natives are friendly—as advertised.”
A cautious reconnoiter of the small part of the palace
with which he was acquainted turned up no human beings or life of any sort, not
even insect life. The place was dead, sterile, as static and unlived-in as a
window display. He shouted once just to hear a voice. The echoes caused him to
shiver; he did not do it again.
The architecture of the place confused
him. Not only was it strange to his experience—he had expected that—but the
place, with minor exceptions, seemed totally unadapted to the uses of human
beings. Great halls large enough to hold ten thousand people at once—had there
been floors for them to stand on. For there frequently were no floors in the
accepted meaning of a level or reasonably level platform. In following a
passageway he came suddenly to one of the great mysterious openings in the
structure and almost fell in before he realized that his path had terminated.
He crawled gingerly forward and looked over the edge. The mouth of the passage
debouched high up on a wall of the place; below him the wall was cut back so
that there was not even a vertical surface for the eye to follow. Far below
him, the wall curved back and met its mate of the opposite side—not decently,
in a horizontal plane, but at an acute angle.
There were other openings scattered around the walls,
openings as unserviceable to human beings as the one in which he crouched. “The
High Ones,” he whispered to himself. All his cockiness was gone out of him. He
retraced his steps through the fine dust and reached the almost friendly
familiarity of the Hall of the Gate.
On his second try he attempted only
those passages and compartments which seemed obviously adapted to men. He had
already decided what such parts of the palace must be—servants’ quarters, or,
more probably, slaves’ quarters. He regained his courage by sticking to such
areas. Though deserted completely, by contrast with the rest of the great
structure a room or a passage which seemed to have been built for men was
friendly and cheerful. The sourceless ever-present illuminations and the
unbroken silence still bothered him, but not to the degree to which he had been
upset by the gargantuan and mysteriously convoluted chambers of the “High
Ones.”
He had almost despaired of finding his way out of the
palace and was thinking of retracing his steps when the corridor he was
following turned and he found himself in bright sunlight.
He was standing at the top of a broad steep ramp which
spread fanlike down to the base of the building. Ahead of him and below him,
distant at least five hundred yards, the pavement of the ramp met the green of
sod and bush and tree. It was the same placid, lush and familiar scene he had
looked out over when he breakfasted with Diktor—a few hours ago and ten years
in the future.
He stood quietly for a short time, drinking in the
sunshine, soaking up the heart-lifting beauty of the warm, spring day. “This is
going to be all right,” he exulted. “It’s a grand place.”
He moved slowly down the ramp, his eyes searching for
human beings. He was halfway down when he saw a small figure emerge from the
trees into a clearing near the foot of the ramp. He called out to it in joyous
excitement. The child—it was a child he saw—looked up, stared at him for a
moment, then fled back into the shelter of the trees.
“Impetuous, Robert—that’s what you are,” he chided
himself. “Don’t scare ‘em. Take it easy.” But he was not made downhearted by
the incident. Where there were children there would be parents, society,
opportunities for a bright, young fellow who took a broad view of things. He
moved on down at a leisurely pace.
A man showed up at the point where the child had
disappeared. Wilson stood still. The man looked him over and advanced
hesitantly a step or two. “Come here!” Wilson invited in a friendly voice. “I
won’t hurt you.”
The man could hardly have understood his words, but he
advanced slowly. At the edge of the pavement he stopped, eyed it and would not
proceed farther.
Something about the behavior pattern clicked in Wilson’s
brain, fitted in with what he had seen in the palace and with the little that
Diktor had told him. “Unless,” he told himself, “the time I spent in
‘Anthropology I’ was totally wasted, this palace is tabu, the ramp I’m standing
on is tabu, and, by contagion, I’m tabu. Play your cards, son, play your
cards!”
He advanced to the edge of the
pavement, being careful not to step off it. The man dropped to his knees and
cupped his hands in front of him, head bowed. Without hesitation Wilson touched
him on the forehead. The man got back to his feet, his face radiant.
“This isn’t even sporting,” Wilson said. “I ought to
shoot him on the rise.
His Man Friday cocked his head, looked puzzled and
answered in a deep, melodious voice. The words were liquid and strange and
sounded like a phrase from a song. “You ought to commercialize that voice,”
Wilson said admiringly. “Some stars get by on less. However—Get along now, and
fetch something to eat. Food.” He pointed to his mouth.
The man looked hesitant, spoke again. Bob Wilson reached
into his pocket and took out the stolen notebook. He looked up eat, then
looked up food. It was the same word. “Blellan,” he said carefully.
“Blellaaaan?”
“Blellaaaaaaaan,” agreed Wilson. “You’ll have to excuse
my accent. Hurry up.” He tried to find hurry in the vocabulary, but it
was not there. Either the language did not contain the idea or Diktor had not
thought it worthwhile to record it. But we’ll soon fix that, Wilson thought—if
there isn’t such a word, I’ll give ‘em one.
The man departed.
Wilson sat himself down Turk-fashion and passed the time
by studying the notebook. The speed of his rise in these parts, he decided, was
limited only by the time it took him to get into full communication. But he had
only time enough to look up a few common substantives when his first
acquaintance returned, in company.
The procession was headed by an extremely elderly man, white-haired
but beardless. All of the men were beardless. He walked under a canopy carried
by four male striplings. Only he of all the crowd wore enough clothes to get by
anywhere but on a beach. He was looking uncomfortable in a sort of toga effect
which appeared to have started life as a Roman-striped awning. That he was the
head man was evident.
Wilson hurriedly looked
up the word for chief.
The word for chief was Diktor.
It should not have surprised him, but it did. It was, of
course, a logical probability that the word Diktor was a title rather
than a proper name. It simply had not occurred to him.
Diktor—the Diktor—had added a note
under the word. “One of the few words,” Wilson read, “which shows some
probability of having been derived from the dead languages. This word, a few
dozen others and the grammatical structure of the language itself, appear to be
the only link between the language of the ‘Forsaken Ones’ and the English
language.” The chief stopped in front of Wilson, just short of the pavement.
“Okay,
Diktor,” Wilson ordered, “kneel down. You’re not exempt.” He pointed to the
ground. The chief knelt down. Wilson touched his forehead.
The food that had been fetched along was plentiful and
very palatable. Wilson ate slowly and with dignity, keeping in mind the
importance of face. While he ate he was serenaded by the entire assemblage. The
singing was excellent he was bound to admit. Their ideas of harmony he found a
little strange and the performance, as a whole, seemed primitive, but their voices
were all clear and mellow and they sang as if they enjoyed it.
The concert gave Wilson an idea. After he had satisfied
his hunger he made the chief understand, with the aid of the indispensable
little notebook, that he and his flock were to wait where they were. He then
returned to the Hall of the Gate and brought back from there the phonograph
and a dozen assorted records. He treated them to a recorded concert of “modern”
music.
The reaction exceeded his hopes. “Begin the Beguine”
caused tears to stream down the face of the old chief. The first movement of
Tschaikowsky’s “Concerto Number One in B Flat Minor” practically stampeded
them. They jerked. They held their heads and moaned. They shouted their
applause. Wilson refrained from giving them the second movement, tapered them
off instead with the compelling monotony of the “Bolero.”
“Diktor,” he said—he was not thinking of the old
chief—”Diktor, old chum, you certainly had these people doped out when you sent
me shopping. By the time you show up-if you ever do-I’ll own the place.”
Wilson’s rise to power
was more in the nature of a triumphal progress than a struggle for supremacy;
it contained little that was dramatic. Whatever it was that the High Ones had
done to the human race it had left them with only physical resemblance and with
temperament largely changed. The docile friendly children with whom Wilson
dealt had little in common with the brawling, vulgar, lusty, dynamic swarms who
had once called themselves the people of the United States.
The relationship was like that of Jersey cattle to
longhorns, or cocker spaniels to wolves. The fight was gone out of them. It was
not that they lacked intelligence, or civilized arts; it was the competitive
spirit that was gone, the will-to-power.
Wilson had a monopoly on that.
But even he lost interest in playing a game that he
always won. Having established himself as boss man by taking up residence in
the palace and representing himself as the viceroy of the departed High Ones,
he, for a time, busied himself in organizing certain projects intended to bring
the, culture “up-to-date”—the reinvention of musical instruments, establishment
of a systematic system of mail service, redevelopment of the idea of styles in
dress and a tabu against wearing the same fashion more than one season. There
was cunning in the latter project. He figured that arousing a hearty interest
in display in the minds of the womenfolk would force the men to hustle to
satisfy their wishes. What the culture lacked was drive—it was slipping
downhill. He tried to give them the drive they lacked.
His subjects cooperated with his wishes, but in a bemused
fashion, like a dog performing a trick, not because he understands it, but
because his master and god desires it.
He soon tired of it.
But the mystery of the High Ones, and especially the
mystery of their Time Gate, still remained to occupy his mind. His was a mixed
nature, half-hustler, half-philosopher. The philosopher had his inning.
It was intellectually
necessary to him that he be able to construct in his mind a physio-mathematical
model for the phenomena exhibited by the Time Gate. He achieved one, not a good
one perhaps, but one which satisfied all of the requirements. Think of a plane
surface, a sheet of paper or, better yet, a silk handkerchief—silk, because it
has no rigidity, folds easily, while maintaining all of the relative attributes
of a two-dimensional continuum on the surface of the silk itself. Let the
threads of the woof be the dimension—.or direction—.of time; let the threads of
the woof represent all three of the space dimensions.
An ink spot on the
handkerchief becomes the Time Gate. By folding the handkerchief that spot may
be superposed on any other spot on the silk. Press the two spots together
between thumb and forefinger; the controls are set, the Time Gate is open, a
microscopic inhabitant of this piece of silk may crawl from one fold to the
other without traversing any other part of the cloth.
The model is imperfect; the picture is static—but a
physical picture is necessarily limited by the sensory experience of the person
visualizing it.
He could not make up his mind whether or not the concept of folding the four-dimensional continuum—three of space, one of time—back on itself so that the Gate was “open” required the concept of higher dimensions through which to fold it. It seemed so, yet it might simply be an intellectual shortcoming of the human mind. Nothing but empty space was required for the “folding,” but “empty space” was itself a term totally lacking in meaning—he was enough of a mathematician to know that.
If higher dimensions were required to “hold” a
four-dimensional continuum, then the number of dimensions of space and of time
were necessarily infinite; each order requires the next higher order to
maintain it.
But “infinite” was another meaningless term. “Open
series” was a little better, but not much.
Another consideration forced him to conclude that there
was probably at least one more dimension than the four his senses could
perceive—the Time Gate itself. He became quite skilled in handling its
controls, but he never acquired the foggiest notion of how it worked, or how it
had been built. It seemed to him that the creatures who built it must
necessarily have been able to stand outside the limits that confined him in
order to anchor the Gate to the structure of space time. The concept escaped
him.
He suspected that the controls he saw were simply the
ones that stuck through into the space he knew. The very palace itself might be
no more than a three-dimensional section of a more involved structure. Such a
condition would help to explain the otherwise inexplicable nature of its
architecture.
He became possessed of an
overpowering desire to know more about these strange creatures, the “High
Ones,” who had come and ruled the human race and built this palace and this
Gate, and gone away again— and in whose backwash he had been flung out of his
setting some thirty millennia. To the human race they were no more than a
sacred myth, a contradictory mass of tradition. No picture of them remained, no
trace of their writing, nothing of their works save the High Palace of Norkaal
and the Gate. And a sense of irreparable loss in the hearts of the race they
had ruled, a loss expressed by their own term for themselves—the Forsaken
Ones.
With controls and speculum he hunted back through time,
seeking the Builders. It was slow work, as he had found before. A passing
shadow, a tedious retracing—and failure.
Once he was sure that he had seen such a shadow in the speculum.
He set the controls back far enough to be sure that he had repassed it, armed
himself with food and drink and waited.
He waited three weeks.
The shadow might have passed during
the hours he was forced to take out for sleep. But he felt sure that he was in
the right period; he kept up the vigil.
He saw it.
It was moving toward the Gate.
When he pulled himself together he was halfway down the
passageway leading away from the hall. He realized that he had been screaming.
He still had an attack of the shakes.
Somewhat later he forced himself to return to the hall,
and, with eyes averted, enter the control booth and return the spheres to zero.
He backed out hastily and left the hall for his apartment. He did not touch the
controls or enter the hall for more than two years.
It had not been fear of physical menace that had shaken
his reason, nor the appearance of the creature—he could recall nothing of how
it looked. It had been a feeling of sadness infinitely compounded which had
flooded through him at the instant, a sense of tragedy, of grief insupportable
and unescapable, of infinite weariness. He had been flicked with emotions many
times too strong for his spiritual fiber and which he was no more fitted to
experience than an oyster is to play a violin.
He felt that he had learned all about the High Ones a man
could learn and still endure. He was no longer curious. The shadow of that
vicarious emotion ruined his sleep, brought him sweating out of dreams.
One other problem
bothered him—the problem of himself and his meanders through time. It still
worried him that he had met himself coming back, so to speak, had talked with
himself, fought with himself.
Which one was himself?
He was all of them, he knew, for he remembered being each
one. How about the times when there had been more than one present?
By sheer necessity he was forced to
expand the principle of nonidentity—“Nothing is identical with anything else,
not even with itself”—to include the ego. In a four-dimensional continuum each
event is an absolute individual, it has its space coordinates and its date.
The Bob Wilson he was right now was not the Bob Wilson he had been ten
minutes ago. Each was a discrete section of a four-dimensional process. One
resembled the other in many particulars, as one slice of bread resembles the
slice next to it. But they were not the same Bob Wilson—they differed by
a length of time.
When he had doubled back on himself,
the difference had become apparent, for the separation was now in space rather
than in time, and he happened to be so equipped as to be able to see a
space length, whereas he could only remember a time difference. Thinking back
he could remember a great many different Bob Wilsons, baby, small child, adolescent,
young man. They were all different—he knew that. The only thing that bound them
together into a feeling of identity was continuity of memory.
And that was the same thing that bound together the
three—no, four, Bob Wilsons on a certain crowded afternoon, a memory track that
ran through all of them. The only thing about it that remained remarkable was
time travel itself.
And a few other little items—the nature of “free will,”
the problem of entropy, the law of the conservation of energy and mass. The
last two, he now realized, needed to be extended or generalized to include the
cases in which the Gate, or something like it, permitted a leak of mass, energy
or entropy from one neighborhood in the continuum to another. They were
otherwise unchanged and valid. Free will was another matter. It could not be
laughed off, because it could be directly experienced—yet his own free will had
worked to create the same scene over and over again. Apparently human will must
be considered as one of the, factors which make up the processes in the
continuum—”free” to the ego, mechanistic from the outside.
And yet his last act of evading Diktor had apparently
changed the course of events. He was here and running the country, had been for
many years, but Diktor had not showed up. Could it be that each act of “true”
free will created a new and different future? Many philosophers had thought so.
This future appeared to have no such person as Diktor—the
Diktor— in it, anywhere or anywhen.
As the end of his first
ten years in the future approached, he became more and more nervous, less and
less certain of his opinion. Damnation, he thought, if Diktor is going to show
up it was high time that he did so. He was anxious to come to grips with him,
establish which was to be boss.
He had agents posted throughout the country of the
Forsaken Ones with instructions to arrest any man with hair on his face and
fetch him forthwith to the palace. The Hall of the Gate he watched himself.
He tried fishing the
future for Diktor, but had no significant luck. He thrice located a shadow and
tracked it down; each time it was himself. From tedium and partly from
curiosity he attempted to see the other end
of the process; he tried to
relocate his original home, thirty thousand years in the past.
It was a long chore. The further the time button was
displaced from the center, the poorer the control became. It took patient
practice to be able to stop the image within a century or so of the period he
wanted. It was in the course of this experimentation that he discovered what he
had once looked for, a fractional control—a vernier, in effect. It was as
simple as the primary control, but twist the bead instead of moving it
directly.
He steadied down on the twentieth century, approximated
the year by the models of automobiles, types of architecture and other gross
evidence, and stopped in what he believed to be 1952. Careful displacement of
the space controls took him to the university town where he had started— after
several false tries; the image did not enable him to read road signs.
He located his boardinghouse, brought the Gate into his
own room. It was vacant, no furniture in it.
He
panned away from the room, and tried again, a year earlier. Success—his own
room, his own furniture, but empty. He ran rapidly back, looking for shadows.
There! He checked the swing of the image. There were
three figures in the room, the image was too small, the light too poor for him
to be sure whether or not one of them was himself. He leaned over and studied
the scene.
He heard a dull thump outside the
booth. He straightened up and looked over the side. Sprawled on the floor was a
limp human figure. Near it lay a crushed and battered hat.
He stood perfectly still for an uncounted time, staring
at the two redundant figures, hat and man, while the winds of unreason swept
through his mind and shook it. He did not need to examine the unconscious form
to identify it. He knew...he knew—it was his younger self, knocked
willy-nilly through the Time Gate.
It was not that fact in itself which shook him. He had
not particularly expected it to happen, having come tentatively to the
conclusion that he was living in a different, an alternative, future from the
one in which he had originally transitted the Time Gate. He had been aware that
it might happen nevertheless, that it did happen did not surprise him.
When it did happen, he himself had been the only
spectator!
He was Diktor. He was the Diktor. He was the
only Diktor!
He would never find Diktor, or have it out with him. He
need never fear his coming. There never had been, never would be, any other
person called Diktor, because Diktor never had been or ever would be anyone but
himself.
In review, it seemed obvious that he must be Diktor,
there were so many bits of evidence pointing to it. And yet it had not been
obvious. Each point of similarity between himself and the Diktor, he recalled,
had arisen from rational causes—usually from his desire to ape the gross
characteristics of the “other” and thereby consolidate his own position of
power and authority before the “other” Diktor showed up. For that reason he had
established himself in the very apartments that “Diktor” had used—so that they
would be “his” first.
To be sure his people called him Diktor, but he had
thought nothing of that—they called anyone who ruled by that title, even the
little sub-chieftains who were his local administrators.
He had grown a beard, such as Diktor had worn, partly in
imitation of the “other” man’s precedent, but more to set him apart from the
hairless males of the Forsaken Ones. It gave him prestige, increased his tabu.
He fingered his bearded chin. Still, it seemed strange that he had not recalled
that his own present appearance checked with the appearance of “Diktor.”
“Diktor” had been an older man. He himself was only thirty-two, ten here,
twenty-two there.
Diktor he had judged to be about forty-five. Perhaps an
unprejudiced witness would believe himself to be that age. His hair and beard
were shot with gray—had been, ever since the year he had succeeded too well in
spying on the High Ones. His face was lined. Uneasy lies the head and so forth.
Running a country, even a peaceful Arcadia, will worry a man, keep him awake
nights.
Not that he was complaining—it had been a good life, a
grand life, and it beat anything the ancient past had to offer.
In any case, he had been looking for a man in his middle
forties, whose face he remembered dimly after ten years and whose picture he
did not have. It had never occurred to him to connect that blurred face with
his present one. Naturally not.
But there were other little things. Arma, for example. He
had selected a likely-looking lass some three years back and made her one of
his household staff, renaming her Arma in sentimental memory of the girl he had
once fancied. It was logically necessary that they were the same girl, not two
Armas, but one.
But, as he recalled her,
the “first” Arma had been much prettier.
H—m-m-m—it must be his own point of view that had
changed. He admitted that he had had much more opportunity to become bored with
exquisite female beauty than his young friend over there on the floor. He
recalled with a chuckle how he had found it necessary to surround himself with
an elaborate system of tabus to keep the nubile daughters of his subjects out
of his hair—most of the time. He had caused a particular pool in the river
adjacent to the palace to be dedicated to his use in order that he might swim
without getting tangled up in mermaids.
The man on the floor groaned, but did not open his eyes.
Wilson, the Diktor, bent over him but made no effort to
revive him. That the man was not seriously injured he had reason to be certain.
He did not wish him to wake up until he had had time to get his own thoughts
entirely in order.
For he had work to do, work which must be done meticulously,
without mistake. Everyone, he thought with a wry smile, makes plans to provide
for their future.
He was about to provide for his past.
There was the matter of the setting of the Time Gate when
he got around to sending his early self back. When he had tuned in on the scene
in his room a few minutes ago, he had picked up the action just before his
early self had been knocked through. In sending him back he must make a slight
readjustment in the time setting to an instant around two o’clock of that particular
afternoon. That would be simple enough; he need only search a short sector
until he found his early self alone and working at his desk.
But the Time Gate had appeared in that room at a later
hour; he had just caused it to do so. He felt confused.
Wait a minute, now—if he changed the setting of the time
control, the Gate would appear in his room at the earlier time, remain there
and simply blend into its “reappearance” an hour or so later. Yes, that was
right. To a person in the room it would simply be as if the Time Gate had been
there all along, from about two o’clock.
Which it had been. He would see to that.
Experienced as he was with the phenomena exhibited by the
Time Gate, it nevertheless required a strong and subtle intellectual effort to think
other than in durational terms, to take an eternal viewpoint.
And
there was the hat. He picked it up and tried it on. It did not fit very well,
no doubt because he was wearing his hair longer now. The hat must be placed
where it would be found—Oh, yes, in the control booth. And the notebook, too.
The notebook, the notebook—Mm-m-m—Something funny, there.
When the notebook he had stolen had become dog-eared and tattered almost to
illegibility some four years back, he had carefully recopied its contents in a
new notebook—to refresh his memory of English rather than from any need for it
as a guide. The worn-out notebook he had destroyed; it was the new one he
intended to obtain, and leave to be found.
In that case, there
never had been two notebooks. The one he had now would become, after being
taken through the Gate to a point ten years in the past, the notebook from
which he had copied it. They were simply different segments of the same
physical process, manipulated by means of the Gate to run concurrently, side by
side, for a certain length of time.
As he had himself-one afternoon.
He wished that he had not thrown away the worn-out
notebook: If he had it at hand, he could compare them and convince himself that
they were identical save for the wear and tear of increasing entropy.
But when had he learned
the language, in order that he might prepare such a vocabulary? To be sure,
when he copied it he then knew the language—copying had not actually
been necessary.
But he had copied it.
The physical process he had all straightened out in his
mind, but the intellectual process it represented was completely circular. His
older self had taught his younger self a language which the older self knew
because the younger self, after being taught, grew up to be the older self and
was, therefore, capable of teaching.
But where had it started?
Which comes first, the hen or the egg?
You feed the rats to the cats, skin the cats, and feed
the carcasses of the cats to the rats who are in turn fed to the cats. The
perpetual motion fur farm.
If God created the world, who created God?
Who wrote the notebook? Who started the chain?
He felt the intellectual desperation
of any honest philosopher. He knew that he had about as much chance of
understanding such problems as a collie has of understanding how dog food gets
into cans. Applied psychology was more his size—which reminded him that there
were certain books which his early self would find very useful in learning how
to deal with the political affairs of the country he was to run. He made a
mental note to make a list.
The man on the floor stirred again, sat up. Wilson knew
that the time had come when he must insure his past. He was not worried; he
felt the sure confidence of the gambler who is “hot,” who knows what the
next roll of the dice will show.
He bent over his alter ego. “Are you all right?” he
asked.
“I guess so,” the younger man mumbled. He put his hand to
his bloody face. “My head hurts.”
“I should think it would,” Wilson agreed. “You came
through head over heels. I think you hit your head when you landed.”
His younger self did not appear fully to comprehend the
words at first. He looked around dazedly, as if to get his bearings. Presently
he said, “Came through? Came through what?”
“The Gate, of course,” Wilson told him. He nodded his
head toward the Gate, feeling that the sight of it would orient the still
groggy younger Bob.
Young Wilson looked over his shoulder in the direction
indicated, sat up with a jerk, shuddered and closed his eyes. He opened them
again after what seemed to be a short period of prayer, looked again, and said,
“Did I come through that?”
“Yes,” Wilson assured him.
“Where am I?”
“In the Hall of the Gate in the High Palace of Norkaal.
But what is more important,” Wilson added, “is when you are. You have
gone forward a little more than thirty thousand years.”
The knowledge did not seem to reassure him. He got up and
stumbled toward the Gate. Wilson put a restraining hand on his shoulder. “Where
are you going?”
“Back!”
“Not so fast.” He did not dare let him go back yet, not
until the Gate had been reset. Besides he was still drunk—his breath was
staggering. “You will go back all right—I give you my word on that. But let me
dress your wounds first. And you should rest. I have some explanations to make
to you, and there is an errand you can do for me when you get back— to our
mutual advantage. There is a great future in store for you and me, my boy—a
great future!”
A great future!
“I do like to wet down a sale,” the fat man said happily, raising his voice above the sighing of the air-conditioner. “Drink up, Professor, I’m two ahead of you.”
He glanced up from their table as
the elevator door opposite them opened. A man stepped out into the cool dark of
the bar and stood blinking, as if he had just come from the desert glare
outside.
“Hey, Fred—Fred Nolan,” the fat man
called out. “Come over!” He turned to his guest. “Man I met on the hop from New
York. Siddown, Fred. Shake hands with Professor Appleby, Chief Engineer of
the. Starship Pegasus—or will be when she’s built. I just sold the
Professor an order of bum steel for his crate. Have a drink on it.”
“Glad to, Mr. Barnes,” Nolan agreed.
“I’ve met Dr. Appleby. On business—Climax Instrument Company.”
“Huh?”
“Climax is supplying us with
precision equipment,” offered Appleby.
Barnes looked surprised, then
grinned. “That’s one on me. I took Fred for a government man, or one of your
scientific johnnies. What’ll it be, Fred? Old-fashioned? The same, Professor?”
“Right. But please don’t call ~me.
‘Professor.’ I’m not one and it ages me. I’m still young.”
“I’ll say you are, uh—Doc, Pete! Two
old-fashioneds and another double Manhattan! I guess I expected a comic book
scientist, with a long white beard. But now that I’ve met you, I can’t figure
out one thing.”
“Which is?”
“Well, at your age you bury yourself
in this, god-forsaken place—”
“We couldn’t build the Pegasus on
Long Island,” Appleby pointed out, “and this is the ideal spot for the
take-off.”
“Yeah, sure, but that’s not it.
It’s—well, mind you, I sell steel. You want special alloys for a starship; I
sell it to you. But just the same, now that business is out of the way, why do
you want to do it? Why try to go to Proxima Centauri, or any other star?”
Appleby looked amused. “It can’t be
explained. Why do men try to climb Mount Everest? What took Perry to the North
Pole? Why did Columbus get the Queen to hock her jewels? Nobody has ever been
to Proxima Centauri—so we’re going.”
Barnes turned to Nolan. “Do you get
it, Fred?”
Nolan shrugged. “I sell precision
instruments. Some people raise chrysanthemums; some build starships. I sell
instruments.”
Barnes’ friendly face looked
puzzled. “Well—” The bartender put down their drinks. “Say, Pete, tell me something.
Would you go along on the Pegasus expedition if you could?”
“Nope.”
“Why not?”
“I like it here.”
Dr. Appleby nodded. “There’s your answer, Barnes, in reverse.
Some have the Columbus spirit and some haven’t.”
“It’s all very well to talk about Columbus,” Barnes
persisted, “but he expected to come back. You guys don’t expect to. Sixty
years—you told me it would take sixty years Why, you may not even live to get
there.”
“No, but our children will. And our grandchildren will
come back.” —“But— Say, you’re not married?”
“Certainly, I am. Family men only oh the expedition. It’s
a two-to-three generation job. You know that.” He hauled out a wallet. “There’s
Mrs. Appleby with Diane. Diane is three and a half.”
“She’s a pretty baby,” Barnes said soberly and passed it
on to Nolan, who smiled at it and handed it back to Appleby. Barnes went on.
“What happens to her?”
“She goes with us, naturally. You wouldn’t want her put
in an orphanage, would you?”
“No, but—” Barnes tossed off the rest of his drink, “I
don’t get it,” he admitted. “Who’ll have another drink?”
“Not for me, thanks,” Appleby declined, finishing his
more slowly and standing up. “I’m due home. Family man, you know.” He smiled.
Barnes did not try to stop him. He said goodnight and
watched Appleby leave.
“My round,” said Nolan. “The same?”
