[Null-A 02] – The Players of Null-A
By A. E. Van Vogt
Scanned by
BW-SciFi
Copyright ©
1948 by Street & Smith Publications, Inc.
All rights
reserved
Published
by arrangement with the author's agent
BERKLEY
MEDALLION EDITION, MARCH, 1966
BERKLEY
MEDALLION BOOKS are published by Berkley Publishing Corporation
Printed in
the United States of America
I
NULL-ABSTRACTS
A normal human nervous system is potentially superior to that
of any animal's. For the sake of sanity and balanced development, each
individual must learn to orientate himself to the real world around him. There
are methods of training by which this can be done.
Shadows. A movement on the hill where the Games Machine had
once stood, where all was now desolation. Two figures, one curiously shapeless,
walked by slowly among the trees. As they came out of the darkness, and into
the light of a street lamp that stood like a lonely sentinel on this height
from which they could overlook the city—one of the figures resolved into a
normal two-legged man.
The other was a shadow, made of shadow stuff, made of
blackness through which the street lamp was visible.
A man, and a shadow that moved like a man, but was not. A
shadow man, who stopped as he reached the protective fence that ran along the
lip of the hill. Who stopped and motioned with a shadow arm at the city below,
and spoke suddenly in a voice that was not shadowy but very human.
'Repeat your instructions, Janasen.'
If the other man was awed by his strange companion, he did
not show it. He yawned slightly.
'Kind of sleepy,' he said.
'Your instructions!'
The man gestured in irritation. 'Look, Mister Follower,' he
said in an annoyed voice, 'don't talk like that to me. That get-up of yours
doesn't scare me in the slightest. You know me. I'll do the job.'
'Your insolence,' said the Follower, 'will try my patience
once too often. You know that there are time energies involved in my own
movements. Your delays are calculated to offend, and I will say this: If I am
ever forced into an unpleasant position because of that tendency on your part,
I'll end our relationship.'
There was such a savage note in the Follower's voice that
the man said no more. He found himself wondering why he taunted this
immeasurably dangerous individual, and the only answer he could think of was
that it burdened his spirit oppressively to realize that he was the paid agent
of a being who was his master in every respect.
'Now, quick,' said the Follower, 'repeat your instructions.'
Reluctantly, the man began. The words were meaningless to
the breeze that blew from behind them; they drifted on the night air like
phantasms out of a dream, or shadows that dissipated in sunlight. There was
something about taking advantage of the street fighting that would now shortly
end. There would be a position open in the Institute of Emigration. The false
papers I have will give me the job during the necessary time.' And the purpose
of the scheming was to prevent a Gilbert Gosseyn from going to Venus until it
was too late. The man had no idea who Gosseyn was, what it was Gosseyn was to
be late for—but the means were clear enough. 'I'll use every authority of the
Institute, and on Thursday, fourteen days from now, when the President Hardie
leaves for Venus, I'll arrange for an accident to take place at a certain time—
and you'll see to it that he's there for it to happen to him.'
'I don't see to anything of the kind,' said the Follower in
a remote voice. 'I merely foresee that he will be there at the proper instant.
Now, what is the moment of the accident?'
'9:28 a.m., zone 10 time.'
There was a pause. The Follower seemed to be in meditation.
'I must warn you,' he said at last, 'that Gosseyn is an unusual individual.
Whether this will affect events or not, I do not know. There seems no reason
why it should, but still there is the possibility. Take heed.'
The man shrugged. 'I can only do my best. I'm not worried.'
'You will be removed in due course in the usual fashion. You
can wait here or on Venus.'
'Venus,' said the man.
'Very well.'
There was silence. The Follower moved slightly, as if to
free himself from the restraint of the other's presence. The shadow shape of
him seemed suddenly less substantial. The street lamp shone sharply through the
black substance that was his body, but even as the misty thing grew duller,
vaguer, less clearly marked, it held together, held its form. It vanished as a
whole, and was gone as if it had never been.
Janasen waited. He was a practical man, and he was curious.
He had seen illusions before, and he was partially convinced that this was one.
After three minutes, the ground glowed. Janasen retreated warily.
The fire raged furiously, but not so violently that he did
not see the inner works of a machine with intricate parts as the white, hissing
flames melted the structure into a shapeless mass. He did not wait for the
end, but started to walk along the pathway that led down to a robocar station.
Ten minutes later he was deep in the city.
The transformation of time energy proceeded at its indeterminable
pace to the hour of 8:43 a.m. on the first Thursday of March, 2561 A.D. The
accident to Gilbert Gosseyn was scheduled for 9:28.
8:43 a.m. At the spaceport on the mountain above the city,
the Venus-bound President Hardie floated into take-off position. It was due to
leave at one o'clock in the afternoon.
Two weeks had passed since the Follower and his henchman
looked down at the city from a world bathed in night. It was two weeks and a
day since a bolt of electricity had spouted from an energy cup in the Institute
of General Semantics, and bloodily sheared off the head of Thorson. As a
result within three days the fighting in the city proper had ended.
Everywhere robotools whirred, buzzed, hissed and worked
under the direction of their electronic brains. In eleven days a gigantic city
came back to life, not without sweat, not without men having to bend their
backs beside the machines. But the results were already colossal. Food supply
was back to normal. Most of the scars of battle were gone. And, of overwhelming
importance, the fear of the unknown forces that had struck at the solar system
from the stars was fading more with each bit of news from Venus, and with each
passing day.
8:30 a.m. On Venus, in the pit that had once been the secret
galactic base of the Greatest Empire in the solar system, Patricia Hardie sat
in her tree apartment studying an abridged stellar guidebook. She was dressed
in a three-day casual which she would wear today only before destroying it. She
was a slender young woman whose good looks were overshadowed by another more
curious quality—an air of authority. The man who opened the door and came in
at that moment paused to gaze at her, but if she had heard his entrance, she
gave no sign.
Eldred Crang waited, faintly amused, but not offended. He
respected and admired Patricia Hardie, but she was not yet fully trained in the
Null-A philosophy, and therefore she still had set techniques of reaction, of
which she was probably unaware. As he watched she must have gone through the
unconscious process of accepting the intrusion, for she turned and looked at
him.
'Well?' she asked.
The lean man walked forward. 'No go,' he said.
'How many messages is that?'
'Seventeen.' He shook his head. 'I'm afraid we've been slow.
We took it for granted Gosseyn would find his way back here. Now our only hope
is that he'll be on the ship that leaves Earth today for Venus.'
There was silence for a while. The woman made some marks
with a needle-sharp instrument in the guidebook. Each time she touched the
page, the material glowed with a faint bluish light. She shrugged finally.
'It can't be helped. Who'd have thought Enro would discover
so quickly what you were doing? Fortunately, you were prompt, and so his
soldiers in this area are scattered to dozens of bases, and are already being
used for other purposes.'
She smiled admiringly. 'You were very clever, my dear,
releasing those soldiers to the tender mercies of base commanders. They're all
so eager to have more men in their sectors that when some responsible officer
gives them a few million they actually try to hide them. Years ago, Enro had to
evolve an elaborate system for locating armies lost in just that fashion.'
She broke off. 'Did you find out how much longer we can stay
here?'
'Bad news on that point," said Crang. They have orders
on Gela 30 to cut Venus off the individual "matrix" circuit the
moment you and I get to Gela. They're leaving the way open for ships to come
this way, which is something, but I was told that the individual
"Distorters" will be cut off in twenty-four hours, whether we get to
Gela or not.'
He stood frowning. 'If only Gosseyn would hurry. I think I
could hold them an extra day or so without revealing your identity. I think we
should take the risk involved. As I see it, Gosseyn's more important than we
are.'
‘There's a tone in your voice,' Patricia Hardie said
sharply. 'Something has happened. Is it war?'
Crang hesitated then: 'When I was sending the message just
now, I tuned in on a confusion of calls from somewhere near the center of the
galaxy. Some nine hundred thousand warships are attacking the central League
powers in the Sixth Decant.'
The young woman was silent for a long time. When she finally
spoke, there were tears in her eyes. 'So Enro has taken the plunge.' She shook
her head angrily and wiped her tears. That settles it. I'm through with him.
You can do anything you please to him if you ever get the chance.'
Crang felt unmoved. 'It was inevitable. The quickness of it
annoys me. We've been caught off base. Just imagine, waiting till yesterday to
send Dr. Kair to Earth to look for Gosseyn.'
'When will he get there?' She waved her hand. 'Never mind.
You've told me that before, haven't you? Day after tomorrow. Eldred, we can't
wait.'
She stood up, and came over to him. Her eyes were narrowed
with speculation as she studied his face. 'You're not going to make us take any
desperate chances, I hope.'
'If we don't wait,' said Crang, 'Gosseyn'll be cut off here
nine hundred seventy-one light-years from the nearest interstellar transport.'
Patricia said quickly, 'At any moment Enro might have an
atomic bomb "similarized" into the pit.'
'I don't think he'll destroy the base. It took too long to
build up, and, besides, I have an idea he knows you're here.'
She looked at him sharply, 'Where would he obtain such
information?'
Crang smiled. 'From me,' he said. 'After all, I had to tell
Thorson who you were to save your life. I also told an intelligence agent of
Enro.'
'Still,' said Patricia, 'all this is based on wishful
thinking. If we get out safely, we can come back for Gosseyn.'
Crang stared at her thoughtfully. There's more to this than
meets the eye. You forget that Gosseyn always assumed that beyond him, or
behind him, was a being he called, for want of a better name, a cosmic chess
player. That's, of course, a wild comparison, but if it had any application
whatsoever, then we've got to assume a second player. Chess is not a game of
solitaire. Another thing: Gosseyn regarded himself as approximately a
seventh-row pawn. Well, I think he became a queen when he killed Thorson. I
tell you, Reesha, it's dangerous, to leave a queen in a position where it
can't move. He should be out in the open, out among the stars, where he'll have
the greatest possible mobility. In my opinion, so long as the players are
hidden and able to make their moves without being caught or observed, just so
long is Gosseyn in deadly danger. I think a delay of even a few months might
be fatal.'
Patricia was briefly silent, then: 'Just where are we
going?'
'Well, we'll have to use the regular transmitters. But I
plan on us stopping somewhere to get news. If it's what I think it will be,
there's only one place for us to go.'
'Oh!' the woman said in a flat tone. 'Just how long do you
intend to wait?'
Crang gazed at her somberly, and drew a deep breath. 'If
Gosseyn's name,' he said, 'is on the passenger list of the President
Hardie—and I'll get that list a few minutes after it takes off from Earth—we'll
wait here till it arrives—three days and two nights from now.'
'And if his name is not on the list?'
'Then we leave here as soon as we've made sure of that.'
The name of Gilbert Gosseyn, as it turned out, was not on
the passenger list of the President Hardie.
8:43 a.m. Gosseyn wakened with a start, and almost simultaneously
became aware of three things: what the time was, that the sun was shining
through the hotel room window, and that the videophone beside the bed was
buzzing softly but insistently.
As he sat up, he came further out of sleep, and abruptly
remembered that this was the day the President Hardie was scheduled to leave
for Venus. The thought galvanized him. The fighting had reduced travel between
the two planets to a once-a-week basis, and he still had the problem of obtaining
permission to get aboard today. He bent down and clicked on the receiver but,
because he was still in his pajamas, left the video plate blank.
'Gosseyn speaking,' he said.
'Mr. Gosseyn,' said a man's voice, this is the Institute of
Emigration.'
Gosseyn stiffened. He'd known this was going to be the day
of decision, and there was a tone to the voice on the phone that he didn't
like.
'Who's talking?' he asked sharply.
'Janasen.'
'Oh!' Gosseyn scowled. This was the man who had put so many
obstacles in his way, who had insisted upon his producing a birth certificate
and other documents and had refused to recognize a favorable lie detector
test. Janasen was a minor official, a rank which was surprising in view of his
almost pathological refusal to do anything on his own initiative. He was no
person to talk to on the day that a ship was due to leave for Venus.
Gosseyn reached down and clicked on the video plate. He
waited till the image of the other's sharp face was clear, then: 'Look,
Janasen, I want to talk to Yorke.'
'I have received my instructions from Mr. Yorke.' Janasen
was imperturbable. His face looked strangely sleek in spite of its thinness.
'Put me through to Yorke,' said Gosseyn.
Janasen ignored the interruption. 'It has been decided,' he
said, 'that in view of the troubled situation on Venus. . . .'
'Get off the line!' Gosseyn said in a dangerous voice. 'I'll
talk to Yorke, and to no one else.'
'. . . that in view of the unsettled situation on Venus,
your application for entrance is refused,' said Janasen.
Gosseyn was furious. For fourteen days he had been held off
by this individual, and now, on the morning of the departure of the ship, here
was the decision.
'This refusal,' said the unfazable Janasen, 'will in no way
debar you from making your application again when the situation on Venus has
been clarified by directives from the Venusian Council for Immigration.'
Gosseyn said: Tell Yorke I'll be along to see him right
after breakfast.'
His fingers flipped the switch, and broke the connection.
Gosseyn dressed swiftly, and then paused for a final survey
of himself in the full length mirror of the hotel room. He was a tall,
stern-faced young man of thirty-five or so. His vision was too sharp for him
not to notice the unusual qualities of that image. At a casual glance, he
looked quite normal, but to his own eyes his head was clearly too large for his
body. Only the massiveness of his shoulder, arm and chest muscles made his head
even tolerable in proportion. As it was he could think of it falling within the
category of 'leonine'. He put on his hat, and now he looked like a big man with
a strongly muscled face, which was satisfactory. As much as possible he wished
to remain inconspicuous. The extra brain, which made his head nearly a sixth
larger than that of an ordinary human being, had its limitations. In the two
weeks that had passed since the death of the mighty Thorson, he'd been free for
the first time to test its terrific powers—and the results had sharply
modified his earlier feeling of invincibility.
A few minutes over twenty-six hours was the maximum time
during which his 'memorized' version of a section of floor was valid. No change
might be visible in the floor, but somehow it altered, and he could no longer
retreat to it in the instantaneous 'similarity' fashion.
That meant he must, literally, rebuild his defenses every
morning and evening in overlapping series, so that he'd never be caught without
a few key points to which he could escape in an emergency. There were several
puzzling aspects to the time limits involved. But that was something to
investigate when he got to Venus.
As he stepped into the elevator a moment later, he glanced
at his watch. 9:27.
One minute later, at 9:28, the time for which the accident
was scheduled, the elevator crashed to destruction at the bottom of its shaft.
II
NULL-ABSTRACTS
General Semantics enables the individual to make the
following adjustments to life: (1) He can logically anticipate the future. (2)
He can achieve according to his capabilities. (3) His behaviour is suited to
his environment.
Gosseyn arrived at the mountain take-off point a few minutes
before eleven o'clock. The air at this height was briskly cool, and the effect
was of exhilaration. He stood for a while near the high fence beyond which the
spaceship lay on its cradle. The first step, he thought, was to get through the
fence.
That was basically easy. The area swarmed with people, and
one more, once he got inside, would scarcely be noticed. The problem was to get
in without anyone observing him materialize.
He felt no regrets, now that he had made up his mind. The
slight delay caused by the accident—he'd escaped from the elevator by the
simple process of similarizing himself back into his hotel room—had brought a
keen awareness of how little time remained to him. He had a picture of himself
trying to obtain a certificate of admission from the Institute of Emigration
at this final day. The visualization was all he needed. The time for legality
was past.
He selected a spot on the other side of the fence behind
some packing cases, memorized it, stepped behind a truck— and a moment later
walked out from behind the packing cases and headed towards the ship. Nobody
tried to stop him. Nobody gave him more than a passing glance. The fact that he
was inside the fence was credential enough, apparently.
He walked aboard and spent his first ten minutes memorizing
a dozen floor areas with his extra-brain—and that was that. During the
take-off, he lay comfortably on the bed of one of the finest suites on the
ship. About an hour later, a key rattled in the lock. Swiftly, Gosseyn attuned
to a memorized area, and swiftly he was transported to it.
He'd chosen his materialization positions skillfully. The
three men who saw him step out from behind a heavy girder obviously took it for
granted that he had been there for several minutes, for they scarcely glanced
at him. He walked easily to the rear of the ship and stood before the great
plexiglass port gazing down at Earth.
The planet was vast below him. It was an immense world that
still showed color. As he watched, it slowly turned a grayish dark, and looked
rounder every minute. It began to contract sharply, and for the first time he
saw it as a great misty ball floating in black space.
Somehow it looked unreal.
He stayed that first night in one of the many unoccupied
cabins. Sleep came slowly, for his thoughts were restless. Two weeks had passed
since the death of the mighty Thorson, and be hadn't heard a word from Eldred
Crang or Patricia Hardie. All his attempts to contact them through the
Institute of Emigration had met with the unvarying reply, 'Our Venusian office
reports your message undeliverable.' He'd thought once or twice that Janasen,
the Institute official, took a personal satisfaction in giving him the bad
news, but that seemed hardly possible.
There was no question, so it seemed to Gosseyn, that Crang
had seized control of the galactic army on the very day Thorson died. The
paper’s been full of the news of the withdrawal of the invaders from the cities
of non-Aristotelian Venus. There was confusion as to the reason for the mass
retreat, and the editors did not seem to be clear as to what was happening.
Only to him who knew what had preceded the enormous defeat was the situation
understandable. Crang was in control. Crang was shipping the galactic soldiers
out of the solar system as fast as his two-mile-long similarity powered ships
could carry them—before Enro the Red, military overlord of the Greatest
Empire, discovered that his invasion was being sabotaged.
But that didn't explain why Crang had not delegated someone
to get in touch with Gilbert Gosseyn who, by killing Thorson, had made all this
possible.
Gosseyn slept uneasily on that thought. For though the
desperate danger of the invasion was temporarily averted, his own personal
problem was unsolved—Gilbert Gosseyn, who possessed a trained extra brain, who
had died, yet lived again in a highly similar body. His own purpose must be to
find out about himself and his strange and tremendous method of immortality.
Whatever the game that was being played around him, he seemed to be one of the
important and powerful figures in it. He must have been tensed by the long
strain he'd been under and by the hideous fight with Torson's armored guard, or
he would have realized sooner that, like it or not, for better or for worse, he
was above the law. He should never have wasted his time with the Institute of
Emigration.
Nobody questioned him. When officers came towards him, he
stepped out of sight, and vanished to one of his memorized areas. Three days
and two nights after the start, the ship eased down through the misty skies of
Venus. He had glimpses of colossal trees, and then a city grew onto the
horizon. Gosseyn came down the gangplank with the rest of the four hundred
passengers. From his place in the fast moving line he watched the process of
landing. Each person stepped up to a lie detector, spoke into it, was
confirmed, and passed through a turnstile into the main part of Immigration
Hall.
The picture clear in his mind, Gosseyn memorized a spot
behind a pillar beyond the turnstile. Then, as if he had forgotten something,
he returned aboard the ship and hid until dark. When the shadows lay deep and
long in the land below, he materialized behind the pillar of the immigration
building, and walked calmly toward the nearest door. A moment later he stepped
down onto a paved sidewalk, and looked along a street that shone with a million
lights.
He had an acute sense of being at the beginning and not the
end of his adventure—Gilbert Gosseyn, who knew just enough about himself to be
dissatisfied.
The pit was guarded by a division of Venusian Null-As, but
there was no interference with the thin but steady stream of visitors. Gosseyn
wandered disconsolately along the brightly lighted corridors of the underground
city. The vastness of what had once been the secret base in the solar system of
the Greatest Empire overshadowed his body. Silent distorter-type elevators
carried him to the higher levels, through rooms that glittered with machines,
some of which were still operating. At intervals he paused to watch Venusian
engineers singly and in groups examining instruments and mechanical devices.
A communicator snatched Gosseyn's attention, and a sudden
wonder made him stop and switch it on. There was a pause, then the voice of the
roboperator said in a matter-of-fact tone, 'What star are you calling?'
Gosseyn drew a deep breath. 'I'd like,' he said, 'to speak
to either Eldred Crang or Patricia Hardie.'
He waited, with rising excitement. The idea had come like a
flash, and he could hardly imagine its being successful. But even if no contact
was established, that in itself would be information of a sort.
After several seconds, the robot said, 'Eldred Crang left
the following message: "To anyone who may attempt to locate me, I regret
that no communication is possible".' That was all. There was no
explanation. 'Any other call, sir?'
Gosseyn hesitated. He was disappointed, but still the situation
was not entirely adverse. Crang had left the solar system connected with the
vast interstellar videophone organization. It was a tremendous opportunity for
the Venusians, and it gave Gosseyn a personal thrill to imagine what they could
do with it. Another question formed in his mind. The answer of the roboperator
was prompt:
'It would take a ship about four hours to come here from
Gela 30, which is the nearest base.'
It was a point Gosseyn was very much interested in. 'I
thought Distorter transport was virtually instantaneous.'
'There is a margin of error in the transport of matter,
although the traveler has no physical awareness of it. To him it appears to be
an instantaneous process.'
Gosseyn nodded. He could understand that to some extent.
Twenty decimal similarity was not perfect. He continued, 'Suppose I made a call
to Gela. Would it take eight hours to get a message back?'
'Oh, no. The margin of error on the electronic level is
infinitesimally small. The error to Gela would be about one-fifth of a second.
Only matter is slow.'
'I see,' said Gosseyn. 'You can talk right across the galaxy
with scarcely any delay.'
'That is right.'
'But suppose I wanted to talk to someone who didn't speak my
language?'
'There is no problem. A robot translates sentence by sentence
in as colloquial a manner as possible.'
Gosseyn wasn't sure about there being no problem in such a
verbal transference. Part of the Null-A approach to reality had to do with the
importance of word-word relationships. Words were subtle, and frequently had
little connection with the facts they were supposed to represent. He could
imagine innumerable mix-ups between galactic citizens who did not speak each
other's languages. Since the galactic empires did not teach Null-A, or practice
it, they were apparently unaware of the dangers of misunderstanding implicit in
the process of intercommunication through robots.
The important thing was to be aware of the problem from
moment to moment. Gosseyn said, 'That's all, thank you!' and broke the
connection.
He arrived presently in the tree apartment which he had
shared with Patricia Hardie while they were both prisoners of Thorson. He
looked for a message that might have been left for him, a more complete and
personal account than could be entrusted to the videophone exchange. He found several
transcribed conversations between Patricia and Crang —and had what he wanted.
The references to Patricia's identity did not surprise him.
He had always hesitated to accept her statements about her personal life, even
though she had proved trustworthy in the fight against Thorson. The information
that the great war in space had started shocked him. He shook his head to the
suggestion that they would return for him in a 'few months'. Too long by far.
But the gathering awareness that he was cut off in an isolated sun system made
him sharply attentive to the rather complete account of the effort Crang had
made to get in touch with him on Earth.
Janasen was responsible, of course. Gosseyn sighed with
understanding. But what was the matter with the man, that he had taken it upon
himself to frustrate one individual whom he did not know? Personal dislike?
Could be. Stranger things had happened. But, on reflection, it seemed to
Gosseyn that that was not the explanation.
More thoughtfully, he played over what Crang had said about
possible hidden players and his danger from them. It was oddly convincing, and
it directed his thought back to Janasen like a beacon.
The man was his starting point. Somebody had moved Janasen
onto the 'board', perhaps only for a fleeting moment of universe time, perhaps
only for a fleeting purpose, a mere pawn in this great game—but pawns, also,
were looked after. Pawns came from somewhere and, when they were human,
returned whence they came. There was probably no time to waste.
Yet, even as he accepted the logic of that, another purpose
grew in Gosseyn's mind. He considered a few of the possibilities, then sat
down at the apartment communicator, and made his call. When the roboperator
asked him what star he wanted, he said, 'Give me the highest official available
at the head offices of the Galactic League.'
'Who shall I say is calling?'
Gosseyn gave his name, and then settled down to wait. His
plan was simple. Neither Crang nor Patricia Hardie would have been able to
advise the League as to what had happened in the solar system. It was a chance
that neither could have taken without grave risks. But the League, or at least
a tiny division of it, had exerted its weak influence in an attempt to save
Venus from Enro, and Patricia Hardie had stated that its permanent officials
were interested in Null-A from an educational viewpoint. Gosseyn could see
many advantages in making the contact. The roboperator's voice interrupted his
thought:
'Madrisol, the secretary of the League, will speak to you.'
The words were scarcely uttered when a lean, intense face
image grew onto the videoplate. The man seemed about forty-five years old, and
many passions were written on his face. His blue eyes darted over Gosseyn's
face. At last, apparently satisfied, Madrisol's lips moved in speech. There was
a short delay, and then: 'Gilbert Gosseyn?'
The robot translator's tone had a query in it. If it was a
reasonably exact representation of the original, then it was a remarkable job.
Who, the tone suggested, was Gilbert Gosseyn?
That was one point that Gosseyn didn't discuss in any kind
of detail. He kept his account to events in the solar system 'in which I have
reason to believe the League has interested itself. Yet even as he was speaking
he had a sense of disappointment. He had expected a measure of Null-A
appearance in the permanent secretary general of the League, but this man's
face showed him to be a thalamic type individual. Emotions would rule him.
Most of his actions and decisions would be reactions based upon emotional
'sets', and not upon Null-A cortical-thalamic processes.
He was describing the possibilities of using Venusians in
the battle against Enro, when Madrisol interrupted both his train of thought
and his narrative.
'You're suggesting,' he said pointedly, 'that the League
States establish transport communication with the solar system, and permit
trained Null-As to direct the League side of the war.'
Gosseyn bit his lip. He took it for granted that Venusians
would achieve the highest positions in a short time, but thalamic individuals
mustn't be allowed to suspect that. Once the process started, they'd be
surprised at the swiftness with which men of Null-A, who had come originally
from Earth, would attain the highest positions which they felt it necessary to
achieve.
Now, he mustered a bleak, humorless smile, and said,
'Naturally, Null-A men would be of assistance in a technical capacity.'
Madrisol frowned. 'It would be difficult,' he said. The
solar system is hemmed in by star systems dominated by the Greatest Empire. If
we attempted to break through, it might seem as if we attached some special
importance to Venus, in which case Enro might destroy your planets. However, I
will take the matter up with the proper officials, and you may be sure that what
can be done will be. But now, if you please—'
It was dismissal. Gosseyn said quickly:
'Your excellency surely some subtle arrangement can be made.
Small ships could slip through, and take a few thousand of the most highly
trained men out where they could be of assistance.'
'Possibly, possibly'—Madrisol looked impatient, and the
mechanical translator made his voice sound the same way, —'but I'll take that
up with—'
'Here on Venus,' Gosseyn urged, 'we have an intact distorter
ship transmitter capable of handling spaceships ten thousand feet long. Perhaps
your people could make use of that. Perhaps you could give me some idea as to
how long such a transmitter remains similarized with transmitters on other
stars.'
'I shall refer all these matters,' said Madrisol, 'to the
proper experts, and decisions will be made. I presume there will be someone
available and authorized to discuss the problem at your end.'
'I'll have the roboperator see to it that you talk to the,
uh, properly constituted authorities here,' said Gosseyn, and suppressed a
smile. There were no 'authorities' on Venus, but this was no time to go into
the vast subject of Null-A voluntary democracy.
'Good-by and good luck.'
There was a click, and the intense face vanished from the
plate. Gosseyn instructed the roboperator to switch all future calls from space
to the Institute of Semantics in the nearest city, and broke the connection. He
was reasonably satisfied. He had set another process in motion and, though he
had no intention of waiting, at least he was doing what he could.
Next, Janasen—even if it meant going back to Earth.
III
NULL-ABSTRACTS
In order to be sane and adjusted as a human being, an
individual must realize that he cannot know all there is to know. It is not
enough to understand this limitation intellectually; the understanding must be
an orderly and conditioned process, 'unconscious' as well as 'conscious'. Such
a conditioning is essential to the balanced pursuit of knowledge of the nature
of matter and life,
The hour seemed late, and Janasen was not yet recovered from
the surprise of having been snatched from the offices of the Institute of
Emigration. He had not suspected the presence of a transport machine in his
own office. The Follower must have other agents in this planetary system. He
looked around him cautiously. He was in a dimly lighted park area. A waterfall
cascaded from some invisible height beyond a clump of trees. The plume of spray
glittered in the vague light.
The Follower stood partly silhouetted against the spray, but
his formless body seemed to merge with the greater darkness on every side. The
silence grew long, and Janasen fidgeted, but he knew better than to speak
first. At last the Follower stirred, and drifted several feet nearer.
'I had difficulty adjusting myself,' he said. 'These
intricate energy problems have always annoyed me, since I am not mechanically
minded.'
Janasen held his silence. He had not expected an explanation,
and he did not feel qualified to interpret the one he had received. He waited.
'We must take a chance,' said the Follower. 'I have followed
my present course because I wish to isolate Gosseyn from those who could help
him and, if necessary, destroy him. The plan that I have agreed to pursue in
support of Enro the Red cannot be interfered with by a person of unknown
potentialities.'
In the darkness, Janasen shrugged. For a moment, then, he
wondered at his own indifference. For a moment there was a bright thought in
his mind that there was something supernormal about a man like himself. The
thought passed. It didn't matter what chance he took, or what were the unknown
potentialities of his opponents. He didn't care. 'I'm a tool,' he told himself
with pride. 'I serve a shadow master.'
He laughed wildly. For he was intoxicated with his own ego,
and the things that he did and felt and thought. Janasen he had called himself
because it was as close as he could get to his real name. David Janasen.
The Follower spoke again. 'There are curious blurs,' he
said, 'in the future of this man Gosseyn, but pictures do come through . . .
though no Predictor can get them clearly. Yet I am sure that he will seek you
out. Do not try to prevent him. He will find that your name was on the list of
passengers of the President Hardie. He will wonder that he did not see you, but
at least it will indicate to him that you are now on Venus. At this moment we
are in a park in downtown New Chicago—'
'Huh!' Janasen glanced around in astonishment. But there
were only the trees and shadow-like shrubs, and the hiss of the waterfall. Here
and there in the darkness weak lights cast their pale glow, but there was no
sign of a city.
'These Venusian cities,' said the Follower, 'have no
parallel elsewhere in the galaxy. They are differently arranged, differently
planned. Everything is free: food, transport, shelter —everything.'
'Well, that makes things simple.'
'Not quite. The Venusians have become aware of the existence
of human beings on the planets of other stars. Having been invaded once they
are likely to take precautions. However, you'll have a week or so, during
which time Gosseyn should discover you.'
'And when he does?' Janasen was interested.
'Have him come to your apartment and give him this.'
The thing tumbled out of the darkness glittering, as it
fell, like a white flickering flame. It lay on the grass shining like a mirror
in sunlight.
'It won't seem so bright in daytime,' said the Follower.
'Remember, it must be given to him in your room. Now, any questions?'
Janasen reached down gingerly and picked up the glowing
object. It seemed to be a plastic card of some kind. It felt smooth and glassy.
There was printing on it, which was too small for him to read with the naked
eye.
'What is he supposed to do with this?'
'Read the message.'
Janasen frowned. 'And what will happen?'
'It is not necessary for you to know that. Just carry out my
instructions.'
Janasen pondered that, and then scowled. 'You said a little
while ago that we must take a chance. It looks to me as if I'm the only one who
is taking any chances.'
'My Friend,' said the Follower in a steely tone, 'I assure
you, you are wrong. But let us have no arguments. Any more questions?'
Actually, he told himself, he had never worried the slightest
bit. 'No,' said Janasen.
There was silence. Then the Follower began to fade. It was
impossible for Janasen to decide just when that fade-out was complete. But
presently he knew that he was alone.
Gosseyn looked down at the 'card', then up at Janasen. The
calmness of the man interested him because it provided an insight into the
other's character. Janasen was a solipsist who had struck a balance with his
neurosis by developing a compensatory attitude value, since again and again it
would depend on whether other stronger men would tolerate his insolence.
The setting of their face-to-face meeting was colorfully
Venusian. They sat in a room that opened onto a patio, with young flowering
shrubs just outside. It was a room with all conveniences including automatic
delivery of food, automatic table cooking devices, which dispensed with the
necessity of having a kitchen.
Gosseyn studied the hollow-cheeked man with hostile gaze.
The task of finding Janasen had not been too involved. A few interplanetary
messages—not obstructed this time, a quick canvassing of hotel roboregisters, and
here was the end of the trail.
It was Janasen who spoke first. 'The system on this planet
sort of interests me. I can't get used to the idea of free food.'
Gosseyn said curtly, 'You'd better start talking. What I do
to you depends entirely on how much you tell me.'
The clear, blue, unafraid eyes stared at him thoughtfully.
'I'll tell you everything I know,' Janasen said at last with a shrug, 'but not
because of your threats. I just don't bother keeping secrets either about
myself or anyone else.'
Gosseyn was prepared to believe that. This agent of the
Follower would be fortunate to survive another five years, but during that time
he would maintain his self-respect. He made no comment, however, and presently
Janasen began to talk. He described his relations with the Follower. He seemed
to be quite candid. He had been in the secret service of the Greatest Empire,
and somehow he must have come to the attention of the shadow-shape. He
proceeded to give a word for word account of his conversations with the Follower
about Gosseyn. In the end he broke off, and returned to his earlier statement.
'The galaxy,' he said, 'swarms with anarchistic ideas, but
I've never before heard of them working. I've been trying to figure out how
this non-artist ... to ... to—'
'Call it Null-A,' said Gosseyn.
'—this Null-A stuff operates, but it seems to depend on
people being sensible, and that I refuse to believe.'
Gosseyn said nothing more. For this was sanity itself that
was being discussed, and that could not be explained with words alone. If
Janasen was interested, let him go to the elementary schools. The other must
have realized his mood, for he shrugged again.
'Read the card yet?' he asked.
Gosseyn did not answer immediately. It was chemically active
but not harmfully so. He had the impression that it was an absorbing material.
Still, it was a strange thing, obviously some development of galactic science,
and he had no intention of being rash with it.
'This Follower,' he said finally, 'actually predicted that I
would go into that elevator about 9:28 a.m.'
It was hard to credit. Because the Follower was not of
Earth, not of the solar system. Somewhere out in the far reaches of the galaxy,
this being had turned his attention to Gilbert Gosseyn. And pictured him doing
a particular thing at a particular time. That was what Janasen's account
implied.
The intricacy of prophecy involved was staggering. It made
the 'card' valuable. From where he sat he could see that there was print on it,
but the words were unreadable. He leaned closer. Still the print was too small.
Janasen shoved a magnifying glass towards him. 'I had to get
this so I could read it myself,' he said.
Gosseyn hesitated, but presently he picked up the card and
examined it. He tried to think of it as a switch that might activate a larger
mechanism. But what?
He looked around the room. At the moment of entering he had
memorized the nearest electric sockets and traced live wires. Some ran to the
table at which he sat, and supplied power to the built-in compact electronic cooking
machine. Gosseyn looked up finally.
'You and I are going to stick together for a while, Mr.
Janasen,' he said. 'I have an idea that you're going to be removed from Venus
either by a ship or a Distorter transporter. I intend to go with you.'
Janasen's gaze was curious. 'Don't you think that might be
dangerous?'
'Yes,' said Gosseyn with a smile. 'Yes, it might be.'
There was silence.
Gosseyn attuned the card to one of his memorized areas, and
simultaneously, he made the action cue a simple fear-doubt. If the emotion of
fear and doubt should enter his mind, the card would instantly be similarized
out of the room.
The precaution was not altogether adequate, but it seemed to
him he had to take the chance.
He focused his glass on the card, and read:
Gosseyn:
A Distorter has a
fascinating quality. It is electrically powered, but shows no unusual
characteristics even when it is on. Such an instrument is built into the table
at which you are sitting. If you have read this far, you are now caught in the
most intricate trap ever devised for one individual.
If the emotion of fear came, he did not recall it then or
afterwards.
For there was night.
IV
NULL-ABSTRACTS
A child's mind, lacking a developed cortex, is
virtually incapable of discrimination. The child inevitably makes many false
evaluations of the world. Many of these false-to-facts judgments are
conditioned into the nervous system on the 'unconscious' level, and can be
carried over to adulthood. Hence, we have a 'well educated' man or woman who
reacts in an infantile fashion.
The wheel glinted as it turned. Gosseyn watched it idly, as
he lay in the cart. His gaze lifted finally from the gleaming metal wheel, and
took in the near horizon, where a building spread itself. It was a wide
structure which curved up from the ground like a huge ball, only a small part
of which was exposed to view.
Gosseyn allowed the picture to seep into his consciousness,
and at first did not feel either puzzled or concerned. He found himself making
a comparison between the scene before him and the hotel room where he had been
talking to Janasen. And then he thought: I am Ashargin.
The idea was nonverbal, an automatic awareness of self, a
simple identification that squeezed up out of the organs and glands of his body
and was taken for granted by his nervous system. Not quite for granted. Gilbert
Gosseyn rejected the identification with amazement that yielded to a thrill of
alarm and then a sense of confusion.
A summer breeze blew into his face. There were other
buildings beside the great one, outbuildings scattered here and there inside a
pattern of trees. The trees seemed to form a kind of fence. Beyond them, a
backdrop of unsurpassed splendor, reared a majestic, snowcapped mountain.
'Ashargin!'
Gosseyn jumped as that baritone yell sounded no more than a
foot from his ear. He jerked around, but in the middle of the action caught a
glimpse of his fingers. That stopped him. He forgot the man, forgot even to
look at the man. Thunderstruck, he examined his hands. They were slender, delicate,
different from the stronger, firmer, larger hands of Gilbert Gosseyn. He looked
down at himself. His body was slim, boyish.
He felt the difference, suddenly, inside, a sense of weakness,
a dimmer life force, a mixupedness of other thoughts. No, not thoughts.
Feelings. Expressions out of organs that had once been under the control of a
different mind.
His own mind drew back in dismay, and once again on a
nonverbal level came up against a fantastic piece of information: 'I am
Ashargin.'
Not Gosseyn? His reason tottered, for he was remembering
what the Follower had written on the 'card'. You are now caught . . . in the
most intricate trap . . . ever devised. The feeling of disaster that came
was like nothing else that he had ever experienced
'Ashargin, you lazy good for nothing, get out and adjust the
harness on the drull.'
He was out of the cart like a flash. With eager fingers he
tightened the loosened cinch on the collar of the husky, ox like beast. All
this before he could think. The job done, he crawled back into the cart. The
driver, a priest in work garb, applied the whip. The cart jogged on, and turned
presently into the yard itself.
Gosseyn was fighting for understanding of the servile obedience
that had sent him scurrying like an automaton. It was hard to think. There was
so much confusion. But at last a measure of comprehension came.
Another mind had once controlled this body—the mind of
Ashargin. It had been an un-integrated, insecure mind, dominated by fears and
uncontrollable emotions that were imprinted on the nervous system and muscles
of the body. The deadly part of that domination was that the living flesh of
Ashargin would react to all that internal imbalance on the unconscious level.
Even Gilbert Gosseyn, knowing what was wrong, would have scarcely any influence
over those violent physical compulsions—until he could train the body of
Ashargin to the cortical-thalamic sanity of Null-A.
Until he could train it ... 'Is that it?' Gilbert Gosseyn
asked himself. 'Is that why I am here? To train this body?'
Faster than his own questions, the flood of organic thought
squeezed up into his brain—memories of that other mind. Ashargin. The Ashargin
heir. The immense meaning of that came slowly, came dimly, came sketchily
because there was so much that had happened. When he was fourteen, Enro's
forces had come to the school he was attending. On that tense day he had
expected death from the creatures of the usurper. But instead of killing him,
they brought him back to Enro's home planet of Gorgzid, and placed him in the
care of the priests of the Sleeping God.
There he labored in the fields, and hungered. They fed him
in the morning, like an animal. Each night he slept with a shuddering
uneasiness, longing for the morning that would bring the one meal a day that
kept him alive. His identity as the Ashargin heir was not forgotten, but it was
pointed out that old ruling families tended to thin away and become weak and
decadent. In such periods the greatest empires had a habit of falling by
default into the possession of masterful men like Enro the Red.
The cart rounded a clump of trees that ornamented a central
portion of the grounds, and they came abruptly within sight of a sky car.
Several men in black, priestly uniforms and one gorgeously arrayed individual
stood in the grass beside the plane, and watched the approach of the cart.
The work priest leaned back in agitation, and nudged
Ashargin with the blunt end of his whip, a hurriedly brutal gesture. He said
hastily, 'Down on your face. It's Yeladji himself, Watcher of the Crypt of the
Sleeping God.'
Gosseyn felt a violent jerk. He flipped over, and crashed to
the bottom of the cart. He was lying there, dazed, as it slowly penetrated to
him that the muscles of Ashargin had obeyed the command with automatic speed.
The shock of that was still running its course when a strong, resonant voice
said:
'Koorn, have the Prince Ashargin enter the plane, and consider
yourself dismissed. The prince will not be returning to the work camp.'
Once more, the obedience of Ashargin was on an all-out
basis. His sense blurred. His limbs moved convulsively. Gosseyn recalled
collapsing into a seat. And then the sky car began to move.
It was all as fast as that.
Where was he being taken? It was the first thought that came
when he could think again. Gradually, the process of sitting relaxed Ashargin's
tensed muscles. Gosseyn made the Null-A cortical-thalamic pause, and felt 'his'
body loosen even more. His eyes came into focus, and he saw that the plane was
well off the ground, and climbing up over the snowcapped peak beyond the
temple of the Sleeping God.
His mind poised at that point like a bird arrested in
mid-flight. Sleeping God? He had a vague memory of other 'facts'
Ashargin had heard. The Sleeping God apparently lay inside a
translucent case in the inner chamber of the dome. Only the priests were ever
allowed to look inside the case of the body itself, and then only during
initiation, once in each individual's life-time.
Ashargin's memory reached that far. And Gosseyn had as much
as he wanted. It was a typical variation of a pagan religion. Earth had had
many such, and the details didn't matter. His mind leaped on to the vastly more
important reality of his situation.
Obviously, this was a turning point in the career of Ashargin.
Gosseyn looked around him with a gathering awareness of the possibilities of
what was here. Three black uniformed priests, one at the control—and Yeladji.
The Watcher of the Crypt, was a plumpish man. His clothes, which had seemed so
dazzling, resolved on closer inspection into a black uniform over which was
draped a gold and silver cloak.
The examination ended. Yeladji was number two priest in the
Gorgzid hierarchy, second only to Secoh, religious overlord of the planet on
which Enro had been born. But his rank and his role in all this meant nothing
to Gilbert Gosseyn. He seemed a distinctly minor character in galactic affairs.
Gosseyn glanced out of the window; there were still mountains
below. In the act of glancing down, he realized for the first time that the
clothes he had on were not normal for Ashargin, the farm laborer. He was
wearing an officer's dress uniform of the Greatest Empire—gold-braided trousers
and pull-over coat with jeweled staff, the like of which Ashargin had not seen
since he was fourteen, and that was eleven years before.
A general! The greatness of the rank startled Gosseyn. His
thoughts grew clearer, sharper. There must be some very important reason why
the Follower had put him here at this turning point in the career of the
Ashargin heir—without his extra brain and helpless in a body that was
controlled by an un-integrated nervous system.
If it was a temporary state, then it was an opportunity to
observe a facet of galactic life such as might never have come his way normally.
If, on the other hand, escape from this trap depended on his personal efforts,
then his role was even clearer. Train Ashargin. Train him at top speed by
Null-A methods. Only in that way could he ever hope to dominate his unique
environment—in possession of a body not his own.
Gosseyn drew a deep breath. He felt amazingly better. He had
made his decision; made it with determination and with a reasonably full
knowledge of the limitations of his position.
Time and events might add new facts to his purpose, but so
long as he was imprisoned in Ashargin's nervous system, that training must be
first in all his plans. It shouldn't be too hard.
The passive way that Ashargin accepted the flight fooled
him. He leaned across the aisle toward Yeladji.
'Most noble Lord Watcher, where am I being taken?'
The assistant head priest turned in surprise. 'Why, to Enro.
Where else?' he said.
Gosseyn had intended to watch the journey, but his ability
to do so ended at that moment. Ashargin's body seemed to melt into a formless
jelly. His vision blurred into the myopic blindness of terror.
The jar of the plane landing shocked him back to a semblance
of normalcy. On trembling legs, he clambered out of the plane, and saw that
they had landed on the roof of a building.
Eagerly, Gosseyn looked around. It seemed important that he
get a picture of his surroundings. He realized he was out of luck. The nearest
edge of the roof was too far away. Reluctantly, he let the three young priests
direct him towards a staircase that led down. He caught a glimpse of a mountain
far to his left—thirty, forty miles away. Was that the mountain beyond which
lay the temple? It must be, for he could see no corresponding mountain range
anywhere else.
He walked with his escort down three broad flights of
stairs, and then along a bright corridor. They paused before an ornate door.
The lesser priests stepped back. Yeladji came slowly forward, his blue eyes
glittering.
'You will go in alone, Ashargin,' he said. 'Your duties are
simple. Every morning, exactly at this hour—eight o'clock, Gorgzid city
time—you will present yourself at this door, and enter without knocking.'
