Published by DELL PUBLISHING,
750 Third Avenue, New York
N.Y. 10017
Copyright, 1964, by Dell
Publishing Co., Inc.
Laurel-Leaf Library, Dell
Publishing Co., Inc. All rights reserved
First Printing—February, 1964
Second Printing—June, 1967
Third Printing—June, 1969
Printed in U.S.A.
VITAL FACTOR, by Nelson Bond.
Copyright, 1951, by Nelson Bond. Reprinted by permission of the author.
POTTAGE, by Zenna Henderson.
From PILGRIMAGE by Zenna Henderson. Copyright © 1955, by Mercury Press, Inc.
Reprinted by permission off Doubleday 8s Co., Inc. and Willis Kingsley Wing.
THE ROADS MUST ROLL, by
Robert A. Heinlein. Reprinted from ASTOUNDING SCIENCE FICTION (now ANALOG
Science Fact—Science Fiction); copyright © 1940 by Robert A. Heinlein.
NIGHTFALL, by Isaac Asimov.
Copyright 1941 Street 8s Smith Publications, Inc. in the U.S.A. and Great
Britain. Reprinted from ASTOUNDING SCIENCE FICTION by permission of the author.
HISTORY LESSON, by Arthur C.
Clarke. Copyright 1949 by Better Publications, Inc. Reprinted by permission of
the author and the author's agents, Scott Meredith Literary Agency, Inc.
IN HIDING, by Wilmer Shires.
Copyright, 1948, by Street 8s Smith Publications, Inc. Reprinted by permission
of the author.
THE MARTIAN CROWN JEWELS, by
Pout Anderson. © 1958 by Davis Publications, Inc. This story originally
appeared in Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine. Reprinted by permission of the
author and the author's agents, Scott Meredith Literary Agency, Inc.
THE SANDS OF TIME, by P.
Schuyler Miller. Reprinted from ASTOUNDING SCIENCE FICTION (now ANALOG Science
Fact—Science Fiction), copyright 1937 by Street 8s Smith Publications, Inc.
Reprinted by permission of the author.
CONTENTS
THE ROADS
MUST ROLL, by Robert Heinlein
THE
STOLEN BACILLUS, by H. G. Wells
HISTORY
LESSON, by Arthur C. Clarke
THE MARTIAN
CROWN JEWELS, by Poul Anderson
THE SANDS OF
TIME, by P. Schuyler Miller
In 1929, Hugo Gernsback, the
publisher of Amazing Stories, first used the term "science fiction"
to identify the particular type of story that was published in his magazine.
But the form is older than the label. It was probably first used by primitive
storytellers who, not knowing a thing about science, went beyond their simple
understanding of nature and with imagination created tales that could be
believed by their hearers.
The possibility of belief is
one of the important elements in science fiction. When Homer retold the
adventures of Ulysses in the Odyssey he frequently resorted to a technique of
what we now call science fiction. This technique is simple, the inclusion of
strange and unknown elements in a story that starts or takes off from a
familiar point. This one foot in the world of reality makes everything else
that happens believable. Thus we may compare Ulysses, leaving his home and
wandering through the western Mediterranean (then as unknown as the depth of
the sea) to Captain Nemo and his crew in Jules Verne's nineteenth-century science
fiction masterpiece Twenty-Thousand Leagues Under the Sea.
Much of our literary heritage
that was concerned with making the incredible somewhat believable was not
always science fiction. Much of the Arabian Nights is pure fantasy, such as
Sindbad's flight on the great bird. Some of these tales are closer to our
modern definition of science fiction, such as those in which flying carpets are
used. The closest thing to science fiction in the Arabian Nights is probably
the story of Aladdin's lamp.
With the growth in man's
knowledge of himself and the world around him came the concept of science. Not
until this concept was firmly established could there be any real science
fiction, because this type of fiction depends on known science for its one foot
in reality in order to make the implausible, the way-out science, believable.
Science fiction can be as
good or as bad as any other kind of writing. The best has style, originality,
characterization, and content. It can be appreciated for its literary
qualities as much as any other types of fiction. Among those who have
contributed memorable works to science fiction are a host of outstanding
writers including Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley, Robert Louis Stevenson, Edgar
Allan Poe, H. G. Wells, and George Orwell.
Science fiction appeals to
people of all ages, but it has a particular appeal to youth (and those who are
young at any age) because it probes into the future or into still unexplored
regions. Students who find other types of fiction dull or unrewarding will
often turn to science fiction for stimulation. The effective teacher will
channel this interest on the part of her students who prefer science fiction
and see that they have access to the best of this kind of writing. The
important thing is that students read—from good science fiction they can be
directed to other forms of literature.
That science fiction has an
impact on the young was pointed out by the above-mentioned Hugo Gernsback in a
speech given at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in October, 1960. He
said:
It has been said that the
space age belongs to the young. Equally true is the fact—it has always been a
fact since its inception—that science fiction is the domain of youth. The
gifted young mind often has the faculty of an uninhibited, intuitive, forceful
imagination that can soar and ferret out secrets of nature.
One other aspect of science
fiction should not be overlooked—it is lots of fun. There is humor in much of
it, bordering on satire. Be watchful for the tongue-in-cheek twist and the
quick about-face of such stories as History Lesson by Arthur Clarke, and that
detective story of the future, The Martian Crown Jewels by Poul Anderson. Part
of the fun of reading science fiction is in determining where fact becomes
fiction in a specific story. Could what happened in H. G. Wells' The Stolen
Bacillus be true? Could an atomic explosion have the effect on the genes that
is basic to the story In Hiding, by Wilmar Shiras?
The stories in this book are
both old and new, but they all deal with some aspect of science, they all are
superb bits of story telling, and they will all appeal to an "uninhibited,
intuitive, forceful imagination."
CORDELIA TITCOMB SMITH
by Nelson Bond
Money can accomplish many
things, but it cannot always control the forces it unleashes. A flying saucer
takes off.
Wayne Crowder called himself
a forceful man. Those who knew him best (none knew him really well) substituted
adjectives somewhat less flattering. He was, they said, a cold and ruthless
man; a man of iron will and icy determination; a man with a heart to match his
granite jaw. Not cunning, dishonest or unfair. Just hard. A man who wanted his
own way—and got it.
In an era that sees more
fortunes lost than gained, Crowder proved his ability and acumen by getting
rich. Even in these days of exaggerated material and labor costs this can be
done by a bold, determined man who admits no obstacles. Wayne Crowder did it.
He patented a simple household product needed by everyone, sold it at a penny
profit that crushed all would-be competition, and made himself a
multi-millionaire despite the staggering levies of the Department of Internal
Revenue. He built himself a towering structure and placed his private office at
its peak. He dwelt in the clouds, both figuratively and literally. In sense and
essence, those whom he employed were his underlings.
A man of ice and stone and
ink and steel, they called him. And in the main, their judgment was correct.
But he surprised them.
One afternoon he said to his
secretary, "Get me my engineers."
The engineers sat
deferentially before his massive desk. Wayne Crowder told them crisply,
"Gentlemen—I want you to build me a spaceship."
The engineers eyed him, and
then each other, a bit apprehensively. Their spokesman cleared his throat.
"A spaceship, sir?"
"I have decided,"
said Crowder, "to be the man who gives spaceflight to mankind."
One of the experts said,
"We can design you such a ship, sir. That part is not too hard. The
fundamental blue print has been in existence for many years; the submarine is
its basis. But—"
"Yes?"
"But the motor that will
power such a ship," said the engineer frankly, "we cannot provide.
Men have searched it for decades, but the answer is not yet found. In other
words, we can build you a ship, but we can't lift that ship from Earth's
surface."
"Design the ship,"
said Crowder, "and I will find the motor you need."
The chief engineer asked,
"Where?"
Crowder answered, "A
fair question. And my answer is: I do not know. But somewhere in this world is
a man who does know the secret—and will reveal it if I provide the money to
convert his theory to fact. I'll be that man."
"You'll be besieged by
crackpots."
"I know it. You men must
help me separate the wheat from the chaff. But anyone who shows up with a
promising idea, however fantastic it may sound, shall have a chance to show
what he can do."
"You mean you'll
subsidize their experiments? It will cost a fortune!"
"I have a fortune,"
said Crowder succinctly. "Now get to work. Build me the ship, and I will
make it fly."
Wayne Crowder summoned the
newsmen. Their stories were spectacular, amusing. Press syndicates took jeering
de-
light in offering the world
the magnate's offer of one hundred thousand dollars in cold cash to the man who
would make it possible for a vessel to rise from this planet. But the stories
circulated to the distant corners of the globe; the offer was transmitted in a
dozen tongues.
The prediction of the
engineers was verified. The Crowder office building became a mecca and a haven
for the lunatic fringe of humanity; their blueprints and scale models clogged
its corridors, their letters were an inky deluge that threatened to engulf the
expanded staff of clerks employed to sort, examine, scrutinize each scheme.
Crowder himself saw only those few who passed the winnowing screen of the
corps. Most of these he eventually turned away, but some he placed on a
retaining wage and set to work. He poured a prince's ransom into the
construction of new laboratories. His wide proving-grounds became the bedlam
workshop for upward of a score of would-be conquistadors of space.
The weeks rolled by; the
spaceship designed by the engineers left the blueprint stage and went into
construction. But still no subsidized inventor had made good his boast that his
pet engine—of steam or explosive, gas or atomic, or whatever fuel—would lift
the metal monster from Earth's surface. Many tests were made. Some were comic, some
tragic. But all were failures.
Still Crowder did not swerve.
"He will come," he
said. "Money and determination will buy anything. One day he will
appear."
And he was right. One day
there came to his office a stranger. He was a small man. He looked even smaller
in that tremendous room. He was an unusual visitor in that he carried no
briefcase fat with blueprints, schematics, or formulae. He was unusual in that
he neither blustered, cowered, nor deferred to his host. He was a pleasant
little stranger, birdlike of eye and movement.
He said, "My name is
Wilkins. I can power the ship you want."
"So?" said Crowder.
"But it will be unlike
that meaningless huge bullet your engineers are building. Rockets are a foolish
waste of time. My motor requires a different sort of vessel."
"Where are your
plans?" asked Crowder.
"Here," and he
tapped his head.
Crowder said impassively,
"I am supporting a score of others who claim the same. None has been
successful. What makes you think your idea will work?"
"The flying disks,"
replied the little man.
"Eh?"
"I've solved their
secret. My idea is based on the principle that lets them fly. Electromagnetism.
Utilization of the force of gravity. Or its opposite: counter-gravity."
"Thank you very
much," said Crowder. "Now if you'll excuse me—"
"Wait!" bade the
little man. "There is one thing more. There is this."
He drew from his pocket a
metal object the size and shape of an ashtray. He suspended it over Crowder's
desk— and took his hand away. It hung there in midair. Crowder touched it. A
gentle tingling stirred his fingertips, but the object did not fall. Crowder
sat down again slowly.
"Enough," he said.
"What do you want?"
"For my services,"
said Wilkins, "you have already set a fair price. Three other things. A
workshop in which to build a pilot model. Expert assistance. And an
answer."
Crowder's brows lifted.
"An answer?"
"An answer to one
question. Why do you want so much to build this ship?"
"Because," said
Crowder frankly, "I love power. Because I am ambitious. I would be the first
to conquer space because to do so will make me greater, richer, stronger than
any other man. I would be the master, not merely of one world, but of
worlds."
"An honest answer,"
said Wilkins, "if a strange one."
"What other could there
be?"
"There could be
mine," said the little man thoughtfully. "I would leave this planet
and go elsewhere—to Mars, perhaps—because there are strange beauties yet to
find. Because there will be scarlet sunsets over barren wastes, and in the star-strewn
night the thin, cold air of a dying world stirring in restless sighs across the
valleys of the dry canals. Because my soul yearns to set foot on another world
as yet untrod by man."
Crowder said brusquely,
"You are a sentimentalist. I am a man of logic. No matter. We can work
together. Your workshop will be ready in the morning."
Four months later, in the
smoky haze of an October sunset, the two men sat together again. But not this
time in Crowder's tower office. This time they crouched within the cubicle of a
small, disk-shaped machine made by Crowder's engineers on plans designed by
Wilkins. Outside, great crowds were gathered to witness the test flight. They
stirred and murmured, waiting restlessly, as inside the control room of the
craft Wilkins installed the final secret part he had not revealed to those who
built his driving apparatus.
The little man secured a wire
here, made a minute adjustment in another place. Crowder growled impatiently.
"Well, Wilkins? What's
holding us up?"
"Nothing now,"
Wilkins laid down his tools, moved to the outer rim of the curiously shaped
craft and raised a metal screen which allowed him to look out upon the
proving-grounds. "Or—sentiment, perhaps. A wish to look once more on
Earth's familiar scenes."
"You are a maudlin
fool," sniffed Crowder, "or else you are afraid. Perhaps you have
decided your invention won't work, after all?"
"It will work."
"Then turn on your
motor. Let me hear its roar and feel the tug as we cut free of Earth's gravity
and fly outward into space."
The little man lowered the
port and moved back to the controls. He touched a lever and depressed a key.
His hands moved dreamily across the board. Said Crowder fretfully, "I'm
beginning to distrust you, Wilkins. If this is all a hoax— When are we going to
take off? You said at five sharp, and" —he glanced at his watch—"it
is now five-oh-two. Well— Do we move?"
"We are already
moving," said Wilkins.
Once more he lifted the
screen that covered the port. Crowder saw the purple-black of space,
cream-splattered with myriad stars. Behind them, receding Earth was a toy
balloon… a dime… a firefly.
"By Gad!" cried
Crowder, stumbling to his feet. "By Gad, you've done it, Wilkins!"
Wilkins smiled.
A great elation tore at
Crowder's breast. He knew emotion at last, this cold, hard man. He cried
triumphantly, "Then I was right! There is nothing money and determination
cannot buy. I swore to be the man to conquer space, and I've made good. It's a
triumph of power and ambition."
"And sentiment,"
said Wilkins.
"What! Your dreaming
would have died a-borning, but for me. I made this possible, Wilkins; don't
ever forget that. My capital, my forcefulness, my will."
He stared at distant Earth
through glowing eyes.
"This is but the
beginning," he said. "We'll build a larger model. One great enough to
hold a hundred men. We'll launch the first invasion of a world. I'll forge a
new empire —on Mars. Turn back now, Wilkins."
"No," said Wilkins.
"I think not."
"What? We've proven this
ship can fly. Now well go back and prepare for greater flights."
"Not so," said the
little man. "We will go on."
"What's this?"
roared Crowder. "You defy me? Are you mad?"
"No," said Wilkins.
"Sentimental."
He took off his coat. He took
off his necktie and his shirt, slipped off his trousers and his shoes. Beneath
his clothing shone another garb, a strange apparel totally unlike anything
Crowder had ever seen before. A gleaming, tight-knit cloth of golden hue,
curiously outlining the quite unhuman aspects of his small physique. He smiled
at Crowder, and it was a friendly smile. But it was not the smile of a creature
born on Earth.
"Your money and ambition
paved the way," said the man from Mars, "but sentiment was the vital
factor that sent me to you. You see—I wanted to go home."
by Zenna Henderson
What was the secret that
held the children of Bendo in quietness and fear? One of many stories about The
People.
You get tired of teaching
after a while. Well, maybe not of teaching itself, because it's insidious and
remains a tug in the blood for all of your life, but there comes a day when you
look down at the paper you're grading or listen to an answer you're giving a
child and you get a boinnng! feeling. And each reverberation of the boing is a
year in your life, another set of children through your hands, another beat in
monotony, and it's frightening. The value of the work you're doing doesn't
enter into it at that moment and the monotony is bitter on your tongue.
Sometimes you can assuage
that feeling by consciously savoring those precious days of pseudo freedom
between the time you receive your contract for the next year and the moment you
sign it. Because you can escape at that moment, but somehow—you don't.
But I did one spring. I quit
teaching. I didn't sign up again. I went chasing after—after what? Maybe
excitement—maybe a dream of wonder—maybe a new bright wonderful world that just
must be somewhere else because it isn't here-and-now. Maybe a place to begin
again so I'd never end up at the same frightening emotional dead end. So I
quit.
But by late August the
emptiness inside me was bigger than boredom, bigger than monotony, bigger than
lusting after freedom. It was almost terror to be next door to September and
not care that in a few weeks school starts— tomorrow school starts—first day of
school. So, almost at the last minute, I went to the placement bureau. Of
course it was too late to try to return to my other school, and besides, the
mold of the years there still chafed in too many places.
"Well," the
placement director said as he shuffled his end-of-the-season cards, past
Algebra and Home EC and PE and High-School English, "there's always
Bendo." He thumbed out a battered-looking three-by-five. "There's
always Bendo."
And I took his emphasis and
look for what they were intended and sighed.
"Bendo?"
"Small school. One room.
Mining town, or used to be. Ghost town now." He sighed wearily and let
down his professional hair. "Ghost people, too. Can't keep a teacher there
more than a year. Low pay—fair housing—at someone's home. No community activities—no
social life. No city within fifty or so miles. No movies. No nothing but
children to be taught. Ten of them this year. All grades."
"Sounds like the town I
grew up in," I said. "Except we had two rooms and lots of community
activities."
"I've been to
Bendo." The director leaned back in his chair, hands behind his head.
"Sick community. Unhappy people. No interest in anything. Only reason they
have a school is because it's the law. Law-abiding anyway. Not enough interest
in anything to break a law, I guess."
"I'll take it," I
said quickly before I could think beyond the feeling that this sounded about as
far back as I could go to get a good running start at things again.
He glanced at me quizzically.
"If you're thinking of lighting a torch of high reform to set Bendo afire
with enthusiasm, forget it. I've seen plenty of king-sized torches fizzle out
there."
"I have no torch,"
I said. "Frankly I'm fed to the teeth with bouncing bright enthusiasm and
hugs PTA's and activities until they come out your ears. They usually turn out
to be the most monotonous kind of monotony. Bendo will be a rest."
"It will that," the
director said, leaning over his cards again. "Saul Diemus is the president
of the board. If you don't have a car the only way to get to Bendo is by bus—it
runs once a week."
I stepped out into the August
sunshine after the interview and sagged a little under its savage pressure,
almost hearing a hiss as the refrigerated coolness of the placement bureau
evaporated from my skin.
I walked over to the quad and
sat down on one of the stone benches I'd never had time to use, those years ago
when I had been a student here. I looked up at my old dorm window and, for a
moment, felt a wild homesickness—not only for years that were gone and hopes
that had died and dreams that had had grim awakenings, but for a special magic
I had found in that room. It was a magic—a true magic—that opened such vistas
to me that for a while anything seemed possible, anything feasible—if not for
me right now, then for others, someday. Even now, after the dilution of time, I
couldn't quite believe that magic, and even now, as then, I wanted fiercely to
believe it. If only it could be so! If only it could be so!
I sighed and stood up. I
suppose everyone has a magic moment somewhere in his life and, like me, can't
believe that anyone else could have the same—but mine was different! No one
else could have had the same experience! I laughed at myself. Enough of the
past and of dreaming. Bendo waited. I had things to do.
I watched the rolling clouds
of red-yellow dust billow away from the jolting bus, and cupped my hands over
my face to get a breath of clean air. The grit between my teeth and the
smothering sift of dust across my clothes was familiar enough to me, but I
hoped by the time we reached Bendo we would have left this dust plain behind
and come into a little more vegetation. I shifted wearily on the angular seat,
wondering if it had ever been designed for anyone's comfort, and caught myself
as a sudden braking of the bus flung me forward.
We sat and waited for the
dust of our going to catch up with us, while the last-but-me passenger, a
withered old Indian, slowly gathered up his gunny-sack bundles and his battered
saddle and edged his Levied velveteen-bloused self up the aisle and out to the
bleak roadside.
We roared away, leaving him a
desolate figure in a wide desolation. I wondered where he was headed. How many
weary miles to his hogan in what hidden wash or miniature greenness in all this
wilderness.
Then we headed straight as a
die for the towering redness of the bare mountains that lined the horizon.
Peering ahead I could see the road, ruler straight, disappearing into the
distance. I sighed and shifted again and let the roar of the motor and the
weariness of my bones lull me into a stupor on the border between sleep and
waking.
A change in the motor roar
brought me back to the jouncing bus. We jerked to a stop again. I looked out
the window through the settling clouds of dust and wondered who we could be
picking up out here in the middle of nowhere. Then a clot of dust dissolved and
I saw
BENDO POST OFFICE
GENERAL STORE
Garage & Service Station
Dry Goods & Hardware
Magazines
In descending size on the front
of the leaning, weather-beaten building propped between two crumbling
smoke-blackened stone ruins. After so much flatness it was almost a shock to
see the bare tumbled boulders crowding down to the roadside and humping their
lichen-stained shoulders against the sky.
"Bendo," the bus
driver said, unfolding his lanky legs and hunching out of the bus. "End of
the line—end of civilization—end of everything!" He grinned and the dusty
mask of his face broke into engaging smile patterns.
"Small, isn't it?"
I grinned back.
"Usta be bigger. Not
that it helps now. Roaring mining town years ago." As he spoke I could
pick out disintegrating buildings dotting the rocky hillsides and tumbling into
the steep washes. "My dad can remember it when he was a kid. That was long
enough ago that there was still a river for the town to be in the bend
o'."
"Is that where it got
its name?"
"Some say yes, some say
no. Might have been a feller named Bendo." The driver grunted as he
unlashed my luggage from the bus roof and swung it to the ground.
"Oh, hi!" said the
driver.
I swung around to see who was
there. The man was tall, well built, good-looking—and old. Older than his face—
older than years could have made him because he was really young, not much
older than I. His face was a stern unhappy stillness, his hands stiff on the
brim of his Stetson as he he'd it waist high.
In that brief pause before
his "Miss Amerson?" I felt the same feeling coming from him that you
can feel around some highly religious person who knows God only as a stern
implacable vengeful deity, impatient of worthless man, waiting only for an
unguarded moment to strike him down in his sin. I wondered who or what his God
was that prisoned him so cruelly. Then I was answering, "Yes, how do you
do?" And ' e touched my hand briefly with a "Saul Diemus" and
turned to the problem of my two large suitcases and my record player.
I followed Mr. Diemus'
shuffling feet silently, since he seemed to have slight inclination for talk. I
hadn't expected a reception committee, but kids must have changed a lot since I
was one, otherwise curiosity about teacher would have lured out at least a
couple of them for a preview look. But the silent two of us walked on for a
half block or so from the highway and the post office and rounded the rocky
corner of a hill. I looked across the dry creek bed and up the one winding
street that was residential Bendo. I paused on the splintery old bridge and
took a good look. I'd never see Bendo like this again. Familiarity would blur
some outlines and sharpen others, and I'd never again see it, free from the
knowledge of who lived behind which blank front door.
The houses were scattered
haphazardly over the hillsides, and erratic flights of rough stone steps led
down from each to the road that paralleled the bone-dry creek bed. The houses
were not shacks but they were unpainted and weathered until they blended into
the background almost perfectly. Each front yard had things growing in it, but
such subdued blossomings and unobtrusive planting that they could easily have
been only accidental massings of natural vegetation.
Such a passion for anonymity…
"The school—" I had
missed the swift thrust of his hand.
"Where?" Nothing I
could see spoke school to me.
"Around the bend."
This time I followed his indication and suddenly, out of the featurelessness of
the place, I saw a bell tower barely topping the hill beyond the town, with the
fine pencil stroke of a flagpole to one side. Mr. Diemus pulled himself
together to make the effort.
"The school's in the
prettiest place around here. There's a spring and trees, and—" He ran out
of words and looked at me as though trying to conjure up something else I'd
like to hear. "I'm board president," he said abruptly. "You'll
have ten children from first grade to second-year high school. You're the boss
in your school. Whatever you do is your business. Any discipline you find
desirable—use. We don't pamper our children. Teach them what you have to. Don't
bother the parents with reasons and explanations. The school is yours."
"And you'd just as soon
do away with it and me, too," I smiled at him.
He looked startled. "The
law says school them." He started across the bridge. "So school
them."
I followed meekly, wondering
wryly what would happen if I asked Mr. Diemus why he hated himself and the
world he was in and even—oh, breathe it softly—the children I was to
"school."
"You'll stay at my
place," he said. "We have an extra room."
I was uneasily conscious of
the wide gap of silence that followed his pronouncement, but couldn't think of
a thing to fill it. I shifted my small case from one hand to the other and kept
my eyes on the rocky path that protested with shifting stones and vocal gravel
every step we took. It seemed to me that Mr. Diemus was trying to make all the
noise he could with his shuffling feet. But, in spite of the amplified echo
from the hills around us, no door opened, no face pressed to a window. It was a
distinct relief to hear suddenly the happy unthinking rusty singing of hens as
they scratched in the coarse dust.
I hunched up in the darkness
of my narrow bed trying to comfort my uneasy stomach. It wasn't that the food
had been bad—it had been quite adequate—but such a dingy meal! Gloom seemed to
festoon itself from the ceiling and unhappiness sat almost visibly at the
table.