“Huh? Yeah, sure.” Barnes stood up. “Let’s get up to the~
bar, Fred, where we can drink properly. I need about six.”
“Okay,” Nolan agreed, standing up. “What’s the trouble?”
“Trouble? Did you see that picture?”
“Well?”
“Well, how do you feel about it? I’m a salesman
too, Fred. I sell steel. It don’t matter what the customer want to use it for;
I sell it to him. I’d sell a man a rope to hang himself. But I do love kids. I
can’t stand to think of that cute little kid going along on that—that crazy
expedition!
“Why not? She’s better off with her parents. She’ll get
as used to steel decks as most kids are to sidewalks.” “But look, Fred. You
don’t have any silly idea they’ll make it, do you?”
“They might.”
“Well, they won’t. They don’t stand a chance. I know. I
talked it over with our technical staff before I left the home office. Nine
chances out of ten they’ll burn up on the take-off. That’s the best that can
happen to them. If they get out of the solar system, which ain’t likely,
they’ll still never make it. They’ll never reach the stars.”
Pete put another drink down in front
of Barnes. He drained it and said: “Set up another one, Pete. They can’t. It’s
a theoretical impossibility. They’ll freeze—or they’ll roast—or they’ll starve.
But they’ll never get there.”
“Maybe so.”
“No maybe about it. They’re crazy.
Hurry up with that drink, Pete. Have one yourself.”
“Coming up. Don’t mind if I do,
thanks.” Pete mixed the cocktail, drew a glass of beer, and joined them.
“Pete, here, is a wise man,” Barnes
said confidentially. “You don’t catch him monkeying around with any trips to
the stars. Columbus—Pfui! Columbus was a dope. He shoulda stood in bed.”
The bartender shook his head. “You
got me wrong, Mr. Barnes. If it wasn’t for men like Columbus, we wouldn’t be
here today—now, would we? I’m just not the explorer type. But I’m a believer. I
got nothing against the Pegasus expedition.”
“You don’t approve of them taking
kids on it, do you?”
“Well . . . there were kids on the Mayflower,
so they tell me.”’
“It’s not the same thing.” Barnes
looked at Nolan, then back to the bartender. “If the Lord had intended us to go
to the stars, he would have equipped us with jet propulsion. Fix me another
drink, Pete.”
“You’ve had about enough for a
while, Mr. Barnes.”
The troubled fat man seemed about to
argue, thought better of it. “I’m going up to the Sky Room and find somebody
that’ll dance with me,” he announced. “G’night.” He swayed softly toward the
elevator.
Nolan watched him leave. “Poor old
Barnes.” He shrugged. “I guess you and I are hard-hearted, Pete.”
“No. I believe in progress, that’s
all. I remember my old man wanted a law passed about flying machines, keep ‘em
from breaking their fool necks. Claimed nobody ever could fly, and the
government should put a stop to it. He was wrong. I’m not the adventurous type
myself but I’ve seen enough people to know they’ll try anything once, and
that’s how progress is made.”
“You don’t look old enough to
remember when men couldn’t fly.”
“I’ve been around a long time. Ten
years in this one spot.”
“Ten years, eh? Don’t you ever get a
hankering for a job that’ll let you breathe a little fresh air?”
“Nope. I didn’t get any fresh air
when I served drinks on Forty-second Street and I don’t miss it now. I like it
here. Always something new going on here, first the atom laboratories and then
the big observatory and now the Starship. But that’s not the real reason. I
like it here. It’s my home.
Watch this.”
He picked up a brandy inhaler, a
great fragile crystal globe, spun it and threw it, straight up, toward the
ceiling. It rose slowly and gracefully, paused for a long reluctant wait at the
top of its rise, then settled slowly, slowly, like a diver in a slow-motion
movie. Pete watched it float past his nose, then reached out with thumb and
forefinger, nipped it easily by the stem, and returned it to the rack.
“See that,” he said. “One-sixth
gravity. When I was tending bar on earth my bunions gave me the dickens all
the time. Here I weigh only thirty-five pounds. I like it on the Moon.”
My name is Holly Jones and I'm
fifteen. I'm very intelligent but it doesn't show, because I look like an
underdone angel. Insipid.
I was born right here in Luna City,
which seems to surprise Earthside types. Actually, I'm third generation; my
grandparents pioneered in Site One, where the Memorial is. I live with my
parents in Artemis Apartments, the new co-op in Pressure Five, eight hundred
feet down near City Hall. But I'm not there much; I'm too busy.
Mornings I attend Tech High and
afternoons I study or go flying with Jeff Hardesty—he's my partner—or whenever
a tourist ship is in I guide groundhogs. This day the Gripsholm grounded
at noon so I went straight from school to American Express.
The first gaggle of tourists was
trickling in from Quarantine but I didn't push forward as Mr. Dorcas, the
manager, knows I'm the best. Guiding is just temporary (I'm really a spaceship
designer), but if you're doing a job you ought to do it well.
Mr. Dorcas spotted me. "Holly!
Here, please. Miss Brentwood, Holly Jones will be your guide."
"'Holly,'" she repeated.
"What a quaint name. Are you really a guide, dear?"
I'm tolerant of groundhogs—some of
my best friends are from Earth. As Daddy says, being born on Luna is luck, not
judgment, and most people Earthside are stuck there. After all, Jesus and
Gautama Buddha and Dr. Einstein were all groundhogs.
But they can be irritating. If high
school kids weren't guides, whom could they hire? "My license says
so," I said briskly and looked her over the way she was looking me over.
Her face was sort of familiar and I
thought perhaps I had seen her picture in those society things you see in
Earthside magazines—one of the rich playgirls we get too many of. She was
almost loathsomely lovely. . . nylon skin, soft, wavy, silverblond hair, basic
specs about 35-24-34 and enough this and that to make me feel like a matchstick
drawing, a low intimate voice and everything necessary to make plainer females
think about pacts with the Devil. But I did not feel apprehensive; she was a
groundhog and groundhogs don't count.
"All city guides are
girls," Mr. Dorcas explained. "Holly is very competent."
"Oh, I'm sure," she
answered quickly and went into tourist routine number one: surprise that a
guide was needed just to find her hotel, amazement at no taxicabs, same for no
porters, and raised eyebrows at the prospect of two girls walking alone through
"an underground city."
Mr. Dorcas was patient, ending with:
"Miss Brentwood, Luna City is the only metropolis in the Solar System
where a woman is really safe—no dark alleys, no deserted neighborhoods, no
criminal element."
I didn't listen; I just held out my
tariff card for Mr. Dorcas to stamp and picked up her bags. Guides shouldn't
carry bags and most tourists are delighted to experience the fact that their
thirty-pound allowance weighs only five pounds. But I wanted to get her moving.
We were in the tunnel outside and me
with a foot on the slidebelt when she stopped. "I forgot! I want a city
map."
"None available."
"Really?"
"There's only one. That's why
you need a guide."
"But why don't they supply
them? Or would that throw you guides out of work?"
See? "You think guiding is
makework? Miss Brentwood, labor is so scarce they'd hire monkeys if they
could."
"Then why not print maps?"
"Because Luna City isn't flat
like—" I almost said, "—groundhog cities," but I caught myself.
"—like Earthside cities,"
I went on. "All you saw from space was the meteor shield. Underneath it
spreads out and goes down for miles in a dozen pressure zones."
"Yes, I know, but why not a map
for each level?"
Groundhogs always say, "Yes, I
know, but—"
"I can show you the one city
map. It's a stereo tank twenty feet high and even so all you see clearly are
big things like the Hall of the Mountain King and hydroponics farms and the
Bats' Cave."
"'The Bats' Cave,'" she
repeated. "That's where they fly, isn't it?"
"Yes, that's where we
fly."
"Oh, I want to see it!"
"OK. It first. . . or the city
map?"
She decided to go to her hotel
first. The regular route to the Zurich is to slide up the west through Gray's
Tunnel past the Martian Embassy, get off at the Mormon Temple, and take a
pressure lock down to Diana Boulevard. But I know all the shortcuts; we got off
at Macy-Gimbel Upper to go down their personnel hoist. I thought she would
enjoy it.
But when I told her to grab a hand
grip as it dropped past her, she peered down the shaft and edged back.
"You're joking."
I was about to take her back the
regular way when a neighbor of ours came down the hoist. I said, "Hello,
Mrs. Greenberg," and she called back, "Hi, Holly. How are your
folks?"
Susie Greenberg is more than plump.
She was hanging by one hand with young David tucked in her other arm and
holding the Daily Lunatic, reading as she dropped. Miss Brentwood
stared, bit her lip, and said, "How do I do it?"
I said, "Oh, use both hands;
I'll take the bags." I tied the handles together with my hanky and went
first.
She was shaking when we got to the
bottom. "Goodness, Holly, how do you stand it? Don't you get
homesick?"
Tourist question number six . . . I
said, "I've been to Earth," and let it drop. Two years ago Mother
made me visit my aunt in Omaha and I was miserable—hot and cold and
dirty and beset by creepy-crawlies. I weighed a ton and I ached and my aunt was
always chivvying me to go outdoors and exercise when all I wanted was to crawl
into a tub and be quietly wretched. And I had hay fever. Probably you've never
heard of hay fever—you don't die but you wish you could.
I was supposed to go to a girls'
boarding school but I phoned Daddy and told him I was desperate and he let me
come home. What groundhogs can't understand is that they live in savagery. But
groundhogs are groundhogs and loonies are loonies and never the twain shall
meet.
Like all the best hotels the Zurich
is in Pressure One on the west side so that it can have a view of Earth. I
helped Miss Brentwood register with the roboclerk and found her room; it had
its own port. She went straight to it, began staring at Earth and going ooh!
and ahh!
I glanced past her and saw that it
was a few minutes past thirteen; sunset sliced straight down the tip of
India—early enough to snag another client. "Will that be all, Miss
Brentwood?"
Instead of answering she said in an
awed voice, "Holly, isn't that the most beautiful sight you ever
saw?"
"It's nice," I agreed. The
view on that side is monotonous except for Earth hanging in the sky—but Earth
is what tourists always look at even though they've just left it. Still, Earth
is pretty. The changing weather is interesting if you don't have to be in it.
Did you ever endure a summer in Omaha?
"It's gorgeous," she
whispered.
"Sure," I agreed. "Do
you want to go somewhere? Or will you sign my card?"
"What? Excuse me, I was
daydreaming. No, not right now—yes, I do! Holly, I want to go out there!
I must! Is there time? How much longer will it be light?"
"Huh? It's two days to
sunset."
She looked startled. "How
quaint. Holly, can you get us space suits? I've got to go outside."
I didn't wince—I'm used to tourist
talk. I suppose a pressure suit looked like a space suit to them. I simply
said, "We girls aren't licensed outside. But I can phone a friend."
Jeff Hardesty is my partner in
spaceship designing, so I throw business his way. Jeff is eighteen and already
in Goddard Institute, but I'm pushing hard to catch up so that we can set up
offices for our firm: "Jones & Hardesty, Spaceship Engineers."
I'm very bright in mathematics, which is everything in space engineering, so
I'll get my degree pretty fast. Meanwhile we design ships anyhow.
I didn't tell Miss Brentwood this,
as tourists think that a girl my age can't possibly be a spaceship designer.
Jeff has arranged his class to let
him guide on Tuesdays and Thursdays; he waits at West City Lock and studies
between clients. I reached him on the lockmaster's phone. Jeff grinned and
said, "Hi, Scale Model."
"Hi, Penalty Weight. Free to
take a client?"
"Well, I was supposed to guide
a family party, but they're late."
"Cancel them; Miss Brentwood .
. . step into pickup, please. This is Mr. Hardesty."
Jeff's eyes widened and I felt
uneasy. But it did not occur to me that Jeff could be attracted by a groundhog.
. . even though it is conceded that men are robot slaves of their body
chemistry in such matters. I knew she was exceptionally decorative, but it was
unthinkable that Jeff could be captivated by any groundhog, no matter how well
designed. They don't speak our language!
I am not romantic about Jeff; we are
simply partners. But anything that affects Jones & Hardesty affects me.
When we joined him at West Lock he
almost stepped on his tongue in a disgusting display of adolescent rut. I was
ashamed of him and, for the first time, apprehensive. Why are males so
childish?
Miss Brentwood didn't seem to mind
his behavior. Jeff is a big hulk; suited up for outside he looks like a Frost
Giant from Das Rheingold; she smiled up at him and thanked him for
changing his schedule. He looked even sillier and told her it was a pleasure.
I keep my pressure suit at West Lock
so that when I switch a client to Jeff he can invite me to come along for the
walk. This time he hardly spoke to me after that platinum menace was in sight.
But I helped her pick out a suit and took her into the dressing room and fitted
it. Those rental suits take careful adjusting or they will pinch you in tender
places once out in vacuum. . . besides there are things about them that one
girl ought to explain to another.
When I came out with her, not
wearing my own, Jeff didn't even ask why I hadn't suited up—he took her arm and
started toward the lock. I had to butt in to get her to sign my tariff card.
The days that followed were the
longest of my life. I saw Jeff only once . . . on the slidebelt in Diana
Boulevard, going the other way. She was with him.
Though I saw him but once, I knew
what was going on. He was cutting classes and three nights running he took her
to the Earthview Room of the Duncan Hines. None of my business!—I hope she had
more luck teaching him to dance than I had. Jeff is a free citizen and if he
wanted to make an utter fool of himself neglecting school and losing sleep over
an upholstered groundhog that was his business.
But he should not have neglected the
firm's business!
Jones & Hardesty had a
tremendous backlog, because we were designing Starship Prometheus. This
project we had been slaving over for a year, flying not more than twice a week
in order to devote time to it—and that's a sacrifice.
Of course you can't build a starship
today, because of the power plant. But Daddy thinks that there will soon be a
technological break-through and mass-conversion power plants will be
built—which means starships. Daddy ought to know—he's Luna Chief Engineer for
Space Lanes and Fermi Lecturer at Goddard Institute. So Jeff and I are
designing a self-supporting interstellar ship on that assumption: quarters,
auxiliaries, surgery, labs—everything.
Daddy thinks it's just practice but
Mother knows better—Mother is a mathematical chemist for General Synthetics of
Luna and is nearly as smart as I am. She realizes that Jones & Hardesty
plans to be ready with a finished proposal while other designers are still
floundering.
Which was why I was furious with Jeff
for wasting time over this creature. We had been working every possible chance.
Jeff would show up after dinner, we would finish our homework, then get down to
real work, the Prometheus. . . checking each other's computations,
fighting bitterly over details, and having a wonderful time. But the very day I
introduced him to Ariel Brentwood, he failed to appear. I had finished my
lessons and was wondering whether to start or wait for him -- we were making a
radical change in power plant shielding—when his mother phoned me. "Jeff
asked me to call you, dear. He's having dinner with a tourist client and can't
come over."
Mrs. Hardesty was watching me so I
looked puzzled and said, "Jeff thought I was expecting him? He has his
dates mixed." I don't think she believed me; she agreed too quickly.
All that week I was slowly convinced
against my will that Jones & Hardesty was being liquidated. Jeff didn't
break any more dates—how can you break a date that hasn't been made?—but we
always went flying Thursday afternoons unless one of us was guiding. He didn't
call. Oh, I know where he was; he took her iceskating in Fingal's Cave.
I stayed home and worked on the Prometheus,
recalculating masses and moment arms for hydroponics and stores on the basis of
the shielding change. But I made mistakes and twice I had to look up logarithms
instead of remembering . . . I was so used to wrangling with Jeff over
everything that I just couldn't function.
Presently I looked at the name place
of the sheet I was revising. "Jones & Hardesty" it read, like all
the rest. I said to myself, "Holly Jones, quit bluffing; this may be The
End. You know that someday Jeff would fall for somebody."
"Of course. . . but not a groundhog."
"But he did. What kind
of an engineer are you if you can't face facts? She's beautiful and rich—she'll
get her father to give him a job Earthside. You hear me? Earthside! So
you look for another partner. . . or go into business on your own."
I erased "Jones &
Hardesty" and lettered "Jones & Company" and stared at it.
Then I started to erase that, too—but it smeared; I had dripped a tear on it.
Which was ridiculous!
The following Tuesday both Daddy and
Mother were home for lunch which was unusual as Daddy lunches at the spaceport.
Now Daddy can't even see you unless you're a spaceship but that day he picked
to notice that I had dialed only a salad and hadn't finished it. "That
plate is about eight hundred calories short," he said, peering at it.
"You can't boost without fuel—aren't you well?"
"Quite well, thank you," I
answered with dignity.
"Mmm . . . now that I think
back, you've been moping for several days. Maybe you need a checkup." He
looked at Mother.
"I do not either need a
checkup!" I had not been moping—doesn't a woman have a right not to
chatter?
But I hate to have doctors poking at
me so I added, "It happens I'm eating lightly because I'm going flying
this afternoon. But if you insist, I'll order pot roast and potatoes and sleep
insead!"
"Easy, punkin'," he
answered gently. "I didn't mean to intrude. Get yourself a snack when
you're through . . . and say hello to Jeff for me."
I simply answered, "OK,"
and asked to be excused; I was humiliated by the assumption that I couldn't fly
without Mr. Jefferson Hardesty but did not wish to discuss it.
Daddy called after me, "Don't
be late for dinner," and Mother said, "Now, Jacob--" and to me,
"Fly until you're tired, dear; you haven't been getting much exercise.
I'll leave your dinner in the warmer. Anything you'd like?"
"No, whatever you dial for
yourself." I just wasn't interested in food, which isn't like me. As I
headed for Bats' Cave I wondered if I had caught something. But my cheeks
didn't feel warm and my stomach wasn't upset even if I wasn't hungry.
Then I had a horrible thought. Could
it be that I was jealous? Me?
It was unthinkable. I am not
romantic; I am a career woman. Jeff had been my partner and pal, and under my
guidance he could have become a great spaceship designer, but our relationship
was straightforward . . . a mutual respect for each other's abilities, with
never any of that lovey-dovey stuff. A career woman can't afford such things --
why look at all the professional time Mother had lost over having me!
No, I couldn't be jealous; I was
simply worried sick because my partner had become involved with a groundhog.
Jeff isn't bright about women and, besides, he's never been to Earth and has
illusions about it. If she lured him Earthside, Jones & Hardesty was
finished.
And somehow, "Jones &
Company" wasn't a substitute: the Prometheus might never be built.
I was at Bats' Cave when I reached
this dismal conclusion. I didn't feel like flying but I went to the locker room
and got my wings anyhow.
Most of the stuff written about
Bats' Cave gives a wrong impression. It's the air storage tank for the city,
just like all the colonies have -- the place where the scavenger pumps, deep
down, deliver the air until it's needed. We just happen to be lucky enough to
have one big enough to fly in. But it never was built, or anything like that;
it's just a big volcanic bubble, two miles across, and if it had broken
through, way back when, it would have been a crater.
Tourists sometimes pity us loonies
because we have no chance to swim. Well, I tried it in Omaha and got water up
my nose and scared myself silly. Water is for drinking, not playing in; I'll
take flying. I've heard groundhogs say, oh yes, they had "flown" many
times. But that's not flying. I did what they talk about, between White
Sands and Omaha. I felt awful and got sick. Those things aren't safe.
I left my shoes and skirt in the
locker room and slipped my tail surfaces on my feet, then zipped into my wings
and got someone to tighten the shoulder straps. My wings aren't readymade
condors; they are Storer-Gulls, custom-made for my weight distribution and
dimensions. I've cost Daddy a pretty penny in wings, outgrowing them so often,
but these latest I bought myself with guide fees.
They're lovely -- titanalloy struts
as light and strong as bird bones, tension-compensated wrist-pinion and shoulder
joints, natural action in the alula slots, and automatic flap action in
stalling. The wing skeleton is dressed in styrene feather-foils with individual
quilling of scapulars and primaries. They almost fly themselves.
I folded my wings and went into the
lock. While it was cycling I opened my left wing and thumbed the alula control
-- I had noticed a tendency to sideslip the last time I was airborne. But the
alula opened properly and I decided I must have been overcontrolling, easy to
do with Storer-Gulls; they're extremely maneuverable. Then the door showed
green and I folded the wing and hurried out, while glancing at the barometer.
Seventeen pounds -- two more than Earth sea-level and nearly twice what we use
in the city; even an ostrich could fly in that. I perked up and felt sorry for
all groundhogs, tied down by six times proper weight, who never, never, never
could fly.
Not even I could, on Earth. My wing
loading is less than a pound per square foot, as wings and all I weigh less
than twenty pounds. Earthside that would be over a hundred pounds and I could
flap forever and never get off the ground.
I felt so good that I forgot about
Jeff and his weakness. I spread my wings, ran a few steps, warped for lift and
grabbed air -- lifted my feet and was airborne.
I sculled gently and let myself
glide towards the air intake at the middle of the floor -- the Baby's Ladder,
we call it, because you can ride the updraft clear to the roof, half a mile
above, and never move a wing. When I felt it I leaned right, spoiling with
right primaries, corrected, and settled in a counterclockwise soaring glide and
let it carry me toward the roof.
A couple of hundred feet up, I
looked around. The cave was almost empty, not more than two hundred in the air
and half that number perched or on the ground -- room enough for didoes. So as
soon as I was up five hundred feet I leaned out of the updraft and began to
beat. Gliding is no effort but flying is as hard work as you care to make it.
In gliding I support a mere ten pounds on each arm -- shucks, on Earth you work
harder than that lying in bed. The lift that keeps you in the air doesn't take
any work; you get it free from the shape of your wings just as long as there is
air pouring past them.
Even without an updraft all a level
glide takes is gentle sculling with your finger tips to maintain air speed; a
feeble old lady could do it. The lift comes from differential air pressures but
you don't have to understand it; you just scull a little and the air supports
you, as if you were lying in an utterly perfect bed. Sculling keeps you moving
forward just like sculling a rowboat. . . or so I'm told; I've never been in a
rowboat. I had a chance to in Nebraska but I'm not that foolhardy.
But when you're really flying, you
scull with forearms as well as hands and add power with your shoulder muscles.
Instead of only the outer quills of your primaries changing pitch (as in
gliding), now your primaries and secondaries clear back to the joint warp
sharply on each downbeat and recovery; they no longer lift, they force you
forward -- while your weight is carried by your scapulars, up under your
armpits.
So you fly faster, or climb, or
both, through controlling the angle of attack with your feet -- with the tail
surfaces you wear on your feet, I mean.
Oh dear, this sounds complicated and
isn't -- you just do it. You fly exactly as a bird flies. Baby birds can learn
it and they aren't very bright. Anyhow, it's easy as breathing after you
learn.. . and more fun than you can imagine!
I climbed to the roof with powerful
beats, increasing my angle of attack and slotting my alulae for lift without
burble -- climbing at an angle that would stall most fliers. I'm little but
it's all muscle and I've been flying since I was six. Once up there I glided
and looked around. Down at the floor near the south wall tourists were trying
glide wings -- if you call those things "wings." Along the west wall
the visitors' gallery was loaded with goggling tourists. I wondered if Jeff and
his Circe character were there and decided to go down and find out.
So I went into a steep dive and
swooped toward the gallery, leveled off and flew very fast along it. I didn't
spot Jeff and his groundhoggess but I wasn't watching where I was going and
overtook another flier, almost collided. I glimpsed him just in time to stall
and drop under, and fell fifty feet before I got control. Neither of us was in
danger as the gallery is two hundred feet up, but I looked silly and it was my
own fault; I had violated a safety rule.
There aren't many rules but they are
necessary; the first is that orange wings always have the right of way --
they're beginners. This flier did not have orange wings but I was overtaking.
The flier underneath -- or being overtaken -- or nearer to wall -- or turning
counterclockwise, in that order, has the right of way.
I felt foolish and wondered who had
seen me, so I went all the way back up, made sure I had clear air, then stooped
like a hawk toward the gallery, spilling wings, lifting tail, and letting
myself fall like a rock.
I completed my stoop in front of the
gallery, lowering and spreading my tail so hard I could feel leg muscles knot
and grabbing air with both wings, alulae slotted. I pulled level in an
extremely fast glide along the gallery. I could see their eyes pop and thought
smugly, "There! That'll show 'em!"
When darn if somebody didn't stoop
on me! The blast from a flier braking right over me almost knocked me out of
control. I grabbed air and stopped a sideslip, used some shipyard words and looked
around to see who had blitzed me. I knew the black-and-gold wing pattern --
Mary Muhlenburg, my best girl friend. She swung toward me, pivoting on a wing
tip. "Hi, Holly! Scared you, didn't I?"
"You did not! You better be
careful; the flightmaster'll ground you for a month."
"Slim chance! He's down for
coffee."
I flew away, still annoyed, and
started to climb. Mary called after me, but I ignored her, thinking, "Mary
my girl, I'm going to get over you and fly you right out of the air."
That was a foolish thought as Mary
flies every day and has shoulders and pectoral muscles like Mrs. Hercules. By
the time she caught up with me I had cooled off and we flew side by side, still
climbing. "Perch?" she called out.
"Perch," I agreed. Mary
has lovely gossip and I could use a breather. We turned toward our usual perch,
a ceiling brace for flood lamps -- it isn't supposed to be a perch but the
flightmaster hardly ever comes up there.
Mary flew in ahead of me, braked and
stalled dead to a perfect landing. I skidded a little but Mary stuck out a wing
and steadied me. It isn't easy to come into a perch, especially when you have
to approach level. Two years ago a boy who had just graduated from orange wings
tried it . . . knocked off his left alula and primaries on a strut -- went
fluttering and spinning down two thousand feet and crashed. He could have saved
himself -- you can come in safely with a badly damaged wing if you spill air
with the other and accept the steeper glide, then stall as you land. But this poor
kid didn't know how; he broke his neck, dead as Icarus. I haven't used that
perch since.
We folded our wings and Mary sidled
over. "Jeff is looking for you," she said with a sly grin.
My insides jumped but I answered
coolly, "So? I didn't know he was here."
"Sure. Down there," she
added, pointing with her left wing. "Spot him?"
Jeff wears striped red and silver,
but she was pointing at the tourist guide slope, a mile away. "No."
"He's there all right."
She looked at me sidewise. "But I wouldn't look him up if I were
you."
"Why not? Or for that matter,
why should I?" Mary can be exasperating.
"Huh? You always run when he
whistles. But he has that Earthside siren in tow again today; you might find it
embarrasing?"
"Mary, whatever are you talking
about?"
"Huh? Don't kid me, Holly
Jones; you know what I mean."
"I'm sure I don't," I
answered with cold dignity.
"Humph! Then you're the only
person in Luna City who doesn't. Everybody knows you're crazy about Jeff;
everybody knows she's cut you out. . . and that you are simply simmering with
jealousy."
Mary is my dearest friend but
someday I'm going to skin her for a rug. "Mary, that's preposterously
ridiculous! How can you even think such a thing?"
"Look, darling, you don't have
to pretend. I'm for you." She patted my shoulders with her secondaries.
So I pushed her over backwards. She
fell a hundred feet, straightened out, circled and climbed, and came in beside
me, still grinning. It gave me time to decide what to say.
"Mary Muhlenburg, in the first
place I am not crazy about anyone, least of all Jeff Hardesty. He and I are
simply friends. So it's utterly nonsensical to talk about me being 'jealous.'
In the second place Miss Brentwood is a lady and doesn't go around 'cutting
out' anyone, least of all me. In the third place she is simply a tourist Jeff
is guiding -- business, nothing more."
"Sure, sure," Mary agreed
placidly. "I was wrong. Still--" She shrugged her wings and shut up.
"'Still' what? Mary, dont be
mealy-mouthed."
"Mmm. . . I was wondering how
you knew I was talking about Ariel Brentwood -- since there isn't anything to
it."
"Why, you mentioned her
name."
"I did not."
I thought frantically. "Uh,
maybe not. But it's perfectly simple. Miss Brentwood is a client I turned over
to Jeff myself, so I assumed that she must be the tourist you meant."
"So? I don't recall even saying
she was a tourist. But since she is just a tourist you two are splitting, why
aren't you doing the inside guiding while Jeff sticks to outside work? I
thought you guides had an agreement?"