He hesitated, seemed to consider his next words, and then
went on with a prim note in his voice:
'It shall never be any concern of yours what his excellency
is doing when you come upon him, and this applies even if there is a lady in
the room. To such incidents you literally pay no attention. Once inside, you
will place yourself completely at his disposal. This does not mean that you
will necessarily be required to do menial work, but if the honor of performing
some personal service for his excellency is requested of you, you will do it
instantly.'
The positivity of command went out of his manner. He
grimaced as if in pain, and then smiled graciously. It was a lordly gesture of
condescension intermixed with a slight anxiety, as if all this that had
happened was unexpected. And there was even the suggestion that the Watcher of
the Crypt regretted certain actions which he had taken against Ashargin as a
matter of discipline. He said:
'As I understand it, we now part company, you and I,
Ashargin. You have been brought up with a strict regard for your rank, and the
great role which is now thrust upon you. It is part of our creed that the first
duty of man to the Sleeping God is that he learns humility. At times you may
have wondered if perhaps your burden was not too great, but now you can see for
yourself that it was all for the best. As a parting admonition, I want you to
remember one thing: From time immemorial it has been the custom of new princes
such as Enro to exterminate rival royal houses root, stock and branch. But you
are still alive. That alone should make you grateful to the great man who
governs the largest empire in all time and space.'
Once more, a pause. Gosseyn had time to wonder why Enro had
left Ashargin alive; time to realize that this cynical priest was actually
trying to make him feel grateful, and then:
'That is all,' said Yeladji. 'Now, enter!'
It was a command, and Ashargin obeyed it in the all-out
fashion that Gosseyn could not resist. His hand snatched forward. He grasped
the knob with his fingers, turned it, and pushed the door open. He stepped
across the threshold.
The door closed behind him.
On the planet of a far sun, a shadow thickened in the center
of a gray room. It floated finally above the floor. There were two other
conscious people in that narrow chamber, separated from each other and from
the Follower by thin, metal grilles—but the shadow shape paid them no
attention. He glided instead over to a cot on which lay the inert body of
Gilbert Gosseyn.
He bent close, and seemed to listen. He straightened finally.
'He's alive,' he said aloud.
He sounded baffled, as if something had happened which was
not within the purview of his own plans. He half-turned to face the woman
through the bars that separated them—if a faceless thing could confront anyone.
'He arrived at the time I predicted?'
The woman shrugged, then nodded sullenly.
'And he's been like this ever since?' His resonant voice was
insistent.
This time the woman did not answer directly. 'So the great
Follower has run up against someone who doesn't conform.'
The shadowy substance trembled, almost as if he were shaking off her words. His reply was a long
time in coming. 'It is a strange universe out there,' said the Follower
finally. 'And here and there, on the myriad planets, are individuals who, like
myself, have a unique faculty that lifts them above the norm. There is Enro—and
now here is Gosseyn.'
He stopped, then said softly as if he was thinking out loud,
'I could kill him this instant by hitting him over the head or by knifing him
or by any one of a dozen methods. And yet—'
'Why don't you?' The woman's tone taunted him.
He hesitated. 'Because ... I don't know enough.' His voice
grew cold and decisive. 'And besides I don't kill people I might be able to
control. I shall be back.'
He began to fade, and presently he was gone from the
squalid, concrete room where a woman and two men were imprisoned in cells that
were separated from each other by a thin, fantastic network of metal.
Gosseyn-Ashargin found that he had entered a large room. At
first sight, it seemed to be filled with machinery. To Ashargin, whose
education had ended when he was fourteen, the picture was all confusion.
Gosseyn recognized mechanical maps and video plates on the walls, and almost
everywhere he looked were Distorter instrument boards. There were several
devices which he had never seen before, but he had so sharp a scientific comprehension
that the very way in which they were fitted with the other machines gave him an
inkling of their purpose.
This was a military control room. From here Enro directed,
as much as one man could, the inconceivably large forces of the Greatest
Empire. The video plates were his eyes. The lights that twinkled on the maps
could theoretically provide him with an over-all picture of any battle
situation. And the very quantity of the Distorter equipment suggested that he
tried to maintain a tight control over his far-flung empire. Perhaps he even
had a linked system of Distorter transport whereby he could go instantly to
almost any part of his empire.
Except for the fixtures, the great room was empty and
unguarded.
There was a large window in one corner, and Gosseyn raced
for it. A moment later, he was standing looking from a height down at the city
Gorgzid.
The capital of the Greatest Empire glittered below him in
the rays of its bright blue sun. Gosseyn remembered with Ashargin's memory that
the old capital of Nirene had been leveled by atomic bombs, and that the entire
area that had once been a city of thirty million was a radioactive desert.
The recollection startled Gosseyn. Ashargin, who had not
witnessed the scenes of destruction on that nightmarish day, was indifferent to
it with the thoughtless indifference of people who cannot imagine an
unobserved disaster. But Gosseyn stiffened before the details of one more major
crime that Enro had committed. The deadly thing was that this one individual
had now plunged the galactic civilization into a war that was already vast
beyond all imagination. If Enro could be assassinated. . . .
His heart pattered. His knees started to buckle. Swallowing,
Gosseyn made the Null-A pause, and halted Ashargin's frightened reaction to the
hard purpose that formed like a flash in Gosseyn's mind.
But the purpose stayed. It stayed. The opportunity that was
here was too tremendous for anything or anyone to stand in its way. This
faint-heart must be persuaded, must be cajoled, built up, propagandized into
making one supreme effort. It could be done. The human nervous system could be
whipped up into ecstatic effort and unlimited sacrifice.
But he'd have to watch out. At the moment the assassination
was consummated, there would be danger of death, and there might even be the
problem of a return to his own brain.
He stood there, eyes narrowed, lips compressed with determination.
He felt the difference within the body of Ashargin, the gathering strength as
that utterly different type of thought changed the very metabolic processes of
the glands and organs. He had no doubt about what was happening. A new,
stronger mind was in possession of this frail body. It was not enough, of
course. Not by itself. Null-A training of muscle and nerve co-ordination was
still necessary. But the first step was taken.
Kill Enro....
He gazed out on the city of Gorgzid with a genuine interest;
it looked like a government city. Even its skyscrapers were covered with
lichens and climbing 'ivy'—it seemed to be ivy—and the roots were built with
old-fashioned towers and odd slopes that appeared to crisscross each other. Of
the city's fourteen million inhabitants, four-fifths of the working population
occupied key positions in government buildings that had direct liaison with
work offices on other planets. About five hundred thousand inhabitants—Ashargin
had never learned the exact figure—were hostages who lived sulkily in the
remote green suburbs. Sulkily, because they considered Gorgzid a provincial
city and felt themselves insulted. Gosseyn could see some of the houses in
which they lived, magnificent homes hidden among trees and evergreen shrubbery,
homes that straddled entire hilltops and crept down into the valleys, and were
lost in the mists of distance.
Gosseyn turned slowly away from the vista that spread there.
For more than a minute, odd sounds had blurred from beyond a door on the
opposite wall. Gosseyn walked towards it, conscious that he had already delayed
longer than was good for a first morning. The door was shut, but he opened it
firmly, and stepped across the threshold.
Instantly, the sound filled his ears.
V
NULL-ABSTRACTS
Because children—and childlike grownups—are incapable of refined
discrimination, many experiences shock their nervous systems so violently that
psychiatrists have evolved a special word for the result: trauma. Carried over
into later years, these traumas can so tangle an individual that unsanity —that
is, neurosis—or even insanity (psychosis) can result. Almost everyone
has had several traumatic experiences. It is possible to alleviate the effect
of many shocks with psychotherapy.
It took a moment,
then, to accept the picture. He was in a large bathroom. Through a door to his
right, partly open, he could see half of an enormous bed in an alcove at the
far corner of a tremendous bedroom. There were other doors leading from the
bathroom, but they were closed. And, besides, after one glance, Gosseyn
brought his mind and his gaze out of the bedroom, and back to the scene that
spread before him.
The bathroom was built of mirrors—literally. Walls, ceiling,
floor, fixtures—all mirrors, so perfectly made that wherever he looked he saw
images of himself getting smaller and smaller but always sharp and clear. A
bathtub projected out from one wall. It, too, was made of mirrors. It curved
rakishly up from the floor to a height of about three feet. Water poured into
it from three great spouts, and swirled noisily around a huge, naked,
red-haired man who was being bathed by four young women. He saw Gosseyn, and
waved the women out of the way.
They were alert, those young women. One of them turned off
the water. The others stepped aside. As silence settled over the bathroom, the
bather sat back with pursed lips and narrowed eyes, studied the slim
Gosseyn-Ashargin. The strain of that examination on Ashargin's nervous system
was terrific. A dozen times, by an effort of will, Gosseyn made the Null-A
cortical-thalamic pause. He had to do it, not merely to retain control, but for
the simple, basic purpose of keeping Ashargin's body from losing
consciousness. The situation was as desperate as that.
'What I'd like to know,' said Enro the Red slowly, 'is what
made you pause in Control Center and look out of the window? Why the window?'
He seemed intent and puzzled. His eyes were without hostility, but they were
bright with the question he had asked. 'After all, you've seen the city
before.'
Gosseyn couldn't answer. The direct interrogation was
threatening to dissolve Ashargin into a flabby jelly. Grimly, Gosseyn fought
for control, as Enro's face took on an expression of sardonic satisfaction.
The dictator stood up and climbed out of the tub onto the mirrored tile of the
floor. Smiling faintly, a remarkable muscular figure of a man, he waited while the
women wrapped a gigantic towel around his dripping body. That towel was
removed, and then he was dried by small towels vigorously wielded. Finally, a
robe the color of his flaming hair was held for him. He slipped into it, and
spoke again, still smiling:
'I like women to bathe me. There is a gentleness about them
that soothes my spirit.'
Gosseyn said nothing. Enro's remark was intended to be
humorous, but like so many people who did not understand themselves he merely
gave himself away. The whole bathing scene here was alive with implications of
a man whose development to adulthood was not complete. Babies, too, loved the
feel of a woman's soft hands. But most babies didn't grow up to gain control of
the largest empire in time and space. And the way Enro had sat in his bath,
aware of what Gosseyn-Ashargin was doing in the adjoining room, showed that no
matter how immature he was on the one hand, a part of his constitution had
attained a comparatively superior state. How valuable that quality would be in an
emergency remained to be seen.
For a moment, standing there, he had forgotten Ashargin. It
was a dangerous lapse. The direct remark by Enro about the women had been too
much for his unstable nervous system. His heart quickened, his knees shook and
his muscles quivered. He staggered and would have fallen if the dictator had
not signaled to the women. Gosseyn saw the movement out of the corner of his
eyes. The next second, firm hands caught him.
When Gosseyn could stand again, and see clearly again, Enro
was striding through one of two doors in the left wall into a room that was
bright with sunlight. And three of the women were in the act of leaving the
bathroom by the partly open bedroom door. Only the fourth young woman continued
to brace his quivering body. The muscles of Ashargin started to shrink away
from her eyes, but just in time Gosseyn made the pause. It was he who realized
that her gaze was not contemptuous but pitying.
'So this is what's been done to you,' she said softly. She
had gray eyes and classically beautiful features. She frowned, then shrugged.
'My name is Nirene—and you'd better get in there, my friend.'
She started to shove him toward the open door through which
Enro had disappeared, but Gosseyn was in control again. He held back. He had
already been struck by her name.
'Is there any connection,' he said, 'between Nirene the girl
and Nirene the old capital?'
Her frown grew puzzled. 'One moment you faint,' she said.
'The next you ask intelligent questions. Your character is more complicated
than your appearance suggests. But now, quick! You must—'
'What does my appearance suggest?' asked Gosseyn.
Cool, gray eyes studied him. 'You asked for it,' she said.
'Defeated, weak, effeminate, childlike, incapable.' She broke off impatiently,
'I said, hurry. I meant it. I'm not staying another minute.'
She whirled around. Without looking back, she walked swiftly
through the bedroom door, and shut it behind her.
Gosseyn made no attempt at speed. He was not enjoying
himself. And he felt tense whenever he thought of his own body. But he was
beginning to get a picture of what he must do if he—and Ashargin—were to
survive the day without being utterly disgraced.
Hold back. Delay reactions in the Null-A fashion. It would
be learning in action, with its many disadvantages. He had a conviction that
for many hours, still, he'd be under the watchful, measuring eyes of Enro, who
would be startled by any sign of self-control in the man he had tried to destroy.
That couldn't be helped. There'd be unpleasant incidents as it was, enough,
perhaps, to persuade even the dictator that all was as it should be.
And the moment he got into whatever room he was given, he'd
make an all-out attempt to 'cure' Ashargin by Null-A methods.
Walking forward slowly, Gosseyn passed through the door
beyond which Enro had disappeared. He found himself in a very large room where
under an enormous window a table was laid for three. He had to take a second
look before he estimated the size of the window at a hundred feet high. Waiters
hovered around, and there were several distinguished-looking men with important
documents held limply in their fingers. Enro was bending over the table. As
Gosseyn paused, the dictator lifted, one after the other, the gleaming covers
from several dishes, and sniffed at the steaming food underneath. He
straightened finally.
'Ah,' he said, 'fried mantoll. Delicious.' He turned with a
smile to Ashargin-Gosseyn. 'You sit over there.' He indicated one of the three
chairs.
The knowledge that he was to have breakfast with Enro did
not surprise Gosseyn. It fitted with his analysis of Enro's intentions toward
Ashargin. Just in time, however, he realized that the young man was beginning
to react in his terrible, self-conscious manner. He made the cortical-thalamic
pause. And saw that Enro was staring at him, thoughtfully.
'So Nirene is taking an interest in you,' he said slowly.
That's a possibility I hadn't considered. Still, it has its aspects. Ah, here
is Secoh.'
The new arrival passed within a foot of Gosseyn, and so his
first look at the man was from the side and the rear. He was dark-haired, about
forty years old and very good-looking in a sharp-faced manner. He wore a
single-piece, form-fitting blue suit with a scarlet cloak neatly draped over
his shoulder. As he bowed to Enro, Gosseyn already had the impression of a
fox-like man, quick, alert, and cunning. Enro was speaking:
'I can't get over Nirene talking to him.'
Secoh walked to one of the chairs, and took up a position
behind it. His keen black eyes glanced at Enro questioningly. The latter
explained succinctly what had passed between Ashargin and the young woman.
Gosseyn found himself listening in amazement. Here it was
again, the dictator's uncanny ability to know what was going on where he could
neither see nor hear in a normal fashion.
The phenomenon changed the direction of his thoughts. Some
of the strain on Ashargin lifted. For a moment, then, he had a picture of this
vast environment of galactic civilization, and of the men who dominated it.
Each individual had some special qualification. Enro could
see into adjoining rooms. It was a unique skill, and yet it scarcely justified
the height of power it had helped him to attain. At first sight it seemed to
prove that men didn't need much of an edge over their fellows to gain
ascendancy over them.
Secoh's special position seemed to derive from the fact that
he was religious overlord of Gorgzid, Enro's home planet. Madrisol of the
League was still an unknown quality.
Finally, there was the Follower, whose science included
accurate prediction of the future, a gadget for making himself insubstantial
and which gave him such control of other people's minds that he had imposed
Gilbert Gosseyn's upon Ashargin's. Of the three men, the Follower seemed the
most dangerous. But that also had yet to be shown. Enro was speaking again.
'I have half a mind to make her his mistress,' he said. He
stood scowling, then his face lighted. 'By heaven, I will.' He seemed suddenly
in good humor, for he began to laugh. 'That ought to be something to see,' he
said. Grinning, he told an off-color joke about the sexual problems of certain
neurotics, and finished on a more savage note. 'I'll cure that female of any
plans she has.'
Secoh shrugged, and then said in a resonant voice, 'I think you're
overestimating the possibilities. But it won't hurt to do as you suggested.' He
waved imperiously at one of the attendants. 'Make a note of his excellency's
request,' he ordered in a tone of assured command.
The man bowed abjectly. 'Already noted, your excellency.'
Enro motioned to Gosseyn. 'Come along,' he said. 'I'm
hungry.' His voice grew bitingly polite. 'Or would you like to be assisted to
your chair?'
Gosseyn had been fighting the Ashargin body's reactions to
the import of Secoh's 'request'. Fighting successfully, it seemed to him. He
walked toward the chair, and he was taking up his position behind it when the
sharpness of Enro's tone must have penetrated to Ashargin. Or perhaps it was a
combination of overpowering events. Whatever the cause, what happened was too
swift for defense. As Enro seated himself, Ashargin-Gosseyn fainted.
When he returned to the conscious state, Gosseyn found
himself sitting at the breakfast table, his body being held upright by two
waiters. Instantly, the body of Ashargin cringed, expecting censure. Startled,
Gosseyn headed off the potential collapse.
He glanced at Enro, but the dictator was busily eating. Nor
did the priest as much as glance at him. The waiters let go of his arms and
began to serve him. The food was all strange to Gosseyn, but as each dish cover
in turn was lifted, he felt a favorable or unfavorable reaction inside him. For
once the unconscious compulsions of the Ashargin body had their uses. Within a
minute or so he was eating food that was familiar and satisfying to the taste
buds of Ashargin.
He began to feel shocked at what had happened. It was hard
to participate in such a humiliating experience without feeling intimately a
part of the disaster. And the worst part was that he could do nothing immediately.
He was caught in this body, his mind and memory superimposed on the brain and
body of another individual, presumably by some variation of Distorter
similarity. And what was happening meantime to the body of Gilbert Gosseyn?
Such possession of another body could not be permanent —and,
besides, he must never forget that the system of immortality which had enabled
him to survive one death would protect him again. Therefore, this was a
tremendously important incident. He must savor it, try to understand it, be
aware of everything that went on.
'Why,' he thought in wonder, 'I'm here at the headquarters
of Enro the Red, the reigning overlord of the Greatest Empire. Actually eating
breakfast with him.'
He stopped eating, and stared at the big man in abrupt
fascination. Enro, of whom he had heard vaguely through .Thorson and Crang and
Patricia Hardie. Enro, who had ordered the destruction of Null-A because it
would be the simplest method of starting a galactic war; Enro, dictator,
leader, Caesar, usurper, absolute tyrant, who must gain some of his ascendancy
by his ability to hear and see what was going on in nearby rooms. Rather a
good-looking man in his way. His face was strong, but it was slightly freckled,
which gave him a boyish appearance. His eyes were clear and bold, and blue in
color. His eyes and mouth looked familiar, but that must be an illusion. Enro
the Red, whom Gilbert Gosseyn had already helped to defeat in the solar
system, and who was now waging the vaster galactic campaign. Failing an
opportunity to assassinate the man, it would be a fantastic achievement to
discover here in the heart and brain of the Greatest Empire, a method of
defeating him.
Enro pushed his chair away from the table. It was like a
signal. Secoh immediately ceased eating, though there was still food on his
plate. Gosseyn put down his own fork and knife, and guessed that breakfast was
over. The waiters began to clear the table.
Enro climbed to his feet, and said briskly, 'Any news from
Venus?'
Secoh and Gosseyn stood up, Gosseyn stiffly. The shock of
hearing the familiar word at this remote distance from the solar system was
personal, and therefore controlled. The jittery nervous system of Ashargin did
not react to the name Venus.
The priest's thin face was calm. 'We have a few more
details. Nothing that matters.'
Enro was intent. 'We'll have to take some action about that
planet,' he said slowly. 'If I could be sure Reesha was not there—'
'That was only a report, your excellency.'
Enro whirled, his expression grim. 'The mere possibility,'
he said, 'is enough to hold my hand.'
The priest was equally bleak. 'It would be unfortunate,' he
said coldly, 'if the League powers discovered your weakness, and spread the
report that Reesha was on any one of thousands of League planets.'
The dictator stiffened, hesitated for a moment. Then he
laughed. He walked over and put his arm around the smaller man's shoulder.
'Good old Secoh,' he said sarcastically.
The Temple lord squirmed at the touch, but bore it for a
moment with a distasteful expression on his face. The big man guffawed. 'What's
the matter?'
Secoh withdrew from the heavy grasp, gently but firmly.
'Have you any instructions to give me?'
The dictator laughed once more, then swiftly he grew
thoughtful. 'What happens to that system is unimportant. But I feel irritated
every time that I remember Thorson was killed there. And I would like to know
how we were defeated. Something went wrong.'
'A Board of Inquiry
has been appointed,' said Secoh.
'Good. Now, what about the battle?'
'Costly but progressively decisive. Would you care to see
the figures of losses?'
'Yes.'
One of the attending secretaries handed a paper to Secoh,
who passed it silently over to Enro. Gosseyn watched the dictator's face. The
potentialities of this situation were becoming vaster every moment. This must
be the engagement which Crang and Patricia had referred to; nine hundred
thousand warships—fighting the titanic battle of the Sixth Decant.
Decant? He thought in a haze of excitement: 'The galaxy
is shaped like a gigantic wheel—' Obviously, they had divided it into
'decants.' There'd be other methods of locating the latitude and longitude of
planets and stars of course, but—
Enro was handing the paper back to his adviser. There was a
pettish expression on his face, and his eyes were sulky.
'I feel indecisive,' he said slowly. 'It's a personal
feeling, a sense of my own life force not having been fulfilled.'
'You have more than a score of children,' Secoh pointed out.
Enro ignored that. 'Priest,' he said, 'it is now four
sidereal years since my sister, destined by the ancient custom of the Gorgzid
to be my only legal wife, departed for—where?'
'There is no trace.' The lean man's voice had a remote
quality.
Enro gazed at him somberly, and said softly, 'My friend, you
always were taken with her. If I thought you were withholding information—' He
stopped, and there must have been a look in the other's eyes, for he said
hastily, with a faint laugh, 'All right, all right, don't be angry. I'm
mistaken. It would be impossible for a man of your cloth to do such a thing.
Your oaths, for one thing.' He seemed to be arguing with himself.
He looked up bleakly, and said, 'I shall have to see to it
that of the children of my sister and myself—yet to be born—the girls are not
educated in schools and on planets where the dynastic principle of
brother-sister marriages is derided.'
No reply. Enro hesitated, staring hard at Secoh. He seemed
unaware for the moment that others were witnessing the interchange. Abruptly,
he changed the subject.
'I can still stop the war,' he said. 'The members of the
Galactic League are nerving themselves now, but they'll almost fall over
themselves to give me my way if I showed any willingness to stop the battle of
the Sixth Decant.'
The priest was quiet, calm, steady. 'The principle of universal
order,' he said, 'and of a universal State transcends the emotions of the
individual. You can shirk none of the cruel necessities.' His voice was
rocklike. 'None,' he said.
Enro did not meet those pale eyes. 'I am undecided,' he repeated.
'I feel unfulfilled, incomplete. If my sister were here, doing her duty . ..'
Gosseyn scarcely heard. He was thinking gloomily. So that's
what they're telling themselves; a Universal State, centrally controlled, and
held together by military force.
It was an old dream of man, and many times destiny had
decreed a temporary illusion of success. There had been a number of empires on
Earth that had achieved virtual control of all the civilized areas of their
day. For a few generations then, the vast domains maintained their unnatural
bonds—unnatural because the verdict of history always seemed to narrow down to
a few meaningful sentences: 'The new ruler lacked the wisdom of his father—'
'Uprisings of the masses—' 'The conquered states, long held down, rose in
successful rebellion against the weakened empire—' There were even reasons
given as to why a particular state had grown weak.
The details didn't matter. There was nothing basically wrong
with the idea of a universal state, but men who thought thalamically would
never create anything but the outward appearance of such a state. On Earth
Null-A had won when approximately five percent of the population was trained
in its tenets. In the galaxy three percent should be sufficient. At that point,
but not till then, the universal state would be a feasible idea.
Accordingly, this war was a fraud. It had no meaning. If
successful, the resultant universal state would last possibly a generation,
possibly two. And then, the emotional drives of other unsane men would impel
them to plotting and to rebellion. Meanwhile, billions would die so that a
neurotic could have the pleasure of forcing a few more high-born ladies to
bathe him every morning.
The man was only unsane, but the war he had started was
maniacal. It must be prevented from development. . . . There was a stir at one
of the doors, and Gosseyn's thought ended. A woman's angry voice sounded:
'Of course I can go in. Do you dare to stop me from seeing
my own brother?'
The voice, in spite of its fury, had a familiar ring in it.
Gosseyn whirled, and saw that Enro was racing for the door at the far end,
opposite the great window.
'Reesha!' he shouted, and there was jubilance in his voice.
Through the watering eyes of Ashargin, Gosseyn watched the
reunion. There was a slim man with the girl, and as they came forward, Enro
carrying the girl in his arms and hugging her fast against his dressing gown,
it was that slim man who drew Gosseyn's fascinated gaze.
For it was Eldred Crang. Crang? Then the girl must be— must
be— He turned and stared, as Patricia Hardie said peevishly, 'Enro, put me
down. I want you to meet my husband.'
The dictator's body grew rigid. Slowly then, he set the girl
down, and slowly turned to look at Crang. His baleful gaze met the yellowy eyes
of the Null-A detective. Crang smiled, as if unaware of the other's immense
hostility. Something of his tremendous personality was in that smile and in his
manner. Enro's expression changed ever so slightly. For a moment he looked
puzzled, even startled, then he parted his lips and he seemed on the point of
speaking when out of the corner of his eyes, he must have caught a glimpse of
Ashargin.
'Oh,' he said. His manner altered radically. His self-possession
returned. He beckoned Gosseyn with a brusque gesture. 'Come along, my friend. I
want you to act as my liaison officer with Grand Admiral Paleol. Tell the
admiral—' He began to walk toward a nearby door. Gosseyn trailed him, and
found himself presently in what he had previously identified as Enro's military
control room. Enro paused before one of the Distorter cages. He faced Gosseyn.
'Tell the admiral,' he repeated, 'that you are my representative.
Here is your authority.' He held out a thin, glittering plaque. 'Now,' he said,
'in here.' He motioned to the cage.
An attendant was opening the door of what Gosseyn had
already recognized as a transport Distorter. Gosseyn walked forward,
nonplussed. He had no desire to leave Enro's court just now. He hadn't yet
learned enough. It seemed important that he remain and learn more. He paused at
the cage door.
'What shall I tell the admiral?'
The other's faint smile had broadened. 'Just who you are,'
Enro said suavely. 'Introduce yourself. Get acquainted with the staff
officers.'
'I see,' said Gosseyn.
He did see. The Ashargin heir was being exhibited to the
military men. Enro must expect opposition from high-ranking officers, and so
they were to have a look at Prince Ashargin —and realize how hopeless it would
be for them ever to build up resistance around the only person who would have
any legal or popular position. He hesitated once more.
'This transport will
take me straight
to the admiral?'
'It has only one control direction either way. It will go
there, and it will come back here. Good luck.'
Gosseyn stepped into the cage without another word. The door
clanged behind him. He sat down in the control chair, hesitated for a
moment—after all, Ashargin wouldn't be expected to act swiftly—and then pulled
the lever.
Instantly, he realized that he was free.
NULL-ABSTRACTS
Children, immature adults and animals 'identify'.
Whenever a person reacts to a new or changing situation as if it were an old
and unchanging one, he or she is said to be identifying. Such an approach to
life is Aristotelian.
Free. That was the tremendous fact. Free of Ashargin. Himself
again. Odd how he knew that. It seemed to grow out of the very elements of his
being. His own transport experience with his extra brain made the transition
feel familiar. Almost, he was aware of the movement. Even the blackness seemed
incomplete, as if his brain did not quite stop working.
Even as he came out of the darkness, he sensed the presence
of a powerful electric dynamo and of an atomic pile. And simultaneously, with
intense disappointment, he realized that they were not near enough for him to
make use of them, or control them, in any way.
Quickly, then, he came to consciousness. As vision returned,
he saw that he was neither in the Venusian apartments of Janasen, nor in any
place to which Enro would have sent Ashargin.
He was lying on his back on a hard bed staring up at a high,
concrete ceiling. His eyes and his mind absorbed the scene in one continuous
glance that followed through. The room he was in was snail. A needle-studded
grille came down from the ceiling. Beyond it, sitting on a bunk watching him,
was a distinguished-looking young woman. Gosseyn's eyes would have paused,
would have stared, but there was another metal grille on the other side of her
cell. In it, sprawled on a bunk, seemingly asleep, was a very large man who was
naked except for a pair of discolored sport shorts. Beyond the giant was
concrete wall.
As he sat up, more intent now, Gosseyn saw that that was the
scene. Three cells in a concrete room, three windows, one in each cell, at
least fifteen feet above the floor, no doors. His summing up stopped short. No
doors? Like a flash, he ran his gaze along the walls searching for cracks in
the cement. There were none.
Quickly, he went over the bars that separated his cell from
the woman's. Quickly, he memorized a portion of the floor of his own cell, then
of hers, and then of the cell of the sleeping colossus. Finally, he tried to
similarize himself back to one of his safety points on Venus.
Nothing happened. Gosseyn accepted the implications. Between
distant points there was a time lag, and in this case the twenty-six hour
period during which a memorized area remained similarizable had been used up.
Venus must be immensely far away.
He was about to make a more detailed survey of his prison
when once more he grew aware of the woman. This time his attention held. His
first fleeting impression had been of someone whose appearance was very
distinctive. Now, with measured glance, he saw that his picture was correct.
The woman was not tall, but she held herself with an air of
unconscious superiority. Unconscious; that was the telling reality. What the
conscious mind of an individual thought was important only insofar as it
reflected or helped to anchor the set of the nervous system. The only
comparison Gosseyn could think of was Patricia Hardie, who so surprisingly had
turned out to be the sister of the mighty Enro. She also had that pride in her
eyes, that automatic, innate conviction of superiority—different from the
Null-A trained Venusians, whose dominant characteristic of complete
adequateness seemed part of their body and their faces.
Like Patricia, the stranger was a Grande dame. Her
pride was of position and rank, of manners and—something else. Gosseyn stared
at her with narrowed eyes. Her face showed that she acted and thought
thalamically, but then, so did Enro and Secoh, and so had virtually every
individual in history before the development of Null-A.
Emotional people could build up their talents along one or
two channels, and achieve as greatly as any Null-A Venusian in a particular
field. Null-A was the system of integrating the human nervous system. Its
greatest values were social and personal.
The important thing about assessing this woman was that, as
he studied her, the extra component of the neural vibrations that flowed from
her seemed to take on greater proportions with each passing moment.
She was dark-haired, with a head that seemed a shade too
large for her body, and she returned his gaze with a faint, puzzled, anxious
yet supercilious smile.
'I can see,' she said uneasily, 'why the Follower has taken
an interest in you.' She hesitated. 'Perhaps you and I could escape together.'
'Escape?' echoed Gosseyn, and looked at her with steady eyes.
He was astonished that she spoke English, but the explanation of that could
wait while he gained more vital information.
The woman sighed, then shrugged. 'The Follower is afraid of
you. Therefore this cell cannot be quite as much of a prison to you as it is to
me. Or am I wrong?'
Gosseyn didn't answer that, but he felt grim. Her analysis
was wrong. He was as completely a prisoner as she was. Without an outside point
to which he could similarize himself, without a power socket before his eyes
to memorize, he had no resources.
He studied the woman with a faint frown. As a fellow
prisoner, she was, theoretically, an ally. As a lady of quality, and, possibly,
an inhabitant of this planet, she might be very valuable to him. The trouble
was that she was very likely an agent of the Follower. And yet, he had a
conviction that a fast decision was needed here.
The woman said, 'The Follower has been in here three times
wondering why you didn't wake up when you first arrived more than two days ago.
Have you any idea?'
Gosseyn smiled. The idea that he would be giving out information
struck him as naive. He was not going to tell anyone that he had been in the
body of Ashargin, although surely the Follower, who had put him there—
He stopped. He felt himself grow taut. He thought, almost
blankly, But that would mean—
He shook his head in wonder, and then stood in blank
amazement. If the Follower had lost control of him, that would indicate the
existence of still another being of enormous power. Not that that was out of
the question. He must never forget his theory. Somewhere out here were the
players of this mighty game, and even a queen, such as he had estimated
himself to be, could be moved or forced, checked and endangered, or even taken
and removed from the board.
He parted his lips to speak, but restrained himself. His
slightest word would be noted and analyzed by one of the sharp and dangerous
minds of the Galaxy. He pondered for a moment, and came back to his own first
question.
Aloud, he said, 'Escape?'
The woman was sighing. 'It seems incredible,' she said. 'A
man whose movements cannot be predicted. Up to a point, I have a clear picture
of what you're going to do, then, because one of those actions is without
logic, I get only blur.'
Gosseyn said, 'You can read the future—like the Follower?'
He was intent. He walked to the bars, separating their two cells, and stared
down at her in fascination. 'How is it done?' Who is this Follower who has the
appearance of a shadow?'
The woman laughed. It was a slightly tolerant laugh, but it
had a musical note in it that was pleasing to the ear. The laughter ended.
'You're in the Follower's Retreat, of course,' she said, and
frowned. 'I don't understand you,' she complained. 'And your questions. Are you
trying to mislead me? Who is the Follower? Why, everyone knows that the
Follower is an ordinary Predictor who discovered how to put himself out of phase.'
There was an interruption. The giant in the third cell
stirred on his cot, and sat up. He stared at Gosseyn.
'Get over to your bunk,' he said in a bass voice. 'And don't
let me catch you talking to Leej again. Now, get!'
Gosseyn did not move, simply watched the other with curious
eyes.
The stranger climbed to his feet, and came over to the bars
of his cell. On the cot he had looked like a giant. Now, for the first time,
Gosseyn realized how big the man really was. He towered. He spread. He was
seven and a half feet tall, and as broad as a gorilla. Gosseyn estimated his
chest at eighty inches.
He was taken aback. He had never seen such an enormous man
before. The giant exuded abnormal physical power. For the first time in his
life, Gosseyn felt himself in the presence of an untrained individual whose
sheer muscular strength visibly exceeded the possibilities of a normal Null-A.
'Better back down fast,' the monster said in a menacing
voice. 'The Follower told me she's mine, and I don't intend to have any
competition.'
Gosseyn glanced questioningly toward the woman, but she had
lain down with her face to the wall. He faced the giant again.
'What planet is this?' he asked conversationally.
His tone must have been right, because the giant lost some
of his belligerence.
'Planet?' he said. 'What do you mean?'
That was startling. Gosseyn, whose mind had leaped ahead,
devising other questions, teetered and came back. Was it possible that he was
in another isolated planetary system similar to that of Sol? The probability
shook him.
'The name of your sun?' he urged. 'Surely, you have a name
for it. It must have been assigned a recognition symbol in the galactic
nomenclature.'
The other's mood chilled visibly. His blue eyes misted with
suspicion. 'What are you trying to pull off?' he asked roughly.
Gosseyn said grimly, 'Don't try to pretend that you don't
know the planets of other suns are inhabited by human beings.'
The huge man looked disgusted. 'Got yourself a little addled
in the brain, haven't you?' he said significantly. 'Look,' he went on, 'my name
is Jurig. I live on Crest, and I'm a Yalertan citizen. I killed a man by
hitting him too hard, and so here I am, subject to execution—but I don't want
to talk to you any more. You bother me with that foolishness.'
Gosseyn hesitated. Jurig's protests were convincing, but he
wasn't prepared to let the matter drop. There was one point that needed
clearing up.
'If you're so innocent,' he said accusingly, 'how is it that
you can speak the English language so perfectly?'
He realized the answer to that as he spoke the word
'English'. Jurig completed the thought with finality.
'What language?' he said. He began to laugh. 'You are
crazy.' He seemed to realize the implications of what he was saying. He
groaned. 'Is it possible the Follower has put me in here with a crazy man?'
He caught hold of himself. 'Man,' he said, 'whoever you
are—the language we're speaking, you as well as I, is Yalertan. And I can tell
you right now, you speak it like a native.'
For a few minutes, then, Gosseyn abandoned the conversation.
He walked to his bunk and sat down. The flow of neural sensations that streamed
from the giant were not friendly. There was cunning in them, and a kind of
smug, murderous self-satisfaction.
The question was, why did the man dissemble? In point of
muscular strength, the Yalertan was in a class by himself. If they ever came to
grips, then Gilbert Gosseyn would have to use his extra brain to similarize
himself to various parts of the prison. He must keep clear of those
gorilla-like arms and fight like a boxer, not a wrestler.
But any use of his extra brain would reveal the nature of
his special ability. Gosseyn climbed to his feet, and walked slowly over to the
grille that divided his cell from that of Leej. He recognized that his position
was bad. The cell had no power sockets. He was caught in it as completely as if
he was the most ordinary of human beings.
The bars of the grille were thin, and about four inches
apart. They looked as if a strong man might be able to bend them.
No strong man in his right mind would ever try. The metal
was encrusted with needles. Thousands of them. He drew back, defeated, then
bent down and examined the connection of the grille with the floor.
There was a crossbar that was free of needles, but the
needles from the horizontal bars reached down over it, guarding it from
probing fingers. Gosseyn straightened, and turned to his one remaining hope,
the cot. If he could move it against the wall, end up, he'd be able to reach
the window.
The cot was a metal affair, its legs cemented into the concrete
floor. After several minutes of straining at it vainly, Gosseyn stood back. A
door less cell, he thought, and silence. His mind paused. The silence was not
complete. There were sounds, movements, rustlings, a faint throb of voices.
This prison must be part of a larger building—what was it the woman had called
it—the Follower's Retreat. He was trying to visualize that when Jurig said from
behind him:
'Funny clothes you got on.'
Gosseyn turned and stared at the man. Jurig's tone indicated
that he had made no connection between the clothing and what Gosseyn had said
about other planets.
He glanced down at
his 'funny' suit. It was a light, plastic coverall with hidden zipper and, also
hidden, a thermostat controlled heating and refrigeration network that was
mazed evenly through the artificial textile material. It was very neat and expensive
looking and very handy to have on, particularly for a man who might find
himself in an unaccustomed climate. In cold or hot weather, the suit would
maintain a uniform temperature next to his skin.
The shock of realizing that he had been using a foreign
language so naturally, so easily, that he hadn't even been aware of it, had
come at the moment that he tried to fit the word 'English' into the Yalertan
tongue. It had sounded wrong. He'd gathered from Thorson and Crang that the
galactic civilization had developed language machines by which soldiers,
diplomats and space travelers could be taught the tongues of the peoples of far
planets. But he hadn't pictured anything like this.
The card must have done it. Gosseyn sank down on his cot,
and closed his eyes. He had really been trapped in Janasen's room. Imagine
actually sitting on a Distorter. In one instant, he thought, I was transported
from Venus. My body headed unerringly for this cell, and arrived at a predetermined
instant. In mid-flight, another player in this vast game, similarized my brain
into the brain case of Ashargin on a far planet. The moment that connection was
broken, I woke up here, already educated in the local language. And, if the
Follower really expected me to awaken the moment my body arrived, then I must
have been taught the language during or immediately after the time that I
looked at the card.
He glanced again at the woman, but her back was still
turned. He looked at Jurig appraisingly; here must be his immediate source of information.
The big man answered his questions without hesitation. The
planet was made up of thousands of large islands. Only the sky trailer people,
the Predictors, could move freely over the entire surface. The rest of the
population was confined, each individual group to its own island. There was
trade among them, and some migration, but always on a limited scale as between
nations. There were numerous trade and immigration barriers but. . .
Gosseyn listened with the attention of a man who was swiftly
grasping at a new idea. He was trying to imagine the Null-A Venusians against
these Yalertans. He tried to think of a comprehensive word that would describe
the Predictors, but nothing seemed to fit. Neither side yet realized that two
utterly different systems for dealing with reality existed in the galaxy.
Neither side had as yet become aware of the other. Both were systems that had
developed in isolation from the main stream of galactic civilization. Both were
now about to be drawn into the maelstrom of a war being fought on so vast a
scale that entire planetary systems might be wiped out.
He commented finally, 'You seem to dislike these Predictors.
Why?'
The giant had wandered away from the bars of his cell, and
was leaning against the wall under the window. 'Are you kidding?' he said. His
eyes narrowed with annoyance, and he came back to the bars. 'You've pulled
enough of that stuff for one day.'
'I'm not kidding. I really don't know.'
'They're stuck-up,' said Jurig abruptly. They can tell the
future, and they're ruthless.'
'That last point sounds bad,' Gosseyn admitted.
They're all bad!' Jurig exploded. He stopped and swallowed
hard. 'They enslave other people. They steal the ideas of the island folk. And
because they can tell the future, they win every battle and repress every
rebellion.'
'Listen!' Jurig leaned closer to the bars in front of him.
His tone was earnest. 'I noticed you didn't like my saying that Leej belonged
to me. Not that it matters what you like, you understand. But don't ever feel
sorry for one of them. I've seen these women flay alive some lesser being'—his
voice grew sarcastic, then angry—'and get a kick out of it. Now, this one has
run up against the Follower for a private reason, and so, for the first time
in centuries—I never heard of any other—one of us lesser folk has a chance at
last to get back a little at these murderous scum. Am I going to take advantage
of that? You bet I am.'
For the first time since she had turned her back, the young
woman stirred. She swung around, sat up, and looked at Gosseyn.
'Jurig's
neglected to mention
one thing,' she
said.
The giant let out a bellow. His lips drew back in a snarl.
'You tell him,' he raged, 'and I'll smash in your teeth the
moment we get together.'
The woman flinched visibly, and there was no question of her
fear. Her voice when she spoke, trembled, but there was defiance in it, too.
'He's supposed to kill you the moment the bars are removed,'
she said.
Jurig's face was a study. 'All right for you, my fine lady.
That finishes you.'
The woman was white. 'I think,' she said shakily, 'the
Follower wants to see how well you can defend yourself.' She stared at him
appealingly. 'What do you think? Can you do anything?'
It was a question that Gosseyn was urgently asking himself.
Gosseyn had an impulse to reassure the young woman, but he
suppressed it. He had no intention of standing by while Jurig's blood-thirsty
threats were carried out, but he must never forget that somewhere beyond these
drab walls was an alert observer—and that his every movement, word and action
would be carefully weighed and analyzed.
'Can you do anything?' she asked, 'or is the Follower
worried about you without reason?'
'What I'd like to know,' countered Gosseyn, 'is what action
do you foresee me taking?'
Her answer proved, if it was necessary to prove it, that
this was no academic argument. Without warning, she burst into tears.
'Oh, please,' she sobbed, 'don't keep me in suspense. That
man's threats are driving me insane.' She shook her head tearfully. 'I don't
know what's the matter. When I look into your future, everything blurs. The
only time that ever happens is with the Follower, and with him it's natural.
He's simply out of phase.'
She broke off, wiped her tears with the back of her hand,
and said earnestly, 'I know you're in danger, too. But if you can do anything
against the Follower, you'll have to be able to do it in the open.'
Gosseyn shook his head. He felt sorry for the woman, but her
logic was wrong. 'In the history of the planet that I come from, surprise has
been a major factor in determining what countries and groups shall dominate
civilization.'
All the tears were gone now from her eyes, and her gaze was
steady again. 'If the Follower can defeat you in the open, he can baffle any
surprise system you may have.'
Gosseyn scarcely heard.
'Listen,' he said earnestly, 'I'm going to try to help you, but whether I can or not depends
on how you answer my questions.'
'Yes?' She sounded breathless, her eyes wide, her lips
parted.
'Have you any pictures at all of my future actions?'
'What I see you doing,' said Leej, 'doesn't make sense. It
just doesn't make sense.'
'But what is it?' He felt exasperated. 'I've got to know.'
'If I told you,' she said, 'it would introduce a new factor
and change the future.'
'But maybe it should be changed.'
'No.' She shook her head. 'After you do it everything blurs.
That gives me hope.'
Gosseyn controlled himself with an effort. Anyway it was
something. The implication was that his extra brain was going to be used. Apparently,
whenever that happened this system of prediction failed to function.
Their faculty remained remarkable, and he'd have to try to
find out how neurotics like this woman could automatically foretell the future.
But that was for later.
'Look,' said Gosseyn, 'when does all this happen?'
'In about ten minutes,' said Leej.
Gosseyn was shocked into temporary silence. Finally, he
said, 'Is there any kind of transport between Yalerta and the planets of other
stars?'
'Yes,' said Leej. 'Without warning, without previous knowledge
on our part, the Follower informed all the sky trailer people that they must
accept commissions on military spaceships of some being who calls himself
Enro. And immediately he had a ship here with some method for transporting us.'
Gosseyn took the shock of that without change of expression,
but he flinched inwardly. He had a sudden picture of seers on every warship
foretelling the future actions of enemy warships. How could any normal human
being fight such a super-human crew? He had known from what Janasen had said
that the Follower was working with Enro, but that was one individual. Here were
reinforcements by the—He asked the question in a piercing tone, 'How many . . .
how many of you are there?'
'About five million,' said Leej.
He had guessed more than that, but the lesser figure brought
him no sense of relief. Five million was enough to dominate the galaxy.
'Still,' said Gosseyn, hoping aloud, 'they won't all go.'
'I refused,' said Leej in a flat tone. 'I'm not the only
one, I understand, but I've talked against the Follower for five years, and so
I'm to be made an example of.' She sounded weary. 'Most of the others are
going.'
Gosseyn estimated that four of the ten minutes were gone. He
wiped his damp forehead, and pressed on.
'What about the accusations Jurig made against the Predictors?'
Leej shrugged listlessly. 'I suppose they're true. I
remember a silly girl in my service talked back to me, and I had her whipped.'