I tried to tell myself that
it was my own travel weariness that slanted my thoughts, but I looked around
the table and saw the hopeless endurance furrowed into the adult faces and
beginning faintly but unmistakably on those of the children. There were two
children there. A girl, Sarah (fourth grade, at a guess), and an adolescent
boy, Matt (seventh?) —too silent, top well mannered, too controlled, avoiding
much too pointedly looking at the empty chair between them.
My food went down in limps and
quarreled fiercely with the coffee that arrived in square-feeling gulps. Even
yet— long difficult hours after the meal—the food still wouldn't lie down to be
digested.
Tomorrow I could slip into
the pattern of school, familiar no matter where school was, since teaching kids
is teaching kids no matter where. Maybe then I could convince my stomach that
all was well, and then maybe even start to thaw those frozen unnatural
children. Of course they well might be little demons away from home—which is
very often the case. Anyway, I felt, thankfully, the familiar September thrill
of new beginnings.
I shifted in bed again, then
stiffening my neck, lifted my ears clear of my pillow.
It was a whisper, the
intermittent hissing I had been hearing. Someone was whispering in the next
room to mine. I sat up and listened unashamedly. I knew Sarah's room was next
to mine, but who was talking with her? At first I could get only half words and
then either my ears sharpened or the voices became louder.
"… and did you hear her laugh?
Right out loud at the table!" The quick whisper became a low voice.
"Her eyes crinkled in the corners and she laughed."
"Our other teachers
laughed, too." The uncertainly deep voice must be Matt.
"Yes," Sarah
whispered. "But not for long. Oh, Matt! What's wrong with us? People in
our books have fun. They laugh and run and jump and do all kinds of fun stuff
and nobody—" Sarah faltered, "no one calls it evil."
"Those are only
stories," Matt said. "Not real life."
"I don't believe
it!" Sarah cried. "When I get big I'm going away from Bendo. I'm
going to see—"
"Away from Bendo!"
Matt's voice broke in roughly. "Away from the Group?"
I lost Sarah's reply. I felt
as though I had missed an expected step. As I wrestled with my breath the
sights and sounds and smells of my old dorm room crowded back upon me. Then I
caught myself. It was probably only a turn of phrase. This futile desolate
unhappiness couldn't possibly be related in any way to that magic…
"Where is Dorcas?"
Sarah asked, as though she knew the answer already.
"Punished." Matt's
voice was hard and unchildlike. "She jumped."
"Jumped!" Sarah was
shocked.
"Over the edge of the
porch. Clear down to the path. Father saw her. I think she let him see her on
purpose." His voice was defiant. "Someday when I get older I'm going
to jump, too—all I want to—even over the house. Right in front of Father."
"Oh, Matt!" The cry
was horrified and admiring. "You wouldn't! You couldn't. Not so far, not
right in front of Father!"
"I would so," Matt
retorted. "I could so, because I—" His words cut off sharply.
"Sarah," he went on, "can you figure any way, any way, that
jumping could be evil? It doesn't hurt anyone. It isn't ugly. There isn't any
law—"
"Where is Dorcas?"
Sarah's voice was almost inaudible. "In the hidey hole again?" She
was almost answering Mart's question instead of asking one of her own.
"Yes," Matt said.
"In the dark with only bread to eat. So she can learn what a hunted animal
feels like. An animal that is different, that other animals hate and hunt"
His bitter voice put quotes around the words.
"You see," Sarah
whispered. "You see?"
In the silence following I
heard the quiet closing of a door and the slight vibration of the floor as Matt
passed my room. I eased back onto my pillow. I lay back, staring toward the
ceiling. What dark thing was here in this house? In this community? Frightened
children whispering in the dark. Rebellious children in hidey holes learning
how hunted animals feel. And a Group… ? No it couldn't be. It was just the
recent reminder of being on campus again that made me even consider that this
darkness might in some way be the reverse of the golden coin Karen had showed
me.
My heart almost failed me
when I saw the school. It was one of those monstrosities that went up around
the turn of the century. This one had been built for a boom town, but now all
the upper windows were boarded up and obviously long out of use. The lower
floor was blank, too, except for two rooms—though with the handful of children
quietly standing around the door it was apparent that only one room was needed.
And not only was the building deserted, the yard was swept clean from side to
side innocent of grass or trees—or playground equipment. There was a deep grove
just beyond the school, though, and the glint of water down canyon.
"No swings?" I
asked the three children who were escorting me. "No slides? No
seesaws?"
"No!" Sarah's voice
was unhappily surprised. Matt scowled at her warningly.
"No," he said,
"we don't swing or slide—nor see a saw!" He grinned up at me faintly.
"What a shame!" I
said. "Did they all wear out? Can't the school afford new ones?"
"We don't swing or slide
or seesaw." The grin was dead. "We don't believe in it."
There's nothing quite so flat
and incontestable as that last statement. I've heard it as an excuse for
practically every type of omission, but, so help me, never applied to
playground equipment. I couldn't think of a reply any more intelligent than
"Oh," so I didn't say anything.
All week long I felt as if I
were wading through knee-deep Jello or trying to lift a king-sized feather bed
up over my head. I used up every device I ever thought of to rouse the class to
enthusiasm—about anything, anything! They were polite and submissive and did
what was asked of them, but joylessly, apathetically, enduringly.
Finally, just before
dismissal time on Friday, I leaned in desperation across my desk.
"Don't you like
anything?" I pleaded. "Isn't anything fun?"
Dorcas Diemus' mouth opened
into the tense silence. I saw Matt kick quickly, warningly, against the leg of
the desk. Her mouth closed.
"I think school is
fun," I said. "I think we can enjoy all kinds of things. I want to
enjoy teaching but I can't unless you enjoy learning."
"We learn," Dorcas
said quickly. "We aren't stupid."
"You learn," I
acknowledged. "You aren't stupid. But don't any of you like school?"
"I like school,"
Martha piped up, my first grader. "I think it's fun!"
"Thank you,
Martha," I said. "And the rest of you—" I glared at them in mock
anger, "you're going to have fun if I have to beat it into you!"
To my dismay they shrank down
apprehensively in their seats and exchanged troubled glances. But before I
could hastily explain myself Matt laughed and Dorcas joined him. And I beamed
fatuously to hear the hesitant rusty laughter spread across the room, but I saw
ten-year-old Esther's hands shake as she wiped tears from her eyes. Tears—of
laughter?
That night I twisted in the
darkness of my room, almost too tired to sleep, worrying and wondering. What
had blighted these people? They had health, they had beauty— the curve of
Martha's cheek against the window was a song, the lift of Dorcas' eyebrows was
breathless grace. They were fed—adequately, clothed—adequately,
housed—adequately, but nothing like they could have been. I'd seen more joy and
delight and enthusiasm from little campground kids who slept in cardboard
shacks and washed—if they ever did—in canals and ate whatever edible came their
way, but grinned, even when impetigo or cold sores bled across their grins.
But these lifeless kids! My
prayers were troubled and I slept restlessly.
A month or so later things
had improved a little bit, but not much. At least there was more relaxation in
the classroom. And I found that they had no deep-rooted convictions against
plants, so we had things growing on the deep window sills—stuff we transplanted
from the spring and from among the trees. And we had jars of minnows from the
creek and one drowsy horny toad that housed in his box of dirt only to flick up
the ants brought for his dinner. And we sang, loudly and enthusiastically, but,
miracle of miracles, without even one monotone in the whole room. But we didn't
sing "Up, Up in the Sky" or "How Do You Like to Go Up in a
Swing?" My solos of such songs were received with embarrassed blushes and
lowered eyes!
There had been one dust-up
between us, though—this matter of shuffling everywhere they walked.
"Pick up your feet, for
goodness' sake," I said irritably one morning when the shoosh, shoosh,
shoosh of their coming and going finally got my skin off. "Surely they're
not so heavy you can't lift them."
Timmy, who happened to be the
trigger this time, nibbled unhappily at one finger. "I can't," he
whispered. "Not supposed to."
"Not supposed to?"
I forgot momentarily how warily I'd been going with these frightened mice of
children. "Why not? Surely there's no reason in the world why you can't
walk quietly."
Matt looked unhappily over at
Miriam, the sophomore who was our entire high school. She looked aside, biting
her lower lip, troubled. Then she turned back and said, "It is customary
in Bendo."
"To shuffle along?"
I was forgetting any manners I had. "Whatever for?"
"That's the way we do in
Bendo." There was no anger in her defense, only resignation.
"Perhaps that's the way
you do at home. But here at school let's pick our feet up. It makes too much
disturbance otherwise."
"But it's bad—"
Esther began.
Matt's hand shushed her in a
hurry.
"Mr. Diemus said what we
did at school was my business," I told them. "He said not to bother
your parents with our problems. One of our problems is too much noise when
others are trying to work. At least in our schoolroom let's lift our feet and
walk quietly."
The children considered the
suggestion solemnly and turned to Matt and Miriam for guidance. They both
nodded and we went back to work. For the next few minutes, from the corner of
my eyes, I saw with amazement all the unnecessary trips back and forth across
the room, with high-lifted feet, with grins and side glances that marked such
trips as high adventure—as a delightful daring thing to do! The whole deal had
me bewildered. Thinking back I realized that not only the children of Bendo
scuffled but all the adults did, too—as though they were afraid to lose contact
with the earth, as though… I shook my head and went on with the lesson.
Before noon, though, the
endless shoosh, shoosh, shoosh of feet began again. Habit was too much for the
children. So I silenty filed the sound under "Uncurable, Endurable,"
and let the matter drop.
I sighed as I watched the
children leave at lunchtime. It seemed to me that with the unprecedented luxury
of a whole hour for lunch they'd all go home. The bell tower was visible from
nearly every house in town. But instead they all brought tight little paper
sacks with dull crumbly sandwiches and unimaginative apples in them. And
silently with their dull scuffly steps they disappeared into the thicket of
trees around the spring.
"Everything is dulled
around here," I thought. "Even the sunlight is blunted as it floods
the hills and canyons. There is no mirth, no laughter. No high jinks or cutting
up. No preadolescent silliness. No adolescent foolishness. Just quiet children,
enduring."
I don't usually snoop but I
began wondering if perhaps the kids were different when they were away from
me—and from their parents. So when I got back at twelve thirty from an adequate
but uninspired lunch at the Diemuses' house I kept on walking past the
schoolhouse and quietly down into the grove, moving cautiously through the
scanty undergrowth until I could lean over a lichened boulder and look down on
the children.
Some were lying around on the
short still grass, hands under their heads, blinking up at the brightness of the
sky between the leaves. Esther and little Martha were hunting out fillaree seed
pods and counting the tines of the pitchforks and rakes and harrows they
resembled. I smiled, remembering how I used to do the same thing.
"I dreamed last
night." Dorcas thrust the statement defiantly into the drowsy silence.
"I dreamed about the Home."
My sudden astonished movement
was covered by Martha's horrified "Oh, Dorcas!"
"What's wrong with the
Home?" Dorcas cried, her cheeks scarlet. "There was a Home! There
was! There was! Why shouldn't we talk about it?"
I listened avidly. This
couldn't be just coincidence— a Group and now the Home. There must be some
connection… I pressed closer against the rough rock.
"But it's bad!"
Esther cried. "You'll be punished! We can't talk about the Home!"
"Why not?" Joel
asked as though it had just occurred to him, as things do just occur to you
when you're thirteen. He sat up slowly. "Why can't we?"
There was a short tense
silence.
"I've dreamed,
too," Matt said. "I've dreamed of the Home —and it's good, it's
good!"
"Who hasn't
dreamed?" Miriam asked. "We all have, haven't we? Even our parents. I
can tell by Mother's eyes when she has."
"Did you ever ask how
come we aren't supposed to talk about it?" Joel asked. "I mean and
ever get any answer except that it's bad."
"I think it had
something to do with a long time ago," Matt said. "Something about
when the Group first came—"
"I don't think it's just
dreams," Miriam declared, "because I don't have to be asleep. I think
it's remembering."
"Remembering?"
asked Dorcas. "How can we remember something we never knew?"
"I don't know,"
Miriam admitted, "but I'll bet it is."
"I remember,"
volunteered Talitha, who never volunteered anything.
"Hush!" whispered
Abie, the second-grade next-to-youngest who always whispered.
"I remember,"
Talitha went on stubbornly. "I remember a dress that was too little so the
mother just stretched the skirt till it was long enough and it stayed
stretched. 'Nen she pulled the waist out big enough and the little girl put it
on and flew away."
"Hoh!" Timmy
scoffed. "I remember better than that" His face stilled and his eyes
widened. "The ship was so tall it was like a mountain and the people went
in the high high door and they didn't have a ladder. 'Nen there were stars, big
burning ones—not squinchy little ones like ours."
"It went too fast!"
That was Abie! Talking eagerly! "When the air came it made the ship hot
and the little baby died before all the little boats left the ship." He
scrunched down suddenly, leaning against Talitha and whimpering.
"You see!" Miriam
lifted her chin triumphantly. "We've all dreamed—I mean remembered!"
"I guess so," said
Matt. "I remember. It's lifting, Talitha, not flying. You go and go as
high as you like, as far as you want to and don't ever have to touch the
ground—at all!" He pounded his fist into the gravelly red soil beside him.
"And you can dance in
the air, too," Miriam sighed. "Freer than a bird, lighter than—"
Esther scrambled to her feet,
white-faced and panic-stricken. "Stop! Stop! It's evil! It's bad! I'll
tell Father! We can't dream—or lift—or dance! It's bad, it's bad! You'll die
for it! You'll die for it!"
Joel jumped to his feet and grabbed
Esther's arm.
"Can we die any
deader?" he cried, shaking her brutally. "You call this being
alive?" He hunched down apprehensively and shambled a few scuffling steps
across the clearing.
I fled blindly back to
school, trying to wink away my tears without admitting I was crying, crying for
these poor kids who were groping so hopelessly for something they knew they
should have. Why was it so rigorously denied them? Surely, if they were what I
thought them… And they could be! They could be!
I grabbed the bell rope and
pulled hard. Reluctantly the bell moved and rolled.
One o'clock, it clanged. One
o'clock!
I watched the children
returning with slow uneager shuffling steps.
That night I started a
letter:
"Dear Karen,
"Yep, 'sme after all
these years. And, oh, Karen! I've found some more! Some more of the People!
Remember how much you wished you knew if any other Groups besides yours had
survived the Crossing? How you worried about them and wanted to find them if
they had? Well, I've found a whole Group! But it's a sick unhappy group. Your
heart would break to see them. If you could come and start them on the right
path again…"
I put my pen down. I looked
at the lines I had written and then crumpled the paper slowly. This was my
Group. I had found them. Sure, I'd tell Karen—but later. Later, after —well,
after I had tried to start them on the right path—at least the children.
After all I knew a little of
their potentialities. Hadn't Karen briefed me in those unguarded magical hours
in the old dorm, drawn to me as I was to her by some mutual sympathy that
seemed stronger than the usual roommate attachment, telling me things no
outsider had a right to hear? And if, when I finally told her and turned the
Group over to her, if it could be a joyous gift, then I could feel that I had
repaid her a little for the wonder world she had opened for me.
"Yes," I thought
ruefully, "and there's nothing like a large portion of ignorance to give
one a large portion of confidence." But I did want to try—desperately.
Maybe if I could break prison for someone else, then perhaps my own bars… I
dropped the paper in the wastebasket.
But it was several weeks
before I could bring myself to let the children know I knew about them. It was
such an impossible situation, even if it was true—and if it wasn't, what kind
of lunacy would they suspect me of?
When I finally set my teeth
and swore a swear to myself that I'd do something definite, my hands shook and
my breath was a flutter in my dry throat.
"Today—" I said
with an effort, "today is Friday." Which gem of wisdom the children
received with charitable silence. "We've been working hard all week, so
let's have fun today." This stirred the children—half with pleasure, half
with apprehension. They, poor kids, found my "fun" much harder than
any kind of work I could give them. But some of them were acquiring a taste for
it. Martha had even learned to skip!
"First, monitors pass
the composition paper." Esther and Abie scuffled hurriedly around with the
paper, and the pencil sharpener got a thorough workout. At least the kids
didn't differ from others in their pleasure in grinding their pencils away at
the slightest excuse.
"Now," I gulped,
"we're going to write." Which obvious asininity was passed over with
forbearance, though Miriam looked at me wonderingly before she bent her head
and let her hair shadow her face.
"Today I want you all to
write about the same thing. Here is our subject."
Gratefully I turned my back
on the children's waiting eyes and printed slowly:
I REMEMBER THE HOME
I heard the sudden intake of
breath that worked itself downward from Miriam to Talitha and then the rapid
whisper that informed Abie and Martha. I heard Esther's muffled cry and I
turned slowly around and leaned against the desk.
"There are so many
beautiful things to remember about the Home," I said into the strained
silence. "So many wonderful things. And even the sad memories are better
than forgetting, because the Home was good. Tell me what you remember about the
Home."
"We can't." Joel
and Matt were on their feet simultaneously.
"Why can't we?"
Dorcas cried. "Why can't we?"
"It's bad!" Esther
cried. "It's evil!"
"It ain't either!"
Abie shrilled, astonishingly. "It ain't either!"
"We shouldn't."
Miriam's trembling hands brushed her heavy hair upward. "It's
forbidden."
"Sit down," I said
gently. "The day I arrived at Bendo Mr. Diemus told me to teach you what I
had to teach you. I have to teach you that remembering the Home is good."
"Then why don't the
grownups think so?" Matt asked slowly. "They tell us not to talk
about it. We shouldn't disobey our parents."
"I know," I
admitted. "And I would never ask your children to go against your parents'
wishes, unless I felt that it is very important. If you'd rather they didn't know
about it at first, keep it as our secret. Mr. Diemus told me not to bother them
with explanations or reasons. I'll make it right with your parents when the
time comes." I paused to swallow and blink away a vision of me leaving
town in a cloud of dust, barely ahead of a posse of irate parents. "Now,
everyone, busy," I said briskly. "I Remember the Home."
There was a moment heavy with
decision and I held my breath, wondering which way the balance would dip. And
then—surely it must have been because they wanted so to speak and affirm the
wonder of what had been that they capitulated so easily. Heads bent and pencils
scurried. And Martha sat, her head bowed on her desk with sorrow.
"I don't know enough
words," she mourned. "How do you write toolas?"
And Abie laboriously erased a
hole through his paper and licked his pencil again.
"Why don't you and Abie
make some pictures?" I suggested. "Make a little story with pictures
and we can staple them together like a real book."
I looked over the silent busy
group and let myself relax, feeling weakness flood into my knees. I scrubbed
the dampness from my palms with Kleenex and sat back in my chair. Slowly I
became conscious of a new atmosphere in my class-
room. An intolerable strain
was gone, an unconscious holding back of the children, a wariness, a
watchfulness, a guilty feeling of desiring what was forbidden.
A prayer of thanksgiving
began to well up inside me. It changed hastily to a plea for mercy as I began
to visualize what might happen to me when the parents found out what I was
doing. How long must this containment and denial have gone on? This concealment
and this carefully nourished fear? From what Karen had told me it must be well
over fifty years—long enough to mark indelibly three generations.
And here I was with my fine
little hatchet trying to set a little world afire! On which very mixed metaphor
I stiffened my weak knees and got up from my chair. I walked unnoticed up and
down the aisles, stepping aside as Joel went blindly to the shelf for more
paper, leaning over Miriam to marvel that she had taken out her Crayolas and
part of her writing was with colors, part with pencil—and the colors spoke to
something in me that the pencil couldn't reach, though I'd never seen the forms
the colors took.
The children had gone home,
happy and excited, chattering and laughing, until they reached the edge of the
school grounds. There, smiles died and laughter stopped and faces and feet grew
heavy again. All but Esther's. Hers had never been light. I sighed and turned
to the papers. Here was Abie's little book. I thumbed through it and drew a
deep breath and went back through it slowly again.
A second grader drawing this?
Six pages—six finished adult-looking pages. Crayolas achieving effects I'd
never seen before—pictures that told a story loudly and clearly.
Stars blazing in a black sky,
with the slender needle of a ship, like a mote in the darkness.
The vastly green
cloud-shrouded arc of the earth against the blackness. A pink tinge of
beginning friction along the ship's belly. I put my finger to the glow. I could
almost feel the heat.
Inside the ship, suffering
and pain, heroic striving, crumpled bodies and seared faces. A baby dead in its
mother's arms. Then a swarm of tinier needles erupting from the womb of the
ship. And the last shriek of incandescence as the ship volatilized against the
thickening drag of the air.
I leaned my head on my hands
and closed my eyes. All this, all this in the memory of an eight-year-old? All
this in the feelings of an eight-year-old? Because Abie knew—he knew how this
felt. He knew the heat and strivings and the dying and fleeing. No wonder Abie
whispered and leaned. Racial memory was truly a two-sided coin.
I felt a pang of misgivings.
Maybe I was wrong to let him remember so vividly. Maybe I shouldn't have let
him…
I turned to Martha's papers.
They were delicate, almost spidery drawings of some fuzzy little animal
(toolas?) that apparently built a hanging hammocky nest and gathered fruit in a
huge leaf basket and had a bird for a friend. A truly out-of-this-world bird.
Much of her story escaped me because first graders—if anyone at all—produce
symbolic art and, since her frame of reference and mine were so different,
there was much that I couldn't interpret. But her whole booklet was joyous and
light.
And now, the stories…
I lifted my head and blinked
into the twilight. I had finished all the papers except Esther's. It was her
cramped writing, swimming in darkness, that made me realize that the day was
gone and that I was shivering in a shadowy room with the fire in the
old-fashioned heater gone out.
Slowly I shuffled the papers
into my desk drawer, hesitated and took out Esther's. I would finish at home. I
shrugged into my coat and wandered home, my thoughts intent on the papers I had
read. And suddenly I wanted to cry —to cry for the wonders that had been and
were no more. For the heritage of attainment and achievement these children had
but couldn't use. For the dream-come-true of what they were capable of doing
but weren't permitted to do. For the homesick yearning that filled every line
they had written —these unhappy exiles, three generations removed from any
physical knowledge of the Home.
I stopped on the bridge and
leaned against the railing in the half dark. Suddenly I felt a welling
homesickness. That was what the world should be like—what it could be like if
only—if only…
But my tears for the Home
were as hidden as the emotions of Mrs. Diemus when she looked up uncuriously as
I came through the kitchen door.
"Good evening," she
said. "I've kept your supper warm."
"Thank you." I
shivered convulsively. "It is getting cold."
I sat on the edge of my bed
that night, letting the memory of the kids' papers wash over me, trying to fill
in around the bits and snippets that they had told of the Home. And then I
began to wonder. All of them who wrote about the actual Home had been so happy
with their memories. From Timmy and his "Shinny ship as high as a montin
and faster than two jets," and Dorcas' wandering tenses as though
yesterday and today were one: "The flowers were like lights. At night it
isn't dark becas they shine so bright and when the moon came up the breeos sing
and the music was so you can see it like rain falling around only
happyer"; up to Miriam's wistful "On Gathering Day there was a big
party. Everybody came dressed in beautiful clothes with flahmen in the girls'
hair. Flahmen are flowers but they're good to eat. And if a girl felt her heart
sing for a boy they ate a flahmen together and started two-ing."
Then, if all these memories
were so happy, why the rigid suppression of them by grownups? Why the pall of
unhappiness over everyone? You can't mourn forever for a wrecked ship. Why a
hidey hole for disobedient children? Why the misery and frustration when, if
they could do half of what I didn't fully understand from Joel and Matt's
highly technical papers, they could make Bendo an Eden?
I reached for Esther's paper.
I had put it on the bottom on purpose. I dreaded reading it. She had sat with
her head buried on her arms on her desk most of the time the others were
writing busily. At widely separated intervals she had scribbled a line or two
as though she were doing something shameful. She, of all the children, had seemed
to find no relief in her remembering.
I smoothed the paper on my
lap.
"I remember," she
had written. "We were thursty. There was water in the creek we were hiding
in the grass. We could not drink. They would shoot us. Three days the sun was
hot She screamed for water and ran to the creek. They shot The water got
red."
Blistered spots marked the
tears on the paper. "They found a baby under a bush. The man hit it with
the wood part of his gun. He hit it and hit it and hit it. I hit scorpins like
that.
"They caught us and put
us in a pen. They built a fire all around us. 'Fly' they said 'fly and save
yourselfs.' We flew because it hurt. They shot us."
"Monsters," they
yelled, "evil monsters. People can't fly. People can't move things. People
are the same. You aren't people. Die, die, die."
Then blackly, traced and
retraced until the paper split: "If anyone finds out we are not of earth
we will die."
"Keep your feet on the
ground."
Bleakly I laid the paper
aside. So there was the answer, putting Karen's bits and snippets together with
these. The shipwrecked ones finding savages on the desert island. A remnant
surviving by learning caution, supression, and denial. Another generation that
pinned the evil label on the Home to insure continued immunity for their children,
and now, a generation that questioned and wondered—and rebelled.
I turned off the light and
slowly got into bed. I lay there staring into the darkness, holding the picture
Esther had evoked. Finally I relaxed. "God help her," I sighed.