"Huh? If he has been guiding
her inside the city, I'm not aware of it--"
"You're the only one who
isn't."
"--and I'm not interested;
that's up to the grievance committee. But Jeff wouldn't take a fee for inside
guiding in any case."
"Oh, sure! -- not one he could bank.
Well, Holly, seeing I was wrong, why don't you give him a hand with her? She
wants to learn to glide."
Butting in on that pair was farthest
from my mind. "If Mr. Hardesty wants my help, he will ask me. In the meantime
I shall mind my own business . . . a practice I recommend to you!"
"Relax, shipmate," she
answered, unruffled. "I was doing you a favor."
"Thank you, I don't need
one."
"So I'll be on my way -- got to
practice for the gymkhana." She leaned forward and dropped off. But she
didn't practice aerobatics; she dived straight for the tourist slope.
I watched her out of sight, then
sneaked my left hand out the hand slit and got at my hanky -- awkward when you
are wearing wings but the floodlights had made my eyes water. I wiped them and
blew my nose and put my hanky away and wiggled my hand back into place, then
checked everything thumbs, toes, and fingers, preparatory to dropping off.
But I didn't. I just sat there,
wings drooping, and thought. I had to admit that Mary was partly right; Jeff's
head was turned completely. . . over a groundhog. So sooner or later he
would go Earthside and Jones & Hardesty was finished.
Then I reminded myself that I had
been planning to be a spaceship designer like Daddy long before Jeff and I
teamed up. I wasn't dependent on anyone; I could stand alone, like Joan of Arc,
or Lise Meitner.
I felt better. . . a cold, stern
pride, like Lucifer in Paradise Lost.
I recognized the red and silver of
Jeff's wings while he was far off and I thought about slipping quietly away.
But Jeff can overtake me if he tries, so I decided, "Holly, don't be a
fool! You've no reason to run. . . just be coolly polite."
He landed by me but didn't sidle up.
"Hi, Decimal Point."
"Hi, Zero. Uh, stolen much
lately?"
"Just the City Bank but they
made me put it back." He frowned and added, "Holly, are you mad at
me."
"Why, Jeff, whatever gave you
such a silly notion?"
"Uh. . . something Mary the
Mouth said."
"Her? Don't pay any attention
to what she says. Half of it's always wrong and she doesn't mean the
rest."
"Yeah, a short circuit between
her ears. Then you aren't mad?"
"Of course not. Why
should I be?"
"No reason I know of. I haven't
been around to work on the ship for a few days.. . but I've been awfully
busy."
"Think nothing of it. I've been
terribly busy myself."
"Uh, that's fine. Look, Test
Sample, do me a favor. Help me out with a friend -- a client, that is -- we'll
she's a friend, too. She wants to learn to use glide wings."
I pretended to consider it.
"Anyone I know?"
"Oh, yes. Fact is, you
introduced us. Ariel Brentwood."
"'Brentwood?' Jeff, there are
so many tourists. Let me think. Tall girl? Blonde? Extremely pretty?"
He grinned like a goof and I almost
pushed him off. "That's Ariel!"
"I recall her . . . she
expected me to carry her bags. But you don't need help, Jeff. She seemed very
clever. Good sense of balance."
"Oh, yes, sure, all of that.
Well, the fact is, I want you two to know each other. She's. . . well, she's
just wonderful, Holly. A real person all the way through. You'll love her when
you know her better. Uh... this seemed like a good chance."
I felt dizzy. "Why, that's very
thoughtful, Jeff, but I doubt if she wants to know me better. I'm just a
servant she hired -- you know groundhogs."
"But she's not at all like the
ordinary groundhog. And she does want to know you better -- she told me
so!"
After you told her to think so!
I muttered. But I had talked myself into a corner. If I had not been hampered
by polite upbringing I would have said, "On your way, vacuum skull! I'm
not interested in your groundhog friends" -- but what I did say was,
"OK, Jeff," then gathered the fox to my bosom and dropped off into a
glide.
So I taught Ariel Brentwood to
"fly." Look, those so-called wings they let tourists wear have fifty
square feet of lift surface, no controls except warp in the primaries, a
built-in dihedral to make them stable as a table, and a few meaningless degrees
of hinging to let the wearer think that he is "flying" by waving his
arms. The tail is rigid, and canted so that if you stall (almost impossible)
you land on your feet. All a tourist does is run a few yards, lift up his feet
(he can't avoid it) and slide down a blanket of air. Then he can tell his grandchildren
how he flew, really flew, "just like a bird."
An ape could learn to
"fly" that much.
I put myself to the humiliation of
strapping on a set of the silly things and had Ariel watch while I swung into
the Baby's Ladder and let it carry me up a hundred feet to show her that you
really and truly could "fly" with them. Then I thankfully got rid of
them, strapped her into a larger set, and put on my beautiful Storer-Gulls. I
had chased Jeff away (two instructors is too many), but when he saw her wing
up, he swooped down and landed by us.
I looked up. "You again."
"Hello, Ariel. Hi, Blip. Say,
you've got her shoulder straps too tight."
"Tut, tut," I said.
"One coach at a time, remember? If you want to help, shuck those gaudy
fins and put on some gliders then I'll use you to show how not to. Otherwise
get above two hundred feet and stay there; we don't need any dining lounge
pilots."
Jeff pouted like a brat but Ariel
backed me up. "Do what teacher says, Jeff. That's a good boy."
He wouldn't put on gliders but he
didn't stay clear, either. He circled around us, watching, and got bawled out
by the flightmaster for cluttering the tourist area.
I admit Ariel was a good pupil. She
didn't even get sore when I suggested that she was rather mature across the
hips to balance well; she just said that she had noticed that I had the
slimmest behind around there and she envied me. So I quit trying to get her
goat, and found myself almost liking her as long as I kept my mind firmly on
teaching. She tried hard and learned fast -- good reflexes and (despite my
dirty crack) good balance. I remarked on it and she admitted diffidently that
she had had ballet training.
About mid-afternoon she said,
"Could I possibly try real wings?"
"Huh? Gee, Ariel, I don't think
so."
"Why not?"
There she had me. She had already
done all that could be done with those atrocious gliders. If she was to learn
more, she had to have real wings. "Ariel, it's dangerous. It's not what
you've been doing, believe me. You might get hurt, even killed."
"Would you be held
responsible?"
"No. You signed a release when
you came in."
"Then I'd like to try it."
I bit my lip. If she had cracked up
without my help, I wouldn't have shed a tear -- but to let her do something too
dangerous while she was my pupil. . . well, it smacked of David and Uriah.
"Ariel, I can't stop you . . . but I should put my wings away and not have
anything to do with it."
It was her turn to bite her lip.
"If you feel that way, I can't ask you to coach me. But I still want to.
Perhaps Jeff will help me."
"He probably will," I
blurted out, "if he is as big a fool as I think he is!"
Her company face slipped but she
didn't say anything because just then Jeff stalled in beside us. "What's
the discussion?"
We both tried to tell him and confused
him for he got the idea I had suggested it, and started bawling me out. Was I
crazy? Was I trying to get Ariel hurt? Didn't I have any sense?
"Shut up!" I
yelled, then added quietly but firmly, "Jefferson Hardesty, you wanted me
to teach your girl friend, so I agreed. But don't butt in and don't think you
can get away with talking to me like that. Now beat it! Take wing. Grab
air!"
He swelled up and said slowly,
"I absolutely forbid it."
Silence for five long counts. Then
Ariel said quietly, "Come, Holly. Let's get me some wings."
"Right, Ariel."
But they don't rent real wings.
Fliers have their own; they have to. However, there are second-hand ones for
sale because kids outgrow them, or people shift to custom-made ones, or
something. I found Mr. Schultz who keeps the key, and said that Ariel was
thinking of buying but I wouldn't let her without a tryout. After picking over
forty-odd pairs I found a set which Johnny Queveras had outgrown but which I
knew were all right. Nevertheless I inspected them carefully. I could hardly
reach the finger controls but they fitted Ariel.
While I was helping her into the
tail surfaces I said, "Ariel? This is still a bad idea."
"I know. But we can't let men
think they own us."
"I suppose not."
"They do own us, of course. But
we shouldn't let them know it." She was feeling out the tail controls.
"The big toes spread them?"
"Yes. But don't do it. Just
keep your feet together and toes pointed. Look, Ariel, you really aren't ready.
Today all you will do is glide, just as you've been doing. Promise?"
She looked me in the eye. "I'll
do exactly what you say. not even take wing unless you OK it."
"OK. Ready?"
"I'm ready."
"All right. Wups! I goofed.
They aren't orange."
"Does it matter?"
"It sure does." There followed
a weary argument because Mr. Schultz didn't want to spray them orange for a
tryout. Ariel settled it by buying them, then we had to wait a bit while the
solvent dried.
We went back to the tourist slope
and I let her glide, cautioning her to hold both alulae open with her thumbs
for more lift at slow speeds, while barely sculling with her fingers. She did
fine, and stumbled in landing only once. Jeff stuck around, cutting figure
eights above us, but we ignored him. Presently I taught her to turn in a wide,
gentle bank -- you can turn those awful glider things but it takes skill;
they're only meant for straight glide.
Finally I landed by her and said,
"Had enough?"
"I'll never have enough! But
I'll unwing if you say."
"Tired?"
"No." She glanced over her
wing at the Baby's Ladder; a dozen fliers were going up it, wings motionless,
soaring lazily. "I wish I could do that just once. It must be
heaven."
I chewed it over. "Actually,
the higher you are, the safer you are."
"Then why not?"
"Mmm . . . safer provided
you know what you're doing. Going up that draft is just gliding like you've
been doing. You lie still and let it lift you half a mile high. Then you come
down the same way, circling the wall in a gentle glide. But you're going to be
tempted to do something you don't understand yet -- flap your wings, or cut
some caper."
She shook her head solemnly. "I
won't do anything you haven't taught me."
I was still worried. "Look,
it's only half a mile up but you cover five miles going there and more getting
down. Half an hour at least. Will your arms take it?"
"I'm sure they will."
"Well. . . you can start down
anytime; you don't have to go all the way. Flex your arms a little now and
then, so they won't cramp. Just don't flap your wings."
"I won't."
"OK." I spread my wings.
"Follow me."
I led her into the updraft, leaned
gently right, then back left to start the counterclockwise climb, all the while
sculling very slowly so that she could keep up. Once we were in the groove I
called out, "Steady as you are!" and cut out suddenly, climbed and
took station thirty feet over and behind her. "Ariel?"
"Yes, Holly?"
"I'll stay over you. Don't
crane your neck; you don't have to watch me, I have to watch you. You're doing
fine."
"I feel fine!"
"Wiggle a little. Don't stiffen
up. It's a long way to the roof. You can scull harder if you want to."
"Aye aye, Cap'n!"
"Not tired?"
"Heavens, no! Girl, I'm
living!" She giggled. "And mama said I'd never be an angel!"
I didn't answer because
red-and-silver wings came charging at me, braked suddenly and settled into the
circle between me and Ariel. Jeff's face was almost as red as his wings.
"What the devil do you think you are doing?"
"Orange wings!" I yelled.
"Keep clear!"
"Get down out of here! Both of
you!"
"Get out from between me and my
pupil. You know the rules."
"Ariel!" Jeff shouted.
"Lean out of the circle and glide down. I'll stay with you."
"Jeff Hardesty," I said
savagely, "I give you three seconds to get out from between us -- then I'm
going to report you for violation of Rule One. For the third time -- Orange
Wings!"
Jeff growled something, dipped his
right wing and dropped out of formation. The idiot sideslipped within five feet
of Ariel's wing tip. I should have reported him for that; all the room you can
give a beginner is none too much.
I said, "OK, Ariel?"
"OK, Holly. I'm sorry Jeff is
angry."
"He'll get over it. Tell me if
you feel tired."
"I'm not. I want to go all the
way up. How high are we?"
"Four hundred feet,
maybe."
Jeff flew below us a while, then
climbed and flew over us. . . probably for the same reason I did: to see
better. It suited me to have two of us watching her as long as he didn't
interfere; I was beginning to fret that Ariel might not realize that the way
down was going to be as long and tiring as the way up. I was hoping she would
cry uncle. I knew I could glide until forced down by starvation. But a beginner
gets tense.
Jeff stayed generally over us,
sweeping back and forth -- he's too active to glide very long -- while Ariel
and I continued to soar, winding slowly up toward the roof. It finally occurred
to me when we were about halfway up that I could cry uncle myself; I didn't
have to wait for Ariel to weaken. So I called out, "Ariel? Tired
now?"
"No."
"Well, I am. Could we go down,
please?"
She didn't argue, she just said,
"All right. What am I to do?"
"Lean right and get out of the
circle." I intended to have her move out five or six hundred feet, get
into the return down draft, and circle the cave down instead of up. I glanced
up, looking for Jeff. I finally spotted him some distance away and much higher
but coming toward us. I called out, "Jeff! See you on the ground." He
might not have heard me but he would see if he didn't hear; I glanced back at
Ariel.
I couldn't find her.
Then I saw her, a hundred feet below
-- flailing her wings and falling, out of control.
I didn't know how it happened. Maybe
she leaned too far, went into a sideslip and started to struggle. But I didn't
try to figure it out; I was simply filled with horror. I seemed to hang there
frozen for an hour while I watched her.
But the fact appears to be that I
screamed "Jeff!" and broke into a stoop.
But I didn't seem to fall, couldn't
overtake her. I spilled my wings completely -- but couldn't manage to fall; she
was as far away as ever.
You do start slowly, of course; our
low gravity is the only thing that makes human flying possible. Even a stone
falls a scant three feet in the first second. But the first second seemed
endless.
Then I knew I was falling. I could
feel rushing air -- but I still didn't seem to close on her. Her struggles must
have slowed her somewhat, while I was in an intentional stoop, wings spilled
and raised over my head, falling as fast as possible. I had a wild notion that
if I could pull even with her, I could shout sense into her head, get her to
dive, then straighten out in a glide. But I couldn't reach her.
This nightmare dragged on for hours.
Actually we didn't have room to fall
for more than twenty seconds; that's all it takes to stoop a thousand feet. But
twenty seconds can be horribly long . . . long enough to regret every foolish
thing I had ever done or said, long enough to say a prayer for us both.. . and
to say good-bye to Jeff in my heart. Long enough to see the floor rushing
toward us and know that we were both going to crash if I didn't overtake her
mighty quick.
I glanced up and Jeff was stooping
right over us but a long way up. I looked down at once.. . and I was overtaking
her... I was passing her -- I was under her!
Then I was braking with everything I
had, almost pulling my wings off. I grabbed air, held it, and started to beat
without ever going to level flight. I beat once, twice, three times. . . and
hit her from below, jarring us both.
Then the floor hit us.
I felt feeble and dreamily
contented. I was on my back in a dim room. I think Mother was with me and I
know Daddy was. My nose itched and I tried to scratch it, but my arms wouldn't
work. I fell asleep again.
I woke up hungry and wide awake. I
was in a hospital bed and my arms still wouldn't work, which wasn't surprising
as they were both in casts. A nurse came in with a tray. "Hungry?"
she asked.
"Starved," I admitted.
"We'll fix that." She
started feeding me like a baby.
I dodged the third spoonful and
demanded, "What happened to my arms?"
"Hush," she said and
gagged me with a spoon.
But a nice doctor came in later and
answered my question. "Nothing much. Three simple fractures. At your age
you'll heal in no time. But we like your company so I'm holding you for
observation of possible internal injury."
"I'm not hurt inside," I
told him. "At least, I don't hurt."
"I told you it was just an
excuse."
"Uh, Doctor?"
"Well?"
"Will I be able to fly
again?" I waited, scared.
"Certainly. I've seen men hurt
worse get up and go three rounds."
"Oh. Well, thanks. Doctor? What
happened to the other girl? Is she. . . did she...?"
"Brentwood? She's here."
"She's right here," Ariel
agreed from the door. "May I come in?"
My jaw dropped, then I said,
"Yeah. Sure. Come in."
The doctor said, "Don't stay
long," and left. I said, "Well, sit down."
"Thanks." She hopped
instead of walked and I saw that one foot was bandaged. She got on the end of
the bed.
"You hurt your foot."
She shrugged. "Nothing. A
sprain and a torn ligament. Two cracked ribs. But I would have been dead. You
know why I'm not?"
I didn't answer. She touched one of
my casts. "That's why. You broke my fall and I landed on top of you. You
saved my life and I broke both your arms."
"You don't have to thank me. I
would have done it for anybody."
"I believe you and I wasn't
thanking you. You can't thank a person for saving your life. I just wanted to
make sure you knew that I knew it."
I didn't have an answer so I said,
"Where's Jeff? Is he all right?"
"He'll be along soon. Jeff's
not hurt . . . though I'm surprised he didn't break both ankles. He stalled in
beside us so hard that he should have. But Holly . . . Holly my very dear . . .
I slipped in so that you and I could talk about him before he got here."
I changed the subject quickly.
Whatever they had given me made me feel dreamy and good, but not beyond being
embarrassed. "Ariel, what happened? You were getting along fine -- then
suddenly you were in trouble."
She looked sheepish. "My own
fault. You said we were going down, so I looked down. Really looked, I mean.
Before that, all my thoughts had been about climbing to the roof; I hadn't
thought about how far down the floor was. Then I looked down and got dizzy and
panicky and went all to pieces." She shrugged. "You were right. I
wasn't ready."
I thought about it and nodded.
"I see. But don't worry -- when my arms are well, I'll take you up
again."
She touched my foot. "Dear
Holly. But I won't be flying again; I'm going back where I belong."
"Earthside?"
"Yes. I'm taking the Billy
Mitchell on Wednesday."
"Oh. I'm sorry."
She frowned slightly. "Are you?
Holly, you don't like me, do you?"
I was startled silly. What can you
say? Especially when it's true? "Well," I said slowly, "I don't
dislike you. I just don't know you very well."
She nodded. "And I don't know
you very well . . . even though I got to know you a lot better in a very few
seconds. But Holly listen please and don't get angry. It's about Jeff. He
hasn't treated you very well the last few days -- while I've been here, I mean.
But don't be angry with him. I'm leaving and everything will be the same."
That ripped it open and I couldn't
ignore it, because if I did, she would assume all sorts of things that weren't
so. So I had to explain. . . about me being a career woman.. . how, if I had
seemed upset, it was simply distress at breaking up the firm of Jones &
Hardesty before it even finished its first starship . how I was not in love
with Jeff but simply valued him as a friend and associate. . . but if Jones
& Hardesty couldn't carry on, then Jones & Company would. "So you
see, Ariel, it isn't necessary for you to give up Jeff. If you feel you owe me
something, just forget it. It isn't necessary."
She blinked and I saw with amazement
that she was holding back tears. "Holly, Holly. . . you don't understand
at all."
"I understand all right. I'm
not a child."
"No, you're a grown woman. . .
but you haven't found it out." She held up a finger. "One -- Jeff
doesn't love me."
"I don't believe it."
"Two. . . I don't love
him."
"I don't believe that,
either."
"Three . . . you say you don't
love him -- but we'll take that up when we come to it. Holly, am I
beautiful?"
Changing the subject is a female
trait but I'll never learn to do it that fast. "Huh?"
"I said, 'Am I
beautiful?'"
"You know darn well you
are!"
"Yes. I can sing a bit and
dance, but I would get few parts if I were not, because I'm no better than a
third-rate actress. So I have to be beautiful. How old am I?"
I managed not to boggle. "Huh?
Older than Jeff thinks you are. Twenty-one, at least. Maybe twenty-two."
She sighed. "Holly, I'm old
enough to be your mother."
"Huh? I don't believe that,
either."
"I'm glad it doesn't show. But
that's why, though Jeff is a dear, there never was a chance that I could fall
in love with him. But how I feel about him doesn't matter; the important thing
is that he loves you."
"What? That's the silliest
thing you've said yet! Oh, he likes me -- or did. But that's all." I
gulped. "And it's all I want. Why, you should hear the way he talks to
me."
"I have. But boys that age
can't say what they mean; they get embarrassed."
"But--"
"Wait, Holly. I saw something
you didn't because you were knocked cold. When you and I bumped, do you know
what happened?"
"Uh, no."
"Jeff arrived like an avenging
angel, a split second behind us. He was ripping his wings off as he hit,
getting his arms free. He didn't even look at me. He just stepped across me and
picked you up and cradled you in his arms, all the while bawling his eyes
out."
"He did?"
"He did."
I mulled it over. Maybe the big lunk
did kind of like me, after all.
Ariel went on, "So you see,
Holly, even if you don't love him, you must be very gentle with him, because he
loves you and you can hurt him terribly."
I tried to think. Romance was still
something that a career woman should shun . . . but if Jeff really did feel
that way -- well. . . would it be compromising my ideals to marry him just to
keep him happy? To keep the firm together? Eventually, that is?
But if I did, it wouldn't be Jones
& Hardesty; it would be Hardesty & Hardesty.
Ariel was still talking: "--you
might even fall in love with him. It does happen, hon, and if it did, you'd be
sorry if you had chased him away. Some other girl would grab him; he's awfully
nice."
"But," I shut up for I
heard Jeff's step -- I can always tell it. He stopped in the door and looked at
us, frowning.
"Hi, Ariel."
"Hi, Jeff."
"Hi, Fraction." He looked
me over. "My, but you're a mess."
"You aren't pretty yourself. I
hear you have flat feet."
"Permanently. How do you brush
your teeth with those things on your arms?"
"I don't."
Ariel slid off the bed, balanced on
one foot. "Must run. See you later, kids."
"So long, Ariel."
"Good-bye, Ariel. Uh. . .
thanks."
Jeff closed the door after she
hopped away, came to the bed and said gruffly, "Hold still."
Then he put his arms around me and
kissed me.
Well, I couldn't stop him, could I?
With both arms broken? Besides, it was consonant with the new policy of the
firm. I was startled speechless because Jeff never kisses me, except birthday
kisses, which don't count. But I tried to kiss back and show that I appreciated
it.
I don't know what the stuff was they
had been giving me but my ears began to ring and I felt dizzy again.
Then he was leaning over me.
"Runt," he said mournfully, "you sure give me a lot of
grief."
"You're no bargain yourself,
flathead," I answered with dignity.
"I suppose not." He looked
me over sadly. "What are you crying for?"
I didn't know that I had been. Then
I remembered why. "Oh, Jeff -- I busted my pretty wings!"
"We'll get you more. Uh, brace
yourself. I'm going to do it again."
"All right." He did.
I suppose Hardesty & Hardesty
has more rhythm than Jones & Hardesty.
It really sounds better.
“All torch pilots! Report to the Commodore!” The call echoed through Earth Satellite Station.
Joe Appleby flipped off the shower to listen. “You don’t mean me,” he said happily, “I’m on leave—but I’d better shove before you change your mind.”
He dressed and hurried along a passageway. He was in the outer ring of the Station; its slow revolution, a giant wheel in the sky, produced gravity-like force against his feet. As he reached his room the loud-speakers repeated, “All torch pilots, report to the Commodore,” then added, “Lieutenant Appleby, report to the Commodore.” Appleby uttered a rude monosyllable.
The Commodore’s office was crowded. All present wore the torch, except a flight surgeon and Commodore Berrio himself, who wore the jets of a rocketship pilot. Berrio glanced up and went on talking: “—the situation. If we are to save Proserpina Station, an emergency run must be made out to Pluto. Any questions?”
No one spoke. Appleby wanted to, but did not wish to remind Berrio that he had been late. “Very well,” Berrio went on. “Gentlemen, it’s a job for torch pilots. I must ask for volunteers.”
Good! thought Appleby. Let the eager lads volunteer and then adjourn. He decided that he might still catch the next shuttle to Earth. The Commodore continued, “Volunteers please remain. The rest are dismissed.”
Excellent, Appleby decided. Don’t rush for the door, me lad. Be dignified—sneak out between two taller men.
No one left. Joe Appleby felt swindled but lacked the nerve to start the exodus. The Commodore said soberly, “Thank you, gentlemen. Will you wait in the wardroom, please?” Muttering, Appleby left with the crowd. He wanted to go out to Pluto someday—sure!—but not now, not with Earthside leave papers in his pocket.
He held a torcher’s contempt for the vast distance itself. Older pilots thought of interplanetary trips with a rocket-man’s bias, in terms of years—trips that a torch ship with steady acceleration covered in days. By the orbits that a rocketship must use the round trip to Jupiter takes over five years; Saturn is twice as far, Uranus twice again, Neptune still farther. No rocketship ever attempted Pluto; a round trip would take more than ninety years. But torch ships had won a foothold even there: Proserpina Station—cryology laboratory, cosmic radiation station, parallax observatory, physics laboratory, all in one quintuple dome against the unspeakable cold.
Nearly four billion miles from Proserpina Station Appleby followed a classmate into the wardroom. “Hey, Jerry,” he said, “tell me what it is I seem to have volunteered for?”
Jerry Price looked around. “Oh, it’s late Joe Appleby. Okay, buy me a drink.”
A radiogram had come from Proserpina, Jerry told him, reporting an epidemic: “Larkin’s disease.” Appleby whistled. Larkin’s disease was a mutated virus, possibly of Martian origin; a victim’s red-cell count fell rapidly, soon he was dead. The only treatment was massive transfusions while the disease ran its course. “So, m’boy, somebody has to trot out to Pluto with a blood bank.”
Appleby frowned. “My pappy warned me. ‘Joe,’ he said, ‘keep your mouth shut and never volunteer.’”
Jerry grinned. “We didn’t exactly volunteer.”
“How long is the boost? Eighteen days or so? I’ve got social obligations Earthside.”
“Eighteen days at one-g—but this will be higher. They are running out of blood donors.”
“How high? A g-and-a-half?” Price shook his head. “I’d guess two gravities.”
“Two g’s!”
“What’s hard about that? Men have lived through a lot more.”
“Sure, for a short pull-out—not for days on end. Two g’s strains your heart if you stand up.”
“Don’t moan, they won’t pick you—I’m more the hero type. While you’re on leave, think of me out in those lonely wastes, a grim-jawed angel of mercy. Buy me another drink.”
Appleby decided that Jerry was right; with only two pilots needed he stood a good chance of catching the next Earth shuttle. He got out his little black book and was picking phone numbers when a messenger arrived. “Lieutenant Appleby, sir?” Joe admitted it.
“The-Commodore’s-compliments-and-will-you-report-at-once-sir?”
“On my way.” Joe caught Jerry’s eye. “Who is what type?”
Jerry said, “Shall I take care of your social obligations?”
“Not likely!”
“I was afraid not. Good luck, boy.”
With Commodore Berrio was the flight surgeon and an older lieutenant. Berrio said, “Sit down, Appleby. You know Lieutenant Kleuger? He’s your skipper. You will be co-pilot.”
“Very good, sir.”
“Appleby, Mr. Kleuger is the most experienced torch pilot available. You were picked because medical records show you have exceptional tolerance for acceleration. This is a high-boost trip.”’
“How high, sir?”
Berrio hesitated. “Three and one-half gravities.” Three and a half g’s! That wasn’t a boost—that was a pullout. Joe heard the surgeon protest, “I’m sorry, sir, but three gravities is all I can approve.”
Berrio frowned. “Legally, it’s up to the captain. But three hundred lives depend on it.”
Kleuger said, “Doctor, let’s see that curve.” The surgeon slid a paper across the desk; Kleuger moved it so that Joe could see it. “Here’s the scoop, Appleby—”
A curve started high, dropped very slowly, made a sudden “knee” and dropped rapidly. The surgeon put his finger on the “knee.” “Here,” he said soberly, “is where the donors are suffering from loss of blood as much as the patients. After that it’s hopeless, without a new source of blood.”
“How did you get this curve?” Joe asked.
“It’s the empirical equation of Larkin’s disease applied to two hundred eighty-nine people.”
Appleby noted vertical lines each marked with an acceleration and a time. Far to the right was one marked: “1 g— 18 days” That was the standard trip; it would arrive after the epidemic had burned out. Two gravities cut it to twelve days seventeen hours; even so, half the colony would be dead. Three g’s was better but still bad. He could see why the Commodore wanted them to risk three-and-a-half kicks; that line touched the “knee,” at nine days fifteen hours. That way they could save almost everybody, but, oh, brother!