She looked at him, her eyes wide and innocent. 'What else can you do with
people who don't know their place?'
Gosseyn had almost forgotten the man, but now he was
forcibly reminded. There was a roar of outrage from the cell beyond the woman.
'You see,' yelled the giant. 'See what I mean?' He paced the
floor. 'Just wait till these grilles go up, and I'll show you what you can do
with people who don't know their place.' He raised his voice in a frenzied
shout. 'Follower, if you hear me, let's get some action. Pull up these grilles.
Pull 'em up.'
If the Follower heard, he showed no sign. The grilles did
not go up. Jurig subsided and retired to his cot. He sat there muttering the
words, 'Just wait! Just wait!'
For Gosseyn, the waiting was past. Jurig, in his outburst,
had given him the clue to the action he must take. He realized he was shaking,
but he didn't care. He had his answer. He knew what he was going to do. The
Follower himself would supply the opportunity at the moment of crisis.
No wonder Leej had disbelieved her advance picture of his
future action. Apparently, it would be a meaningless move.
Crash! The interrupting sound came as he was settling back
onto the cot. A metallic sound.
The grilles were lifting.
VII
NULL-ABSTRACTS
In making a statement about an object or an event, an
individual 'abstracts' only a few of its characteristics. If he says, 'That
chair is brown!' he should mean that brownness is one of its qualities, and he
should be aware, as he speaks, that it has many other qualities. 'Consciousness
of abstracting' constitutes one of the main differences between a person who is
semantically trained and one who is not.
With the speed of a hunting cat, Gosseyn was off his cot.
His fingers gripped the crossbar of the grille at the bottom. He felt himself
irresistibly lifted up.
The effort to hold on cost him every ounce of strength in
his arms and fingers. The area to which he had to cling was less than an inch
in thickness, and it curved the wrong way. But he had taken his grip just under
the needles, under that fantastic pattern of needles, and he either hung on or
suffered ultimate defeat.
He hung on. As he came up above the level of the window, he
was able to see out. He had a glimpse of a courtyard in the immediate
foreground, of a high fence in the near distance made of sharply pointed metal
spears, and of a land of trees beyond. Gosseyn barely glanced at the vista. One
look at the scene as a whole, and then he turned his attention to the
courtyard.
There was an agonizingly slow moment while he memorized the
surface structure of a part of a cobblestone. And then, his purpose
accomplished, he dropped nearly twenty feet to the concrete floor of the cell.
He landed on all fours, physically relaxed, but with his
mind as taut as a metal bar. He had an outside area to which he could escape by
using the special powers of his extra brain, but he still had to make up his
mind what his immediate course of action should be.
His problem with regard to the Follower was not radically
altered. Deadly and imminent danger remained but at least he could now get out
into the open.
Warily, like a fighter parrying a dangerous opponent, Gosseyn
watched the gorilla-like Jurig who was supposed to kill him.
'Leej,' he said, without looking at the Predictor woman,
'come over here behind me.'
She came without a word, her feet almost noiseless on the
floor. He had a glimpse of her face as she slipped past him. Her cheeks were
colorless, her eyes blurred, but she held her head high.
From the far side of what was now one room, Jurig snarled.
'That won't do you any good, hiding behind him.'
It was a purely thalamic threat, serving no useful purpose
even to Jurig. But Gosseyn did not let it go by. He had been waiting for an
opening. A man who could not make up his mind about a larger issue had to
appear to concentrate on a smaller one. So long as he gave the impression of
being concerned with Jurig, as if that were the danger, just so long would the
Follower await events. He said in a steely voice:
'Jurig, I'm tired of that kind of talk. It's time you made
up your mind whose side you're on. And I'm telling you right now that it had
better be mine.'
The Yalertan, who had been bracing himself and edging
forward, stopped. The muscles of his face worked spasmodically, quivering
between doubt and rage. He glared at Gosseyn with the baffled eyes of a bully
whose smaller opponent was not afraid.
'I'm going to smash your head against the cement,' he said
from between clenched teeth. But he spoke the words as if he were testing their
effect.
'Leej,' said Gosseyn.
'Yes?'
'Can you see what I'm going to do?'
'There's nothing. Nothing.'
It was Gosseyn's turn to be baffled. True, if she couldn't
foresee his actions, then neither could the Follower. But he had hoped to
obtain a vague picture which would help him make up his mind. What should he do
when he got outside? Run? Or enter the Retreat and seek out the Follower?
His role in this affair was on a vaster level than that of
either Jurig or Leej. Like the Follower, he was a major piece in the galactic
game of chess. At least, he must consider himself one until events proved
otherwise. It imposed restraints upon him. Escape alone would not solve his
problems. He must also, if it could possibly be done, plant the seeds of future
victory.
'Jurig,' he temporized aloud, 'you've got a big decision to
make. It involves more courage than you've yet shown, but I'm sure you have it
in you. From now on, regardless of consequences, you're against the Follower. I
tell you, you have no choice. The next time we meet, if you're not working
unconditionally against him, I shall kill you.'
Jurig stared at him uncertainly. It seemed hard for him to
realize that a fellow prisoner was actually giving him an order. He laughed
uneasily. And then the immensity of the insult must have penetrated. He became
enormously angry, the anger of a man who feels himself outraged.
'I'll show you what choice I have!' he shouted.
His approach was swift but heavy. He held his arms out,
obviously intending to hug and squeeze, and the surprise for him was when
Gosseyn stepped right into the circle of those bear like limbs, and sent a
powerful right to his jaw. The blow failed to land squarely but it stopped
Jurig short. He grappled with Gosseyn with a sick look on his face. His
expression grew sicker as he fought to gain a strangle hold on a man who, now
that so telling a blow had been struck, was not only faster but stronger than
himself.
The Yalertan yielded suddenly, like a door that has been
smashed open with a battering ram. Gosseyn felt it coming, and with a final
burst of strength sent the other staggering back across the floor, routed,
defeated in mind and body.
The shock would be lasting, and Gosseyn regretted it. But
there was no doubt that it had been necessary. On such identifications, people
like Jurig built their egos. All through his life, like the goats in the famous
experiment, Jurig had butted his way to dominance. It was his way, not
Gosseyn's, of expressing his superiority.
Consciously, he would resent the defeat, find a dozen excuses
for himself. But on the unconscious level he would accept it. So far as Gilbert
Gosseyn was concerned, his confidence in his physical prowess was gone. Only
Null-A training would ever enable him to reorientate himself to the new
situation, and that was not available.
Satisfied, Gosseyn similarized himself out onto the courtyard.
Swiftly, then, the greater purpose of escape took full possession of his
nervous system.
He was vaguely aware of people in the courtyard turning to
look at him as he ran. He had a glimpse, in turning his head, of an enormous
pile of buildings, spires and steeples, masses of stone and marble, colored
glass windows. That picture of the Follower's Retreat remained in his mind even
as he kept 'watch' on every energy source in the castle. He was ready to
similarize himself back and forth to escape blasters and power-driven weapons.
But there was no change in the flow from the dynamo or the atomic pile.
Automatically, he similarized Leej to the memorized area
behind him, but he did not look to see if she was following him.
He reached the tall fence, and saw that the spears which
looked formidable enough in themselves were encrusted with the same kind of
needles as had been the grilles in the prison cell he'd just left. Nine feet of
unscalable metal—but he could see between the spears.
It required the usual long—it seemed long—moment to memorize
an area beyond the fence. Actually, it was not a memory. When he concentrated
in a definite fashion on a spot, his extra brain automatically took a
'photograph' of the entire atomic structure of the matter involved to a depth
of several molecules. The similarization process that could then follow
resulted from the flow of nervous energy along channels in the extra
brain—channels which had been created only after prolonged training. The activating
cue would send a wash of that energy out, first along the nerves of his body,
and then beyond his skin. For an instant then, every affected atom was forced
into a blurred resemblance to the photographer pattern. When the approximation
of similarity was made accurate to twenty decimal places, the two objects became
contiguous, and the greater bridged the gap to the lesser as if there were no
gap.
Gosseyn similarized himself through the fence and started to
run toward the woods. As he ran he felt the presence of magnetic energy and saw
a plane glide toward him over the trees. He kept on running, watching it from
the corner of his eyes, striving to analyze its power source. It had no
propeller, but there were long metal struts jutting down from its stubby wings.
Similar type plates ran along its fuselage, and that gave him confirmation.
Here was the source of the magnetic power.
Its weapons would be bullets or a magentic beam blaster.
The machine had been off to one side. Now, its nose twisted
toward him. Gosseyn similarized himself back to the fence.
A plume of colored fire puffed along the ground where he had
been. The grass smoked. There were flashes of yellow flame from the brush, but
that only mingled with the red-green-blue-orange of the blaster's own chromatic
display.
As the plane hissed past him, Gosseyn took a photograph of
its tail assembly. And once more, at top speed, he started to run toward the
trees more than a hundred yards away.
He kept a watch on the plane, and saw it turn and dive down
at him again. This time Gosseyn took no chances. He was a hundred feet from the
fence, which was dangerously close. But he similarized the tail assembly of the
plane to the memorized area beside the fence.
There was a crash that rocked the ground. The metallic
shriek of the plane, its speed undiminished by the process of similarization,
was ear splitting as it screeched along parallel to the fence, tearing the
fence with fantastic ripping sounds. It came to a rest an eighth of a mile
away, a tattered fragment.
Gosseyn ran on. He reached the woods safely, but he was no
longer satisfied with merely escaping. If one attacking device existed, then so
might others. Swiftly, he memorized an area beside a tree, stepped aside and
brought Leej up to it. Next, he transported himself back to the area just
outside the cell window, and headed at a run for the nearest door leading into
the Retreat. He wanted weapons that would match anything the Follower had
mustered to prevent his escape, and he intended to get them.
He found himself in a broad corridor, and the first thing he
saw was a long line of magnetic lights. He memorized the nearest one, and
immediately felt a lot better. He had a small but potent weapon that would
operate anywhere on Yalerta.
He continued along the corridor but no longer at top speed.
The dynamo and the pile were near, but just where he had no way of knowing. He
sensed the presence of human beings around, but the neural flow was neither
tense nor menacing. He came to a basement stairway, and without hesitation
headed down the long flight of steps. Two men were standing at the bottom,
talking to each other earnestly but without anxiety.
They looked up at him in surprise. And Gosseyn, who had
already made his plan, said breathlessly, 'Which way to the power plant? It's
urgent.'
One of the men looked excited. 'Why . . . why—that way. That
way. What's the matter?'
Gosseyn was already racing in the direction indicated. The
other called after him, 'The fifth door to your right.'
When he came to the fifth door, he stopped just inside the
threshold. Just what he had expected he didn't know, but not an atomic pile
feeding power to an electric dynamo. The huge dynamo was turning softly. Its
great wheel glinted as it moved slowly. To either side were walls lined with
instrument boards. A half dozen men were moving around, and at first they
didn't see him. Gosseyn walked boldly towards the power outlet of the dynamo,
and memorized it. He estimated it at forty thousand kilowatts.
Then, still without hesitation, he strode to the pile
itself. There were the usual devices for looking into the interior, and an
attendant was bending over a gauge making minute adjustments on a marked dial.
Gosseyn stepped up beside him, and peered through one of the viewing devices into
the pile itself.
He was aware of the man straightening. But the long moment
the other required to grasp the nature of the intrusion was all that Gosseyn
needed. As the attendant tugged at his shoulder, too surprised for speech or
anger, Gosseyn stepped back and, without a word, walked to the door and out
into the corridor.
The moment he was out of sight, he transported himself into
the woods. Leej stood a dozen feet away, almost facing him.
She jumped as he appeared, and babbled something he didn't
catch. He waited for the expression on her face to indicate that she was
recovering. He didn't have long to wait.
Her body trembled, but it was a quaver of excitement. Her
eyes were slightly glazed, but they became bright with eagerness. She grabbed
his arm with quivering fingers.
'Quick,' she said, 'this way. My trailer will be over here.'
'Your what?' said Gosseyn.
But she had started off through the brush, and she seemed
not to hear.
Gosseyn ran after her, his eyes narrowed, and he was
thinking: Has she been fooling me? Has she known all this time that she was
going to escape now? But then why wouldn't the Follower know, and be waiting?
He couldn't help remembering that he was caught in 'the most
intricate trap ever devised for one man.' It was something to think about even
if he apparently succeeded in getting away.
Ahead of him, the woman plunged through a screen of tall
shrubs, and then he didn't hear her any more. Following her, Gosseyn found
himself on the edge of a limitless sea. He had time to remember that this was a
planet of vast oceans broken at intervals by islands, and then an airship came
floating over the trees to his left. It was about a hundred and fifty feet
long, snub-nosed, and about thirty feet high at its thickest. It plunged
lightly into the water in front of them. A long, sleek gangplank came sliding
down toward them. It touched the sand at the woman's feet.
In a flash, she was up and along it. She called over her
shoulder, 'Hurry!'
Gosseyn pressed across the threshold behind her. The moment
he was inside, the door flowed shut, and the machine began to glide forward and
up. The swiftness with which everything happened reminded him of a similar
experience he'd had at the Temple of the Sleeping God on Gorgzid while in the
body of Prince Ashargin.
There was one difference, vital and urgent. As Ashargin, he
had not felt immediately threatened. Now, he did.
VIII
NULL-ABSTRACTS
Aristotle's formulations of the science of his time were
probably the most accurate available during his lifetime. His followers for two
thousand years subscribed to the identification that they were true for all
time. In more recent years, new systems of measurement disproved many of these
'truths', but they continue to be the basis of the opinions and beliefs of most
people. The two-valued logic on which such folk-thought is founded has
accordingly been given the designation aristotelian—abbreviation: A—and the
many-valued logic of modern science has been given the name non-aristotelian—abbreviation:
Null-A.
Gosseyn found himself in a corridor at the bottom of a
flight of steps. The corridor extended both right and left, curving gradually
out of sight. At the moment he had no impulse for exploration. He followed Leej
up the stairway toward a bright room, and he was already noticing the radical
design of the ceiling lights. It confirmed his first 'feel' of the ship's power
source. Magnetic power.
The fact was interesting because of the picture it gave him
of Yalertan scientific development, comparable to twenty-second century Earth.
But it also gave him a shock. For him now the magnetic engine had a flaw. It
was too complete. It performed so many functions that people who used it had a
tendency to discard all other forms of power.
The Predictors had made the old mistake. There was no atomic
power aboard. No electricity. Not even a battery. That meant no really potent
weapons, and no radar. These Predictors obviously expected to be able to
foresee the approach of anything inimical to them, but this was not so any
more. He had a vision in his mind of galactic engineers sending electrically
guided aerial torpedoes with proximity fuses and atomic warheads, or any of a
dozen devices that, once attuned to a target, would follow it till they
destroyed it or were themselves destroyed.
The worst part of it was that he could do nothing but find
out as swiftly as possible just how much Leej could foresee.
And of course, he could hope.
The bright room into which Leej led him was longer, broader
and higher than it had seemed from the entrance below. It was a drawing room,
complete with couches, chairs, tables, a massive green rug and, directly across
from where he had paused, a sloping window that bulged out like a streamlined
balcony from the side of the ship.
The woman flung herself with an audible sigh onto a couch
near the window, and said, 'It's wonderful to be safe again.' She shook her
dark hair with a tiny shudder. 'What a nightmare.'
She added in a savage tone, 'That will never happen again.'
Gosseyn, heading for the window, was stopped short by her
words. He half turned to ask her on what she based her confidence. He didn't
speak the question. She had already admitted that she couldn't foretell the
actions of the Follower, and that was all he needed to know. Deprived of her
gift, she was a good-looking, emotional young woman about thirty years old
without any particular astuteness to protect her from danger. He could find out
all she knew after he had done what he could to ward off possible attacks.
As he started forward again, he felt the nerve sensation
that indicated the approach of a human being. A moment later, a man emerged
from a door that led to the forward part of the vessel. The fellow was slim,
with an edge of gray in his hair. He ran over to Leej, and knelt beside her.
'My dear,' he said, 'you're back.'
He kissed her with a quick movement.
At the window now, Gosseyn ignored the lovers. He was
looking down and back at a fascinating scene. An island. A green island, set
like an emerald in a sapphire sea. There was a gem within the green gem, a pile
of buildings that shone gray-white in the sun, and already it was hard to make
out the details. They seemed unreal, and actually did not resemble buildings
at this distance. His knowledge that they were enabled his mind to fill in the
gaps.
The ship was climbing a long, shallow slope of air. Its
speed was evidently greater than he had thought from the smoothness of the
acceleration, because, as he watched, the island shrank visibly in size. And he
could see now that there was no apparent movement either on the ground or in
the air above it.
That braced him, though there had been in his mind through
all the dangerous moments the knowledge that, even if he were killed, the
continuity of his memories and thoughts would immediately be carried on by
another Gosseyn body, which would wake up automatically in a remote hiding
place.
Unfortunately, as he had learned from an earlier version of
his body, now dead, the next group of Gosseyns were eighteen years old. He
couldn't escape the conviction that no eighteen year old could handle the
crisis that had been created by Enro. People had confidence in mature men and
not in children. That confidence might make a difference between victory and
defeat in a critical moment.
It was important that he remain alive in this body.
His eyes narrowed thoughtfully as he considered the immediate
possibilities. He had work to do. He must stop further transportation of
Predictors to Enro's fleet, seize the warships that had landed, and, as soon as
possible, attack the shadow-thing on his island.
There were preliminaries to be accomplished, but those were
the things he must work toward—and swiftly. Swiftly. The great and decisive
battle of the Sixth Decant was hourly growing in fury. If he knew anything of
human nature, then the League was already shaken to its tenuous foundations.
Certainly, Enro expected it to collapse, and, childish though the dictator
might be when it came to women, on the political and military level he was a
genius.
He was about to turn from the window when it struck him that
Jurig, under sentence of death as he was, might be bearing the brunt of the
Follower's wrath. Hastily, he similarized Jurig to the woods outside the fence.
If the man was at all afraid, he would hide there and so be available for transportation
to the ship later on.
The action taken, he twisted back into the room in time to
hear the woman say calmly, 'I'm sorry, Yanar, but he will want a woman, and
naturally I must be the one. Good-by.'
The man was on his feet, his face dark. He looked up and his
eyes met Gosseyn's. The hatred that sparkled in their dark depths was matched
by the sensation that jumped from his nervous system to Gosseyn's extra brain.
He said with a sneer, 'I don't give my mistress up to anyone without a fight,
even someone whose future is a blur.'
His hand disappeared into a pocket, and came out with a
small, fanlike instrument. He brought it up, and pressed the charger.
Gosseyn walked forward, and took the weapon from Yanar's
fingers. The other did not resist. There was a strained look on his face, and
the nervous rhythm that exuded from him had altered to a fear pattern. He was
obviously stunned at the way his fragile appearing but powerful gun had failed
to 'fire.' Gosseyn moved off several paces and examined the instrument
curiously. The radial flanges that made up the antenna was typical, and
verified, if verification was needed, the nature of the energy involved.
Magnetic weapons operated on outside power, in this case the field set up by
the magnetic engines in the hull. The field extended with dimming strength for
a distance of nearly five miles beyond the hull.
Gosseyn slipped the instrument into his pocket, and tried to
imagine the effect on Yanar of what had happened. He had photographed the
entire weapon, and allowed one of the discharge points to flow to a
similarized area into the prison cell of the Follower's Retreat. The distance
in space prevented the current from coming back to the ship, and so the weapon,
its energy diverted, had failed to function. The psychological effect must be
slightly terrific.
The man's face remained a bleached white, but he brought his
teeth together with a snap.
'You'll have to kill me,' he said, bitterly.
He was a middle-aged nonentity, set in his ways, thalamically
bound up in A—as distinct from Null-A—habits, and because he could shoot for
purely emotional reasons, he would be dangerous so long as they were both
aboard the ship. He must be killed, or exiled, or—Gosseyn smiled grimly
—guarded. He knew just the man who could do it. Jurig. But that was for later.
Now, he half-turned to Leej, and questioned her pointedly about the marriage
customs of the Predictors.
There was no marriage. 'That,' said Leej with disdain, 'is
for the lesser breeds.'
She did not say so in so many words, but Gosseyn gathered
that Yanar was one of a long line of lovers, and that, being older, he had had
even more mistresses. These people wearied of each other, and because of their
gift were usually able to name the exact hour when they would separate. The
unexpected appearance of Gosseyn had terminated this affair sooner than
anticipated.
Gosseyn was neither repelled nor attracted by the moves
involved. His first thought had been to reassure Yanar that he needn't worry
about losing his mistress. He didn't say it. He wanted a Predictor beside him
from now on, and Leej might be insulted if she discovered that he did not make
love to women who did not have some Null-A training.
He asked Leej one more question. 'What does Yanar do besides
eat and sleep?'
'He runs the ship.'
Gosseyn motioned at Yanar. 'Lead the way,' he said curtly.
Further conversation with Leej could wait. He was a man who
must depend on what he knew, and the sense of urgency was strong upon him
again.
As he examined the ship, Gosseyn's mind jumped back to what
Leej had said when they were running through the underbrush on the Follower's
island. Trailer, she had called her machine.
A skytrailer. He could imagine the easy life these Predictors
had lived for so many years on their world of islands and water. Floating
lazily through the sky, landing when the mood touched them, and where they
desired; seizing control of any 'lesser' human being whom it pleased them to
enslave, and snatching any object they wanted to possess—there was a part of
man's nature that longed for such a carefree existence. The fact that in this
case it included a ruthless subjugation of people who did not have the precious
gift of prophecy was easy to understand also. Overlordship could always be
justified by minds that were not too critical. And, besides, recent
generations had grown up from babyhood in an environment where slavery was not
questioned by the Predictor hierarchy. The attitude was part of the set of
their nervous systems.
Though they did not seem to realize it, the appearance of
the Follower on their idyllic scene had forever broken the casual pattern of
their existence. And now, the arrival of the galactic warship and the presence
of Gilbert Gosseyn were further indicators of their changing conditions. They
must either adjust or be swept aside.
The control room was in the nose of the vessel. It didn't
take long to examine it. The controls were of the simple discharger type
common to energy derived from the planet's own magnetic currents.
The dome of the control room was limpidly transparent.
Gosseyn stood for a long moment gazing down at the sea that was rushing by
below. As far as he could see ahead there was only a mass of heaving waters,
and not a sign of land.
He turned away to continue his exploration. There was a
steel stairway in one corner. It led up at a steep slant to a closed hatch in
the ceiling. Gosseyn started up immediately.
The loft turned out to be a storeroom. Gosseyn examined the
labels on boxes and containers, not quite sure what he was looking for, but
ready to follow up on any idea that suggested itself. Suddenly, as he examined
a drum filled with degravitated air, the idea came.
As he continued his conducted tour, his plan grew more
plausible. He glanced in at each of four bedrooms, a dining room, and a rear
control room on the main floor, and then went down to the lower deck, but by
now he was searching for something. He had previously sensed the presence of
other human beings below deck. He finally counted six men and six women. They
were submissive in manner, and judging from the neural flow from their bodies,
obviously accepted their lot. He dismissed them from his calculations and,
after peering in at spacious kitchens and more storerooms, he came to a workroom.
It was what he had been looking for. He sent Yanar about his
business, and locked the door.
Gosseyn emerged three hours later with two tubes set up on a
plate that would take power from the magnetic field of the ship's engines.
Straight up to the loft he climbed, and spent more than fifteen minutes piping
degravitated air into the airtight container inside which he had set up his
tubes.
At first the oscillation was faint. It grew stronger. The
rhythmic pulse heat in his extra brain steadily and evenly. On earth, the
graviton tube was known as a member of a group that was said to possess
'radiation hunger.' Lacking the gravitonic particle, it craved stability. Up
to that point its reactions were normal, for all things in nature fought
constantly to achieve a balance. It was the tube's methods that were fantastic.
It sent out radiations of its own to search for normal matter.
Every time it touched an object, a message was dispatched back to the tube.
Result: excitement. A change in the rhythm so long as the object remained in
the vicinity. On Earth, technicians said of such moments, 'There's old Ehrenhaft
wagging his tail again.'
Not that it did any good. And the tube never seemed to learn
from experience. The process went on and on, without its hunger ever being
satisfied. Surprisingly, as with many other things, such 'stupidity' was useful
to those who cared to exploit it.
Gosseyn maneuvered the ship to a height of five miles, and
then down almost to the surface of the water. He was able in this way to
accustom himself to the normal rhythm variation of movement above a sea.
Finally, he set the cue. If there was any variation in the rhythm, then his
extra brain would be warned, whereupon he would similarize himself into either
front or rear control room and decide on further measures.
It was a personal detector system on a very limited level,
useless against weapons traveling miles a second, and certainly useless if a
galactic Distorter ever got a 'fix' on his ship. But it was something.
Gosseyn hesitated, then found himself an end of wire and
memorized it. Quickly he memorized two floor areas in the control room. And
then, as the sun disappeared behind the shimmering horizon of water, and the
twilight quickened toward night, he headed for the living room, conscious that
he was ready for more positive action.
When Gosseyn entered the living room, Yanar was sitting in a
chair near the window, reading a book. The room glowed with soft, magnetic
lights; cold lights, yet they always looked so warm and intimate, because of
the way their colors changed ever so little from moment to moment.
Gosseyn stopped just inside the doorway, and watched the
other narrowly. This was the test. He similarized the wire end back in the
control room to the first memorized area, and waited.
The older man looked up with a start from his book. He
stared at Gosseyn grimly, then climbed to his feet, walked to a chair at the
far end of the room, and sat down. A steady stream of unfriendly neural
sensations, tinged with spasmodic discharges indicating doubt, flowed from the
Predictor's nervous system.
Gosseyn studied the man, convinced that he had got as much
of a response as he could hope for. It could be an attempt to fool him. His
every move could have been foreseen and allowed for. But he thought not.
Accordingly, his major problem with these Predictors was
solved. Each time he 'moved' the wire with his extra brain, he would confuse
their ability to predict his actions. There would, in short, be a blur. He
could carry on an interview, and be fairly sure that his questions were not
being anticipated. There was one more problem: Should he or should he not be
conciliatory with Yanar?
That was more important than it might seem. It took time to
make friends, but it only required a shock moment to impress another person
with the fear that he was in the presence of a superior. The power of Gilbert
Gosseyn on Yalerta was going to depend on his ability to put over the idea that
he was invincible. In no other way could he hope to operate at the top speed
necessary to his plans and to the basic war situation in the galaxy.
The question was, at what speed would it be right for him to
operate?
Gosseyn walked over to the window. It was almost pitch dark
now, but the glint of the sea was visible in the half light. If there was a
moon circling the planet, it was not yet above the horizon, or else it was too
small to reflect a noticeable amount of sunlight.
He gazed at the light-flecked waters, and wondered how far
he was from Earth. It seemed strange, even unsettling, to realize how great the
distance must be. It brought a sense of smallness, an awareness of how much
remained to be done. He could only hope he would be able to develop to the
height of power that would be necessary in the critical days ahead. He was not
a man who need ever think of himself as belonging to any one planet, but,
still, he did have a strong feeling for the solar system.
A sound drew his attention. He turned away from the window,
and saw that the slaves from the lower deck were busy in the dining room. He
watched them thoughtfully, noting that the youngest and prettiest girl was the
target for little, spiteful acts of domination by the other two women. She was
about nineteen, Gosseyn estimated. She kept her eyes down, which was a
significant sign. If he knew anything about thalamic people—and he did—then she
was biding her time and awaiting an opportunity to repay her tormentors. Gosseyn
guessed from the nature of the neural sensations that flowed from her that she
would be able to do her greatest damage by playing the coquette with the men
servants.
He studied Yanar again, and made up his mind. Definitely,
irrevocably, no friendliness.
He walked slowly toward the man, making no effort to be
stealthy. The Predictor glanced up, and saw him coming. He stirred uneasily in
his chair, but remained where he was. He looked unhappy.
Gosseyn considered that a good sign. Except for those who
had been in contact with the Follower, none of these Predictors had ever been
subjected to the pressure of not knowing from instant to instant what the
future might hold. It should be interesting to observe the effect on Yanar. And
besides, he himself needed information badly.
Gosseyn began by asking the simple questions. And before
each one—not only in the beginning, but during the entire interview—he shifted
the wire in the control room back and forth between the floor areas 'one' and
'two.'
With occasional exceptions, Yanar answered freely. His full
name was Yanar Wilvry Blove, he was forty-four years old, and had no
occupation—that was where the first hesitation came.
Gosseyn noted the point mentally, but made no comment.
Blockage in connection with occupation, distinct interruption in neural flow.
'Is there any significance to your names?' he asked.
Yanar seemed relieved. He shrugged. 'I'm Yanar of the Wilvry
birth center on the island of Blove.'
So that was how it worked. He shifted the wire again, and
said affably, 'You people have quite a gift of foreseeing. I've never run into
anything like it before.'
'No good against you,' said Yanar darkly.
That was worth knowing for sure, though, of course, the
statement that it was not usable did not make the words true. Fortunately, he
had other verification.
Not that he had any alternative but to proceed as if Yanar
didn't foresee his questions.
The interview continued. Gosseyn wasn't sure what he was
searching for. A clue perhaps. His belief that he was still in the Followers'
trap was becoming greater and not less. If that was so, then he was fighting
against time, in a very real sense.
But what was the nature of the trap?
He learned the Predictors were born in a normal fashion,
usually aboard sky trailers. A few days after being born they were taken to the
nearest birth center that had space available.
'What does the birth center do to the child?' Gosseyn asked.
Yanar shook his head. And there was blockage again in the
neural flow from him. 'We don't give information like that to strangers,' he
said stubbornly, 'not even to—' He stopped, shrugged, then finished curtly, 'To
no one.'
Gosseyn did not press the matter. He was beginning to feel
distracted. The facts he was unearthing were valuable but not vital. They did
not fit his needs of the moment.
Yet there was nothing to do but go on.
'How long have there been Predictors?' he asked.
'Several hundred years.'
Then it's the result of an invention?'
'There's a legend—' Yanar began. He stopped, and stiffened.
Blockage. 'I refuse to answer that,' he said.
Gosseyn said, 'At what stage does the prophetic ability
appear?'
'Above twelve. Sometimes a little sooner.'
Gosseyn nodded, half to himself. There was a theory forming
in the back of his mind, and this fitted. The faculty developed slowly, like
the human cortex and like his own extra brain. He hesitated over his next
question, because there was an assumption in it that he didn't want Yanar to
notice until it was too late. As before, he shifted the wire first, then:
'What happens to children of Predictors for whom there's no
room in the birth center?'
Yanar shrugged. 'They grow up and run the islands.'
He sat smug. He seemed unaware that he had revealed by
implication that only those children who went to the birth centers became
Predictors.
His impassivity started another train of thought in Gosseyn's
mind. He had been intent, but now it struck him sharply that Yanar was not
reacting like a man being subjected for the first time to such an interview as
this. He knew what it felt like not to have advance awareness of questions.
Knew it so well that it didn't upset him.
Like lightning Gosseyn saw the possibilities. He stepped
back in his chagrin. It seemed incredible that it had taken him so long to
realize the truth. He stared down at the Predictor, and said finally in a
level but steely voice:
'And now, you will please describe exactly how you have been
communicating with the Follower.'
If ever a man was caught by surprise, then Yanar was that
man. He seemed unprepared in the extreme thalamic fashion. His face turned
livid. The neural flow from his nervous system blocked and then burst, and
then blocked and burst again.
'What do you mean?' He whispered the words finally.
Since the question was rhetorical, Gosseyn did not repeat
his statement. He glowered down at the Predictor. 'Quick!' he said. 'Before I kill
you.'
Yanar sagged limply back into his chair, and once more he
changed color. He flushed. 'I didn't,' he stammered. 'Why should I endanger
myself by calling the Follower and telling him where you were? I wouldn't do a
thing like that.'
He shook himself, 'You can't prove it,' he said.
Gosseyn didn't need proof. He had been dangerously remiss
in not keeping a watch on Yanar. And so the message had been sent and the
damage done. Gosseyn had no doubt of that. The Predictor's reactions were too
violent and too realistic. Yanar had never had to control his emotions, and so
now he didn't know how. Guilt poured from every reflex in his body.
Gosseyn felt chilled. But he had done what he could to
protect himself, and so there was nothing to do but obtain more information. He
said curtly, 'You'd better talk fast, my friend, and truthfully. Did you
contact the Follower himself?'
Yanar was sullen. He shrugged, and once more that was a
signal for a block to break. 'Of course,' he said.
'You mean, he expected a call from you?' Gosseyn wanted that
clear. 'You're his agent?'
The man shook his head. 'I'm a Predictor,' he said.
There was pride in his tone, but it was a bedraggled
variety. A lock of his iron-gray hair had sagged over one temple. He looked
like anything but a nobleman of Yalerta.
Gosseyn did not comment on the boast. He had his man on the
run, and that was what counted.
'What did you tell him?'
'I said you were aboard.'
'And what did he say?'
'He said he knew that.'
'Oh!' said Gosseyn. He paused, but only for a moment.
His mind jumped ahead to other aspects of the situation. In
quick succession he rapped out a dozen vital questions.
The moment he had his facts he similarized the both of them
into the control room, and stood over the trembling Yanar while he produced
maps, and showed the wide circular course the ship had been following round and
round the Follower's island, at a radius of a hundred miles.
Gosseyn reset the course for the island of Crest, only a few
hundred miles north by northwest. Then he turned to confront the Predictors.
'And now,' he said in a threatening tone, 'we come to the
problem of what to do with a traitor.'
The older man was pale, but some of his fear had departed.
He said boldly, 'I owe you nothing. You can kill me, but you can't expect
loyalty from me, and you won't get it.'
It wasn't loyalty that Gosseyn wanted. It was fear. He must
make certain that these Predictors learned to think twice before they acted
against him. But what to do?
It seemed impractical to make a definite decision. He turned
on his heel and headed back into the drawing room. As he entered, Leej appeared
from the direction of the bedrooms. He walked toward her, a faint frown on his
face. A few questions, madam, he thought bleakly. How was it that
Yanar could warn the Follower without his action being predictable? Please
explain that.
The woman stopped, and waited for him, smiling. Her smile
changed abruptly. Her gaze plunged past him and slightly to one side. Gosseyn
spun around, and stared.
He felt nothing, heard nothing, and there was no sense of a
presence even now that he could see. But a shape was taking form a dozen feet
to his right. It grew black, and yet he could see the wall beyond it. It
thickened, but it was not substance.
He felt himself become tense. The moment of his meeting with
the Follower had come.
IX
NULL-ABSTRACTS
Semantics has to do with the meaning of meaning, or
the meaning of words. General Semantics has to do with the relationship of the
human nervous system to the world around it, and therefore it includes
semantics. It provides an integrating system for all human thought and
experience.
There was silence. The Follower seemed to be regarding him,
for the shadowy mass was holding steady now. Gosseyn's brief, intense anxiety
began to fade. He stared at his enemy alertly, and, swiftly, his attitude
changed.
Actually, what could the Follower do against him?
Cautiously, Gosseyn shifted his gaze for a flickering moment
to take in the rest of the scene before him. If there was going to be a battle,
he wanted to be in the best possible position for it.
Leej was standing where she had paused. Her body was rigid,
her eyes still unusually wide open. During the fleeting instant that his
attention lingered upon her, he noted that the neural sensations that flowed
from her showed an unvarying anxiety. It could be an alarm for her own safety
exclusively, but Gosseyn thought not. Her fate was too closely bound up with
his. He dismissed all thought of danger from her.
His eyes shifted toward the door of the corridor that led to
the control room. For the barest moment, then, he lost sight of the Follower.
He twisted back immediately, but he had his fact. The door was too far to the
right. He had to turn his head too sharply in order to see it.
Gosseyn began to back toward the wall behind him. He moved
slowly. There were several thoughts in his mind, several possibilities of
danger. Yanar. The Predictor, he discovered with a swift probe of his extra
brain, was still in the control room. Unfriendly vibrations flowed from him.
Gosseyn smiled grimly. He could just imagine how the older
man might do him great damage in a critical moment. From memory, he visualized
the wall behind him, and it had the air-conditioning slits that he wanted for
his purpose. He twisted slightly to one side, until the soft breeze was blowing
directly against his back, and there, one heel pressed against the wall, he
took up his position.
Having done what he could, he studied his enemy with
appraising eyes.
A man? It was hard to believe that a human form could become
so shadowy, so insubstantial. The structure of darkness had no form. Gosseyn
saw, now that he was looking at it sharply, that it wavered ever so slightly.
As he watched, fascinated, it changed and grew fuzzy at the edges, only to fill
in again as if a pressure was behind it pushing the foggy stuff forward.
Cautiously, Gosseyn probed into that gas like thickness. He
held himself ready to nullify potent energies.
But there was nothing.
He took his usual prolonged moment to photograph an object.
And still there was nothing. No image formed.
No normal image, that is. His extra brain registered the
presence of air. But the darkness itself came out blank.
He remembered what Leej had said, that the Follower was a
being out of phase. He had assumed from other comments that the man had found a
way of being out of phase in time. Somehow, not in this time. Here, but not
now.
Suddenly, now, he realized that he had a more far-reaching
assumption than that. He had assumed that Leej 'knew what she was talking
about.
Where would she have gained the idea that the Follower was
out of phase? Why, from the propaganda of the Follower! Neither she nor the
Predictors had any critical ability, at least not in a scientific sense. These
Predictors stole their science from the islands. And so, in their innocence,
they had accepted the Follower's own picture.
'Leej!' Gosseyn spoke without looking at her.
'Yes?' shakily.
'Have you ever seen the Follower as a man, without—' he
paused, finished sardonically, 'his make-up on?'
'No.'
'Do you know anybody who has?'
'Oh, yes. Yanar. And, oh, many others. He grew up from
childhood, you know.'
For a tense moment Gosseyn toyed with the idea that Yanar
was the Shadow. Yanar standing in the control room manipulating the shadow
puppet. He rejected the notion. The man's reactions under questioning, both
inward and outward, had been on a provincial level. The Follower was a great
man.
The question of how the Follower did what he did was not
something about which he could make up his mind on the available evidence. But
it was just as well to clear away the assumptions of people who didn't really
know the truth.
Gosseyn waited.
A mental finger in his brain quivered on a nerve trigger
that would bring the power from the forty thousand kilowatt dynamo in the
Follower's Retreat across the gap of space, and straight into the shadow stuff.
He didn't pull the trigger. This was one time he had no intention
of forcing the issue.
He had not long to wait. A deep, resonant voice came out of
the shadow emptiness.
'Gilbert Gosseyn, I offer you—partnership.'
For a man who had been nerving himself for deadly conflict,
the words came with almost the force of a bombshell.
His mind adjusted swiftly. He remained puzzled but his skepticism
faded. Actually, Leej had indicated something like this might happen. In
describing the Follower's visit to his cell while he still lay unconscious, she
had reported the Follower as saying that he preferred to use people rather
than kill them.
It was interesting, but not convincing, that he had now
decided on equal status. Gosseyn waited to be convinced.
'Between us,' said the shadow-thing in his strong voice,
'you and I can dominate the galaxy.'
Gosseyn had to smile at that, but it was an unpleasant
smile. The word 'dominate' was not calculated to win the good will of a person
trained as he had been.
Still he made no reply. He wanted to hear every word of the
offer without any more comment than was necessary.
'I warn you, of course,' said the Shadow, 'that if you
should prove to be less strong than I suspect, you will eventually have to take
a subordinate role. But for the moment I offer full partnership, without
conditions.'
Gosseyn grew sardonic. This was thalamic talk. Without
conditions, indeed! He did not doubt but that he was expected to co-operate
with the purposes of the Follower. People tended to project their own hopes and
desires, and so a plan for personal aggrandizement became the plan.
Next move: bloodthirsty threats.
'If you refuse,' said the resonant voice, 'then you and I
are enemies, and you will be destroyed without mercy.'
And that, Gosseyn presumed cynically, was that. The pattern
of the neurosis was complete.
His analysis must have been correct. Silence settled over
the room, and once more for a little time there was only the movement of the
ship as it raced through the night sky on wings of magnetic power.
It was clear that he was now expected to make an answer.
Well, what ought he to say?
From the corner of his eyes, Gosseyn saw that Leej was edging
cautiously toward a chair. She made it, and sighed audibly as she sank into it.
That brought a bleak amusement to Gosseyn, which passed as the Follower said in
his steeliest tone, 'Well?'
There was the beginning of purpose in Gosseyn now, a half
determination to test the strength of the other. Test it now. But first, as
much information as he could get.
'What's the war situation?' he temporized.
'I predict unqualified victory for Enro in three months,'
was the reply.
Gosseyn hid his shock. 'You actually see the moment of
victory?'
The pause, then, was so slight that Gosseyn wondered
afterwards if it had occurred, or if he imagined it.
'I do,' was the firm reply.
He couldn't accept that, since it failed to take his extra
brain into account. The strong possibility that he was being lied to made him
sardonic again.
'No blurs?' he said.
'None.'
There was an interruption, a movement from Leej. She sat up.
'That,' she said in a clear voice, 'is a lie. I can foresee
everything that anyone else can. And it is difficult to prophesy in detail for
more than three weeks. Even that is always within certain limits.'
'Woman, hold your tongue!'
Leej's color was high. 'Follower,' she said, 'if you can't
win with the power you really have, then you are as good as lost. And don't
think for an instant that I feel myself bound to obey your orders. I do not
desire, and never have desired, your victory.'
'Good girl,' said Gosseyn.
But he frowned, and noted a point for future reference.
There was in her words a veiled implication of previous collaboration with the
Follower.
'Leej,' he said without looking at her, 'are there any blurs
in the next few weeks?'
'There is no picture at all,' was the answer. 'It's as if everything
is cut off. The future is a blank.'
'Perhaps,' said the Follower softly but resonantly, 'that is
because Gosseyn is about to die.'
He added quickly, 'My friend, you have five seconds to make
up your mind.'
The five seconds passed in silence.
Gosseyn had expected, if an attack came, it would be one of
three types. First, the Follower might try to utilize the magnetic power of
Leej's ship against him. He'd quickly discover that that wouldn't work.
Second, and most likely, he'd use a source of power in the
Retreat, since that was his base of operations. He'd quickly discover that
that wouldn't work either. Third, he would use an outside source of power. If
it was the latter, Gosseyn's hope was that it operated across space and not by
mechanical similarity.
If it came by space, the tubes he had set up would detect it
and his extra brain could then similarize electric energy onto the carrier beam
of the tubes.
It turned out to be a combination. A Distorter and an electric
power source in the Retreat. Gosseyn felt the abrupt redirection of the current
from the forty thousand kilowatt dynamo. It was what he had been waiting for,
was ready for. There were 'switches' in his extra brain which, once set to
cues, operated faster than any electric switch.
The problem, with his special method of controlling matter
and energy, was that in a comparative sense it took a long time to 'set' the
initial pattern.
The cue was automatic.
All the power of the dynamo flowed, not as the Follower
directed, into a blaster, but according to the extra brain pattern. At first
Gosseyn let it churn harmlessly into the ground at one of his memorized areas
on the island. He wanted the Follower to realize that the attack was not
proceeding according to plan.
'One, two, three,' he counted deliberately, and then without
further pause similarized it into the air directly in front of the shadow
shape.
There was a flash of flame, brighter than the sun.
The shadowy stuff absorbed it, and held. It took every volt
and watt, wavering as it did so, but it held.
Presently the Follower said, 'We seem to be at an impasse.'
It was a reality that had already struck home to Gosseyn. He
was all too keenly aware of his own shortcomings. It was not apparent, but
Gilbert Gosseyn was ridiculously vulnerable. A surprise blast from a source of
power over which he had not previously established control, and he would be
dead.
The fact that his memory would go on in the body of an
eighteen year old, and that there would be an apparent life continuity did not
alter the meaning of the defeat. No youth of eighteen would ever save a galaxy.
And if such an individual, or even several such individuals interfered too
much, they also could be removed from the scene by older and more powerful
individuals like the Follower.
The perspiration stood out on his face. Just for a moment,
there was a plan in his mind, to attempt something he had never tried before.
But he rejected it almost instantly. Atomic energy was simply one more power
that he could control with his extra mind. But to know that he could do it, and
actually to do it, were entirely different aspects of the problem.
In this confined space, atomic radiation could be as deadly
to the user as to the person it was used against.
'I think,' the Follower's voice cut across his thoughts,
'we'd better come to an agreement. I warn you I have not used all my
resources.'
Gosseyn could well believe that. The Follower need merely
turn to an outside source of power, and instantly he would be the victor in
this tense and deadly battle. At best, Gilbert Gosseyn could retreat to the
Follower's island. The possibility of an ignominious recapture was as close as
that.
And still he dared not use the atomic energy from the pile
in the Retreat.
He made the famous thalamo-cortical pause, and consciously
said to himself, 'There is more to this situation than is apparent. No
individual can take the output of a forty thousand kilowatt dynamo. Therefore,
I am making an identification. There must be an explanation for the shadow
shape which is beyond my own understanding of physics.'
But whose physics? The Follower had confessed that he knew
little of such things. Whose vast knowledge was he using?
The mystery seemed as great as that posed by the existence
of such a being as the Follower.