"God help us all."
Another week was nearly over.
We cleaned the room up quickly, for once anticipating the fun time instead of
dreading it. I smiled to hear the happy racket all around me, and felt my own
spirits surge upward in response to the light-heartedness of the children. The
difference that one afternoon had made in them! Now they were beginning to feel
like children to me. They were beginning to accept me. I swallowed with an
effort. How soon would they ask, "How come? How come I knew?" There
they sat, all nine of them —nine, because Esther was my first absence in the
year— bright-eyed and expectant.
"Can we write
again?" Sarah asked. "I can remember lots more."
"No," I said.
"Not today." Smiles died and there was a protesting wiggle through
the room. "Today we are going to do. Joel." I looked at him and
tightened my jaws. "Joel, give me the dictionary." He began to get
up. "Without leaving your seat!"
"But I—!" Joel
broke the shocked silence. "I can't!"
"Yes, you can," I
prayed. "Yes, you can. Give me the dictionary. Here, on my desk."
Joel turned and stared at the
big old dictionary that spilled pages 1965 to 1998 out of its cracked old
binding. Then he said, "Miriam?" in a high tight voice. But she shook
her head and shrank back in her seat, her eyes big and dark in her white face.
"You can." Miriam's
voice was hardly more than a breath. "It's just bigger—"
Joel clutched the edge of his
desk and sweat started out on his forehead. There was a stir of movement on the
bookshelf. Then, as though shot from a gun, pages 1965 to 1998 whisked to my
desk and fell fluttering. Our laughter cut through the blank amazement and we
laughed till tears came.
"That's a-doing it,
Joel!" Matt shouted. "That's showing them your muscles!"
"Well, it's a
beginning." Joel grinned weakly. "You do it, brother, if you think
it's so easy."
So Matt sweated and strained
and Joel joined with him, but they only managed to scrape the book to the edge
of the shelf where it teetered dangerously.
Then Abie waved his hand
timidly. "I can, teacher."
I beamed that my silent one
had spoken and at the same time frowned at the loving laughter of the big kids.
"Okay, Abie," I
encouraged. "You show them how to do it."
And the dictionary swung off
the shelf and glided unhastily to my desk, where it came silently to rest.
Everyone stared at Abie and
he squirmed. "The little ships," he defended. "That's the way
they moved them out of the big ship. Just like that."
Joel and Matt turned their
eyes to some inner concentration and then exchanged exasperated looks.
"Why, sure," Matt
said. "Why, sure." And the dictionary swung back to the shelf.
"Hey!" Timmy
protested. "It's my turn!"
"That poor
dictionary," I said. "It's too old for all this bouncing around. Just
put the loose pages back on the shelf."
And he did.
Everyone sighed and looked at
me expectantly. "You come to me," I said, feeling a chill creep
across my stiff shoulders. "Lift to me, Miriam."
Without taking her eyes from
me she slipped out of her seat and stood in the aisle. Her skirts swayed a
little as her feet lifted from the floor. Slowly at first and then more quickly
she came to me, soundlessly, through the air, until in a little flurried rush
her arms went around me and she gasped into my shoulder. I put her aside trembling.
I groped for my handkerchief. I said shakily, "Miriam, help the rest. I'll
be back in a minute."
And I stumbled into the room
next door. Huddled down in the dust and debris of the catchall storeroom it had
become, I screamed soundlessly into my muffling hands. And screamed and
screamed! Because after all—after all!
And then suddenly, with a
surge of pure panic, I heard a sound—the sound of footsteps, many footsteps,
approaching the schoolhouse. I jumped for the door and wrenched it open just in
time to see the outside door open. There was Mr. Diemus and Esther and Esther's
father, Mr. Jonso.
In one of those flashes of
clarity that engrave your mind in a split second I saw my whole classroom.
Joel and Matt were chinning
themselves on nonexistent bars, their heads brushing the high ceiling as they
grunted upward. Abie was swinging in a swing that wasn't there, arcing across
the corner of the room just missing the stovepipe from the old stove, as he
chanted, "Up in a swing, up in a swing!" This wasn't the first time
they had tried their wings! Miriam was kneeling in a circle with the other
girls and they were all coaxing their books up to hover unsupported above the
floor, while Timmy vroomm-vroomed two paper jet planes through intricate
maneuvers in and out the rows, of desks.
My soul curdled in me as I
met Mr. Diemus' eyes. Esther gave a choked cry as she saw what the children
were doing, and the girls' stricken faces turned to the intruders. Matt and
Joel crumpled to the floor and scrambled to their feet. But Abie, absorbed in
his wonderful new accomplishment, swung on, all unconscious of what was
happening until Talitha frantically screamed, "Abie!"
Startled, he jerked around
and saw the forbidding group at the door. With a disappointed cry, as though a
loved toy had been snatched from him, he stopped there in midair, his fists
clenched. And then, realizing, he screamed, a terrified panic-stricken cry, and
slanted sharply upward, trying to escape, and ran full tilt into the corner of
the high old map case, sideswiping it with his head, and, reeling backward,
fell!
I tried to catch him. I did!
I did! But I caught only one small hand as he plunged down onto the old
woodburning heater beneath him. And the crack of his skull against the ornate
edge of the cast iron lid was loud in the silence.
I straightened the crumpled
little body carefully, not daring to touch the quiet little head. Mr. Diemus
and I looked at each other as we knelt on opposite sides of the child. His lips
opened, but I plunged before he could get started.
"If he dies," I bit
my words off viciously, "you killed him!"
His mouth opened again,
mainly from astonishment. "I—" he began.
"Barging in on my
classroom!" I raged. "Interrupting classwork! Frightening my
children! It's all your fault, your fault!" I couldn't bear the burden of
guilt alone. I just had to have someone share it with me. But the fire died and
I smoothed Abie's hand, trembling.
"Please call a doctor.
He might be dying."
"Nearest one is in
Tortura Pass," Mr. Diemus said. "Sixty miles by road."
"Cross country?" I
asked.
"Two mountain ranges and
an alkali plateau."
"Then—then—" Abie's
hand was so still in mine.
"There's a doctor at the
Tumble A Ranch," Joel said faintly. "He's taking a vacation."
"Go get him." I
held Joel with my eyes. "Go as fast as you know how!"
Joel gulped miserably.
"Okay."
"They'll probably have
horses to come back on," I said. "Don't be too obvious."
"Okay," and he ran
out the door. We heard the thud of his running feet until he was halfway across
the schoolyard, then silence. Faintly, seconds later, creek gravel crunched
below the hill. I could only guess at what he was doing—that he couldn't lift all
the way and was going in jumps whose length was beyond all reasonable
measuring.
The children had gone home,
quietly, anxiously. And after the doctor arrived we had improvised a stretcher
and carried Abie to the Peterses' home. I walked along close beside him watching
his pinched little face, my hand touching his chest occasionally just to be
sure he was still breathing.
And now—the waiting…
I looked at my watch again. A
minute past the last time I looked. Sixty seconds by the hands, but hours and
hours by anxiety.
"He'll be all
right," I whispered, mostly to comfort myself. "The doctor will know
what to do."
Mr. Diemus turned his dark
empty eyes to me. "Why did you do it?" he asked. "We almost had
it stamped out. We were almost free."
"Free of what?" I
took a deep breath. "Why did you do it? Why did you deny your children
their inheritance?"
"It isn't your
concern—"
"Anything that hampers
my children is my concern. Anything that turns children into creeping
frightened mice is wrong. Maybe I went at the whole deal the wrong way, but you
told me to teach them what I had to—and I did."
"Disobedience,
rebellion, flouting authority—"
"They obeyed me," I
retorted. "They accepted my authority!" Then I softened. "I
can't blame them," I confessed. "They were troubled. They told me it
was wrong— that they had been taught it was wrong. I argued them into it. But,
oh, Mr. Diemus! It took so little argument, such a tiny breach in the dam to
loose the flood. They never even questioned my knowledge—any more than you
have, Mr. Diemus! All this—this wonder was beating against their minds,
fighting to be set free. The rebellion was there long before I came. I didn't
incite them to something new. I'll bet there's not a one, except maybe Esther,
who hasn't practiced and practiced, furtively and ashamed, the things I
permitted—demanded that they do for me.
"It wasn't fair—not fair
at all—to hold them back."
"You don't
understand." Mr. Diemus' face was stony. "You haven't all the
facts—"
"I have enough," I
replied. "So you have a frightened memory of an unfortunate period in your
history. But what people doesn't have such a memory in larger or lesser degree?
That you and your children have it more vividly should have helped, not
hindered. You should have been able to figure out ways of adjusting. But leave
that for the moment. Take the other side of the picture. What possible thing
could all this suppression and denial yield you more precious than what you
gave up?"
"It's the only
way," Mr. Diemus said. "We are unacceptable to Earth but we have to
stay. We have to conform—"
"Of course you had to
conform," I cried. "Anyone has to when they change societies. At
least enough to get them by until others can adjust to them. But to crawl in a
hole and pull it in after you! Why, the other Group—"
"Other Group!" Mr.
Diemus whitened, his eyes widening.
"Other Group? There are
others? There are others?" He leaned tensely forward in his chair.
"Where? Where?" And his voice broke shrilly on the last word. He
closed his eyes and his mouth trembled as he fought for control. The bedroom
door opened. Dr. Curtis came out, his shoulders weary.
He looked from Mr. Diemus to
me and back. "He should be in a hospital. There's a depressed fracture and
I don't know what all else. Probably extensive brain involvement. We need X
rays and—and—" He rubbed his hand slowly over his weary young face.
"Frankly, I'm not experienced to handle cases like this. We need
specialists. If you can scare up some kind of transportation that won't
jostle—" He shook his head, seeing the kind of country that lay between us
and anyplace, and went back into the bedroom.
"He's dying," Mr.
Diemus said. "Whether you're right or we're right, he's dying."
"Wait! Wait!" I said,
catching at the tag end of a sudden idea. "Let me think." Urgently I
willed myself back through the years to the old dorm room. Intently I listened
and listened and remembered.
"Have you a—a—Sorter in
this Group?" I asked, fumbling for unfamiliar terms.
"No," said Mr.
Diemus. "One who could have been, but isn't."
"Or any Communicator?
Anyone who can send or receive?"
"No," Mr. Diemus
said, sweat starting on his forehead. "One who could have been, but—"
"See?" I accused.
"See what you've traded for—for what? Who are the could-but-can'ts? Who
are they?"
"I am," Mr. Diemus
said, the words a bitterness in his mouth. "And my wife."
I stared at him, wondering
confusedly. How far did training decide? What could we do with what we had?
"Look," I said
quickly. "There is another Group. And they—they have all the persuasions
and designs. Karen's been trying to find you—to find any of the People. She
told me—oh, Lord, it's been years ago, I hope it's still so— every evening they
send out calls for the People. If we can catch it—if you can catch the call and
answer it, they can help. I know they can. Faster than cars, faster than
planes, more surely than specialists—"
"But if the doctor finds
out—" Mr. Diemus wavered fearfully.
I stood up abruptly.
"Good night, Mr. Diemus," I said, turning to the door. "Let me
know when Abie dies."
His cold hand shook on my
arm.
"Can't you see!" he
cried. "I've been taught, too—longer and stronger than the children! We
never even dared think of rebellion! Help me, help me!"
"Get your wife," I
said. "Get her and Abie's mother and father. Bring them down to the grove.
We can't do anything here in the house. It's too heavy with denial."
I hurried on ahead and sank
on my knees in the evening shadows among the trees.
"I don't know what I'm
doing," I cried into the bend of my arm. "I have an idea but I don't
know! Help us! Guide us!"
I opened my eyes to the
arrival of the four.
"We told him we were
going out to pray," said Mr. Diemus.
And we all did.
Then Mr. Diemus began the
call I worded for him, silently, but with such intensity that sweat started
again on his face. Karen, Karen, come to the People, come to the People. And
the other three sat around him bolstering his effort, supporting his cry. I
watched their tense faces, my own twisting in sympathy, and time was lost as we
labored.
Then slowly his breathing
calmed and his face relaxed and I felt a stirring as though something brushed
past my mind. Mrs. Diemus whispered, "He remembers now. He's found the
way."
And as the last spark of sun
caught mica highlights on the hilltop above us, Mr. Diemus stretched his hands
out slowly and said with infinite relief, "There they are."
I looked around startled,
half expecting to see Karen coming through the trees. But Mr. Diemus spoke
again.
"Karen, we need help.
One of our Group is dying. We have a doctor, an Outsider, but he hasn't the
equipment or the know-how to help. What shall we do?"
In the pause that followed I
became slowly conscious of a new feeling. I couldn't tell you exactly what it
was—a kind of unfolding—an opening—a relaxation. The ugly tight defensiveness
that was so characteristic of the grownups of Bendo was slipping away.
"Yes, Valancy,"
said Mr. Diemus. "He's in a bad way. We can't help because—" His
voice faltered and his words died. I felt a resurgence of fear and unhappiness
as his communication went beyond words and then ebbed back to speech again.
"We'll expect you then.
You know the way."
I could see the pale blur of
his face in the dusk under the trees as he turned back to us.
"They're coming,"
he said, wonderingly. "Karen and Valancy. They're so pleased to find
us—" His voice broke. "We're not alone—"
And I turned away as the two
couples merged in the darkness. I had pushed them somewhere way beyond me.
It was a lonely, lonely walk
back to the house for me— alone.
They dropped down through the
half darkness—four of them. For a fleeting second I wondered at myself that I
could stand there matter-of-factly watching four adults slant calmly down out
of the sky. Not a hair ruffled, not a stain of travel on them, knowing that
only a short time before they had been hundreds of miles away—not even aware
that Bendo existed.
But all strangeness was swept
away as Karen hugged me delightedly.
"Oh, Melodye," she
cried, "it is you! He said it was, but I wasn't sure! Oh, it's so good to
see you again! Who owes who a letter?"
She laughed and turned to the
smiling three. "Valancy, the Old One of our Group." Valancy's radiant
face proved the Old One didn't mean age. "Bethie, our Sensitive." The
slender fair-haired young girl ducked her head shyly. "And my brother
Jemmy. Valancy's his wife."
"This is Mr. and Mrs.
Diemus," I said. "And Mr. and Mrs. Peters, Abie's parents. It's Abie,
you know. My second grade." I was suddenly overwhelmed by how long ago and
far away school felt. How far I'd gone from my accustomed pattern!
"What shall we do about
the doctor?" I asked. "Will he have to know?"
"Yes," said
Valancy. "We can help him but we can't do the actual work. Can we trust
him?"
I hesitated, remembering the
few scanty glimpses I'd had of him. "I—," I began.
"Pardon me," Karen
said. "I wanted to save time. I went in to you. We know now what you know
of him. We'll trust Dr. Curtis."
I felt an eerie creeping up
my spine. To have my thoughts taken so casually! Even to the doctor's name!
Bethie stirred restlessly and
looked at Valancy. "He'll be in convulsions soon. We'd better hurry."
"You're sure you have
the knowledge?" Valancy asked.
"Yes," Bethie
murmured. "If I can make the doctor see— if he's willing to follow."
"Follow what?"
The heavy tones of the
doctor's voice startled us all as he stepped out on the porch.
I stood aghast at the
impossibility of the task ahead of us and looked at Karen and Valancy to see
how they would make the doctor understand. They said nothing. They just looked
at him. There was a breathless pause. The doctor's startled face caught the
glint of light from the open door as he turned to Valancy. He rubbed his hand
across his face in bewilderment and, after a moment, turned to me.
"Do you hear her?"
"No," I admitted.
"She isn't talking to me."
"Do you know these
people?"
"Oh, yes!" I cried,
wishing passionately it were true. "Oh, yes!"
"And believe them?"
"Implicitly."
"But she says that
Bethie—who's Bethie?" He glanced around.
"She is," Karen
said, nodding at Bethie.
"She is?" Dr.
Curtis looked intently at the shy lovely face. He shook his head wonderingly
and turned back to me.
"Anyway this one,
Valancy, says Bethie can sense every condition in the child's body and that she
will be able to tell all the injuries, their location and extent without X
rays! Without equipment?"
"Yes," I said.
"If they say so."
"You would be willing to
risk a child's life—?"
"Yes. They know. They
really do." And I swallowed hard to keep down the fist of doubt that
clenched in my chest.
"You believe they can
see through flesh and bone?"
"Maybe not see," I
said, wondering at my own words. "But know with a knowledge that is sure
and complete." I glanced, startled, at Karen. Her nod was very small but
it told me where my words came from.
"Are you willing to
trust these people?" The doctor turned to Abie's parents.
"They're our
People," Mr. Peters said with quiet pride. "I'd operate on him myself
with a pickax if they said so."
"Of all the screwball
deals—!" The doctor's hand rubbed across his face again. "I know I
needed this vacation, but this is ridiculous!"
We all listened to the
silence of the night and—at least I—to the drumming of anxious pulses until Dr.
Curtis sighed heavily.
"Okay, Valancy. I don't
believe a word of it. At least I wouldn't if I were in my right mind, but
you've got the terminology down pat as if you knew something—. Well,
I'll do it. It's either that
or let him die. And God have mercy on our souls!"
I couldn't bear the thought
of shutting myself in with my own dark fears, so I walked back toward the
school, hugging myself in my inadequate coat against the sudden sharp chill of
the night. I wandered down to the grove, praying wordlessly, and on up to the
school. But I couldn't go in. I shuddered away from the blank glint of the
windows and turned back to the grove. There wasn't any more time or direction
or light or anything familiar, only a confused cloud of anxiety and a final icy
weariness that drove me back to Abie's house.
I stumbled into the kitchen,
my stiff hands fumbling at the doorknob. I huddled in a chair, gratefully
leaning over the hot wood stove that flicked the semidarkness of the big homey
room with warm red light, trying to coax some feeling back into my fingers.
I drowsed as the warmth began
to penetrate, and then the door was flung open and slammed shut. The doctor
leaned back against it his hand still clutching the knob.
"Do you know what they
did?" he cried, not so much to me as to himself. "What they made me
do? Oh, Lord!" He staggered over to the stove, stumbling over my feet. He
collapsed by my chair, rocking his head between his hands. "They made me
operate on his brain! Repair it. Trace circuits and rebuild them. You can't do
that! It can't be done! Brain cells damaged can't be repaired. No one can
restore circuits that are destroyed! It can't be done. But I did it! I did
it!"
I knelt beside him and tried
to comfort him in the circle of my arms.
"There, there,
there," I soothed.
He clung like a terrified
child. "No anesthetics!" he cried. "She kept him asleep. And no
bleeding when I went through the scalp! They stopped it. And the impossible
things I did with the few instruments I have with me! And the brain starting to
mend right before my eyes! Nothing was right!"
"But nothing was
wrong," I murmured. "Abie will be all right, won't he?"
"How do I know?" he
shouted suddenly, pushing away from me.
"I don't know anything
about a thing like this. I put his brain back together and he's still
breathing, but how do I know!"
"There, there," I
soothed. "It's over now."
"It'll never be
over!" With an effort he calmed himself, and we helped each other up from
the floor. "You can't forget a thing like this in a lifetime."
"We can give you forgetting,"
Valancy said softly from the door. "If you want to forget. We can send you
back to the Tumble A with no memory of tonight except a pleasant visit to
Bendo."
"You can?" He
turned speculative eyes toward her. "You can," he amended his words
to a statement.
"Do you want to
forget?" Valancy asked.
"Of course not," he
snapped. Then, "I'm sorry. It's just that I don't often work miracles in
the wilderness. But if I did it once, maybe—"
"Then you understand
what you did?" Valancy asked smiling.
"Well, no, but if I
could—if you would— There must be some way—"
"Yes," Valancy
said, "but you'd have to have a Sensitive working with you, and Bethie is
it as far as Sensitives go right now."
"You mean it's true what
I saw—what you told me about the—the Home? You're extraterrestrials?"
"Yes," Valancy
sighed. "At least our grandparents were." Then she smiled. "But
we're learning where we can fit into this world. Someday—someday we'll be
able—" She changed the subject abruptly.
"You realize, of course,
Dr. Curtis, that we'd rather you wouldn't discuss Bendo or us with anyone else.
We would rather be just people to Outsiders."
He laughed shortly,
"Would I be believed if I did?"
"Maybe no, maybe
so," Valancy said. "Maybe only enough to start people nosing around.
And that would be too much. We have a bad situation here and it will take a
long time to erase—" Her voice slipped into silence, and I knew she had
dropped into thoughts to brief him on the local problem. How long is a thought?
How fast can you think of hell—and heaven? It was that long before the doctor
blinked and drew a shaky breath.
"Yes," he said.
"A long time."
"If you like,"
Valancy said, "I can block your ability to talk of us."
"Nothing doing!"
the doctor snapped. "I can manage my own censorship, thanks."
Valancy flushed. "I'm
sorry. I didn't mean to be condescending."
"You weren't," the
doctor said. "I'm just on the prod tonight. It has been a day, and that's
for sure!"
"Hasn't it,
though?" I smiled and then, astonished, rubbed my cheeks because tears had
begun to spill down my face. I laughed, embarrassed, and couldn't stop. My
laughter turned suddenly to sobs and I was bitterly ashamed to hear myself
wailing like a child. I clung to Valency's strong hands until I suddenly slid
into a warm welcome darkness that had no thinking or fearing or need for
believing in anything outrageous, but only in sleep.
It was a magic year and it
fled on impossibly fast wings, the holidays flicking past like telephone poles
by a railroad train. Christmas was especially magical because my angels
actually flew and the glory actually shone round about because their robes had
hems woven of sunlight—I watched the girls weave them. And Rudolph the
red-nosed reindeer, complete with cardboard antlers that wouldn't stay
straight, really took off and circled the room. And as our Mary and Joseph
leaned raptly over the manger, their faces solemn and intent on the miracle, I
felt suddenly that they . were really seeing, really kneeling beside the manger
in Bethlehem.
Anyway the months fled, and
the blossoming of Bendo was beautiful to see. There was laughter and frolicking
and even the houses grew subtly into color. Green things crept out where only
rocks had been before, and a tiny tentative stream of water had begun to flow
down the creek again. They explained to me that they had to take it slow
because people might wonder if the creek filled overnight! Even the rough steps
up to the houses were becoming overgrown because they were seldom used, and I
was becoming accustomed to seeing my pupils coming to school like a bevy of
bright birds, playing tag in the treetops. I was surprised at myself for
adjusting so easily to all the incredible things done around me by the People,
and I was pleased that they accepted me so completely. But I always felt a pang
when the children escorted me home—with me, they had to walk.
But all things have to end,
and one May afternoon I sat staring into my top desk drawer, the last to be
cleaned out, wondering what to do with the accumulation of useless things in
it. But I wasn't really seeing the contents of the drawer, I was concentrating
on the great weary emptiness that pressed my shoulders down and weighted my
mind. "It's not fair," I muttered aloud and illogically, "to
show me heaven and then snatch it away."
"That's about what
happened to Moses, too, you know."
My surprised start spilled an
assortment of paper clips and thumbtacks from the battered box I had just
picked up.
"Well,
forevermore!" I said, righting the box. "Dr. Curtis! What are you
doing here?"
"Returning to the scene
of my crime," he smiled, coming through the open door. "Can't keep my
mind off Abie. Can't believe he recovered from all that—shall we call it repair
work? I have to check him every time I'm anywhere near this part of the
country—and I still can't believe it."
"But he has."
"He has for sure! I had
to fish him down from a treetop to look him over—" The doctor shuddered
dramatically and laughed. "To see him hurtling down from the top of that
tree curdled my blood! But there's hardly even a visible scar left."
"I know," I said,
jabbing my finger as I started to gather up the tacks. "I looked last
night. I'm leaving tomorrow, you know." I kept my eyes resolutely down to
the job at hand. "I have this last straightening up to do."
"It's hard, isn't
it?" he said, and we both knew he wasn't talking about straightening up.
"Yes," I said
soberly. "Awfully hard. Earth gets heavier every day."
"I find it so lately,
too. But at least you have the satisfaction of knowing that you—"
I moved uncomfortably and
laughed.
"Well, they do say:
those as can, do; those as can't, teach."
"Umm," the doctor
said noncommittally, but I could feel his eyes on my averted face and I
swiveled away from him, groping for a better box to put the clips in.
"Going to summer
school?" His voice came from near the windows.
"No," I sniffed
cautiously. "No, I swore when I got my Master's that I was through with
education—at least the kind that's come-every-day-and-learn-something."
"Hmm!" There was
amusement in the doctor's voice. "Too bad. I'm going to school this
summer. Thought you might like to go there, too."
"Where?" I asked
bewildered, finally looking at him.
"Cougar Canyon summer
school," he smiled. "Most exclusive."
"Cougar Canyon! Why
that's where Karen—"
"Exactly," he said.
"That's where the other Group is established. I just came from there.
Karen and Valancy want us both to come. Do you object to being an experiment?"
"Why, no—" I cried,
and then, cautiously, "What kind of an experiment?" Visions of brains
being carved up swam through my mind.