The time advantage dropped off by inverse squares. Eighteen days required one gravity, so nine days took four, ‘while four-and-a-half days required a fantastic sixteen gravities. But someone had drawn a line at “16 g—4.5 days.” “Hey! This plot must be for a robot-torch—that’s the ticket! Is there one available?”
Berrio said gently, “Yes. But what are its chances?”
Joe shut up. Even between the inner planets robots often went astray. In four-billion-odd miles the chance that one could hit close enough to be caught by radio control was slim. “We’ll try,” Berrio promised. “If it succeeds, I’ll call you at once.” He looked at Kleuger. “Captain, time is short. I must have your decision.”
Kleuger turned to the surgeon. “Doctor, why not another half gravity? I recall a report on a chimpanzee who was centrifuged at high g for an amazingly long time.”
“A chimpanzee is not a man.”
Joe blurted out, “How much did this chimp stand, Surgeon?”
“Three and a quarter gravities for twenty-seven days.”
“He did? What shape was he in when the test ended?”
“He wasn’t,” the doctor grunted.
Kleuger looked at the graph, glanced at Joe, then said to the Commodore, “The boost will be at three and one-half gravities, sir.”
Berrio merely said, “Very well, sir. Hurry over to sick bay. You haven’t much time.”
Forty-seven minutes later they were being packed into the scout torchship Salamander. She was in orbit close by; Joe, Kleuger, and their handlers came by tube linking the hub of the Station to her airlock Joe was weak and dopy from a thorough washing-out plus a dozen treatments and injections. A good thing, he thought, that light-off would be automatic.
The ship was built for high boost; controls were over the pilots’ tanks, where they could be fingered without lifting a hand. The flight surgeon and an assistant fitted Kleuger into one tank while two medical technicians arranged Joe in his. One of them asked, “Underwear smooth? No wrinkles?”
“I guess.”
“I’ll check.” He did so, then arranged fittings necessary to a man who must remain in one position for days. “The nipple left of your mouth is water; the two on your right are glucose and bouillon.”
“No solids?”
The surgeon turned in the air and answered, “You don’t need any, you won’t want any, and you mustn’t have any. And be careful in swallowing.”
“I’ve boosted before.”
“Sure, sure. But be careful.”
Each tank was like an oversized bathtub filled with a liquid denser than water. The top was covered by a rubbery sheet, gasketed at the edges; during boost each man would float with the sheet conforming to his body. The Salamander being still in free orbit, everything was weightless and the sheet now served to keep the fluid from floating out. The attendants centered Appleby against the sheet and fastened him with sticky tape, then placed his own acceleration collar, tailored to him, behind his head. The surgeon came over and inspected. “You okay?”
“Sure.”
“Mind that swallowing.” He added, “Okay, Captain. Permission to leave your ship, sir?”
“Certainly. Thank you, Surgeon.”
“Good luck.” He left with the technicians.
The room had no ports and needed none. The area in front of Joe’s face was filled with screens, instruments, radar, and data displays; near his forehead was his eyepiece for the coelostat. A light blinked green as the passenger tube broke its anchors; Kleuger caught Joe’s eye in a mirror mounted opposite them. “Report, Mister.”
“Minus seven’ minutes oh four. Tracking. Torch warm and idle. Green for light-off.”
“Stand by while I check orientation.” Kleuger’s eyes disappeared into his coelostat eyepiece. Presently he said, “Check me, Joe.”
“Aye aye, sir.” Joe twisted a knob and his eyepiece swung down. He found three star images brought together perfectly in the cross hairs. “Couldn’t be better, Skipper.”
“Ask for clearance.”
“Salamander to Control—clearance requested to Proserpina. Automatic light-off on tape. All green.”
“Control
to Salamander. You are cleared. Good luck!”
“Cleared, Skipper. Minus three. Double oh!” Joe thought morosely that he should be half way to Earth now. Why the hell did the military always get stuck with these succor-&-rescue jobs?
When the counter flashed the last thirty seconds he forgot his foregone leave. The lust to travel possessed him. To go, no matter where, anywhere go! He smiled as the torch lit off.
Then weight hit him.
At three and one-half gravities he weighed six hundred and thirty pounds. It felt as if a load of sand had landed on him, squeezing his chest, making him helpless, forcing his head against his collar. He strove to relax, to let the supporting liquid hold him together. It was all right to tighten up for a pull-out, but for a long boost one must relax. He breathed shallowly and slowly; the air was pure oxygen, little lung action was needed. But he labored just to breathe. He could feel his heart struggling to pump blood grown heavy through squeezed vessels. This is awful! he admitted. I’m not sure I can take it. He had once had four g for nine minutes but he had forgotten how bad it was.
“Joe! Joe!”
He opened his eyes and tried to shake his head. “Yes, Skipper.” He looked for Kleuger in the mirror; the pilot’s face was sagging and drawn, pulled into the mirthless grin of high acceleration.
“Check orientation!”
Joe let his arms float as he worked controls with leaden fingers. “Dead on, Skipper.”
“Very well. Call Luna.”
Earth Station was blanketed by their torch but the Moon was on their bow. Appleby called Luna tracking center and received their data on the departure plus data relayed from Earth Station. He called figures and times to Kleuger, who fed them into the computer. Joe then found that he had forgotten, while working, his unbearable weight. It felt worse than ever. His neck ached and he suspected that there was a wrinkle under his left calf. He wiggled in the tank to smooth it, but it made it worse. “How’s she look, Skipper?”
“Okay. You’re relieved, Joe. I’ll take first watch.”
“Right, Skipper.” He tried to rest—as if a man could when buried under sandbags. His bones ached and the wrinkle became a nagging nuisance. The pain in his neck got worse; apparently he had wrenched it at light-off. He turned his head, but there were just two positions—bad and worse. Closing his eyes, he attempted to sleep. Ten minutes later he was wider awake than ever, his mind on three things, the lump in his neck, the irritation under his leg, and the squeezing weight.
Look, bud, he told himself, this is a long boost. Take it easy, or adrenalin exhaustion will get you. As the book says, “The ideal pilot is relaxed and unworried. Sanguine in temperament, he never borrows trouble.” Why, you chair-warming so-and-so! Were you at three and a half g’s when you wrote that twaddle?
Cut it out, boy! He turned his mind to his favorite subject—girls, bless their hearts. Such self-hypnosis he had used to pass many a lonely million miles. Presently he realized wryly that his phantom harem had failed him. He could not conjure them up, so he banished them and spent his time being miserable.
He
awoke in a sweat. His last dream had been a nightmare that he was headed out
to Pluto at an impossibly high boost.
My God! So he was!
The pressure seemed worse. When he moved his head there was a stabbing pain down his side. He was panting and sweat was pouring off. It ran into his eyes; he tried to wipe them, found that his arm did not respond and that his fingertips were numb. He inched his arm across his body and dabbed at his eyes; it did not help.
He stared at the elapsed time dial of the integrating ancelerograph and tried to remember when he was due on watch. It took a while to understand that six and a half hours had passed since light-off. He then realized with a jerk that it was long past time to relieve the watch. Kleuger’s face in the mirror was still split in the grin of high g; his eyes were closed. “Skipper!” Joe shouted. Kleuger did not stir. Joe felt for the alarm button, thought better of it. Let the poor goop sleep!
But somebody had to feed the hogs—better get the clouds out of his brain. The accelerometer showed three and a half exactly; the torch dials were all in operating range; the radiometer showed leakage less than ten percent of danger level.
The integrating accelerograph displayed elapsed time, velocity, and distance, in dead-reckoning for empty space. Under these windows were three more which showed the same by the precomputed tape controlling the torch; by comparing, Joe could tell how results matched predictions. The torch had been lit off for less than seven hours, speed was nearly two million miles per hour and they were over six million miles out. A third display corrected these figures for the Sun’s field, but Joe ignored this; near Earth’s orbit the Sun pulls only one two-thousandth of a gravity—a gnat’s whisker, allowed for in precomputation. Joe merely noted that tape and D.R. agreed; he wanted an outside check.
Both Earth and Moon now being blanketed by the same cone of disturbance, he. twisted knobs until their radar beacon beamed toward Mars and let it pulse the signal meaning “Where am I?” He did not wait for answer; Mars was eighteen minutes away by radio. He turned instead to the coelostat. The triple image had wandered slightly but the error was too small to correct.
He dictated what he had done into the log, whereupon he felt worse. His ribs hurt, each breath carried the stab of pleurisy. His hands and feet felt “pins-and-needles” from scanty circulation. He wiggled them, which produced crawling sensations and wearied him. So he held still and watched the speed soar. It increased seventy-seven miles per hour every second, more than a quarter million miles per hour every hour. For once he envied rocketship pilots; they took forever to get anywhere but they got there in comfort.
Without the torch, men would never have ventured much past Mars. E = Mc2, mass is energy, and a pound of sand equals fifteen billion horsepower-hours. An atomic rocket-ship uses but a fraction of one percent of that energy, whereas the new torchers used better than eighty percent. The conversion chamber of a torch was a tiny sun; particles expelled from it approached the speed of light.
Appleby was proud to be a torcher, but not at the moment. The crick had grown into a splitting headache, he wanted to bend his knees and could not, and he was nauseated from the load on his stomach. Kleuger seemed able to sleep through it, damn his eyes! How did they expect a man to stand this? Only eight hours and already he felt done in, bushed—how could he last nine days?
Later—time
was beginning to be uncertain—some indefinite time later he heard his name
called. “Joe! Joe!”
Couldn’t a man die in peace? His eyes wandered around, found the mirror; he struggled to focus. “Joe! You’ve got to relieve me—I’m groggy.”
“Aye aye, sir.”
“Make a check, Joe. I’m too goofed up to do it.”
“I already did, sir.”
“Huh? When?”
Joe’s eyes swam around to the elapsed-time dial. He closed one eye to read it. “Uh, about six hours ago.”
“What? What time is it?”
Joe didn’t answer. He wished peevishly that Kleuger would go away. Kleuger added soberly, “I must have blacked out, kid. What’s the situation?” Presently he insisted, “Answer me, Mister.”
“Huh? Oh, we’re all right—down the groove. Skipper, is my left leg twisted? I can’t see it.”
“Eh? Oh, never mind your leg! What were the figures?”
“What figures?”
“‘What figures?’ Snap out of it, Mister! You’re on duty.”
A fine one to talk, Joe thought fretfully. If that’s how he’s going to act, I’ll just close my eyes and ignore him.
Kleuger repeated, “The figures, Mister.”
“Huh? Oh, play ‘em off the log if you’re so damned eager!” He expected a blast at that, but none came. When next he opened his eyes Kleuger’s eyes were closed. He couldn’t recall whether the Skipper had played his figures back or not—nor whether he had logged them. He decided that it was time for another check but he was dreadfully thirsty; he needed a drink first. He drank carefully but still got a drop down his windpipe. A coughing spasm hurt him all over and left him so weak that he had to rest.
He pulled himself together and scanned the dials. Twelve hours and— No, wait a minute! One day and twelve hours—that couldn’t be right. But their speed was over ten million miles per hour and their distance more than ninety million miles from Earth;, they were beyond the orbit of Mars. “Skipper! Hey! Lieutenant Kleuger!”
Kleuger’s face was a grinning mask. In dull panic Joe tried to find their situation. The coelostat showed them balanced; either the ship had wobbled back, or Kleuger had corrected it. Or had he himself? He decided to run over the log and see. Fumbling among buttons he found the one to rewind the log.
Since
he didn’t remember to stop it the wire ran all the way back to light-off, then
played back, zipping through silent stretches and slowing for speech. He
listened to his record of the first check, then found that Phobos Station,
Mars, had answered with a favorable report—to which a voice added, “Where’s
the fire?”
Yes, Kleuger had corrected balance hours earlier. The wire hurried through a blank spot, slowed again—Kleuger had dictated a letter to someone; it was unfinished and incoherent. Once Kleuger had stopped to shout, “Joe! Joe!” and Joe heard himself answer, “Oh shut up!” He had no memory of it.
There was something he should do but he was too tired to think and he hurt all over—except his legs, he couldn’t feel them. He shut his eyes and tried not to think. When he opened them the elapsed time was turning three days; he closed them and leaked tears.
A bell rang endlessly; he became aware that it was the general alarm, but he felt no interest other than a need to stop it. It was hard to find the switch, his fingers were numb. But he managed it and was about to rest from the effort, when he heard Kleuger call him. “Joe!”
“Huh?”
“Joe—don’t go back to sleep or I’ll turn the alarm on again. You hear me?”
“Yeah—” So Kleuger had done that—why, damn him!
“Joe, I’ve got to talk to you. I can’t stand any more.”
“‘Any more what?”
“High boost. I can’t take any more—it’s killing me.”
“Oh, rats!” Turn on that loud bell, would he?
“I’m dying, Joe. I can’t see—my eyes are shot. Joe, I’ve got to shut down the boost. I’ve got to.”
“Well, what’s stopping you?” Joe answered irritably.
“Don’t you see, Joe? You’ve got to back me up. We tried-and we couldn’t. We’ll both log it. Then it’ll be all right.”
“Log what?”
“Eh? Dammit, Joe, pay attention. I can’t talk much. You’ve got to say—to say that the strain became unendurable and you advised me to shut down. I’ll confirm it and it will be all right.” His labored whisper was barely audible.
Joe couldn’t figure out what Kleuger meant. He couldn’t remember why Kleuger had put them in high boost anyhow. “Hurry, Joe.”
There he went, nagging him! Wake him up and then nag him—to hell with him. “Oh, go back to sleep!” He dozed off and was again jerked awake by the alarm. This time he knew where the switch was and flipped it quickly. Kleuger switched it on again, Joe turned it off. Kleuger quit trying and Joe passed out.
He came awake in free fall. He was still realizing the ecstasy of being weightless when he managed to reorient; he was in the Salamander, headed for Pluto. Had they reached the end of the run? No, the dial said four days and some hours. Had the tape broken? The autopilot gone haywire? He then recalled the last time he had been awake.
Kleuger had shut off the torch!
The stretched grin was gone from Kleuger’s face, the features seemed slack and old. Joe called out, “Captain! Captain Kleuger!” Kleuger’s eyes fluttered and lips moved but Joe heard nothing. He slithered out of the tank, moved in front of Kleuger, floated there. “Captain, can you hear me?”
The lips whispered, “I had to, boy. I saved us. Can you get us back, Joe?” His eyes opened but did not track.
“Captain, listen to me. I’ve got to light off again.”
“Huh? No, Joe, no!”
“I’ve got to.”
“No! That’s an order, Mister.”
Appleby stared, then with a judo chop caught the sick man on the jaw. Kleuger’s head bobbed loosely. Joe pulled himself between the tanks, located a three-position switch, turned it from “Pilot & Co-Pilot” to “Co-Pilot Only”; Kleuger’s controls were now dead. He glanced at Kleuger, saw that his head was not square in his collar, so he taped him properly into place, then got back in his tank. He settled his head and fumbled for the switch that would put the autopilot back on tape. There was some reason why they must finish this run—but for, the life of him he could not remember why. He squeezed the switch and, weight pinned him down.
He was awakened by a dizzy feeling added to the pressure. It went on for seconds, he retched futilely. When the motion stopped he peered at the dials. The Salamander had just completed the somersault from acceleration to deceleration. They had come half way, about, eighteen hundred million miles; their speed was over three million miles per hour and beginning to drop. Joe felt that he should report it to the skipper—he had no recollection of any trouble with him. “Skipper! Hey!” Kleuger did not move. Joe called again, then resorted to the alarm.
The clangor woke, not Kleuger, but Joe’s memory. He shut it off, feeling soul sick. Topping his physical misery was shame and loss and panic as he recalled the shabby facts. He felt that he ought to log it but could not decide what to say. Beaten and ever lower in mind he gave up and tried to rest.
He woke later with something gnawing at his mind…something he should do for the Captain…something about a cargo robot—
That
was it! If the robot-torch had reached Pluto, they could quit! Let’s see—elapsed-time
from light-off was over five days. Yes, if it ever got there, then— He ran the
wire back, listened for a recorded message. It was there: “Earth Station to
Salamander—Extremely sorry to report that robot failed rendezvous. We are
depending on you.—Berrio.”
Tears of weakness and disappointment sped down his cheeks, pulled along by three and one-half gravities.
It was on the eighth day that Joe realized that Kleuger was dead. It was not the stench—he was unable to tell that from his own ripe body odors. Nor was it that the Captain had not roused since flip-over; Joe’s time sense was so fogged that he did not realize this. But he had dreamt that Kleuger was shouting for him to get up, to stand up—”Hurry up, Joe!” But the weight pressed him down.
So sharp was the dream that Joe tried to answer after he woke up. Then he looked for Kleuger in the mirror. Kleuger’s face was much the same, but he knew with sick horror that the captain was dead. Nevertheless he tried to arouse him with the alarm. Presently he gave up; his fingers were purple and he could feel nothing below his waist; he wondered if be were dying and hoped that he was. He slipped into that lethargy which had become his normal state.
He did not become conscious when, after more than nine days, the autopilot quenched the torch. Awareness found him floating in midroom, having somehow squirmed out of his station. He felt deliciously lazy and quite hungry; the latter eventually brought him awake.
His surroundings put past events somewhat into place. He pulled himself to hii tank and examined the dials. Good grief!—it had been two hours since the ship had gone into free fall. The plan called for approach to be computed before the tape ran out, corrected on entering free fall, a new tape cut and fed in without delay, then let the autopilot make the approach. He had done nothing and wasted two hours.
He slid between tank and controls, discovering then that his legs were paralyzed. No matter—legs weren’t needed in free fall, nor in the tank. His hands did not behave well, but he could use them. He was stunned when he found Kleuger’s body, but steadied down and got to work. He had no idea where he was; Pluto might be millions of miles away, or almost in his lap—perhaps they had spotted him and were already sending approach data. He decided to check the wire.
He found their messages at once:
“Proserpina to Salamander—Thank God you are coming. Here are your elements at quench out—”: followed by time reference, range-and-bearing figures, and doppler data.
And
again: “Here are later and better figures, Salamander—hurry!”
And finally, only a few minutes ‘before: “Salamander, why the delay in light-off? Is your computer broken down? Shall we compute a ballistic for you?”
The idea that anyone but a torcher could work a torch ballistic did not sink in. He tried to work fast, but his hands bothered him—he punched wrong numbers and had to correct them. It took him a half hour to realize that the trouble was not just his fingers. Ballistics, a subject as easy for him as checkers, was confused in his mind.
He could not work the ballistic.
“Salamander
to Proserpino—Request ballistic for approach into parking orbit around Pluto.”
The answer came so quickly that he knew that they had not waited for his okay. With ponderous care he cut the tape and fed it into the autopilot. It was then that he noticed the boost. . . four point oh three.
Four gravities for the approach— He had assumed that the approach would be a normal one—and so it might have been if he had not wasted three hours. But it wasn’t fair! It was too much to expect. He cursed childishly as he settled himself, fitted the collar, and squeezed the button that turned control to the autopilot. He had a few minutes of waiting time; he spent it muttering peevishly. They could have figured him a better ballistic—hell, he should have figured it. They were always pushing him around. Good old Joe, anybody’s punching bag! That so-and-so Kleuger over there, grinning like a fool and leaving the work for him—if Kleuger hadn’t been so confounded eager— Acceleration hit him and he blacked out.
When the shuttle came up to meet him, they found one man dead, one nearly dead, and the cargo of whole blood.
The supply ship brought pilots for the Salamander and fetched Appleby home. He stayed in sick bay until ordered to Luna for treatment; on being detached he reported to Berrio, escorted by the flight surgeon. The Commodore let him know brusquely that he had done a fine job, a damn’ fine job! The interview ended and the surgeon helped Joe to stand; instead of leaving Joe said, “Uh, Commodore?”
“Yes, son?”
“Oh, there’s one thing I don’t understand, uh, what I don’t understand is, uh, this: why do I have to go, uh, to the geriatrics clinic at Luna City? That’s for old people, uh? That’s what I’ve always understood—the way I understand it. Sir?”
The surgeon cut in, “I told you, Joe. They have the very best physiotherapy. We got special permission for you.”
Joe looked perplexed. “Is that right, sir? I feel funny, going to an old folks’, uh, hospital?”
“That’s right, son.”
Joe grinned sheepishly. “Okay, sir, uh, if you say so.”
They started to leave. “Doctor—stay a moment. Messenger, help Mr. Appleby.”
“Joe, can you make it?”
“Uh, sure! My legs are lots better—see?” He went out, leaning on the messenger.
Berrio said, “Doctor, tell me straight: will Joe get well?”
“No, sir.”
“Will he get better?’
“Some, perhaps. Lunar gravity makes it easy to get the most out of what a man has left.”
“But will his mind clear up?”
The doctor hesitated. “It’s this way, sir. Heavy acceleration is a speeded-up aging process. Tissues break down, capillaries rupture, the heart does many times its proper work. And there is hypoxia, from failure to deliver enough oxygen to the brain.”
The Commodore struck his desk an angry blow. The surgeon said gently, “Don’t take it so hard, sir.”
“Damn it, man—think of the way he was. Just a kid, all bounce and vinegar—now look at him! He’s an old man-senile.”
“Look at it this way,” urged the surgeon, “you expended one man, but you saved two hundred and seventy.”
“‘Expended one man’? If you mean Kleuger, he gets a medal and his wife gets a pension. That’s the best, any of us can expect. I wasn’t thinking of Kleuger.”
“Neither was I,” answered the surgeon.
On the horizon lay the immobile
cloud which capped the incredible waterspouts known as the Pillars of Hawaii.
Captain Blake lowered his
binoculars. "There they stand, gentlemen."
In addition to the naval personnel
of the watch, the bridge of the hydrographic survey ship U. S. S. Mahan
held two civilians; the captain's words were addressed to them. The elder and
smaller of the pair peered intently through a spyglass he had borrowed from the
quartermaster. "I can't make them out," he complained.
"Here—try my glasses,
doctor," Blake suggested, passing over his binoculars. He turned to the
officer of the deck and added, "Have the forward range finder manned, if
you please, Mr. Mott." Lieutenant Mott caught the eye of the bos'n's mate
of the watch, listening from a discreet distance, and jerked a thumb upward.
The petty officer stepped to the microphone, piped a shrill stand-by, and the
metallic voice of the loud-speaker filled the ship, drowning out the next words
of the captain: "Raaaaange one! Maaaaaaaan and cast loose!"
"I asked," the captain
repeated, "if that was any better."
"I think I see them,"
Jacobson Graves acknowledged. "Two dark vertical stripes, from the cloud
to the horizon."
"That's it."
The other civilian, Bill Eisenberg,
had taken the telescope when Graves had surrendered it for the binoculars.
"I got 'em too," he announced. "There's nothing wrong with this
'scope, Doc. But they don't look as big as I had expected," he admitted.
"They are still beyond the
horizon," Blake explained. "You see only the upper segments. But they
stand just under eleven thousand feet from water line to cloud-if they are
still running true to form."
Graves looked up quickly. "Why
the mental reservation? Haven't they been?"
Captain Blake shrugged. "Sure.
Right on the nose. But they ought not to be there at all-four months ago they
did not exist. How do I know what they will be doing today-or tomorrow?"
Graves nodded. "I see your
point-and agree with it. Can we estimate their height from the distance?"
"I'll see." Blake stuck
his head into the charthouse. "Any reading, Archie?"
"Just a second, captain."
The navigator stuck his face against a voice tube and called out,
"Range!"
A muffled voice replied, "Range
one-no reading."
"Something greater than twenty
miles," Blake told Graves cheerfully. "You'll have to wait,
doctor."
Lieutenant Mott directed the
quartermaster to make three bells; the captain left the bridge, leaving word
that he was to be informed when the ship approached the critical limit of three
miles from the Pillars. Somewhat reluctantly, Graves and Eisenberg followed him
down; they had barely time enough to dress before dining with the captain.
Captain Blake's manners were
old-fashioned; he did not permit the conversation to turn to shop talk until
the dinner had reached the coffee and cigars stage. "Well,
gentlemen," he began, as he lit up, "just what is it you propose to
do?
"Didn't the Navy Department
tell you?" Graves asked with a quick look.
"Not much. I have had one
letter, directing me to place my ship and command at your disposal for research
concerning the Pillars, and a dispatch two days ago telling me to take you
aboard this morning. No details."
Graves looked nervously at
Eisenberg, then back to the captain. He cleared his throat. "Uh-we
propose, captain, to go up the Kanaka column and down the Wahini."
Blake gave him a sharp look, started
to speak, reconsidered, and started again. "Doctor-you'll forgive me, I
hope; I don't mean to be rude-but that sounds utterly crazy. A fancy way to
commit suicide."
"It may be a little
dangerous-"
"Hummph!"
"-but we have the means to
accomplish it, if, as we believe to be true, the Kanaka column supplies the
water which becomes the Wahini column on the return trip." He outlined the
method. He and Eisenberg totaled between them nearly twenty-five years of
bathysphere experience, eight for Eisenberg, seventeen for himself. They had
brought aboard the Mahan, at present in an uncouth crate on the fantail,
a modified bathysphere. Externally it was a bathysphere with its anchor weights
removed; internally it much more nearly resembled some of the complicated
barrels in which foolhardy exhibitionists have essayed the spectacular, useless
trip over Niagara Falls. It would supply air, stuffy but breathable, for
forty-eight hours; it held water and concentrated food for at least that
period; there were even rude but adequate sanitary arrangements.
But its principal feature was an
anti-shock harness, a glorified corset, a strait jacket, in which a man could
hang suspended clear of the walls by means of a network of Gideon cord and
steel springs. In it, a man might reasonably hope to survive most violent
pummeling. He could perhaps be shot from a cannon, bounced down a hillside,
subjected to the sadistic mercy of a baggage smasher, and still survive with
bones intact and viscera unruptured.
Blake poked a finger at a line
sketch with which Graves had illustrated his description. "You actually
intend to try to ascend the Pillars in that?"
Eisenberg replied. "Not him,
captain. Me."
Graves reddened. "My damned
doctor-"
"And your
colleagues," Eisenberg added. "It's this way, captain: There's
nothing wrong with Doc's nerve, but he has a leaky heart, a pair of submarine
ears, and a set of not-so-good arteries. So the Institute has delegated me to
kinda watch over him."
"Now look here," Graves
protested, "Bill, you're not going to be stuffy about this. I'm an old
man; I'll never have another such chance."
"No go," Eisenberg denied.
"Captain, I wish to inform you that the Institute vested title of record
to that gear we brought aboard in me, just to keep the old war horse from doing
anything foolish."
"That's your pidgin,"
Blake answered testily. "My instructions are to facilitate Dr. Graves'
research. Assuming that one or the other of you wish to commit suicide in that
steel coffin, how do you propose to enter the Kanaka Pillar?"
"Why, that's your job, captain.
You put the sphere into the up column and pick it up again when it comes down
the down column."
Blake pursed his lips, then slowly
shook his head. "I can't do that."
"Huh? Why not?"
"I will not take my ship closer
than three miles to the Pillars. The Mahan is a sound ship, but she is
not built for speed. She can't make more than twelve knots. Some place inside
that circle the surface current which feeds the Kanaka column will exceed
twelve knots. I don't care to find out where, by losing my ship.
"There have been an
unprecedented number of unreported fishing vessels out of the islands lately. I
don't care to have the Mahan listed."
"You think they went up the
column?"
"I do."
"But, look, captain,"
suggested Bill Eisenberg, "you wouldn't have to risk the ship. You could
launch the sphere from a power boat."
Blake shook his head. "Out of
the question," he said grimly. "Even if the ship's boats were built
for the job, which they aren't, I will not risk naval personnel. This isn't
war."
"I wonder," said Graves
softly.
"What's that?"
Eisenberg chuckled. "Doc has a
romantic notion that all the odd phenomena turned up in the past few years can
be hooked together into one smooth theory with a single, sinister
cause-everything from the Pillars to LaGrange's fireballs."
"LaGrange's fireballs? How
could there be any connection there? They are simply static electricity, allee
samee heat lightning. I know; I've seen 'em."