The shadow shape broke the silence. 'I admit,' he said,
'that you've caught me by surprise. Next time I'll operate on a different
basis.' He broke off. 'Gosseyn, will you consider any kind of partnership?'
'Yes, but on my conditions.'
'What are they?' After a brief hesitation.
'First, that you turn the Predictors against Enro.'
'Impossible.' The Follower's voice was curt. 'The League
must go down, civilization briefly lose its cohesion. I have a very special
reason for requiring the makings of a universal state.'
Gosseyn remembered wryly where he had heard that before. He
stiffened. 'At a cost of a hundred billion dead,' he said. 'No, thank you.'
'I suppose you're a Null-A.' Grimly.
There was no point in denying that. The Follower knew that
Venus existed, knew where it was, and could presumably order its destruction at
any time. 'I'm a Null-A,' Gosseyn admitted.
The Follower said: 'Suppose I told you I was prepared to
have a Null-A universal state.'
'I'd hesitate to accept that as a fact.'
'And yet, I might consider it. I haven't had time to examine
this non-aristotelian philosophy in detail, but as I see it, it's a method of
scientific thinking. Is that correct?'
'It's a way of thinking,' said Gosseyn cautiously.
The Follower's voice had a musing tone when he spoke again.
'I've never yet,' he said, 'had reason to fear science in any of its branches.
I don't think I need to begin now. Let me put it like this: Let us both give
this matter further consideration. But next time we meet you must have made up
your mind. Meanwhile, I shall try to prevent you from making any more use of
power on this planet.'
Gosseyn said nothing, and this time the silence continued.
Slowly, the shadow shape began to withdraw.
Even in that bright light it was difficult to decide when
the last wisp of it faded out of sight.
There was a pause. And then the dynamo in the Follower'
Retreat began to give off less power. In thirty seconds the power was off.
Another pause. And then the pile went dead. Almost at the
same instant, the magnetic power in the Retreat faded off into nothingness.
The Follower had made a shrewd guess as to what had
happened. Even if he didn't suspect the full truth, he had now taken action
that had all the effect of a complete and accurate analysis.
Only the magnetic power of a small ship remained in the
control of Gilbert Gosseyn.
X
NULL-ABSTRACTS
For the sake of sanity, DATE: Do not say, 'Scientists believe. . . .' Say, 'Scientists
believed in 1956 . . .' 'John Smith (1956) is an isolationist. . .' All things,
including John Smith's political opinions, are subject to change and can
therefore only be referred to in terms of the moment.
Slowly, Gosseyn let himself become aware again of his surroundings.
He turned his head and glanced toward the dining room, where the servants had
been so busy a short time before. They were not in sight. He could see the
edge of the table, and all the dishes seemed to be on it, though no food was
visible.
His gaze leaped to Leej, paused long enough for him to
notice that she was climbing to her feet, and then flashed on to the door that
led to the control room. From where he stood, the full length of the corridor
and even a part of the dome window were visible, but there was no sign of
Yanar.
The ship remained steady on its course.
Leej broke the silence between them. 'You've done it,' she
whispered.
Gosseyn walked forward from the wall. He shook off her
words, but he did not tell her that the Follower had just nullified whatever
victory he had gained.
Leej came toward him now, her eyes glowing. 'Don't you
realize,' she said, 'you've beaten the Follower?'
She touched his arm with a quick, tremulous caress of her
fingers.
Gosseyn said, 'Come along.'
He headed toward the control room. When he entered, Yanar
was bending expectantly over the magnetic radio receiver. For Gosseyn it was
apparent at a glance what the man was doing—still waiting for instructions.
Without a word he walked forward, reached past Yanar's shoulder and shut off
the instrument.
The other started violently, then straightened, and turned
with a sneer on his lips. Gosseyn said, 'Pack your bags if you have any. You're
getting off at the first stop.'
The Predictor shrugged. Without a word he stalked from the
room.
Gosseyn stared after him thoughtfully. The man's presence
annoyed him. He was an irritation, a minor nuisance whose only importance in
the galactic scheme of things was that he was a Predictor. That, in spite of
his obstinate and petty character, made him interesting.
Unfortunately, he was but one man out of more than two
million, neither typical nor atypical of his kind. It was possible to make
certain cautious hypotheses about the Predictors from his observation of Yanar
and Leej. But such conclusions must be subject to change without notice.
He dismissed Yanar from his mind, and turned to Leej. 'How long
will it take us to get to Crest, where the warship is?'
The young woman walked over to a plate on the wall, which
Gosseyn hadn't noticed before. She pressed a button. Instantly, a map sprang
into sharp relief. It showed water and islands, and a tiny point of light.
She indicated the brightness. 'That's us,' she said. She
pointed at a land mass higher up. 'There's Crest.' Carefully, she counted
finely ruled lines that crisscrossed the map.
'About three hours and twenty minutes,' she said. 'We'll
have plenty of time to eat dinner.'
'Eat!' Gosseyn echoed. And then he smiled, and shook his
head in a half apology to himself. He was tremendously hungry, but he had
almost forgotten that such normal instincts existed.
It was going to be pleasant to relax.
Dinner.
Gosseyn watched as the young girl served him a cocktail
glass that contained segments of what seemed to be fish. He waited alertly
while Yanar was served by one of the older women, and then transposed the two
glasses by similarization.
He tested his own cocktail. It was fish, sharply flavored.
But, after the initial shock to his taste buds, delicious. He ate it all, then
put down his fork, sat back and looked at Leej.
'What goes on in your mind when you foresee?'
The young woman was serious. 'It's automatic.'
'You mean, there's no pattern you follow?'
Well—'
'Do you pause? Do you think of an object? Do you have to see
it?'
Leej smiled, and even Yanar seemed more relaxed, even
slightly, if tolerantly, amused. The woman said, 'We just have it, that's all. It's
not something that has to be thought about.'
So those were the kind of answers they gave themselves. They
were different. They were special. Simple answers for simple people. Actually,
the complication was of an unparalleled order. The Predictor processes
occurred on a nonverbal level. The whole system of Null-A was an organized
attempt to co-ordinate nonverbal realities with verbal projections. Even on
Null-A Venus the gap between interpretation and event had never been more than
partially bridged.
He waited while the empty glasses were removed, and they
were each served a plate containing a brownish red meat, three vegetables and a
thin sauce of greenish color. He exchanged his for Yanar's, tasted each of the
vegetables in turn, and then cut off a piece of meat. Finally, he sat back.
'Try to explain,' he said.
Leej closed her eyes. 'I've always thought of it as floating
in the time stream. It's a spreading out. Memories are coming into my mind,
but they aren't really memories. Very clear, very sharp. Visual pictures. What
is it you want to know? Ask about something not connected with yourself. You
blur everything.'
Gosseyn had laid down his fork. He would have liked a
prediction about Venus, but that would require projection of his future. He
said, 'The girl who's serving me.'
'Vorn?' Leej shook her head and smiled at the girl, who was
standing rigid and colorless. 'It's too hard on their nervous systems. I'll
tell you her future privately later on, if you wish.' The girl sighed.
'The galactic warship,' said Gosseyn, 'on Crest?'
'You must be connected with that because it's blurred.'
'Blurred now?' He was surprised. 'Before we actually get
there?'
'Yes.' She shook her head. 'This is not answering your questions,
is it?'
'Could we get through to another star system if somebody was
going there?'
'It depends on the distance. There is a limitation.'
'How far?'
'I don't know. I haven't had enough experience.'
'Then how do you know about it?'
'The galactic recruiting ship gives out bulletins.'
'Bulletins?'
She smiled. 'They're not depending entirely on the Follower's
orders. They're trying to make it seem exciting.'
Gosseyn could imagine how that would work. The project was
being made to sound fascinating for the benefit of minds that had many
childlike qualities. And the publicists were smart enough to indicate that
there were obstacles.
'These mental pictures,' he said. 'Can you follow the
future-lines of some person you know who volunteered for warship service?
She sighed and shook her head. 'It's too far. The bulletin
once mentioned about eighteen thousand light-years.'
Gosseyn remembered that Crang had indicated in his conversation
with Patricia Hardie, or rather Reesha, sister of Enro, that the Distorter
transport bases of galactic civilization could not be more than about a
thousand light-years apart.
Theoretically, similarity transport was instantaneous, and
theoretically spatial distance made no difference. In practice there seemed to
be a margin of error. The instruments were not perfect. Twenty decimal
similarity, the critical point where interaction occurred, was no total
similarity.
Apparently, the Predictor gift was also imperfect, even when
not impeded by the presence of Gilbert Gosseyn. Still, whatever the distance
over which they could predict, it would be adequate for the purposes of a
battle in space.
Gosseyn hesitated, then:
'About how many ships' movements could they take into account at the
same time?'
Leej looked surprised. 'It really doesn't matter. All of
them, of course, that had any connection with the event It's very limited in
that way.'
'Limited!' said Gosseyn.
He stood up, and without a word headed for the control room.
He had been undecided about the Predictors. Prepared to let
the galactic ship go on recruiting them until he made up his mind just when he
would try to seize it. Now, it seemed to him that might be a long way off. One
man didn't capture a battleship without planning.
A preliminary move was necessary.
At the end of the living room, Gosseyn stopped and turned.
'Leej,' he called, 'I'll be needing you.'
She was already on her feet, and she joined him a minute
later in the dome. 'That was a short dinner,' she said anxiously.
'We'll finish it later,' said Gosseyn. He was intent. 'Is
there any band on this radio that can be used for sending a general message?'
'Why, yes. We have what we call an emergency band that—' She
stopped. 'It's used to co-ordinate our plans when we are threatened.'
Gosseyn said, 'Set it.'
She gave him a startled look, but there must have been
something in his expression that decided her to say no more. A moment later,
Gosseyn was on the air. As before—it was now quite automatic—he shifted the
wire immediately before each sentence he spoke. He said in a ringing voice:
'Calling all Predictors! From this moment every Predictor
who is discovered or captured aboard a warship of the Greatest Empire will be
executed. Friends are advised to communicate this warning to people who are
already aboard such ships.
'You may all judge the effectiveness of this threat by the
fact that you did not foresee the call that I am now making. I repeat: Every
Predictor found aboard an Enro warship will be executed. There are no
exceptions.'
He returned to the dining room, finished his dinner, and
then went back to the control room. From its vantage point two and a half hours
later he saw the lights of a city in the distance. At Yanar's request, the ship
was brought down at what Leej called a Predictor air station. As soon as they
were up in the air again, Gosseyn set the accelerator to Full, and then
slipped to the window, and looked down at the city below. So many people. He
saw the lights entwined with innumerable curling fingers of water. In some
cases the ocean twisted right through the center of the city.
As he watched, all the lights went out. Gosseyn stared, but
there was blackness. Beside him Leej uttered an exclamation.
'I wonder why they did that.'
Gosseyn could have answered the question, but he didn't. The
Follower was taking no chances. He evidently had a theory about the nature of
Gilbert Gosseyn's control over energy, and he intended to see that no energy
was available.
Leej said, 'Where are we going now?'
When he told her, some of the color went out of her face.
'It's a warship,' she said. "There are hundreds of soldiers aboard, and
weapons that could kill you from many different directions at once.'
That was true enough. The danger of trying to use his
special powers to seize a ship was that it would be virtually impossible to
nullify or control many scores of hand weapons. It was under such circumstances
that fatal accidents could occur all too easily.
But what had happened put a pressure on him to act more
swiftly than he had planned. The reality was that he had already used his
strongest weapons against the Follower. Therefore, the sooner he got away from
Yalerta the better. Somewhere out in the galaxy there might be scientific understanding
of what made the Follower invulnerable, and, actually, until he found a
rational approach, he'd better stay away from the man.
Besides, the galactic warship was the only method he knew of
to get off this isolated planet.
The greatest risks were in order.
In half an hour there was light ahead. At first, the
galactic ship was little more than a bright blur in the midnight darkness, but
presently, so brilliant were the lights around it, it was clearly visible.
Gosseyn set Leej's airship into a wide orbit around the bigger ship, and
studied the approaches through a magnetic powered telescope.
The stranger was about six hundred feet long. A small ship
indeed by galactic standards. But then, it had only one purpose on Yalerta.
Aboard was a Distorter transport instrument of the type that produced
mechanical similarity. As an invention it had probably no equal in the history
of science. With it, man could move across the vast distances of space as if
there were no space. A Predictor on Yalerta need merely step into the Distorter
aboard the warship, and he would be transported a hundred or a thousand
light-years away almost instantly. The margin of error, as he had discovered
with the organic distorter in his head, was as small as to be almost not
noticeable.
The ship lay on a level plain. During the forty minutes that
Gosseyn watched it, two sky trailers came out of the darkness. They came at
different times, and floated down to a landing near a blaze point that must be
an air lock. Gosseyn presumed that these were volunteers, and what interested
him was that, on each occasion, the trailer departed before the volunteer was
allowed aboard the galactic ship.
It was just such details that he had been waiting to find
out.
They approached boldly. At five miles he was able to sense
the energy aboard—and received his great disappointment. Electricity only, and
in unimportant quantities. The drive pile had been damped.
Mentally, Gosseyn drew back from the venture. In his
anxiety, he began to whistle under his breath. He was aware of Leej watching
him.
'Why, you're nervous,' she said wonderingly.
Nervous, he thought grimly, uncertain, undecided. Very true.
As things stood now, he could wait in the hope of improving his position with
regard to the ship—or he could make an attempt to capture it immediately.
'This power of yours,' said Leej, 'the way you do things—
how does it work?'
She was wondering about that at last, was she? Gosseyn
smiled, and shook his head.
'It's a little involved,' he said, 'and without wishing to
be offensive, I think it's beyond your scientific training. It goes something
like this: The extensional area we call space-time is probably an illusion of
the senses. That is, any reality they have bears little relation to what you
see, feel or touch. Just as you seem to be better orientated as a Predictor to
the real space-time continuum, with emphasis on the time element—that is,
better orientated than the average individual—so I am better orientated, but
in my case the emphasis seems to be on space.'
She seemed not to have heard. 'You're not actually
all-powerful, are you? Just what are your limitations?'
'Do you mind,' said Gosseyn, 'if I tell you later? I've just
made up my mind about something.'
A pale Leej guided the airship through the night, and grew
paler as she listened to his, instructions. 'I don't think you have any right,'
she said shakily, 'to ask me to do such a thing.'
Gosseyn said, 'I'd like to ask you one question.'
'Yes?'
'When you were in the cell with Jurig, what would have
happened if he had killed me? Would the Follower have rescued you?'
'No, I was merely a device to incite you to your greatest
effort. If I failed—it was my failure, also.'
'Well?' said Gosseyn softly.
The woman was silent, her lips pursed. The neural flow from
her had changed from an anxious unevenness to a tense but steady pattern. She
looked up at last.
'All right,' she said, 'I'll do it.'
Gosseyn patted her arm in silent approval. He did not fully
trust Leej. There was a possibility that this also was a trap. But the shadow
thing had already discovered that imprisoning Gilbert Gosseyn was easier said
than done.
Gosseyn's eyes narrowed with determination. He was a man who
had to keep moving. He felt immensely confident of his ability to do so, as
long as he did not become too cautious in the face of necessity.
His reverie broke, as the beam of a searchlight penetrated
the dome. There was a click as the magnetic receiver went on, and a man's voice
said, 'Please land in the lighted area a hundred yards from our entrance.'
Leej took the ship down without a word. When they had come
to rest, the voice spoke again from the receiver. 'How many are coming?'
Gosseyn held up a finger to Leej, and motioned for her to
answer. 'One,' she said.
'Sex?'
'Female.'
'Very well. One female person will emerge from your ship and
approach the admission office at the foot of the gangplank. The trailer will leave
immediately and go to a distance of five miles. As soon as it has retreated the
required distance, the volunteer will be allowed aboard our ship.'
So it was five miles that the trailers were supposed to go.
It seemed to Gosseyn that the two volunteers he had observed earlier had been
admitted before anything like that distance had been covered by the ships that
had brought them.
It was the same way with Leej. Gosseyn, who had similarized
himself to the rear control room, watched her pause at the small structure
beside the lower end of the gangplank. After little more than a second she
started up the gangplank.
He glanced at the speedometer. The trailer had gone one and
one-eighth Yalertan miles.
It could mean one of two things. First, this was a trap, and
he was being lured. Or second, the space veterans had become bored, and were
no longer adhering to the rules.
Of course, it could be a combination. A trap by the Follower,
of which the ship's crew knew nothing. Or perhaps they had even been warned, and
didn't take the threat seriously.
One by one Gosseyn ticked off the possibilities in his mind,
and each time came back to the same reality. It made no difference. He had to
make the attempt.
As he watched, Leej disappeared through the lock. He waited
patiently. He had set himself four minutes after she got inside. In a way it
was a long time to leave her alone.
He waited, and he felt strangely without regrets. For a
moment, when she had protested her inclusion, he had wondered if he was not
pushing her too hard. That wonder was past. It had seemed to him then, and
still did, that the ship's crew would have been warned against a man, not a
woman. Therefore, hers must be the risk of making the initial entry.
If she got inside, then so would he. There were other
methods, but that was the fastest. He had plans for Leej, but first of all she
must acquire the feeling that her fate was bound up with his.
He glanced at the clock, and experienced a thrill. The four
minutes were up.
He hesitated a moment longer, and then similarized himself
to the open porthole beside the air lock. It was touch and go for a second as
he clawed for a hold. And then his arm was straddling the metal seat of the
porthole.
It had seemed like a good place to enter, and so he had
photographed it through the telescope while the trailer was still on the
ground.
He drew himself into the tunnel-like porthole.
XI
NULL-ABSTRACTS
For the sake of sanity, INDEX: Do not say, 'Two
little girls . . .' unless you mean, 'Mary and Jane, two- little girls,
different from each other, and from all the other people in the world ...'
From where he lay straddling the porthole, Gosseyn could
hear the murmur of conversation. It was subdued, so that no word came through.
But the talking was between a woman and a man.
Cautiously, Gosseyn peered around the inner rim of the
porthole. He looked down into a broad corridor. About thirty feet to his left
was the open air lock through which Leej had come. To his right he could see
Leej herself standing in a doorway and beyond her, with only his shoulder and
arm visible, was a man in the uniform of an officer of the Greatest Empire.
Except for the three of them, the corridor was deserted.
Gosseyn lowered himself to the floor, and keeping to the far
wall, approached the couple.
As Gosseyn came up, Leej was saying: '. . . I think I'm
entitled to the details. What arrangements have been made for women?'
Her tone was calm, with just the right note of demand in it.
The officer's voice, when he answered, held a resigned patience.
'Madam, I assure you, a six-room apartment, servants, every
convenience, and authority second only to that of the captain and his first
officers. You are—'
He stopped, as Gosseyn stepped into the doorway beside Leej.
His surprise lasted only a few seconds.
'I beg your pardon,' he said. 'I didn't see you come aboard.
The admission officer outside must have forgotten to—'
He stopped again. He seemed to realize the improbability of
the admission officer having forgotten anything of the kind. His eyes widened.
His jaw sagged slightly. His plump hand moved perkily toward the blaster at his
side.
Gosseyn hit him once on the jaw. And caught him as he fell.
He carried the unconscious body to a couch. He searched the
man quickly, but found only the blaster in the holster. He straightened, and
looked around. He had already noticed that in addition to the ordinary
furnishings, the room contained a number of Distorter type elevators. Now, he
counted them. One dozen, and not elevators, really. He'd called them that ever
since he had mistaken them for elevators when he was in Enro's secret Venusian
base.
One dozen. The sight of them in a row against the wall
farthest from the door clarified his mental picture. This was the room from
which Yalerta's Predictors were sent to their assigned posts. The process was
even simpler than he had thought. There seemed to be no preliminaries. The
admission officer allowed a volunteer into the gangplank. And then this plump
man led them into this room, and shipped them to their destination.
The rest of the ship was apparently unaffected. The officers
and men lived their routine existence, apart from the purposes for which their
ship had come to Yalerta. And since it was after midnight, they might possibly
be asleep.
Gosseyn felt stimulated at the mere idea.
He stepped back to the door. As before, the corridor was
deserted.
Behind him, Leej said, 'He's awakening.'
Gosseyn returned to the couch, and stood waiting.
The man stirred, and sat up, nursing his jaw. He glanced
swiftly from Leej to Gosseyn and back again. Finally, he said in a querulous
tone, 'Are you two crazy?'
Gosseyn said: 'How many men are there aboard this ship?'
The other stared at him, then he started to laugh. 'Why you
fool,' he said. For a moment he seemed to be overcome with renewed amusement.
'How many men,' he mimicked. His voice rose. 'There are five hundred. Just
think that over, and get out of this ship as fast as you can.'
The crew complement was about what Gosseyn had expected.
Spaceships were never crowded in the same fashion as ground vehicles. It was a
matter of air and food supply. Still, five hundred men.
'Do the men live in dormitories?' he asked.
There are eight dormitories,' replied the officer. 'Sixty
men in each one.' He rubbed his hands together. 'Sixty,' he repeated, and his
voice relished the figure. 'Would you like me to take you down and introduce
you?'
Gosseyn allowed the humor to pass him by. 'Yes,' he said,
'yes, I would.'
Leej's fingers plucked at his arm nervously. There's a continuous
blur,' she said.
Gosseyn nodded. 'I've got to do it,' he said. 'Otherwise he
would know what I'm doing.'
She nodded doubtfully. 'So many men. Doesn't that make it
complicated?'
Her words were like a spur to the officer. He climbed to his
feet. 'Let's go,' he said jovially.
Gosseyn said, 'What's your name?"
'Oreldon.'
Silently, Gosseyn motioned him toward the corridor. When
they came to the open outer lock, Gosseyn stopped.
'Can you close these doors?' he asked.
The man's plumpish face glowed with conscious good humor.
'You're right,' he said. 'We wouldn't want any visitors while I was off duty.'
He stepped briskly forward, and he was about to press the button when Gosseyn
stopped him.
'A moment, please,' he said. 'I'd like to check those connections.
Wouldn't want you setting off an alarm, you know.'
He unfastened the plate and swung it open. By count, there
were four wires too many. 'Where do they go?' he asked Oreldon.
To the control room. Two for opening, two for shutting.'
Gosseyn nodded, and closed the panel. It was a chance he had
to take. There would always be a connection with the control board.
Firmly, he pressed the button. Metal stirred, thick slabs of
it glided across the opening and clanked shut with a steely sound.
'Mind if I talk to my partner outside?' Oreldon asked.
Gosseyn had been wondering about the man outside. 'What do
you want to say to him?' he asked.
'Oh, just that I've closed the door, and that he can relax
for a while.'
'Naturally,' said Gosseyn, 'you will be careful how
you word it.'
'Of course.'
Gosseyn checked the wiring, then waited while Oreldon
switched on a wall phone. He recognized that the other was in a state of
thalamic stimulation. Accordingly, he would be swept along by the intoxicating
flood of his own humor until the shock of imminent disaster sobered him. That
would be the moment to watch for.
Apparently, the doors were not always open, for the admission
officer did not seem surprised that they were closed. 'You're sure, Orry,' he
said, 'that you're not going off with that female who just came in?'
'Regretfully, no,' said Oreldon, and broke the connection.
'Can't have these conversations going on too long,' he said heartily to
Gosseyn. 'People might get suspicious.'
They came to a stairway. Oreldon was about to start down it
when Gosseyn restrained him. 'Where does this lead?' he asked.
'Why, down to the men's quarters.'
'And where's the control room?'
'Oh, you wouldn't want the control room. You have to climb
for that. It's up front.'
Gosseyn said gravely that he was happy to hear that. 'And
how many openings are there into the lower deck?' he asked.
'Four.'
'I hope,' said Gosseyn pleasantly, 'that you're telling me
the truth. If I should discover that there are five, for instance, this blaster
might go off suddenly.'
There's only four, I swear it,' said Oreldon. His voice was
hoarse suddenly.
'You see,' said Gosseyn, 'I notice there's a heavy door that
can slide over this stairway.'
'Wouldn't you say that was normal?' Oreldon was back in the
groove again. 'After all, a spaceship has to be built so that whole sections
can be sealed off in case of accident.'
'Let's slide it shut, shall we?' said Gosseyn.
'Huh!' His tone showed that he hadn't even thought of such a
thing. His pasty face showed that this was the moment of shocked realization.
His eyes rolled as he glared helplessly along the corridor. 'You don't think
for one second,' he snarled, 'that you're going to get away with this.'
'The door,' said Gosseyn in an inexorable tone.
The officer hesitated, his body rigid. Then slowly he walked
to the wall. He opened a sliding panel, waited tensely until Gosseyn had
checked the wiring and then jerked the lever. The door panels were only two
inches thick. They closed with a faint thud.
'I sincerely hope,' said Gosseyn, 'that they are now locked,
and that they can't be opened from beneath, because if I should discover
differently I would always have time to fire this blaster at least once.'
'They lock,' said Oreldon sullenly.
'Fine,' said Gosseyn. 'But now let's hurry. I'm eager to
have those other stairways cut off also.'
Oreldon kept glancing anxiously along side corridors as they
walked, but if he hoped that they would see a member of the crew, he was
disappointed. There was silence except for the faint sound of their own
movements. No one stirred.
'I think everyone must have gone to bed,' said Gosseyn.
The man did not respond. They completed the task of shutting
off the lower floor before another word was spoken, then Gosseyn said, 'That
should leave twenty officers including you and your friend outside. Is that
right?'
Oreldon nodded, but he said nothing. His eyes looked glazed.
'And if I remember my ancient history of Earth correctly,'
said Gosseyn, 'there used to be an old custom—due to the intransigent character
of some people—of confining officers to their quarters under certain
circumstances. That always meant a system of outside locks. It would be
interesting if Enro's warships also had problems, and solutions, like that.'
He had to take only one glance at his prisoner's face to
realize that Enro's ships had.
Ten minutes after that, without a shot having been fired, he
was in complete control of the galactic warship.
It had been too easy. That was the feeling that grew on
Gosseyn as he peered into the deserted control room. Herding Oreldon ahead of
him, and with Leej bringing up the rear, he entered the room. Critically, he
looked around.
There was slackness here, not a single man on duty, except
the two officers who looked after the Predictors.
Too easy. Considering the precautions that the Follower had
already taken against him, it seemed unbelievable that the ship was his in
reality.
And yet, it seemed to be.
Once more he gave his attention to the room. The instrument
board curved massively beneath the transparent dome. It was divided into three
sections: electric, Distorter and atomic. First, the electric.
He manipulated the switches that started an atomic powered
dynamo somewhere in the depths of the ship. He felt better. As soon as he had
memorized enough sockets, he would be in a position to release intolerable
energy into each room and along every corridor. It was tremendously convincing.
If this was a trap, then the crew members were not in on it.
But still he was dissatisfied. He studied the board. There
were levers and dials on each section, the purposes of which he could only
partially guess. He did not worry about the electric or the atomic; the latter
could not be used within the confines of the ship, and the former he would
shortly control without qualification.
That left the Distorter. Gosseyn frowned. There was no doubt
of it. Here was the danger. Despite his possession of an organic Distorter in
what he called his extra brain, his knowledge of the mechanical Distorter
system of the galactic civilization was vague. In that vagueness his weakness
must lie, and the trap, if there was a trap.
In his preoccupation, he had moved back from the board. He
was standing there, teetering between several possibilities, when Leej said,
'We'll have to sleep.'
'Not while we're on Yalerta,' said Gosseyn.
His main plan was fairly clear. There was a margin of error
between perfect similarity and the twenty decimal similarity of the mechanical
Distorter. Measured by spatial distance, it came to about a thousand
light-years every ten hours. But that also, Gosseyn had already surmised, was
an illusion.
He explained to Leej: 'It's not really a question of speed.
Relatively, one of the earliest and most encompassing of Null-A formulations,
shows that factors of space and time cannot be considered separately. But I'm
coming around to another variation of the same idea. Events occur at different
moments, and separateness in space is merely part of the image that forms in
our nervous systems when we try to interpret the time gap.'
He saw that once more he had left the woman far behind. He
went on, half to himself: 'It's possible that two given events are so closely
related that in fact they are not different events at all, no matter how far
apart they seem to be, or how carefully defined. In terms of probability—'
Gosseyn stood frowning over the problem, feeling himself on
the edge of a much greater solution that that required by the immediate
situation. Leej's voice distracted his attention.
'But what are you going to do?'
Gosseyn stepped once more to the board. 'Right now,' he
said, 'we're taking off on normal drive.'
The control instruments were similar to those on the ships
that plied the space between Earth and Venus. The first upward thrust tensed
every plate. The movement grew continuous. In ten minutes they were clear of
the atmosphere, and gathering speed. After twenty-five minutes more, they
emerged from the umbral cone of the planet, and sunlight splashed brilliantly
into the control room.
In the rearview plate, the image of the spinning world of
Yalerta showed as a saucer of light holding a vast, dark, misty ball. Gosseyn
turned abruptly from the scene, and faced Oreldon. The officer turned pale when
Gosseyn told him his plan.
'Don't let him guess I'm responsible,' he begged.
Gosseyn promised without hesitation. But it seemed to him
that if a military board of the Greatest Empire should ever investigate the
seizure of the Y-381907 the truth would be quickly discovered.
. . . . .
It was Oreldon who knocked on the captain's door, and presently
emerged accompanied by a stocky, angry man. Gosseyn cut his violent language
short.
'Captain Free, if it should ever be discovered that this
ship was captured without the firing of a shot, you will probably pay with your
life. You'd better listen to me.'
He explained that he wanted the use of the ship temporarily
only, and Captain Free calmed enough to start discussing details. It appeared
that Gosseyn's picture of how interstellar ships could operate was correct.
Ships were set to go to a distant point, but the pattern could be broken before
they got there.
'It's the only way we can stop at planets like Yalerta,' the
captain explained. 'We similarize to a base more than a thousand light-years
farther on, then make the break.'
Gosseyn nodded. 'I want to go to Gorgzid, and I want the
pattern to break about a day's normal flight away.'
He was not surprised that the destination startled the
other. 'Gorgzid!' the captain exclaimed. His eyes narrowed, and then he smiled
grimly. 'They should be able to take care of you,' he said. 'Well, do you want
to go now? It will take seven jumps.'
Gosseyn did not answer immediately. He was intent on the
neural flow from the man. It was not quite normal, which actually was natural
enough. There were uneven spurts, indicating emotional disturbances, but there
was no purposeful pattern. It was convincing. The captain had no plans, no
private schemes, no treachery in mind.
Once more he considered his position. He was attuned to the
electric dynamo, and the atomic pile of the ship. He was in a position to kill
every man aboard in a flash. His position was virtually impregnable.
His hesitation ended. Gosseyn drew a deep breath, and then:
'Now!' he said.
XII
NULL-ABSTRACTS
For the sake of sanity, use ET CETERA: When you say, 'Mary
is a good girl!' be aware that Mary is much more than 'good.' Mary is 'good,'
nice, kind, et cetera, meaning she also has other characteristics. It is worth
remembering, also, that modern psychology—1956—does not consider the placidly 'good'
individual a healthy personality.
He had held himself tense, half expecting that an attempt
would be made to use the momentary blackout against him.
Now, he turned, and said, That was certainly fast enough.
We—'
His voice faltered—because he was no longer in the control
room of the destroyer.
Five hundred feet away was a control board on a vaster plane
than the one which he had left only an instant before. The transparent dome
that curved up from it was of such noble proportions that for a moment his
brain refused to grasp the size.
With a sickening comprehension, he stared down at his hands
and body: his hands were thin, bony; his body slim, and dressed in the uniform
of a staff officer of the Greatest Empire.
Ashargin!
The recognition was so sharp that Gosseyn felt the body that
he again occupied, tremble and start to cringe. With an effort he fought off
the weakness, but there was despair in him as he thought of his own body far
away in the control room of the Y-381907.
It must be lying unconscious on the floor. At this very
minute, Oreldon and Captain Free would be overpowering Leej, preparatory to
capturing the two interlopers. Or rather—Gosseyn made the distinction
bleakly—approximately eighteen thousand light-years away, several days before
so far as the destroyer was concerned, Leej and Gilbert Gosseyn's body had been
seized.
He must never forget that a time difference resulted from
similarity transport.
He grew abruptly aware that his thoughts were too violent
for the fragile Ashargin in whose body he was once more trapped. With blurred
eyes he looked around him, and slowly he began to adjust. Slowly, because this
was not his own highly trained nervous system which he was trying to control.
Nevertheless, presently, his brain cleared, and he stopped
trembling. After a minute, though the waves of weakness made a rhythm inside
him, he was able to realize what Ashargin had been doing at the moment that he
was possessed.
He had been walking along with a group of fleet admirals. He
saw them now ahead of him. Two had stopped, and were looking back at him where
he stood. One of these said, 'Your excellency, you look ill.'
Before Gosseyn-Ashargin could reply, the other man, a tall,
gaunt, old admiral, whose uniform sparkled with the jeweled medals and insignia
that he wore, said sardonically, 'The prince has not been well since he
arrived. We must commend him for his devotion to duty at such a time.'
As the second man finished speaking, Gosseyn recognized him
as Grand Admiral Paleol. The identification brought him even further back to
normalcy. For it was something only Ashargin would know.
Clearly, the two minds, his and Ashargin's, were starting to
integrate on the unconscious level.
The realization stiffened him. Here he was. Once more he had
been picked up by an unseen player, and the essence that was his mind
similarized into a brain not his own. The quicker he adjusted, the better off
he would be.
This time he had to try to dominate his situation. Not a
trace of weakness must show. Ashargin would have to be driven to the limit of
his physical capacity.
As he hurried forward, to join the other officers, all of
whom had stopped now, the memory of Ashargin's last week was beginning to well
up. Week? The realization that seven days had passed for Ashargin, while he had
had less than a full day and night of conscious existence, briefly startled
Gosseyn. But the pause it gave him was only momentary.
The picture of the previous week was surprisingly good.
Ashargin had not fainted once. He had successfully bridged the initial
introductions. He had even tried to put over the idea that he would be an
observer until further notice. For a man who had collapsed twice in the
presence of Enro, it was an achievement of the first order.
It was one more evidence that even so unintegrated a personality
as Ashargin responded quickly, and that only a few hours of control by a Null-A
trained mind could cause definite improvement.
'Ah,' said a staff officer just ahead of Gosseyn-Ashargin,
'here we are.'
Gosseyn looked up. They had come to the entrance of a small
council room. It was evident—and Ashargin's memory backed him up—that a meeting
of high officers was about to take place.
Here he would be able to make his new, determined personality
of Ashargin felt.
There were officers already in the room. Others were bearing
down from various points. As he watched, still others emerged from Distorter
cages a hundred feet farther along the wall. Introductions came thick and fast.
Several of the officers looked at him sharply when his name
was given. But Gosseyn was uniformly polite to the newcomers. His moment would
come later.
Actually, his attention had been distracted.
He had suddenly realized that the great room behind him was
the control room of a super-battleship. And more. It was the control room of a
ship that was at this very moment engaged in the fantastic battle of the Sixth
Decant.
The excitement of the thought was like a flame in his mind
During a lull in the introductions, he felt compelled to turn and look, this
time with comprehending eyes. The dome towered a good five hundred feet above
his head. It curved up and over him, limpidly transparent, and beyond were the
jewel-bright stars of the central mass of the galaxy.
The Milky Way, close-up. Millions of the hottest and most
dazzling suns of the galaxy. Here, amid beauty that could never be surpassed,
Enro had launched his great fleets. He must believe that it was the area of
final decision.
Faster, now, came Ashargin's memories of the week he had
watched the great battle. Pictures took form of thousands of ships
simultaneously similarized to the base of an enemy planetary stronghold. Each
time, the similarization was cut off just before the ships reached their
objective.
Out of the shadowless darkness, then, they darted toward the
doomed planet. More ships attacking than all the surrounding sun systems could
muster. Distances that would have taken many months, even years, by ordinary
flight were bridged almost instantly. And always the attacking fleet gave the
victim the same alternative. Surrender, or be destroyed.
If the leaders of any planet, or group of planets, refused
to credit the danger, the ruthless rain of bombs that poured from the sky
literally consumed their civilization. So violent and so concentrated were the
explosions that chain reactions were set up in the planet's crust.
The majority of systems were more reasonable. The segment
of fleet which had paused to capture or destroy merely left an occupying force,
and then flashed on to the next League base.
There was no real defense. It was impossible to concentrate
sizable fleets to oppose the attackers, since it was impossible to know which
planetary system was next in line. With uncanny ability, the invading forces
fought those fleets that were brought against them. The attacking forces seemed
always to know the nature of the defense, and wherever the defense was
fiercest there appeared a dozen Enro ships for every one that was available to
the League power.
To Ashargin that was almost magical, but not to Gosseyn. The
Predictors of Yalerta were fighting with the fleets of the Greatest Empire, and
the defenders literally had no chance.
The flood of memory ended as the Grand Admiral's voice said
ironically from behind him: 'Prince, the meeting is about to begin.'
It was a relief to be able to sit down at the long council
table.
He saw that his chair was next to and at the right of the
admiral. Swiftly, his eyes took in the rest of the room.
It was larger than he had first thought. He realized what
had given him the impression of smallness. Three walls were veritable maps of
space. Each was sprinkled with uncountable lights, and on each wall about ten
feet up from the floor there were series of squares on which numbers flickered
and whirled. One square had red numbers on it, and the figure shown was 91308.
It changed as Gosseyn watched and jumped to 91749. That was the largest change
he observed as he glanced around.
He waited for some explanation of the numbers to well up
from Ashargin's memory. Nothing came except the information that Ashargin had
not before been in this room.
There were squares with numbers in blue, and squares with
yellow, green, orange and gray numbers, pink numbers, purple and violet
numbers. And than there were squares in which alternate figures were different
colors. It was obviously a method of distinguishing facts at a glance, but the
facts themselves were unstable.
They changed from moment to moment. The figures went through
violent gyrations. They seemed to dance as they shifted and altered. And there
was no question but that they told a story. It seemed to Gosseyn that in square
after square of cryptic numbers the ever changing pattern of the battle of the
Sixth Decant was revealed.
It cost him a tremendous effort to withdraw his fascinated gaze
from the squares, and to realize that Admiral Paleol had been speaking for
several moments.
'. . . Our problems,' the gaunt and grim old man was saying,
'will scarcely be more difficult in the future than they have already been. But
I called you here today to warn you that incidents have already occurred which
will probably become more numerous as time goes on. For instance, on seventeen
different occasions now, we have been unable to similarize our ships to bases,
the Distorter patterns of which were secured for our great leader by the most
highly organized spy system ever conceived.
'It is clear that some of the planetary governors have become
suspicious and in their panic have altered the patterns. In every case so far
brought to my attention, the planets involved were approached by our ships
similarizing to a base beyond them, and then breaking. In every case, the
offending planet was given no opportunity to surrender, but was mercilessly
destroyed.
'These eventualities, you will be happy to know, were foreseen
by our great leader, Enro the Red. History has no previous record of one man
gifted with such foresight, sagacity and with so great a will to peace.'
The final remark was an aside. Gosseyn looked quickly at
some of the other men, but their faces were intent. If they saw anything odd in
the description of Enro as a man of peace they held their counsel.
He had several thoughts of his own. So an involved spy
system had procured for Enro the Distorter patterns of thousands of league
bases. It seemed to Gosseyn that there was a fateful combination of forces now
working in Enro's favor. In the period of a few short years he had risen from
the hereditary rulership of a small planetary group to the height of galactic
power. And as if to prove that destiny itself was on his side, during that same
period a planet of Predictors had been discovered, and those gifted minds were
now working for him.
True, the Follower who supplied them had plans of his own.
But that would not stop the war.
'. . . Of course,' Grand Admiral Paleol was saying, 'the
main league centers in this area are not rubbing out their Distorter patterns.
It takes time to build up similarity connections, and their own ships would be
cut off from any bases in which the patterns were altered. However, in the
future we must reckon with the possibility that more and more groups will try
to break away into isolation. And some of them will succeed.
'You see'—his long face creased into a cold smile—'there are
systems which cannot be approached by similarizing to bases beyond them. In
planning our campaign we made a point of launching all our initial attacks
against planets that could so be approached. Now, gradually, our position will
become more flexible. We must improvise. Fleets will find themselves in a
position to attack objectives that were not formerly considered to be within
our reach. To know when such opportunities exist will require the highest
degree of alertness on the part of officers and crew members of all ranks.'
Unsmiling now, the old man looked around the table. 'Gentlemen,
that about concludes my report. I must tell you that our casualties are heavy.
We are losing ships at the average rate of two battleships, eleven cruisers,
seventy-four destroyers and sixty-two miscellaneous craft every hour of
operations. Of course, these are actuarial figures, and vary greatly from day
to day. But, nevertheless, they are very real, as you can see by glancing at
the wall estimators in this room.
'But basically our position is excellent. Our great obstacle
is the vastness of space and the fact that it takes the time of a portion of
our fleet to handle each separate conquest. However, it is now possible to
estimate mathematically the length of the campaign. So many more planets to
conquer, so much time for each—altogether ninety-four sidereal days. Any
questions?'
There was silence. Then at the far end of the table, an
admiral climbed to his feet.
'Sir,' he said, 'I wonder if we could have the views of the
Prince Ashargin.'
The grand admiral arose slowly. The smile was back on his
long, usually dour face. 'The prince,' he said dryly, 'is with us as a personal
emissary of Enro. He has asked me to say that he has no comments to make at
this time.'
Gosseyn climbed to his feet. His purpose was to have
Ashargin sent back to Gorgzid, to Enro's headquarters, and it seemed to him the
best way to do that was to start talking out of turn.
'That,' he said, 'is what I said to the grand admiral yesterday.'
He paused to wince at the high tenor of Ashargin's voice,
and to relax the tenseness that swept Ashargin's body. In doing so he glanced
at the old man beside him. The grand admiral was gazing up at the ceiling, but
with such an expression that Gosseyn had an insight into the truth. He said
quickly:
'I am momentarily expecting a call from Enro to return to
make my report, but if I have time I should like to discuss some of the
philosophical implications of the war we are waging.'
He got no further. The ceiling grew bright, and the face
that took form on it was the face of Enro. Every man in the room sprang to his
feet, and stood at attention.
The red-haired dictator stared down at them, a faint, ironic
smile on his face. 'Gentlemen,' he said at last, 'because of previous
business, I have just now tuned into this council meeting. I am sorry to have
interrupted it, particularly sorry because I see that I came on the scene just
as the Prince Ashargin was about to speak to you. The prince and I are in
accord on all major aspects of the conduct of the war, but right now I desire
him to return to Gorgzid. Gentlemen, you have my respects.'
'Your excellency,' said Grand Admiral Paleol, 'we salute
you.'
He turned to Gosseyn-Ashargin. 'Prince,' he said, 'I shall
be happy to accompany you to the transport section.'
Gosseyn said, 'Before I leave I wish to send a message to
Y-381907.'
Gosseyn planned his message in the belief that he would
shortly be back in his own body. He wrote:
SHOW EVERY COURTESY TO
THE TWO PRISONERS YOU HAVE ABOARD YOUR SHIP. THEY ARE NOT TO BE TIED OR
HANDCUFFED OR CONFINED. BRING THE PREDICTOR WOMAN AND THE MAN, WHETHER HE IS
UNCONSCIOUS OR CONSCIOUS, TO GORGZID.
He slipped the message sheet into the slot of the roboperator.
'Send that immediately to Captain Free on Y-381907. I'll wait here for an
acknowledgment.'
He turned and saw that Grand Admiral Paleol was watching
him curiously. The old man smiled, and said with a tolerant sneer, 'Prince,
you're something of an enigma. Am I right in believing you think Enro and
myself will some day be called to account for what we are doing?'
Gosseyn-Ashargin shook his head. 'It could happen,' he said.
'You might overreach yourself. But actually it wouldn't be a bringing to
account. It would be a vengeance, and immediately there would be a new power
group as venal, though perhaps more cautious for a while, as the old. The
childish individuals who think in terms of overthrowing a power group have
failed to analyze the character that binds such a group. One of the first steps
is the inculcation of the belief that they are all prepared to die at any
moment. So long as the group holds together, no individual member of it dares
to hold a contrary opinion on that basic point. Having convinced themselves
that they are unafraid, they can then justify all crimes against others. It's
extremely simple and emotional and childlike on the most destructive level.'
The admiral's sneer was broader. 'Well, well,' he said,
'quite a philosopher, aren't you?' His keen eyes grew curious. 'Very
interesting though. I had never thought of the bravery factor being so
fundamental.'
He seemed about to speak again, but the roboperator interrupted.
'I am unable to get through to the destroyer Y-381907.'
Gosseyn-Ashargin hesitated. He was startled. He said, 'No
contact at all?'
'None.'
He was recovering now. 'Very well, keep trying until the
message is delivered, and advise me on Gorgzid.'
He turned, and shook hands with Paleol. A few minutes after
that he pulled the lever of the Distorter cage which was supposed to take
Ashargin back to Enro's palace.
XIII
NULL-ABSTRACTS
For the sake of sanity, be careful not to LABEL.
Words like Fascist, Communist, Democrat, Republican, Catholic, Jew refer to
human beings, who never quite fit any label.