The doctor laughed.
"Nothing as gruesome as you're imagining, probably." Then he sobered
and sat on the edge of my desk. "I've been to Cougar Canyon a couple of
times, trying to figure out some way to get Bethie to help me when I come up
against a case that's a puzzler. Valancy and Karen want to try a period of
training with Outsiders—" that's us—he grimaced wryly, "to see how much
of what they are can be transmitted by training. You know Bethie is half
Outsider. Only her mother was of the People."
He was watching me intently.
"Yes," I said
absently, my mind whirling, "Karen told me."
"Well, do you want to
try it? Do you want to go?"
"Do I want to go!"
I cried, scrambling the clips into a rubber-band box. "How soon do we
leave? Half an hour? Ten minutes? Did you leave the motor running?"
"Woops, woops!" The
doctor took me by both arms and looked soberly into my eyes.
"We can't set our hopes
too high," he said quietly. "It may be that for such knowledge we
aren't teachable—"
I looked soberly back at him,
my heart crying in fear that it might be so.
"Look," I said
slowly. "If you had a hunger, a great big gnawing-inside hunger and no
money and you saw a bakery shop window, which would you do? Turn your back on
it? Or would you press your nose as close as you could against the glass and
let at least your eyes feast? I know what I'd do." I reached for my
sweater.
"And, you know, you never
can tell. The shop door might open a crack, maybe—someday—"
By Robert A. Heinlein
This may not be the
solution to our commuter problems, but it has its challenges!
"Who makes the roads
roll?"
The speaker stood still on
the rostrum and waited for his audience to answer him. The reply came in
scattered shouts that cut through the ominous, discontented murmur of the
crowd.
"We do!"—"We
do!"—"Damn right!"
"Who does the dirty work
'down inside'—so that Joe Public can ride at his ease?"
This time it was a single
roar, "We do!"
The speaker pressed his
advantage, his words tumbling out in a rasping torrent. He leaned toward the
crowd, his eyes picking out individuals at whom to fling his words. "What
makes business? The roads! How do they move the food they eat? The roads! How
do they get to work? The roads! How do they get home to their wives? The
roads!" He paused for effect, then lowered his voice. "Where would
the public be if you boys didn't keep them roads rolling? Behind the eight ball
and everybody knows it. But do they appreciate it? Pfui! Did we ask for too
much? Were our demands unreasonable? 'The right to resign whenever we want to.'
Every working stiff in other lines of work has that. 'The same pay as the
engineers.' Why not? Who are the real engineers around here? D'yuh have to be a
cadet in a funny little hat before you can learn to wipe a bearing, or jack
down a rotor? Who earns his keep: The 'gentlemen' in the control offices, or
the boys 'down inside'? What else do we ask? 'The right to elect our own
engineers.' Why the hell not? Who's competent to pick engineers? The
technicians?—or some damn, dumb examining board that's never been 'down
inside', and couldn't tell a rotor bearing from a field coil?"
He changed his pace with
natural art, and lowered his voice still further. "I tell you, brother,
it's time we quit fiddlin' around with petitions to the Transport Commission,
and use a little direct action. Let 'em yammer about democracy; that's a lot of
eye wash, we've got the power, and we're the men that count!"
A man had risen in the back
of the hall while the speaker was haranguing. He spoke up as the speaker
paused. "Brother Chairman," he drawled, "may I stick in a couple
of words?"
"You are recognized,
Brother Harvey."
"What I ask is, what's
all the shootin' for? We've got the highest hourly rate of pay of any
mechanical guild, full insurance and retirement, and safe working conditions,
barring the chance of going deaf." He pushed his anti-noise helmet further
back from his ears. He was still in dungarees, apparently just up from standing
watch. "Of course we have to give ninety days notice to quit a job, but,
cripes, we knew that when we signed up. The roads have got to roll—they can't
stop every time some lazy punk gets bored with his billet.
"And now Soapy—"
The crack of the gavel cut him short. "Pardon me, I mean Brother
Soapy—tells us how powerful we are, and how we should go in for direct action.
Rats! Sure we could tie up the roads, and play hell with the whole community,
but so could any screwball with a can of nitroglycerine, and he wouldn't have
to be a technician to do it, neither.
"We aren't the only
frogs in the puddle. Our jobs are important, sure, but where would we be
without the farmers—or the steel workers—or a dozen other trades and
professions?"
He was interrupted by a
sallow little man with protruding upper teeth, who said, "Just a minute,
Brother Chairman, I'd like to ask Brother Harvey a question," then turned
to Harvey and inquired in a sly voice, "Are you speaking for the guild,
Brother, or just for yourself? Maybe you don't believe in the guild? You
wouldn't by any chance be"—he stopped and slid his eyes up and down
Harvey's lank frame—"a spotter, would you?"
Harvey looked over his
questioner as if he had found something filthy in a plate of food.
"Sikes," he told him, "if you weren't a runt, I'd stuff your
store teeth down your throat. I helped found this guild. I was on strike in
'sixty-six. Where were you in 'sixty-six? With the finks?"
The chairman's gavel pounded.
"There's been enough of this," he said. "Nobody who knows
anything about the history of this guild doubts the loyalty of Brother Harvey.
We'll continue with the regular order of business." He stopped to clear
his throat. "Ordinarily we don't open our floor to outsiders, and some of
you boys have expressed a distaste for some of the engineers we work under, but
there is one engineer we always like to listen to whenever he can get away from
his pressing duties. I guess maybe it's because he's had dirt under his nails
the same as us. Anyhow, I present at this time Mr. Shorty Van Kleeck—"
A shout from the floor
stopped him. "Brother Van Kleeck!"
"O.K. Brother Van
Kleeck, Chief Deputy Engineer of this road-town."
"Thanks, Brother
Chairman." The guest speaker came briskly forward, and grinned expansively
at the crowd, seeming to swell under their approval. "Thanks, Brothers. I
guess our chairman is right. I always feel more comfortable here in the Guild
Hall of the Sacramento Sector—or any guild hall, for that matter—than I do in
the engineers' clubhouse. Those young punk cadet engineers get in my hair.
Maybe I should have gone to one of the fancy technical institutes, so I'd have
the proper point of view, instead of coming up from 'down inside'.
"Now about those demands
of yours that the Transport Commission just threw back in your face—Can I speak
freely?"
"Sure you can,
Shorty!"—"You can trust us!"
"Well, of course I
shouldn't say anything, but I can't help but understand how you feel. The roads
are the big show these days, and you are the men that make them roll. It's the
natural order of things that your opinions should be listened to, and your
desires met. One would think that even politicians would be bright enough to
see that. Sometimes, lying awake at night, I wonder why we technicians don't
just take things over, and—"
"Your wife is calling,
Mr. Gaines."
"Very well." He
picked up the handset and turned to the visor screen.
"Yes, darling, I know I
promised, but…You're perfectly right, darling, but Washington has especially
requested that we show Mr. Blekinsop anything be wants to see. I didn't know he
was arriving today…No, I can't turn him over to a subordinate. It wouldn't be courteous.
He's Minister of Transport for Australia. I told you that…Yes, darling, I know
that courtesy begins at home, but the roads must roll. It's my job; you knew
that when you married me. And this is part of my job. That's a good girl. We'll
positively have breakfast together. Tell you what, order horses and a breakfast
pack and we'll make it a picnic. I'll meet you in Bakersfield—usual
place…Goodbye, darling. Kiss Junior goodnight for me."
He replaced the handset on
the desk whereupon the pretty, but indignant, features of his wife faded from
the visor screen. A young woman came into his office. As she opened the door
she exposed momentarily the words printed on its outer side; "DIEGO-RENO
ROADTOWN, Office of the Chief Engineer." He gave her a harassed glance.
"Oh, it's you. Don't
marry an engineer, Dolores, marry an artist. They have more home life."
"Yes, Mr. Gaines. Mr.
Blekinsop is here, Mr. Gaines."
"Already? I didn't
expect him so soon. The Antipodes ship must have grounded early."
"Yes, Mr. Gaines."
"Dolores, don't you ever
have any emotions?"
"Yes, Mr. Gaines."
"Hmmm, it seems
incredible, but you are never mistaken. Show Mr. Blekinsop in."
"Very good, Mr.
Gaines."
Larry Gaines got up to greet
his visitor. Not a particularly impressive little guy, he thought, as they
shook hands and exchanged formal amenities. The rolled umbrella, the bowler hat
were almost too good to be true.
An Oxford accent partially
masked the underlying clipped, flat, nasal twang of the native Australian.
"It's a pleasure to have you here, Mr. Blekinsop, and I hope we can make
your stay enjoyable."
The little man smiled.
"I'm sure it will be. This is my first visit to your wonderful country. I
feel at home already. The eucalyptus trees, you know, and the brown hills—"
"But your trip is
primarily business?"
"Yes, yes. My primary
purpose is to study your roadcities, and report to my government on the
advisability of trying to adapt your startling American methods to our social
problems Down Under. I thought you understood that such was the reason I was
sent to you."
"Yes, I did, in a
general way. I don't know just what it is that you wish to find out. I suppose
that you have heard about our road towns, how they came about, how they
operate, and so forth."
"I've read a good bit,
true, but I am not a technical man, Mr. Gaines, not an engineer. My field is
social and political. I want to see how this remarkable technical change has
affected your people. Suppose you tell me about the roads as if I were entirely
ignorant. And I will ask questions."
"That seems a practical
plan. By the way, how many are there in your party?"
"Just myself. I sent my
secretary on to Washington."
"I see." Gaines
glanced at his wrist watch. "It's nearly dinner time. Suppose we run up to
the Stockton strip for dinner. There is a good Chinese restaurant up there that
I'm partial to. It will take us about an hour and you can see the ways in
operation while we ride."
"Excellent."
Gaines pressed a button on
his desk, and a picture formed on a large visor screen mounted on the opposite
wall. It showed a strong-boned, angular young man seated at a semi-circular
control desk, which was backed by a complex instrument board. A cigarette was
tucked in one corner of his mouth.
The young man glanced up,
grinned, and waved from the screen. "Greetings and salutations, Chief.
What can I do for you?"
"Hi, Dave. You've got
the evening watch, eh? I'm running up to the Stockton sector for dinner.
Where's Van Kleeck?"
"Gone to a meeting
somewhere. He didn't say."
"Anything to
report?"
"No, sir. The roads are
rolling, and all the little people are going ridey-ridey home to their
dinners."
"O.K., keep 'em
rolling."
"They'll roll,
Chief."
Gaines snapped off the
connection and turned to Blekinsop. "Van Kleeck is my chief deputy. I wish
he'd spend more time on the road and less on politics. Davidson can handle
things, however. Shall we go?"
They glided down an electric
staircase, and debauched on the walkway which bordered the northbound five
mile-an-hour strip. After skirting a stairway trunk marked OVERPASS TO
SOUTHBOUND ROAD, they paused at the edge of the first strip. "Have you
ever ridden a conveyor strip before?" Gaines inquired. "It's quite
simple. Just remember to face against the motion of the strip as you get
on."
They threaded their way
through homeward-bound throngs, passing from strip to strip. Down the center of
the twenty-mile-an-hour strip ran a glassite partition which reached nearly to
the spreading roof. The Honorable Mister Blekinsop raised his eyebrows inquiringly
as he looked at it.
"Oh, that?" Gaines
answered the unspoken inquiry as he slid back a panel door and ushered his
guest through.
"That's a wind break. If
we didn't have some way of separating the air currents over the strips of
different speeds, the wind would tear our clothes off on the
hundred-mile-an-hour strip." He bent his head to Blekinsop's as he spoke,
in order to cut through the rush of air against the road surfaces, the noise of
the crowd, and the muted roar of the driving mechanism concealed beneath the
moving strips. The combination of noises inhibited further conversation as they
proceeded toward the middle of the roadway. After passing through three more
wind screens located at the forty, sixty, and eighty-mile-an-hour strips
respectively, they finally reached the maximum speed strip, the
hundred-mile-an-hour strip, which made the round trip, San Diego to Reno and
back, in twelve hours.
Blekinsop found himself on a
walkway twenty feet wide facing another partition. Immediately opposite him an
illuminated show window proclaimed:
JAKE'S STEAK HOUSE No. 4
The Fastest Meal on the
Fastest Road!
"To dine on the fly
makes the miles roll by!!"
"Amazing!" said Mr.
Blekinsop. "It would be like dining in a tram. Is this really a proper
restaurant?"
"One of the best. Not
fancy, but sound."
"Oh, I say, could
we—"
Gaines smiled at him.
"You'd like to try it, wouldn't you, sir?"
"I don't wish to interfere
with your plans—"
"Quite all right. I'm
hungry myself, and Stockton is a long hour away. Let's go in."
Gaines greeted the manageress
as an old friend. "Hello, Mrs. McCoy. How are you tonight?"
"If it isn't the chief
himself! It's a long time since we've had the pleasure of seeing your
face." She led them to a booth somewhat detached from the crowd of dining
commuters. "And will you and your friend be having dinner?"
"Yes, Mrs. McCoy—suppose
you order for us—but be sure it includes one of your steaks."
"Two inches thick, from
a steer that died happy." She glided away, moving her fat frame with
surprising grace.
With sophisticated
foreknowledge of the chief engineer's needs, Mrs. McCoy had left a portable
telephone at the table. Gaines plugged it in to an accommodation jack at the
side of the booth, and dialed a number.
"Hello, Davidson? Dave,
this is the chief. I'm in Jake's beanery number four for supper. You can reach
me by calling ten-six-six."
He replaced the handset, and
Blekinsop inquired politely, "Is it necessary for you to be available at
all times?"
"Not strictly
necessary," Gaines told him, "but I feel safer when I am in touch.
Either Van Kleeck, or myself, should be where the senior engineer of the
watch—that's Davidson this shift—can get hold of us in a pinch. If it's a real
emergency, I want to be there, naturally."
"What would constitute a
real emergency?"
"Two things,
principally. A power failure on the rotors would bring the road to a
standstill, and possibly strand millions of people a hundred miles, or more,
from their homes. If it happened during a rush hour we would have to evacuate
those millions from the road, not too easy to do."
"You say millions, as
many as that?"
"Yes, indeed. There are
twelve million people dependent on this roadway, living and working in the
buildings adjacent to it, or within five miles of each side."
The Age of Power blends into
the Age of Transportation almost imperceptibly, but two events stand out as
landmarks in the change: the achievement of cheap sun power and the
installation of the first mechanized road.
The power resources of oil
and coal of the United States had—save for a few sporadic outbreaks of common
sense—been shamefully wasted in their development all through the first half of
the twentieth century. Simultaneously, the automobile, from its humble start as
a one-lunged horseless carriage, grew into a steel-bodied monster of over a
hundred horsepower and capable of making more than a hundred miles an hour.
They boiled over the countryside, like yeast in ferment. In 1955 it was
estimated that there was a motor vehicle for every two persons in the United
States.
They contained the seeds of
their own destruction. Eighty million steel juggernauts, operated by imperfect
human beings at high speeds, are more destructive than war. In the same
reference year the premiums paid for compulsory liability and property damage
insurance by automobile owners exceeded in amount the sum paid that year to
purchase automobiles. Safe driving campaigns were chronic phenomena, but were
mere pious attempts to put Humpty-Dumpty together again. It was not physically
possible to drive safely in those crowded metropolises. Pedestrians were
sardonically divided into two classes, the quick, and the dead.
But a pedestrian could be
defined as a man who had found a place to park his car. The automobile made
possible huge cities, then choked those same cities to death with their
numbers. In 1900 Herbert George Wells pointed out that the saturation point in
the size of a city might be mathematically predicted in terms of its
transportation facilities. From a standpoint of speed alone the automobile made
possible cities two hundred miles in diameter, but traffic congestion, and the
inescapable, inherent danger of high-powered, individually operated vehicles
cancelled out the possibility.
In 1955 Federal Highway #66
from Los Angeles to Chicago, "The Main Street of America", was
transformed into a superhighway for motor vehicles, with an underspeed limit of
sixty miles per hour. It was planned as a public works project to stimulate
heavy industry; it had an unexpected by-product. The great cities of Chicago
and St. Louis stretched out urban pseudopods toward each other, until they met
near Bloomington, Illinois. The two parent cities actually shrunk in
population.
That same year the city of
San Francisco replaced its antiquated cable cars with moving stairways, powered
with the Douglas-Martin Solar Reception Screens. The largest number of
automobile licenses in history had been issued that calendar year, but the end
of the automobile era was in sight, and the National Defense Act of 1957 gave
fair warning.
This act, one of the most
bitterly debated ever to be brought out of committee, declared petroleum to be
an essential and limited material of war. The armed forces had first call on
all oil, above or below the ground, and eighty million civilian vehicles faced
short and expensive rations. The "temporary" conditions during World
War II had become permanent.
Take the superhighways of the
period, urban throughout their length. Add the mechanized streets of San
Francisco's hills. Heat to boiling point with an imminent shortage of gasoline.
Flavor with Yankee ingenuity. The first mechanized road was opened in 1960
between Cincinnati and Cleveland.
It was, as one would expect,
comparatively primitive in design, being based on the ore belt conveyors of ten
years earlier. The fastest strip moved only thirty miles per hour and was quite
narrow, for no one had thought of the possibility of locating retail trade on
the strips themselves. Nevertheless, it was a prototype of social pattern which
was to dominate the American scene within the next two decades—neither rural,
nor urban, but partaking equally of both, and based on rapid, safe, cheap,
convenient transportation.
Factories—wide, low buildings
whose roofs were covered with solar power screens of the same type that drove
the road—lined the roadway on each side. Back of them and interspersed among
them were commercial hotels, retail stores, theatres, apartment houses. Beyond
this long, thin, narrow strip was the open country-side, where the bulk of the
population lived. Their homes dotted the hills, hung on the banks of creeks,
and nestled between the farms. They worked in the "city" but lived in
the "country"—and the two were not ten minutes apart.
Mrs. McCoy served the chief
and his guest in person. They checked their conversation at the sight of the
magnificent steaks.
Up and down the six hundred
mile line, Sector Engineers of the Watch were getting in their hourly reports
from their subsector technicians. "Subsector one—check!"
"Subsector
two—check!" Tensionometer readings, voltage, load, bearing temperatures,
synchrotachometer readings—"Subsector seven—check!" Hard-bitten, able
men in dungarees, who lived much of their lives 'down inside' amidst the
unmuted roar of the hundred mile strip, the shrill whine of driving rotors, and
the complaint of the relay rollers.
Davidson studied the moving
model of the road, spread out before him in the main control room at Fresno
Sector. He watched the barely perceptible crawl of the miniature hundred mile
strip and subconsciously noted the reference number on it which located Jake's
Steak House No. 4. The chief would be getting in to Stockton soon; he'd give
him a ring after the hourly reports were in. Everything was quiet; traffic
tonnage normal for rush hour; he would be sleepy before this watch was over. He
turned to his Cadet Engineer of the Watch. "Mr. Barnes."
"Yes, sir."
"I think we could use
some coffee."
"Good idea, sir. I'll
order some as soon as the hourlies are in."
The minute hand of the
control board chronometer reached twelve. The cadet watch officer threw a
switch. "All sectors, report!" he said, in crisp, self-conscious
tones.
The faces of two men flicked
into view on the visor Screen. The younger answered him with the same air of
acting under supervision. "Diego Circle—rolling!"
They were at once replaced by
two more. "Angeles Sector—rolling!"
Then: "Bakersfield
Sector—rolling!"
And: "Fresno
Sector—rolling!".
Finally, when Reno Circle had
reported, the cadet turned to Davidson and reported: "Rolling, sir."
"Very well, keep them
rolling!"
The visor screen flashed on
once more. "Sacramento Sector, supplementary report."
"Proceed."
"Cadet Guenther, while
on visual inspection as cadet sector engineer of the watch, found Cadet Alec
Jeans, on watch as cadet subsector technician, and R. J. Ross, technician
second class, on watch as technician for the same subsector, engaged in playing
cards. It was not possible to tell with any accuracy how long they had
neglected to patrol their subsector."
"Any damage?"
"One rotor running hot,
but still synchronized. It was jacked down, and replaced."
"Very well. Have the
paymaster give Ross his time, and turn him over to the civil authorities. Place
Cadet Jeans under arrest and order him to report to me."
"Very well, sir."
"Keep them
rolling!"
Davidson turned back to the
control desk and dialed Chief Engineer Gaines' temporary number.
"You mentioned that
there were two things that could cause major trouble on the road, Mr. Gaines,
but you spoke only of power failure to the rotors." Gaines pursued an
elusive bit of salad before answering. "There really isn't a second major
trouble, it won't happen. However, we are travelling along here at one hundred
miles per hour. Can you visualize what would happen if this strip under us
should break?"
Mr. Blekinsop shifted
nervously in his chair. "Hmm, a rather a disconcerting idea, don't you
think? I mean to say, one is hardly aware that one is travelling at high speed,
here in this snug room. What would the result be?"
"Don't let it worry you;
the strip can't part. It is built up of overlapping sections in such a fashion
that it has a safety factor of better than twelve to one. Several miles of
rotors would have to shut down all at once, and the circuit breakers for the
rest of the line fail to trip out before there could possibly be sufficient
tension on the strip to cause it to part.
"But it happened once,
on the Philadelphia-Jersey City Road, and we aren't likely to forget it. It was
one of the earliest high speed roads, carrying a tremendous passenger traffic,
as well as heavy freight, since it serviced a heavily industrialized area. The
strip was hardly more than a conveyor belt, and no one had foreseen the weight
it would carry. It happened under maximum load, naturally, when the high speed
way was crowded. The part of the strip behind the break buckled for miles,
crushing passengers against the roof at eighty miles per hour. The section
forward of the break cracked like a whip, spilling passengers onto the slower
ways, dropping them on the exposed rollers and rotors down inside, and snapping
them up against the roof.
"Over three thousand
people were killed in that one accident, and there was much agitation to
abolish the roads. They were even shut down for a week by presidential order,
but he was forced to reopen them again. There was no alternative."
"Really? Why not?"
"The country bad become
economically dependent on the roads. They were the principal means of
transportation in the industrial areas, the only means of economic importance.
Factories were shut down; food didn't move; people got hungry and the President
was forced to let them roll again. It was the only thing that could be done;
the social pattern had crystallized in one form, and it couldn't be changed
overnight. A large, industrialized population must have large-scale
transportation, not only for people, but for trade."
Mr. Blekinsop fussed with his
napkin, and rather diffidently suggested, "Mr. Gaines, I do not intend to
disparage the ingenious accomplishments of your great people, but isn't it
possible that you may have put too many eggs in one basket in allowing your
whole economy to become dependent on the functioning of one type of
machinery?"
Gaines considered this
soberly. "I see your point. Yes and no. Every civilization above the
peasant and village type is dependent on some key type of machinery. The old
South was based on the cotton gin. Imperial England was made possible by the
steam engine. Large populations have to have machines for power, for
transportation, and for manufacturing in order to live. Had it not been for
machinery the large populations could never have grown up. That's not a fault
of the machine; that's its virtue.
"But it is true that
whenever we develop machinery to the point where it will support large
populations at a high standard of living we are then bound to keep that
machinery running, or suffer the consequences. But the real hazard in that is
not the machinery, but the men who run the machinery. These roads, as machines,
are all right. They are strong and safe and will do everything they were
designed to do. No, it's not the machines, it's the men.
"When a population is
dependent on a machine, they are hostages of the men who tend the machines. If
their morale is high, their sense of duty strong—"
Someone up near the front of
the restaurant had turned up the volume control of the radio, letting out a
blast of music that drowned out Gaines' words. When the sound had been tapered
down to a more nearly bearable volume, he was saying:
"Listen to that. It
illustrates my point."
Blekinsop turned an ear to
the music. It was a swinging march of compelling rhythm, with a modern
interpretive arrangement. One could hear the roar of machinery, the repetitive
clatter of mechanisms. A pleased smile of recognition spread over the
Australian's face. "It's your Field Artillery Song, The Roll of the
Caissons, isn't it? But I don't see the connection."
"You're right; it was
the Roll of the Caissons, but we adapted it to our own purposes. It's the Road
Song of the Transport Cadets. Wait."
The persistent throb of the
march continued, and seemed to blend with the vibration of the roadway
underneath into a single tympani. Then a male chorus took up the verse:
Hear them hum!
Watch them run!
Oh, our job is never done,
For our roadways go rolling
along!
While you ride;
While you glide;
We are watching 'down
inside',
So your roadways keep rolling
along!
Oh, it's Hie! Hie! Hee!
The rotor men are we—
Check off the sectors loud
and strong!
(spoken) One! Two! Three!
Anywhere you go
You are bound to know
That your roadways are
rolling along!
(Shouted) KEEP THEM ROLLING!
That your roadways are
rolling along!
"See said Gaines,"
with more animation in his voice, "See? That is the real purpose of the
United States Academy of Transport. That is the reason why the transport
engineers are a semi-military profession, with strict discipline. We are the
bottle neck, the sine qua non, of all industry, all economic life. Other
industries can go on strike, and only create temporary and partial
dislocations. Crops can fail here and there, and the country takes up the
slack. But if the roads stop rolling, everything else must stop; the effect
would be the same as a general strike—with this important difference: It takes
a majority of the population, fired by a real feeling of grievance, to create a
general strike; but the men that run the roads, few as they are, can create the
same complete paralysis.