The scientists were at once
attentive, Graves' pique and Eisenberg's amusement alike buried in
truth-tropism. "You did? When? Where?"
"Golf course at Hilo. Last
March. I was-"
"That case! That was one
of the disappearance cases!"
"Yes, of course. I'm trying to
tell you. I was standing in a sand trap near the thirteenth green, when I
happened to look up-" A clear, balmy island day. No clouds, barometer
normal, light breeze. Nothing to suggest atmospheric disturbance, no maxima of
sunspots, no static on the radio. Without warning a half dozen, or more, giant
fireballs-ball "lightning" on a unprecedented scale-floated across
the golf course in a sort of skirmish line, a line described by some observers
as mathematically even-an assertion denied by others.
A woman player, a tourist from the
mainland, screamed and began to run. The flanking ball nearest her left its
place in line and danced after her. No one seemed sure that the ball touched
her-Blake could not say although he had watched it happen-but when the ball had
passed on, there she lay on the grass, dead.
A local medico of somewhat
flamboyant reputation insisted that he found evidence in the cadaver of both
coagulation and electrolysis, but the jury that sat on the case followed the
coroner's advice in calling it heart failure, a verdict heartily approved by
the local chamber of commerce and tourist bureau.
The man who disappeared did not try
to run; his fate came to meet him. He was a caddy, a Japanese-Portygee-Kanata
mixed breed, with no known relatives, a fact which should have made it easy to
leave his name out of the news reports had not a reporter smelled it out.
"He was standing on the green, not more than twenty-five yards away from
me," Blake recounted, "when the fireballs approached. One passed on
each side of me. My skin itched, and my hair stood up. I could smell ozone. I
stood still-"
"That saved you," observed
Graves.
"Nuts," said Eisenberg.
"Standing in the dry sand of the trap was what saved him."
"Bill, you're a fool,"
Graves said wearily. "These fireball things perform with intelligent
awareness."
Blake checked his account. "Why
do you assume that, doctor?"
"Never mind, for the moment,
please. Go on with your story."
"Hm-m-m. Well, they passed on
by me. The caddy fellow was directly in the course of one of them. I don't
believe he saw it-back toward it, you see. It reached him, enveloped him,
passed on-but the boy was gone."
Graves nodded. "That checks
with the accounts I have seen. Odd that I did not recall your name from the
reports."
"I stayed in the
background," Blake said shortly. "Don't like reporters."
"Hm-m-m. Anything to add to the
reports that did come out? Any errors in them?"
"None that I can recall. Did
the reports mention the bag of golf clubs he was carrying?"
"I think not."
"They were found on the beach,
six miles away."
Eisenberg sat up. "That's
news," he said. "Tell me: Was there anything to suggest how far they
had fallen? Were they smashed or broken?"
Blake shook his head. "They
weren't even scratched, nor was the beach sand disturbed. But they
were-ice-cold."
Graves waited for him to go on; when
the captain did not do so he inquired, "What do you make of it?"
"Me? I make nothing of
it."
"How do you explain it?"
"I don't. Unclassified
electrical phenomena. However, if you want a rough guess, I'll give you one.
This fireball is a static field of high potential. It englobes the caddy and
charges him, whereupon he bounces away like a pith ball-electrocuted,
incidentally. When the charge dissipates, he falls into the sea."
"So? There was a case like it
in Kansas, rather too far from the sea."
"The body might simply never
have been found."
"They never are. But even
so-how do you account for the clubs being deposited so gently? And why were
they cold?"
"Dammit, man, I don't know! I'm
no theoretician; I'm a maritime engineer by profession, an empiricist by
disposition. Suppose you tell me."
"All right-but bear in mind
that my hypothesis is merely tentative, a basis for investigation. I see in
these several phenomena, the Pillars, the giant fireballs, a number of other
assorted phenomena which should never have happened, but did-including the
curious case of a small mountain peak south of Boulder, Colorado, which had its
tip leveled off 'spontaneously'-I see in these things evidence of intelligent
direction, a single conscious cause." He shrugged. "Call it the 'X'
factor. I'm looking for X."
Eisenberg assumed a look of mock sympathy.
"Poor old Doc," he sighed. "Sprung a leak at last."
The other two ignored the crack.
Blake inquired, "You are primarily an ichthyologist, aren't you?"
"Yes."
"How did you get started along
this line?"
"I don't know. Curiosity, I
suppose. My boisterous young friend here would tell you that ichthyology is
derived from 'icky.' "
Blake turned to Eisenberg. "But
aren't you an ichthyologist?"
"Hell, no! I'm an oceanographer
specializing in ecology."
"He's quibbling," observed
Graves. "Tell Captain Blake about Cleo and Pat."
Eisenberg looked embarrassed.
"They're damned nice pets," he said defensively.
Blake looked puzzled; Graves
explained. "He kids me, but his secret shame is a pair of goldfish.
Goldfish! You'll find 'em in the washbasin in his stateroom this minute."
"Scientific interest?"
Blake inquired with a dead pan.
"Oh, no! He thinks they are
devoted to him."
"They're damned nice
pets," Eisenberg insisted. "They don't bark, they don't scratch, they
don't make messes. And Cleo does so have expression!"
In spite of his initial resistance
to their plans Blake Cooperated actively in trying to find a dodge whereby the
proposed experiment could be pertormed without endangering naval personnel or
material. He liked these two; he understood their curious mixture of selfless
recklessness and extreme caution; it matched his own-it was professionalism, as
distinguished from economic motivation.
He offered the services of his
master diver, an elderly commissioned warrant officer, and his technical crew
in checking their gear. "You know," he added, "there is some
reason to believe that your bathysphere could make the round trip, aside from
the proposition that what goes up must come down. You know of the VJ-14?"
"Was that the naval plane lost
in the early investigation?"
"Yes." He buzzed for his
orderly. "Have my writer bring up the jacket on the VJ-14," he
directed.
Attempts to reconnoiter the strange
"permanent" cloud and its incredible waterspouts had been made by air
soon after its discovery. Little was learned. A plane would penetrate the
cloud. Its ignition would fail; out it would glide, unharmed, whereupon the
engines would fire again. Back into the cloud
-engine failure. The vertical reach
of the cloud was greater than the ceiling of any plane.
"The VJ-14," Blake
stated, referring occasionally to the file jacket which bad been fetched,
"made an air reconnaissance of the Pillars themselves on 12 May, attended
by the U. S. S. Pelican. Besides the pilot and radioman she carried a
cinematographer and a chief aerographer. Mm-m-m--only the last two entries seem
to be pertinent: 'Changing course. Will fly between the Pillars-14,' and
'0913-Ship does not respond to controls-14.' Telescopic observation from the Pelican
shows that she made a tight upward spiral around the Kanaka Pillar, about one
and a half turns, and was sucked into the column itself. Nothing was seen to
fall.
"Incidentally the pilot,
Lieutenant-m-m-m-m, yes-Mattson-Lieutenant Mattson was exonerated posthumously
by the court of inquiry. Oh, yes, here's the point pertinent to our question:
From the log of the Pelican. '1709-Picked up wreckage identified as part of
VJ-14. See additional sheet for itemized description.' We needn't bother with
that. Point is, they picked it up four miles from the base of the Wahini Pilha
on the side away from the Kanaka, The inference is obvious and your scheme
might work. Not that you'd live through it."
"I'll chance it,"
Eisenberg stated.
"Mm-m-m-yes. But I was going to
suggest we send up a dead load, say a crate of eggs packed into a
hogshead." The buzzer from the bridge sounded; Captain Blake raised his
voice toward the brass funnel of a voice tube in the overhead. "Yes?"
"Eight o'clock, Captain. Eight
o'clock lights and galley fires out; prisoners secured."
"Thank you, sir." Blake
stood up. "We can get together on the details in the morning."
A fifty-foot motor launch bobbed
listlessly astern the Mahan. A nine-inch coir line joined it to its
mother ship; bound to it at fathom intervals was a telephone line ending in a
pair of headphones worn by a signalman seated in the stern sheets of the
launch. A pair of flags and a spyglass lay on the thwart beside him; his blouse
had crawled up, exposing part of the lurid cover of a copy of Dynamic Tales,
smuggled along as a precaution against boredom.
Already in the boat were the
coxswain, the engineman, the boat officer, Graves, and Eisenberg. With them,
forward in the boat, was a breaker of water rations, two fifty-gallon drums of
gasoline-and a hogshead. It contained not only a carefully packed crate of eggs
but also a jury-rigged smoke-signal device, armed three ways-delayed action set
for eight, nine and ten hours; radio relay triggered from the ship; and simple
salt-water penetration to complete an electrical circuit. The torpedo gunner in
charge of diving hoped that one of them might work and thereby aid in locating
the hogshead. He was busy trying to devise more nearly foolproof gear for the
bathysphere.
The boat, officer signaled ready to
the bridge. A megaphoned bellow responded, "Pay her out handsomely!"
The boat drifted slowly away from the ship and directly toward the Kanaka
Pillar, three miles away.
The Kanaka Pillar loomed above them,
still nearly a mile away but loweringly impressive nevertheless. The place
where it disappeared in cloud seemed almost overhead, falling toward them. Its
five-hundred-foot-thick trunk gleamed purplish-black, more like polished steel
than water.
"Try your engine again,
coxswain."
"Aye, aye, sir!" The
engine coughed, took hold; the engineman eased in the clutch, the screw bit in,
and the boat surged forward, taking the strain off the towline. "Slack
line, sir."
"Stop your engine." The
boat officer turned to his passengers. "What's the trouble, Mr. Eisenberg?
Cold feet?"
"No, dammit-seasick. I hate
a small boat."
"Oh, that's too bad. I'll see
if we haven't got a pickle in that chow up forward."
"Thanks, but pickles don't help
me. Never mind, I can stand it."
The boat officer shrugged, turned
and let his eye travel up the dizzy length of. the column. He whistled,
something which he had done every time he had looked at it. Eisenberg, made
nervous by his nausea, was beginning to find it cause for homicide. "Whew!
You really intend to try to go up that thing, Mr. Eisenberg?"
"I do!"
The boat officer looked startled at
the tone, laughed uneasily, and added, "Well, you'll be worse than
seasick, if you ask me."
Nobody had. Graves knew his friend's
temperament; he made conversation for the next few minutes.
"Try your engine,
coxswain." The petty officer acknowledged, and reported back quickly:
"Starter doesn't work,
sir."
"Help the engineman get a line
on the flywheel. I'll take the tiller."
The two men cranked the engine over
easily, but got no answering cough. "Prime it!" Still no results.
The boat officer abandoned the
useless tiller and jumped down into the engine space to lend his muscle to
heaving on the cranking line. Over his shoulder he ordered the signalman to
notify the ship.
"Launch Three, calling bridge.
Launch Three, calling bridge. Bridge-reply! Testing-testing." The
signalman slipped a phone off one ear. "Phone's dead, sir."
"Get busy with your flags. Tell
'em to haul us in!" The officer wiped sweat from his face and straightened
up. He glanced nervously at the current slap-slapping against the boat's
side.
Graves touched his arm. "How
about the barrel?"
"Put it over the side if you
like. I'm busy. Can't you raise them, Sears?"
"I'm trying, sir."
"Come on, Bill," Graves
said to Eisenberg. The two of them slipped forward in the boat, threading their
way past the engine on the side away from the three men sweating over the
flywheel. Graves cut the hogshead loose from its lashings, then the two
attempted to get- a purchase on the awkward, unhandy object. It and its light
load weighed less than two hundred pounds, but it was hard to manage,
especially on the uncertain footing of heaving floorboards.
They wrestled it outboard somehow,
with one smashed finger for Eisenberg, a badly banged shin for Graves. It
splashed heavily, drenching them with sticky salt water, and bobbed astern,
carried rapidly toward the Kanaka Pillar by the current which fed it.
"Ship answers, sir!"
"Good! Tell them to haul us in-carefully."
The boat officer jumped out of the engine space and ran forward, where he
checked again the secureness with which the tow-line was fastened.
Graves tapped him on the shoulder.
"Can't we stay here until we see the barrel enter the column?"
"No! Right now you had better
pray that that line holds, instead of worrying about the barrel-or we go up the
column, too. Sears, has the ship acknowledged?"
"Just now, sir."
"Why a coir line, Mr. Parker?'
Eisenberg inquired, his1 nausea forgotten in the excitement. "I'd rather
depend on steel, or even good stout Manila."
"Because coir floats, and the
others don't," the officer answered snappishly. "Two miles of line
would drag us to the bottom. Sears! Tell them to ease the strain. We're
shipping water."
"Aye, aye, sir!"
The hogshead took less than four
minutes to reach the column, enter it, a fact which Graves ascertained by
borrowing the signalman's glass to follow it on the last leg of its trip-which
action won him a dirty look from the nervous boat officer. Some minutes later,
when the boat was about five hundred yards farther from the Pillar than it had
been at nearest approach, the telephone came suddenly to life. The starter of
the engine was tested immediately; the engine roared into action.
The trip back was made with engine
running to take the strain off the towline-at half speed and with some
maneuvering, in order to avoid fouling the screw with the slack bight of the
line.
The smoke signal worked-one circuit
or another. The plume of smoke was sighted two miles south of the Wahini
Pillar, elapsed time from the moment the vessel had entered the Kanaka column
just over eight hours.
Bill Eisenberg climbed into the
saddle of the exerciser in which he was to receive antibends treatment-thirty
minutes of hard work to stir up his circulation while breathing an atmosphere
of helium and oxygen, at the end of which time the nitrogen normally dissolved
in his blood stream would be largely replaced by helium. The exerciser itself
was simply an old bicycle mounted on a stationary platform. Blake looked it
over. "You needn't have bothered to bring this," he remarked.
"We've a better one aboard. Standard practice for diving operations these
days."
"We didn't know that,"
Graves answered. "Anyhow, this one will do. All set, Bill?"
"I guess so." He glanced over
his shoulder to where the steel bulk of the bathysphere lay, uncrated, checked
and equipped, ready to be swung outboard by the boat crane. "Got the
gasket-sealing compound?"
"Sure. The Iron Maiden is all
right. The gunner and I will seal you in. Here's your mask."
Eisenberg accepted the inhaling
mask, started to strap it on, checked himself. Graves noticed the look on his
face. "What's the trouble, son?"
"Doc. . .
"Yes?"
"I say-you'll look out for Cleo
and Pat, won't you?"
"Why, sure. But they won't need
anything in the length of time you'll be gone."
"Um-m-m, no, I suppose not. But
you'll look out for 'em?"
"Sure."
"O.K." Eisenberg slipped
the inhaler over his face, waved his hand to the gunner waiting by the gas
bottles. The gunner eased open the cut-off valves, the gas lines hissed, and
Eisenberg began to pedal like a six-day racer.
With thirty minutes to kill, Blake
invited Graves to go forward with him for a smoke and a stroll on the
fo'c's'le. They had completed about twenty turns when Blake paused by the
wildcat, took his cigar from his mouth and remarked, "Do you know, I
believe he has a good chance of completing the trip."
"So? I'm glad to hear
that."
"Yes, I do, really. The success
of the trial with the dead load convinced me. And whether the smoke gear works
or not, if that globe comes back down the Wahini Pillar, I'll find it."
"I know you will. It was a good
idea of yours, to paint it yellow."
"Help us to spot it, all right.
I don't think he'll learn anything, however. He won't see a thing through those
ports but blue water, from the time he enters the column to the time we pick
him up."
"Perhaps so."
"What else could he
see?"
"I don't know. Whatever it is
that made those Pillars, perhaps."
Blake dumped the ashes from his
cigar carefully over the rail before replying. "Doctor, I don't understand
you. To my mind, those Pillars are a natural, even though strange,
phenomenon."
"And to me it's equally obvious
that they are not 'natural.' They exhibit intelligent interference with the
ordinary processes of nature as clearly as if they had a sign saying so hung on
them."
"I don't see how you can say
that. Obviously, they are not man-made."
"No."
"Then who did make them-if they
were made?"
"I don't know."
Blake started to speak, shrugged,
and held his tongue. They resumed their stroll. Graves turned aside to chuck
his cigarette overboard, glancing outboard as he did so.
He stopped, stared, then called out:
"Captain Blake!"
"Eh?" The captain turned
and looked where Graves pointed. "Great God! Fireballs!"
"That's what I thought."
"They're some distance
away," Blake observed, more to himself than to Graves. He turned
decisively. "Bridge!" he shouted. "Bridge! Bridge ahoy!"
"Bridge, aye aye!"
"Mr. Weems-pass the word: 'All
hands, below decks.' Dog down all ports. Close all hatches. And close up the
bridge itself! Sound the general alarm."
"Aye aye, sir!"
"Move!" Turning to Graves,
he added, "Come inside."
Graves followed him; the captain
stopped to dog down the door by which they entered himself. Blake pounded up
the inner ladders to the bridge, Graves in his train. The ship was filled with
whine of the bos'n pipe, the raucous voice of the loud-speaker, the clomp of
hurrying feet, and the monotonous, menacing cling-cling-cling! of the
general alarm.
The watch on the bridge were still
struggling with the last of the heavy glass shutters of the bridge when the
captain burst into their midst. "I'll take it, Mr. Weems," he
snapped.
In one continuous motion he moved
from one side of the bridge to the other, letting his eye sweep the port side
aft, the fo'c's'le, the starboard side aft, and finally rest on the
fireballs-distinctly nearer and heading straight for the ship. He cursed.
"Your friend did not get the news," he said to Graves.
He grasped the crank which could
open or close the after starboard shutter of the bridge.
Graves looked past his shoulder, saw
what he meant-the afterdeck was empty, save for one lonely figure pedaling away
on the stationary bicycle. The LaGrange fireballs were closing in.
The shutter stuck, jammed tight,
would not open. Blake stopped trying, swung quickly to the loud-speaker control
panel, and cut in the whole board without bothering to select the proper
circuit. "Eisenberg! Get below!"
Eisenberg must have heard his name
called, for be turned his head and looked over his shoulder-Graves saw
distinctly-just as the fireball reached him. It passed on, and the saddle of
the exerciser was empty.
The exerciser was undamaged, they
found, when they were able to examine it. The rubber hose to the inhaler mask
had been cut smoothly. There was no blood, no marks. Bill Eisenberg was simply
gone.
'Tm going up."
"You are in no physical shape
to do so, doctor."
"You are in no way responsible,
Captain Blake."
"I know that. You may go if you
like-after we have searched for your friend's body."
"Search be damned! I'm going up
to look for him."
"Huh? Eh? How's that?"
"If you are right, he's dead,
and there is no point in searching for his body. If I'm right, there is just an
outside chance of finding him-up there!" He pointed toward the cloud cap
of the Pillars.
Blake looked him over slowly, then
turned to the master diver. "Mr. Hargreave, find an inhaler mask for Dr.
Graves."
They gave him thirty minutes of conditioning
against the caisson disease while Blake looked on with expressionless Silence.
The ship's company, bluejackets and officers alike, stood back and kept quiet;
they walked on eggs when the Old Man had that look.
Exercise completed, the diver crew dressed
Graves rapidly and strapped him into the bathysphere with dispatch, in order
not to expose him too long to the nitrogen in the air. Just before the escape
port was dogged down Graves spoke up.
"Captain Blake."
"Yes, doctor?"
"Bill's goldfish-will you look
out for them?"
"Certainly, doctor."
"Thanks."
"Not at all. Are you
ready?"
"Ready."
Blake stepped forward, stuck an arm
through the port of the sphere and shook hands with Graves. "Good
luck." He withdrew his arm. "Seal it up."
They lowered it over the side; two
motor launches nosed it half a mile in the direction of the Kanaka Pillar where
the current was strong enough to carry it along. There they left it and bucked
the current back to the ship, were hoisted in.
Blake followed it with his glasses
from the bridge. It drifted slowly at first, then with increased speed as it
approached the base of the column. It whipped into rapid motion the last few
hundred yards; Blake saw a flash of yellow just above the water line, then
nothing more.
Eight hours-no plume of smoke. Nine
hours, ten hours, nothing. After twenty-four hours of steady patrol in the
vicinity of the Wahini Pillar, Blake radioed the Bureau.
Four days of vigilance-Blake knew
that the bathysphere's passenger must be dead; whether by suffocation,
drowning, implosion, or other means was not important. He so reported and
received orders to proceed on duty assigned. The ship's company was called to
quarters; Captain Blake read the service for the dead aloud in a harsh voice,
dropped over the side some rather wilted hibiscus blooms-all that his steward
could produce at the time-and went to the bridge to set his course for Pearl
Harbor.
On the way to the bridge he stopped
for a moment at his cabin and called to his steward: "You'll find some
goldfish in the stateroom occupied by Mr. Eisenberg. Find an appropriate
container and place them in my cabin."
"Yes, suh, Cap'n."
When Bill Eisenberg came to his
senses he was in a Place. Sorry, but no other description is suitable; it
lacked features. Oh, not entirely, of course-it was not dark where he was, nor
was it in a state of vacuum, nor was it cold, nor was it too small for comfort.
But it did lack features to such a remarkable extent that he had difficulty in
estimating the size of the place. Consider stereo vision, by which we estimate
the size of things directly, does not work beyond twenty feet or so. At
greater distances we depend on previous knowledge of the true size of familiar
objects, usually making our estimates subconsciously-a man so high is
about that far away, and vice versa.
But the Place contained no familiar
objects. The ceiling was a considerable distance over his head, too far to
touch by jumping. The floor curved up to join the ceiling and thus prevented
further lateral progress of more than a dozen paces or so. He would become
aware of the obstacle by losing his balance. (He had no reference lines by
which to judge the vertical; furthermore, his sense of innate balance was
affected by the mistreatment his inner ears had undergone through years of
diving. It was easier to sit than to walk, nor was there any reason to walk,
after the first futile attempt at exploration.)
When he first woke up he stretched
and opened his eyes, looked around. The lack of detail confused him. It was as
if he were on the inside of a giant eggshell, illuminated from without by a
soft, mellow, slightly amber light. The formless vagueness bothered him; he
closed his eyes, shook his head, and opened them again-no better.
He was beginning to remember his
last experience before losing consciousness-the fireball swooping down, his
frenzied, useless attempt to duck, the "Hold your hats, boys!"
thought that-flashed through his mind in the long-drawn-out split second before
contact. His orderly mind began to look for explanations. Knocked cold, he
thought, and my optic nerve paralyzed. Wonder if I'm blind for good.
Anyhow, they ought not to leave him
alone like this in his present helpless condition. "Doc!" he shouted.
"Doc Graves!"
No answer, no echo-he became aware
that there was no sound, save for his own voice, none of the random little
sounds that fill completely the normal "dead" silence. This place was
as silent as the inside of a sack of flour. Were his ears shot, too?
No, he had heard his own voice. At
that moment he realized that he was looking at his own hands. Why, there was
nothing wrong with his eyes-he could see them plainly!
And the rest of himself, too. He was
naked.
It might have been several hours
later, it might have been moments, when he reached the conclusion that he was
dead. It was the only hypothesis which seemed to cover the facts. A dogmatic
agnostic by faith, he had expected no survival after death; he had expected to
go out like a light, with a sudden termination of consciousness. However, he
had been subjected to a charge of static electricity more than sufficient to
kill a man; when he regained awareness, he found himself without all the usual
experience which mates up living.
Therefore-he was dead. Q.E.D.
To be sure, he seemed to have a
body, but he was acquainted with the subjective-objective paradox. He still had
memory, the strongest pattern in one's memory is body awareness. This was not
his body, but his detailed sensation memory of it. So he reasoned. Probably, he
thought, my dream-body will slough away as my memory of the object-body fades.
There was nothing to do, nothing to
experience, nothing to distract his mind. He fell asleep at last, thinking
that, if this were death, it was damned dull!
He awoke refreshed, but quite hungry
and extremely thirsty. The matter of dead, or not-dead, no longer concerned
him; he was interested in neither theology nor metaphysics.
He was hungry.
Furthermore, he experienced on
awakening a phenomenon which destroyed most of the basis fur his intellectual
belief in his own death-it had never reached the stage of emotional conviction.
Present there with him in the Place he found material objects other than
himself, objects which could be seen and touched.
And eaten.
Which last was not immediately
evident, for they did not look like food. There were two sorts. The first was
an amorphous lump of nothing in particular, resembling a grayish cheese in
appearance, slightly greasy to the touch, and not appetizing. The second sort
was a group of objects of uniform and delightful appearance. They were spheres,
a couple of dozen; each one seemed to Bill Eisenberg to be a duplicate of a
crystal ball he had once purchased-true Brazilian rock crystal the perfect
beauty of which he had not been able to resist; he had bought it and smuggled
it home to gloat over in private.
The little spheres were like that in
appearance. He touched one. It was smooth as crystal and had the same chaste
coolness, but it was soft as jelly. It quivered like jelly, causing the lights
within it to dance delightfully, before resuming its perfect roundness.
Pleasant as they were, they did not
look like food, whereas the cheesy, soapy lump might be. He broke off a small
piece, sniffed it, and tasted it tentatively. It was sour, nauseating,
unpleasant. He spat it out, made a wry face, and wished heartily that he could
brush his teeth. If that was food, he would have to be much hungrier.
He turned his attention back to the
delightful little spheres of crystallike jelly. He balanced them in his palms,
savoring their soft, smooth touch. In the heart of each he saw his own
reflection, imagined in miniature, made elfin and graceful. He became aware
almost for the first time of the serene beauty of the human figure, almost any human
figure, when viewed as a composition and not as a mass of colloidal detail.
But thirst became more pressing than
narcissist admiration. It occurred to him that the smooth, cool spheres, if
held in the mouth, might promote salivation, as pebbles will. He tried it; the
sphere he selected struck against his lower teeth as he placed it in his mouth,
and his lips and chin were suddenly wet, while drops trickled down his chest.
The spheres were water, nothing but water, no cellophane skin, no container of any
sort. Water had been delivered to him, neatly packaged, by some esoteric trick
of surface tension.
He tried another, handling it more
carefully to insure that it was not pricked by his teeth until he had it in his
mouth. It worked; his mouth was filled with cool, pure water-too quickly; he
choked. But he had caught on to the trick; he drank four of the spheres.
His thirst satisfied, he became
interested in the strange trick whereby water became its own container. The
spheres were tough; he could not squeeze them into breaking down, nor did
smashing them hard against the floor disturb their precarious balance. They
bounced like golf balls and came up for more. He managed to pinch the surface
of one between thumb and fingernail. It broke down at once, and the water
trickled between his fingers-water alone, no skin nor foreign substance. It
seemed that a cut alone could disturb the balance of tensions; even wetting had
no effect, for he could hold one carefully in his mouth, remove it, and dry it
off on his own skin.
He decided that, since his supply
was limited, and no more water was in prospect, it would be wise to conserve
what he had and experiment no further.
The relief of thirst increased the
demands of hunger. He turned his attention again to the other substance and
found that he could force himself to chew and swallow. It might not be food, it
might even be poison, but it filled his stomach and stayed the pangs. He even
felt well fed, once he had cleared out the taste with another sphere of water.
After eating he rearranged his
thoughts. He was not dead, or, if he were, the difference between living and
being dead was imperceptible, verbal. OK, he was alive. But he was shut up
alone. Somebody knew where he was and was aware of him, for he had been supplied
with food and drink-mysteriously but cleverly. Ergo-he was a prisoner, a
word which implies a warden.
Whose prisoner? He had been struck
by a LaGrange fireball and had awakened in his cell. It looked, he was forced
to admit, as if Doc Graves had been right; the fireballs were intelligently
controlled. Furthermore, the person or persons behind them had novel ideas as
to how to care for prisoners as well as strange ways of capturing them.
Eisenberg was a brave man, as brave
as the ordinary run of the race from which he sprang-a race as foolhardy as
Pekingese dogs. He had the high degree of courage so common in the human race,
a race capable of conceiving death, yet able to face its probability daily, on
the highway, on the obstetrics table, on the battlefield, in the air, in the
subway and to face lightheartedly the certainty of death in the end.
Eisenberg was apprehensive, but not,
panic-stricken. His situation was decidedly interesting; he was no longer
bored.