Gosseyn expected to wake up in his own body. Expected it
because it had happened on such an occasion the first time. Expected it with
such a will to have it so that he felt a pang of disappointment as he looked
through the transparent door of the Distorter cage.
For the third time in two weeks, he saw the military control
room of Enro's palace.
His disappointment passed swiftly. Here he was, and there
was nothing he could do about it. He stepped to the door, and was surprised to
see that the room outside the cage was empty. Having failed to get back to his
own body, he'd taken it for granted that he would immediately be asked to
explain the meaning of the message he'd sent to Captain Free. Well, he was
ready for that, also.
He was ready for many things, he decided, as he headed for
the great windows at the far end of the room. The windows were bright with
sunlight. Morning? he wondered as he looked out. The sun seemed higher in the
sky than when he had come to Enro's palace the first time. It was confusing. So
many different planets in different parts of the galaxy moving around their
suns at different velocities. And then there was the loss of time factor of the
so-called instantaneous Distorter transport.
He estimated that it was approximately 9:30 a.m., Gorgzid
City time. Too late to have breakfast with Enro and Secoh— not that he was
interested. Gosseyn started for the door that led to the outer corridor. He
half expected to be told to halt, either by a command from a wall phone or by
the appearance of someone with instructions for him. No one stopped him.
He had no illusions about that. Enro, who had a special
personal gift for seeing and hearing distant sights and sounds, was not unaware
of him. This was a deliberately granted opportunity, a withholding of control
rooted in either curiosity or contempt.
The reason made no difference. Whatever it was it gave him a
breathing spell free of tension. That was important, to begin with. But even
that was unimportant in the long run.
He had a plan, and he intended to force Ashargin to take any
and every risk. That included, if necessary, ignoring direct orders from Enro
himself.
The corridor door was unlocked, as it had been a week
before. A woman carrying a pail was coming along the corridor. Gosseyn closed
the door behind him, and beckoned the woman. She trembled, apparently at the
sight of the uniform, and she acted as if she was not accustomed to being
addressed by officers.
'Yes, sir,' she mumbled. 'The Lady Nirene's apartment, sir?
Two flights down. Her name is on the door of the apartment.'
Nobody stopped him. The girl who answered the door was
pretty, and looked intelligent. She frowned at him, then left him standing. He
heard her farther inside the apartment hallway call, 'Ni, he's here.'
There was a muffled exclamation from inside. And then Nirene
appeared in the hallway. 'Well,' she snapped, 'are you coming in? Or are you
going to stand there like a nitwit?'
Gosseyn held his silence. He followed her into a tastefully
furnished living room, and sat down in the chair to which she motioned him.
There was no sign of the other woman. He saw that Nirene was studying him with
bleak eyes. She said in a bitter voice, 'Speaking to you carries heavy
penalties.'
'Let me reassure you,' said Gosseyn, 'you are in no danger
of any indignity from the Prince Ashargin.' He spoke deliberately in the third
person. 'He's not a bad sort, actually.'
'I have been ordered,' she said, 'ordered on pain of death.'
She was tense.
'You cannot help it if all your advances are refused,' said
Gosseyn.
'But then you risk death.'
'The prince,' said Gosseyn, 'is being used for a private purpose
of Enro. You don't think Enro will leave him alive after he's through with
him.'
She was suddenly very pale. 'You dare to talk like that,'
she breathed, 'knowing that he might be listening.'
'The prince,' said Gosseyn, 'has nothing to lose.'
Her gray eyes were curious—and more. 'You speak of him —as
if he is someone else.'
'It's a way of thinking objectively.' He broke off. 'But I
had two purposes in coming to see you. The first is a question, which I hope
you will answer. I have a theory that no man can subjugate a galactic empire in
eleven years, and that four million hostages held here in Gorgzid indicate
tremendous unrest throughout the Greatest Empire. Am I right about that?"
'Why, of course.' Nirene shrugged. 'Enro is quite candid
about it. He is playing a game against time, and the game interests him as much
as the result itself.'
'It would. But now, question two.' Quickly, he explained
Ashargin's position in the palace, and finished, 'Has he yet been assigned an
apartment?'
Nirene's eyes were wide and wondering. 'Do you mean to tell
me,' she said, 'that you don't really know what has happened?'
Gosseyn did not answer. He was busy relaxing Ashargin, who
had suddenly become tense. The young woman stood up, and he saw that she was
regarding him in a less unfriendly manner. She pursed her lips, and then looked
back with a searching, puzzled gaze.
'Come with me,' she said. She walked swiftly to a door that
opened on to another corridor. She passed through a second door at the far end,
and stepped aside for him to enter. Gosseyn saw that it was a bedroom.
'Our room,' she said. Once again the tone was in her voice,
and her eyes watched him questioningly. She shook her head finally. 'You really
don't know, do you? Very well, I'll tell you.'
She paused, and tensed a little, as if putting the fact into
words gave it a sharper reality, then: 'You and I were married this morning
under a special decree issued by Secoh. I was officially notified a few minutes
ago.'
Having spoken the words, she slipped past him, and was gone
along the corridor.
Gosseyn closed the door after her and locked it. How much
time he had he didn't know, but if the Ashargin body was ever to be reorient
Ted, then moments like this must be utilized.
His plan was very simple. He would remain in the room until
Enro ordered him to do some specific thing. Then he would disobey the order.
He could feel Ashargin quivering at the deadliness of such
an idea. But Gosseyn held out against the weakness, and thought consciously for
the benefit of the other's nervous system, Prince, every time you take a
positive action on the basis of a high-level consideration, you establish
certainties of courage, self-assurance and skills.
All that was oversimplified, of course, but a necessary preliminary
to higher level Null-A training.
Gosseyn's first act was to go into the bathroom and turn on
the hot water. He set the thermostat, and then, before undressing, went out to
the bedroom to look for a mechanical device that would give off a rhythmic
sound. He failed to find one.
That was disappointing, but still there were makeshifts that
would do. He undressed and, when the tub was full, turned off the faucet, but
allowed a steady leak, not too fast and not too slow. He had to force himself
to climb into the water. For Ashargin's thin body, it seemed hot to the point
of scalding.
At first he breathed gaspingly, but gradually he grew accustomed
to the heat, and he settled back and listened to the rhythmic sound of the
leak.
Drip, drip, drip, went the faucet. He kept his eyes unblinkingly
open, and watched a bright spot on the wall at a point higher than eye level.
Drip, drip, drip. Steady sound, like the beat of his heart. Beat, beat,
beat—hot, hot, hot, he transposed the meaning. So hot, every muscle was
relaxing. Drip —drip—drip. Re-lax, re-lax, re-lax.
There was a time in the history of man on Earth when a drop
of water falling rhythmically on a man's forehead had been used to drive him
mad. This, of course, was not the head; the position under the faucet would
have been uncomfortable. But the principle was the same.
Drip—drip—drip. The Chinese torturers who used that method
didn't know that behind it was a great secret, and that the man who went mad did
so because he thought he would, because he had been told he would, because he
had absolute faith that the system would produce madness.
If his faith had been that it would produce sanity, the effect
was just as great in that direction. If his faith had been that it would make a
thin, gangling body strong, the rhythm worked equally well in that direction.
Drip, drip, drip. Relax, relax, so easy to relax. In hospitals on Earth, when
men were brought in taut from emotional or physical ills, the warm bath was the
first step in relaxation. But unless other steps were taken, the tension soon
returned. Conviction was the vital ingredient, a flexible, empirical sort of
conviction which could be readily altered to fit the dynamic world of reality,
yet which was essentially indestructible. Gosseyn had it.
Ashargin did not. There were too many unbalanced developments
in his weak body. Years of fear had kept his muscles flabby, drained his energy
and stunted his growth.
The slow minutes dragged rhythmically by. He felt himself
dozing. It was so comfortable, so cozy, to lie in the warm water, in the womb
of warm water from which all life had come. Back in the hot seas of the
beginning of things, in the bosom of the Great Mother—and drift to the slow,
pulsing rhythm of a heartbeat that still quivered with the thrill of new
existence.
A knock on the outer door of the bedroom brought him lazily
back to awareness of his surroundings. 'Yes?' he called.
'Enro,' came the strained voice of Nirene, 'has just called.
He wants you to report to him immediately.'
Gosseyn felt the pang go through Ashargin's body. 'All
right,' he said.
'Prince,' said Nirene, and her tone was urgent, 'he was very
blunt about it.'
Gosseyn nodded to himself. He felt stimulated, and he could
not completely fight off Ashargin's uneasiness. But there was no doubt in his
mind as he climbed out of the bathtub.
The moment for him to defy Enro had arrived.
He dressed, nevertheless, without haste, and then left the
bedroom. Nirene was waiting in the living room. Gosseyn hesitated at sight of
her. He was acutely conscious of Enro's special power of hearing and seeing
through solid walls. There was a question he wanted to ask, but not directly.
The solution occurred to him after a moment. 'Have you a
palace directory?'
She walked silently to the videophone in one corner, and
brought a glowing flexible plate, which she handed him with the explanation:
'Just pull that slide down. Each time it clicks it shows the floor of the
person you want, and where his apartment is. There's a list of names on the
back. It's automatically kept up to date.'
Gosseyn didn't need the list. He knew what names he wanted.
With a quick movement of his hand he slid the lever to Reesha, covering the
action as much as possible.
Presumably, Enro could 'see' through a hand as readily as
through walls, but there must be some limitation to his gift. Gosseyn decided
to depend on speed.
One glance he took, had his information, and then he shifted
the lever to the name of Secoh. That, also, required only an instant. He moved
the lever casually but swiftly to zero position, and handed the plate back to
Nirene.
He felt wonderfully calm and at ease. The Ashargin body was
quiescent, accepting the violent positivities that were being forced upon it
with an equanimity that promised well for the future.
'Good luck,' he said to Nirene.
He suppressed an Ashargin impulse to tell her where he was
going. Not that Enro wouldn't know in a few minutes. But he had the feeling
that if he named his destination an attempt would be made to divert him.
Out in the hall, he walked swiftly toward the stairway,
climbed one flight of stairs, which brought him within one floor of Enro's
apartments. He turned off to the right, and a moment later he was being
admitted to the apartment of the woman he had once known as Patricia Hardie. He
hoped that Enro would be curious as to what his sister and the Prince Ashargin
had to say to each other, and that the curiosity would restrain him from
immediate punitive action.
As Gosseyn-Ashargin followed the servant into a large reception
room he saw that Eldred Crang was standing at the window. The Venusian Null-A
detective turned as the visitor entered, and gazed thoughtfully at him.
There was silence as they looked at each other. It seemed to
Gosseyn that he was more interested in seeing Crang than Crang could possibly
be in the Prince Ashargin.
He could appreciate Crang's position. Here was a Null-A who
had come into the heart of the enemy stronghold, who was pretending- -with her
connivance—that he was married to the sister of the warlord of the Greatest
Empire, and on that tenuous basis—more tenuous even than he might realize, in
view of Enro's belief in brother-sister marriage—was apparently prepared to
oppose the dictator's plans.
Just how he would do it was a problem in strategy. But then
there were people who might wonder how the Prince Ashargin could ever hope to
set himself against the same tyrant. Gosseyn was trying to solve that problem
by a bold defiance, based upon a plan that still seemed logical.
He had no doubt that Crang would be equally bold, if necessary—and
that he would not have come at all if he had thought his presence would not
have some effect.
It was Crang who spoke first. 'You wish to see the Gorgzin
Reesha.' He used the feminine of the title of ruler on Enro's home planet.
'Very much.'
Crang said, 'As you possibly know, I am the Gorgzin's husband.
I hope you don't mind telling me your business first.'
Gosseyn welcomed it. The sight of Crang had braced him
immensely. The non-Aristotelian detective was so skillful an operator that his
mere presence on this scene seemed partial proof at least that the situation
was not as bad as it seemed.
Crang spoke again. 'What's on your mind, Prince?' he said
pleasantly.
Gosseyn launched into a frank account of what had happened
to Ashargin. He finished, 'I am determined to raise the level of the prince's
position here in the palace. So far he has been treated in an unforgivably
debasing fashion. I should like to use the good offices of the Gorgzin to alter
the attitude of his excellency.'
Crang nodded thoughtfully. 'I see.' He came away from the
window, and motioned Gosseyn-Ashargin into a chair. 'I hadn't really estimated
your position in this picture at all,' he said. 'From what I had heard, you
were accepting the debasing role which Enro had assigned to you.'
'As you can see,' said Gosseyn, 'and as Enro must be realizing,
the prince insists that so long as he is alive he be treated according to his
rank.'
'Your use of the third person interests me,' said Crang,
'and I am also interested in the qualifying phrase "so long as he is
alive." If you are able to hold firmly to the implications of that
phrase, it seems to me the, uh, prince might obtain redress from the Gorgzid.'
It was approval of a kind. It was cautious and yet unmistakable.
It seemed to assume that the dictator might be listening in on the
conversation, and so the words were on a high verbal level. Crang hesitated,
then went on:
'It is doubtful, however, if my wife could be of much assistance
to you as an intermediary. She has taken the position of being absolutely
opposed to the war of conquest which her brother is waging.'
That was information indeed, and from the look on Crang's
face, Gosseyn realized that the man had imparted it to him deliberately.
'Naturally,' said Crang, 'as her husband, I also oppose the
war without qualification.'
Briefly, it was dazzling. Here was their method of boldness,
different from his own, yet rooted in the special reality of Patricia's
relationship to Enro. Gosseyn grew critical. The method had the same inherent
flaws as did the opposition he was developing at this moment. How were they
overcoming the flaw? Gosseyn asked the question.
'It seems to me,' he said slowly, 'that in taking such a
stand, you and the Gorgzin have greatly restricted your freedom of action. Or
am I wrong?'
'Partly wrong,' said Crang. 'Here in this sun system, my
wife's legal rights are almost equal to those of Enro. His excellency is
greatly attached to the traditions, the customs and the habits of the people,
and so he has made no effort to destroy any of the local institutions.'
It was more information. And it fitted. It fitted his own
plan. Gosseyn was about to speak again, when he saw that Crang was looking past
his shoulder. He turned, and saw that Patricia Hardie had entered the room. She
smiled as her eyes met his.
'I was listening in the next room,' she said. 'I hope you
don't mind.'
Gosseyn indicated that he didn't, and there was a pause. He
was fascinated. Patricia Hardie, the Gorgzin Reesha of the planet Gorgzid,
sister of Enro—the young woman who had once pretended to be the daughter of
President Hardie of Earth, and who had later pretended to be the wife of
Gilbert Gosseyn—with so great a career of intrigue behind her, she was
unquestionably a personality to be reckoned with. And, best of all, she had
never to his knowledge wavered in her support of the League and of Null-A.
She was, it seemed to him, becoming more beautiful, not
less. She was not quite so tall as Leej, the Predictor woman, but she seemed
more lithely built. Her blue eyes had the same imperious expression in them as
was in Leej's gray eyes, and both women were equally good looking. But there
the resemblance ended.
Patricia glowed with purpose. Perhaps it was a youthful
purpose, but the other woman didn't have it. Possibly, he knew what Leej was
like, and knew, also, Patricia's career. That could be very important. But
Gosseyn thought it was more than that. Leej was a drifter. As long as she had
been aware of her future, she had had no reason to be ambitious. And even if
she should suddenly acquire a purpose, now that she could no longer depend on
her prophetic gift, it would take a long time to change her habits and her
basic attitude.
Crang broke the silence. 'Prince,' he said, and his tone was
very friendly, 'I think I can clear up your puzzlement as to why you are
married to Lady Nirene. My wife, knowing nothing of the conversation of last
week, took it for granted that any relationship between Nirene and yourself
would be legalized by the church.'
Patricia laughed softly. 'It never occurred to me,' she
said, 'that there were undercurrents in the situation.'
Gosseyn nodded, but he was grim. He assumed that she was
aware of Enro's past intentions for her, and that she regarded those intentions
lightly. But she was missing additional undercurrents, it seemed to him. Enro
must still hope for a legal marriage relationship with his sister, or he would
not have tried to prevent her from learning that he regarded the relationship
as unimportant where other people were concerned. His about-face gave a sharp
insight into both his character and his purposes.
'Your brother,' Gosseyn said aloud, 'is a remarkable man.'
He paused. 'I presume he can hear what we're saying here— if he so desires.'
Patricia said, 'My brother's gift has a curious history.'
She paused, and Gosseyn, who was looking directly at her, saw from her
expression that she intended to give him information. She went on, 'Our parents
were either very religious or very clever. They decided that the male Gorgzid
heir should spend his first year after birth in the crypt with the Sleeping
God. The reaction of the people was hostile in the extreme, and so after three
months Enro was removed, awakened, and thereafter his childhood was normal.
'He was about eleven when he began to be able to see and
hear things in distant places. Naturally, father and mother immediately
considered it a gift from the God himself.'
'What does Enro think?' asked Gosseyn.
He didn't hear her answer. A rush of Ashargin memories
flooded into his consciousness about the Sleeping God, bits of things he had
learned when he was a slave of the temple.
Every report he had heard was different. Priests were allowed
to look at the God at their initiation rites. Not one of them ever saw the
thing. The Sleeping God was an old man, a child, a youth of fifteen, a baby—the
subsequent accounts had as little relationship as that.
Those details held Gosseyn's mind only flashingly. Whether
those who looked were hypnotically deluded, or whether the illusion was
mechanical seemed of incidental importance. The aspect of the picture that
almost shocked Gosseyn out of his seat was the detail of the Sleeping God's
daily existence—he was unconscious, but fed and exercised by a complicated
system of machinery. The entire temple hierarchy was organized to keep that
machinery running.
The light that broke upon Gosseyn at that moment was
dazzling because—this was the way a Gosseyn body would be looked after.
His mind strained at the thought. For many seconds, the idea
seemed too fantastic for acceptance. A Gosseyn body here at what was now the
headquarters of the Greatest Empire. Here, and protected from harm by all the
forces of a powerful pagan religion.
Crang broke the silence. 'Time for lunch,' he said. 'That's
for all of us, I believe. Enro doesn't like to be kept waiting.'
Lunch! Gosseyn estimated that an hour had passed since Enro
had ordered him to report. Long enough to set the stage for a crisis.
But lunch itself passed in virtual silence. The dishes were
whisked off, and still Enro remained seated, thus holding the others to the
table also. For the first time the dictator stared directly at
Gosseyn-Ashargin. His gaze was bleak and unfriendly.
'Secoh,' he said, without looking around.
'Yes?' The lord guardian was quick.
'Have the lie detector brought in.' The steely gaze remained
fixed upon Gosseyn's eyes. The prince has been asking for an investigation and
I am happy to oblige him.'
Considering the circumstances, it was about as true a statement
as Enro had made, but Gosseyn would have changed one word in the utterance. He
had expected an investigation. And here it was.
Enro did not remain seated. As the lie detector knobs were
fastened to Gosseyn-Ashargin's palms, he climbed to his feet and stood looking
down at the table. He waved the others to remain in their chairs, and began.
'We have here a very curious situation,' he said. 'One week
ago, I had the Prince Ashargin brought to the palace. I was shocked at his
appearance and his actions.' His lips twisted. 'Apparently, he suffered from a
strong sense of guilt, presumably as a result of his feeling that his family
had failed the people of the Greatest Empire. He was nervous, tense, shy,
almost tongue-tied and a pitiful spectacle. For more than ten years he had been
isolated from interplanetary and local affairs.'
Enro paused, his face serious, his eyes glowing. He continued
in the same intense tone.
'Even that first morning he showed one or two flashes of
insight and understanding that were not in character. During his week on the
flagship of Admiral Paleol, he behaved to some extent as his past history would
have led us to expect. During his final hour aboard the ship, he changed radically
once more and again showed knowledge that was beyond the possibilities of his
position. Among other things, he sent the following message to the destroyer,
Y-381907.'
He turned with a quick movement to one of the hovering
secretaries, and held out his hand. 'The message,' he said. A sheet of paper
was handed to him.
Gosseyn listened as Enro read the message. Every word seemed
as incriminating as he had known it was. A dictator, the most powerful warlord
in the galaxy, had turned aside from his many duties to give attention to an
individual whom he had intended to use as a pawn in his own game.
Whether or not the unseen player who had similarized the
mind of Gilbert Gosseyn into the brain of Prince Ashargin had foreseen such a
crisis as this didn't matter. Gosseyn might be a pawn himself, subject to being
moved at someone else's will, but when he was in charge events happened his
way—if he could make them.
Enro was speaking again in his dark voice. 'It did not occur
immediately to either Admiral Paleol or myself what mission that ship was on. I
will say only this now. We identified the ship finally, and it seems incredible
that Prince Ashargin should ever have heard about it. Its mission was secret
and important, and though I will not mention the nature of the mission, I can
inform the prince that his message was not delivered to the ship.'
Gosseyn refused to accept that. The roboperator on the
flagship sent the message while I was there,' he said quickly.
The big man shrugged. 'Prince,' he said, 'it was not stopped
by us. The message was not acknowledged by the destroyer. We have been unable
to contact the Y-381907 for several days, and I am afraid that I shall have to
ask you for some very straight answers. The destroyer is being replaced on
Yalerta by a battleship, but it will require more than a month of flight for
the replacement ship to reach that planet.'
Gosseyn received the two pieces of news with mixed feelings.
It was a great victory that no more Predictors would be sent from Yalerta for
an entire month. The destroyer was another matter.
'But where could it have gone?' he asked.
He thought of the Follower, and grew tense. After a moment
he rejected the more dangerous implications of that idea. It was true,
apparently, that the Follower frequently was not able to predict events that
were related to Gilbert Gosseyn. Yet that applied only when the extra brain was
being used. It seemed reasonable, accordingly, to believe that he knew where
Gosseyn was.
Right there that train of logic ended. There was no reason
at all why the Follower should suddenly become secretive with Enro as to the
whereabouts of the destroyer. Gosseyn gazed up at Enro with unflinching eyes.
The time had come to deliver another shock.
'Doesn't the Follower know?' he asked.
Enro had parted his lips to speak again. Now, he brought his
teeth together with a click. He stared at Gosseyn with baffled eyes. At last he
said:
'So you know about the Follower. That settles it. It's time
the lie detector gives us some idea of what goes on in your mind.'
He turned a switch.
There was silence at the table. Even Crang, who had been
absently pecking at the food on his plate, stirred in his chair, and laid down
his fork. Secoh was frowning thoughtfully. Patricia Hardie watched her brother
with a faint curl to her lips. It was she who spoke first.
'Enro, don't be so stupidly melodramatic.'
The big man twisted towards her, his eyes narrowed, his face
dark with anger. 'Silence,' he said harshly. 'I need no comments from a person
who has disgraced her brother.'
Patricia shrugged, but Secoh said sharply, 'Your excellency,
restrain yourself.'
Enro turned toward the priest, and for a moment, so ugly was
the expression on his face, it seemed to Gosseyn that he was going to strike
the lord guardian.
'Always were interested in her, weren't you?' he said with a
sneer.
'Your sister,' said the priest, 'is co-ruler of Gorgzid and
of the overlordship of the Sleeping God.'
Enro ran one hand through his red hair, and shook himself
like a young lion. 'Sometimes, Secoh,' he said, and the sneer was broader, 'you
give the impression that you are the Sleeping God. It's a dangerous illusion.'
The priest said quietly, 'I speak with authority vested in
me by the State and the Temple. I can do no less.'
'I am the State,' said Enro coldly.
Gosseyn said, 'I seem to remember hearing that one before.'
Neither man seemed aware of his remark. And for the first
time it struck him that he was witnessing a major clash. Gosseyn sat up.
'You and I,' said Secoh in a singsong voice, 'hold the cup
of life but for a moment. When we have drunk our fill, we shall go down into
darkness—and there will still be a State.'
'Ruled by my blood.' Violently.
'Perhaps.' His voice sounded far away. 'Excellency, the
fever that has seized on you I shall feed until victory is achieved.'
'And then?'
'You will receive the Temple call.'
Enro parted his lips to say something. Then he closed them
again. There was a blank expression on his face, that slowly changed into a
comprehending smile.
'Clever, aren't you?' he said. 'So I'll receive the Temple
call, will I, to become an initiate. Is there anything significant, possibly,
in the fact that you issue the calls?'
The priest said quietly, 'When the Sleeping God disapproves
of what I say or do, I'll know.'
The sneer was back on Enro's face. 'Oh, you will, will you?
He'll let you know, I suppose, and then you'll tell us?'
Secoh said simply, 'Your thrusts do not reach me, excellency.
If I used my position for my own ends, the Sleeping God would not long tolerate
such blasphemy.'
Enro hesitated. His face was no longer dark, and it seemed
to Gosseyn that the powerful ruler of one-third of the galaxy felt himself on
dangerous ground.
He was not surprised. Human beings had a persistent attachment
for their own homes. Behind all Enro's achievements, inside the skin of this
man whose word was law on nine hundred thousand warships, were all the impulses
of the human nervous system.
In him they had become twisted until, in some cases, they
were barely recognizable as human. Yet the man had once been a boy, and the boy
a baby born on Gorgzid. So strong was the connection that he had brought the
capital of the Greatest Empire to his home planet. Such a man would not lightly
insult the pagan religion by the tenets of which he had been reared.
Gosseyn saw that he had read correctly the processes of the
other's mind. Enro bowed sardonically to Patricia,
'Sister,' he said, 'I humbly beg your pardon.'
He turned abruptly toward Gosseyn-Ashargin. These two people
on the destroyer,' he said. 'Who are they?'
The moment for the test had come.
Gosseyn answered promptly, 'The woman is a Predictor, of no
particular importance. The man is called Gilbert Gosseyn.'
He glanced at Patricia and Crang casually as he spoke the
name so familiar to them. It was important that they show no sign of
recognition.
They took it, it seemed to Gosseyn, very well indeed. They
continued intently watching his face, but there was not a trace of surprise in
their eyes.
Enro was concentrating on the lie detector. 'Any comments?'
he asked.
The pause that followed was of many seconds duration.
Finally, cautiously, the detector said, 'The information is correct as far as
it goes.'
'How much farther should it go?' Enro asked sharply.
'There is confusion,' was the reply.
'Of what?'
'Identity.' The detector seemed to realize the answer was
inadequate. It repeated. 'There is confusion.' It started to say something
else, but the sound must have been cut off, for not even the sense of a letter
came through.
'Well, I'll be—,' said Enro explosively. He hesitated. 'Is
the confusion in connection with the two people on the destroyer?'
'No,' said the detector briskly. 'That is'—it sounded uncertain
again—'that is, not exactly.' It spoke up with determination, 'Your
excellency, this man is Ashargin, and yet he isn't. He—' It was silent for a
moment, then lamely, 'Next question, please.'
Patricia Hardie giggled. It was an incongruous sound. Enro
sent her a terrible glance.
He said savagely, 'What fool brought this faulty detector in
here? Bring a replacement at once.'
The second lie detector, when it had been attached, said in
answer to Enro's question, 'Yes, this is Ashargin.' It paused. 'That is—he
seems to be.' It finished uncertainly, 'There is some confusion.'
There was some confusion now in the dictator, also. 'This is
unheard of,' he said. He braced himself. 'Well, we'll get to the bottom of it.'
He stared at Ashargin. 'These people on the destroyer—I
gather from your message to Captain Free that they are prisoners.'
Gosseyn nodded. 'That's right.'
'And you want them brought here. Why?'
'I thought you might like to question them,' said Gosseyn.
Enro looked baffled again. 'I can't see how you expect to
use anyone against me once they're here in my power.' He turned to the machine.
'What about that, Detector? Has he been telling the truth?'
'If you mean, does he want them brought here? Yes, he does.
As for using them against you—it's all mixed up.'
'In what way?'
'Well, there's a thought about the man on the ship being
here already, and there's a thought about the Sleeping God— they all seem to be
mixed up somehow with Ashargin.'
'Your excellency,' interposed Secoh, as the astounded Enro
stood silent, 'may I ask a question of the Prince Ashargin?'
Enro nodded but said nothing.
'Prince,' said the priest, 'have you any idea as to the
nature of this confusion?'
'Yes,' said Gosseyn.
'What is your explanation?'
'I am periodically possessed, dominated, controlled and directed
by the Sleeping God.'
And, thought Gosseyn with deep satisfaction, let the lie detectors try to
disprove that.
Enro laughed. It was the laughter of a man who has been
keyed up and is suddenly confronted with something ridiculous. He sat down at
the table, put his face in his palms, his elbows on the table, and laughed.
When he looked up finally, there were tears in his eyes.
'So you are the Sleeping God,' he said, 'and now you have
taken possession of Ashargin.'
The humor of it struck him anew, and he guffawed for a full
half minute before once more controlling himself. This time he glanced at
Secoh.
'Lord guardian,' he said, 'how many is this?' He seemed to
realize that the question required explanation for the others at the table. He
turned to Gosseyn. 'During the course of a year, about a hundred people on this
planet alone come forward claiming to be possessed by the Sleeping God.
Throughout the Empire about two thousand red-haired men pretend to be Enro the
Red, and during the last eleven years approximately ten thousand people have
come forward claiming to be Prince Ashargin. About half of these are over fifty
years old.'
Gosseyn said, 'What happens when they appear before a lie
detector?'
The big man scowled. 'All right,' he said, 'let's have it
How do you do it?'
Gosseyn had expected skepticism. Except for Crang, these
were thalamic people. Even Patricia Hardie, friendly though she was to Venus,
was not a Null-A. Such individuals would hold contradictory ideas, and even
discuss the contradiction, without in any way being influenced by the reality.
The important thing was that a seed had been planted. He saw that Enro was
scowling.
'Enough of this farce,' said the big man. 'Let's get down to
some facts. I admit you fooled me, but I don't see how you expect to gain
anything by it. What do you want?'
'An understanding,' said Gosseyn. He spoke cautiously, yet
he felt bold and determined. 'As I see it, you want to use me for something.
Very well, I'm willing to be used—up to a point. In return, I want freedom of
action.'
'Freedom of what?'
Gosseyn's next words took in the other people at the table.
'In launching this war,' he said, 'you endangered the life of every person in
the galaxy, including the Greatest Empire. I think you should accept advice
from those who will share your fate if anything goes wrong.'
Enro leaned forward, and drew his arm back as if to strike
him in the face. He sat like that for a moment, tense, his lips compressed and
his eyes bleak. Slowly, he relaxed, and leaned back in his chair. There was a
faint smile on his face, as he said, 'Go on, hang yourself!'
Gosseyn said, 'It seems to me that you've concentrated so
completely on the offensive part of the war that you have perhaps not taken
into account some equally important aspects.'
Enro was shaking his head wonderingly. 'All this,' he said in
amazement, 'from someone who has spent the last eleven years in a vegetable
garden.'
Gosseyn ignored the comment. He was intent, and it seemed to
him that he was making progress. His theory was simplicity itself. The Prince
Ashargin had not been brought forward at this critical moment except for the
most urgent reasons. He would not be lightly eliminated until the purpose for
which he had been resurrected was accomplished.
Besides, this was a good time to obtain information as to
just what Enro was doing about certain individuals.
'For instance,' Gosseyn said, 'there is the problem of the
Follower.' He paused to let that sink in, then went on. 'The Follower is a
virtually indestructible being. You don't think that, when this war is won, a
man like the Follower will allow Enro the Red to dominate the galaxy.'
Enro said grimly, 'I'll take care of the Follower if he ever
gets any ideas.'
'That's easy to say. He could come into this room at this
moment, and kill everybody in it.'
The big man shook his head. He looked amused. 'My friend,'
he said, 'you've been listening to the Follower's propaganda. I don't know how
he makes that shadow shape of his, but I decided long ago that all the rest was
based on normal physics. That means Distorters and, in case of weapons, energy
transmission. There are only two Distorters in this building not in my control,
and I tolerate them. I defy any one to build machines in my vicinity that I
don't know about.'
Gosseyn said, 'Still, he can predict your every move.'
The smile faded from the other's face. 'He can make any
prediction he pleases,' he said harshly. 'I have the power. If he tries to
interfere with it, he'll quickly find himself in the position of a man who has
been sentenced to hang. He knows the exact day and hour, but there is nothing
he can do about it.'
Gosseyn said, 'In my opinion you haven't thought that
through the way you ought to.'
Enro was silent, his gaze fixed on the table. He looked up
finally. 'Anything else?' he said. 'I'm waiting for these conditions you mentioned.'
It was time to get down to business.
Gosseyn could feel the gathering strain on Ashargin's body.
He would have liked to ease up a little on the tense nervous system of the
prince. He thought of glancing at Crang, Patricia or Secoh to see how they were
reacting to the developing situation. It would give Ashargin a moment of
relaxation.
He suppressed the impulse. Enro had practically forgotten
that there was anyone else present. And it would be unwise to distract his
concentrated attention. He said aloud:
'I want to have permission to make a call anywhere in the
galaxy at any time of the day or night. Naturally, you can listen in—you or
your agent, that is.'
'Naturally,' said Enro sarcastically. 'What else?'
'I want to have the authority to use the Distorter transporter
anywhere in the Greatest Empire at will.'
'I'm glad,' said Enro, 'you're restricting your movements to
the Empire.' He broke off. 'Continue, please.'
'I want authority to order any equipment I please from the
Stores Department.' He added quickly, 'No weapons, of course.'
Enro said, 'I can see that this could go on and on. What do
you offer in exchange for these fantastic demands?'
Gosseyn spoke his answer, not to Enro, but to the lie
detector. 'You've been listening to all this—have I been speaking frankly so
far?'
The tubes flickered ever so faintly. There was a long
hesitation. 'You mean everything up to a point. Beyond that there is confusion
involving—' It stopped.
'The Sleeping God?' asked Gosseyn.
'Yes—and then again, no.'
Gosseyn turned to Enro. 'How many revolutions are you
fighting,' he asked, 'on planets of the Greatest Empire, where vital war
equipment is being manufactured?'
The dictator stared at him sourly. He said finally, 'More
than twenty-one hundred.'
'That's only three percent. What are you worried about?' It
was a negative statement for his purposes, but Gosseyn wanted information.
'Some of them,' said Enro frankly, 'are important technologically
out of proportion to their numbers.'
That was what he had wanted to hear. Gosseyn said, 'For what
I have asked, I'll make radio speeches in support of your attack. Whatever the
name of Ashargin is worth in controlling the empire, I place at your disposal.
I'll co-operate until further notice. That's what you want of me, isn't it?'
Enro stood up. 'Are you sure,' he said savagely, 'that there
isn't anything else you want?'
'One more thing,' said Gosseyn.
'Yes?'
Gosseyn ignored the sneer in the big man's voice. 'It has to
do with my wife. She will no longer appear at the royal bathtub.'
There was a long pause. And then a powerful fist smashed
down on the table.
'It's a deal,' said Enro, in a ringing voice, 'and I want
you to make your first speech this afternoon.'
XIV
NULL-ABSTRACTS
For the sake of sanity, use QUOTATIONS: For instance,
'conscious' and 'unconscious' mind are useful descriptive terms, but it has
yet to be proved that the terms themselves accurately reflect the 'process'
level of events. They are maps of a territory about which we can possibly never
have exact information. Since Null-A training is for the individuals, the
important thing is to be conscious of the 'multiordinal'—that is the many valued—meaning
of the words one hears or speaks.
It was late afternoon when Gosseyn returned to Nirene's
apartment. The young woman was sitting at the table writing a letter. She laid
down her pen when he entered, climbed to her feet, and went over to a big
chair. From its depths she gazed at him, her gray eyes steady.
'So we've all got about two months to live,' she said at
last.
Gosseyn-Ashargin pretended to be surprised. 'That long?' he
said.
He made no further comment. Just what she had heard about
the luncheon incident or where she had heard it didn't matter. He felt sorry
for her, but her destiny was not yet actually in his hands. When a ruler could
order a woman to become the mistress or wife of a stranger because she had
paused for half a minute to speak to him, that was a fact that defied normal
expectations. She had made the mistake of being born a member of the old
nobility, and she existed beside the abyss of Enro's suspicions.
It was Nirene who once more broke the silence. 'What are you
going to do now?'
Gosseyn had been asking himself the question, aware that it
was greatly complicated by the possibility that at any moment he might be back
in his own body.
But suppose he wasn't? Suppose he remained here for several
days longer. What then? Was there anything he could do that would be of value
now or later to either Ashargin or Gosseyn?
There was Venus. Were any Venusians out in space yet? Did
they even know what was going on?
And he really ought to have a look at the Sleeping God. That
involved obtaining permission from Secoh.
His mind paused as he came to item number three on his list.
Train Ashargin. He looked at Nirene.
'I've been driving the prince rather hard,' he said, 'and I
think I'd better let him have a rest for about an hour.'
'I'll call you when the time is up,' said Nirene, and her
voice was so gentle that Gosseyn glanced at her, startled.
In the bedroom Gosseyn rigged up a wall recorder to repeat
a three-minute relaxation pattern. Then he lay down. During the hour that
followed he never quite went to sleep. There was always the voice in the
background, the monotone of Ashargin's voice repeating the few phrases over
and over.
Lying there, he allowed his mind to idle around the harsher
memories of Ashargin's prison years. Each time he came to an incident that had
made a profound impression, he talked silently to the younger Ashargin. He made
it as real as that, as if the fifteen, sixteen or twenty year old Ashargin heir
was in each case a living entity inside him. The older Ashargin talked to the
younger at a moment when the latter was undergoing a traumatic experience.
From his greater height of understanding, he assured the
younger individual that the affective incident must be looked at from a
different angle than that of a frightened youth. Assured him that fear of pain
and fear of death were emotions that could be overcome, and that in short the shock
incident which had once affected him so profoundly no longer had any meaning
for him. More than that, in future he would have better understanding of such
moments, and he would never again be affected in an adverse fashion.
It was one more Null-A training make-shift, as had been all
the others. But it was a system of self-therapy that was scientifically sound,
and which would bring definite benefits.
'Relax,' the voice soothed on. And because of what he was
doing, every word meant, 'Relax the tensions of a life time. Let all those past
fears and doubts and uncertainties be discharged from the nervous system.'
The effect did not depend on any belief that something would
happen, though conviction made it more powerful. But it would take time. There
were many suppressed memories that would have to be skillfully brought out in
the open, before the therapy could be used on them.
Prince Ashargin was not going to be relaxed in one day.
Nevertheless, by the time Nirene knocked softly on the door,
he had had not only the equivalent of an hour's sleep, but a psychoanalytic
reorientation that under the circumstances he could have secured in no other
way.
He stood up refreshed, feeling himself ready for the evening
and the night.
The days stepped by, and the question was, how was he going
to find out about Venus?
He had several possibilities. All of them required a hint as
to what he wanted to know. Enro might be as quick at seeing the meaning in such
a hint as the person to whom it was directed.
That was a risk he could not take until he had exhausted
every other means.
At the end of four days, Gosseyn was a badly worried man. He
saw himself isolated here in the body of the Ashargin heir, in spite of his
so-called freedom of action, prevented from doing the only things that
mattered.
Venusian Null-A's alone could stop Enro and the Predictors.
That was his assumption, based on his observations and his knowledge of things
as they were. But as far as he knew, they were cut off, unable to act. They
could be easily destroyed by a dictator who had already ordered hundreds of
planets pulverized.
Each day he hoped to be returned to his own body. He tried
to help. He used Distorter elevators whenever possible to move from one
building to another. Four times in four days he took trips to distant planets
and back. But his mind remained
in the body
of Prince Ashargin.
He waited for a call informing him that the Y-381907 had
been contacted. No call came.
What could be happening?
On the fourth day he went personally to the Interplanetary
Communications Department. It occupied a building ninety stories high and ten
blocks wide. The building information section had one hundred roboperators
redirecting calls to the proper sector centers. He identified himself to one
of them.
'Oh, yes,' it said. 'Prince Ashargin. We have received instructions
about you.'
Gosseyn made his inquiry, turned away and then came back. He
was curious about small things. 'What kind of instructions?' he asked.
The answer had the frankness of Enro behind it. The
roboperator said, 'You can call anywhere but transcriptions of every
conversation must be sent to the Intelligence Center.'
Gosseyn nodded. He could expect no more than that. He took a
Distorter cage to the sector center he wanted, and seated himself at the
videophone. Presently, he was saying, 'I want to speak to Captain Free, or
anyone aboard the Y-381907.'
He could have made the call from Nirene's apartment, hut
here he could see the Distorter that carried the message. He could watch the contact
attempt being made, as the roboperator dialed the pattern which, according to
the foot-thick transparent plate that listed destroyers, belonged to the
Y-381907.
All this he could see with his own eyes. If it was possible
for him to prevent interference in the attempt to contact the destroyer, then
this was one of the methods.
Another was to call from a planet visited at random. He had
done that twice, without result.
Now, a minute passed. Then two minutes. Still there was no
answer. After about four minutes the roboperator said, 'One moment, please.' At
the end of ten minutes, the operator's voice came again. 'The following
situation exists. When Similarity was raised to the known mechanical limit of
twenty-three decimal places, a faint response was achieved. This was, however,
an automatic process. It is evident that the pattern at the other end is still
partly similarized, but that deterioration is continuous. Clearly, no attempt
is being made by those on the ship to hold to the pattern.'
'Thank you,' said Gosseyn-Ashargin.
It was hard to imagine that his body was out there somewhere
while his reasoning self was here attached to the nervous system of the
Ashargin heir.
What could be happening?
On the sixth day, Enro went on the public videophone with a
message. He was visibly jubilant, and his voice rang with triumph as he
reported:
'I have just been informed by Grand Admiral Paleol,
commander of our forces in the Sixth Decant area that the capital city of Tuul
was destroyed a few hours ago by our invincible fleet. This is but one of an
unending series of victories won by our men and our weapons against a fiercely
resisting enemy.
'Fight on, admiral. The hearts of the people and the confidence
of your government are with you.'
Tuul? Gosseyn remembered the name with Ashargin's memory.
Tuul was the stronghold of the most powerful State of the League group. It was
one more planet out of thousands, but the fact that it was labeled 'capital'
would be symbolic to the unintegrated minds to whom a map, in a semantic sense,
was the territory, and the word the event itself.
Even for Gilbert Gosseyn, the destruction of Tuul was a
turning point. He dared not wait any longer.
After dinner he invited Nirene to go with him to see Crang
and Patricia. 'I hope,' he said pointedly, 'that the Gorgzin and you can find a
great deal to talk about.'
She looked at him in momentary surprise, but he did not
enlarge on his words. His idea for partially overcoming Enro's gift of
clairvoyance could not be openly stated.
Nirene did her best. Gosseyn had no idea what she suspected
was going to happen. But at the beginning her voice hardly stopped.
Patricia's answers were halting at first. She looked distinctly
taken aback by the machine-gunlike voice that fired at her so steadily. And
then suddenly, she must have caught on. She walked over and sat on the edge of
Crang's chair, and began to talk back.
Nirene, ten feet away, hesitated, and then came over and sat
on Ashargin's lap. The conversation that followed was the most active that Gosseyn
had ever heard between two women. There was scarcely a moment during the rest
of that evening when his own cautious words were not spoken against the
background trill of wifely chatter.
Gosseyn first stated one of his lesser purposes. 'Know
anything about training extra brains?' he asked. It was the first time he had
mentioned the word to Crang.
The slim man's fine, yellow-tinged eyes studied him
thoughtfully. Then he smiled. 'A little. What is it you want to know?'
'It's a problem of time, I think,' said Gosseyn. 'The first
photograph is too slow, somehow. Slower than a chemical photographic plate, and
the most complex of electronic tubes are chain lightning compared to it.'
Crang nodded, and said, 'It's notorious that specialized
machines can perform any particular function much faster and frequently better
than a given human appendage or organ. That is the price of our virtually
unlimited adaptability.'
Gosseyn said quickly, 'You think the problem unsolvable?'
The other shook his head. 'It's a matter of degree. It's
possible the original training followed a wrong pattern, and that a different
approach might bring better results.'
Gosseyn knew what Crang meant. A pianist who learned the
wrong system of fingering could not become a virtuoso until he laboriously
taught himself the proper method. The human brain and body as a whole could be
educated to achieve results in many different ways. Some of those ways were
heartbreaking in the results they achieved, and some were so remarkable that
the ordinary individual who had been properly conditioned came to be regarded
as a genius.
The question was, how could his understanding of that
general truth be utilized to re-train his extra brain when he returned to his
own body?
'I would say,' said Crang, 'that it's a matter of setting up
correct ideas.'
They talked around that for a while. For the moment Gosseyn
was not worried about what Enro might hear. Even if the dictator could tune out
the almost unending vibration of sound from Nirene and Patricia, this part of
the conversation would not mean anything to him.
He lost none of his caution, but he was preoccupied with a
desire to find out what the nature of such an idea would be. Crang made several
suggestions, but it seemed to Gosseyn that the non-Aristotelian detective was
still striving to estimate the extent of Ashargin's knowledge.
That decided him finally. He turned the conversation to the
problem of possession of one mind by another. He pointed out that it might be
done by an extra brain, and that the similarization process involved could be a
contact on a high level between a full grown extra brain and the vestigial of
such a brain present in all human beings. Thus the greater would still come to
the lesser.
Crang was watchful. 'What puzzles me,' he said, 'is what
would the extra brain be doing while it was in possession of the vestigial?
Would it dominate both bodies at the same time, or would the greater be in a
state of relaxation?'