"We had just one strike
on the roads, back in 'sixty-six. It was justified, I think, and it corrected a
lot of real, abuses—but it mustn't happen again."
"But what is to prevent
it happening again, Mr. Gaines?"
"Morale, esprit de
corps. The technicians in the road service are indoctrinated constantly with
the idea that their job is a sacred trust. Besides which we do everything we
can to build up their social position. But even more important is the Academy.
We try to turn out graduate engineers imbued with the same loyalty, the same
iron self-discipline, and determination to perform their duty to the community
at any cost, that Annapolis and West Point and Goddard are so successful in
inculcating in their graduates."
"Goddard? Oh, yes, the
rocket field. And have you been successful, do you think?"
"Not entirely, perhaps,
but we will be. It takes time to build up a tradition. When the oldest engineer
is a man who entered the Academy in his teens, we can afford to relax a little
and treat it as a solved problem."
"I suppose you are a
graduate?"
Gaines grinned. "You
flatter me, I must look younger than I am. No, I'm a carry-over from the army.
You see, the Department of Defense operated the roads for some three months
during reorganization after the strike in 'sixty-six. I served on the
conciliation board that awarded pay increases and adjusted working conditions,
then I was assigned—"
The signal light of the
portable telephone glowed red. Gaines said, "Excuse me," and picked
up the handset.
"Yes?"
Blekinsop could overhear the
voice at the other end. "This is Davidson, Chief. The roads are
rolling."
"Very well. Keep them
rolling!"
"Had another trouble
report from the Sacramento Sector."
"Again? What this
time?"
Before Davidson could reply
he was cut off. As Gaines reached out to dial him back, his coffee cup, half
full, landed in his lap. Blekinsop was aware, even as he was rocked against the
edge of the table, of a disquieting change in the hum of the roadway.
"What has happened, Mr.
Gaines?"
"Don't know. Emergency
stop—God knows why." He was dialing furiously. Shortly he flung the phone
down, without bothering to return the handset to its cradle. "Phones are
out. Come on! No! You'll be safe here. Wait."
"Must I?"
"Well, come along then, and
stick close to me." He turned away, having dismissed the Australian
cabinet minister from his mind. The strip ground slowly to a stop, the giant
rotors and myriad rollers acting as fly wheels in preventing a disastrous
sudden stop. Already a little knot of commuters, disturbed at their evening
meal, were attempting to crowd out the door of the restaurant.
"Halt!"
There is something about a
command issued by one who is used to being obeyed which enforces compliance. It
may be intonation, or possibly a more esoteric power, such as animal tamers are
reputed to be able to exercise in controlling ferocious beasts. But it does
exist, and can be used to compel even those not habituated to obedience.
The commuters stopped in
their tracks.
Gaines continued,
"Remain in the restaurant until we are ready to evacuate you. I am the
Chief Engineer. You will be in no danger here. You!" He pointed to a big
fellow near the door. "You're deputized. Don't let anyone leave without
proper authority. Mrs. McCoy, resume serving dinner."
Gaines strode out the door,
Blekinsop tagging along. The situation outside permitted no such simple
measures.
The hundred mile strip alone
had stopped; a few feet away the next strip flew by at an unchecked ninety-five
miles an hour. The passengers on it flickered past, unreal cardboard figures.
The twenty-foot walkway of
the maximum speed strip had been crowded when the breakdown occurred. Now the
customers of shops, of lunchstands, and of other places of business, the
occupants of lounges, of television theatres—all came crowding out onto the
walkway to see what had happened. The first disaster struck almost immediately.
The crowd surged, and pushed
against a middle-aged woman on its outer edge. In attempting to recover her
balance she put one foot over the edge of the flashing ninety-five mile strip.
She realized her gruesome error, for she screamed before her foot touched the
ribbon.
She spun around, and landed
heavily on the moving strip, and was rolled by it, as the strip attempted to
impart to her mass, at one blow, a velocity of ninety-five miles per hour—one
hundred and thirty-nine feet per second. As she rolled she mowed down some of
the cardboard figures as a sickle strikes a stand of grass. Quickly, she was
out of sight, her identity, her injuries, and her fate undetermined, and
already remote.
But the consequences of her
mishap were not done with. One of the flickering cardboard figures bowled over
by her relative momentum fell toward the hundred mile strip, slammed into the
shockbound crowd, and suddenly appeared as a live man—but broken and bleeding,
amidst the luckless, fallen victims whose bodies had checked his wild flight.
Even there it did not end.
The disaster spread from its source, each hapless human ninepin more likely
than not to knock down others so that they fell over the danger-laden boundary,
and in turn ricocheted to a dearly bought equilibrium.
But the focus of calamity
sped out of sight, and Blekinsop could see no more. His active mind, accustomed
to dealing with large' numbers of individual human beings, multiplied the
tragic sequence he had witnessed by twelve hundred miles of thronged conveyor
strip, and his stomach chilled.
To Blekinsop's surprise,
Gaines made no effort to succor the fallen, nor to quell the fear-infected mob,
but turned an expressionless face back to the restaurant. When Blekinsop saw
that he was actually re-entering the restaurant, he plucked at his sleeve.
"Aren't we going to help those poor people?"
The cold planes of the face
of the man who answered him bore no resemblance to his genial, rather boyish,
host of a few minutes before. "No. Bystanders can help them—I've got the
whole road to think of. Don't bother me."
Crushed, and somewhat
indignant, the politician did as he was ordered. Rationally, he knew that the
Chief Engineer was right—a man responsible for the safety of millions cannot
turn aside from his duty to render personal service to one—but the cold
detachment of such viewpoint was repugnant to him.
Gaines was back in the
restaurant. "Mrs. McCoy, where is your get-away?"
"In the pantry,
sir."
Gaines hurried there,
Blekinsop at his heels. A nervous Filipino salad boy shrank out of his way as
he casually swept a supply of prepared green stuffs onto the floor and stepped
up on the counter where they had rested. Directly above his head and within
reach was a circular manhole, counterweighted and operated by a handwheel set
in its center. A short steel ladder, hinged to the edge of the opening was
swung up flat to ceiling and secured by a hook.
Blekinsop lost his hat in his
endeavor to clamber quickly enough up the ladder after Gaines. When he emerged
on the roof of the building. Gaines was searching the ceiling of the roadway
with a pocket flashlight He was shuffling along, stooped double in the awkward
four feet of space between the roof underfoot and ceiling.
He found what he sought, some
fifty feet away, another manhole similar to the one they had used to escape
from below. He spun the wheel of the lock and stood up in the space, then
rested his hands on the sides of the opening and with a single. lithe movement
vaulted to the roof of the roadways. His companion followed him with more
difficulty.
They stood in darkness, a
fine, cold rain feeling at their faces. But underfoot, and stretching beyond
sight on each hand, the sun power screens glowed with a faint opalescent
radiance, their slight percentage of inefficiency as transformers of radiant
sun power to available electrical power being evidenced as a mild
phosphorescence. The effect was not illumination, but rather like the ghostly
sheen of a snow covered plain seen by starlight.
The glow picked out the path
they must follow to reach the rain-obscured wall of buildings bordering the
ways. The path was a narrow black stripe which arched away into the darkness
over the low curve of the roof. They started away on this path at a dog trot,
making as much speed as the slippery footing and the dark permitted, while
Blekinsop's mind still fretted at the problem of Gaines' apparently callous
detachment. Although possessed of a keen intelligence his nature was dominated
by a warm, human sympathy, without which no politician, irrespective of other
virtues or shortcomings, is long successful.
Because of this trait he
distrusted instinctively any mind which was guided by logic alone. He was aware
that, from a standpoint of strict logic, no reasonable case could be made out
for the continued existence of the human race, still less for the human values
he served.
Had he been able to pierce
the preoccupation of his companion, he would have been reassured. On the
surface Gaines' exceptionally intelligent mind was clicking along with the
facile ease of an electronic integrator, arranging data at hand, making tentative
decisions, postponing judgments without prejudice until necessary data were
available, exploring alternatives. Underneath, in a compartment insulated by
stern self-discipline from the acting theatre of his mind, his emotions were a
torturing storm of self-reproach. He was heartsick at suffering he had seen,
and which he knew too well was duplicated up and down the line. Although he was
not aware of any personal omission, nevertheless, the fault was somehow his,
for authority creates responsibility.
He had carried too long the
superhuman burden of kingship—which no sane mind can carry light-heartedly—and
was at this moment perilously close to the frame of mind which sends captains
down with their ships. Only the need for immediate, constructive action sustained
him.
But no trace of this conflict
reached his features.
At the wall of buildings
glowed a green line of arrows, pointing to the left. Over them, at the terminus
of the narrow path, shone a sign: "ACCESS DOWN." They pursued this,
Blekinsop puffing in Gaines' wake, to a door let in the wall, which gave in to
a narrow stairway lighted by a single glowtube. Gaines plunged down this, still
followed, and they emerged on the crowded, noisy, stationary walkway adjoining
the northbound road.
Immediately adjacent to the
stairway, on the right, was a public tele-booth. Through the glassite door they
could see a portly, well-dressed man speaking earnestly to his female
equivalent, mirrored in the visor screen. Three other citizens were waiting
outside the booth.
Gaines pushed past them,
flung open the door, grasped the bewildered and indignant man by the shoulders,
and hustled him outside, kicking the door closed after him. He cleared the
visor screen with one sweep of his hand, before the matron pictured therein
could protest, and pressed the emergency-priority button.
He dialed his private code
number, and was shortly looking into the troubled face of his Engineer of the
Watch, Davidson.
"Report!"
"It's you, Chief! Thank
God! Where are you?" Davidson's' relief was pathetic.
"Report!"
The Senior Watch Officer
repressed his emotion and complied in direct, clipped phrases, "At
seven-oh-nine p.m. the consolidated tension reading, strip twenty, Sacramento
Sector, climbed suddenly. Before action could be taken, tension on strip twenty
passed emergency level; the interlocks acted, and power to subject strip cut
out. Cause of failure, unknown. Direct communication to Sacramento control
office has failed. They do not answer the auxiliary, nor the commercial line.
Effort to re-establish communication continues. Messenger dispatched from
Stockton Subsector Ten.
"No casualties reported.
Warning broadcast by public announcement circuit to keep clear of strip nineteen.
Evacuation has commenced."
"There are
casualties," Gaines cut in. "Police and hospital emergency routine.
Move!"
"Yes, sir!"
Davidson snapped back, and hooked a thumb over his shoulder, but his Cadet
Officer of the Watch had already jumped to comply. "Shall I cut out the
rest of the road, Chief?"
"No. No more casualties
are likely after the first disorder. Keep up the broadcast warnings. Keep,
those other strips rolling, or we will have a traffic jam the devil himself
couldn't untangle." Gaines had in mind the impossibility of bringing the
strips up to speed under load. The rotors were not powerful enough to do this.
If the entire road was stopped, he would have to evacuate every strip, correct
the trouble on strip twenty, bring all strips up to speed, and then move the
accumulated peak load traffic. In the meantime, over five million stranded
passengers would, constitute a tremendous police problem. It was simpler to
evacuate passengers on strip twenty over the roof, and allow them to return
home via the remaining strips. "Notify the Mayor and the Governor that I
have assumed emergency authority. Same to the Chief of Police and place him
under your orders. Tell the Commandant to arm all cadets available and await
orders. Move!"
"Yes, sir. Shall I
recall technicians off watch?"
"No. This isn't an
engineering failure. Take a look at your readings; that entire sector went out
simultaneously. Somebody cut out those rotors by hand. Place offwatch
technicians on standby status, but don't arm them, and don't send them down
inside. Tell the Commandant to rush all available senior-class cadets to
Stockton Subsector Office number ten to report in. I want them equipped with
tumblebugs, pistols, and sleepy bombs."
"Yes, sir." A clerk
leaned over Davidson's shoulder and said something in his ear. "The
Governor wants to talk to you, Chief."
"Can't do it, nor can
you. Who's your relief? Have you sent for him?"
"Hubbard, he's just come
in."
"Have him talk to the
Governor, the Mayor, the press—anybody that calls—even the White House. You
stick to your watch. I'm cutting off. I'll be back in communication as quickly
as I can locate a reconnaissance car." He was out of the booth almost
before the screen cleared.
Blekinsop did not venture to
speak, but followed him out to the northbound twenty-mile strip. There Gaines
stopped, short of the wind break, turned, and kept his eyes on the wall beyond
the stationary walkway. He picked out some landmark, or sign—not apparent to
his companion—and did an Eliza-crossing-the-ice back to the walkway, so rapidly
that Blekinsop was carried some hundred feet beyond him, and almost failed to
follow when Gaines ducked into a doorway and ran down a flight of stairs.
They came out on a narrow
lower walkway, 'down inside'. The pervading din claimed them, beat upon their
bodies as well as their ears. Dimly, Blekinsop perceived their surroundings, as
he struggled to face that wall of sound. Facing him, illuminated by the yellow
monochrome of a sodium arc, was one of the rotors that drove the five-mile strip,
its great, drum-shaped armature revolving slowly around the stationary field
coils in its core. The upper surface of the drum pressed against the under side
of the moving way and imparted to it its stately progress.
To the left and right, a
hundred yards each way, and beyond at similar intervals, farther than he could
see, were other rotors. Bridging the gaps between the rotors were the slender
rollers, crowded together like cigars in a box, in order that the strip might
have a continuous rolling support. The rollers were supported by steel girder
arches through the gaps of which he saw row after row of rotors in staggered
succession, the rotors in each succeeding row turning over more rapidly than
the last.
Separated from the narrow
walkway by a line of supporting steel pillars, and lying parallel to it on the
side away from the rotors, ran a shallow paved causeway, joined to the walk at
this point by a ramp. Gaines peered up and down this tunnel in evident
annoyance. Blekinsop started to ask him what troubled him, but found his voice
snuffed out by the sound. He could not cut through the roar of thousands of
rotors and the whine of hundreds of thousands of rollers.
Gaines saw his lips move and
guessed at the question.
He cupped his hands around
Blekinsop's right ear, and shouted, "No car. I expected to find a car
here."
The Australian, wishing to be
helpful, grasped Gaines' arm and pointed back into the jungle of machinery.
Gaines' eye followed the
direction indicated and picked out something that he had missed in his
preoccupation—a half dozen men working around a rotor several strips away. They
had jacked down a rotor until it was no longer in contact with the road surface
and were preparing to replace it in toto. The replacement rotor was standing by
on a low, heavy truck.
The Chief Engineer gave a
quick smile of acknowledgment and thanks and aimed his flashlight at the group,
the beam focused down to a slender, intense needle of light.
One of the technicians looked
up, and Gaines snapped the light on and off in a repeated, irregular pattern. A
figure detached itself from the group, and ran toward them.
It was a slender young man,
dressed in dungarees and topped off with earpads and an incongruous, pillbox
cap, bright with gold braid and Insignia. He recognized the Chief Engineer and
saluted, his face falling into humorless, boyish intentness.
Gaines stuffed his torch into
a pocket and commenced to gesticulate rapidly with both hands—clear, clean
gestures, as involved and as meaningful as deaf-mute language. Blekinsop dug
into his own dilettante knowledge of anthropology and decided that it was most
like American Indian sign language, with some of the finger movements of hula.
But it was necessarily almost entirely strange, being adapted for a particular
terminology.
The cadet answered him in
kind, stepped to the edge of the causeway, and flashed his torch to the south.
He picked out a car, still some distance away, but approaching at headlong
speed. It braked, and came to a stop alongside them.
It was a small affair, ovoid
in shape, and poised on two centerline wheels. The forward, upper surface swung
up and disclosed the driver, another cadet. Gaines addressed him briefly in
sign language, then hustled Blekinsop ahead of him into the cramped passenger compartment.
As the glassite hood was
being swung back into place, a blast of wind smote them, and the Australian
looked up in time to glimpse the last of three much larger vehicles hurtle past
them. They were headed north, at a speed of not less than two hundred miles per
hour. Blekinsop thought that he had made out the little hats of cadets through
the windows of the last of the three, but he could not be sure.
He had no time to wonder—so
violent was the driver's getaway. Gaines ignored the accelerating surge; he was
already calling Davidson on the built-in communicator. Comparative silence had
settled down once the car was closed. The face of a female operator at the
relay station showed on the screen.
"Get me Davidson, Senior
Watch Office!"
"Oh! It's Mr. Gaines!
The Mayor wants to talk to you, Mr. Gaines."
"Refer him, and get me
Davidson. Move!"
"Yes, sir!"
"And see here, leave
this circuit hooked in to Davidson's board until I tell you personally to cut
it."
"Right." Her face
gave way to the Watch Officer's.
"That you, Chief? We're
moving, progress O.K., no change."
"Very well You'll be
able to raise me on this circuit, or at Subsector Ten office. Clearing
now." Davidson's face gave way to the relay operator.
"Your wife is calling,
Mr. Gaines. Will you take it?"
Gaines muttered something not
quite gallant, and answered, "Yes."
Mrs. Gaines flashed into
facsimile. He burst into speech before she could open her mouth. "Darling
I'm all right don't worry I'll be home when I get there I've go to go now."
It was all out in one breath, and he slapped the control that cleared the
screen.
They slammed to a
breath-taking stop alongside the stair leading to the watch office of Subsector
Ten, and piled out. Three big lorries were drawn up on the ramp, and three
platoons of cadets were ranged in restless ranks alongside them.
A cadet trotted up to Gaines,
and saluted. "Lindsay, sir, Cadet Engineer of the Watch. The Engineer of
the Watch requests that you come at once to the control room."
The Engineer of the Watch
looked up as they came in. "Chief Van Kleeck is calling you."
"Put him on."
When Van Kleeck appeared in
the big visor, Gaines greeted him with, "Hello, Van. Where are you?"
"Sacramento Office. Now,
listen—"
"Sacramento? That's
good! Report."
Van Kleeck looked
disgruntled. "Report, hell! I'm not your deputy any more, Gaines. Now,
you—"
"What the hell are you
talking about?"
"Listen, and don't
interrupt me, and you'll find out. You're through, Gaines. I've been picked as
Director of the Provisional Central Committee for the New Order."
"Van, have you gone off
your rocker? What do you mean, the New Order?"
"You'll find out. This
is it, the functionalist revolution. We're in; you're out. We stopped strip
twenty just to give you a little taste of what we can do."
Concerning Function: A
Treatise on the Natural Order in Society, the bible of the functionalist
movement, was first published in 1930. It claimed to be a scientifically
accurate theory of social relations. The author, Paul Decker, disclaimed the
"outworn and futile" ideas of democracy and human equality, and
substituted a system in which human beings were evaluated
"functionally"—that is to say, by the role each filled in the
economic sequence. The underlying thesis was that it was right and proper for a
man to exercise over his fellows whatever power was inherent in his function,
and that any other form of social organization was silly, visionary, and
contrary to the "natural order."
The complete interdependence
of modern economic life seems to have escaped him entirely.
His ideas were dressed up
with a glib mechanistic pseudopsychology based on the observed orders of
precedence among barnyard fowls, and on the famous Pavlov conditioned-reflex
experiments on dogs. He failed to note that human beings are neither dogs, nor
chickens. Old Doctor Pavlov ignored him entirely, as he had ignored so many
others who had, blindly and unscientifically dogmatized about the meaning of
his important, but strictly limited, experiments.
Functionalism did not take
hold at once—during the thirties almost everyone, from truck driver to hatcheck
girl, had a scheme for setting the world right in six easy lessons; and a
surprising percentage managed to get their schemes published. But it gradually
spread. Functionalism was particularly popular among little people everywhere
who could persuade themselves that their particular jobs were the indispensable
ones, and that, therefore, under the "natural order" they would be
top dog. With so many different functions actually indispensable such
self-persuasion was easy.
Gaines stared at Van Kleeck
for a moment before replying. "Van," he said slowly, "you don't
really think you can get away with this, do you?"
The little man puffed out his
chest. "Why not? We have gotten away with it. You can't start strip twenty
until I am ready to let you, and I can stop the whole road, if necessary."
Gaines was becoming
uncomfortably aware that he was dealing with unreasonable conceit, and held
himself patiently in check. "Sure you can, Van, but how about the rest of
the country? Do you think the United States Army will sit quietly by and let
you run California as your private kingdom?"
Van Kleeck looked sly.
"I've planned for that. I've just finished broadcasting a manifesto to all
the road technicians in the country, telling them what we have done, and
telling them to arise, and claim their rights. With every road in the country
stopped, and people getting hungry, I reckon the President will think twice
before sending the army to tangle with us. Oh, he could send a force to
capture, or kill me—I'm not afraid to die!—but he doesn't dare start shooting
down road technicians as a class, because the country can't get along without
us—consequently, he'll have to get along with us—on our terms!"
There was much bitter truth
in what he said. If an uprising of the road technicians became general, the
government could no more attempt to settle it by force than a man could afford
to cure a headache by blowing out his brains. But was the uprising general?
"Why do you think that
the technicians in the rest of the country will follow your lead?"
"Why not? It's the
natural order of things. This is an age of machinery; the real power everywhere
is in the technicians, but they have been kidded into not using their power
with a lot of obsolete catch-phrases. And of all the classes of technicians,
the most important, the absolutely essential, are the road technicians. From
now on they run the show—it's the natural order of things!" He turned away
for a moment, and fussed with some papers on the desk before him, then be
added, "That's all for now, Gaines. I've got to call the White House, and
let the President know how things stand. You carry on, and behave yourself, and
you won't get hurt."
Gaines sat quite still for
some minutes after the screen cleared. So that's how it was. He wondered what
effect, if any, Van Kleeck's invitation to strike had had on road technicians
elsewhere. None, he thought—but then he had not dreamed that it could happen
among his own technicians. Perhaps he had made a mistake in refusing. to take
time to talk to anyone outside the road. No, if he had stopped to talk to the
Governor, or the newspapermen, he would still be talking. Still. He dialed
Davidson.
"Any trouble in any
other sectors, Dave?"
"No, Chief."
"Or on any other
road?"
"None reported."
"Did you hear my talk
with Van Kleeck?"
"I was cut in-yes."
"Good. Have Hubbard call
the President and the Governor, and tell them that I am strongly opposed to the
use of military force as long as the outbreak is limited to this road. Tell
them that I will not be responsible if they move in before I ask for
help."
Davidson looked dubious.
"Do you think that is wise, Chief?"
"I do! If we try to
blast Van and his red-hots out of their position, we may set off a real,
country-wide uprising. Furthermore, he could wreck the road so that God himself
couldn't put it back together. What's your rolling tonnage now?"
"Fifty-three percent under
evening peak."
"How about strip
twenty?"
"Almost evacuated."
"Good. Get the road
clear of all traffic as fast as possible. Better have the Chief of Police place
a guard on all entrances to the road to keep out new traffic. Van may stop all
strips at any time—or I may need to, myself. Here is my plan. I'm going 'down
inside' with these armed cadets. We will work north, overcoming any resistance
we meet. You arrange for watch technicians and maintenance crews to follow
immediately behind us. Each rotor, as they come to it, is to be cut out, then
hooked in to the Stockton control board. It will be a haywire rig, with no
safety interlocks, so use enough watch technicians to be able to catch trouble
before it happens.
"If this scheme works,
we can move control of the Sacramento Sector right out from under Van's feet,
and he can stay in this Sacramento control office until he gets hungry enough
to be reasonable."
He cut off and turned to the
Subsector Engineer of the Watch. "Edmunds, give me a helmet—and a pistol."
"Yes, sir." He
opened a drawer, and handed his chief a slender, deadly looking weapon. Gaines
belted it on, and accepted a helmet, into which he crammed his head, leaving
the anti-noise ear flaps up. Blekinsop cleared his throat.
"May—uh—may I have one
of those helmets?" he inquired.
"What?" Gaines
focused his attention. "Oh. You won't need one, Mr. Blekinsop. I want you
to remain right here until you hear from me."
"But—" The
Australian statesman started to speak, thought better of it, and subsided.
From the doorway the Cadet
Engineer of the Watch demanded the Chief Engineer's attention. "Mr.
Gaines, there is a technician out here who insists on seeing you, a man named
Harvey."
"Can't do it."
"He's from the
Sacramento Sector, sir."
"Oh! Send him in."
Harvey quickly advised Gaines
of what he had seen and heard at the guild meeting that afternoon. "I got
disgusted and left while they were still jawin', Chief. I didn't think any more
about it until twenty stopped rolling. Then I heard that the trouble was in
Sacramento Sector, and decided to look you up."
"How long has this been
building up?"
"Quite some time, I
guess. You know how it is—there are a few soreheads everywhere and a lot of
them are functionalists. But you can't refuse to work with a man just because
he holds different political views. It's a free country."
"You should have come to
me before, Harvey." Harvey looked stubborn. Gaines studied his face.