If he were a prisoner, it seemed
likely that his captor would come to investigate him presently, perhaps to
question him, perhaps to attempt to use him in some fashion. The fact that, he
had been saved and not killed implied some sort of plans for his future. Very
well, he would concentrate on meeting whatever exigency might come with a calm
and resourceful mind. In the meantime, there was nothing he could do toward
freeing himself; he had satisfied himself of that. This was a prison which
would baffle Houdini-smooth continuous walls, no way to get a purchase.
He had thought once that he had a
clue to escape; the cells had sanitary arrangements of some sort, for that
which his body rejected went elsewhere. But he got no further with that lead;
the cage was self-cleaning-and that was that. He could not tell how it was
done. It baffled him.
Presently he slept again.
When he awoke, one element only was
changed-the food and water had been replenished. The "day" passed
without incident, save for his own busy fruitless thoughts.
And the next "day." And
the next.
He determined to stay awake long
enough to find out how food and water were placed in his cell. He made a
colossal effort to do so, using drastic measures to stimulate his body into
consciousness. He bit his lips, he bit his tongue. He nipped the lobes of his
ears viciously with his nails. He concentrated on difficult mental feats.
Presently he dozed off; when he
awoke, the food and water had been replenished.
The waking periods were followed by
sleep, renewed hunger and thirst, the- satisfying of same, and more sleep. It
was after the sixth or seventh sleep that he decided that some sort of a
calendar was necessary to his mental health. He had no means of measuring time
except by his sleeps; he arbitrarily designated them as days. He had no means
of keeping records, save his own body. He made that do. A thumbnail shred, torn
off, made a rough tattooing needle. Continued scratching of the same area on
his thigh produced a red welt which persisted for a day or two, and could be
renewed.
Seven welts made a week. The
progression of such welts along ten fingers and ten toes gave him the means to
measure twenty weeks-which was a much longer period than he anticipated any
need to measure.
He had tallied the second set of
seven thigh welts on the ring finger of his left hand when the next event
occurred to disturb his solitude. When he awoke from the sleep following said
tally, he became suddenly and overwhelmingly aware that he was not alone!
There was a human figure sleeping
beside him. When he had convinced himself that he was truly wide awake-his
dreams were thoroughly populated-he grasped the figure by the shoulder and
shook it. "Doc!" he yelled. "Doc! Wake up!"
Graves opened his eyes, focused
them, sat up, and put out his hand. "Hi, Bill," he remarked.
"I'm damned glad to see you."
"Doc!" He pounded the
older man on the back. "Doc! For Criminy sake! You don't know how glad I
am to see you."
"I can guess."
"Look, Doc-where have you been?
How did you get here?
Did the fireballs snag you, too?"
"One thing at a time, son.
Let's have breakfast." There was a double ration of food and water on the
"floor" near them. Graves picked up a sphere, nicked it expertly, and
drank it without losing a drop. Eisenberg watched him knowingly.
"You've been here for some
time."
"That's right."
"Did the fireballs get you the
same time they got me?"
"No." He reached for the
food. "I came up the Kanaka Pillar."
"What!"
"That's right. Matter of fact,
I was looking for you."
"The hell you say!"
"But I do say. It looks as if
my wild hypothesis was right; the Pillars and the fireballs are different
manifestations of the same cause-X!"
It seemed almost possible to hear
the wheels whir in Eisenberg's head. "But, Doc.. . . look here, Doc, that
means your whole hypothesis was correct. Somebody did the whole thing.
Somebody has us locked up here now."
"That's right." He munched
slowly. He seemed tired, older and thinner than the way Eisenberg remembered
him. "Evidence of intelligent control Always was. No other explanation."
"But who?"
"Ah!"
"Some foreign power? Are we up
against something utterly new in the way of an attack?" -
"Hummph! Do you think the
Russians, for instance, would bother to serve us water like this?"
He held up one of the dainty little spheres.
"Who, then?"
"I wouldn't know. Call 'em
Martians-that's a convenient way to think of them."
"Why Martians?"
"No reason. I said that was a
convenient way to think of them."
"Convenient how?"
"Convenient because it keeps
you from thinking of them as human beings-which they obviously aren't. Nor
animals. Something very intelligent, but not animals, because they are smarter
than we are. Martians."
"But. . . but- Wait a minute.
Why do you assume that your X people aren't human? Why not humans who have a
lot of stuff on the ball that we don't have? New scientific advances?"
"That's a fair question,"
Graves answered, picking his teeth with a forefinger. "I'll give you a
fair answer. Because in the-present state of the world we know pretty near
where alt the best minds are and what they are doing. Advances, like these
couldn't be hidden and would be a long time in developing. X indicates evidence
of a half a dozen different lines of development that are clear beyond our ken
and which would require years of work by hundreds of researchers, to say the
very least. Ipso facto, nonhuman science.
"Of course," he continued,
"if you want to postulate a mad scientist and a secret laboratory, I can't
argue with you. But I'm not writing Sunday supplements."
Bill Eisenberg kept very quiet for
some time, while he considered what Graves said in the light of his own
experience.
"You're right, Doc," he
finally admitted. "Shucks-you're usually right when we have an argument.
It has to be Martians. Oh, I don't mean inhabitants of Mars; I mean some form
of intelligent life from outside this planet."
"Maybe."
"But you just said so!"
"No, I said it was a convenient
way to look at it."
"But it has to be by
elimination."
"Elimination is a tricky line
of reasoning."
"What else could it be?"
"Mm-m-m. I'm not prepared to
say just what I do think- yet. But there are stronger reasons than we have
mentioned for concluding that we are up against nonhumans. Psychological
reasons."
"What sort?"
"X doesn't treat prisoners in
any fashion that arises out of human behavior patterns. Think it over."
They had a lot to talk about; much
more than X, even though X was a subject they were bound to return to. Graves
gave Bill a simple bald account of how he happened to go up the Pillar-an
account which Bill found very moving for what was left out, rather than told.
He felt suddenly very humble and unworthy as he looked at his elderly, frail
friend.
"Doc, you don't look
well."
"I'll do."
"That trip up the Pillar was
hard on you. You shouldn't have tried it."
Graves shrugged. "I made out
all right." But he had not, and Bill could see that he had not. The old
man was "poorly."
They slept and they ate and they
talked and they slept again. The routine that Eisenberg had grown used to alone
continued, save with company. But Graves grew no stronger.
"Doc, it's up to us to do
something about it."
"About what?"
"The whole situation. This
thing that has happened to us is an intolerable menace to the whole human race.
We don't know what may have happened down below-"
"Why do you say 'down
below'?"
'Why, you came up the Pillar."
"Yes, true-but I don't know
when or how I was taken out of -the bathysphere, nor where they may have taken
me. But go ahead. Let's have your idea."
"Well, but-OK-we don't know
what may have happened to the rest of the human race. The fireballs may be
picking them off one at a time, with no chance to fight back and no way of
guessing what has been going on. We have some idea of the answer. It's up to us
to escape and warn them. There may be some way of fighting back. It's our duty;
the whole future of the human race may depend on it."
Graves was silent so long after Bill
had finished his tocsin that Bill began to feel embarrassed, a bit foolish. But
when he finally spoke it was to agree. "I think you are right, Bill. I
think it quite possible that you are right. Not necessarily, but distinctly
possible. And that possibility does place an obligation on us to all mankind.
I've known it. I knew it before we got into this mess, but I did not have
enough data to justify shouting. 'Wolf!'
"The question is," he went
on, "how can we give such a warning-now?"
"We've got to escape!"
"Ah."
"There must be some
way."
"Can you suggest one?"
"Maybe. We haven't been able to
find any way in or out of this place, but there must be a way-has to be; we
were brought in. Furthermore, our rations are put inside every day-somehow. I
tried once to stay awake long enough to see how it was done, but I fell
asleep-"
"So did I."
"Uh-huh. I'm not surprised. But
there are two of us now; we could take turns, watch on and watch off, until
something happened."
Graves nodded. "It's worth
trying."
Since they had no way of measuring
the watches, each kept the vigil until sleepiness became intolerable, then
awakened the other. But nothing happened. Their food ran out, was not replaced.
They conserved their water balls with care, were finally reduced to one, which
was not drunk because each insisted on being noble about it-the other must
drink it! But still no manifestation of any sort from their unseen Captors.
After an unmeasured and unestimated
length of time-but certainly long, almost intolerably long-at a time when
Eisenberg was in a light, troubled sleep, he was suddenly awakened by a touch
and the sound of his name. He sat up, blinking, disoriented. "Who? What?
Wha'sa matter?"
"I must have dozed off,"
Graves said miserably. "I'm sorry, Bill." Eisenberg looked where
-Graves pointed. Their food and water had been renewed.
Eisenberg did not suggest a renewal
of the experiment. In the first place, it seemed evident that their keepers did
not intend for them to learn the combination to their cell and were quite
intelligent enough to outmaneuver their necessarily feeble attempts. In the
second place, Graves was an obviously sick man; Eisenberg did not have the
heart to suggest another long, grueling, half-starved vigil.
But, lacking knowledge of the
combination, it appeared impossible to break jail. A naked man is a
particularly helpless creature; lacking materials wherewith to fashion tools,
he can do little. Eisenberg would have swapped his chances for eternal bliss
for a diamond drill, an acetylene torch, or even a rusty, secondhand chisel.
Without tools of some sort it was impressed on him that he stood about as much
chance of breaking out of his cage as his goldfish, Cleo and Patra, had of
chewing their way out of a glass bowl.
"Doc?"
"Yes, son."
"We've tackled this the wrong
way. We know that X is intelligent; instead of trying to escape, we should be
trying to establish communication."
"How?"
"I don't know. But there must
be some way."
But if there was, he could never
conjure it up. Even if he assumed that his captors could see and hear him, how
was he to convey intelligence to them by word or gesture? Was it theoretically
possible for any nonhuman being, no matter how intelligent, to find a pattern
of meaning in human speech symbols, if he encountered them without context,
without background, without pictures, without pointing? It is certainly
true that the human race, working under much more favorable circumstances, has
failed almost utterly to learn the languages of the other races of animals.
What should he do to attract their
attention, stimulate their interest? Recite the "Gettysburg Address"?
Or the multiplication table? Or, if he used gestures, would deaf-and-dumb
language mean any more, or any less, to his captors than the sailor's hornpipe?
"Doc?"
"What is it, Bill?" Graves
was sinking; he rarely initiated a conversation these "days."
"Why are we here? I've had it
in the back of my mind that eventually they would take us out and do
something with us. Try to question us, maybe. But it doesn't look like they
meant to."
"No, it doesn't."
"Then why are we here? Why do
they take care of us?"
Graves paused quite a long time
before answering: "I think that they are expecting us to reproduce."
"What!"
Graves shrugged.
"But that's ridiculous."
"Surely. But would they know
it?"
"But they are
intelligent."
Graves chuckled, the first time he
had done so in many sleeps. "Do you know Roland Young's little verse about
the flea:
"A funny creature is the
Flea
You cannot tell the She from He.
But He can tell-and so can
She."
"After all, the visible
differences between men and women are quite superficial and almost
negligible-except to men and women!"
Eisenberg found the suggestion
repugnant, almost revolting; he struggled against it. "But look, Doc-even
a little study would show them that the human race is divided up into sexes. After
all, we aren't the first specimens they've studied."
"Maybe they don't study
us."
"Huh?"
"Maybe we are just-pets."
Pets! Bill Eisenberg's morale had
stood up well in the face of danger and uncertainty. This attack on it was more
subtle. Pets! He had thought of Graves and himself as prisoners of war, or,
possibly, objects of scientific research. But pets!
"I know how you feel,"
Graves went on, watching his face, "It's . . . it's humiliating
from an anthropocentric viewpoint. But I think it may be true. I may as well
tell you my own private theory as to the possible nature of X, and the relation
of X to the human race. I haven't up to now, as it is almost sheer conjecture,
based on very little data. But it does cover the known facts.
"I conceive of the X creatures
as being just barely aware of the existence of men, unconcerned by them, and
almost completely uninterested in them."
"But they hunt us!"
"Maybe. Or maybe they just pick
us up occasionally by accident. A lot of men have dreamed about an impingement
of nonhuman intelligences on the human race. Almost without exception the dream
has taken one of two forms, invasion and war, or exploration and mutual social
intercourse.
Both concepts postulate that
nonhumans are enough like us either to fight with us or talk to us-treat us as
equals, one way or the other. I don't believe that X is sufficiently interested
in human beings to want to enslave them, or even exterminate them. They may not
even study us, even when we come under their notice. They may lack the
scientific spirit in the sense of having a monkeylike curiosity about
everything that moves. For that matter, how thoroughly do we study other
life forms? Did you ever ask your goldfish for their views on goldfish poetry
or politics? Does a termite think that a woman's place is in the home? Do
beavers prefer blondes or brunettes?"
"You are joking."
"No, I'm not! Maybe the life
forms I mentioned don't have such involved ideas. My point is: if they did, or
do, we'd never guess it. I don't think X conceives of the human race as
intelligent."
Bill chewed this for a while, then
added: "Where do you think they came from, Doc? Mars, maybe? Or clear out
of the Solar System?"
"Not necessarily. Not even
probably. It's my guess that they came from the same place we did-from up
out of the slime of this planet."
"Really, Doc-"
"I mean it. And don't give me
that funny look. I may be sick, but I'm not balmy. Creation took eight
days!"
"Huh?"
"I'm using biblical language.
'And God blessed them, and God said unto them, Be fruitful and multiply, and
replenish the earth, and subdue it: and have dominion over the fish of the sea,
and over the fowl of the air, and over every living thing that moveth upon the
earth.' And so it came to pass. But nobody mentioned the stratosphere."
"Doc-are you sure you feel all
right?"
"Dammit-quit trying to
psychoanalyze me! I'll drop the allegory. What I mean is: We aren't the latest
nor the highest stage in evolution. First the oceans were populated. Then
lungfish to amphibian, and so on up, until the continents were populated, and,
in time, man ruled the surface of the earth-or thought he did. But did
evolution stop there? I think not. Consider-from a fish's point of view air is
a hard vacuum. From our point of view the upper reaches of the atmosphere,
sixty, seventy, maybe a hundred thousand feet up seem like a vacuum and unfit
to sustain life. But it's not vacuum. It's thin, yes, but there is matter there
and radiant energy. Why not life, intelligent life, highly evolved as it would
have to be-but evolved from the same ancestry as ourselves and fish? We
wouldn't see it happen; man hasn't been aware, in a scientific sense, that
long. When our grand-daddies were swinging in the trees, it had already
happened."
Eisenberg took a deep breath.
"Just wait a minute, Doc. I'm not disputing the theoretical possibility of
your thesis, but it seems to me it is out on direct evidence alone. We've never
seen them, had no direct evidence of them. At least, not until lately. And we should
have seen them."
"Not necessarily. Do ants see
men? I doubt it."
"Yes-but, consarn it, a man has
better eyes than an ant."
"Better eyes for what? For his
own needs. Suppose the X-creatures are too high up, or too tenuous, or too
fast-moving! for us to notice them. Even a thing as big and as solid and as
slow as an airplane can go up high enough to go out of sight, even on a clear
day. If X is tenuous and even semitransparent, we never would see
them-not even as occultations of stars, or shadows against the moon-though as a
matter of fact there have been some very strange stories of just that sort of
thing."
Eisenberg got up and stomped up and
down. "Do you mean to suggest," he demanded, "that creatures so
insubstantial they can float in a soft vacuum built the Pillars?"
"Why not? Try explaining how a
half-finished, naked embryo like homo sapiens built the Empire State
Building."
Bill shook his head. "I don't
get it."
"You don't try. Where do you
think this came from? Graves held up one of the miraculous little water
spheres.
"My guess is that life on this
planet is split three ways, with almost no intercourse between the three. Ocean
culture, Ian culture, and another-call it stratoculture. Maybe a fourth down
under the crust-but we don't know. We know a little about life under the sea,
because we are curious. But how much do they know of us? Do a few dozen
bathysphere descents constitute an invasion? A fish that sees our bathysphere
might go home and take to his bed with a sick headache, but he wouldn't talk
about it, and he wouldn't be believed if he did. If a lot of fish see us and
swear out affidavits, along comes a fish-psychologist and explains it as mass
hallucination.
"No, it takes something at
least as large and solid and permanent as the Pillars to have any effect on
orthodox conceptions. Casual visitations have no real effect."
Eisenberg let his thoughts simmer
for some time before commenting further. When he did, it was half to himself.
"I don't believe it. I won't believe it!"
"Believe what?"
"Your theory. Look, Doc-if you
are right, don't you see what it means? We're helpless, we're outclassed."
"I don't think they will bother
much with human beings. They haven't, up till now."
"But that isn't it. Don't you
see? We've had some dignity as a race. We've striven and accomplished things.
Even when we failed, we had the tragic satisfaction of knowing that we were,
nevertheless, superior and more able than the other animals. We've had faith in
the race-we would accomplish great things yet. But if we are just one of the
lower animals ourselves, what does our great work amount to? Me, I couldn't go
on pretending to be a 'scientist' if I thought I was just a fish, mucking
around in the bottom of a pool. My work wouldn't signify anything."
"Maybe it doesn't."
"No, maybe it doesn't."
Eisenberg got up and paced the constricted area of their prison. "Maybe
not. But I won't surrender to it. I won't! Maybe you're right. Maybe
you're wrong. It doesn't seem to matter very much where the X people
came from. One way or the other, they are a threat to our own kind. Doc, we've
got to get out of here and warn them!"
"How?"
Graves was comatose a large part of
the time before he died. Bill maintained an almost continuous watch over him,
catching only occasional cat naps. There was little he could do for his friend,
even though he did watch over him, but the spirit behind it was comfort to them
both.
But he was dozing when Graves called
his name. He woke at once, though the sound was a bare whisper. "Yes,
Doc?"
"I can't talk much more, son.
Thanks for taking care of me."
"Shucks, Doc."
"Don't forget what you're here
for. Some day you'll get a break. Be ready for it and don't muff it. People
have to be warned."
"I'll do it, Doc. I swear
it."
"Good boy." And then,
almost inaudibly, "G'night, son."
Eisenberg watched over the body
until it was quite cold and had begun to stiffen. Then, exhausted by his long
vigil and emotionally drained, he collapsed into a deep sleep.
When he woke up the body was gone.
It was hard to maintain his morale,
after Graves was gone. It was all very well to resolve to warn the rest of
mankind at the first possible chance, but there was the endless monotony to
contend with. He had not even the relief from boredom afforded the condemned
prisoner-the checking off of limited days. Even his "calendar" was
nothing but a counting of his sleeps.
He was not quite sane much of the
time, and it was the twice-tragic insanity of intelligence, aware of its own
instability. He cycled between periods of elation and periods of extreme
depression, in which he would have destroyed himself, had he the means.
During the periods of elation he
made great plans for fighting against the X creatures-after he escaped. He was
not sure how or when, but, momentarily, he was sure. He would lead the crusade
himself; rockets could withstand the dead zone of the Pillars and the cloud;
atomic bombs could destroy the dynamic balance of the Pillars. They would harry
them and hunt them down; the globe would once again be the kingdom of man, to
whom it belonged.
During the bitter periods of relapse
he would realize clearly that the puny engineering of mankind would be of no
force against the powers and knowledge of the creatures who built the Pillars,
who kidnapped himself and Graves in such a casual and mysterious a fashion.
They were outclassed.
Could codfish plan a sortie against
the city of Boston? Would it matter if the chattering monkeys in Guatemala
passed a resolution to destroy the navy?
They were outclassed. The human race
had reached its highest point-the point at which it began to be aware that it
was not the highest race, and the knowledge was death to it, one way or the
other-the mere knowledge alone, even as the knowledge was now destroying him,
Bill Eisenberg, himself. Eisenberg-homo piscis. Poor fish!
His overstrained mind conceived a
means by which he might possibly warn his fellow beings. He could not escape as
long as his surroundings remained unchanged. That was established and he
accepted it; he no longer paced his cage. But certain things did leave
his cage: left-over food, refuse-and Graves' body. If he died, his own body
would be removed, he felt sure. Some, at least, of the things which had gone up
the Pillars had come down again-he knew that. Was it not likely that the X
creatures disposed of any heavy mass for which they had no further use by
dumping it down the Wahini Pillar? He convinced himself that it was so.
Very well, his body would be
returned to the surface, eventually. How could he use it to give a message to
his fellow men, if it were found? He had no writing materials, nothing but his
own body.
But the same make-do means which
served him as a calendar gave him a way to write a message. He could make welts
on his skin with a shred of thumbnail. If the same spot were irritated over and
over again, not permitted to heal, scar tissue would form. By such means he was
able to create permanent tattooing.
The letters had to be large; he was
limited in space to the fore part of his body; involved argument was
impossible. He was limited to a fairly simple warning. If he had been quite
right in his mind, perhaps be would have been able to devise a more cleverly
worded warning-but then he was not.
In time, he had covered his chest
and belly with cicatrix tattooing worthy of a bushman chief. He was thin by
then and of an unhealthy color; the welts stood out plainly.
His body was found floating in the
Pacific, by Portuguese fishermen who could not read the message, but who turned
it in to the harbor police of Honolulu. They, in turn, photographed the body,
fingerprinted it, and disposed of it. The fingerprints were checked in
Washington, and William Eisenberg, scientist, fellow of many distinguished
societies, and high type of homo sapiens, was officially dead for the
second time, with a new mystery attached to his name.
The cumbersome course of official
correspondence unwound itself and the record of his reappearance reached the
desk of Captain Blake, at a port in the South Atlantic. Photographs of the body
were attached to the record, along with a short official letter telling the
captain that, in view of his connection with the case, it was being provided
for his information and recommendation.
Captain Blake looked at the
photographs for the dozenth time. The message told in scar tissue was plain
enough:
"BEWARE-CREATION TOOK EIGHT
DAYS."
But what did it mean?
Of one thing he was sure-Eisenberg
had not had those scars on his body when he disappeared from the Mahan.
The man had lived for a considerable period after he was grabbed up by the
fireball-that was certain. And he had learned something. What? The reference to
the first chapter of Genesis did not escape him; it was not such as to be
useful.
He turned to his desk and resumed
making a draft in painful longhand of his- report to the bureau. "-the
message in scar tissue adds to the mystery, rather than clarifying it. I am now
forced to the opinion that the Pillars and the-La-Grange fireballs are
connected in some way. The patrol around the Pillars should not be relaxed. If
new opportunities or methods for investigating the nature of the Pillars should
develop, they should be pursued thoroughly. I regret to say that I have nothing
of the sort to suggest-"
He got up from his desk and walked to
a small aquarium supported by gimbals from the inboard bulkhead, and stirred up
the two goldfish therein with a forefinger. Noticing the level of the water, he
turned to the pantry door. "Johnson, you've filled this bowl too full
again. Pat's trying to jump out again!"
"I'll fix it, captain."
The steward came out of the pantry with a small pan. ("Don't know why the
Old Man keeps these tarnation fish. He ain't interested in 'em-that's
certain.") Aloud he added: "That Pat fish don't want to stay in
there, captain. Always trying to jump out. And he don't like me,
captain."
"What's that?" Captain
Blake's thoughts had already left the fish; he was worrying over the mystery
again.
"I say that fish don't like
me, captain. Tries to bite my finger every time I clean out the bowl"
"Don't be silly, Johnson."
“Four’s your point. Roll ‘em!”
“Anybody want a side bet on double deuces?”
No one answered; the old soldier rattled dice in a glass, pitched them against the washroom wall. One turned up a deuce; the other spun. Somebody yelled, “It’s going to five! Come, Phoebe!”
It stopped—a two. The old soldier said, “I told you not to play with me. Anybody want cigarette money?”
“Pick
it up, Pop. We don’t—oh, oh! ‘Tenshun/”
In the door stood a civilian, a colonel, and a captain. The civilian said, “Give the money back, Two-Gun.”
“Okay, Prof.” The old soldier extracted two singles. “That much is mine.”
“Stop!” objected the captain. “I’ll impound that for evidence. Now, you men—”
The colonel stopped him. “Mick. Forget that you’re adjutant. Private Andrews, come along.” He went out; the others followed. They hurried through the enlisted men’s club, out into desert sunshine and across the quadrangle.
The civilian said, “Two-Gun, what the deuce!”
“Shucks, Prof, I was just practicing.”
“Why don’t you practice against Grandma Wilkins?”
The soldier snorted. “Do I look silly?”
The colonel put in, “You’re keeping a crowd of generals and V.I.P.s waiting. That isn’t bright.”
“Colonel Hammond, I was told to wait in the club.”
“But not in its washroom. Step it up!”
They went inside headquarters to a hail where guards checked their passes before letting them in. A civilian was speaking: “—and that’s the story of the history-making experiments at Duke University. Doctor Reynolds is back; he will conduct the demonstrations.”
The officers sat down In the rear, Dr. Reynolds went to the speaker’s table. Private Andrews sat down with a group set apart from the high brass and distinguished civilians of the audience. A character who looked like a professional gambler—and was—sat next to two beautiful redheads, identical twins. A fourteen-year-old Negro boy slumped in the next chair; he seemed asleep. Beyond him a most wide-awake person, Mrs. Anna Wilkins, tatted and looked around. In the second row were college students and a drab middle-aged man.
The table held a chuck-a-luck cage, packs of cards, scratch pads, a Geiger counter, a lead carrying case. Reynolds leaned on it and said, “Extra-Sensory Perception, or E.S.P., is a tag for little-known phenomena—telepathy, clairvoyance, clairaudience, precognition, telekinesis. They exist; we can measure them; we know that some people are thus gifted. But we don’t know how they work. The British, in India during World War One, found that secrets were being stolen by telepathy.” Seeing doubt in their faces Reynolds added, “It is conceivable that a spy five hundred miles away is now ‘listening in’—and picking your brains of top-secret data.”
Doubt was more evident. A four-star Air Force general said, “One moment, Doctor—if true, what can we do to stop it?”
“Nothing.”
“That’s no answer. A lead-lined room?”
“We’ve tried that, General. No effect.”
“Jamming with high frequencies? Or whatever ‘brain waves’ are?”
“Possibly, though I doubt it. If E.S.P. becomes militarily important you may have to operate with all facts known. Back to our program: These ladies and gentlemen are powerfully gifted in telekinesis, the ability to control matter at a distance. Tomorrow’s experiment may not succeed, but we hope to convince the doubting Thomases”—he smiled at a man in the rear—”that it is worth trying.”
The man he looked at stood up. “General Hanby!”
An Army major general looked around. “Yes, Doctor Withers?”
“I asked to be excused. My desk is loaded with urgent work—and these games have nothing to do with me.”
The commanding general started to assert himself; the four-star visitor put a hand on his sleeve. “Doctor Withers, my desk in Washington is piled high, ‘but I sin here because the President sent me. Will you please stay? I want a skeptical check on my judgment.”
Withers sat down, still angry. Reynolds continued: ‘We will start with E.S.P. rather than telekinesis—which is a bit different, anyhow.” He turned to one of the redheads. “Jane, will you come here?”
The girl answered, “I’m Joan. Sure.”
“All right—Joan. General LaMott, will you draw something on this scratch pad?”
The four-star flyer cocked an eyebrow. “Anything?”
“Not too complicated.”
“Right, Doctor.” He thought, then began a cartoon of a girl, grinned and added a pop-eyed wolf. Shortly he looked up. “Okay?”
Joan had kept busy with another pad; Reynolds took hers to the general. The sketches were alike—except that Joan bad added four stars to the wolf’s shoulders. The general looked at her; she looked demure. “I’m convinced,” he said drily. “What next?”
“That could be clairvoyance or telepathy,” Reynolds lectured. “We will now show direct telepathy.” He called the second twin to him, then said, “Doctor Withers, will you help us?”
Withers still looked surly. “With what?”
“The same thing—but Jane will watch over your shoulder while Joan tries to reproduce what you draw. Make it something harder.”
“Well…okay.” He took the pad, began sketching a radio circuit, while Jane watched. He signed it with a “Clem,” the radioman’s cartoon of the little fellow peering over a fence.
“That’s fine!” said Reynolds. “Finished, Joan?”