'Relaxation, definitely,' said Gosseyn.
It was a point he had been wanting to put over, and he was
pleased. In spite of handicaps, he had managed to inform Crang that the
Gosseyn body was unconscious.
Since Crang already knew that Gosseyn was aboard the
Y-381907, his picture of the situation must be clearing up considerably.
'There was a time,' Gosseyn went on, 'when I took it for
granted that such a position could only be maintained by some third party
enforcing the interchange. It seems hard to believe'—he hesitated—'that the
Sleeping God would leave his mind in a body so circumscribed as that of
Ashargin if he had a way of preventing it.'
He hoped Crang got the point, that Gilbert Gosseyn was not
actually in control of his own destiny.
'And, of course,' he went on, 'Ashargin is only a puppet who
has now done about as much as he can.'
'I wouldn't say that,' said Crang, deliberately.
So abruptly did they arrive at the main purpose of their
intent and cautious interchange.
At least, Gosseyn reflected as he eyed the other, it was his
main purpose. Crang's position in all this frankly puzzled him. The man seemed
to be doing nothing. He had taken the risk—the terrific risk in view of what he
had done on Venus—of coming to Enro's headquarters. And now here he sat day
after day, doing nothing.
His plan, if he had any, would have to be important indeed
to justify his inaction while the battle of the Sixth Decant moved relentlessly
to a final decision.
Crang resumed briskly: 'As I see it, Prince, these mystical
discussions can only lead so far. There comes a time when men act. Now, Enro is
an outstanding example of a man of action. A military genius of the first
order. His like will not be seen again in the galaxy for centuries.'
It was strange praise, coming from the lips of Eldred Crang.
And since it was false to facts—any Venusian Null-A trained in military tactics
could equal Enro's 'genius' —it obviously had a purpose.
He shifted Nirene to a more comfortable position on his lap,
and started to settle back.
At that moment he saw the opportunity for himself in what
Crang had said. He interposed quickly:
'It seems to me that men like yourself will leave their mark
on the military history of the galaxy. It should be interesting to follow the
developments, and to know something about them.'
Crang laughed. 'Time will tell,' he said, and changed the
subject. He went on, 'It's unfortunate that Enro is not yet recognized as the
greatest military genius who ever lived.'
Gosseyn nodded glumly. He recognized that something was
coming. But his own question had been evaded. He was positive that Crang had
understood what he had tried to say.
And he won't answer, he thought grimly. Well, if he's really got a plan, it
had better be good.
'I feel sure,' said Crang, 'that after his death even the
people of the League group will recognize and acclaim the consummate skill of
the attack that is being launched against the central powers.'
And now Gosseyn saw the plan. 'Greatest . . . who had
lived.' 'After his death—'
Crang was proposing that an attempt be made to kill Enro.
After a moment Gosseyn was amazed. There was a time when the
idea of using Ashargin to kill Enro had seemed the only possible use to which
so powerless an individual could be put. All that was changed. The Ashargin
heir had already been used to influence billions of people. He was known to be
alive. At the proper moment his influence might be decisive.
To sacrifice him now in an attempt to assassinate the
dictator was comparable to throwing away a queen in a game of chess. Even at
that moment he had thought of it as a sacrifice. Now, with what he knew of
Enro, he felt convinced that Ashargin would give up his life futilely.
Besides, the death of Enro would not stop the fleet. Paleol
was there, gaunt and grim and determined. Paleol, and his thousands of officers
who had put themselves beyond the laws of the League, would seize control of
the Government against any group that tried to take over the Greatest Empire.
Of course, if Ashargin were killed while trying to murder
Enro, presumably Gilbert Gosseyn would be back in control of his own body. For
him, who was still convinced that he would be able to return normally, that was
something to consider a week hence. And—just in case—the plan could be
started now. Preparations ought to be made.
Grudgingly, with many reservations, Gosseyn nodded his
acceptance of the plot.
That ended the evening. He had expected that details would
be discussed, but Crang stood up and said, 'We've had a pleasant and amiable
talk. I'm glad you were able to drop in.'
At the door the Null-A detective added, 'You might try to
imitate the reflex that makes for good vision.'
It was a possible method of training that had already
occurred to Gosseyn. He nodded. 'Good night,' he said curtly.
His impression of the visit as he walked with a silent
Nirene back to her apartment was one of intense disappointment.
He waited till Nirene was out of the apartment, and then
called Madrisol of the League on the videophone.
He waited tensely while the call was put through. For this
could be interpreted as treason. He had asked Enro for the right to phone
anyone he pleased, but unauthorized individuals did not contact the enemy in
time of war. He was wondering how close a watch the Intelligence Department
kept on him, when the operator's voice came:
'The League secretary agrees to speak to the Prince
Ashargin, but only under the condition that it is clearly understood that he is
a legal authority speaking to an outlaw.'
Gosseyn saw instantly the legal implications for Ashargin if
he accepted such a ruling. He intended to do everything in his power to help
the League win this war. If victory did result, then Ashargin would be in a
dangerous position.
He felt annoyed, but after a moment he thought of a way out.
'The Prince Ashargin,' he said, 'has imperative reasons for speaking to
Madrisol, and therefore accepts the condition but without prejudice.'
He had not long to wait after that. The lean ascetic looking
face of Madrisol came into the screen. The man's face seemed even thinner than
when he had last seen it with the eyes of Gilbert Gosseyn's body. The League
secretary snapped, 'Is this a surrender offer?'
The question was so unrealistic that Gosseyn was pulled from
his own purposes. Madrisol continued in a sharp tone, 'You understand there can
be no compromise with principle. All individuals in the ruling hierarchy of the
Greatest Empire must submit themselves to trial by the League Tribunal.'
A fanatic. In spite of his
own complete opposition to Enro, Gosseyn's voice held a note of irony as
he said, 'Sir, don't you think you are making a hasty assumption? This is not,
nor am I in a position to make, a surrender offer.'
He went on quickly, 'The reason for my call will probably
surprise you. It is of vital importance that you do not refer by name to the
matter about which I am going to talk. What I intend to say will presently be
reported to Enro, and any indiscretion on your part could have disastrous
effects.'
'Yes, yes, go on.'
Gosseyn did not let it go at that. 'Have I your word?' he
asked. 'Your word of honour?'
The answer was cold. 'Honour does not enter into any relationship
between a League authority and an outlaw. But,' continued Madrisol, 'I shall
certainly not make any revelations that would be dangerous to a friendly
planet.'
It was the promise he wanted. Yet, now that it had been
made, Gosseyn hesitated. Ashargin's memory of entire sun systems being
destroyed put a restraint on his tongue.
If Enro made a wild guess as to the planet involved, he
could be counted on to act. A single suspicion would be sufficient. At the
moment, Venus was an incident to the dictator. As long as it was kept in that
status, the Venusians would probably be safe.
Madrisol's voice came impatiently, 'I must ask you to come
to the point.'
Once more Gosseyn went over in his mind the words he had
prepared—and took the plunge. He explained about the call that Gilbert Gosseyn
had made several weeks before to Madrisol, and the request he had made at that
time. 'Did you ever do anything about that?'
Madrisol was frowning. 'I seem to recall the matter vaguely.
I believe that one of my technician staff tried to put a call through.'
'What happened?' Tensely.
'Just a second. I'll check to see if the call was actually
made.'
'Careful,' cautioned Gosseyn.
Madrisol's lips pressed more tightly together, but he nodded.
He came back in less than a minute. 'No,' he said, 'the call has not yet been
made.'
Gosseyn stared at the man wordlessly for a moment. He was
not absolutely convinced. It was expecting a lot of a man in Madrisol's
position to reveal any information to the Prince Ashargin. But he remembered
how curt the other had been when he had phoned him up from Venus. And this
fitted. How it fitted.
He found his voice. 'I urge you,' he said, 'to establish contact
at once—personally.'
He broke the connection, depressed. It was beginning to look
as if Crang's desperate plan was not a last resort at all, but the only resort.
And yet—no! Paleol would execute every person in the palace, Nirene, Patricia,
Crang. . . .
Gosseyn grew calm. No use thinking about such things. Unless
some decisive action was taken Nirene and Crang and Ashargin—at least—would die
shortly anyway. He must remember the great role that Crang had played on
Venus, and trust that the Null-A detective was being as skillful now as he had
been then.
He would attempt to kill Enro if Crang advised it.
It required more than an hour to figure out the pattern that
he wanted. The actual words took only four and a quarter minutes to say into
the recorder.
It was an intricate process that he began then, intricate in
the sense that he wanted to set up responses on the unconscious level of the
mind, and actually change the reactions of the autonomic nervous system.
What he attempted then was old in human history. The superb
legions of Julius Caesar defeated vaster armies of the barbarians because the
nervous systems of Roman soldiers had been trained to co-ordinated fighting.
The legions of Caesar would have stood little chance against the armies of the
Eastern Roman Empire of the Sixth Century.
There had been only a slight change in weapons, but the
training of the men had been improved.
In 1940, the dictator Hitler had trained the nervous systems
of his men in a new and different type of mechanical warfare. He was not
defeated until superior numbers of men and machines adopted his methods. The
machines existed before the blitzkrieg, but the nervous systems of the men who
operated them had to be trained to the new integration. When that training was
complete, superiority existed automatically.
In the days that followed the fumbled peace of World War II,
more and more people began to accept the conclusions which the new science of
General Semantics was laboriously deriving from the mass of available evidence.
One of these conclusions was, 'The human nervous system is uniquely capable of
unlimited training, but the method is the determining factor.'
Gosseyn's—and Crang's—idea was based on a principle of
vision. A relaxed eye sees best. The normal eye remains relaxed when it shifts
steadily. When, for any reason, an eye capable of good vision begins to stare,
the image blurs. Unlike a camera, the eye sees clearly only on the instant
following the relaxing shift.
It seemed to Gosseyn that if he could, while in Ashargin's
body—while he was waiting—discover an automatic way for his extra brain to
relax, then he would attain a quicker and sharper 'photograph' for similarity
purposes. How could an extra brain be relaxed? An obvious approach would be the
associative relaxation of the surrounding tissue.
So he set about relaxing the blood vessels of the cortex,
the thalamus, and the sub-cortex—where the embryo extra brain of Ashargin would
be located.
By association, all the cells around the blood vessels would
automatically relax, also. That was the theory, and it had been proven many
times.
Each time the voice on the recorder made the suggestion, he
imitated the method he used with his extra brain in his own body to obtain a
'memorized' area. Two hours went by. He reached the point where he could follow
the pattern and think of other things.
'Relax—look . . . relax—look . . .' The assassination plan
would have to be very carefully worked out if it were true that Enro had guards
watching him from peepholes in the walls. 'Relax—look . . . relax—look . . .
relax—look . . .' There were several possibilities, of course. Since Ashargin
was supposed to make the attack, the whole of the prince's position had to be
considered. Suppose that both Ashargin and Gosseyn were dead a week hence,
would that revive automatically the nearest Gosseyn replacement body, in this
case the Sleeping God of Gorgzid?
'Relax—look . . , relax—look . . .' If it were the latter,
then Gosseyn could see merits in the plan. He tried to imagine the effect if
the Sleeping God should rise up to confront Enro and Secoh. 'Relax—look ...
relax—look .. . relax—look ...' It seemed to Gosseyn that there was one
preliminary which he must take care of personally.
If the sequence of events actually followed the pattern he
had pictured, then he must make an investigation. He was assuming that the
Sleeping God was a Gosseyn body.
That would have to be checked.
Enro did not turn up for lunch. Secoh, who arrived late,
explained, 'He has gone to see Admiral Paleol.'
Gosseyn studied the priest as he settled himself at the
table.
At forty, the other's face was marked with an intricacy of
the passions that had impelled him to strive for the great rank he held. But
there was more than that. After the way Secoh had talked to Enro on the day the
lie detector was used on Ashargin, it seemed probable that the lord guardian
was a man who believed what he taught.
Was this the moment to broach the subject of an interview?
Gosseyn decided that it was. How should he bring the matter up? His method,
when he finally spoke, was frankness. When he had finished, Secoh stared at him
thoughtfully.
Twice, he parted his lips to speak. Twice, he stirred in his
Chair as if he intended to get up and leave. At last, he said mildly, 'The
privilege of seeing the Sleeping God is granted only to members of the Order.'
'Exactly,' said Gosseyn.
Secoh looked startled, and Gosseyn hoped that there was a
picture in his mind of what it would mean to have it publicly known that the
Ashargin heir was a convert to the pagan religion that he cherished. Did he
have a vision of an entire galaxy worshipping before the videophone image of
the crypt Of the Sleeping God? Gosseyn hoped so.
Secoh put down his fork and knife, and placed his hands on
the table. They were slim and delicate looking hands, but there was firmness in
them, also. He said at last in a kindly voice:
'My boy, I don't wish to discourage you. Your position is an
anomalous one. I would be happy to personally give you the lower order
instruction, and by an extension of my discretionary powers I think that could
be made to include the Ceremony of the Beholding.'
So that was what it was called.
'I must warn you, however,' Secoh went on, 'the usual protection
assured novices and initiates would not be accorded to you. We are in process
of creating a universal state and our great leader has found it necessary to
make hard decisions regarding individuals.'
He stood up. 'Tomorrow morning,' he said, 'be ready at six
to go to the Temple. In view of your claims last week to be possessed, it had
been my intention to take you into the presence of the Sleeping God. I am
curious to know whether or not there will be an omen.'
He turned and walked away from the table, and out of the
room.
In Gosseyn's case, the lower order instruction was part of
the Ceremony of the Beholding. It was a history of the Sleeping God, and
fascinating in its own way after the manner of folk tales.
The Temple of the Mound had existed before men were on
Gorgzid. In the misty past, after he had created the universe, the god had
chosen the planet Gorgzid for his resting place.
There, guarded by his chosen people, he slept from his arduous
labors. A day would come when, waking at last from his brief slumber—brief in
the cosmic sense—he would rise and carry on his work.
To his people of Gorgzid had been given the task of making
the world ready for his awakening. On that bright day he would want a universe
united.
As the rites proceeded, and the picture unfolded, Gosseyn
realized many things for the first time. This was the justification for Enro's
conquests. If you accepted the initial assumptions, then all the rest
followed.
Gosseyn was shocked. He was making an assumption of his own,
that this was a Gosseyn body. If such was the madness that built up around
Gosseyn bodies, then he who was immortal by means of a series of such bodies,
would have to reconsider the whole problem of his immortality.
It was about nine o'clock when he was dressed in a long
white robe, and the Parade of the Beholding began. It was a curious route they
took, down steps that fitted Into a curved metal wall. They came to a depth in
which was an atomic pile drive—and Gosseyn had his second shock.
A spaceship! The Temple of the Mound was a ball-like
spaceship buried in the soil drift of centuries, perhaps for thousands of
years.
They were climbing now, up the opposite curved wall. They
came to the central floor, and turned into a room that hummed with the faint
undercurrents of sounds. Gosseyn suspected the presence of many machines, but
he didn't have his extra brain to verify the suspicion. The far wall curved
into the room. From each corner arched a columned pylon. The four curved
pilasters ended on a narrow buttress about twenty feet out from where the wall
should have been.
It could have been the head of a coffin. The inner wall was translucent
and glowed with an all-pervading light. Little steps led from it to the top of
the buttress. Secoh climbed one of the staircases, and motioned to Gosseyn to
climb the one that led up from the other side. As he reached the top, a panel
slid open in the upper portion of the crypt.
'Kneel,' said Secoh sonorously, 'and behold!'
From the kneeling position Gosseyn could see the shoulders,
part of the arms and chest, and the head of the man who lay inside. The face
was lean and very lax, the lips slightly parted. It was the face of a man of
about forty. The head was large and the face had a strangely blank look. It was
a good-looking countenance, but only because of its symmetry and line of cheek
and bone. It was the face of a moron. There was not even a faint resemblance to
Gilbert Gosseyn.
The Sleeping God of Gorgzid was a stranger.
They arrived back at the palace in time for lunch, and at
first Gosseyn did not realize that the great crisis was upon him.
There were two guests in the salon in addition to Enro,
Patricia, Crang and Nirene—altogether eight people at the table. The visitors
wore uniforms complete with the insignia of the rank of marshal. The
conversation at the table was dominated by Enro and the two military men.
Their conversation had to do with a Board of Inquiry that
had investigated what was called a revolution. Gosseyn gathered that the
revolution had been successful for reasons that were still obscure. The two
officers were the Board.
He watched them curiously. They both seemed, in their
manners and expressions, ruthless men. Before they announced their
recommendations, he decided that two such coldly intellectual individuals would
inevitably solve any such problem by recommending the destruction of the rebel
planets.
He glanced at Crang and saw that the Null-A detective was
impassive, but that, beside him, Patricia was showing signs of agitation. He
realized that there must have been mention of the Board's work before his
arrival in the salon. The two of them were definitely interested in what was
going on. Abruptly, Patricia broke into the conversation.
'Gentlemen,' she said sharply, 'I sincerely hope that you
have not chosen the easy way out in coming to your decision.'
The two officers turned and glanced at her, and then, as of
one accord, looked questioningly at Enro. The Gorgzid studied his sister's
face, a faint smile on his lips.
'You may be sure,' he said suavely, 'that Marshals Rour and
Ugell will have considered only the evidence.'
'Naturally,' nodded Rour. Ugell merely gazed at Patricia
with his ice-blue eyes.
'I want to hear the recommendations,' said Patricia curtly,
'before I make up my mind as to that.'
The faint smile remained unchanged on Enro's face. He was
enjoying himself. 'I seem to remember a rumor,' he said, 'that my sister once
took a special interest in the system under discussion.'
To Gosseyn the realization of the truth had come many
seconds before. Venus! This was the Board of Inquiry that had been appointed to
investigate the defeat of Thorson in the solar system.
'Well, gentlemen,' said Enro amiably, 'I see that we are all
interested in hearing what you have to say.'
Ugell took a paper from an inner pocket, and put on a pair
of glasses. He looked up. 'Are you interested in the reasons for our decision?'
'Most certainly,' said Enro. 'What I want to know is, what
happened? How did Thorson, one of the great trouble shooters of the empire,
fail on a mission that was to be a mere incident in his career?'
Rour was silent. Ugell said, 'Your excellency, we questioned
more than a thousand officers and men. Their stories made the following
picture. Our armies successfully captured the cities of the rebels. Then, on
the death of Marshal Thorson, the new commander ordered that Venus be
abandoned. Naturally, these orders were carried out. So you see it is no
disgrace to our armies, but the action of one man for reasons which we have not
been able to discover.'
The picture was reasonably accurate. It failed to mention
that Venusian Null-As had successfully defended their planet against the
attacking forces. The investigation had not ferreted out the role that Gilbert
Gosseyn had played in the death of Thorson, but, still, the facts that had been
discovered were a part of the reality.
Enro was frowning. 'Was Thorson murdered by his successor?'
he asked.
There is no evidence pointing in that direction,' said Rour,
as Ugell failed to answer. 'Marshal Thorson was killed during an attack which
he personally led against a rebel stronghold on the planet, Earth.'
Enro exploded into anger. The incredible fool,' he said
savagely. 'What was he doing leading any force in person?" With an effort
the dictator controlled himself. 'However, gentlemen, I am very glad to have
heard this account. It fits in with some information which I already have, and
with some theories of mine. At the moment I am troubled in my own palace here
by people who are foolishly plotting against my life, and so I should like you
to give me the name of the officer who succeeded Thorson as commander of our
forces on Venus.'
Ugell read from the paper: 'His name is Eldred Crang. We
have been unable to find any trace of this traitor.'
Enro stared straight ahead. 'And, gentlemen, what are your
recommendations?' Ugell read in a monotone, 'That the habitable parts of the
system be sprayed with any one-year radioactive isotope that is available in
the region, and that the system be rendered uninhabitable.'
He looked up. 'Marshal Rour is rather taken with a new idea
that a young woman psychologist has been urging upon him recently. That is,
that some planet be populated solely with criminally insane people. It seemed
to us, though this notion was not incorporated in the text of our findings that
it might be an interesting experiment to carry out as soon as the planets in question
become habitable again.'
He handed the document to Enro, who took it without a word.
There was a pause while he read it.
So Enro had known all the time. That was the thought that Gosseyn
held in his mind. Their silly little plot—which had never really got beyond the
embryo stage—had probably amused him even as he pondered the most devastating
answer he could make to all their hopes.
It seemed clear, also, that he had known for some days who
Eldred Crang was.
Enro was passing the document to Patricia. Without looking
at it, she started to tear it up.
'That, gentlemen, is what I think of your recommendations.'
She climbed to her feet. Her face was colorless. 'It's just
about time, Enro,' she said, 'that you and your executioners stop this mad
murder of every one who has the courage to oppose you. The people of the
planets Venus and Earth are harmless.'
'Harmless?' said Rour involuntarily. 'If they're so
harmless, how is it that they were able to defeat our armies?'
She turned on him, her blue eyes flashing. 'Your report has
stated—just now—that there was no defeat. That the action to retreat was taken
at the command of the officer who succeeded Thorson.'
She leaned towards him. 'Is it possible that you are trying
to cover up a defeat for our forces by a false statement, an appeal to the
vanity of my brother?'
She was beside herself, in a thalamic fury. With a gesture
she waved aside his effort to speak, and answered her own question.
'Never mind,' she said, 'your facts are reasonably accurate.
I'll vouch for them. Because I gave the order to the officer who succeeded
Thorson. He had no recourse but to obey the sister of his ruler. He sits here
beside me as my husband.'
'His price was high,' sneered Enro.
He turned to the military men. 'Gentlemen, I have known for
several days the identity of Eldred Crang. I am unable to act against him as a
traitor because here on Gorgzid my sister's authority is very similar to my
own, and I am bound by my religious faith to uphold her rights. I am trying to
persuade the lord guardian to ... uh ... grant her a divorce, and he has taken
the request under advisement.'
The words were earnestly spoken. It was hard to believe that
behind the apparent logic and integrity of them was Enro's determination to use
that religion to compel his sister to follow the ancient Gorgzid custom of
brother-sister marriage. And that all the rest was fabrication.
Patricia was speaking again, earnestly. 'The people of the
solar system have developed an educational system of the highest order, a
culture which I should like to see modeled throughout the galaxy.'
She turned to look down at her brother. 'Enro,' she said,
'there can be no point in destroying a system which had devoted itself to
education. If at any time it should be necessary to take over those planets, it
could probably be done without bloodshed.'
Enro laughed. 'An educational system, eh?' He shrugged
cynically. 'Secoh will be only too happy to tell you the plans the Temples have
for subjugated planets.'
He turned to the marshals and there was a savage note in his
voice as he said: 'Gentlemen, I must apologize for my sister's ill-tempered
rudeness. She has a tendency to forget that her rule as Gorgzin does not extend
beyond the planetary system where she and I are joint heirs. In ordering
Lieutenant General Crang to withdraw our forces from Venus, she forgot that the
Greatest Empire is a private achievement of my own. In marrying him, and
permitting him and'—he hesitated, and glared for an instant at
Gosseyn-Ashargin—'other upstarts to plan against me under her protection, she
forfeited any right which she might have had to appeal to the softer side of my
nature.'
His teeth snapped decisively. He said grimly: 'You may be
sure that I do not appoint Boards of Inquiry, and then ignore their
recommendations. And, as a precaution, to insure that the Gorgzin does not
place herself in jeopardy by going to Venus, I shall immediately issue an order
that no galactic Distorters can be used by her until after the destruction of
the population of the solar system has been carried out as recommended. Thank
you, gentlemen. You have my best wishes.'
Gosseyn noticed that the negating order did not extend to
Prince Ashargin. He said nothing, but immediately the meal was over, he headed
for the public Distorter system of the palace. He didn't know if it was
possible to go to Venus in a Distorter cage; by ship, yes, but he couldn't get
hold of a ship —and so his only recourse was to make the attempt.
He took the torn segments of the Venusian report from his
pocket and quickly pieced them together. He still had to admire the way Crang
had removed them from Patricia's plate, studied them briefly, and then casually
passed them on to Ashargin.
The galactic co-ordinates of the position in space of Sol
were printed right across the top of page one. He read, Decant Eight,
r36,400 theta 272° Z1800—
Thirty-six thousand, four hundred light-years from the
galactic axis, at an angle of 272° from the standard line —which was based on
some remote galaxy—and eighteen hundred light-years on the minus side of the
galactic plane. And his very first task must be to get to Decant Eight.
As he pulled the lever in the cage, Gosseyn felt the change.
Felt himself return to his own body—free of Ashargin.
He wakened in the swift fashion of the change, sat up
abruptly, and then lay back with a groan as every stiff muscle in his body
shrieked in protest against the sharp movement.
There was a feminine exclamation from near the bed. Leej
came into the line of vision of his smarting eyes.
'You're awake,' she said, and her voice was little more than
a whisper. 'I thought something was going to happen, but I couldn't be sure.'
Tears came into her eyes. 'I've got to tell you,' she said.
'We're cut off. Something has happened to the Distorter system. The ship is
marooned. Captain Free says it will take us five hundred years to get to the
nearest base.'
The mystery of the lost destroyer, Y-381907, was explained.
XV
NULL-ABSTRACTS
A few of the operational principles of general semantics are
as follows: (1) Human nervous systems are structurally similar one to the
other, but are never exactly the same. (2) Any human nervous system is affected
by events —verbal
or nonverbal. (3) An event—that is a happening— affects the
body-and-mind as a whole.
Gosseyn did not try to move again immediately. His eyes were
watering from the sudden flood of light, but his vision was better. His body
ached. Every joint and muscle seemed to be protesting the one attempt he had
made to sit up. He recognized what had happened. Allowing for the passage of
time during the Distorter transport, he had been away from the destroyer for
about a month. During the whole time his body had been lying unconscious.
Compared to the attention the Gosseyn bodies must receive
from their automatic 'incubators,' the care he had been given during the month
just past, however well meaning, had probably been on a level only slightly
higher than primitive.
He grew aware again of Leej. She was sitting on the edge of
the bed, watching him with eyes that glowed emotionally. But she said nothing,
and so, favoring his stiff muscles, he looked around the room.
It was a rather nicely furnished bedroom with twin beds. The
other bed had been slept in, and he surmised that it had been occupied by Leej.
He passed instantly on to the thought that they were probably imprisoned
together.
That was an assumption that he intended to check on as soon
as possible.
His gaze came back to her, and this time she spoke. 'How are
you feeling? The pictures I have are not clear on that point.'
He managed a reassuring smile for her. He was just beginning
to realize what a disastrous month it must have been for a woman of her
position. In spite of what the Follower had tried to do to her, she was not
really accustomed to danger or reverses.
'I think I'm all right,' he said slowly. And his jaw ached
from the effort of speaking.
Her delicate face showed concern. 'Just a moment,' she said.
'I'll get some ointment.'
She disappeared into the bathroom, and emerged almost immediately
with a small plastic tube. Before he could realize her intention, she drew the
bedclothes from him. For the first time he realized that he was completely
undressed. She squeezed a fine slick of oil onto her palm, and began to rub it
vigorously into his skin.
'I've been doing this all month,' she smiled. 'Just
imagine.'
Oddly enough, he knew what she meant. Imagine Leej, a free
Predictor, who had servants for every purpose, actually performing such menial
labor herself. Her amazement at herself made the intimacy of the act subtly
right and normal. He was no Enro, requiring the soft feel of women's hands to
make him happy, but he settled back and waited while she rubbed the ache out of
his legs, arms and back. She stepped away finally and watched his hesitant
attempts to sit up.
To Gosseyn, his helplessness was a startling condition. Not
really unexpected, but a reality which somehow he would have to take into
account in the future. While he experimented with exercising his muscles, Leej
brought his clothes out of a drawer.
'I had everything cleaned,' she said, 'in the ship's
cleaning plant, and I bathed you about two hours ago, so you just have to get
dressed.'
The fact that she had managed to secure the services of the
laundry department interested Gosseyn, but he did not comment on that mundane
level. 'You knew I was going to wake up?'
'Naturally.'
She must have seen the questioning expression of his face,
for she said quickly:
'Don't worry, the blurs start soon enough, now that you're
awake.'
'When?' He was tense at the thought of action.
'In about fifteen minutes.'
Gosseyn began to dress more swiftly.
He spent five of the fifteen minutes slowly walking around
the room. Then he rested for a minute, and for two minutes walked faster,
swinging his arms with a free rhythm. He paused finally and looked down at Leej
where she had sat down in a chair.
'What's all this about being lost in space?' he asked.
The eagerness went out of her eyes. 'We're cut off,' she
said somberly. 'Somebody set up a relay that destroyed the Distorter Matrix
for the nearest base. That happened at the moment when you became unconscious,
after the matrix had been used once.'
The technical words sounded strange coming from her lips,
but presently only the meaning remained. In that first moment after his
awakening, when his alertness had been subnormal, he had only partially
grasped the implications of what she had said. It wasn't that he hadn't
understood. He had. But his mind had leaped to the related but comparatively
unimportant idea that this explained why the destroyer had for so long failed
to answer videophone calls.
Now, he felt a chill.
Cut off, Leej had said. Cut off four hundred light-years
from the nearest base. If the ship's Distorter transport system had really been
put out of commission, then they would be dependent on atomic drive with all
the speed limitations of ordinary space-time travel.
He parted his lips to speak. Leej knew virtually nothing of
science. The words she used must have been picked up during the past month, and
they probably meant very little to her.
He had better find out as quickly as possible from more
authoritative quarters the full extent of the catastrophe.
He turned and looked at the door, annoyed at the idea of
being imprisoned. These people couldn't possibly suspect what he could do with
this extra brain. And, therefore, locked doors were childish barriers,
irritating when there were so many things to do. He turned to question Leej.
She said quickly, 'It's not locked. We're not prisoners.'
Her words anticipated his question. It made him feel good to
be back again where such things were possible. He walked to the door; it opened
effortlessly. He hesitated, and then stepped across the threshold and out into
the corridor. It was silent and deserted.
He took a photograph of the floor just outside the door, and
because he was intent, a second passed before he realized that he must have
used his extra brain automatically at just about the time predicted by Leej.
He returned into the room, and stood looking at her. 'Was
that it?' he said. 'Was that the moment?'
She had climbed to her feet to watch him. Now, with a sigh,
she sank back into her chair. 'What did you do?'
Gosseyn had no objection to telling her—except for one
thing. 'If ever you should be captured,' he explained, 'a lie detector might
obtain information from you that would be dangerous for us all.'
He shook his head at her, smiling. From the expression on
her face, he knew that she knew what he was going to say. But he said it
anyway. 'How did you do it?"
'I snatched your blaster.'
'You had a vision of the month ahead?"
She shook her head. 'Oh, no. The blur that started then continued
throughout the month. But it was I who saw you slump to the floor.' She stood
up. 'It was all very easy, I assure you.'
Gosseyn nodded. He could see what she meant. Captain Free
and Oreldon would have stood blank for a second, not realizing what was
happening.
'They offered no resistance,' said Leej. 'And I had them
carry you to our room. But just a moment now. I have some soup for you.'
Our room, thought Gosseyn. It was a point which he had intended
bringing up as gently as possible. He watched her as she walked swiftly out of
the room. She came back a moment later, carrying a tray on which was a steaming
bowl of soup. She was so friendly, so helpful; she took their relationship so
completely for granted, that he changed his mind about speaking to her just
then.
He ate the soup, and felt much better. But when he gave her
back the tray, his thoughts were already turning back to their deadly
situation.
'I'd better go and see Captain Free,' he said.
As he walked along the empty corridor, Venus and all the
mighty events of the galaxy seemed very far away.
Captain Free opened the door of his room, and Gosseyn's
first impression was that he was ill. The stocky commander's face was very
pale, and there was a feverish look in his brown eyes. He stared at Gosseyn as
if he were seeing a ghost. The color rushed abruptly into his cheeks.
'Gosseyn,' he said, and his voice was a croak, 'what's been
the matter with you? We're lost.'
Gosseyn stared at him, wondering if this exhibition of the
emotion of fear explained the inefficiency which had enabled him to capture the
destroyer. He said finally, quietly, 'We've got work to do. Let's do it.'
They walked side by side along the silent corridors of the
ship to the control room. In an hour he had the picture. Extra circuits had
been built into the matrixes that were in the three similarity slots of the
control board. They were so interconnected that if any one of them was used
once on a 'break,' the pattern in all three would be disorganized.
The break had occurred during the similarization which had
also resulted in his becoming unconscious a month before. The disarranged
matrixes had been tuned to the patterns of the three nearest bases. Since they
no longer worked, it was impossible to get to base by similarity means.
Gosseyn saw that Captain Free believed every word of his
explanation of the operation of the system, and that was enough for him. He
believed it, also, but in a more qualified fashion.
Somebody, he told himself, set up those circuits. Who?
The problem was more subtle than it might at first appear.
It was reasonable to assume that the Follower was responsible. And yet the
shadow-thing had admitted to Janasen when the two of them were on Venus that he
was not mechanically minded.
The statement was not necessarily fact. But, still, people
who used the products of the machine age did not automatically know how to set
up relays to interfere with the operation of intricate machines.
Gosseyn walked over to the captain's desk and sat down. He
was more tired than he cared to think about. But he dared not slacken his
effort. In far-off space a fateful order had been given. Destroy Venus! Or
rather, destroy the people of the solar system.
Commands like that probably took time to carry out. But the
time was running short.
After two minutes rest, he climbed to his feet. There was
only one quick, logical method of solving their immediate problem. It seemed to
him that he was ready to make it.
He memorized a number of key points aboard the ship as well
as several power sources. And then he pressed the button that opened one of
the sliding doors to the lower section of the ship. He motioned Captain Free to
go ahead of him.
Wordlessly, they
headed down the stairway.
It was a different world they came to. Here was the laughter
of men, the shouts and the sounds of many movements. For Gosseyn it meant a
confusion of perception of neural flow.
The dormitory doors were open, and men stood along the
corridors. They stiffened to attention as Captain Free came up, but relaxed
after he had passed. Gosseyn said:
'Do the men know the truth?'
The commander shook his head. 'They think they're making a
trip between two planets. I've been in daily touch with the noncommissioned
officers in charge, and everything is fine.'
'They didn't even worry about the connecting doors being
locked for a month?' Sharply.
'They only go upstairs when ordered, and that usually means
work. So I don't think they'll be worried.'
Gosseyn made no comment on that. His theory was that
somebody had gone up without orders, and worked hard indeed. He could possibly
have located the guilty man by questioning four hundred and eighty separate
individuals with a lie detector. But while he did so, laboriously, Enro's fleet
would arrive in the solar system, radioactive isotopes would be sprayed down
upon the misty skies of Venus and Earth, and three billion people would die
horribly without having received a single advance warning.
The prevision was without benefit of Predictors, but it was
nightmarishly realistic none the less. Gosseyn shuddered, and swiftly put his
attention back to the job at hand. At his suggestion, Captain Free ordered a
general return to dormitories.
'Shall I have the doors locked?' he asked.
Gosseyn shook his head.
'There are several exits to this place,' the commander
persisted. 'I presume you're down here for a purpose. Shall I have guards
posted at the doors?'
'No,' said Gosseyn.
The captain stared at him uneasily. 'I'm worried,' he said.
There's no one up there who's free except the Predictor woman. It'd be
unpleasant if someone slipped up the stairway and closed the connecting doors
between the two sections.'
Gosseyn smiled grimly. The other wasn't even close in his
estimate of the situation. That wasn't the danger. 'It's a point I've
considered,' was all he said.
They went into each dormitory in turn. While the noncommissioned
officers and Captain Free made a roll call, Gosseyn talked to individuals. He
made a pattern out of the task. 'What's your name? How are you feeling? Worried
about anything?' With each question he watched not only the man's facial
responses but the neural flow that came from him like an aura.
He made a fast job of it, particularly as the crew members
began to answer. 'Feeling all right, Doc.' 'Yes, Doc.' Gosseyn did not
discourage the assumption that he was a psychiatrist.
He was in the third dormitory when a relay closed in his
extra brain. Somebody was climbing the stairway that led to the upper section
of the ship. He turned to speak to Captain Free, but the commander was not in
sight. A noncommissioned officer stepped forward smartly.
'The captain went to the washroom. He'll be right back.'
Gosseyn waited. It would take, he estimated, one and a half
minutes for the Follower's agent to go from the stairway to the control room
from which the Predictors had been sent to their assigned stations. Since all
such subsidiary Distorters operated through the main matrix, the control room
must be first.
He would have liked to talk to Leej, but to bring her down
by similarity would be too startling. And, besides, there wasn't time. He said
something about being right back, stepped out into the corridor, crouched down,
and in that position similarized himself behind the captain's desk in the
control room.
Cautiously, he peered over the top of the desk, but for a
while he made no effort to move, simply knelt there and watched. The man was
removing the panel of the Distorter board directly over the similarity slots.
He worked swiftly, and every little while looked over his shoulder toward one
or the other of the two entrances. And yet Gosseyn had no impression of
frantic haste. It was not surprising; traitors such as this always had some
extra quality of nerve or boldness that set them apart from their fellows. Such
a man would have to be handled very carefully.
As he watched, the other lifted down one of the metal
panels. Swiftly, he drew out the matrix in the slot, laid it on the floor, and
came up immediately with a curved, glowing shape. Because of its shininess, it
was so different from the other that a moment passed before Gosseyn recognized
it. A Distorter matrix, not dead, but energized.
He stepped out of his hiding place, and walked toward the
control board. He was about ten feet from it when the man must have heard him
coming. He stiffened and then slowly turned.
'I beg your pardon, sir,' he said, 'but I was sent up here
to do some work on this—' He stopped the lie. Relief flooded his face. He
said, 'I thought you were one of the officers.'
He seemed about to turn back to the board when Gosseyn's
expression must have warned him. Or perhaps he was taking no chances. His hand
moved convulsively, and a blaster appeared in it.
Gosseyn similarized him thirty feet from the control board.
He heard the hiss of the blaster, and then a cry of amazement, behind him. He
turned swiftly, and saw that the other man was poised rigid in every muscle,
facing away. In the man's tense hand he caught the glint of the blaster's
stock. Swiftly, he photographed it, and as the other swung jerkily around, he
similarized the weapon into his own hand. He was deliberate now.
He got the maniacal terror he wanted, but he got something
more also. Snarling like an animal, the man made an attempt to reach the
Distorter switches. Three times Gosseyn similarized him back to his starting
point. The third time, abruptly, the other ceased his mad effort. He stopped.
He snatched a knife from an inner pocket, and before Gosseyn could realize his
intention, plunged the blade into his own left breast.
There were sounds of running footsteps. Captain Free, followed
an instant later by Leej, came darting into the control room. 'What happened?'
Captain Free asked breathlessly.
He stopped short, and he stood by wordlessly as the traitor
grimaced at them, shuddered—and died.
The commander identified him as an assistant to the communications
engineer. He verified that the matrix the fellow had put into the similarity
slot was for the base four hundred light-years away.
There was time, then, for explanations. Gosseyn offered the
main points of his rationalization that had led him to set his trap.
'If it was an agent of the Follower, then he must still be
aboard. Why? Well, because no one was missing. How did I know that? You,
Captain Free, kept in touch with the noncommissioned officers in charge of
dormitories, and they would surely have reported it if a man were missing.
'So he was still aboard. And for a whole month he waited in
the lower part of the ship, cut off from the control room. You can imagine the
ferment he was in, for he surely hadn't planned on waiting so long before
making his escape. Why would he have a way of escape? I think it'd be because a
man would always include a way of escape when making his plans, and would only
accept the idea of death if he felt himself trapped.
'With all those pressures working on him, he wasted no time
getting upstairs when the doors opened.
'Of course, the new matrix would also have a wrecking circuit
in it, which would operate the moment he used it to escape. But there's one
little point about that which puzzles me. Captain Free tells me we'll have to
stop at a base about eighteen thousand light-years from here, and pick up the
matrixes that will take us to Venus at r36000 theta 272 Z1400, and when we get
there, we're going to have to have our papers in order.
'My little point is this: How did a mechanic expect to turn
up at base without release papers of some kind? Crew members of warships
usually have to explain why they are not with their ships. You might say the
Follower would protect him, but that isn't really logical. I don't think the
Follower would care to have Enro know that he was responsible for cutting off
Predictors from the fighting fleets for a whole month.'
He looked up. 'As soon as you've fixed up that circuit, Captain,
come and see me. I'll be in my room.'
XVI
NULL-ABSTRACTS
For the sake of sanity, learn to evaluate an event in terms
of total response. Total response includes visceral and nervous changes, and
emotional reaction, the thought about the event, the spoken statement, the
action repressed, the action taken, et cetera.
As soon as he reached the bedroom, Gosseyn took off his
shoes and lay down on top of the bed. He had been feeling the nausea coming on
for more than an hour. The great effort of trapping the saboteur had been a
strain almost too much for him to maintain.
He was anxious not to show weakness. And so it was pleasant
to feel the strength flowing back into his body. After twenty minutes of lying
with closed eyes, he stretched, yawned, and opened his eyes.
He sat up with a sigh. It was like a signal. Leej came in
carrying another bowl of soup. The timing of it obviously indicated prevision.
Gosseyn ate the soup thinking about that, and he was just finishing it when
Captain Free came into the room.
'Well,' he said, 'we're all set. Give the signal and we'll
start.'
Gosseyn glanced at Leej, but she shook her head. 'You can't
expect anything from me,' she said. 'As far as I can see, there's nothing
wrong, but I can't see as far as we're going.'
Captain Free said, 'We're lined up to go through the remainder
of Decant Nine to the nearest marginal base in Decant Eight. There, of course,
we have to stop.'
'Approach that base with a break,' Gosseyn said, 'and then
we'll talk some more.'
Eighteen similarity jumps and slightly more than ten minutes
later, according to the time that seemed to have passed, Captain Free came back
into the cabin.
'We're six and three quarter light-years from the base,' he
said. 'Not bad. That puts us within eleven thousand light-years of Venus.'
Gosseyn climbed off the bed and walked stiffly to the control
room. He sank into the lounge in front of the transparent dome. The question in
his mind was, should they flash straight into the base? Or should they make
their approach overland? He glanced questioningly at Leej.
'Well?' he said.
The young woman walked over to the control board. She settled
into the circular chair, turned, and said, 'We're going in.' She pulled the
lever.
The next second they were inside the base.
There was dimness all around. As his eyes became accustomed
to the lesser light, Gosseyn saw that the enormous metal cave was much larger
than the base of the Greatest Empire on Venus.
Gosseyn turned his attention to Captain Free. The commander
was giving instructions over the videophone. He came over to Gosseyn just as
Leej also walked up. He said:
'An assistant of the port captain will come aboard in about
half an hour Meanwhile I've given orders for the new equipment to be brought
into the ship. They accept that as routine.'
Gosseyn nodded, but he was thoughtful as he studied the
officer. He was not worried to any extent as to what Captain Free might be
able to do against his interests. With Leej and himself co-ordinating to
frustrate a threatening danger before it was scheduled to happen, risks from
men and machines need scarcely be thought about.
Still, the man seemed to be co-operating not as a prisoner
but as an open partner. He had no desire to call the other's attention to his
neglect of duty as an officer of the military forces of the Greatest Empire,
and yet, some understanding seemed essential.
He decided to be frank. After he had finished, he had to
wait for nearly a minute. Finally, Captain Free said:
'Gosseyn, a man in your position, with your special power,
can scarcely have any idea of what hundreds of thousands of officers in the
Greatest Empire went through when Enro took over. It was very skillfully done,
and if the others were like me, then they must have felt trapped.
'It was virtually impossible to know what to do. There were
spies everywhere, and the overwhelming majority of the crews were for Enro.
When he was war minister he had his opportunity to place his traitors in key
positions everywhere.'
Captain Free shrugged. 'Very few of us dared show resistance.
Men were being executed right and left; the dividing line seeming to be
whether or not you made open comment. As a result of a lie detector test, I
was listed as a doubtful person, and warned. But I was allowed to live because
I had not resisted in any way.'
He finished, 'The rest was simple enough. I rather lost
interest in my career. I was easily wearied. And when I realized what this trip
to Yalerta meant, I'm afraid I let discipline go by the board. It seemed to me
that the Predictors would insure an Enro victory. When you came along, I was
shocked for a few minutes. I saw myself court-martialed and executed. And then
I realized you might be able to protect me. That was all I needed. From that
moment I was your man. Does that answer your question?'
It did indeed. Gosseyn held out his hand. 'It's an old
custom of my planet,' he said, 'in its highest form a method of sealing
friendships.'
They shook hands.
Briskly, Gosseyn turned to Leej.
'What's on the time horizon?' he asked.
'Nothing.'
'No blurs?'
'None. The papers of the ship show that we are on a special
mission. That mission is vaguely stated, and gives Captain Free considerable
authority.'
That means we get out of the base without the slightest
thing going wrong?'
She nodded, but her face was serious. 'Of course,' she said
earnestly, 'I'm looking at a picture of the future that you could alter by some
deliberate interference. For instance, you could try to make a blur just to
prove me wrong. I really have no idea what would happen then. But my picture
says there is no blur.'
Gosseyn was interested in experiments, but not at the
moment. Still, there were other aspects of the situation.