"No, I guess you are right. It's my business to keep tab on your mates,
not yours. As you say, it's a free country. Anything else?"
"Well, now that it has
come to this, I thought maybe I could help you pick out the ringleaders."
"Thanks. You stick with
me. We're going 'down inside' and try to clear up this mess."
The office door opened
suddenly, and a technician and a cadet appeared, lugging a burden between them.
They deposited it on the floor, and waited.
It was a young man, quite
evidently dead. The front of his dungaree jacket was soggy with blood. Gaines
looked at the watch officer. "Who is he?"
Edmunds broke his stare and
answered, "Cadet Hughes, he's the messenger I sent to Sacramento when
communication failed. When he didn't report, I sent Marston and Cadet Jenkins
after him."
Gaines muttered something to
himself, and turned away. "Come along, Harvey."
The cadets waiting below had
changed in mood. Gaines noted that the boyish intentness for excitement had
been replaced by something uglier. 'There was much exchange of hand signals and
several appeared to be checking the loading of their pistols.
He sized them up, then
signaled to the cadet leader. There was a short interchange of signals. The
cadet saluted, turned to his men, gesticulated briefly, and brought his arm
down smartly. They filed upstairs and into an empty standby room, Gaines following.
Once inside, and the noise
shut out, he addressed them,
"You saw Hughes brought
in, how many of you want a chance to kill the louse that did it?"
Three of the cadets reacted
almost at once, breaking ranks and striding forward. Gaines looked at them coldly.
"Very well. You three turn in your weapons, and return to your quarters.
Any of the rest of you that think this is a matter of private revenge, or, a
hunting party, may join them." He permitted a short silence to endure
before continuing. "Sacramento Sector has been seized by unauthorized
persons. We are going to retake it—if possible, without loss of life on either
side, and, if possible, without stopping the roads. The plan is to take over
'down inside', rotor by rotor, and cross-connect through Stockton, The task
assignment of this group is to proceed north 'down inside', locating and
overpowering all persons in your path. You will bear in mind the probability
that most of the persons you will arrest are completely innocent. Consequently,
you will favor the use of sleep gas bombs, and will shoot to kill only as a
last resort.
"Cadet Captain, assign
your men in squads of ten each, with a squad leader. Each squad is to form a
skirmish line across 'down inside', mounted on tumblebugs, and will proceed north
at fifteen miles per hour. Leave an interval of one hundred yards between
successive waves of skirmishers. Whenever a man is sighted, the entire leading
wave will converge on him, arrest him, and deliver him to a transport car and
then fall in as the last wave. You will assign the transports that delivered
you here to receive prisoners. Instruct the drivers to keep abreast of the
second wave.
"You will assign an
attack group to recapture subsector control offices, but no office is to be
attacked until its subsector has been cross-connected with Stockton. Arrange
liaison accordingly.
"Any questions?" He
let his eyes run over the faces of the young men. When no one spoke up, he
turned back to the cadet in charge. "Very well, sir. Carry out your
orders!"
By the time the dispositions
bad been completed, the follow-up crew of technicians had arrived, and Gaines
had given the engineer in charge his instructions. The cadets "stood to
horse" alongside their poised tumblebugs. The Cadet Captain looked expectantly
at Gaines. He nodded, the cadet brought his arm down smartly, and the first
wave mounted and moved out.
Gaines and Harvey mounted
tumblebugs, and kept abreast of the Cadet Captain, some twenty-five yards
behind the leading wave. It had been a long time since the Chief Engineer had
ridden one of these silly-looking little vehicles, and he felt awkward. A
tumblebug does not give a man dignity, since it is about the size and shape of
a kitchen stool, gyro-stabilized on a single wheel. But it is perfectly adapted
to patrolling the maze of machinery 'down inside', since it can go through an
opening the width of a man's shoulders, is easily controlled, and will stand
patiently upright, waiting, should its rider dismount.
The little reconnaissance car
followed Gaines at a short interval, weaving in and out among the rotors, while
the television and audio communicator inside continued as Gaines' link to his
other manifold responsibilities.
The first two hundred yards
of the Sacramento Sector passed without incident, then one of the skirmishers
sighted a tumblebug parked by a rotor. The technician it served was checking
the gauges at the rotor's base, and did not see them approach. He was unarmed
and made no resistance, but seemed surprised and indignant, as well as very
bewildered.
The little command group
dropped back and permitted the new leading wave to overtake them.
Three miles farther along the
score stood thirty-seven men arrested, none killed. Two of the cadets had
received minor wounds, and had been directed to retire. Only four of the
prisoners had been armed, one of these Harvey had been able to identify
definitely as a ringleader. Harvey expressed a desire to attempt to parley with
the outlaws, if any occasion arose. Gaines agreed tentatively. He knew of Harvey's
long and honorable record as a labor leader, and was willing to try anything
that offered a hope of success with a minimum of violence.
Shortly thereafter the first
wave flushed another technician. He was on the far side of a rotor; they were
almost on him before he was, seen. He did not attempt to resist, although he
was armed, and the incident would not have been worth recording, had he not
been talking into a hush-a-phone which he had plugged into the telephone jack
at the base of the rotor.
Gaines reached the group as
the capture was being effected. He snatched at the soft rubber mask of the
phone, jerking it away from the man's mouth so violently that he could feel the
bone-conduction receiver grate between the man's teeth. The prisoner spat out a
piece of broken tooth and glared, but ignored attempts to question him.
Swift as Gaines had been, it
was highly probable that they had lost the advantage of surprise. It was
necessary to assume that the prisoner had succeeded in reporting the attack
going on beneath the ways. Word was passed down the line to proceed with
increased caution.
Gaines' pessimism was
justified shortly. Riding toward them appeared a group of men, as yet several
hundred feet away. There were at least a score, but their exact strength could
not be determined, as they took advantage of the rotors for cover as they
advanced. Harvey looked at Gaines, who nodded, and signaled the Cadet Captain
to halt his forces.
Harvey went on ahead,
unarmed, his hands held high above his head, and steering by balancing the
weight of his body. The outlaw party checked its speed uncertainly, and finally
stopped. Harvey approached within a couple of rods of them and stopped likewise.
One of them, apparently the leader, spoke to him in sign language, to which he
replied.
They were too far away and
the yellow light too uncertain to follow the discussion. It continued for
several minutes, then ensued a pause. The leader seemed uncertain what to do.
One of his party rolled forward, returned his pistol to its holster, and
conversed with the leader. The leader shook his head at the man's violent
gestures.
The man renewed his argument,
but met the same negative response. With a final disgusted wave of his hands,
he desisted, drew his pistol, and shot at Harvey. Harvey grabbed at his middle
and leaned forward. The man shot again; Harvey jerked, and slid to the ground.
The Cadet Captain beat Gaines
to the draw. The killer looked up as the bullet bit him. He looked as if he
were puzzled by some strange occurrence—being too freshly dead to be aware of
it.
The cadets came in shooting.
Although the first wave was outnumbered better than two to one, they were
helped by the comparative demoralization of the enemy. The odds were nearly
even after the first ragged volley. Less than thirty seconds after the first
treacherous shot all of the insurgent party were dead, wounded, or under
arrest. Gaines' losses were two dead (including the murder of Harvey) and two
wounded.
Gaines modified his tactics
to suit the changed conditions. Now that secrecy was gone, speed and striding
power were of first importance. The second wave was directed to close in
practically to the heels of the first. The third wave was brought up to within
twenty-five yards of the second. These three waves were to ignore unarmed men,
leaving them to be picked up by the fourth wave, but they were directed to
shoot on sight any person carrying arms.
Gaines cautioned them to
shoot to wound, rather than to kill, but he realized that his admonishment was
almost impossible to obey. There would be killing. Well, he had not wanted it,
but he felt that he had no choice. Any armed outlaw was a potential killer—he
could not, in fairness to his own men, lay too many restrictions on them.
When the arrangements for the
new marching order were completed, he signed the Cadet Captain to go ahead, and
the first and second waves started off together at the top speed of which the
tumblebugs were capable—not quite eighteen miles per hour. Gaines followed
them.
He swerved to avoid Harvey's
body, glancing involuntarily down as he did so. The face was an ugly jaundiced
yellow under the sodium arc, but it was set in a death mask of rugged beauty in
which the strong fiber of the dead man's character was evident. Seeing this,
Gaines did not regret so much his order to shoot, but the deep sense of loss of
personal honor lay more heavily on him than before.
They passed several
technicians during the next few minutes, but had no occasion to shoot. Gaines
was beginning to feel somewhat hopeful of a reasonably bloodless victory, when
he noticed a change in the pervading throb of machinery which penetrated even
through the heavy anti-noise pads of his helmet. He lifted an ear pad in time
to hear the end of a rumbling diminuendo as the rotors and rollers slowed to
rest.
The road was stopped.
He shouted, "Halt your
men!" to the Cadet Captain. His words echoed hollowly in the unreal
silence.
The top of the reconnaissance
car swung up as he turned and hurried to it. "Chief!" the cadet
within called out, "relay station calling you."
The girl in the visor screen
gave way to Davidson as soon as she recognized Gaines' face. "Chief,"
Davidson said at once, "Van Kleeck's calling you."
"Who stopped the
road?"
"He did."
"Any other major change
in the situation?"
"No, the road was
practically empty when he stopped it."
"Good. Give me Van
Kleeck."
The chief conspirator's face
was livid with uncurbed anger when he identified Gaines. He burst into speech.
"So! You thought I was fooling, eh? What do you think now, Mister Chief
Engineer Gaines?"
Gaines fought down an impulse
to tell him exactly what he thought, particularly about Van Kleeck. Everything
about the short man's manner affected him like a squeaking slate pencil.
But he could not afford the
luxury of speaking his mind. He strove to get just the proper tone into his
voice which would soothe the other man's vanity. "I've got to admit that
you've won this trick, Van—the roadway is stopped—but don't think I didn't take
you seriously. I've watched your work too long to underrate you. I know you
mean what you say."
Van Kleeck was pleased by the
tribute, but tried not to show it. "Then why don't you get smart, and give
up?" he demanded belligerently. "You can't win."
"Maybe not, Van, but you
know I've got to try. Besides," he went on, "why can't I win? You
said yourself that I could call on the whole United States Army."
Van Kleeck grinned
triumphantly. "You see that?" He held up a pear-shaped electric push
button, attached to a long cord. "If I push that, it will blow a path
right straight across the ways—blow it to Kingdom Come. And just for good
measure I'll take an ax, and wreck this control station before I leave."
Gaines wished wholeheartedly
that he knew more about psychiatry. Well, he'd just have to do his best, and
trust to horse sense to give him the right answers. "That's pretty
drastic, Van, but I don't see how we can give up."
"No? You'd better have
another think. If you force me to blow up the road, how about all the people
that will be blown up along with it?"
Gaines thought furiously. He
did not doubt that Van Kleeck would carry out his threat; his very phraseology,
the childish petulance of "If you force me to do this—" betrayed the
dangerous irrationality of his mental processes. And such an explosion anywhere
in the thickly populated Sacramento Sector would be likely to wreck one, or
more, apartment houses, and would be certain to kill shopkeepers on the
included segment of strip twenty, as well as chance bystanders. Van was
absolutely right; he dare not risk the lives of bystanders who were not aware
of the issue and had not consented to the hazard—even if the road never rolled
again.
For that matter, he did not
relish chancing major damage to the road itself, but it was the danger to
innocent life that left him helpless.
A tune ran through his head,
"Hear them hum; watch them run. Oh, our work is never done—" What to
do? What to do? "While you ride; while you glide; we are—"
This wasn't getting anyplace.
He turned back to the screen.
"Look, Van, you don't want to blow up the road unless you have to, I'm
sure. Neither do I. Suppose I come up to your headquarters, and we talk this
thing over. Two reasonable men ought to be able to make a settlement."
Van Kleeck was suspicious.
"Is this some sort of a trick?"
"How can it be? I'll
come alone, and unarmed, just as fast as my car can get there."
"How about your
men?"
"They will sit where
they are until I'm back. You can put out observers to make sure of it."
Van Kleeck stalled for a
moment, caught between the fear of a trap, and the pleasure of having his
erstwhile superior come to him to sue for terms. At last he grudgingly
consented.
Gaines left his instructions
and told Davidson what he intended to do. "If I'm not back within an hour,
you're on your own, Dave."
"Be careful,
Chief."
"I will."
He evicted the cadet driver
from the reconnaissance car and ran it down the ramp into the causeway, then
headed north and gave it the gun. Now he would have a chance to collect his
thoughts, even at two hundred miles per hour. Suppose he pulled off this
trick—there would still have to be some changes made. Two lessons stood out
like sore thumbs: First, the strips must be cross-connected with safety
interlocks so that adjacent strips would slow down, or stop, if a strip's speed
became dangerously different from those adjacent. No repetition of what
happened on twenty!
But that was elementary, a
mere mechanical detail. The real failure had been in men, Well, the
psychological classification tests must be improved to insure that the roads
employed only conscientious, reliable men. But hell's bells, that was just
exactly what the present classification tests were supposed to insure beyond
question. To the best of his knowledge there had never been a failure from the
improved Hunim-Wadsworth-Burton method—not until today in the Sacramento
Sector. How had Van Kleeck gotten one whole sector of temperament-classified
men to revolt?
It didn't make sense.
Personnel did not behave
erratically without a reason. One man might be unpredictable, but in large
numbers, they were as dependable as machines, or figures. They could be
measured, examined, classified. His inner eye automatically pictured the
personnel office, with its rows of filing cabinets, its clerks—He'd got it!
He'd got it! Van Kleeck, as Chief Deputy, was ex officio personnel officer for
the entire road!
It was the only solution that
covered all the facts. The personnel officer alone had the perfect opportunity
to pick out all the bad apples and concentrate them in one barrel. Gaines was
convinced beyond any reasonable doubt that there had been skullduggery, perhaps
for years, with the temperament classification tests, and that Van Kleeck had
deliberately transferred the kind of men he needed to one sector, after
falsifying their records.
And that taught another
lesson, tighter tests for officers, and no officer to be trusted with
classification and assignment without close supervision and inspection. Even
he, Gaines, should be watched in that respect. Qui custodiet ipsos custodes?
Who will guard those selfsame guardians? Latin might be obsolete, but those old
Romans weren't dummies.
He at last knew wherein he
had failed, and he derived melancholy pleasure from the knowledge. Supervision
and inspection, check and re-check, was the answer. It would be cumbersome and
inefficient, but it seemed that adequate safeguards always involved some loss
of efficiency.
He should not have entrusted
so much authority to Van Kleeck without knowing more about him. He still should
know more about him. He touched the emergency-stop button, and brought the car
to a dizzying halt. "Relay station! See if you can raise my office."
Dolores' face looked out from
the screen. "You're still there—good!" he told her. "I was
afraid you'd gone home."
"I came back, Mr.
Gaines."
"Good girl. Get me Van
Kleeck's personal file jacket. I want to see his classification record."
She was back with it in exceptionally
short order and read from it the symbols and percentages. He nodded repeatedly
as the data checked his hunches—masked introvert-inferiority complex. It
checked.
"'Comment of the
Board:'" she read, "'In spite of the potential instability shown by
maxima A, and D on the consolidated profile curve, the Board is convinced that
this officer is, nevertheless, fitted for duty. He has an exceptionally fine
record, and is especially adept in handling men. He is therefore recommended
for retention and promotion."
"That's all, Dolores.
Thanks."
"Yes, Mr. Gaines!"
"I'm off for a showdown.
Keep your fingers crossed."
"But Mr. Gaines—"
Back in Fresno, Dolores stared wide-eyed at an empty screen.
"Take me to Mr. Van
Kleeck!"
The man addressed took his
gun out of Gaines' ribs—reluctantly, Gaines thought—and indicated that the
Chief Engineer should precede him up the stairs. Gaines climbed out of the car,
and complied.
Van Kleeck had set himself up
in the sector control room proper, rather than the administrative office. With
him were half a dozen men, all armed.
"Good evening, Director
Van Kleeck." The little man swelled visibly at Gaines' acknowledgment of
his assumed rank.
"We don't go in much
around here for titles," he said, with ostentatious casualness. "Just
call me Van. Sit down, Gaines."
Gaines did so. It was
necessary to get those other men out. He looked at them with an expression of
bored amusement. "Can't you handle one unarmed man by yourself, Van? Or
don't the functionalists trust each other?"
Van Kleeck's face showed his
annoyance, but Gaines' smile was undaunted. Finally the smaller man picked up a
pistol from his desk, and motioned toward the door. "Get out, you
guys!"
"But Van—"
"Get out, I said!"
When they were alone, Van
Kleeck picked up the electric push button which Gaines had seen in the visor
screen, and pointed his pistol at his former chief. "O.K.," he
growled, "try any funny stuff, and off it goes! What's your
proposition?"
Gaines' irritating smile grew
broader. Van Kleeck scowled. "What's so damn funny?" he said.
Gaines granted him an answer.
"You are, Van—honest, this is rich. You start a functionalist revolution,
and the only function you can think of to perform is to blow up the road that
justifies your title. Tell me," he went on, "what is it you are so
scared of?"
"I am not afraid!"
"Not afraid? You?
Sifting there, ready to commit hara-kiri with that toy push button, and you
tell me that you aren't afraid. If your buddies knew how near you are to throwing
away what they've fought for, they'd shoot you in a second. You're afraid of
them, too, aren't you?"
Van Kleek thrust the push
button away from him, and stood up; "I am not afraid!" he screamed,
and came around the desk toward Gaines.
Gaines sat where he was, and
laughed. "But you are! You're afraid of me, this minute. You're afraid
I'll have you on the carpet for the way you do your job. You're afraid the
cadets won't salute you. You're afraid they are laughing behind your back.
You're afraid of using the wrong fork at dinner. You're afraid people are
looking at you—and you are afraid that they won't notice you."
"I am not!" he
protested. "You—You dirty, stuck-up snob! Just because you went to a
high-hat school you think you're better than anybody." He choked, and
became incoherent, fighting to keep back tears of rage. "You, and your
nasty little cadets—"
Gaines eyed him cautiously.
The weakness in the man's character was evident now—he wondered why he had not
seen it before. He recalled how ungracious Van Kleeck had been one time when he
had offered to help him with an intricate piece of figuring.
The problem now was to play
on his weakness, to keep him so preoccupied that he would not remember the
peril-laden push button. He must be caused to center the venom of his twisted
outlook on Gaines, to the exclusion of every other thought.
But he must not goad him too
carelessly, or a shot from across the room might put an end to Gaines, and to
any chance of avoiding a bloody, wasteful struggle for control of the road.
Gaines chuckled.
"Van," he said, "you are a pathetic little shrimp. That was a
dead give-away. I understand you perfectly; you're a third-rater, Van, and all
your life you've been afraid that someone would see through you, and send you
back to the foot of the class. Director—pfui! If you are the best the
functionalists can offer, we can afford to ignore them—they'll fold up from
their own rotten inefficiency." He swung around in his chair, deliberately
turning his back on Van Kleeck and his gun.
Van Kleeck advanced on his
tormentor, halted a few feet away, and shouted, "You—I'll show you. I'll
put a bullet in you; that's what I'll do!"
Gaines swung back around, got
up, and walked steadily toward him. "Put that popgun down before you hurt
yourself."
Van Kleeck retreated a step.
"Don't you come near me!" he screamed. "Don't you come near
me—or I'll shoot you—see if I don't!"
This is it, thought Gaines,
and dived.
The pistol went off alongside
his ear. Well, that one didn't get him. They were on the floor. Van Kleeck was
hard to hold, for a little man. Where was the gun? There! He had it. He broke
away.
Van Kleeck did not get up. He
lay sprawled on the floor, tears streaming out of his closed eyes, blubbering
like a frustrated child.
Gaines looked at him with
something like compassion in his eyes, and hit him carefully behind the ear
with the butt of the pistol. He walked over to the door, and listened for a
moment, then locked it cautiously.
The cord from the push button
led to the control board. He examined the hookup, and disconnected it
carefully. That done, he turned to the televisor at the control desk, and
called Fresno.
"Okay, Dave," he
said, "Let 'em attack now—and for the love of Pete, hurry!" Then he
cleared the screen, not wishing his watch officer to see how he was shaking.
Back in Fresno the next
morning Gaines paced around the Main Control Room with a fair degree of
contentment in his heart. The roads were rolling—before long they would be up
to speed again. It had been a long night. Every engineer, every available
cadet, had been needed to, make the inch-by-inch inspection of Sacramento
Sector which he had required. Then they had to cross-connect around two wrecked
subsector control boards. But the roads were rolling—he could feel their rhythm
up through the floor.
He stopped beside a haggard,
stubbly-bearded man. "Why don't you go home, Dave?" be asked.
"McPherson can carry on from here."
"How about yourself,
Chief? You don't look like a June bride."
"Oh, I'll catch a nap in
my office after a bit. I called my wife, and told her I couldn't make it. She's
coming down here to meet me."
"Was she sore?"
"Not very. You know how
women are." He turned back to the instrument board, and watched the
clicking 'busy-bodies' assembling the data from six sectors. San Diego Circle,
Angeles Sector, Bakersfield Sector, Fresno Sector, Stockton—Stockton? Stockton!
Good grief! Blekinsop! He had left a cabinet minister of Australia cooling his
heels in the Stockton office all night long!
He started for the door,
while calling over his shoulder, "Dave, will you order a car for me? Make
it a fast one!" He was across the hail, and had his head inside his
private office before Davidson could acknowledge the order.
"Dolores!"
"Yes, Mr. Gaines."
"Call my wife, and tell
her I had to go to Stockton. If she's already left home, just have her wait
here. And Dolores—"
"Yes, Mr. Gaines?"
"Calm her down."
She bit her lip, but her face
was impassive. "Yes, Mr. Gaines."
"That's a good
girl." He was out and started down the stairway. When he reached road
level, the sight of the rolling strips warmed him inside and made him feel
almost cheerful.
He strode briskly away toward
a door marked ACCESS DOWN, whistling softly to himself. He opened the door, and
the rumbling, roaring rhythm from 'down inside' seemed to pick up the tune even
as it drowned out the sound of his whistling.
Hie! Hie! Hee!
The rotor men are we—
Check off your sectors loud
and strong!
One! Two! Three!
Anywhere you go
You are bound to know
That your roadways are
rolling along!
by H. G. Wells
The wish to destroy which
may only react upon one's self being made ridiculous cuts a man down to size.
"This again," said
the Bacteriologist, slipping a glass slide under the microscope, "is a
preparation of the celebrated Bacillus of cholera—the cholera germ."
The pale-faced man peered
down the microscope. He was evidently not accustomed to that kind of thing, and
held a limp white hand over his disengaged eye. "I see very little,"
he said.
"Touch this screw,"
said the Bacteriologist; "perhaps the microscope is out of focus for you.
Eyes vary so much. Just the fraction of a turn this way or that."
"Ah! now I see,"
said the visitor. "Not so very much to see after all. Little streaks and
shreds of pink. And yet those little particles, those mere atomies, might
multiply and devastate a city! Wonderful!"
He stood up, and releasing
the glass slip from the microscope, held it in his hand towards the window.
"Scarcely visible," he said, scrutinising the preparation. He
hesitated. "Are these—alive? Are they dangerous now?"
"Those have been stained
and killed," said the Bacteriologist. "I wish, for my own part, we
could kill and stain every one of them in the universe."
"I suppose," the
pale man said with a slight smile, "that you scarcely care to have such
things about you in the living —in the active state?"
"On the contrary, we are
obliged to," said the Bacteriologist. "Here, for instance—" He
walked across the room and took up one of several sealed tubes. "Here is
the living thing. This is a cultivation of the actual living disease
bacteria." He hesitated. "Bottled cholera, so to speak."
A slight gleam of
satisfaction appeared momentarily in the face of the pale man. "It's a
deadly thing to have in your possession," he said, devouring the little
tube with his eyes. The Bacteriologist watched the morbid pleasure in his
visitor's expression. This man, who had visited him that afternoon with a note
of introduction from an old friend, interested him from the very contrast of
their dispositions. The lank black hair and deep grey eyes, the haggard
expression and nervous manner, the fitful yet keen interest of his visitor were
a novel change from the phlegmatic deliberations of the ordinary scientific
worker with whom the Bacteriologist chiefly associated. It was perhaps natural,
with a hearer evidently so impressionable to the lethal nature of his topic, to
take the most effective aspect of the matter.
He held the tube in his hand
thoughtfully. "Yes, here is the pestilence imprisoned. Only break such a
little tube as this into a supply of drinking-water, say to these minute
particles of life that one must needs stain and examine with the highest powers
of the microscope even to see, and that one can neither smell nor taste—say to
them, 'Go forth, increase and multiply, and replenish the cisterns,' and death
—mysterious, untraceable death, death swift and terrible, death full of pain
and indignity—would be released upon this city, and go hither and thither
seeking his victims. Here he would take the husband from the wife, here the
child from its mother, here the statesman from his duty, and here the toiler
from his trouble. He would follow the water-mains, creeping along streets,
picking out and punishing a house here and a house there where they did not
boil their drinking-water, creeping into the wells of the mineral-water makers,
getting washed into salad, and lying dormant in ices. He would wait ready to be
drunk in the horse-troughs and by unwary children in the public fountains. He
would soak into the soil, to reappear in springs and wells at a thousand
unexpected places. Once start him at the water supply, and before we could ring
him in, and catch him again, he would have decimated the metropolis."