“Yes, Doctor.” He fetched her pad; the diagram was correct—but Joan had added to “Clem” a wink.
Reynolds interrupted awed comment with, “I will skip card, demonstrations and turn to telekinesis. Has anyone a pair of dice?” No one volunteered; he went on, “We have some supplied by your physics department. This chuck-a-luck cage is signed and sealed by them and so is this package.” He broke it open, spilled out a dozen dice. “Two-Gun, how about some naturals?”
“I’ll try, Prof.”
“General LaMott, please select a pair and put them In this cup.”
The general complied and handed the cup to Andrews. “What are you going to roll, soldier?”
“Would a sixty-five suit the General?”
“If you can.”
“Would the General care to put up a five spot, to make it interesting?” He waited, wide-eyed and innocent.
LaMott grinned. “You’re faded, soldier.” He peeled out a five; Andrews covered it, rattled the cup and rolled. One die stopped on the bills—a five. The other bounced against a chair—a six.
“Let it ride, sir?”’
“I’m not a sucker twice. Show us some naturals.”
“As you say, sir.” Two-Gun picked up the money, then rolled 6-1, 5-2, 4-3, and back again. He rolled several 6’s, then got snake eyes. He tried again, got acey-deucey. He faced the little old lady. “Ma’am,” he said, “if you want to roll, why don’t you get down here and do the work?”
“Why, Mr. Andrews!”
Reynolds said hastily, “You’ll get your turn, Mrs. Wilkins.”
“I don’t know what you gentlemen are talking about.” She resumed tatting.
Colonel Hammond sat down by the redheads. “You’re the January Twins—aren’t you?”
“Our public!” one answered delightedly.
“The name is ‘Brown,’” said the other.
“‘Brown,’” he agreed, “but how about a show for the boys?”
“Dr. Reynolds wouldn’t like it,” the first said dutifully. “I’ll handle him. We don’t get USO; security regulations are too strict. How about it, Joan?”
“I’m Jane. Okay, if you fix it with Prof.”
“Good girls!” He went back to where Grandma Wilkins was demonstrating selection—showers of sixes in the chuck-a-luck cage. She was still tatting. Dr. Withers watched glumly. Hammond said, ‘Well, Doc?”
“These things are disturbing,” Withers admitted, “but it’s on the molar level—nothing affecting the elementary particles.”
“How about those sketches?”
“I’m a physicist, not a psychologist. But the basic particles—electrons, neutrons, protons—can’t be affected except with apparatus designed in accordance with the laws of radioactivity. Dr. Reynolds was in earshot; at Withers’ remark he said, “Thank you, Mrs. Wilkins. Now, ladies and gentlemen, another experiment. Norman!”
The colored boy opened his eyes. “Yeah, Prof?”
“Up here. And the team from your physics laboratory, please. Has anyone a radium-dial watch?”
Staff technicians hooked the Geiger counter through an amplifier so that normal background radioactivity was heard as occasional clicks, then placed a radium-dial watch close to the counter tube; the clicks changed to hail-storm volume. “Lights out, please,” directed Reynolds.
The boy said, “Now, Prof?”
“Wait, Norman. Can everyone see the watch?” The silence was broken only by the rattle of the amplifier, counting radioactivity of the glowing figures. “Now, Norman!”
The shining figures quenched out; the noise, died to sparse clicks.
The same group was in a blockhouse miles out in the desert; more miles beyond was the bomb proving site; facing it was a periscope window set in concrete and glazed with solid feet of laminated filter glass. Dr. Reynolds was talking with Major General Hanby. A naval captain took reports via earphones and speaker horn; he turned to the C.O. “Planes on station, sir.”
“Thanks, Dick.”
The horn growled, “Station Charlie to Control; we fixed it.”
The navy man said to Hanby, “All stations ready, range clear.”
“Pick up the count.”
“All stations, stand by to resume count at minus seventeen minutes. Time station, pick up the count. This is a live nun. Repeat, this is a live run.”
Hanby said to Reynolds, “Distance makes no difference?”
“We could work from Salt Lake City once my colleagues knew the setup.” He glanced down. “My watch must have stopped.”
“Always feels that way. Remember the metronome on the first Bikini test? It nearly drove me nuts.”
“I
can imagine. Um, General, some of my people are high-strung. Suppose I ad
lib?”
Hanby smiled grimly. “We always have a pacifier for visitors. Doctor Withers, ready with your curtain raiser?”
The chief physicist was bending over a group of instruments; he looked tired. “Not today,” he answered in a flat voice. “Satterlee will make it.”
Satterlee came forward and grinned at the brass and V.I.P.’s and at Reynolds’ operators. “I’ve been saving a joke for an audience that can’t walk out. But first—” He picked up a polished metal sphere and looked at the ES.P. adepts. “You saw a ball like this on your tour this morning. That one was plutonium; it’s still out there waiting to go bang! in about . . . eleven minutes. This is merely steel—unless someone has made a mistake. That would be a joke—we’d laugh ourselves to bits!”
He got no laughs, went on: “But it doesn’t weigh enough; we’re safe. This dummy has been prepared so that Dr. Reynolds’ people will have an image to help them concentrate. It looks no more like an atom bomb than I look like Stalin, but it represents—if it were plutonium—what we atom tinkerers call a ‘subcritical mass.’ Since the spy trials everybody knows how an atom bomb works. Plutonium gives off neutrons at a constant rate. If the mass is small, most of them escape to the outside. But if it is large enough, or a critical mass, enough are absorbed by other nuclei to start a chain reaction. The trick is to assemble a critical mass quickly— then run for your life! This happens in microseconds; I can’t be specific without upsetting the security officer.
“Today we will find out if the mind can change the rate of neutron emission in plutonium. By theories sound enough to have destroyed two Japanese cities, the emission of any particular neutron is pure chance, but the total emission is as invariable as the stars in their courses. Otherwise it would be impossible to make atom bombs.
“By standard theory, theory that works, that subcritical mass out there is no more likely to explode than a pumpkin. Our test group will try to change that. They will concentrate, try to increase the probability of neutrons’ escaping, and thus set off that sphere as an atom bomb.”
“Doctor Satterlee?” asked a vice admiral with wings. “Do you think it can be done?”
“Absolutely not!” Satterlee turned to the adepts. “No offense intended, folks.”
“Five minutes!” announced the navy captain.
Satterlee nodded to Reynolds. “Take over. And good luck.” Mrs. Wilkins spoke up. “Just a moment, young man. These ‘neuter’ things. I—”
“Neutrons, madam.”
“That’s what I said. I don’t quite understand. I suppose that sort of thing comes in high school, but I only finished eighth grade. I’m sorry.”
Satterlee looked sorry, too, but, he tried. “—and each of these nuclei is potentially able to spit out one of these little neutrons. In that sphere out there”—he held up the dummy—“There are, say, five thousand billion trillion nuclei, each one—”
“My, that’s quite a lot, isn’t it?”
“Madam, it certainly is. Now—”’
“Two minutes!”
Reynolds interrupted. “Mrs.. Wilkins, don’t worry. Concentrate on that metal ball out there and think about those neutrons, each one ready to come out. When I give the word, I want you all—you especially, Norman—to think about that ball, spitting sparks like a watch dial. Try for more sparks. Simply try. It you fail, no one will blame you. Don’t get tense.”
Mrs. Wilkins nodded. “I’ll try.” She put her tatting down and got a faraway look.
At once they were blinded by unbelievable radiance bursting through the massive filter. It beat on them, then died away.
The naval captain said, “What the hell!” Someone screamed, “It’s gone, it’s gone!”
The speaker brayed: “Fission at minus one minute thirty-seven seconds. Control, what went wrong. It looks like a hydrogen—”
The concussion wave hit and all sounds were smothered.
Lights
went out, emergency lighting clicked on. The blockhouse heaved like a boat in a
heavy sea. Their eyes were still dazzled, their ears assaulted by cannonading
afternoise, and physicists were elbowing flag officers at the port, when an anguished
soprano cut through the din. “Oh, dear!”
Reynolds snapped, “What’s the matter, Grandma? You all right?”
“Me? Oh, yes, yes—but I’m so sorry. I didn’t mean to do it.”
“Do what?”
“I was just feeling it out, thinking about all those little bitty neuters, ready to spit. But I didn’t mean to make it go off—not till you told us to.”
“Oh.” Reynolds turned to ‘the rest. “Anyone else jump the gun?”
No one admitted it. Mrs. Wilkins said timidly, “I’m sorry, Doctor. Have they got another one? I’ll be more careful.”
Reynolds and Withers were seated in the officers’ mess with coffee in front of them; the physicist paid no attention to his. His eyes glittered and his face twitched. “No limits! Calculations show over ninety per cent conversion of mass to energy. You know what that means? If we assume—no, never mind. Just say that we could make every bomb the size of a pea. No tamper. No control circuits. Nothing but...“ He paused. “Delivery would be fast, small jets—just a pilot, a weaponeer, and one of your ‘operators.’ No limit to the number of bombs. No nation on earth could—”
“Take it easy,” said Reynolds. “We’ve got only a few telekinesis operators. You wouldn’t risk them in a plane.”
“But—”
“You don’t need to. Show them the bombs, give them photos of the targets, hook them by radio to the weaponeer. That spreads them thin. And we’ll test for more sensitive people. My figures show about one in eighteen hundred.”
“‘Spread them thin,’” repeated Withers.’ “Mrs. Wilkins could handle dozens of bombs, one after another—couldn’t she?”
“I suppose so. We’ll test.”
“We will indeed!” ‘Withers noticed his coffee, gulped it. “Forgive me, Doctor; I’m punchy. I’ve had to revise too many opinions.”
“I know. I was a behaviorist.”
Captain Mikeler came in, looked around and came over. “The General wants you both,” he said softly. “Hurry.”
They were ushered into a guarded office.. Major General Hanby was with General LaMott and Vice Admiral Keithley; they looked grim. Hanby handed them message flimsies. Reynolds saw the stamp TOP SECRET and handed his back. “General, I’m not cleared for this,”
“Shut up and read it.”
Reynolds skipped the number groups:
“—(PARAPHRASED) RUSSIAN EMBASSY TODAY HANDED STATE ULTIMATUM: DEMANDS USA CONVERT TO ‘PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC’ UNDER POLITICAL COMMISSARS TO BE ASSIGNED BY USSR. MILITARY ASSURANCES DEMANDED. NOTE CLAIMS MAJOR US CITIES (LIST SEPARATE) ARE MINED WITH ATOMIC BOMBS WHICH THEY THREATEN TO SET OFF BY RADIO IF TERMS ARE NOT MET BY SIXTEEN HUNDRED FRIDAY EST.”
Reynolds reread it—”SIXTEEN HUNDRED FRIDAY”—Two P.M. day after tomorrow, local time. Our cities booby-trapped with A-bombs? Could they do that? He realized that LaMott was speaking. “We must assume that the threat is real. Our free organization makes it an obvious line of attack.”
The admiral said, “They may be bluffing.”
The air general shook his head. “They know the President won’t surrender. We can’t assume that Ivan is stupid.”
Reynolds
wondered why he was being allowed to hear this. LaMott looked at him. “Admiral
Keithley and I leave for Washington at once. I have delayed to ask you this:
your people set off an atom bomb. Can they keep bombs from going off?”
Reynolds felt his time sense stretch as if he had all year to think about Grandma Wilkins, Norman, his other paranormals. “Yes,” he answered.
LaMott stood up. “Your job, Hanby. Coming, Admiral?”
“Wait!” protested Reynolds. “Give me one bomb and Mrs. Wilkins—and I’ll sit on it. But how many cities? Twenty? Thirty?”
“Thirty-eight.”
“Thirty-eight bombs—or more. Where are they? What do they look like? How long will this go on? It’s impossible.”
“Of course—but do it anyhow. Or try. Hanby, tell them we’re on our way, will you?”
“Certainly, General.”
“Good-by, Doctor. Or so long, rather.”
Reynolds suddenly realized that these two were going back to “sit” on one of the bombs, to continue their duties until it killed them. He said quickly, “We’ll try. We’ll certainly try.”
Thirty-eight cities, forty-three hours and seventeen adepts. Others were listed in years of research, but they were scattered through forty-one states. In a dictatorship secret police would locate them at once, deliver them at supersonic speeds. But this was America.
“Find them! Get them here! Fast! Hanby assigned Colonel Hammond to turn Reynolds’ wishes into orders and directed his security officer to delegate his duties, get on the phone and use his acquaintance with the F.B.I., and other security officers, and through them with local police, to cut red tape and find those paranormals. Find them, convince them, bring pressure, start them winging toward the proving ground. By sundown, twenty-three had been found, eleven had been convinced or coerced, two had arrived. Hanby phoned Reynolds, caught him eating a sandwich standing up. “Hanby speaking. The Président just phoned.”
“The President?”
“LaMott got in to see him. He’s dubious, but he’s authorized an all-out try, short of slowing down conventional defense. One of his assistants left National Airport by jet plane half an hour ago to come here and help. Things will move faster.”
But it did not speed things up, as the Russian broadcast was even then being beamed, making the crisis public; the President went on the air thirty minutes later. Reynolds did not hear him; he was busy. Twenty people to save twenty cities—and a world. But how? He was sure that Mrs. Wilkins could smother any A-bomb she had seen; he hoped the others could. But a hidden bomb in a far-off city—find it mentally, think about it, quench it, not for the microsecond it took to set one off, but for the billions of microseconds it might take to uncover it—was it possible?
What would help? Certain drugs—caffeine, benzedrine. They must have quiet, too. He turned to Hammond. “I want a room and bath for each one.”
“You’ve got that.”
“No, we’re doubled up, with semi-private baths.”
Hammond shrugged. “Can do. It means booting out some brass.”
“Keep the kitchen manned. They must not sleep, but they’ll have to eat. Fresh coffee all the time and cokes and tea—anything they want. Can you put the room phones through a private switchboard?”
“Okay. What else?”
“I don’t know. We’ll talk to them.”
They all knew of the Russian broadcast, but not what was being planned; they met his words with uneasy silence. Reynolds turned to Andrews. “Well, Two-Gun?”
“Big bite to chew, Prof.”
“Yes. Can you chew it?”
“Have to, I reckon.”
“Norman?”
“Gee, Boss! How can I when I can’t see ‘em?”
“Mrs. Wilkins couldn’t see that bomb this morning. You can’t see radioactivity on a watch dial; it’s too small. You just see the dial and think about it. Well?”
The Negro lad scowled. “Think of a shiny ball in a city somewhere?”
“Yes. No, wait—Colonel Hammond, they need a visual image and it won’t be that. There are atom bombs here—they must see one.”
Hammond frowned. “An American bomb meant for dropping or firing won’t look like a Russian bomb rigged for placement and radio triggering.”
“What will they look like?”
“G-2 ought to know. I hope. We’ll get some sort of picture. A three-dimensional mock-up, too. I’d better find Withers and the General.” He left.
Mrs. Wilkins said briskly, “Doctor, I’ll watch Washington, D. C.”
“Yes, Mrs. Wilkins. You’re the only one who has been tested, even in reverse. So you guard Washington; it’s of prime importance.”
“No, no, that’s not why. It’s the city I can see best.”
Andrews said, “She’s got something, Prof. I pick Seattle.”
By midnight Reynolds had his charges, twenty-six by now, tucked away in the officers’ club. Hammond and he took turns at a switchboard rigged in the upper hall. The watch would not start until shortly before deadline. Fatigue reduced paranormal powers, sometimes to zero; Reynolds hoped that they were getting one last night of sleep.
A microphone had been installed in each room; a selector switch let them listen in. Reynolds disliked this but Hammond argued, “Sure, it’s an invasion of privacy. So is being blown up by an A-bomb.” He dialed the switch. “Hear that? Our boy Norman is sawing wood.” He moved it again. “Private ‘Two-Gun’ is stilt stirring. We can’t let them sleep, once it starts, so we have to spy on them.”
“I suppose so.”
Withers came upstairs. “Anything more you need?’
“I guess not,” answered Reynolds. “How about the bomb mock-up?”
“Before morning.”
“How authentic is it?”
“Hard to say. Their agents probably rigged firing circuits from radio parts bought right here; the circuits could vary a lot. But the business part—well, we’re using real plutonium.
“Good. We’ll show it to them after breakfast.”
Two-Gun’s door opened. “Howdy, Colonel. Prof—it’s there.”
“What is?’
“The bomb. Under Seattle. I can feel it.”
“Where is it?”
“It’s down—it feels down. And it feels wet, somehow. Would they put it in the Sound?”
Hammond jumped up. “In the harbor—and shower the city with radioactive water!” He was ringing as he spoke. “Get me General Hanby!”
“Morrison here,” a voice answered. “What is it, Hammond?”
“The Seattle bomb—have them dredge for it. It’s in the Sound, or somewhere under water.”
“Eh? How do you know?”
“One of Reynolds’ magicians. Do it!” He cut off.
Andrews said worriedly, “Prof, I can’t see it—I’m not a ‘seeing-eye.’ Why don’t you get one? Say that little Mrs. Brentano?”
“Oh, my God! Clairvoyants.—we need them, too.” Withers said, “Eh, Doctor? Do you think—”
“No, I don’t, or I would have thought of it. How do they search for bombs? What instruments?”
“Instruments? A bomb in its shielding doesn’t even affect a Geiger counter. You have to open things and look.”
“How long will that take? Say for New York!”
‘‘Hammond said, “Shut up! Reynolds, where are these clairvoyants?”
Reynolds chewed his lip. “They’re scarce.”
“Scarcer than us dice rollers,” added Two-Gun. “But get that Brentano kid. She found keys I had lost digging a ditch. Buried three feet deep—and me searching my quarters.”
“Yes, yes, Mrs. Brentano.” Reynolds pulled out a notebook. Hammond reached for the switchboard. “Morrison? Stand by for more names—and even more urgent than the others.”
More urgent but harder to find; the Panic was on. The President urged everyone to keep cool and stay home, whereupon thirty million people stampeded. The ticker in the P.I.O. office typed the story: “NEW YORK NY—TO CLEAR JAM CAUSED BY WRECKS IN OUTBOUND TUBE THE INBOUND TUBE OF HOLLAND TUNNEL HAS BEEN REVERSED. POLICE HAVE STOPPED TRYING TO PREVENT EVACUATION. BULLDOZERS WORKING TO REOPEN TRIBOROUGH BRIDGE, BLADES SHOVING WRECKED CARS AND HUMAN HAMBURGER. WEEHAWKEN FERRY DISASTER
CONFIRMED: NO PASSENGER LIST YET—FLASH—GEORGE WASHINGTON BRIDGE GAVE WAY AT 0353 EST, WHETHER FROM OVERLOAD OR SABOTAGE NOT KNOWN. MORE MORE MORE—FLASH—
It was repeated everywhere. The Denver-Colorado Springs highway had one hundred thirty-five deaths by midnight, then reports stopped. A DC-7 at Burbank ploughed into a mob which had broken through the barrier. The Baltimore-Washington highway was clogged both ways; Memorial Bridge was out of service. The five outlets from Los Angeles were solid with creeping cars. At four A.M. EST the President declared martial law; the order had no immediate effect.
By morning Reynolds had thirty-one adepts assigned to twenty-four cities. He had a stomach-churning ordeal before deciding to let them work only cities known to them. The gambler, Even-Money Karsch, had settled it: “Doc, I know when I’m hot, Minneapolis has to be mine.” Reynolds gave in, even though one of his students had just arrived from there; he put them both on it and prayed that at least one would be “hot.” Two clairvoyants arrived; one, a blind news-dealer from Chicago, was put to searching there; the other, a carnie mentalist, was given the list and told to find bombs wherever she could. Mrs. Brentano had remarried and moved; Norfolk was being combed for her.
At
one fifteen P.M., forty-five minutes before deadline, they were in their rooms,
each with maps and aerial views of his city, each with photos of the mocked-up
bomb. The club was clear of residents; the few normals needed to coddle the
paranormals kept careful quiet. Roads nearby were blocked; air traffic was
warned away. Everything was turned toward providing an atmosphere in which
forty-two people could sit still and think.
At the switchboard were Hammond, Reynolds, and Gordon McClintock, the President’s assistant. Reynolds glanced up. “What time is it?”
“One thirty-seven,” rasped Hammond. “Twenty-three minutes.”
“One thirty-eight,” disagreed McClintock. “Reynolds, how about Detroit? You can’t leave it unguarded.”
“Whom can I use? Each is guarding the city he knows best.”
“Those twin girls—I heard them mention Detroit.”
“They’ve played everywhere. But Pittsburgh is their home.”
“Switch one of them to Detroit.”
Reynolds thought of telling him to go to Detroit himself. “They work together. You want to get them upset and lose both cities?”
Instead of answering McClintock said, “And who’s watching Cleveland?”
“Norman Johnson. He lives there and he’s our second strongest operator.”
They were interrupted by voices downstairs. A man came up, carrying a bag, and spotted Reynolds. “Oh, hello, Doctor. What is this? I’m on top priority work—tank production— when the F.B.I. grabs me. You are responsible?”
“Yes. Come with me.” McClintock started to speak, but Reynolds led the man away. “Mr. Nelson, did you bring your family?”
“No, they’re still in Detroit. Had I known—”
“Please! Listen carefully.” He explained, pointed out a map of Detroit in the room to which they went, showed him pictures of the simulated bomb, “You understand?”
Nelson’s jaw muscles were jumping. “It seems impossible.”
“It is possible. You’ve got to think about that bomb—or bombs. Get in touch, squeeze them, keep them from going off. You’ll have to stay awake.”
Nelson breathed gustily. “I’ll stay awake.”
“That phone will get you anything you want. Good luck.” He passed the room occupied by the blind clairvoyant; the door was open. “Harry, it’s Prof. Getting anything?”
The man turned to the voice. “It’s in the Loop. I could walk to it if I were there. A six-story building.”
“That’s the best you can do?”
“Tell them to try the attic. I get warm when I go up.”
“Right away!” He rushed back, saw that Hanby had arrived. Swiftly he keyed the communications office. “Reynolds speaking. The Chicago bomb is in a six-story building in the Loop area, probably in the attic. No—that’s all. G’by!”
Hanby started to speak; Reynolds shook his head and looked at his watch. Silently the General picked up the phone. “This is the commanding officer. Have any flash sent here.” He put the phone down and stared at his watch.
For fifteen endless minutes they stood silent. The General broke it by taking the phone and saying, “Hanby. Anything?”
“No, General. Washington is on the wire.”
“Eh? You say Washington?”
“Yes, sir. Here’s the General, Mr. Secretary.”
Hanby sighed. “Hanby speaking, Mr. Secretary. You’re all right? Washington . . . is all right?”
They could hear the relayed voice. “Certainly certainly.
We’re past the deadline. But I wanted to tell you: Radio Moscow is telling the world that our cities are in flames.”
Hanby hesitated. “None of them are?”
“Certainly not. I’ve a talker hooked in to GHQ, which has an open line to every city listed. All safe. I don’t know whether your freak people did any good but, one way or another, it was a false—” The line went dead.
Hanby’s face went dead with it. He jiggled the phone. “I’ve been cut off!”
“Not here, General—at the other end. Just a moment.”
They waited. Presently the operator said, “Sorry, sir. I can’t get them to answer.”
“Keep trying!”
It was slightly over a. minute—it merely seemed longer—when the operator said, “Here’s your party, sir.”
“That you, Hanby?” came the voice. “I suppose we’ll have phone trouble just as we had last time. Now, about these ESP people: while we are grateful and all that, nevertheless I suggest that nothing be released to the papers. Might be misinterpreted.”
“Oh. Is that an order, Mr. Secretary?”
“Oh, no, no! But have such things routed through my office.”
“Yes, sir.” He cradled the phone.
McClintock said, “You shouldn’t have rung off, General. I’d like to know whether the Chief wants this business continued.”
“Suppose we talk about it on the way back to my office.” The General urged him away, turned and gave Reynolds a solemn wink.
Trays were placed outside the doors at six o’clock; most of them sent for coffee during the evening. Mrs. Wilkins ordered tea; she kept her door open and chatted with anyone who passed. Harry the newsboy was searching Milwaukee; no answer had been received from his tip about Chicago. Mrs. Ekstein, or “Princess Cathay” as she was billed, had reported a “feeling” about a house trailer in Denver and was now poring over a map of New Orleans. With the passing of the deadline panic abated; communications were improving. The American people were telling each other that they had known that those damned commies were bluffing.
Hammond and Reynolds sent for more coffee at three A.M.; Reynolds’ hand trembled as he poured. Hammond said, “You haven’t slept for two nights. Get over on that divan.”
“Neither have you.”
“I’ll sleep when you wake up.”
“I can’t sleep. I’m worrying about what’ll happen when they get sleepy.” He gestured at the line of doors.
“So am I.”
At seven A.M. Two-Gun came out. “Prof, they got it. The bomb. It’s gone. Like closing your hand on nothing.”
Hammond grabbed the phone. “Get me Seattle—the F.B.I. office.”
While they waited, Two-Gun said, “What now, Prof?”
Reynolds tried to think. “Maybe you should rest.”
“Not until this is over. Who’s got Toledo? I know that burg.”
“Uh...young Barnes.”
Hammond was connected; he identified himself, asked the question. He put the phone down gently. “They did get it,” he whispered. “It was in the lake.”
“I told you it was wet,” agreed Two-Gun. “Now, about Toledo—”
“Well . . . tell me when you’ve got it and we’ll let Barnes rest.”
McClintock rushed in at seven thirty-five, followed by Hanby. “Doctor Reynolds! Colonel Hammond!”
“Sh! Quiet! You’ll disturb them.”
McClintock said in a lower voice, “Yes, surely—I was excited. This is important. They located a bomb in Seattle and—”
“Yes. Private Andrews told us.”
“Huh? How did he know?’
“Never mind,” Hanby intervened. “The point is, they found the bomb already triggered. Now we know that your people are protecting the cities.”
“Was there any doubt?’
“Well. . . yes.”
“But there isn’t now,” McClintock added.’ “I must take over.” He bent over the board. “Communications? Put that White House line through here.”
“Just what,” Reynolds said slowly, “do you mean by ‘take over’?”
“Eh? Why, take charge on behalf of the President. Make sure these people don’t let down an instant!”
“But
what do you propose to do?”
Hanby said hastily, “Nothing, Doctor. We’ll just keep in touch with Washington from here.”
They continued the vigil together; Reynolds spent the time hating McClintock’s guts. He started to take coffee, then decided on another benzedrine tablet instead. He hoped his people were taking enough of it—and not too much. They all had it, except Grandma Wilkins, who wouldn’t touch it. He wanted to check with them but knew that he could not—each bomb was bound only by a thread of thought; a split-split second of diversion might be enough.
The outside light flashed; Hanby took the call. “Congress has recessed,” he announced, “and the President is handing the Soviet Union a counter ultimatum; locate and disarm any bombs or be bombed in return.” The light flashed again; Hanby answered. His face lit up. “Two more found,” he told them. “One in Chicago, right where your man said; the other in Camden.”
“Camden? How?”
“They rounded up the known Communists, of course. This laddie was brought back there for questioning. He didn’t like that; .he knew that he was being held less than a mile from the bomb. Who is on Camden?”
“Mr. Dimwiddy.”
“The elderly man with the bunions?”
“That’s right—retired postman. General, do we assume that there is only one bomb per city?”
McClintock answered, “Of course not! These people must—”
Hanby cut in, “Central Intelligence is assuming so, except for New York and Washington. If they had more bombs here, they would have added more cities.”
Reynolds left to take Dimwiddy off watch. McClintock, he fumed, did not realize that people were flesh and blood.
Dimwiddy was unsurprised. “A while ago the pressure let up, then—well, I’m afraid I dozed. I had a terrible feeling that I had let it go off, then I knew it hadn’t.”
Reynolds told him to rest, then be ready to help out elsewhere. They settled on Philadelphia; Dimwiddy had once lived there.
The watch continued. Mrs. Ekitein came up with three hits, but no answers came back; Reynolds still had to keep those cities covered. She then complained that her “sight” had gone; Reynolds went to her room and told her to nap, not wishing to consult McClintock.