The whole problem of prevision seemed to become more
puzzling the further he looked into it. If Enro, the Predictors and Gilbert
Gosseyn himself were all products of the same kind of training, then why
couldn't he who had been in an 'incubator' thirty times as long as a Predictor,
and more than a hundred times longer than Enro—why couldn't he see across
distance as Enro did, and into the future like the Predictors?
Training, he thought. His. For they had received none. But
he had been given flawed training, for a purpose which later had to be changed.
As soon as he had warned the Venusians, he'd have to consult
Dr. Kair and the other scientists. And this time they'd work on the problem
with a new understanding of its possibilities.
It was just a few minutes less than an hour after their
arrival that they flashed out of the base. Ten jumps and ten thousand
light-years brought them near Gela.
Next stop, Venus.
At Gosseyn's suggestion, Leej set the 'break* needles. Rather,
she spent several seconds setting them. Then abruptly she leaned back, shook
her head, and said, 'There's something wrong.'
'It's beyond my range, but I have a feeling that we won't
get as close to the planet as we did when we went into that base. I have a
sense of interference.'
Gosseyn did not hesitate. 'We'll phone them,' he said.
But the videophone and plate were silent, lifeless.
That gave him pause, but not for long. There was really
nothing to do but take the ship through to Venus.
As before, the similarity jump seemed instantaneous. Captain
Free glanced at the distance calculators, and said to Leej:
'Good work. Only eight light-years from the Venusian base.
Can't do much better than that.'
There was a clatter of sound, a bellowing voice: 'This is
the roboperator in charge of communications—an emergency!'
XVII
NULL-ABSTRACTS
For the sake of sanity, be aware of SELF-REFLEXIVE-NESS. A
statement can be about reality or it can be about a statement about a statement
about reality.
Gosseyn took five
quick steps toward the control board, and stood behind Captain Free, tense and
alert. He shifted his gaze steadily from one to the other of the rear, side and
front video plates. The roboperator spoke again in its 'emergency' voice.
'Voices in space,' it roared. 'Robots sending messages to
each other.'
'Give us the messages,' Captain Free commanded loudly. He
glanced around and up at Gosseyn. 'Do you think Enro's fleet is here already?'
Gosseyn wanted more evidence. I was released, he thought,
from Ashargin's brain within a few minutes after Enro gave the order. It
probably took about forty hours for me to get back to the destroyer, two hours
more to get the ship moving, less than an hour at the base, and then just under
eighty hours to get here to Venus—about a hundred and twenty-two hours, only
three of which could be considered wasted.
Five days! The assigned fleet, of course, could have been
detached from a base much nearer to Venus, in fact, probably had been. That
was one trouble with his expectations. Similarity videophone communications
involved the movement of electrons in a comparatively simple pattern. Electrons
were naturally identical to eighteen decimal places, and so the 'margin of
error' in transmission was only fourteen seconds for every four thousand
light-years—as compared to ten hours for material objects for the same
distance.
Enro's fleet could be here ahead of them on the basis of
time saved by the use of telephone orders. But attacks on planetary bases
involved more than that. It would take time to load the equipment for the type
of atomic destruction that was to be rained down on Earth and Venus.
And there was another point, even more important. Enro had
plans of his own. Even now, he could be delaying his orders to destroy the people
of the solar system in the hope that the threat of such an attack would force
his sister to marry him.
The roboperator was bellowing again. 'I am now,' it shouted,
'transmitting the robot message.' Its tone grew quieter, more even. 'A ship at
CR-94-687-12 . . . bzzz . . . similarize . . . Converge and attack . . . five
hundred human beings aboard . . . bzzz . . . zero 54 seconds . . . Capture—'
Gosseyn spoke in a hushed voice:
'Why, we're being attacked by robot defenses.'
The relief that came had in it excitement and pride as well
as caution. Scarcely more than two and a half months had passed since the death
of Thorson. Yet here already were defenses against interstellar attacks.
The Null-A's must have sized up the situation, recognized
that they were at the mercy of a neurotic dictator, and concentrated the
productive resources of the system on defense. It could be titanic.
Gosseyn saw that Captain Free's fingers were quivering on
the lever that would take them back to the star Gela, the base a thousand
light-years behind them.
'Wait!' he said.
The commander was tense. 'You're not going to stay here?'
'I want to see this,' said Gosseyn, 'for just one moment.'
For the first time, Gosseyn glanced at Leej. 'What do you
think?'
He saw that her face was tense. She said, 'I can picture the
attack, but I can't see its nature. There's a blur a moment after it starts. I
think—'
She was interrupted. Every radar machine in the control room
stammered into sound and light. There were so many pictures on the viewplates
that Gosseyn could not even glance at them all.
Because, simultaneously, something tried to seize his mind.
His extra brain registered a massively complex energy network,
and recorded that it was trying to short circuit the impulses that flowed to
and from the motor centers of his brain. Trying? Succeeding.
He had a swift comprehension of the nature and limitations
of this phase of the attack. Abruptly, he made the cortical-thalamic pause.
The pressure on his mind ended instantly.
Out of the corners of his eyes, he saw that Leej was standing
stiffly, a distorted expression on her face. In front of him Captain Free sat
rigid, his fingers contracted like marble claws less than an inch from the
lever that would take them back to Gela.
Above him, the roboperator transmitted: 'Unit CR- . . .
bbzzzz . . . incapacitated. All personnel aboard but one seized —concentrate on
the recalcitrant—'
With one flick of his finger, Gosseyn pushed the lever which
was set to break near the base a thousand light-years away.
There was blackness.
The destroyer Y-381907 poised in space, safe, slightly more
than eight hundred light-years from Venus. In the control chair Captain Free
began to lose that abnormal rigidity.
Gosseyn whirled, and raced for Leej. He reached her just in
time. The stiffness that had held her on her feet let go. He caught her as she
fell, limply.
As he carried her to the lounge in front of the transparent
dome, he visualized the happenings elsewhere on the ship. Men by the hundreds
must be falling or had already fallen to the floor. Or if they had been lying
down throughout the crisis, then now they were sagging, loose muscled, as if
every tension in their bodies had suddenly let go.
Leej's heart was beating. She had hung so lax in his arms
that for a moment the thought had come that she was dead. As Gosseyn
straightened, her eyelids flickered and tried to open. But it was nearly three
minutes before she was able to sit up and say, wanly, 'Surely, you're not going
back?'
'Just a minute,' said Gosseyn.
Captain Free was stirring, and Gosseyn had a vision of the
commander convulsively tugging at switches, levers and dials in a frantic
belief that the ship was still in danger. Hurriedly, he lifted him out
of the control chair.
His mind was busy as he carried the man to the lounge beside
Leej, thinking about what she had said. Now, he asked, 'You see us returning?'
She nodded reluctantly. 'But that's all. It's outside my
range.'
Gosseyn nodded, and sat staring at her. His sense of elation
was dimming. The Venusian method of defense was so unique, so calculated to
catch only people not Null-A trained, that, once they engaged, only his
presence had saved the ship. Briefly, it had seemed as if the Venusians had an
invincible defense.
But if he hadn't been aboard, then there would have been no
blur to confuse Leej. She would have foreseen the attack in ample time for the
ship to escape.
In the same way, Enro's fleet, with its Predictors, would
escape the first onslaught. Or perhaps the predictions could be so accurate
that the fleet could keep on breaking toward Venus.
It was possible that the entire Venusian defense, marvelous
though it was, was worthless. In building their robots, the Venusians had
failed to take the Predictors into their calculations.
The fact was not surprising. Even Crang had not known about
them. It might be, of course, that there'd be no Predictors on the fleet Enro
was sending. But that surely could not be counted on.
His mind reached that far, and then circled back to what
Leej had said. He nodded, visualizing the situation. Then he said:
'We'll have to try again, because we've got to get through
those defenses. It's as important as ever.'
In a way it was more important. Already there was in his
mind a picture of robot defense forces like this opposing Enro's titanic fleet
in the Sixth Decant. And if a method could be found to make them react a little
faster, so that the attack came in one second and not in fifty-four, then even
the prevision of the Predictors might be too slow.
Gosseyn considered several possibilities, then carefully explained
the nature of the cortical-thalamic pause to Leej and the captain. They went
through the routine several times, a mere brushing on the edge of the subject,
but it was all there was time for.
The precautions might not work, but they were worth trying.
The preliminaries completed, he seated himself in the control
chair, and looked around. 'Ready?' he asked.
Leej said in a querulous tone, 'I don't think I like being
out in space.' That was her only comment.
Captain Free said nothing.
Gosseyn said, 'All right, this time we're going through as
far as we can.'
He pushed the lever.
The attack came thirty-eight seconds by the clock after the
blackness ended. Gosseyn watched the nuances of its development, instantly
nullified the assault on his own mind. But this time he took a further step.
He tried to superimpose a message upon the complex force.
'Order attack to end!' He repeated that several times.
He waited for the command to be echoed by the roboperator, but
it continued to transmit messages between the robotic brains outside the ship.
He sent a second message. 'Break all contacts!' he ordered firmly.
The ship's robovoice said something about all but one of the
units being incapacitated, and, without a single reference to his command,
added, 'Concentrate on the recalcitrant—'
Gosseyn pressed the similarity lever, and broke after five
light-minutes.
In sixteen seconds, the attack resumed. He sent a quick
glance at Leej and the commander. They were both sagging in their seats. Their
brief Null-A training hadn't proved very effective.
He forgot them, and watched the viewplates, waiting for a
blaster attack. When nothing happened, he jumped a light-day nearer Sol. A
glance at the distance gauges showed that Venus was still slightly more than
four light-days away.
This time the attack resumed after eight seconds.
It was still not fast enough. But it helped to fill out the
picture that was forming in his mind. The Venusians were trying to capture
ships and not destroy them. The devices they had developed for that purpose
would have been marvelous in a galaxy of normal human beings. And they were
wonderful in their ability to distinguish between friend and foe. But against
extra brains or Predictors they had a limited value. Gosseyn suspected that
they had been rushed through the assembly lines in the belief that time was
short.
Since that was truer every minute, he tried one more test.
He sent a message to the unit that was still trying with a blind, mechanical
obstinacy to capture him: 'Consider me and everyone aboard captured.'
Again, there was no response to show that anybody had heard.
Once more Gosseyn pushed the similarity lever, the needle controls of which had
been set so accurately by Leej. Now, he thought, we'll see.
When the momentary blackness ended, the distance indicators
showed ninety-four light-minutes from Venus. In three seconds the attack came,
and this time it was on a different level entirely.
The ship shuddered in every plate. On the view plate the
defensive screen was a bright orange in color. The robo-radar spoke for the
first time, a whining howl: 'Atomic bombs approaching!'
With the flip of his finger, Gosseyn moved the similarity
lever back, and jumped nine hundred and eleven light-years towards Gela.
The second attempt to penetrate the Venusian defenses had
failed.
Gosseyn, his mind already intent on the details of the third
attempt, revived Leej. She came to consciousness, and shook her head.
'It's out of the question,' she said. 'I'm too tired.'
He started to say something, but instead he studied her
face. The lines of weariness in it were unmistakable. Her body drooped
noticeably.
'I don't know what those robots did to me,' she said, 'but I
need a rest before I can do what you want. Besides,' she went on, 'you haven't
got the energy either.'
Her words reminded him of his own weariness. He rejected the
obstacle, and parted his lips to speak. Leej shook her head.
'Please don't argue with me,' she said in a tired voice. 'I
can tell you right now that there's slightly more than a six-hour pause to the
next blur, and that we spend the time in much-needed sleep.'
'You mean, we just sit out here in space?'
'Sleep,' she corrected. 'And stop worrying about those Venusians.
Whoever attacks them will withdraw and look the situation over, as we did.'
He supposed she was right. The logic behind her remark was
Aristotelian, and without evidence to support it. But her general argument was
more plausible. Physical weariness. Slow reflexes. An imperative need to
recuperate from the friction of battle.
The human element had entered the list of combatants.
'This blur,' he said finally, 'what's it about?'
'We wake up,' said Leej, 'and there it is.'
Gosseyn stared at her. 'No advance warning?'
'Not a word—'
Gosseyn woke up in darkness, and thought, 'I've really got
to investigate the phenomenon of my extra brain.' He felt immediately puzzled
that he should have had such a thought during the sleep hour.
After all, his idea—a sound one—had been to leave the problem
until he reached Venus.
There was a stirring in the next bed. Leej turned on the
light. 'I have a sense of continuous blur,' she said. 'What's the matter?'
He felt the activity then, within himself. His extra brain
working as it had when an automatic process was reacting to a cue. It was a
sensation only, stronger than his awareness of the beating of his heart or the
expansion and contraction of his lungs, but as steady. But this time there was
no cue.
'When did the blur start?' he asked.
'Just now.' Her tone was serious. 'I told you there'd be one
at this time, but I expected it to be the usual kind, a momentary block.'
Gosseyn nodded. He had decided to sleep up to the moment of
the blur. And here it was. He lay back, closed his eyes, and deliberately relaxed
the muscles of the blood vessels of his brain, a simple suggestive process. It
seemed the most normal method of breaking the flow.
Presently, he began to feel helpless. How did a person stop
the life of his heart or lungs—or the interneuronic flow that had suddenly and
without warning started up in his extra brain?
He sat up and looked at Leej, and parted his lips to confess
his failure. And then he saw a strange thing. He saw her appear to get up from
her bed, and go to the door fully dressed. And then she was sitting at a table
where Gilbert Gosseyn also sat, and Captain Free. Her face flickered. He saw
her again, farther away this time. Her face was vaguer, her eyes wide and
staring, and she was saying something he didn't catch.
With a start he was back in the bedroom, and Leej was still
there, sitting on the edge of the bed gazing at him in amazement. 'What's the
matter?' she said. 'It's continuing. The blur is continuous.'
Gosseyn climbed to his feet and began to dress. 'Don't ask
me anything just now,' he said. 'I may be leaving the ship, but I'll be back.'
It took a moment, then, to bring back into his mind one of
the areas he had 'memorized' on Venus two and a half months before.
He could feel the faint, pulsing flow from his extra brain.
Deliberately, he relaxed as he had on the bed. He felt the change in the
memory; it altered visibly. He was aware of his brain following the ever
changing pattern. There were little jumps and gaps. But each time the
photographic image in his mind would come clear and sharp, though changed.
He closed his eyes. It made no difference; the change continued.
He knew that three weeks had passed, a month, then the full elapsed time since
his departure from Venus. And still his memory of the area remained on a twenty
decimal level.
He opened his eyes, shook himself with a shuddering muscular
movement, and consciously forced himself to become aware again of his
surroundings.
It was easier the second time. And still easier the third
time. At the eighth attempt the jumps and gaps were still there, but when he
returned his attention to the bedroom, he realized that the uncontrolled phase
of his discovery was over.
He no longer had the sensation of flow inside his extra
brain.
Leej said, The blur has stopped!' She hesitated, then: 'But
there's another one due almost immediately.'
Gosseyn nodded. 'I'm leaving now,' he said.
Without the slightest hesitation, he thought the old cue
word for that memorized area.
Instantly, he was on Venus.
He found himself, as he had expected, behind the pillar he
had used as a point of concealment on the day he arrived on Venus from Earth
aboard the President Hardie.
Slowly, casually, he turned around to see if perhaps his
arrival had been observed. There were two men in sight. One of them was walking
slowly toward a partly visible exit. The other one looked directly at him.
Gosseyn walked toward him, and simultaneously the other man
started forward, also. They met at a halfway mark, and the Venusian had a faint
frown on his face.
'I'm afraid I'll have to ask you to remain here,' he said,
'until I can call a detective. I was watching the spot where you'—he
hesitated—'materialized.'
Gosseyn said, 'I've often wondered what it would seem like
to an observer.' He made no effort to conceal what had happened. 'Take me to
your military experts at once.'
The man looked at him thoughtfully. 'You're a Null-A?'
'I'm a Null-A.'
'Gosseyn?'
'Gilbert Gosseyn.'
'My name is Armstrong,' said the man, and he held out his
hand with a smile. 'We've been wondering what had happened to you—' He broke
off. 'But let's hurry.'
He did not head for the door, as Gosseyn had expected.
Gosseyn slowed, and commented. Armstrong explained, 'I beg your pardon,' he
said, 'but if you want fast contact you'd better come along. Does the word
Distorter mean anything to you?'
It did indeed. 'Just a few as yet,' Armstrong amplified.
'We've been building vast numbers, but for other purposes.'
'I know,' said Gosseyn. The ship I was on ran into some of
the result of your labors.'
Armstrong stopped as they came to the Distorter. His gaze
was intent, and his face slowly whitened. 'You mean,' he said, 'that our
defenses are no good?'
Gosseyn hesitated. 'I don't know yet for certain,' he said,
'but I'm afraid they're not.'
They went through the Distorter blackness in silence. When
Armstrong opened the cage door, they were at the end of a corridor. They walked
rapidly, Gosseyn slightly behind, to where several men were sitting at desks
poring over piles of documents. Gosseyn was not particularly surprised to discover
that Armstrong was unacquainted with any of the men. Null-A Venusians were
responsible individuals, and could go at will into factories where the most
secret work was carried on.
Armstrong identified himself to the Venusian nearest the door,
and then he introduced Gosseyn.
The man who had been sitting down stood up and held out his
hand. 'Elliott is my name,' he said. He turned toward a nearby desk, and raised
his voice. 'Hey, Don, call Dr. Kair. Gilbert Gosseyn is here.'
Gosseyn did not wait for Dr. Kair to arrive. What he had to
say was too urgent for any delays. Swiftly he explained about the attack that
Enro had ordered. That caused a sensation, but of a different kind than he
expected.
Elliott said, 'So Crang succeeded. Good man.'
Gosseyn, on the point of continuing his account, stopped and
stared at him. The light of understanding that broke over his mind then was
dazzling for a moment. 'You mean,' he said, 'that Crang went to Gorgzid for the
purpose of somehow persuading Enro to launch an attack on Venus—' He stopped,
thinking of the still-born plot to assassinate Enro. Explained now. It had
never been intended to succeed.
His brief exhilaration faded. Soberly, he told the group of
Venusians about the Predictors. He finished with the utmost earnestness:
'I haven't actually tested my idea that Predictors can get
through your cordons, but it seems logical to me that they can.'
There was a brief discussion, and then he was taken over to
a videophone where a man had been pressing buttons and talking in a low tone to
a roboperator. He looked up now. 'This is a hook-up,' he said. Tell your story
again.'
This time Gosseyn went into greater detail. He described the
Predictors, their culture, the predominantly thalamic natures of individuals he
had met, and he went on to give a picture of the Follower and his estimate of
what the shadow-shape was. He described Enro, the court situation of Gorgzid,
and the position of Eldred Crang.
'I have just now discovered,' he went on, 'that Crang went
out into space for the purpose of tricking Enro into sending the fleet to
destroy Venus. I can tell you that he has accomplished this mission, but
unfortunately he didn't know that Predictors existed. And so, the attack which
is now about due, will be fought by the enemy under more favorable conditions
than anyone could have imagined who knew the nature of the defense forces which
have been developed here on Venus and Earth.'
He finished quietly, 'I leave these thoughts with you.'
Elliott sat down in the chair he had vacated. He said
earnestly, 'Send in your comments to Robot Receiver in the usual manner.'
Gosseyn learned upon inquiry that the usual method was for
small groups of individuals to discuss the matter and come forth with as many
reasonable suggestions as they could think of. Then one of their number joined
in a similar discussion with other delegates like himself. The recommendations
moved from level to level as each group of delegates in turn appointed
delegates to still more broadly based groups. Thirty-seven minutes after
Elliott asked for comments, Robot Receiver called him, and gave him four
principle suggestions, in the order of priority:
(1) Draw a line on
the star Gela, the base from which ships from the central mass of the galaxy
would come, and concentrate all defenses
along this line, so that the robot reaction to the appearance of warships would take place within two or
three seconds.
Since the alternative was complete destruction, their hope
must be that such a line defense, catching the enemy by surprise, would be able
to capture the entire first fleet, Predictors or no.
(2) Have Leej bring
in the destroyer, and see what a Predictor could do knowing the nature of the
defense.
(3) Abandon the plan
to operate secretly against Enro in favor of the League, and offer the League
all available weapons in the full knowledge that the information might be misused
and that a vindictive League peace would be hard to distinguish from an
unconditional victory by Enro. In return, require the acceptance of Venusian
emigrants.
(4) Abandon Venus.
Gosseyn returned to the destroyer, and the arrangements for
the third attempt to break through the defenses were made. He would have liked
to remain aboard, but Leej herself rejected his presence.
'One blur, and we'd be lost. Can you guarantee there won't
be any?'
Gosseyn couldn't. He had control to some extent of his new
ability to predict the future in so far as blurs were concerned.
'But suppose there's a blur while I'm on the ground?' he
asked. 'It's in your range.'
'But you're not concerned,' Leej pointed out. 'All these
things have their limitations, as I've told you.'
Her ability didn't look limited when at one minute to two
the Y-381907 materialized three miles above the galactic base on Venus, and
plunged off at an angle through the atmosphere. It was followed a moment later
by a line of torpedoes. It darted like a shooting star in and out of the
atmosphere of the planet, out of sight most of the time except for the
videoplate picture they had of its spasmodic flight.
A dozen times atomic torpedoes exploded where it had been an
instant before, but each time it was gone beyond the farthest reach of the
explosion. At the end of an hour of fruitless chase, Central Robot Control
ordered all robot units to discontinue the chase.
Gosseyn similarized himself aboard the destroyer, took the
controls away from a weary Leej, and brought the ship down in the yards of the
Military Industrial Branch.
He made no comment to any of the Venusians. The ship's break-through
spoke for itself.
Predictors could get through robotic mind control defenses.
It was more than three hours later when they were having
dinner that Leej suddenly stiffened. 'Ships!' she said.
For seconds she sat rigid, then slowly relaxed, 'It's all
right,' she said, 'they're captured.'
It was nearly fifteen minutes before Robot Control confirmed
that a hundred and eight warships, including two battleships and ten cruisers
had been seized by a concentrated force of fifteen million mind-controlling
robots.
Gosseyn accompanied a large boarding party that investigated
one of the battleships. As swiftly as possible the officers and crew were
removed. Meanwhile Null-A scientists studied the controls of the ship. In that
department Gosseyn proved helpful. He lectured to a large group of prospective
officers on the information he had gained as to the operation of the destroyer.
Afterwards, he made several attempts to utilize his new
ability to foresee events, but the pictures jumped too much. Whatever relaxation
he had achieved must still be incomplete. And he was too busy to more than
discuss the problem with Dr. Kair, briefly.
'I think you're on the right track,' the psychiatrist said,
'but we'll have to go into that thoroughly when we have more time.'
Time became a watchword during the days that followed. It
was discovered on the basis of interviews—Leej foresaw the discovery by
twenty-four hours—that there were no Predictors with the fleet.
It made no difference to the Venusian plan. A survey of Venusian
opinion indicated the general belief that there could be a second fleet within
a few weeks, that it would have Predictors aboard, and that it might be
captured despite the presence of the prescient men and women from
Yalerta.
It made no difference. Venus would still have to be
abandoned. Action groups of scientists worked in relays on a twenty-four-hour
basis, setting up auxiliary Distorters in each of the captured ships, similar
to those which had been used to send the Predictors from Yalerta to the fleet
in the Sixth Decant.
The capture of the warships of the Greatest Empire made it
possible to set up a chain of ships stretching to within eight hundred
light-years of the nearest League base, which was just over nine thousand
light-years distant. From that near point videophonic communication was
established.
The arrangement with the League proved surprisingly easy. A
planetary system that would shortly be attaining a daily peak production of
twelve million robotic defense units of a new type made a surprising amount of
sense to the rigid-minded Madrisol.
A fleet of twelve hundred League ships used the chain of
captured warships to break toward Gela. The four planets of that sun were
overwhelmed in four hours, and so further attacks by future Enro forces were
cut off until he could recapture his base.
It made no difference. To the Venusians, the League members
were almost as dangerous as Enro. So long as the Null-As were on one planet,
they were at the mercy of people who might become afraid of them because they
were different, people who would shortly be justifying the execution of
millions of other neurotics like themselves, and who would
also presently discover that the new weapons which they were being offered were
not invincible.
The reaction to such a discovery could not be guessed. It
might not mean anything. And then again, all the benefits derived from the
defense units might be dismissed as unimportant if they failed to achieve that
absolute perfection so dear to the hearts of the unintegrated.
The Null-As did not bring up the possible weaknesses of
their offerings during the conferences which decided that two hundred to two
hundred thousand individuals would be allotted immediately to each of some ten
thousand League planets.
Even as the details were discussed, the movement of families
got under way.
Gosseyn watched the migration with mixed emotions. He did
not doubt the necessity of it, but having made the concession, logic ended and
feeling began.
Venus abandoned. It was hard to believe that two hundred
million people would be scattered to the far distances of the galaxy. He did
not doubt that in scattering there would be collective safety. Individuals
might meet with disaster as still more planets were destroyed in the war of
wars. It was possible, though only vaguely so, that some would be harmed on
planets here and there. But that would be the exception and not the rule. They
were too few to be considered dangerous, and each Null-A would swiftly size up
the local situation and act accordingly.
Everywhere now there would be Null-A men and women at the
full height of their integrated strength, never again to be cut off in one
group on an isolated star system. Gosseyn selected several groups going to
comparatively nearby planets, and went with them through the Distorters, and
saw them safely to their destinations.
In each case the planets where they arrived were democratically
governed. They were absorbed into the population masses that, for the most
part, didn't even know they existed.
Gosseyn could only follow groups at random. More than a
hundred thousand planets were receiving these very special refugees, and it
would have taken a thousand lifetimes to follow them all. A world was being
evacuated except for a small core of one million who would remain behind. The
role of those who stayed was to act as a nucleus for the billions on Earth who
knew nothing of what had happened. For them the Null-A training system would
carry on as if there had been no migration.
The rivers of Null-A travelers flowing toward the Distorter
transmitters became a stream, then a trickle. Before the last of the migrants
were finally gone, Gosseyn went to New Chicago where a captured battleship,
renamed the Venus, was being fitted out to take him, Leej, Captain Free
and a crew of Null-A technical experts into space.
He entered a virtually deserted city. Only the factories,
which were not visible, and the Military Center were flamboyantly active.
Elliott accompanied Gosseyn into the ship, and gave him the latest available
information.
'We haven't heard anything from the battle, but then our
units are probably just going into action.' He smiled, and shook his head. 'I
doubt if anybody will bother to give us the details of what happens. Our
influence is waning steadily. The attitude toward us is a mixture of tolerance
and impatience. From one hand we get a pat on the shoulder for having invented
weapons which, for the most part, are regarded as decisive, though they
aren't. From the other hand we get a shove and an admonition to remember that
we are now just a tiny, unimportant people, and that we must leave the details
in the hands of those who are the experts in galactic affairs.'
He paused, amused but grave.
'Whether they know it or not,' he said, 'almost every Null-A
will try to affect the ending of the war. Naturally, the direction we want
events to take are peaceful rather than warlike. It may not show immediately,
but we don't want the galaxy divided into two groups that violently hate each
other.'
Gosseyn nodded. The galactic leaders had yet to discover
—though actually they might never do so; the process would be so subtle—that
what one Null-A like Eldred Crang had done, would shortly be multiplied by two
hundred million. Thought of Eldred Crang reminded Gosseyn of a question he had
been intending to ask for many days.
'Who developed your new robot devices?'
'The Institute of General Semantics, under the direction of
the late Lavoisseur.'
'I see.' Gosseyn was silent for a moment, thinking out his
next question. He said finally, 'Who directed your attention to the particular
development that you've used so successfully?'
'Crang,' said Elliott. 'Lavoisseur and he were very good
friends.'
Gosseyn had his answer. He changed the subject. 'When do we
leave?' he asked.
'Tomorrow morning.'
'Good.'
The news brought a sense of positive excitement. For weeks
he had been almost too busy to think, and yet he had never quite forgotten that
such individuals as the Follower and Enro were still forces to be reckoned
with.
And there was the even greater problem of the being who had
similarized his mind into the nervous system of Ashargin.
Many vital things remained to be done.
XVIII
NULL-ABSTRACTS
For the sake of sanity, remember: 'The map is not the
territory, the word is not the thing it describes.' Wherever the map is
confused with the territory, a 'semantic disturbance' is set up in the
organism. The disturbance continues until the limitation of the map is
recognized.
The following
morning the powerful battleship sped out through the interstellar darkness. In
addition to its all Null-A crew, it was loaded with a hundred thousand robotic
mind control units.
They stopped the ship at Dr. Kair's request after the first
break.
'We've been studying you at odd intervals,' he told Gosseyn,
'though you were about as elusive as anyone could be. But still, we got
something.'
He brought some photographs out of his brief case, and
handed them around. 'This picture of the extra brain was taken a week ago.'
The area glowed with millions of fine interlacing lines.
'It's alive with excitation,' Dr. Kair said. 'When you consider that at one
time its only contact with the rest of your body and brain tissue appeared to
be the blood vessels that supply it and the nerve connections that affect the blood
stream directly—when you consider that, then the present condition of the
extra brain is, by comparison, one of enormous activity.'
He broke off. 'Now,' he said, 'about further training. My
colleagues and I have been thinking about what you told us, and we have a
suggestion to make.'
Gosseyn
interrupted. 'First, a question.'
He hesitated. What he had to say was in a way irrelevant.
And yet, it had been pressing on his mind ever since his
talk the day before with Elliott.
'Who,' he asked, 'gave the direction to the training I received
under Thorson?'
Dr. Kair frowned. 'Oh, we all made suggestions but in my
opinion the most important contribution was made by Eldred Crang.'
Crang again! Eldred Crang, who knew how to train extra
brains; who had transmitted messages from Lavoisseur before the death of that
earlier, older Gosseyn body—the problem of Crang was thus suddenly and
intricately again to the fore.
Briefly, objectively, he outlined the cases of Crang to
the group. When he had finished, Dr. Kair shook his head.
'Crang came to me for an examination just before he left
Venus. He was wondering if the strain was telling on him. I can tell you he is
a normal Null-A without any special faculties, though his reflexes and
integration were on a level that I have seen only once or twice before in my
entire career as a psychiatrist.'
Gosseyn said, 'He definitely had no extra brain?'
'Definitely not.'
'I see,' said Gosseyn.
It was another door closing. Somehow, he had hoped that
Eldred Crang would be the player who had similarized his mind into the body of
Ashargin. It wasn't eliminated from the picture but a different explanation
seemed to be required.
'There's a point here,' said the woman psychiatrist, 'that
we discussed once before, but which Mr. Gosseyn may not have heard about. If
Lavoisseur gave Crang his knowledge of how to train extra brains, and yet now
it turns out that the method is not a very good one, are we to believe that
Lavoisseur-Gosseyn bodies were only trained in what now seems to be an inefficient
method?' She finished quietly, The death of Lavoisseur seems to indicate that
he had no ability at prevision, and yet already you are at the edge of that and
other abilities.'
Dr. Kair said, 'We can go into those details later. Right
now I'd like Gosseyn to try an experiment.'
When he had explained what he wanted, Gosseyn said, 'But
that's nineteen thousand light-years away.'
'Try it,' urged the psychiatrist.
Gosseyn hesitated, and then concentrated on one of his
memorized areas in the control room of Leej's skytrailer. He swayed as with
vertigo. Startled, he fought a sense of nausea. He looked at the others in
amazement. 'That must have been a similarity of just under twenty decimals. I
think I can make it if I try again.'
'Try,' said Dr. Kair.
'What'll I do if I get there?'
'Look the situation over. We'll follow you as far as the
nearby base.'
Gosseyn nodded. This time he closed his eyes. The changing
picture of the memorized area came sharp and clear.
When he opened his eyes, he was on the skytrailer.
He did not move immediately from the area of his arrival,
but stood gathering impressions. There was a quiet, neural flow from the near
reaches of the ship. The servants, he decided, were still on duty.
He walked forward, and looked out. They were over open
countryside. Below was a level plain. Far to his right he caught the shimmer of
water. As he watched, and the ship moved on, he lost sight of the sea. That
gave him an idea.
He bent over the controls, and straightened again almost
immediately as he saw how they were set. The trailer was still following the
circular route that he had set for it just before he made his successful effort
to seize the destroyer.
He made no attempt to touch the controls or alter them. The
ship could have been tampered with in spite of its appearance of being exactly
as he had left it.
He probed for magnetic current flow, but found nothing
unusual. He relaxed his mind, and tried to see what was going to happen. But
the only picture of the control room that he could get showed no one in it.
That brought up the question, 'Where am I going next?'
Back to the battleship? It would be a waste of time. He had
an impulse to know how long it had taken him to come to Yalerta, but that was
something he could check on later.
Great events were transpiring. Men and women for whose
safety he felt partially responsible were still in danger areas: Crang,
Patricia, Nirene, Ashargin....
A dictator must be overthrown, a great war machine brought
to a halt by any possible means.
Abruptly, he made his decision.
He arrived at the Follower's Retreat at his memorized area
just outside the door of the power house. He reached the upper floor without
incident, and paused to ask a man the way to the Follower's apartment.
'I'm here for an appointment,' he explained, 'and I must
hurry.'
The servant was sympathetic. 'You came in the wrong way,' he
said, 'but if you will follow that side corridor you'll come to a large
anteroom. They'll tell you there where to go next.'
Gosseyn doubted if anyone would tell him what he wanted to
know. But he came presently to a room that was not as large as he had expected,
and so ordinary that he stared at it, wondering if he had come to the right
place.
A number of people sat in lounges, and directly across from
him was a little wooden fence inside which were eight desks. A man sat at each
desk, apparently doing clerical work.
Beyond the desks was a glass enclosed office with one large
desk in it.
As he passed through the gate, and into the little fenced
area, several of the clerks rose up from their chairs in a half protest.
Gosseyn ignored them. He was shifting the wire in the control room of the
skytrailer again, and he wanted to get inside the glass office before letting
Yanar become aware of him.
He opened the door, and he was closing it behind him when
the Predictor became aware of him. The man looked up with a start.
There was another door beyond Yanar, and Gosseyn headed
straight for it. With a jump, Yanar was on his feet and barring his way. He was
defiant.
'You'll have to kill me before you can go in there.'
Gosseyn stopped. He had already penetrated with his extra
brain the room beyond the door. No impulse of life came. That was not final
proof that it was unoccupied. But his sense of urgency dimmed considerably.
He frowned at Yanar. He had no intention of killing the man,
particularly when he had so many other ways at his disposal of dealing with the
Predictor. Besides, he was curious. Several questions had bothered him for some
time. He said:
'You were aboard Leej's ship as an agent of the Follower?'
'Naturally,' Yanar shrugged.
'I suppose you mean by that, how else would the ship have
been waiting for us?'
Yanar nodded warily. His eyes were watchful.
'But why allow any means of escape?'
The Follower considered you too dangerous to be left here.
You might have wrecked his Retreat.'
'Then why bring me to Yalerta?'
'He wanted you where Predictors could keep track of your
movements.'
'But that didn't work?'
'You're right. That didn't work.'
Gosseyn paused at that point. There was an implication in
the answers that startled him.
Once more now, more sternly, he stared at the Predictor.
There were several other questions he had in mind, particularly about Leej.
But actually they didn't matter. She had proved herself to his present
satisfaction, and the details could wait.
That settled it. He similarized Yanar into the prison cell
which Leej and Jurig and he had occupied weeks ago.
Then he opened the door and stepped into the room he
believed to be the Follower's private office.
As he had sensed, the place was unoccupied.
Curiously, Gosseyn looked around him. An enormous desk faced
the door. There were built-in filing cabinets against the wall to the left, and
an intricate system—it looked intricate and somewhat different—of Distorter
mechanisms and controls to his right.
Feeling both relieved and disappointed, Gosseyn considered
his next move. Yanar was out of the way. Not that that meant much one way or
the other. The man was a nuisance, but not a danger.
Gosseyn headed for the filing cabinets. They were all magnetically
locked, but it was the work of a moment to open each circuit with his extra
brain. Drawer after drawer slid outward at his touch. The files were of the
plastic variety, similar to the palace directory which Nirene had shown him
when he was in Ashargin's body.
The equivalent of scores of pages of print were impressed on
successive layers of molecules. Each 'page' showed up in turn as the index
slide at the edge was manipulated.
Gosseyn searched for and found a plate with his own name on
it. There were four printed pages in the file. The account was very objective,
and for the most part detailed what had been done in connection with him. The
first item read.
'Transferred name from GE-4408C.' It seemed to indicate another
file elsewhere. There followed a reference to his training under Thorson with
the notation, 'Have been unable to find any of the individuals who
participated in the training, and discovered it too late to prevent it.'
There were several references to Janasen, then a description
of the Distorter relay system that had been used to transport Gosseyn from
Janasen's apartment on Venus. 'Had this device built by the same people who
made F. for me, so that it would actually seem to be an ordinary cooking
table.' That was printed, but there was a notation in longhand on the margin:
'Very cunning.'
Gosseyn read the four pages with a sense of disappointment.
He had expected to find an overtone of reference that would fill in his own
picture of what had happened between the Follower and himself. But the account
was too brief and too matter-of-fact. At the bottom of the fourth page was a
note: 'See Ashargin.'
Gosseyn secured Ashargin's file. That was longer. In the
early pages the writer dealt principally with Ashargin's life from the time he
arrived at the Temple of the Sleeping God. It was not until the last page that
there was any cross reference to Ashargin's 'file'. The comment was brief.
'Under lie detector questioning by Enro, Ashargin made several references to
Gilbert Gosseyn.' Besides the item, in longhand, was written: 'Investigate.'
The final paragraph on Ashargin said:
'The forced marriage of the Prince and Princess Ashargin
seems to have developed into a relationship of fact as well as name. The change
in this man calls for an urgent inquiry, although Enro is coming around to the
idea that a co-operative Ashargin will be valuable even after the war. The
Predictors find his conduct exemplary during the next three weeks.'
There was no indication as to when the three weeks had
begun, no mention of the trip to Venus on which Gosseyn-Ashargin had started,
nor any definite statement that he was back at the palace.
Gosseyn put the file back in its drawer, and continued his
examination of the room. He found a narrow door skillfully built into the
Distorter panels. It led into a tiny bedroom that contained one piece of
furniture, a neatly made up bed. There was no clothes closet, but there was a
very small bathroom with toilet and wash basin. A dozen towels hung on a plain
metal towel rack.
The Follower, if this was indeed his inner sanctum, did not
coddle himself.
It took most of the day to explore the Retreat. The building
had no unusual features. There were servants' quarters, several entire sections
devoted to a busy clerical staff, the power plant in the basement, and a wing
made up of prison cells.
The clerks and power attendants lived in cottages along the
coast line farthest from the main building. Yanar and five other Predictors had
apartments on one corridor. There was a hangar in the rear of the structure
large enough to house a dozen sky trailers. When Gosseyn looked into it, there
were seven large machines and three small planes. The latter were of the type
that had attacked him during his escape from the prison.
No one interfered with him. He moved at will through the
buildings and around the island. Not a single person seemed to have the
authority or the inclination to bother him. Such a situation had probably never
existed before on the island, and apparently they were all waiting for the
Follower to come to do something about it.
Gosseyn waited also, not without some doubts, but with a
strong determination not to depart. He had a will to action, a sense that
events were moving to a head much faster than his almost passive existence at
the Retreat indicated.
His plans were made, and it was only a matter of waiting
till the battleship arrived.
He slept the first night in the little bedroom adjoining the
Follower's office. He slept peacefully with his extra brain cued to respond to
any operation of the Distorter equipment. He had not yet established that the
Follower manipulated his curious shadow-shape by means of Distorter relays, but
the available evidence pointed in that direction.
And he knew just what he intended to do to prove or disprove
the theory.
The next morning he similarized to Leej's skytrailer, ate
breakfast with three waitresses hovering around him, anxious to do his
slightest bidding. They seemed puzzled by his politeness. Gosseyn didn't have
time to train them in self-respect. He finished his meal and set to work.
First, he laboriously rolled up the drawing room rug. And
then he began to cut free the metal floor plates as near as he could remember
to the point where the Follower had materialized on the ship.
He found the Distorter within inches of where he expected
it to be.
That was fairly convincing. But he had another verification
in the cell where he had been imprisoned when he first arrived on Yalerta. A
wild-eyed Yanar watched him through the bars as he broke open the seemingly
solid metal cot, and there, also, found a Distorter.
Surely, the picture was becoming clearer, sharper. And the
crises must be near.
The second night passed as uneventfully as the first. Gosseyn
spent the third day going through the files. There were two pages on Secoh that
interested him, because the information in them had not been a part of
Ashargin's memory.
The forty-seven pages on Enro were divided into sections,
but they merely confirmed what he had already heard, with many added details.
Madrisol was listed as a dangerous and ambitious man. Grand Admiral Paleol was
depicted as a killer. 'An implacable character,' the Follower had written,
which was quite a tribute from a person who had some fairly implacable
characteristics himself.
He investigated only names that he knew, and a few cross
references. It would take a staff of experts to go through the tens of
thousands of files and make a comprehensive report.
On the fourth day he left the files alone, and worked out a
plan for himself and the battleship to follow. It was uneconomical in terms of
time wasted for the ship to trail him over the galaxy, when his purpose, as
well as the purpose of Elliott and the others, was to get through to Gorgzid.
He wrote, 'Enro has safeguarded his home planet by a system
of doling out matrixes for the Gorgzid base under such a strict system that it
is highly improbable that any could be secured by normal methods.
'But a man with an extra brain should be able to secure a
matrix. . . .'
He reached that early point in his summing up when the long
expected relay closed in his brain, and he knew that the battleship had
similarized to a break halt near the base eleven hundred light-years away.
Gosseyn made the jump back to the Venus instantly.
'You must have similarized yourself from the ship to Yalerta
in a little over an hour,' Dr. Kair estimated.
They couldn't figure it out exactly. But the speed was so
much greater, the margin of error so very small compared to the ninety-odd
hours the battleship had required for the journey, that the time involved
scarcely mattered.
One hour plus. Awed, he walked a hundred feet to the
towering transparent dome of the battleship's control room. He was not exactly
a man who had to have the vastness of space explained to him, and that made the
new potential of his extra brain seem even more impressive.
The blackness pressed against the glass. He had no
particular sense of distance with the stars that he could see. They were tiny
bright points a few hundred yards away. That was the illusion. Nearness. And,
now, for him they were near. In five and a half hours he could similarize
himself across the hundred thousand light-year span of this spinning galaxy of
two hundred thousand million suns—if he had a memorized area to which he could
go.
Elliott came up beside him. He held out a matrix which
Gosseyn took.
'I'd better be going,' he said. 'I won't feel right until
those filing cabinets are aboard the Venus.'
He checked to make sure the matrix was in the sheath, and
then similarized himself to the Follower's office.
He took the matrix out of its protective sheath, and carefully
laid it on the desk. It would be too bad if the battleship actually
similarized to the matrix, but Leej was aboard to make sure that the ship's
break toward Yalerta fell short of a complete jump.
As he had expected, the Venus arrived successfully
above the island just under three hours later. Study units were landed, and
Gosseyn went aboard for a conference.
To his surprise, Dr. Kair planned no experiments and no
training.
'We're going to use a work therapy,' the psychiatrist explained.
'You will train yourself by doing.'
He amplified briefly. 'Frankly, Gosseyn, training would take
time, and you're doing all right. The advantage that you appear to have had
over Lavoisseur is that you found out that there were other things that could
be done, and you tried to do them. It seems certain that he knew nothing of the
Predictors, or he would have mentioned them to Crang. Accordingly, he never had
any reason to believe that he could train himself to foresee the future.'
Gosseyn said, 'That means I go back immediately and go
through the Distorter in the Follower's office.'
There was one other thing he had to do, and he did it the
moment he was down in the Retreat again. He similarized Yanar to his one
memorized area on the island of Crest.
That humane duty performed, he joined the group investigating
the Follower's private Distorter system. Already the results were interesting.
'That is the most advanced setup we've seen to date,' one of
the Null-As told him. 'More intricate. Some of the printed circuits inside that
paneling will take time to trace.'
They had already decided to work on the assumption that the
Follower's Distorters operated on a better than twenty decimal similarity
basis.
'So we're going to remain on Yalerta for a while, and give
you a chance to come back. Besides, we have to wait for that battleship of
Enro's which you mentioned. It's due any day now.'
Gosseyn agreed that the final purpose at least was important.
It was vital that no more Predictors be sent to Enro's fleet.
He was not so sure about waiting for his return. The action
he was about to take could become involved, and might require a prolonged effort.
Still, if the Distorter was really fast, only the journey through it would take
time. He could now be sure of similarizing himself back to the ship with
minimum time error, and then back again to wherever he had been.
It was the opinion of all that there was no time to waste,
and that a thorough investigation of the instruments would take quite a while.
Once again Gosseyn agreed. His own examination had shown him
that the paneling was divided into two sections. In one division were three
Distorters, the controls of which could be adjusted to any patterns.
The second division had in it only one instrument. It had as
its control a single protruding tube, which could be pulled or pushed by a tiny
lever. In the past he had discovered that such single control Distorters were
similarizable to any one destination to which they had a permanent matrix. He
hoped that this one was tuned to the Follower's real headquarters in the
galaxy.