He stopped abruptly. He had
been told rhetoric was his weakness.
"But he is quite safe
here, you know—quite safe."
The pale-faced man nodded.
His eyes shone. He cleared his throat. "These Anarchist-rascals,"
said he, "are fools, blind fools—to use bombs when this kind of thing is
attainable. I think—"
A gentle rap, a mere light
touch of the fingernails was heard at the door. The Bacteriologist opened it.
"Just a minute, dear," whispered his wife.
When he reentered the
laboratory his visitor was looking at his watch. "I had no idea I had
wasted an hour of your time," he said. "Twelve minutes to four. I
ought to have left here by half-past three. But your things were really too
interesting. No, positively I cannot stop a moment longer. I have an engagement
at four."
He passed out of the room
reiterating his thanks, and the Bacteriologist accompanied him to the door, and
then returned thoughtfully along the passage to his laboratory. He was musing
on the ethnology of his visitor. Certainly the man was not a Teutonic type nor
a common Latin one. "A morbid product, anyhow, I am afraid," said the
Bacteriologist to himself, "How he gloated on those cultivations of
disease germs!" A disturbing thought struck him. He turned to the bench by
the vapour-bath, and then very quickly to his writing table. Then he felt
hastily in his pockets, and then rushed to the door. "I may have put it
down on the hall table," he said.
"Minnie!" he
shouted hoarsely in the hall.
"Yes, dear," came a
remote voice.
"Had I anything in my
hand when I spoke to you, dear, just now?"
Pause.
"Nothing, dear, because
I remember—"
"Blue ruin!" cried
the Bacteriologist, and incontinently ran to the front door and down the steps
of his house to the street.
Minnie, hearing the door slam
violently, ran in alarm to the window. Down the street a slender man was
getting into a cab. The Bacteriologist, hatless, and in his carpet slippers was
running and gesticulating wildly towards this group. One slipper came off, but
he did not Wait for it. "He has gone mad!" said Minnie;
"it's that horrid science of his"; and, opening the window, would
have called after him. The slender man, suddenly glancing round, seemed struck
with the same idea of mental disorder. He pointed hastily to the
Bacteriologist, said something to the cabman, the apron of the cab slammed, the
whip swished, the horse's feet clattered, and in a moment cab, and
Bacteriologist hotly in pursuit, had receded up the vista of the roadway and
disappeared round the corner.
Minnie remained straining out
of the window for a minute. Then she drew her head back into the room again. She
was dumbfounded. "Of course he is eccentric," she meditated.
"But running about London—in the height of the season, too—in his
socks!" A happy thought struck her. She hastily put her bonnet on, seized
his shoes, went into the hall, took down his hat and light overcoat from the
pegs, emerged upon the doorstep, and hailed a cab that opportunely crawled by.
"Drive me up the road and round Havelock Crescent, and see if we can find
a gentleman running about in a velveteen coat and no hat."
"Velveteen coat, ma'am,
and no 'at. Very good, ma'am." And the cabman whipped up at once in the
most matter-of-fact way, as if he drove to this address every day in his life.
Some few minutes later the
little group of cabmen and loafers that collects round the cabmen's shelter at
Haverstock Hill were startled by the passing of a cab with a ginger-coloured
screw of a horse, driven furiously.
They were silent as it went
by, and then as it receded— "That's 'Arry 'Icks. Wot's he
got?" said the stout gentleman known as Old Tootles.
"He's a-using his whip,
he is, to rights," said the ostler boy.
"Hullo!" said poor
old Tommy Byles; "here's another bloomin' loonatic. Slowed if there
ain't"
"It's old George,"
said old Tootles, "and he's drivin' a loonatic, as you say. Ain't
he a-clawin' out of the keb? Wonder if he's after 'Arry 'Icks?"
The group round the cabmen's
shelter became animated. Chorus: "Go it, George!"
"It's a race"
"You'll ketch 'em!"
"Whip up!"
"She's a goer, she
is!" said the ostler boy.
"Strike me giddy!"
cried old Tootles. "Here! I'm a-goin' to begin in a minute.
Here's another comin'. If all the kebs in Hampstead ain't gone mad this
morning!"
"It's a fieldmale this
time," said the ostler boy.
"She's a followin' him,"
said old Tootles. "Usually the other way about."
"What's she got in her
'and?"
"Looks like
a'igh'at."
"What a bloomin' lark it
is! Three to one on old George," said the ostler boy. "Nexst!"
Minnie went by in a perfect
roar of applause. She did not like it but she felt that she was doing her duty,
and whirled on down Haverstock Hill and Camden Town High Street with her eyes
ever intent on the animated back view of old George, who was driving her
vagrant husband so incomprehensibly away from her.
The man in the foremost cab
sat crouched in the corner, his arms tightly folded, and the little tube that
contained such vast possibilities of destruction gripped in his hand. His mood
was a singular mixture of fear and exultation. Chiefly he was afraid of being
caught before he could accomplish his purpose, but behind this was a vaguer but
larger fear of the awfulness of his crime. But his exultation far exceeded his
fear. No Anarchist before him had ever approached this conception of his.
Ravachol, Vaillant, all those distinguished persons whose fame he had envied
dwindled into insignificance beside him. He had only to make sure of the water
supply, and break the little tube into a reservoir. How brilliantly he had
planned it, forged the letter of introduction and got into the laboratory, and
how brilliantly he had seized his opportunity! The world should hear of him at
last. All those people who had sneered at him, neglected him, preferred other
people to him, found his company undesirable, should consider him at last.
Death, death, death! They had always treated him as a man of no importance. All
the world had been in a conspiracy to keep him under. He would teach them yet
what it is to isolate a man. What was this familiar street? Great Saint
Andrew's Street, of course! How fared the chase? He craned out of the cab. The
Bacteriologist was scarcely fifty yards behind. That was bad. He would be
caught and stopped yet. He felt in his pocket for money, and found
half-a-sovereign. This he thrust up through the trap in the top of the cab into
the man's face. "More," he shouted, "if only we get away."
The money was snatched out of
his hand. "Right you are," said the cabman, and the trap slammed, and
the lash lay along the glistening side of the horse. The cab swayed, and the Anarchist,
half standing under the trap, put the hand containing the little glass tube
upon the apron to preserve his balance. He felt the brittle thing crack, and
the broken half of it rang upon the floor of the cab. He fell back into the
seat with a curse, and stared dismally at the two or three drops of moisture on
the apron.
He shuddered.
"Well! I suppose I shall
be first. Phew! Anyhow, I shall be a Martyr. That's something. But it
is a filthy death, nevertheless. I wonder if it hurts as much as they say."
Presently a thought occurred
to him—he groped between his feet. A little drop was still in the broken end of
the tube, and he drank that to make sure. It was better to make sure. At any
rate, he would not fail.
Then it dawned upon him that
there was no further need to escape the Bacteriologist. In Wellington Street he
told the cabman to stop, and got out. He slipped on the step, and his head felt
queer. It was rapid stuff this cholera poison. He waved-his cabman out of
existence, so to speak, and stood on the pavement with his arms folded upon his
breast awaiting the arrival of the Bacteriologist. There was something tragic
in his pose. The sense of imminent death gave him a certain dignity. He greeted
his pursuer with a defiant laugh.
"Vive l'Anarchie! You
are too late, my friend. I have drunk it. The cholera is abroad!"
The Bacteriologist from his
cab beamed curiously at him through his spectacles. "You have drunk it! An
Anarchist! I see now." He was about to say something more, and then
checked himself. A smile hung in the corner of his mouth. He opened the apron
of his cab as if to descend, at which the Anarchist waved him a dramatic
farewell and strode oil towards Waterloo Bridge, carefully jostling his
infected body against as many people as possible. The Bacteriologist was so
preoccupied with the vision of him that he scarcely manifested the slightest
surprise at the appearance of Minnie upon the pavement with his hat and shoes
and overcoat. "Very good of you to bring my things," he said, and
remained lost in contemplation of the receding figure of the Anarchist.
"You had better get
in," he said, still staring. Minnie felt absolutely convinced now that he
was mad, and directed the cabman home on her own responsibility. "Put on
my shoes? Certainly, dear," said he, as the cab began to turn, and hid the
strutting black figure, now small in the distance, from his eyes. Then suddenly
something grotesque struck him, and he laughed. Then he remarked, "It is
really very serious, though."
"You see, that man came
to my house to see me, and he is an Anarchist. No—don't faint, or I cannot
possibly tell you the rest. And I wanted to astonish him, not knowing he was an
Anarchist, and took up a cultivation of that new species of Bacterium I was
telling you of, that infest, and I think cause, the blue patches upon various
monkeys; and like a fool, I said it was Asiatic cholera. And he ran away with
it to poison the water of London, and he certainly might have made things look
blue for this civilised city. And now he has swallowed it. Of course, I cannot
say what will happen, but you know it turned that kitten blue, and the three
puppies—in patches, and the sparrow—bright blue. But the bother is, I shall
have all the trouble and expense of preparing some more.
"Put on my coat on this
hot day! Why? Because we might meet Mrs. Jabber. My dear, Mrs. Jabber is not a
draught. But why should I wear a coat on a hot day because of Mrs. —? Oh! very
well."
by H. G. Wells
It was on the first day of
the new year that the announcement was made, almost simultaneously from three
observatories, that the motion of the planet Neptune, the outermost of all the
planets that wheel about the sun, had become very erratic. Ogilvy had already
called attention to a suspected retardation in its velocity in December. Such a
piece of news was scarcely calculated to interest a world the greater portion
of whose inhabitants were unaware of the existence of the planet Neptune, nor
outside the astronomical profession did the subsequent discovery of a faint,
remote speck of light in the region of the perturbed planet cause any very
great excitement. Scientific people, however, found the intelligence remarkable
enough, even before it became known that the new body was rapidly growing
larger and brighter, that its motion was quite different from the orderly
progress of the planets, and that the deflection of Neptune and its satellite
was becoming now of an unprecedented kind.
Few people without a training
in science can realise the huge isolation of the solar system. The sun with its
specks of planets, its dust of planetoids, and its impalpable comets, swims in
a vacant immensity that almost defeats the imagination. Beyond the orbit of
Neptune there is space, vacant so far as human observation has penetrated,
without warmth or light or sound, blank emptiness, for twenty million times a
million miles. That is the smallest estimate of the distance to be traversed
before the very nearest of the stars is attained. And, saving a few comets more
unsubstantial than the thinnest flame, no matter had ever to human knowledge
crossed this gulf of space, until early in the twentieth century this strange
wanderer appeared. A vast mass of matter it was, bulky, heavy, rushing without
warning out of the black mystery of the sky into the radiance of the sun. By
the second day it was clearly visible to any decent instrument, as a speck with
a barely sensible diameter, in the constellation Leo near Regulus. In a little
while an opera glass could attain it.
On the third day of the new
year the newspaper readers of two hemispheres were made aware for the first
time of the real importance of this unusual apparition in the heavens. "A
Planetary Collision," one London paper headed the news, and proclaimed
Duchaine's opinion that this strange new planet would probably collide with
Neptune. The editorial writers enlarged upon the topic. So that in most of the
capitals of the world, on January 3rd, there was an expectation, however
vague, of some imminent phenomenon in the sky; and as the night followed the
sunset round the globe, thousands of men turned their eyes skyward to seethe
old familiar stars just as they had always been.
Until it was dawn in London
and Pollux setting and the stars overhead grown pale. The winter's dawn it was,
a sickly filtering accumulation of daylight, and the light of gas and candles
shone yellow in the windows to show where people were astir. But the yawning
policeman saw the thing, the busy crowds in the markets stopped agape, workmen
going to their work betimes, milkmen, the drivers of news-carts, dissipation
going home jaded and pale, homeless wanderers, sentinels on their beats, and
in the country, labourers trudging afield, poachers slinking home, all over the
dusky quickening country it could be seen—and out at sea by seamen watching for
the day—a great white star, come suddenly into the westward sky!
Brighter it was than any star
in our skies; brighter than the evening star at its brightest. It still glowed
out white an, large, no mere twinkling spot of light, but a small round, clear
shining disc, an hour after the day had come. And where science has not
reached, men stared and feared, telling one another of the wars and pestilences
that are foreshadowed by these fiery signs in the Heavens. Sturd Boers, dusky
Hottentots, Gold Coast Negroes, Frenchmen Spaniards, Portuguese, stood in the
warmth of the sunrise, watching the setting of this strange new star.
And in a hundred
observatories there had been suppressed excitement, rising almost to shouting
pitch, as the two remote bodies had rushed together, and a hurrying to and fro
to gather photographic apparatus and spectroscope, and this appliance and that,
to record this novel astonishing sight, the destruction of a world. For it was
a world, a sister planet of our earth, far greater than our earth indeed, that
had so suddenly flashed into flaming death. Neptune it was had been struck,
fairly and squarely, by the strange planet from outer space and the heat of the
concussion had incontinently turned two solid globes into one vast mass of incandescence.
Round the world that day, two hours before the dawn, went the pallid great
white star, fading only as it sank westward and the sun mounted above it.
Everywhere men marvelled at it, but of all those who saw it none could have
marvelled more than those sailors, habitual watchers of the stars, who far away
at sea had heard nothing of its advent and saw it now rise like a pigmy moon
and climb zenithward and hang overhead and sink westward with the passing of
the night.
And when next it rose over
Europe everywhere were crowds of watchers on hilly slopes, on house-roofs, in
open spaces, staring eastward for the rising of the great new star. It rose
with a white glow in front of it, like the glare of a white fire, and those who
had seen it come into existence the night before cried out at the sight of it.
"It is larger," they cried. "It is brighter!" And, indeed
the moon a quarter full and sinking in the west was in its apparent sizebeyond
comparison, but scarcely in all its breadth had it as much brightness now as
the little circle of the strange new star.
"It is brighter!"
cried the people clustering in the streets. But in the dim observatories the
watchers held their breath and peered at one another. "It is nearer,"
they said. "Nearer!"
And voice after voice
repeated, "It is nearer," and the clicking telegraph took that up,
and it trembled along telephone wires, and in a thousand cities grimy compositors
fingered the type. "It is nearer." Men writing in offices, struck
with a strange realisation, flung down their pens; men talking in a thousand
places suddenly came upon a grotesque possibility in those words, "It is
nearer." It hurried along awakening streets, it was shouted down the
frost-stilled ways of quiet villages, men who had read these things from the
throbbing tape stood in yellow-lit doorways shouting the news to the
passers-by. "It is nearer." Pretty women, flushed and glittering,
heard the news told jestingly between the dances, and feigned an intelligent
interest they did not feel. "Nearer! Indeed. How curious! How very, very
clever people must be to find out things like that!"
Lonely tramps faring through
the wintry night murmured those words to comfort themselves—looking skyward.
"It has need to be nearer, for the night's as cold as charity. Don't seem
much warmth from it if it is nearer, all the same."
"What is a new star to
me?" cried the weeping woman kneeling beside her dead.
The schoolboy, rising early
for his examination work, puzzled it out for himself—with the great white star,
shining broad and bright through the frost-flowers of his window.
"Centrifugal, centripetal," he said, with his chin on his fist.
"Stop a planet in its flight, rob it of its centrifugal force, what then?
Centripetal has it, and down it falls into the sun! And this—!"
"Do we come in the way?
I wonder—"
The light of that day went
the way of its brethren, and with the later watches of the frosty darkness rose
the strange star again. And it was now so bright that the waxing moon seemed
but a pale yellow ghost of itself, hanging huge in the sunset. In a South
African city a great man had married, and the streets were alight to welcome
his return with his bride. "Even the skies have illuminated," said
the flatterer. Under Capricorn, two Negro lovers, daring the wild beasts and
evil spirits, for love of one another, crouched together in a cane brake where
the fireflies hovered. "That is our star," they whispered, and felt
strangely comforted by the sweet brilliance of its light.
The master mathematician sat
in his private room and pushed the papers from him. His calculations were
already finished. In a small white phial there still remained a little of the
drug that had kept him awake and active for four long nights. Each day, serene,
explicit, patient as ever he had given his lecture to his students, and then
had come back at once to this momentous calculation. His face was grave, a
little drawn and hectic from his drugged activity. For some time he seemed lost
in thought. Then he went to the window, and the blind went up with a click.
Halfway up the sky, over the clustering roofs, chimneys, and steeples of the
city, hung the star.
He looked at it as one might
look into the eyes of a brave enemy. "You may kill me," he said after
a silence. "But I can hold you—and all the universe for that matter—in the
grip of this little brain. I would not change. Even now."
He looked at the little
phial. "There will be no need of sleep again," he said. The next day
at noon, punctual to the minute he entered his lecture theatre, put his hat on
the end of the table as his habit was, and carefully selected a large piece of
chalk. It was a joke among his students that he could not lecture without that
piece of chalk to fumble in his fingers, and once he had been stricken to
impotence by their hiding his supply. He came and looked under his, grey
eyebrows at the rising tiers of young fresh faces, and spoke with his
accustomed studied commonness of phrasing- "Circumstances have risen—circumstances
beyond my control," he said and paused, "which will debar me from completing
the course I had designed. It would seem, gentlemen, if I may put the thing
clearly and briefly, that—Man has lived in vain."
The students glanced at one
another. Had they heard aright? Mad? Raised eyebrows and grinning lips there
were, but one or two faces remained intent upon his calm grey-fringed face.
"It will be interesting," he was saying, "to devote this morning
to an exposition, so far as I can make it clear to you, of the calculations
that have led me to this conclusion. Let us assume—"
He turned towards the
blackboard, meditating a diagram in the way that was usual to him. "What
was that about livin’ vain'?" whispered one student to another.
"Listen," said the other, nodding towards the lecturer.
And presently they began to
understand.
That night the star rose
later, for its proper eastward motion had carried it some way across Leo
towards Virgo, and its brightness was so great that the sky became a luminous
blue as it rose, and every star was hidden in its turn, save only Jupiter near
the zenith, Capella, Aldebaran, Sirius, and the pointers of the Bear. It was
very white and beautiful. In many parts of the world that night a pallid halo
encircled it about. It was perceptibly larger; in the clear refractive sky of
the tropics it seemed as if it were nearly a quarter the size of the moon. The
frost was still on the ground in England, but the world was as brightly lit as
if it were midsummer moonlight. One could see to read quite ordinary print by
that cold clear light, and in the cities the lamps burnt yellow and wan.
And everywhere the world was
awake that night, and throughout Christendom a sombre murmur hung in the keen
air over the countryside like the belling of bees in the heather, and this
murmurous tumult grew to a clangour in the cities. It was the tolling of the
bells in a million belfry towers and steeples, summoning the people to sleep no
more, to sin no more, but to gather in their churches and pray. And overhead,
growing larger and brighter as the earth rolled on its way and the night
passed, rose the dazzling star.
And the streets and houses
were alight in all the cities, the shipyards glared, and whatever roads led to
high country were lit and crowded all night along. And in all the seas about
the civilised lands, ships with throbbing engines, and ships with belling
sails, crowded with men and living creatures, were standing out to ocean and
the north. For already the warning of the master mathematician had been
telegraphed all over the world, and translated into a hundred tongues. The new
planet and Neptune, locked in a fiery embrace, were whirling headlong, ever
faster and faster towards the sun. Already every second this blazing mass flew
a hundred miles, and every second its terrific velocity increased. As it flew
now, indeed, it must pass a hundred million of miles wide of the earth and
scarcely affect it. But near its destined path, as yet only slightly perturbed,
spun the mighty planet Jupiter and his moons sweeping splendid round the sun.
Every moment now the attraction between the fiery star and the greatest of the
planets grew stronger. And the result of that attraction? Inevitably Jupiter
would be deflected from his orbit into an elliptical path, and the burning
star, swung by his attraction wide of its sunward rush, would "describe a
curved path" and perhaps collide with, and certainly pass very close to,
our earth. "Earthquakes, volcanic outbreaks, cyclones, sea waves, floods,
and a steady rise in temperature to I know not what limit"— so prophesied
the master mathematician.
And overhead, to carry out
his words, lonely and cold and livid, blazed the star of the coming doom.
To many who stared at it that
night until their eyes ached, it seemed that it was visibly approaching. And
that night, too, the weather changed, and the frost that had gripped all
Central Europe and France and England softened towards a thaw.
But you must not imagine
because I have spoken of people praying through the night and people going
aboard ships and people fleeing towards mountainous country that the whole
world was already in a terror because of the star. As a matter of fact, use and
wont still ruled the world, and save for the talk of idle moments and the
splendour of the night, nine human beings out of ten were still busy at their
common occupations. In all the cities the shops, save one here and there,
opened and closed at their proper hours, the doctor and the undertaker plied
their trades, the workers gathered in the factories, soldiers drilled,
scholars studied, lovers sought one another, thieves lurked and fled,
politicians planned their schemes. The presses of the newspapers roared through
the nights, and many a priest of this church and that would not open his holy
building to further what he considered a foolish panic. The newspapers insisted
on the lesson of the year 1000—for then, too, people had anticipated the end.
The star was no star—mere gas—a comet; and were it a star it could not possibly
strike the earth. There was no precedent for such a thing. Common sense was
sturdy everywhere, scornful, jesting, a little inclined to persecute the
obdurate fearful. That night, at seven-fifteen by Greenwich time, the star
would be at its nearest to Jupiter. Then the world would see the turn things
would take. The master mathematician's grim warnings were treated by many as so
much mere elaborate self-advertisement. Common sense at last, a little heated by
argument, signified its unalterable convictions by going to bed. So, too,
barbarism and savagery, already tired of the novelty, went about their mighty
business, and save for a howling dog here and there, the beast world left the
star unheeded.
And yet, when at last the
watchers in the European States saw the star rise, an hour later it is true,
but no larger than it had been the night before, there was still plenty awake
to laugh at the master mathematician—to take the danger as if it had passed.
But hereafter the laughter
ceased. The star grew—it grew with a terrible steadiness hour after hour, a
little larger each hour, a little nearer the midnight zenith, and brighter and
brighter, until it had turned night into a second day. Had it come straight to
the earth instead of in a curved path, had it lost no velocity to Jupiter, it
must have leapt the intervening gulf in a day, but as it was it took five days
altogether to come by our planet. The next night it had become a third the
size of the moon before it set to English eyes, and the thaw was assured. It
rose over America near the size of the moon, but blinding white to look at, and
hot; and a breath of hot wind blew now with its rising and gathering strength,
and in Virginia, and Brazil, and down the St. Lawrence valley, it shone
intermittently through a driving reek of thunderclouds, flickering violet
lightning and hail unprecedented. In Manitoba was a thaw and devastating
floods. And upon all the mountains of the earth the snow and ice began to melt
that night, and all the rivers coming out of high country flowed thick turbid, and
soon—in their upper reaches—with swirling and the bodies of beasts and men.
They rose steadily, steadily in the ghostly brilliance, and came trickling over
their banks at last, behind the flying population of their valleys.
And along the coast of
Argentina and up the South Atlantic the tides were higher than had ever been
in the memory of man, and the storms drove the waters in many cases scores of
miles inland, drowning whole cities. And so great grew the heat during the
night that the rising of the sun was like the coming of a shadow. The
earthquakes began and grew until all down America from the Arctic Circle to
Cape Horn, hillsides were sliding, fissures were opening, and houses and walls
crumbling to destruction. The whole side of Cotopaxi slipped out in one vast
convulsion, and a tumult of lava poured out so high and broad and swift and
liquid that in one day it reached the sea.
So the star, with the wan
moon in its wake, marched across the Pacific, trailed the thunderstorms like
the hem of a robe, and the growing tidal wave that toiled behind it, frothing
and eager, poured over island and island and swept them clear of men. Until
that wave came at last—in a blinding light and with the breath of a furnace,
swift and terrible it came—a wall of water, fifty feet high, roaring hungrily,
upon the long coasts of Asia, and swept inland across the plains of China. For
a space the star, hotter now and larger and brighter than the sun in its
strength, showed with pitiless brilliance the wide and populous country; towns
and villages with their pagodas and trees, roads, wide, cultivated fields,
millions of sleepless people staring in helpless terror at the incandescent
sky; and then, low and growing, came the murmur of the flood. And thus it was
with millions of men that night—a flight nowhither, with limbs heavy with heat
and breath fierce and scant, and the flood like a wall swift and white behind.
And then death.
China was lit glowing white,
but over Japan and Java and all the islands of Eastern Asia the great star was
a ball of dull red fire because of the steam and smoke and ashes the volcanoes
were spouting forth to salute its coming. Above was the lava, hot gasses and ash,
and below the seething floods, and the whole earth swayed and rumbled with the
earthquake shocks. Soon the immemorial snows of Thibet and the Himalaya were
melting and pouring down by ten million deepening converging channels upon the
plains of Burmah and Hindostan. The tangled summits of the Indian jungles were
aflame in a thousand places, and below the hurrying waters around the stems
were dark objects that still struggled feebly and reflected the blood-red
tongues of fire. And in a rudderless confusion a multitude of men and women
fled down the broad riverways to that one last hope of men—the open sea.