Luncheon trays came and went. Reynolds continued worrying over how to arrange his operators to let them rest. Forty-three people and thirty-five, cities—if only he had two for every city! Maybe any of them could watch any city? No, he could not chance it.
Barnes woke up and took back Toledo; that left Two-Gun free. Should he let him take Cleveland? Norman had had no relief and Two-Gun had once been through it, on a train. The colored boy was amazing but rather hysterical, whereas Two-Gun-—well, Reynolds felt that Two-Gun would last, even through a week of no sleep.
No! He couldn’t trust Cleveland to a man who had merely passed through it. But with Dimwiddy on Philadelphia, when Mary Gifford woke he could put her on Houston and that would let Hank sleep before shifting him to Indianapolis and that would let him— A chess game, with all pawns queens and no mistakes allowed.
McClintock was twiddling the selector switch, listening in. Suddenly he snapped, “Someone is asleep!”
Reynolds checked the number.
“Of course, that’s the twins’ room; they take turns. You may hear snores in 21 and 30 and 8 and 19. It’s okay; they’re off watch.”
“Well, all right.” McCllntock seemed annoyed. Reynolds bent back to his list. Shortly McClintock snorted, “Who’s in room 12?”
“Uh? Wait—that’s Norman Johnson, Cleveland.”
“You mean he’s on watch?”
“Yes.” ‘Reynolds could hear the boy’s asthmatic breathing, felt relieved.
“He’s asleep!”
‘“No, he’s not.”
But McClintock was rushing down the corridor. Reynolds took after him; Hammond and Hanby followed. Reynolds caught up as McClintock burst into room 12. Norman was sprawled in a chair, eyes closed in his habitual attitude.
McClintock rushed up, slapped him. “Wake up!” Reynolds grabbed
McClintock. “You bloody fool!” Norman opened his eyes, then burst into tears.
“It’s gone!”
“Steady, Norman. It’s all right.”
“No, no! It’s gone—and my mammy’s gone with it!”
McClintock snapped, “Concentrate, boy! Get back on it!”
Reynolds turned on him. “Get out. Get out before I punch you.”
Hanby and Hammond were in the door; the General cut in with a hoarse whisper, “Pipe down, Doctor, bring the boy.”
Back at the board the outside light was flashing. Hanby took the call while Reynolds tried to quiet the boy. Hanby ‘listened gravely, then said, “He’s right. Cleveland just got it.”
McCllntock snapped, “He went to sleep. He ought to be shot.”
“Shut up,” said Hanby.
“But—”
Reynolds said, “any others, General?”
“Why would there be?”
“All this racket. It may have disturbed a dozen of them.”
“Oh, we’ll see.” He called Washington again. Presently he sighed. “No, just Cleveland. We were lucky.”
“General,” McClintock insisted, “he was asleep.”
Hanby looked at him. “Sir, you may be the President’s deputy but you yourself have no military authority. Off my post.”
“But I am directed by the President to—”
“Off my post, sir! Go back to Washington. Or to Cleveland. McClintock looked dumbfounded. Hanby added, “You’re worse than bad—you’re a fool.”
“The President will hear of this.”
“Blunder again and the President won’t live that long. Get out.”
By nightfall the situation was rapidly getting worse.
Twenty-seven cities were still threatened and Reynolds was losing operators faster than bombs were being found. Even-Money Karsch would not relieve when awakened. “See that?” he said, rolling dice. “Cold as a well-digger’s feet. I’m through.” After that Reynolds tested each one who was about to relieve, found that some were tired beyond the power of short sleep to restore them—they were “cold.”
By midnight there were eighteen operators for nineteen cities. The twins had fearfully split up; it had worked.
Mrs. Wilkins was holding both Washington and Baltimore; she had taken Baltimore when he had no one to relieve there.
But now he had no one for relief anywhere and three operators—Nelson, Two-Gun and Grandma Wilkins—had had no rest. He was too fagged to worry; he simply knew that whenever one of them reached his limit, the United States would lose a city. The panic had resumed after the bombing of Cleveland; roads again were choked. The disorder made harder the search for bombs. But there was nothing he could do.
Mrs. Ekstein still complained about her sight but kept at it. Harry the newsboy had had no luck with Milwaukee, but there was no use shifting him; other cities were “dark” to him. During the night Mrs. Ekstein pointed to the bomb in Houston. It was, she said, in a box underground. A coffin? Yes, there was a headstone; she was unable to read the name.
Thus, many recent dead in Houston were disturbed. But it was nine Sunday morning before Reynolds went to tell Mary Gifford that she could rest—or relieve for Wilmington, if she felt up to it. He found her collapsed and lifted her onto the bed, wondering if she had known the Houston bomb was found.
Eleven cities now and eight people. Grandma Wilkins held four cities. No one else had been able to double up. Reynolds thought dully that it was a miracle that they had been able to last at all; it surpassed enormously the best test performance.
Hammond looked up as he returned. “Make any changes?”
“No. The Gifford kid is through. We’ll lose half a dozen cities before this is over.”
“Some of them must be damn near empty by now.”
“I hope so. Any more bombs found?”
“Not yet. How do you feel, Doc?”
“Three weeks dead.” Reynolds sat down wearily. He was wondering if he should wake some of those sleeping and test them again when he heard a noise below; he went to the stairwell. Up came an M.P. captain. “They said to bring her here.” Reynolds looked at the woman with him. “Dorothy Brentano!”
“Dorothy Smith now.”
He controlled his trembling and explained what was required. She nodded. “I figured that out on the plane. Got a pencil? Take this: St. Louis—a river warehouse with a sign reading ‘Bartlett & Sons, Jobbers.’ Look in the loft. And Houston—no, they got that one. Baltimore—it’s in a ship at the docks, the S.S. Gold Coast. What other cities? I’ve wasted time feeling around where there was nothing to find.”
Reynolds was already shouting for Washington to answer.
Grandma Wilkins was last to be relieved; Dorothy located one in the Potomac—and Mrs. Wilkins told her sharply to keep trying. There were four bombs in Washington, which Mrs. Wilkins had known all along. Dorothy found them in eleven minutes.
Three hours later Reynolds showed up in the club mess-room, not having been able to sleep. Several of his people were eating and listening to the radio blast about our raid on Russia. He gave it a wide berth; they could blast Omsk and Tomsk and Minsk and Pinsk; today he didn’t care. He was sipping milk and thinking that he would never drink coffee again when Captain Mikeler bent over his table.
“The General wants you. Hurry!”
“Why?”
“I said, ‘Hurry!’ Where’s Grandma Wilkins—oh I see her. Who is Mrs. Dorothy Smith?”
Reynolds looked around. “She’s with Mrs. Wilkins.”
Mikeler rushed them to Hanby’s office. Hanby merely said, “Sit over there. And you ladies, too. Stay in focus.”
Reynolds found himself looking into a television screen at the President of the United States. He looked as weary as Reynolds felt, but he turned on his smile. “You are Doctor Reynolds?”
“Yes, Mr. President!”
“These ladies are Mrs. Wilkins and Mrs. Smith?”
“Yes, sir.”
The President said quietly, “You three and your colleagues will be thanked by the Republic. And by me, for myself. But that must wait. Mrs. Smith, there are more bombs—in Russia. Could your strange gift find them there?”
“Why, I don’t—I can try!”
“Mrs. Wilkins, could you set off those Russian bombs while they are still far away?”
Incredibly, she was still bright-eyed and chipper. “Why, Mr. President!”
“Can you?”
She got a far-away look. “Dorothy and I had better have a quiet room somewhere. And I’d like a pot of tea. A large pot.”
He judged that
the Valley was hotter than usual—but, then, it usually was. Imperial Valley was
a natural hothouse, two hundred and fifty feet below sea level, diked from the
Pacific Ocean by the mountains back of San Diego, protected from the Gulf of
Baja California by high ground on the south. On the east, the Chocolate
Mountains walled off the rushing Colorado River.
He parked his car
outside the. Barbara Worth Hotel in El Centro and went into the bar. “Scotch.”
The bartender
filled a shot glass, then set a glass of ice Water beside it. “Thanks. Have
one?”
“Don’t mind if I
do.”
The customer
sipped his drink, then picked up the chaser. “That’s just the right amount of
water in the right place. I’ve got hydrophobia.”
“Huh?”
“I hate water.
Darn near drowned when I was a kid. Afraid of it ever since.”
“Water ain’t fit
to drink,” the bartender agreed, “but I do like to swim.”
“Not for me.
That’s why I like the Valley. They restrict the stuff to irrigation ditches,
washbowls, bathtubs, and glasses. I always hate to go back to Los Angeles.”
“If you’re afraid
of drowning,” the barkeep answered, “you’re better off in L.A. than in the
Valley. We’re below sea level here. Water all around us, higher than our heads.
Suppose somebody pulled out the cork?”
“Go frighten your
grandmother. The Coast Range is no cork.”
“Earthquake.”
“That’s crazy.
Earthquakes don’t move mountain ranges.”
“Well, it
wouldn’t necessarily take a quake. You’ve heard about the 1905 flood, when the
Colorado River spilled over and formed the Salton Sea? But don’t be too sure
about quakes; valleys below sea level don’t just grow—something has to
cause them. The San Andreas Fault curls around this valley like a question
mark. Just imagine the shake-up it must have taken to drop thousands of square
miles below the level of the Pacific.”
“Quit trying to
get my goat. That happened thousands of years ago. Here.” He laid a bill on the
bar and left. Joykiller! A man like that shouldn’t be tending bar.
The thermometer
in the shaded doorway showed 118 degrees. The solid heat beat against him,
smarting his eyes and drying his lungs, even while he remained on the covered
sidewalk. His car, he knew, would be too hot to touch; he should have garaged
it. He walked around the end of it and saw someone bending over the left hand
door. He stopped. “What the hell do you think you’re doing?”
The figure turned
suddenly, showing pale, shifty eyes. He was dressed in a business suit, dirty
and unpressed. He was tieless. His hands and nails, were dirty, but not with
the dirt of work; the palms were uncalloused. A weak mouth spoiled features
otherwise satisfactory. “No harm intended,” he apologized. “I just wanted to
read your registration slip. You’re from Los Angeles. Give me a lift back to
the city, pal.”
The car owner
ignored him and glanced around inside the automobile. “Just wanted to see where
I was from, eh? Then why did you open the glove compartment? I ought to run you
in.” He looked past the vagrant at two uniformed deputy sheriffs sauntering
down the other side of the street. “On your way, bum.”
The man followed
the glance, then faded swiftly away in the other direction. The car’s owner
climbed in, swearing at the heat, then checked the glove compartment. The
flashlight was missing.
Checking it off
to profit-and-loss, he headed for Brawley, fifteen miles north. The heat was
oppressive, even for Imperial Valley. Earthquake weather, he said to himself,
giving vent to the Californian’s favorite superstition, then sternly denied
it—that dumb fool gin peddler had put the idea in his mind. Just an ordinary
Valley day, a little hotter, maybe.
His business took
him to several outlying ranchos between Brawley and the Salton Sea. He was
heading back toward the main highway on a worn gravel mat when the car began to
waltz around as if he were driving over corduroy. He stopped the car, but the
shaking continued, accompanied by a bass grumble.
Earthquake! He
burst out of the car possessed only by the primal urge to get out in the open,
to escape the swaying towers, the falling bricks. But there were no buildings
here— nothing but open desert and irrigated fields.
He went back to
the car, his stomach lurching to every following temblor. The right front tire
was flat. Stone-punctured, he decided, when the car was bounced around by the
first big shock.
Changing that
tire almost broke his heart. He was faint from heat and exertion when he
straightened up from it.
Another shock,
not as heavy as the first, but heavy, panicked him again and he began to run,
but he fell, tripped by the crazy galloping of the ground. He got up and went
back to the car.
It had slumped
drunkenly, the jack knocked over by the quake.
He wanted to
abandon it, but the dust from the shocks had closed in around him like fog,
without fog’s blessed coolness. He knew he was several miles from town and
doubted his ability to make it on foot.
He got to work,
sweating and gasping. One hour and thirteen minutes after the initial shock the
spare tire was in place. The ground still grumbled and shook from time to time.
He resolved to drive slowly and thereby keep the car in control if another bad
shock came along. The dust forced him to drive slowly, anyhow.
Moseying back
toward the main highway, he was regaining his calm, when he became aware of a
train in the distance. The roar increased, over the noise, of the car—an
express train, he decided, plunging down the valley. The thought niggled at the
back of his mind for a moment, until he realized why the sound seemed wrong:
Trains should not race after a quake; they should creep along, the crew alert
for spread rails.
The sound was
recast in his mind. Water!
Out of the
nightmare depths of his subconscious, out of the fright of his childhood, he
placed it. This was the sound after the darn broke, when, as a kid, he had been
so nearly drowned. Water! A great wall of water, somewhere in the dust, hunting
for him, hunting for him!
His foot jammed
the accelerator down to the floorboards; the car bucked and promptly stalled.
He started it again and strove to keep himself calm. With no spare tire and a
bumpy road he could not afford the risk of too much speed. He held himself down
to a crawling thirty-five miles an hour, tried to estimate the distance and
direction of the water, and prayed.
The main highway
jumped at him in the dust and he was almost run down by a big car roaring past
to the north. A second followed it, then a vegetable truck, then the tractor
unit of a semi-trailer freighter.
It was all he
needed to know. He turned north.
He passed the
vegetable truck and a jalopy-load of Okiestyle workers, a family. They shouted
at him, but he kept going. Several cars more powerful than his passed him and
he passed in turn several of the heaps used by the itinerant farm workers.
After that he had the road to himself. Nothing came from the north.
The trainlike
rumble behind him increased.
He peered into
the rear-view mirror but could see nothing through the dusty haze.
There was a child
sitting beside the road and crying—a little girl about eight. He drove on past,
hardly aware of her, then braked to a stop. He told himself that she must have
folks around somewhere, that it was no business of his. Cursing himself, he
backed and turned, almost drove past her in the dust, then managed to turn
around without backing and pulled up beside her. “Get in!”
She turned a
dirty, wet, tragic face, but remained seated.
“I can’t. My foot
hurts.”
He jumped out,
scooped her up and dumped her in the righthand seat, noting as he did so that
her right foot was swollen. “How did you do it?” he demanded, as he threw in
the car.
“When the thing
happened. Is it broke?” She was not crying now. “Are you going to take me
home?”
“I—I’ll take care
of you. Don’t ask questions.”
“All right,” she
said doubtfully. The roar behind them was increasing. He wanted to speed up but
the haze and the need to nurse his unreliable spare tire held him back. He had
to swerve suddenly when a figure loomed up in the dust—a Nisei boy, hurrying
toward them.
The child beside
him leaned out. “That’s Tommy!”
“Huh? Never mind.
Just a goddam Jap.”
“That’s Tommy
Hayakawa. He’s in my class.” She added. “Maybe he’s looking for me.”
He cursed again,
under his breath, and threw the car into a turn that almost toppled it. Then he
was heading back, into that awful sound.
“There he is,”
the child shrieked. “Tommy! Oh, Tommy!”
“Get in,” he
commanded, when he had stopped the car by the boy.
“Get in, Tommy,”
his passenger added.
The boy
hesitated; the driver reached past the little girl, grabbed the boy by his
shirt and dragged him in. “Want to be drowned, you fool?”
He had just
shifted into second, and was still accelerating, when another figure sprang up
almost in front of the car—a man, waving his arms. He caught a glimpse of the
face as the car gained speed. It was the sneak thief.
His conscience
was easy about that one, he thought as he drove on. Good riddance! Let the
water get him.
Then the horror
out of his own childhood welled up in him and he saw the face of the tramp
again, in a horrible fantasy. He was struggling in the water, his bloodshot
eyes bulging with terror, his gasping mouth crying wordlessly for help.
The driver was
stopping the car. He did not dare turn; he backed the car, at the highest speed
he could manage. It was no great distance, or else the vagrant had run after
them.
The door was
jerked open and the tramp lurched in. “Thanks, pal,” he gasped. “Let’s get out
of here!”
“Right!” He
glanced into the mirror, then stuck his head out and looked behind. Through the
haze he saw it, a lead black wall, thirty—or was it a hundred?—feet high,
rushing down on them, overwhelming them. The noise of it pounded his skull.
He gunned the car
in second, then slid into high and gave it all he had, careless of the tires.
“How we doing?” he yelled.
The tramp looked
out the rear window. “We’re gaining. Keep it up”
He skidded around
a wreck on the highway, then slowed a trifle, aware that the breakneck flight
would surely lose them the questionable safety of the car if he kept it up. The
little girl started to cry.
“Shut up!” he
snapped.
The Nisei boy
twisted around and looked behind. “What is it?” he asked in an awed voice.
The tramp
answered him. “The Pacific Ocean has broken through.”
“It can’t be!”
cried the driver. “It must be the Colorado River.”
“That’s no river,
Mac. That’s the Gulf. I was in a cantina in Centro when it came over the radio
from Calexico. Warned us that the ground had dropped away to the south. Tidal
wave coming. Then the station went dead.” He moistened his lips. “That’s why
I’m here.”
The driver did
not answer. The vagrant went on nervously, “Guy I hitched with went on without
me, when he stopped for gas in Brawley.” He looked back again. “I can’t see it
any more.”
“We’ve gotten away
from it?”
“Hell, no. It’s
just as loud. I just can’t see it through the murk.”
They drove on.
The road curved a little to the right and dropped away almost imperceptibly.
The bum looked
ahead. Suddenly he yelled. “Hey! Where you going?”
“Huh?’
“You got to get
off the highway, man! We’re dropping back toward the Salton Sea—the lowest
place in the Valley.”
“There’s no other
place to go. We can’t turn around.”
“You can’t go
ahead. It’s suicide!”
“We’ll outrun it.
North of the Salton, it’s high ground again.”
“Not a chance.
Look at your gas gauge.”
The gauge was
fluttering around the left side of the dial. Two gallons, maybe less. Enough to
strand them by the sunken shores of the Salton Sea. He Stared at it in an agony
of indecision.
“Gotta cut off to
the left,” his passenger was saying. “Side road. Follow it up toward the
hills.”
“Where?”
“Coming up. I
know this road. I’ll watch for it.”
When he turned
into the side road, he realized sickly that his course was now nearly parallel
to the hungry flood south of them. But the road climbed.
He looked to the
left and tried to see the black wall of water, the noise of which beat loud in
his ears, but the road demanded his attention. “Can you see it?” he yelled to
the tramp.
“Yes! Keep
trying, pal!”
He nodded and
concentrated on the hills ahead. The hills must surely be above sea level, he
told himself. On and on he drove, through a timeless waste of dust and heat and
roar. The grade increased, then suddenly the car broke over a rise and headed
down into a wash—a shallow arroyo that should have been dry, but was not.
He was into water
before he knew it, hub high and higher. He braked and tried to back. The engine
coughed and stalled.
The tramp jerked
open the door, dragged the two children out, and, with one under each arm,
splashed his way back to higher ground. The driver tried to start the car, then
saw frantically that the rising water was up above the floorboards.
He jumped out,
stumbled to his knees in water waist-deep, got to his feet, and struggled after
them.
The tramp had set
the children down on a little rise and was looking around. “We got to get out
of here,” the car owner gasped.
The tramp shook
his head. “No good. Look around you.”
To the south, the
wall of water had broken around the rise on which they stood. A branch had
sluiced between them and the hills, filling the wash in which the car lay
stalled. The main body of the rushing waters had passed east of them, covering
the highway they had left, and sweeping on toward the Salton Sea.
Even as he
watched, the secondary flood down the wash returned to the parent body. They
were cut off, surrounded by the waters.
He wanted to
scream, to throw himself into the opaque turbulence and get it over. Perhaps he
did scream. He realized that the tramp was shaking him by the shoulder.
“Take it easy,
pal. We’ve got a couple of throws left.”
“Huh?” He wiped
his eyes. “‘What do we do?”
“I want my
mother,” the little girl said decisively.
The tramp reached
down and patted her absent-mindedly. Tommy Hayakawa put his arm around her.
“I’ll take care of you, Laura,” he said gravely.
The water was
already over the top of the car and rising. The boiling head of the flood was
well past them; its thunder was lessening; the waters rose quietly—but they
rose.
“We can’t stay
here,” he persisted.
‘We’ll have to,”
the tramp answered....
Their living
space grew smaller, hardly thirty feet by fifty. They were not alone now. A
coyote, jack rabbits, creepers, crawlers, and gnawers, all the poor relations
of the desert, were forced equally back into the narrowing circle of dry land.
The coyote ignored the rabbits; they ignored the coyote. The highest point of
their island was surmounted by a rough concrete post about four feet high, an
obelisk with a brass plate set in its side. He read it twice before the meaning
of the words came to him.
It was a bench
mark, stating, as well as latitude and longitude, that this spot, this line
engraved in brass, was “sea level.” When it soaked into his confused brain he
pointed it out to his companion. “Hey! Hey, look! We’re going to make it! The
water won’t come any higher!”
The tramp looked.
“Yes, I know. I read it. But it doesn’t mean anything. That’s the level it used
to be before the earthquake.”
“But—”
“It may be higher—or
lower. We’ll find out.”
The waters still
came up. They were ankle-deep at sundown. The rabbits and the other small
things were gradually giving up. They were in an unbroken waste of water,
stretching from the Chocolate Mountains beyond where the Salton Sea had been,
to the nearer hills on the west. The coyote slunk up against their knees, dog
fashion, then appeared to make up its mind, for it slipped into the water and
struck out toward the hills. They could see its out-thrust head for a long time,
until it was just a dot on the water in the gathering darkness.
When the water
was knee-deep, each man took one of the children in his arms. They braced
themselves against the stability of the concrete post, and waited, too tired
for panic. They did not talk. Even the children had not talked much since
abandoning the car.
It was getting
dark. The tramp spoke up suddenly. “Can you pray?”
“Uh—not very
well.”
“Okay. I’ll try,
then.” He took a deep breath. “Merciful Father, Whose all-seeing eye notes even
the sparrow in its flight, have mercy on these Thy unworthy servants. Deliver
them from this peril, if it be Thy will.” He paused, and then added, “And make
it as fast as You can, please. Amen.”
The darkness
closed in, complete and starless. They could not see the water, but they could
feel it and hear it. It was warm—it felt no worse when it soaked their armpits
than it had around their ankles. They had the kids on their shoulders now, with
their backs braced against the submerged post. There was little current.
Once something
bumped against them in the darkness—a dead steer, driftwood, a corpse—they had
no way of knowing. It nudged them and was gone. Once he thought he saw a light,
and said suddenly to the tramp, “Have you still got that flashlight you swiped
from me?”
There was a long
silence and a strained voice answered, “You recognized me.”
“Of course.
Where’s the flashlight?”
“I traded it for
a drink in Centro.
“But, look, Mac,”
the voice went on reasonably, “if I hadn’t borrowed it, it would be in your
car. It wouldn’t be here. And if I did have it in my pocket, it’d be
soaked and wouldn’t work.”
“Oh, forget it!”
“Okay.” There was
silence for a while, then the voice went on, “Pal, could you hold both the kids
a while?”
“I guess so.
Why?”
“This water is
still coming up.. It’ll be over our heads, maybe. You hang onta the kids; I’ll
boost myself up on the post. I’ll sit on it and wrap my legs around it. Then
you hand me the kids. That way we gain maybe eighteen inches or two feet.”
“And what happens
to me?”
“You hang onto my
shoulders and float with your head out of the water.”
“Well—we’ll try
it.”
It worked. The
kids clung to the tramp’s sides, supported by water and by his arms. The driver
hung onto~-the tramp where he could,’ first to his belt, then, as the waters
rose and his toes no longer touched bottom, to the collar of his coat.
They were still
alive.
“I wish it would
get light. It’s worse in the darkness.”
“Yeah,” said the
tramp. “If it was light, maybe somebody ‘ud see us.”
“How?”
“Airplane, maybe.
They always send out airplanes, in floods.”
He suddenly began
to shake violently, as the horror came over him, and the memory of another
flood when there had been no rescuing airplanes.
The tramp said
sharply, “What’s the matter, Mac? Are you cracking up?”
“No, I’m all
right. I just hate water.”
“Want to swap
around? You hold the kids for a while and I’ll hang on and float.”
“Uh. . . No, we
might drop one. Stay where you are.”
“We can make it.
The change’ll do you good.” The tramp shook the children. “Hey, wake up! Wake
up, honey—and hold tight.”
The kids were
transferred to his shoulders while he gripped the post with his knees and the
tramp steadied him with an arm. Then he eased himself cautiously onto the top
of the post, as the tramp got off and floated free, save for one anchoring
hand. “You all right?” he said to the tramp.
The hand squeezed
his shoulder in the darkness. “Sure, Got a snootful of water.”
“Hang on.”
“Don’t worry—I
will!”
He was shorter
than the tramp; he had to sit erect to keep his head out of water. The children
clung tightly. He kept them boosted high.
Presently the
tramp spoke. “You wearing a belt?”
“Yes. Why?”
“Hold still.” He
felt a second hand fumbling at his waist, then his trousers loosened as the
belt came away. “I’m going to strap your legs to the post. That’s the bad part
about it; your legs cramp. Hold tight now. I’m going under.”
He felt hands
under water, fumbling at his legs. Then there was the tension of the belt being
tightened around his knees. He relaxed to the pressure. It was a help; he found
he could hold his position without muscular effort.
The tramp broke
water near him. “Where are you?” the voice was panicky.
“Here! Over
here!” he tried to peer into the inky darkness; it was hopeless. “Over this
way!” The splashing seemed to come closer. He shouted again, but no hand
reached out of the darkness. He continued to shout, then shouted and listened
intermittently. It seemed to him that he heard splashing long after the sound
had actually ceased.
He stopped
shouting only when his voice gave out. Little Laura was sobbing on his
shoulder. Tommy was trying to get her to stop. He could tell from their words
that they had not understood what had happened and he did not try to explain.
When the water
dropped down to his waist, he moved the kids so that they sat on his lap. This
let him rest his arms, which had grown almost unbearably tired as the receding
water ceased to support the weight of the children. The water dropped still
more, and the half dawn showed him that the ground beneath him was, if not dry,
at least free from flood.
He shook Tommy
awake. “I can’t get down, kid. Can you unstrap me?”
The boy blinked
and rubbed his eyes. He looked around and seemed to recall his circumstances
without dismay. “Sure. Put me down.”
The boy loosened
the buckle after some difficulty and the man cautiously unwound himself from
his perch. His legs refused him when he tried to stand; they let him and the
girl sprawl in the mud.
“Are you hurt?”
he asked her as he sat up..
“No,” she
answered soberly.
He looked around.
It was getting steadily lighter and he could see the hills to the west; it now
appeared that the water no longer extended between the hills and themselves. To
the east was another story; the Salton Sea no longer existed as such. An
unbroken sheet of water stretched from miles to the north clear to the southern
horizon.
His car was in
sight; the wash was free of water except for casual pools. He walked down,
toward the automobile, partly to take the knots out of his legs, pertly to see
if the car could ever be salvaged. It was there that he found the tramp.
The body lay
wedged against the right rear wheel, as if carried down there by undertow.
He walked back
toward the kids. “Stay away from the car,” he ordered. “Wait here. I’ve got
something to do.” He went back to the car and found the keys still in the
ignition lock. He opened the trunk with some difficulty and got out a short
spade he kept for desert mishaps.
It was not much
of a grave, just a shallow trench in the wet sand, deep enough to receive and
cover a man, but he promised himself that he would come back and do better. He
had no time now. The waters, he thought, would be back with high tide. He must
get himself and the children to the hills.
Once the body was
out of sight, he called out to the boy and the girl, “You can come here now.”
He had one more chore. There was drift about, yucca stalks, bits of wood. He
selected two pieces of unequal length, then dug around in his tool chest for
bits of wire. He wired the short piece across the longer, in a rough cross,
then planted the cross in the sand near the head of the grave.
He stepped back
and looked at it, the kids at his side.
His lips moved
silently for a moment, then he said, “Come on, kids. We got to get out of
here.” He picked up the little girl, took the boy by the hand, and they walked
away to the west, the sun shining on their backs.