He pulled the lever without hesitation.
Gosseyn did not move immediately after the blackness ended.
He was in a large, book-lined room. Through a half open door he could see the
edge of a bed.
He let his extra brain become aware of the life in the
building. There was a great deal, but it seemed on a quiet and peaceful level.
As far as he was able to make out, there was no one in the adjoining room.
His gaze was moving around swiftly now. He saw that the
Distorter to which he had been similarized was one of two set at right angles
to each other in a corner.
That seemed to
complete the general
picture.
He memorized a floor area at his feet, then walked over and
picked one of the books out of the bookcase. It was printed in the Gorgzid
language.
That gave him a moment of exhilaration, but as he was
turning to the flyleaf he thought: It doesn't necessarily mean I'm on
Gorgzid. Many people in the Greatest Empire will have books printed in the
language of the capital planet.
At that instant his thought poised. He stared down at the
name in the flyleaf, shook his head, and put the book back on the shelf.
But five other volumes he selected at random had the same
name in them.
It was the name of Eldred Crang.
Gosseyn walked slowly to the bedroom door. He was puzzled,
but not very worried. As he moved across the bedroom, he sensed the presence of
people in the room beyond. Cautiously, he opened the door a crack. A corridor.
He opened the door wider, slipped through and closed it behind him.
If necessary, he could make a retreat at the speed of
similarity. But he wasn't sure yet whether he was going to retreat
He reached the end of the corridor and stopped. From where
he stood he could just see the back of somebody who looked like Patricia
Hardie. She spoke then, and the identification was complete.
Her words had no importance, nor had the answer Crang gave
her. What mattered about them was that here, they were, and in the library
adjoining their bedroom was a Distorter that connected with the Follower's
Retreat on Yalerta.
It was a bewildering discovery, and Gosseyn decided against
confronting the couple until he had discussed the matter with Elliott and the
others.
But he was not yet ready to leave Gorgzid. He returned to
the library, and stood contemplating the second Distorter. Like the one which
he had already used in the Retreat, it was a single control affair.
It seemed logical to find out where it would take him. He
pressed the lever.
He emerged in what seemed to be a small storeroom. There
were piles of metal cases in one corner, and several shelves. A single, closed
door seemed the only normal entrance.
There was no Distorter except the one through which he had
come.
Swiftly, Gosseyn memorized a floor area, and then tried the
door. It opened out upon a rather bare office. A desk, two chairs and a rug
completed the picture.
Beyond the desk was another door.
Gosseyn paused on his way across the room and tried the
drawers of the desk. They were locked with key locks, and could not be opened
by an extra brain without the use of power.
The office door opened onto a corridor about ten feet long,
at the end of which was another door. Gosseyn pushed it wide without
hesitation, stepped through, and stopped.
The large chamber that spread before him hummed with faint
undercurrents of sound. A narrow buttress extended twenty feet from one wall.
It was so skillfully integrated that it seemed to be a projection of the wall
itself, a prolonged curving out instead of the flat surface which the wall normally
should have been.
The nearer curve of the jutting wall was translucent, and
glowed with an all-pervading light. Tiny stairways led from the floor to the
top of the crypt of the Sleeping God of Gorgzid.
The effect of it upon him was different than when he had
seen it through the eyes of Ashargin. Now, with his extra brain, he sensed the
pulsing currents of energy that operated the invisible machines. Now, there
came a faint sense of life force, a human neural flow, slight, steady, and with
scarcely any variation in intensity.
Gosseyn climbed the steps without benefit of the Ceremony
of the Beholding, and looked down at the Sleeping God of Gorgzid. His
examination of the face and of the crypt was different from that of Ashargin,
sharper, more alert. He saw things to which the duller senses of the prince had
been blind.
The 'coffin' was a structure of many sections. The body was
held by a series of tiny, viselike arms and hands. He recognized their
purpose. They were designed to exercise the muscles. If the Sleeping God ever
wakened from his long sleep, he would not find himself stiff and weak, as
Gilbert Gosseyn had after a month of being unconscious on the destroyer
Y-381907.
The sleeper's skin was healthy. His body looked firm and
strong. Whoever had planned his diet had had more equipment than had been
available to Leej on the destroyer.
Gosseyn came down the steps, and examined the base of the
coffin. As he had expected, the stairs were movable, and the base panels could
slide back.
He slid them out of the way, and stood looking down at a
machine.
Almost immediately he realized that he had come to the end
of a trail. On all his journeying's, on the mightiest ships of the Greatest
Empire, he had never seen a machine quite like this one.
After he had gazed at it a while, he shook his head in wonder.
The circuits were printed in intricate designs, but he was able to identify
more than a dozen purposes.
He recognized a Distorter circuit, a lie detector, a robot
relay, and other more simple devices. But that electronic brain had no less
than one hundred and forty-seven main circuits, each one of which was a unit in
depth, the surface and interior of which was interlaid with many thousands of
smaller circuits.
Even the almost human robot weapons which Lavoisseur had
turned over to the Venusians had only twenty-nine main sections.
Intent now, Gosseyn studied the artificial brain. On that
closer examination, several of the wires seemed burned out. The discovery
alerted him, and in quick succession he saw several other damaged segments. How
so well-built and protected an instrument could have been damaged was not easy
to understand, but the end result was unmistakable.
It would take an immense amount of skill to repair the
machinery and awaken the Sleeping God.
It would probably not be his job. He was in the front line,
and not in the technical department. It was time he went back to the
battleship.
He similarized himself, and arrived on the Venus to
hear the alarm bells ringing.
Elliott explained that the battle was over. 'When our robots
acted, I don't think they even knew what hit them. We captured the entire personnel.'
It was a very satisfying victory, for more reasons than one.
The captured battleship was the one Enro had sent more than a month before to
replace the Y-381907. It had come to start a new flow of Predictors to the
fleet of the Greatest Empire. It would take time for another ship to replace
it. That was one result.
The second result, it seemed to Gosseyn, was the more important
when properly considered. The Venus was free to follow him to Gorgzid.
No Null-A had any explanation to offer for the mystery of
Eldred Crang. Elliott said: 'We can only assume that he did not know about the
Predictors, and therefore made no statements on a concrete predictable level.
Your discovery seems to indicate that Crang is more aware of what is going on
than we suspected.'
A short time later Gosseyn was given another matrix, and
Elliott told him, 'We'll leave at once, and we'll see you in about three days.'
Gosseyn nodded. He intended to explore the Temple of the
Sleeping God in more detail. 'I want to see if the atomic drive is still in
working order. Maybe I can take the whole temple out to space.' He grinned.
'They might take that as an omen that the god disapproves of their aggression.'
He finished more seriously. 'Except for that, I'll lie
pretty low until you people arrive.'
Before leaving the ship, he sought out Dr. Kair. The psychiatrist
motioned him to a chair, but Gosseyn rejected the offer. He stood frowning,
then said:
'Doctor, there's something at the end of this trail we're
following that's going to be different from anything we expected. I've had
some hazy pictures—' He paused, then: 'Twice, now, my mind has been similarized
into the body of Prince Ashargin. On the surface it looks as if someone was
helpfully giving me a look at the larger scene of events, and I'm almost
willing to accept that as the motive.'
'But why through Ashargin's eyes? Why is he necessary?'
'You see, it comes down to this: If it's possible to put my
mind into other people's bodies, why wasn't it put into the body of Enro? With
Enro under my control, I think I could end the war like that.'
He snapped his fingers.
'The logic of that seems so inescapable that I can only conclude
we are looking at the picture from the wrong angle. There must be another
answer, possibly an answer bigger than the war itself.'
He stood frowning, then held out his hand. Dr. Kair shook it
silently. Gosseyn stepped away, and, still holding on to the matrix,
similarized himself to the little storeroom in the Temple of the Sleeping God
on Gorgzid.
Even as he came out of the blackness, he realized with a
thalamic sense of frustration that he was going to wake up in the body of the
Prince Ashargin—for the third time in as many months.
XIX
NULL-ABSTRACTS
For the sake of sanity, remember: First is the event, the initial
stimulus; second is the nervous impact of the event, via the senses; third is
the emotional reaction based on the past experience of the individual; fourth
comes the verbal reaction. Most individuals identify the first and fourth
steps, and are not aware that the second and third exist.
'It's dinner time,' said Nirene.
Gosseyn-Ashargin
climbed to his feet, and they walked in silence along the corridor. Her face
was thoughtful, and when she tucked her fingers lightly under his arm, it
looked like an automatic gesture. But the very unconscious nature of it
emphasized for Gosseyn what he had already realized from Ashargin's memory,
that this marriage had indeed developed into an affectionate relationship.
'I'm not so sure,' said Nirene, 'that the privilege of being
at the royal dinner table is one that I enjoy. I can't decide whether I've been
promoted or not.'
Gosseyn-Ashargin did not reply. He was thinking of the body
of Gilbert Gosseyn lying in the storeroom in the Temple of the Sleeping God.
At any moment, Secoh might walk in and find it.
Beside that fact, the private life of the Prince and
Princess Ashargin faded into insignificance.
Neither Enro nor Secoh were present for dinner, which did
not make Gosseyn feel any better He had a vision of the Lord Guardian deciding
to spend this night of nights at the Temple. There was no question of what he
himself must do, but the details occupied his attention for most of the meal.
So it was with a sense of something wrong that he looked up
suddenly and saw that the two women were very pale. Patricia was saying:
'. . . I didn't think I'd feel this way, but the possibility
of a complete League victory makes me almost as uneasy as I used to be when I
thought of my brother winning unconditionally.'
Nirene said: The terrible thing about being pulled into a
war against your will is that, no matter how little you had to do with it, you
discover finally that your own fate is bound up with the fortunes of your
side.'
Briefly, Gosseyn was drawn aside from his urgent private
purposes. He knew what they were thinking, and there must have been a real
reverse to shock them so violently.
Defeat would be a personal disaster for everyone in the
Greatest Empire. There would be humiliation, armies of occupation, a ruthless
search for war criminals, vengefulness that would show little or no
comprehension of the possible effects on the nervous systems of both victors
and vanquished.
He parted his lips to speak, and then closed them again,
struck by a sudden thought. If the situation was really serious, then
this might be the explanation for the dictator's absence from dinner.
Before he could say anything, he had confirmation. Patricia
said:
'Enro's with the fleet. They lost four divisions without a
trace, and the battle of the Sixth Decant is stopped while they plan counter
measures.'
'And where is Secoh?' Gosseyn asked.
Nobody knew, but Crang gave him a sharp questioning look.
All he said, however, was: 'It's important, of course, that there be no
complete victory. Unconditional surrender is an illusion.'
Gosseyn did not hesitate. They might as well know the facts.
Briefly, succinctly, without giving his source of information, or describing
the robotic weapons and their effect, he told them what the possible result
would be in the war.
He finished: 'The sooner Enro realizes that he's got a long
war of attrition on his hands, and makes or accepts overtures of peace, the
more quickly he'll insure that no accidents of fate brings about complete
ruin.'
He stood up. 'If Enro comes back before I do, tell him I
want to see him.'
He excused himself, and walked rapidly out of the room.
Arriving in the outer corridor, he headed for the roof.
Several planes were parked near the stairway from which he emerged. As he
seated himself in the front seat of the nearest one, the plane's electronic
brain spoke to him through a loudspeaker.
'Where to?
'Over the mountain,' said Gosseyn, 'I'll tell you where to
go from there.'
They took off swiftly over the city. To the impatient Gosseyn,
it seemed as if the spread of lights below would never end. Finally, however,
the blackness began, and soon it was general except for vagrant spots of light
that dotted the horizon.
Once more the roboplane spoke. 'We're over the mountains.
Where to?'
Gosseyn looked down. He could see nothing. The sky was
cloud-filled, the night like pitch.
'I want you to land on a little road about half a mile this
side of the Temple of the Sleeping God,' he ordered.
He described it in detail, estimating the distance of various
clumps of trees, and picturing the curving of the road on the basis of
Ashargin's sharp memory of the scene.
The flight continued in silence. They came down in darkness,
and bumped to a stop.
Gosseyn's parting admonition was: 'Come back every hour.'
He stepped down onto the road, walked a few feet, and
stopped. He waited then for the plane to make its almost silent take off—a rush
of air and a slight hiss of power— and then he started off along the road.
The night was hot and still. He met no one, but that was
expected. This was a road that Ashargin knew of old. A thousand and more nights
like this he had tramped from the potato fields back to his cot in one of the
work huts.
He reached the even deeper shadows of the temple itself and
paused again. For a long minute he listened for sounds that would indicate
activity.
There was no sound.
Boldly, yet with care, he pushed open the metal door, and
started down the same metal stairway which had been his route during the Parade
of the Beholding.
He reached the door of the inner chamber without incident,
and to his surprise it was unlocked. The surprise lasted only a few moments. He
had brought along an instrument for picking locks, but it was just as well not
to have to make Ashargin's poorly coordinated fingers cope with it.
He slipped inside, and closed the door softly behind him.
The now familiar scene of the crypt spread before him. Swiftly, he walked to
the small corridor that led to the private office of the Lord Guardian.
At that door he paused again and listened. Silence. Safely
inside, he headed for the storeroom door. He held his breath as he peered into
the dim interior, and sighed with relief as he saw the body lying on the floor.
He was in time. But the problem now was to get the unconscious
body to safety.
First, he hid the matrix under a metal box on an upper
shelf. Then, quickly, he knelt beside the still form, and listened for life in
it. He heard the heartbeat, and felt the pulse, and felt the warmth of the
slow, measured breathing of the unconscious Gosseyn. And it was one of the
strangest experiences of his existence to be there watching over his own body.
He climbed to his feet, bent down, and slipped his hands
under the armpits. He drew a deep breath, and jerked. The limp body moved about
three inches.
He had expected difficulty in moving the body, but not that
much. It seemed to him that if he could get it started that would be the
important thing. He tried again, and this time he kept going. But his muscles
began to ache as he crossed the little den, and he took his first rest at the
door.
His second rest, somewhat longer, came at the end of the
short corridor. When he reached the middle of the chamber of the crypt nearly
twenty minutes later, he was so worn out that he felt dizzy.
He had already decided on the only possible place in the
temple where he could hide the heavy body. Now, he began to wonder if he would
have the strength to put it there.
He climbed the steps to the top of the crypt. From that
vantage point, he studied the mechanism of the covering; not the transparent
plates near the head of the sleeper, but the translucent sections farther along
the twenty-foot length of the coffin.
They slid back. It was as simple as that. They slid back,
and revealed straps and tubes and holding devices for three more bodies. Two of
them were on a slightly smaller scale than the other. At the sight,
understanding dawned on Gosseyn. The smaller ones were for women.
This spaceship was designed to take two women and two men
across the miles of interstellar space and the years of time between star
systems that had not had similarity travel established between them.
He wasted no time pondering the implications, but bent his
muscles to the enormous task of dragging the Gosseyn body up the steps and into
the crypt.
How long it required he had no idea. Again and again he
rested. A dozen times it seemed to him that Ashargin was being driven beyond
all the resources of his thin physique. But at last he had the body tied in
place. Tied because there must be a mechanism for disposing of dead bodies.
Parts of this machine were so faulty that they probably had no operating
function that would tell them when a body was alive. That might explain why the
women and one of the men had not been replaced.
It was as well to take precautions.
He slid the panel back in place, moved the steps back into
position, and he was standing on top of them making sure that there was no sign
that they had been tampered with, when he heard a sound from the direction of
the storeroom. He turned, tense.
Eldred Crang came in.
The Null-A detective stopped short, and put one finger to
his lips in a warning fashion. He came forward swiftly, pushed the other
stairway toward the rear of the crypt, and climbed up it.
With a gesture he slid back the panels where
Gosseyn-Ashargin had put the Gosseyn body. For several seconds he gazed down at
the body, and then he pulled the panels shut, climbed to the floor, and pulled
the stairway back where it had been.
Ashargin meanwhile had returned to the floor also. Crang
took his arm.
'Sorry,' he said in a low voice, 'that I didn't get a chance
to help you cart it up there. But I wasn't in my apartment when the machine
first sent a warning to me. I came as soon as I could make sure'—he
smiled—'that you hid it where it ought to go.'
'But now, quick, come along.'
Gosseyn followed him without a word. There was not a Null-A
aboard the Venus who had questioned Crang's motives, and he was not
going to start now. His mind bubbled with questions, but he was prepared to
accept the implications of Crang's words that there was need for haste.
Through the little office and into the storeroom they hurried.
Crang stepped aside when they came to the Distorter. 'You first,' he said.
They emerged in Crang's library. Crang started forward as
urgently as ever, and then, halfway across the floor, he paused and turned. He
indicated the Distorter through which Gosseyn
had originally come
from Yalerta.
'Where does that lead?' he asked.
When Gosseyn told him, he nodded. 'I thought it was
something like that. But I could never be sure. Going through from here depends
upon the operation of remote controls, which I've never been able to locate.'
Crang asking a question about something he didn't know was a
new experience for Gosseyn. Before Gosseyn could ask any questions of his own,
Crang said:
'Enro has been away for eight days, but he's due back any
minute. That's according to word we received shortly after dinner. So go to
your room as fast as you can'—he hesitated, evidently considering his next
words—'and sleep,' he finished finally. 'But quick now.'
In the drawing room, Patricia said, 'Good night!' quietly.
At the outer door Crang said earnestly, 'Have a good night's rest. And I mean
sleep I'
Gosseyn headed sedately along the corridor. He felt
strangely blank, and he had a feeling that too many things had happened too
swiftly. Why had Crang assured himself that the Gosseyn body was in the right
place, after having first been warned by a machine? What machine? There was
only one that had any relevancy, so far as Gosseyn could make out. And that was
the damaged electronic brain under the crypt.
Had Crang established some control over that machine? It
sounded as if he had.
But what did he mean, sleep?
He was two floors down, starting along the corridor to
Nirene's and Ashargin's apartment, when a Venusian robotic weapon snatched at
his mind.
He had time for one startled realization: This couldn't be
the Null-A manned battleship Venus. There hadn't been time for it to
arrive.
It could only be that this was a major League attack. But
how had they got through?
The thought ended. He was fighting desperately to save
Ashargin's body from being controlled.
XX
NULL-ABSTRACTS
For the sake of sanity, each individual should break
down the blockages in his own nervous system. A blockage is a semantic
disturbance in which adequate response is inhibited. Blockages can often be
eliminated by the proper use of the thalamo-cortical 'delayed reaction,' by
self-analysis, or by heteroanalysis.
Almost, he was overwhelmed before he could think. The feel
of the complex force was so much stronger than when he had felt it in his own
brain, its effect so swiftly paralyzing that he stopped involuntarily.
It was possible that that was what saved him then. He had to
stand there, and he thought back to the old, simple version of establishing the
famous cortical-thalamic pause, the method used to condition trainees:
'I am now relaxing,' he told himself, 'and all stimuli are
making the full circuit of my nervous system, along my spinal cord, to the
thalamus, through the thalamus and up to the cortex, and through the
cortex, and then, and only then, back through the thalamus and down into the
nervous system.
'Always, I am consciously aware of the stimulus moving up to
and through the cortex.'
That was the key. That was the difference between the Null-A
superman and the animal man of the galaxy. The thalamus—the seat of
emotions—and the cortex—the seat of discrimination—integrated, balanced in a
warm and wonderful relationship. Emotions, not done away with, but made richer
and more relaxed by the association with that part of the mind—the cortex—that
could savor unnumbered subtle differences in the flow of feeling.
All through the palace, men would be struggling in a
developing panic against the powerful force that had struck at them. Once that
panic began it would not stop short of hysteria. And instant by instant it
would grow. The stimulus flashing down from the fearful thalamus, quickening
the heartbeat, speeding up the breathing process, tensing the muscles,
stimulating the glands to more violent production —and each overexcited organ
in its turn sending a new stimulus to the thalamus. Quickly, the cycle gained
in speed and intensity.
Yet all that the individual had to do was to stop for an
instant, and think: The stimulus is now going through my cortex. I'm
thinking and feeling, not just feeling.
And so he achieved for Ashargin a full cortical-thalamic
pause.
The complex force continued to struggle against him, and he
realized that he would have to be alert to make sure that Ashargin was not
overwhelmed by a surprise emotional shock.
He ran without hindrance to the apartment, and headed for
the bedroom. He knew in what condition he'd find Nirene. He let the thought of
it come consciously into his mind, so that Ashargin would know, also, and not
be surprised. As he expected, Nirene was in bed rigid and unconscious. She
had apparently wakened at the moment of attack, for there was a twisted look of
amazed horror on her face.
It was her expression that sent a shock through Ashargin.
Anxiety, alarm, fear; like lightning the emotion ran its gamut. Like lightning,
the complex force pressed in and seized his mind.
In a desperate effort Gosseyn threw himself across the bed,
so that he would be able to relax. It did no good. His muscles stiffened. He
lay tautly sprawled at the foot of the bed.
He had wondered what it would be like, what a controlled
person thought and felt. And it really wasn't very complicated at all. He
slept.
And he dreamed a strange dream.
He dreamed that the body of Gosseyn in the crypt was now
receptive as it had never been before, and that only in that unconscious
position, and inside the memory crypt was it possible in its comparatively
untrained state to achieve the tremendous rapport that had at last been
established.
The thought came not from Gosseyn but through him.
'I am the memory of the past.' The thought reached to his
mind through the unconscious body of Gosseyn. 'In me, the machine beneath the
crypt, is the only memory of the Migration that has survived, and my memory is
the result of an accident.
'All the machines were damaged to some extent in passing
through great clouds of matter, the nature of whose basic energy was not
suspected. As a result the memories of most of them were lost. What saved mine
was that a key circuit was burned out before the greater damage could be done.
'In spite of their injuries, most of the machines that
succeeded in making the journey were able to revive the bodies they carried,
for that is a simple mechanical function. I could also revive the one body
still in my care, but unfortunately he would not be able to survive. And I am
not allowed willfully to destroy a body until it is dead. Those who have tended
me in recent years have forgotten that their ancestors came to this planet in
the same way as the human being they worshipped, and still worship, as the
Sleeping God.
'The ancestors arrived memory less, and quickly forgot the
manner of their arrival. The struggle for existence was fierce and demanding.
The ships in which they came lie buried and forgotten in the soil drift of the
ages. I arrived late, so my ship has not yet been covered.
'Everywhere their descendants have built up false pictures
of their evolution on the basis of studying the fauna of their new homes. They
do not yet realize that all life seeks movement, and that macrocosmic movement
is limited to certain forms, and that the struggle to stand erect is part of
the will to movement of particular species.
'The Great Migration was undertaken on the basis of an
assumption not necessarily true, but true as far as was and is known. The
assumption that the human nervous system with its cortical and higher
developments is unique in time-space. It has never been imitated, and, when
considered in all its intricate aspects, probably never will be—'
Two bodies, two nervous systems interacting, the greater to
the lesser in the similarity fashion. The first picture came then, of men
watching a brief point as it moved nearer the edge of a shadowed substance.
What that substance was neither the man in the crypt nor the
machine whose vibrations were suffusing him knew.
A bright point that moved
sedately, and men thoughtfully
watching it. Men who had lived and died many million years before. The bright
point hovered at the edge of the shadowed substance, poised for a moment, and
then slipped over the edge.
It was gone instantly.
The pattern of surrounding space altered slightly. There was
a sudden strain, a tension that brought a break in a basic rhythm. Matter began
to change.
An entire galaxy shifted its time balance, but long before
the physical crisis the decisive moment came for the inhabitants. The
alternatives were bleak. To remain and die, or go to another galaxy.
They knew that the time required for such a journey would be
vast beyond all the powers of mechanical and human ingenuity. As the years
passed, even electronic patterns would alter radically, and would in many instances
become meaningless.
More than ten thousand million ships started out, each with
its crypt, each with its intricate machine designed to control the life cycles
of two men and two women for a million or more years. Those ships were
wonderfully made. Through the darkness they sped at three quarters the speed of
light. For this was no Distorter-swift journey. There were no set matrixes
where they were going, no memorized areas to which men and their machines could
flash with the speed of thought. All that must yet be laboriously built up.
Once more, the dream changed. It grew more relaxed, more
personal, though the thoughts that came were still not particularly directed at
either Ashargin or Gosseyn.
'I similarized the mind of Gosseyn into the body of
Ashargin. Gosseyn possesses the only extra brain in the galaxy, besides that of
the Sleeping God—which does not count. The "god" could probably be
awakened now, but certain mechanical possesses necessary to his development
have long been out of operation, so he could not remain alive more than a few
minutes.'
'Why did I choose Ashargin? Because he was a weakling. From
experience, I know that a stronger personality could have fought Gosseyn's
control consciously. His being nearby was also a factor.
'After the first time, after the channel had been established,
it didn't matter of course where he was.
'But there was another more important reason why Ashargin
was the logical person. Because of the intricate Imperial plans of Enro. the
prince could be in a position to do more than any other individual to bring
Gosseyn to the crypt.
And, naturally, it was reasonable to believe that he would
also be valuable to Gosseyn himself.
'How tremendous this achievement is you may guess from the
fact that I have now for the first time been able to tell the story of the Migration
to a direct survivor of the expedition. Many times I have tried to maneuver a
Lavoisseur-Gosseyn body into the crypt in the way that Gosseyn is there now.
But I succeeded only in making successive generations of the Gosseyn body wary
of me. The attempt previous to this one had extremely dangerous repercussions.
'I succeeded in similarizing the mind of old Lavoisseur into
the body of the work priest whose duty it was to sweep out this inner chamber.
My purpose was to give Lavoisseur an opportunity to repair the damage that had
been done to the vital elements in my structure. The plan proved impossible,
for two reasons. First, the priest was not in a position to obtain the
necessary equipment. And, secondly, he resisted being possessed.
'At first the resistance was not too great, and so some work
was done, and some investigation made by Lavoisseur into the nature of the
machinery of the crypt. As it turned out, it was unfortunate that even this
brief opportunity existed. For Lavoisseur repaired a device over which I have
no control, an instrument for initiating the matter change which caused the
destruction of the other galaxy. The device was sent along in one of every ten
thousand ships for study purposes only, and it interested Lavoisseur because
there was nothing like it on the ship in which he had come.
'Although Lavoisseur did not know it, this device automatically
attuned itself to the body of the priest, a result of precaution taken by the
builders to insure that the instrument would always be under the control of a
human being.
'Naturally, they intended the human being to be one of
themselves.
'The priest need now merely think himself out of phase in
time, and the change, fortunately limited, occurs. By using Distorter
transport, he can direct the nebular substance to any point in the galaxy where
he has a Distorter.
'When the priest's resistance to Lavoisseur's control grew
too strong, it was necessary to break the contact. What followed was something
I admit I did not foresee. After the priest recovered from his fright at what
had happened, he came to believe that he had been possessed by the Sleeping
God.
'His ability to assume the shadow shape seemed to confirm
this analysis, and in a sense, of course, it is true that he gains his power
from the Sleeping God. But only in the same way that I am the Player who has
been manipulating your mind. The real gods and the real Players have been dead
nearly two million years.
'But now, you are about to waken. Your position is a
difficult one, but you have one duty. You must kill the priest who possesses
this power. How you can do this once he is in his shadow shape I do not know.
'Yet kill him you must.
'And now, there is not much left to tell. Ashargin need
merely transmit himself through a Distorter, and I will free him from Gosseyn's
control, and Gosseyn will immediately awaken. Or Ashargin could be killed, and
Gosseyn's mind would automatically return to his own body. Those are the only
two methods.
'Eldred Crang was a confidante of Lavoisseur, and some years
ago as a result of information he secured from Lavoisseur he came here and did
some work on my damaged structure. At that time he was unsuccessful in making
adequate repairs. More recently, he succeeded in setting up a relay by which I could
send him warnings with sound and light signals —the kind of warning by which I
called him here when Ashargin was hiding the Gosseyn body.
'One last warning. The attack which has captured the palace
only seems to be a League attack. Actually, the priest chose that method to
strike for power in order to discredit Enro—'
The 'dream' began to fade. He tried to pull it back, but it
retreated even further. Then he grew aware that he was being physically shaken.
Gosseyn-Ashargin opened his eyes, and stared up at Nirene.
Her face was white, but she was calm.
'Darling, Secoh is here to see you. Please get up.'
There was a sound at the bedroom door. Nirene drew back
slowly, and Gosseyn had a clear view of the bedroom doorway.
Secoh, the Lord Guardian of the Sleeping God, stood just
inside the bedroom, staring at him with unsmiling eyes. Secoh, Gosseyn
was thinking, the work priest who had once been sweeper in the inner chamber
of the temple.
Secoh—the Follower.
XXI
NULL-ABSTRACTS
It is not enough to know about Null-A training techniques.
They must be learned on the automatic, that is, the 'unconscious' level. The
'talking-about' stage must give way to the 'doing' stage. The goal is
flexibility of approach below the verbal level to any event. General semantics is
designed to give the individual a sense of direction, not a new set of
inflexibilities.
He had a flash glimpse now of the whole picture. Entirely
aside from the dream, so many things fitted. That mechanic on the destroyer
killing himself rather than taking a chance on being questioned. What private
emotional reason could have driven him to it? Religious, of course.
And who would be in a better position than Secoh for finding
out when a new planet like Yalerta had been discovered? As a chief adviser of
Enro, he would have the resources of an empire at his disposal.
Millions of bits of information would be catalogued, condensed
and organized for him to pass on to Enro—if he chose. Scientific information of
every kind would be submitted to him for submission to the dictator. And so,
radically new and different Distorter instruments had come to the attention of
a man who knew little or nothing about any of the sciences, and who needed just
such a development to give galactic-wide scope to his private wanderings.
A man who called himself the Follower, a name with religious
meaning.
The rest of the scene, the motivation for everything, could
be a growth based on the religion itself. It seemed natural that the Lord
Guardian of the Sleeping God should have spurred the ambitions of a planetary
emperor like Enro, driving him to conquer the Greatest Empire, then consolidating
the galaxy in order to spread the religion farther.
The picture was not complete in all its parts, but in that
flash moment it seemed logical to Gosseyn that he adopt it as the assumption on
which he must base his actions now.
Secoh was the Follower. Secoh was a sincere believer in the
religion of the Sleeping God. Secoh was a fanatic, sharp and alert on almost
every level of thought—except his religious belief. And even there his very
conviction must give him a flexible way of looking at things.
But if there was a weakness in this man, that was it.
Gosseyn-Ashargin sat up slowly as Secoh approached the bed and sat down facing
him. The priest said in a rich tone:
'Prince, you are about to be given an opportunity to win
back for your family a measure of your former position.'
Gosseyn guessed then what was coming. He was not mistaken.
He listened to the offer, which was in effect a vice regency with, as Secoh
carefully put it, 'Only the Sleeping God himself above you.'
Meaning himself. And yet he undoubtedly believed what he
said.
There was no pretense that League forces had captured
Gorgzid. The Lord Guardian was frank. 'It seemed to Crang it might be a good
bargaining point if the League appeared to have captured the capital.'
He waved a hand, dismissing that aspect of the subject.
'I can tell you,' he said sincerely, 'that Enro was no
longer satisfactory to the Sleeping God, and I need hardly say that the calls
you have received from the Temple are an indication of where the God is trying
to point my attention.'
He meant it. This man believed in his curious religion. His
eyes glowed with honest purpose. Gosseyn studied him, and was only too conscious
of how unsane the man was.
He wondered then: Was Enro dead? He asked the question.
Secoh hesitated, but only for a moment. 'He must have
suspected something,' he confessed. 'I went to his apartment last night after
his return to the palace, hoping to hold him in conversation until it was too
late for him to get away. We had rather an explosive conversation.'
He scowled. 'The sacrilegious scum! In the past he has
dissembled his hatred of the Sleeping God, but last night he was in a state of
anxiety, and so he forgot himself, and actually threatened to destroy the
temple.
'Then, just as the attack began, he similarized himself to
Paleol's flagship.'
Secoh paused. Some of the fire went out of his eyes. He said
thoughtfully, 'Enro is a very able man.'
It was a grudging admission, but the fact that Secoh could
make such a statement was a measure of his own ability. His failure to capture
Enro was clearly a major defeat, and yet he had already adjusted to it.
'Well,' said Secoh, 'are you with me or against me?'
It was a bald way of putting it, especially as there was no
indication of what refusal might mean. Gosseyn decided against a direct
question about that. He said instead:
'What would you have done with Enro if you had caught him?'
The Lord Guardian smiled. He stood up and walked over to the
bedroom window. He beckoned Gosseyn-Ashargin, who came without hesitation.
Gosseyn stood beside the priest, and looked down on a
courtyard that was changed. Gallows were going up. More than a dozen were
already in position, and there were silent shapes hanging from nine of them.
Gosseyn stared at the dead men thoughtfully. He was neither shocked nor impressed.
Wherever men acted thalamically there usually would be found a full quota of
hangmen. Beside him, Secoh said:
'Enro managed to get away but I did seize a number of his
uncompromising supporters. Some of them I am still trying to persuade.' He
sighed. 'I am easy to please, but in the final issue I must have cooperation.
Accordingly, such scenes as that'—he pointed downward—'are necessary
concomitants to the elimination of evil forces.' He shook his head. 'One can
have no mercy on recalcitrants.'
Gosseyn had his answer. This was what happened to people who
were 'against' instead of 'for'.
He knew now what crisis he must try to arrange. But it would
be staking a great deal—Ashargin's life, among other things—on the intensity of
Secoh's beliefs.
It was surprisingly easy to say the nonsense words. It took
a moment to realize why: Ashargin's nervous system would have established
channels for false to fact verbalisms about the Sleeping God—a point he'd have
to remember in his final plans for the prince, who was obviously not yet
trained in general semantics.
But he spoke the necessary words about having received a
summons from the Sleeping God to the effect that a great honor was planned for
Secoh. He must come to the temple, bringing with him Ashargin and a Distorter
circuit. Gosseyn watched tensely for the Lord Guardian's reaction to the
inclusion of the Distorter, since that would be a deviation from long
established rituals. But apparently Secoh accepted any direct command of his
god, regardless of past formalisms.
And so the first and simplest step was accomplished.'
XXII
NULL-ABSTRACTS
General semantics is a discipline, and not a philosophy. Any
number of new Null-A oriented philosophies are possible, just as any number of
geometrical systems can be developed. Possibly, the most important requirement
of our civilization is the development of a Null-A oriented political economy.
It can be stated categorically that no such system has yet been developed. The
field is wide open for bold and imaginative men and women to create a system
that will free mankind of war, poverty and tension. To do this it will be
necessary to take control of the world away from people who identify.
Secoh decided to make a pageant of it. In three hours, lines
of planes, loaded with troops and priests from the capital, dotted the sky on
the route over the mountain to the Temple of the Sleeping God.
Gosseyn-Ashargin had hoped that they would make the journey
through the Distorter in Crang's and Patricia's apartment. But when that
didn't happen, he requested that Crang be in the same machine as he himself.
They sat down together.
There were many things Gosseyn wanted to know. He assumed,
however, that there might be listening devices. So he began gravely, 'I have
only gradually realized the nature of the friendship between yourself and the
Lord Guardian.'
Crang nodded, and said with equal wariness, 'I am honored by
his confidence.'
To Gosseyn, the fascinating aspect of the relationship so
suddenly revealed was that Crang had, four years before, unerringly chosen
Secoh instead of Enro as the person to whom he should attach himself.
The conversation went on in that polite fashion, but gradually
Gosseyn obtained the information he wanted. It was an amazing picture of a
Null-A Venusian detective, who had secretly gone out to space from Venus to
discover the nature of the threat against Null-A.
It was Secoh, as Enro's adviser, who had put Crang in charge
of the secret Enro base on Venus. Why? So that the Gorgzin Reesha would be
beyond the reach of her brother's determination to make her his wife.
At that point Gosseyn had a sudden memory of Enro accusing
Secoh. 'You always were taken with her!' the dictator had said.
He had a vision then of a work priest aspiring to the hand
of the highest lady on the planet. And because such emotions became set on the
unconscious level, all his triumphs since then meant nothing beside the potent
early love feeling.
Another phrase of Crang's brought him a vivid picture of how
the marriage of Crang and Patricia had been presented to Secoh as not a true
marriage, but as another protection for her. They were saving her for the day
when the Follower could claim her for his own.
A subsequent statement of Crang's made later, and seeming
to have no connection with what had gone before, justified the dangerous
deception. 'When a person has put away the fear of death,' the detective said
quietly, 'he is free of petty fears and petty tribulations. Only those who want
life under any conditions suffer bad conditions.'
Clearly, if the worst came to the worst, Mr. and Mrs. Eldred
Crang would take death.
But why the attack driving out Enro? The explanation for
that required even more caution in the telling. But the answer was dazzling. It
was important that the dictator be put in a frame of mind where he would
consider, or even initiate, negotiations for ending the war. Enro, driven from
his home planet, his sister in the control of his enemy, would have a reason
for making outside peace, so that he could concentrate on restoring his
position in his own empire.
The amazing Crang had actually found a way that might end
the war.
Crang was hesitating. And there was the faintest note of
anxiety in his voice as he added carefully: 'It will be a great privilege to be
present at the temple on so great an occasion, but isn't it possible that some
of those who will be there are so delicately balanced emotionally that the very
nearness of their god will upset them?'
'I'm sure,' said Gosseyn-Ashargin firmly, 'that the Sleeping
God will personally insure that everything will take place as it should.'
That was as near as innuendo would take them to his plan.
Brilliant lights shone from hidden sources. Priests lined
each side wall, holding glittering scepters of power and banners of rich cloth.
Thus the preliminary ritual ended in the great chamber of the Sleeping God.
At the moment of crisis, Gosseyn-Ashargin put his hand
lightly on the control lever of the Distorter. Before activating it, he took a
final look around through the eyes of Ashargin.
He had an inexorable will to action, but he forced himself
to examine the environment in which he intended to make his moves.
The guests were clustered near the door. There were priests
there, also, headed by Yeladji, the Lord Watcher, arrayed in his gold and
silver cloak of office. He had a frown on his plump face, as if he was
not altogether happy about what was taking place. But apparently he knew better
than to say anything.
The others were equally subdued. There were court functionaries
whom Gosseyn-Ashargin knew by sight, and others whom he did not know. And there
were Nirene, Patricia and Crang.
They would be in danger if Secoh tried to use energy, but
that was a risk that would have to be taken. This was the showdown. Vast issues
were at stake, and no danger could be considered too great.
Secoh stood alone in front of the crypt.
He was naked, a humble state which he had decreed years ago
for all important ceremonials in the inner chamber, particularly those where
robes of office were subsequently bestowed on the honored individual. His body
thus revealed was slender but firmly fleshed. His black eyes glowed with a
feverish light of expectancy. There seemed little likelihood that he would grow
suspicious at this final hour, but Gosseyn decided to take no chances.
'Most noble Lord Guardian,' he began, 'after I have similarized
myself from this Distorter to the one near the door, there must be complete
silence.'
'There will be silence,' said Secoh. And he put a threat
into the words for everyone present.
'Very well—now!' said Gosseyn-Ashargin. As he spoke
he activated the Distorter.
He found himself, as the machine had promised him in the
dream, back in the crypt in his own body. He lay quiet, aware of the nearness
of the 'god'. Then he directed a thought.
'Machine.'
'Yes?' The answer came swiftly into his brain.
'You indicated that henceforth you and I could communicate
at will.'
'That is correct. The relationship, having been established,
is permanent.'
'You said, also, that the Sleeping God could now be awakened,
but that he would die very quickly.'
'Death would come within a few minutes,' was the reply. 'Due
to damage to the equipment, the endocrine glands are atrophied, and I have been
replacing their functions artificially. The moment the artificial supply is cut
off, the brain will begin to deteriorate.'
'Do you think the body would be physically able to respond
to my commands?'
'Yes. This body, like all the others, has received a pattern
of exercises that were designed to enable it to function when the ship arrived
at its destination.'
Gosseyn drew a deep breath, and then he gave his next order.
'Machine, I am going to similarize myself into the storeroom at the rear of
this chamber.
'When I do that, put my mind into the body of the Sleeping
God.'
At first there was only blankness. It was as if his consciousness
had been blotted by an all-absorbing material.
But the pressures driving him were too strong for that state
to last long. He had a sense, finally, of time passing swiftly, and that
brought his first thought in his new body.
Get up!
No. Not that first. Slide the lid. The lid must come first
Action must follow an orderly pattern. Sit up, and slide the lid.
There was a blur of light, and a vague awareness of movement.
And then, filling his ears and seeming to echo through his head, a cry of
wonder from many throats.
I
must have moved. The lid must be sliding. Push harder. Harder.
He was conscious of pushing, and of his heart beating
rapidly. His body ached with an all-embracing pain.
Then he stood up. That was a sharper sensation, for there
was more vision with it. He saw blurred figures in the mist before him, and a
bright room.
Still the pressure to act and move and think faster grew
inside him. He thought in anguish, This body has only minutes to live.
He tried to mutter the words he wanted, and to force the
stiff larynx to movement. And, because sound like vision is in the mind and not
the organ only, he was able presently to form the words that he had planned.
For the first time, then, he wondered how Secoh was taking
the awakening of his 'god.'
The effect should already be tremendous. For this was a
peculiarly unsound and dangerous religion for a man to have. Like the old idol
worship of Earth which it resembled, it was based upon symbol identification,
but unlike its counterparts elsewhere in space and time, it was subject to a
special kind of disaster because the 'idol' was a living though unconscious
human being.
Such a religion's continued acceptance by individuals depended
on the god remaining asleep.
Its temporary acceptance by Secoh, if an awakening should
occur, depended on the god taking it for granted that his chief guardian was
above reproach.
This awakened god stood up before a throng of notables,
pointed an accusing finger straight at Secoh, and said quickly:
'Secoh—traitor—you must die.'
In that instant, the innate will to survival of Secoh's nervous
system demanded that he reject his religious belief.
He couldn't do it. It was too deeply ingrained. It was
associated with every tension in his body.
He couldn't do it—which meant that he must accept his god's
sentence of death without question.
And he couldn't do that.
All his life he had balanced himself precariously like a
tightrope walker; only, instead of a balancing pole, he had used words. Now,
those words were in conflict with reality. It was as if the man on the rope
suddenly lost his pole. He began to sway, wildly. With panic came innumerable
dangerous and disturbing related stimuli of the thalamus. Swiftly, thrashing
violently, he fell.
Madness.
It was the madness that comes from unresolvable inner
conflict. Through all the ages of human existence such conflicts have been set
up in the minds of millions of men. Hostility to a father conflicting with the
desire for the security of parental protection; attachment to an
over-possessive mother conflicting with the need to grow up and become independent;
dislike of an employer conflicting with the need to make a living. Always, the
first step was unsanity, and then, if the balance became too hard to maintain,
escape into the relative security of insanity.
Secoh's first attempt to escape his conflict was physical.
His body blurred, and then, to the sound of a faint moan from the spectators,
it grew shadowy.
The Follower stood before them.
For Gosseyn, still in control of the untrained nervous
system of the 'god,' Secoh's transformation into his Follower shape was
expected.
But it was the crisis.
Slowly, he started down the steps. Slowly, because the
'god's' muscles were too stiff to permit swift movement. The exercising they
had received within the confined space of the sleeping chamber had opened up
vital nerve channels, but only on a limited scale.
Without Gosseyn's knowledge of how it was done, the almost
mindless human thing could scarcely have crawled, let alone walk.
Driving him was the ever more desperate realization that he
only had minutes—minutes during which the Follower must be defeated.
Down the steps he faltered, and straight toward the wavery
shape of blackness.
The strain of watching one's god walk towards one with
hostile intent must be a mind-destroying experience. In a very frenzy of
terror, the Follower protected himself by the only method at his disposal.
Energy poured from the shadow shape. In a flare of white
flame, the god-body dissolved into nothingness. In that instant Secoh became a
man who had destroyed his god. No human nervous system trained as his had been
could accept so terrible a guilt.
So he forgot it.
He forgot that he had done it. And since that involved
forgetting all the related incidents of his life, he forgot those also. His
training from early childhood had been for the priesthood. All that had to go,
so that the memory of his crime could be utterly banished.
Amnesia is easy for the human nervous system. Under hypnosis
it can be induced with almost alarming simplicity. But hypnosis is not
necessary. Meet an unpleasant individual, and soon you will not be able to
recall his name. Have an unpleasant experience, and it will fade away, fade as
a dream fades.
Amnesia is the best method of escaping from reality. But it
has several forms, and one at least is devastating. You cannot forget the
memory of a lifetime of experience, and remain adult.
There was so much that Secoh had to forget. Down he went,
and down and down. To Gosseyn, who had returned to his own body instantly when
the 'god' was killed, and who stood watching now from the doorway that led to
the back office, what followed was anticipated.
The Follower's shadow shape disappeared, and Secoh was
revealed teetering on legs that supported him a few moments only.
He fell limply. Physically, he had only a few feet to go,
but mentally his journey continued down. He lay on his side on the floor, and
his knees drew up tightly against his chest, his feet pressed against his
thighs, and his head flopped loosely. At first he sobbed a little, but quickly
he grew silent. When they carried him out on a stretcher, he lay unaware of his
surroundings, curled-up and silent and tearless.
A baby that has not yet been born does not cry.