Larger grew the star, and
larger, hotter, and brighter with a terrible swiftness now. The tropical ocean
had lost its phosphorescence, and the whirling steam rose in ghostly wreaths
from the black waves that plunged incessantly, speckled with storm-tossed
ships.
And then came a wonder. It
seemed to those who in Europe watched for the rising of the star that the world
must have ceased its rotation. In a thousand open spaces of down and upland the
people who had fled thither from the floods and the falling houses and sliding
slopes of hill watched for that rising in vain. Hour followed hour through a
terrible suspense, and the star rose not. Once again men set their eyes upon
the old constellations they had counted 1 lost to them forever. In England it
was hot and clear overhead, though the ground quivered perpetually, but in the
tropics, Sirius and Capella and Aldebaran showed through a veil of steam. And when
at last the great star rose near ten hours late, the sun rose close upon it,
and in the centre, of its white heart was a disc of black.
Over Asia it was the star had
begun to fall behind the 1 movement of the sky, and then suddenly, as it hung
over India, its light had been veiled. All the plain of India from the mouth of
the Indus to the mouths of the Ganges was a shallow waste of shining water that
night, out of which rose temples and palaces, mounds and hills, black with
people. , Every minaret was a clustering mass of people, who fell one by one
into the turbid waters, as heat and terror overcame them. The whole land seemed
a-wailing, and suddenly there swept a shadow across the furnace of despair, and
a breath of cold wind, and a gathering of clouds, out of the cooling air. Men
looking up, near blinded, at the star, saw that a black disc was creeping
across the light. It was the moon, coming between the star and the earth. And
even as men cried to God at this respite, out of the East with a strange inexplicable
swiftness sprang the sun. And then star, sun, and moon rushed together across
the heavens.
So it was that presently, to
the European watchers, star and sun rose close upon each other, drove headlong
for a space and then slower, and at last came to rest, star and sun merged into
one glare of flame at the zenith of the sky. The moon no longer eclipsed the
star but was lost to sight in the brilliance of the sky. And though those who
were still alive regarded it for the most part with that dull stupidity that
hunger, fatigue, heat, and despair engender, there were still men who could
perceive the meaning of these signs Star and earth had been at their nearest,
had swung about one another, and the star had passed. Already it was receding,
swifter and swifter, in the last stage of its headlong journey downward into
the sun.
And then the clouds gathered,
blotting out the vision of the sky, the thunder and lightning wove a garment
round the world; all over the earth was such a downpour of rain as men had
never before seen, and where the volcanoes flared red against the cloud canopy
there descended torrents of mud. Everywhere the waters were pouring off the
land, leaving mud-silted ruins, and the earth littered like a storm-worn beach
with all that had floated, and the dead bodies of the men and brutes, its
children. For days the water streamed off the land, sweeping away soil and
trees and houses in the way, and piling huge dykes and scooping out Titanic
gullies over the countryside. Those were the days of darkness that followed the
star and the heat. All through them, and for many weeks and months, the
earthquakes continued.
But the star had passed, and
men, hunger-driven and gathering courage only slowly, might creep back to their
ruined cities, buried granaries, and sodden fields. Such few ships as had
escaped the storms of that time came stunned and shattered and sounding their
way cautiously through the new marks and shoals of once-familiar ports. And as
the storms subsided men perceived that everywhere the days were hotter than of
yore, and the sun larger, and the moon, shrunk to a third of its former sizes
took now fourscore days between its new and new.
But of the new brotherhood
that grew presently among men, of the saving of laws and books and machines, of
the strange change that had come over Iceland and Greenland and the shores of
Baffin's Bay, so that the sailors coming there presently found them green and
gracious, and could scarce believe their eyes, this story does not tell. Nor of
the movement of mankind now that the earth was hotter, northward and southward
towards the poles of the earth. It concerns itself only with the coming and
the passion of the star.
The Martian astronomers—for
there are astronomers on Mars, although they are very different beings from
men—were naturally profoundly interested by these things. They saw them from
their own standpoint, of course. "Considering the mass and temperature of
the missile that was flung through our solar system into the sun," one
wrote, "it is astonishing what a little damage the earth, which it missed
so narrowly, has sustained. All the familiar continental markings and the
masses of the seas remain intact, and indeed the only difference seems to be a
shrinkage of the white discoloration (supposed to be frozen water) round either
pole." Which only shows how small the vastest of human catastrophes may seem,
at a distance of a few million miles.
By Isaac Asimov
What slight change in our present natural
order could panic our own world into chaos and destruction?
If the stars should appear one night in
a thousand years, how would men believe
and adore, and preserve for many
generations
the remembrance of the city of God?'
EMERSON
Aton 77, director of Saro University, thrust
out a belligerent lower lip and glared at the young newspaperman in a hot fury.
Theremon 762 took that fury in his stride.
In his earlier days, when his now widely syndicated column was only a mad idea
in a cub reporter's mind, he had specialized in 'impossible' interviews. It had
cost him bruises, black eyes, and broken bones; but it had given him an ample
supply of coolness and self-confidence. So he lowered the outthrust hand that
had been so pointedly ignored and calmly waited for the aged director to get
over the worst. Astronomers were queer ducks, anyway, and if Aton's actions of
the last two months meant anything; this same Aton was the queer-duckiest of
the lot.
Aton 77 found his voice, and though it
trembled with restrained emotion, the careful, somewhat pedantic phraseology,
for which the famous astronomer was noted, did not abandon him.
'Sir,' he said, 'you display an infernal
gall in coming to me with that impudent proposition of yours.' The husky
telephotographer of the Observatory, Beenay 25, thrust a tongue's tip across
dry lips and interposed nervously, 'Now, sir, after all -- '
The director turned to him and lifted a
white eyebrow.
'Do not interfere, Beenay. I will credit
you with good intentions in bringing this man here; but I will tolerate no
insubordination now.'
Theremon decided it was time to take a
part. 'Director Aton, if you'll let me finish what I started saying, I think --
'
'I don't believe, young man,' retorted
Aton, 'that anything you could say now would count much as compared with your
daily columns of these last two months. You have led a vast newspaper campaign
against the efforts of myself and my colleagues to organize the world against the
menace which it is now too late to avert. You have done your best with your
highly personal attacks to make the staff of this Observatory objects of
ridicule.'
The director lifted a copy of the Saro
City Chronicle from the table and shook it at Theremon furiously. 'Even a
person of your well-known impudence should have hesitated before coming to me
with a request that he be allowed to cover today's events for his paper. Of all
newsmen, you!'
Aton dashed the newspaper to the floor,
strode to the window, and clasped his arms behind his back.
'You may leave,' he snapped over his
shoulder. He stared moodily out at the skyline where Gamma, the brightest of
the planet's six suns, was setting. It had already faded and yellowed into the
horizon mists, and Aton knew he would never see it again as a sane man. He
whirled. 'No, wait, come here!' He gestured peremptorily. I'll give you your
story.'
The newsman had made no motion to leave,
and now he approached the old man slowly. Aton gestured outward.
'Of the six suns, only Beta is left in the
sky. Do you see it?'
The question was rather unnecessary. Beta
was almost at zenith, its ruddy light flooding the landscape to an unusual
orange as the brilliant rays of setting Gamma died. Beta was at aphelion. It
was small; smaller than Theremon had ever seen it before, and for the moment it
was undisputed ruler of Lagash's sky.
Lagash's own sun. Alpha, the one about
which it revolved, was at the antipodes, as were the two distant companion
pairs. The red dwarf Beta -- Alpha's immediate companion -- was alone, grimly
alone.
Aton's upturned face flushed redly in the
sunlight. 'In just under four hours,' he said, 'civilization, as we know it,
comes to an end. It will do so because, as you see. Beta is the only sun in the
sky.' He smiled grimly. 'Print that! There'll be no one to read it.'
'But if it turns out that four hours pass
-- and another four -- and nothing happens?' asked Theremon softly.
'Don't let that worry you. Enough will
happen.'
'Granted! And still -- if nothing happens?'
For a second time, Beenay 25 spoke. 'Sir,
I think you ought to listen to him.'
Theremon said, 'Put it to a vote, Director
Aton.'
There was a stir among the remaining five
members of the Observatory staff, who till now had maintained an attitude of
wary neutrality.
'That,' stated Aton flatly, 'is not
necessary.' He drew out his pocket watch. 'Since your good friend, Beenay,
insists so urgently, I will give you five minutes. Talk away.'
'Good! Now, just what difference would it
make if you allowed me to take down an eyewitness account of what's to come? If
your prediction comes true, my presence won't hurt; for in that case my column
would never be written. On the other hand, if nothing comes of it, you will
just have to expect ridicule or worse. It would be wise to leave that ridicule
to friendly hands.'
Aton snorted. 'Do you mean yours when you
speak of friendly hands?'
'Certainly!' Theremon sat down and crossed
his legs.
'My columns may have been a little rough,
but I gave you people the benefit of the doubt every time. After all. this is
not the century to preach "The end of the world is at hand" to
Lagash. You have to understand that people don't believe the Book of
Revelations anymore, and it annoys them to have scientists turn aboutface and
tell us the Cultists are right after all -- '
'No such thing, young man,' interrupted
Aton. 'While a great deal of our data has been supplied us by the Cult, our
results contain none of the Cult's mysticism. Facts are facts, and the Cult's
so-called mythology has certain facts behind it. We've exposed them and ripped
away their mystery. I assure you that the Cult hates us now worse than you do.'
'I don't hate you. I'm just trying to tell
you that the public is in an ugly humor. They're angry.'
Aton twisted his mouth in derision. 'Let
them be angry.'
'Yes, but what about tomorrow?'
'There'll be no tomorrow!'
'But if there is. Say that there is --
just to see what happens. That anger might take shape into something serious.
After all, you know, business has taken a nosedive these last two months.
Investors don't really believe the world is coming to an end, but just the same
they're being cagy with their money until it's all over. Johnny Public doesn't
believe you, either, but the new spring furniture might just as well wait a few
months -- just to make sure.
'You see the point. Just as soon as this
is all over, the business interests will be after your hide. They'll say that
if crackpots -- begging your pardon -- can upset the country's prosperity any
time they want, simply by making some cockeyed prediction -- it's up to the
planet to prevent them. The sparks will fly, sir.'
The director regarded the columnist
sternly. 'And just what were you proposing to do to help the situation?'
'Well' -- Theremon grinned -- 'I was
proposing to take charge of the publicity. I can handle things so that only the
ridiculous side will show. It would be hard to stand, I admit, because I'd have
to make you all out to be a bunch of gibbering idiots, but if I can get people
laughing at you, they might forget to be angry. In return for that, all my
publisher asks is an exclusive story.'
Beenay nodded and burst out, 'Sir, the
rest of us think he's right. These last two months we've considered everything
but the million-to-one chance that there is an error somewhere in our theory or
in our calculations. We ought to take care of that, too.'
There was a murmur of agreement from the
men grouped about the table, and Aton's expression became that of one who found
his mouth full of something bitter and couldn't get rid of it.
'You may stay if you wish, then. You will
kindly refrain, however, from hampering us in our duties in any way. You will
also remember that I am in charge of all activities here, and in spite of your
opinions as expressed in your columns, I will expect full cooperation and full
respect -- '
His hands were behind his back, and his
wrinkled face thrust forward determinedly as he spoke. He might have continued
indefinitely but for the intrusion of a new voice.
'Hello, hello, hello!' It came in a high
tenor, and the plump cheeks of the newcomer expanded in a pleased smile.
'What's this morgue-like atmosphere about here? No one's losing his nerve, I
hope.'
Aton started in consternation and said
peevishly, 'Now what the devil are you doing here, Sheerin? I thought you were
going to stay behind in the Hideout.'
Sheerin laughed and dropped his stubby
figure into a chair. 'Hideout be blowed! The place bored me. I wanted to be
here, where things are getting hot. Don't you suppose I have my share of
curiosity? I want to see these Stars the Cultists are forever speaking about.'
He rubbed his hands and added in a soberer tone. 'It's freezing outside. The
wind's enough to hang icicles on your nose. Beta doesn't seem to give any heat
at all, at the distance it is.'
The white-haired director ground his teeth
in sudden exasperation. 'Why do you go out of your way to do crazy things,
Sheerin? What kind of good are you around here?'
'What kind of good am I around there?'
Sheerin spread his palms in comical resignation. 'A psychologist isn't worth
his salt in the Hideout. They need men of action and strong, healthy women that
can breed children. Me? I'm a hundred pounds too heavy for a man of action, and
I wouldn't be a success at breeding children. So why bother them with an extra
mouth to feed? I feel better over here.'
Theremon spoke briskly. 'Just what is the
Hideout, sir?'
Sheerin seemed to see the columnist for
the first time. He frowned and blew his ample cheeks out. 'And just who in
Lagash are you, redhead?'
Aton compressed his lips and then muttered
sullenly, 'That's Theremon 762, the newspaper fellow. I suppose you've heard of
him.'
The columnist offered his hand. 'And, of
course, you're Sheerin 501 of Saro University. I've heard of you.' Then he
repeated, 'What is this Hideout, sir?'
'Well,' said Sheerin, 'we have managed to
convince a few people of the validity of our prophecy of -- er -- doom, to be
spectacular about it, and those few have taken proper measures. They consist
mainly of the immediate members of the families of the Observatory staff,
certain of the faculty of Saro University, and a few outsiders. Altogether,
they number about three hundred, but three quarters are women and children.'
'I see! They're supposed to hide where the
Darkness and the -- er -- Stars can't get at them, and then hold out when the
rest of the world goes poof.'
'If they can. It won't be easy. With all
of mankind insane, with the great cities going up in flames -- environment will
not be conducive to survival. But they have food, water, shelter, and weapons
-- '
'They've got more,' said Aton. 'They've
got all our records, except for What we will collect today. Those records will
mean everything to the next cycle, and that's what must survive. The rest can
go hang.'
Theremon uttered a long, low whistle and
sat brooding for several minutes. The men about the table had brought out a
multi-chess board and started a six-member game. Moves were made rapidly and in
silence. All eyes bent in furious concentration on the board. Theremon watched
them intently and then rose and approached Aton, who sat apart in whispered conversation
with Sheerin.
'Listen,' he said, let's go somewhere
where we won't bother the rest of the fellows. I want to ask some questions.'
The aged astronomer frowned sourly at him,
but Sheerin chirped up, 'Certainly. It will do me good to talk. It always does.
Aton was telling me about your ideas concerning world reaction to a failure of
the prediction -- and I agree with you. I read your column pretty regularly, by
the way, and as a general thing I like your views.'
'Please, Sheerin,' growled Aton.
'Eh? Oh, all right. We'll go into the next
room. It has softer chairs, anyway.'
There were softer chairs in the next room.
There were also thick red curtains on the windows and a maroon carpet on the
floor. With the bricky light of Beta pouring in, the general effect was one of
dried blood.
Theremon shuddered. 'Say, I'd give ten
credits for a decent dose of white light for just a second. I wish Gamma or
Delta were in the sky.'
'What are your questions?' asked Aton.
'Please remember that our time is limited. In a little over an hour and a
quarter we're going upstairs, and after that there will be no time for talk.'
'Well, here it is.' Theremon leaned back
and folded his hands on his chest. 'You people seem so all-fired serious about
this that I'm beginning to believe you. Would you mind explaining what it's all
about?'
Aton exploded, 'Do you mean to sit there
and tell me that you've been bombarding us with ridicule without even finding
out what we've been trying to say?'
The columnist grinned sheepishly. 'It's not
that bad, sir. I've got the general idea. You say there is going to be a
world-wide Darkness in a few hours and that all mankind will go violently
insane. What I want now is the science behind it.'
'No, you don't. No, you don't,' broke in
Sheerin. 'If you ask Aton for that -- supposing him to be in the mood to answer
at all -- he'll trot out pages of figures and volumes of graphs. You won't make
head or tail of it. Now if you were to ask me, I could give you the layman's
standpoint.'
'All right; I ask you.'
'Then first I'd like a drink.' He rubbed
his hands and looked at Aton.
'Water?' grunted Aton.
'Don't be silly!'
'Don't you be silly. No alcohol today. It
would be too easy to get my men drunk. I can't afford to tempt them.'
The psychologist grumbled wordlessly. He
turned to Theremon, impaled him with his sharp eyes, and began.
'You realize, of course, that the history
of civilization on Lagash displays a cyclic character -- but I mean cyclic!'
'I know,' replied Theremon cautiously,
'that that is the current archaeological theory. Has it been accepted as a
fact?'
'Just about. In this last century it's
been generally agreed upon. This cyclic character is -- or rather, was -- one
of the great mysteries. We've located series of civilizations, nine of them definitely,
and indications of others as well, all of which have reached heights comparable
to our own, and all of which, without exception, were destroyed by fire at the
very height of their culture.
'And no one could tell why. All centers of
culture were thoroughly gutted by fire, with nothing left behind to give a hint
as to the cause.'
Theremon was following closely. 'Wasn't
there a Stone Age, too?'
'Probably, but as yet practically nothing
is known of it, except that men of that age were little more than rather
intelligent apes. We can forget about that.'
'I see. Go on!'
There have been explanations of these
recurrent catastrophes, all of a more or less fantastic nature. Some say that
there are periodic rains of fire; some that Lagash passes through a sun every
so often; some even wilder things. But there is one theory, quite different
from all of these, that has been handed down over a period of centuries.'
'I know. You mean this myth of the
"Stars" that the Cultists have in their Book of Revelations.'
'Exactly,' rejoined Sheerin with
satisfaction. 'The Cultists said that every two thousand and fifty years Lagash
entered a huge cave, so that all the suns disappeared, and there came total
darkness all over the world! And then, they say, things called Stars appeared,
which robbed men of their souls and left them unreasoning brutes, so that they
destroyed the civilization they themselves had built up. Of course they mix all
this up with a lot of religio-mystic notions, but that's the central idea.'
There was a short pause in which Sheerin
drew a long breath. 'And now we come to the Theory of Universal Gravitation.'
He pronounced the phrase so that the capital letters sounded -- and at that
point Aton turned from the window, snorted loudly, and stalked out of the room.
The two stared after him, and Theremon
said, 'What's wrong?'
'Nothing in particular,' replied Sheerin.
'Two of the men were due several hours ago and haven't shown up yet. He's
terrifically short-handed, of course, because all but the really essential men
have gone to the Hideout.'
'You don't think the two deserted, do
you?'
'Who? Faro and Yimot? Of course not.
Still, if they're not back within the hour, things would be a little sticky.'
He got to his feet suddenly, and his eyes twinkled. 'Anyway, as long as Aton is
gone -- '
Tiptoeing to the nearest window, he
squatted, and from the low window box beneath withdrew a bottle of red liquid
that gurgled suggestively when he shook it.
'I thought Aton didn't know about this,'
he remarked as he trotted back to the table. 'Here! We've only got one glass
so, as the guest, you can have it. I'll keep the bottle.'
And he filled the tiny cup with judicious
care. Theremon rose to protest, but Sheerin eyed him sternly.
'Respect your elders, young man.'
The newsman seated himself with a look of
anguish on his face. 'Go ahead, then, you old villain.'
The psychologist's Adam's apple wobbled as
the bottle upended, and then, with a satisfied grunt and a smack of the lips,
he began again. 'But what do you know about gravitation?'
'Nothing, except that it is a very recent
development, not too well established, and that the math is so hard that only
twelve men in Lagash are supposed to understand it.'
'Tcha! Nonsense! Baloney! I can give you
all the essential math in a sentence. The Law of Universal Gravitation states
that there exists a cohesive force among all bodies of the universe, such that
the amount of this force between any two given bodies is proportional to the
product of their masses divided by the square of the distance between them.'
'Is that all?'
'That's enough! It took four hundred years
to develop it.'
'Why that long? It sounded simple enough,
the way you said it.'
'Because great laws are not divined by
flashes of inspiration, whatever you may think. It usually takes the combined
work of a world full of scientists over a period of centuries. After Genovi 4I
discovered that Lagash rotated about the sun Alpha rather than vice versa --
and that was four hundred years ago -- astronomers have been working. The
complex motions of the six suns were recorded and analyzed and unwoven. Theory
after theory was advanced and checked and counterchecked and modified and
abandoned and revived and converted to something else. It was a devil of a
job.'
Theremon nodded thoughtfully and held out
his glass for more liquor. Sheerin grudgingly allowed a few ruby drops to leave
the bottle.
'It was twenty years ago,' he continued
after remoistening his own throat, 'that it was finally demonstrated that the
Law of Universal Gravitation accounted exactly for the orbital motions of the
six suns. It was a great triumph.'
Sheerin stood up and walked to the window,
still clutching his bottle. 'And now we're getting to the point. In the last
decade, the motions of Lagash about Alpha were computed according to gravity,
and it did not account for the orbit observed; not even when all perturbations
due to the other suns were included. Either the law was invalid, or there was
another, as yet unknown, factor involved.'
Theremon joined Sheerin at the window and
gazed out past the wooded slopes to where the spires of Saro City gleamed
bloodily on the horizon. The newsman felt the tension of uncertainty grow
within him as he cast a short glance at Beta. It glowered redly at zenith,
dwarfed and evil.
'Go ahead, sir,' he said softly.
Sheerin replied, 'Astronomers stumbled
about for year, each proposed theory more untenable than the one before --
until Aton had the inspiration of calling in the Cult. The head of the Cult,
Sor 5, had access to certain data that simplified the problem considerably.
Aton set to work on a new track.
'What if there were another nonluminous
planetary body such as Lagash? If there were, you know, it would shine only by
reflected light, and if it were composed of bluish rock, as Lagash itself
largely is, then, in the redness of the sky, the eternal blaze of the suns
would make it invisible -- drown it out completely.'
Theremon whistled. 'What a screwy idea!'
'You think that's screwy? Listen to this:
Suppose this body rotated about Lagash at such a distance and in such an orbit
and had such a mass that its attention would exactly account for the deviations
of Lagash's orbit from theory -- do you know what would happen?'
The columnist shook his head.
'Well, sometimes this body would get in
the way of a sun.' And Sheerin emptied what remained in the bottle at a draft.
'And it does, I suppose,' said Theremon
flatly.
'Yes! But only one sun lies in its plane
of revolution.' He jerked a thumb at the shrunken sun above. 'Beta! And it has
been shown that the eclipse will occur only when the arrangement of the suns is
such that Beta is alone in its hemisphere and at maximum distance, at which
time the moon is invariably at minimum distance. The eclipse that results, with
the moon seven times the apparent diameter of Beta, covers all of Lagash and
lasts well over half a day, so that no spot on the planet escapes the effects.
That eclipse comes once every two thousand and forty-nine years.'
Theremon's face was drawn into an
expressionless mask.
'And that's my story?'
The psychologist nodded. 'That's all of
it. First the eclipse -- which will start in three quarters of an hour -- then
universal Darkness and, maybe, these mysterious Stars -- then madness, and end
of the cycle.'
He brooded. 'We had two months' leeway --
we at the Observatory -- and that wasn't enough time to persuade Lagash of the
danger. Two centuries might not have been enough. But our records are at the
Hideout, and today we photograph the eclipse. The next cycle will start off
with the truth, and when the next eclipse comes, mankind will at last be ready
for it. Come to think of it, that's part of your story too.'
A thin wind ruffled the curtains at the
window as Theremon opened it and leaned out. It played coldly with his hair as
he stared at the crimson sunlight on his hand. Then he turned in sudden
rebellion.
'What is there in Darkness to drive me
mad?'
Sheerin smiled to himself as he spun the
empty liquor bottle with abstracted motions of his hand. 'Have you ever
experienced Darkness, young man?'
The newsman leaned against the wall and
considered. 'No. Can't say I have. But I know what it is. Just -- uh -- ' He
made vague motions with his fingers and then brightened. 'Just no light. Like
in caves.' ,
'Have you ever been in a cave?'
'In a cave! Of course not!'
'I thought not. I tried last week -- just
to see -- but I got out in a hurry. I went in until the mouth of the cave was
just visible as a blur of light, with black everywhere else. I never thought a
person my weight could run that fast.'
Theremon's lip curled. 'Well, if it comes
to that, I guess I wouldn't have run if I had been there.'
The psychologist studied the young man
with an annoyed frown.
'My, don't you talk big! I dare you to
draw the curtain.'
Theremon looked his surprise and said,
'What for? If we had four or five suns out there, we might want to cut the
light down a bit for comfort, but now we haven't enough light as it is.'
'That's the point. Just draw the curtain;
then come here and sit down.'
'All right.' Theremon reached for the
tasseled string and jerked. The red curtain slid across the wide window, the
brass rings hissing their way along the crossbar, and a dusk-red shadow clamped
down on the room.
Theremon's footsteps sounded hollowly in
the silence as he made his way to the table, and then they stopped halfway. 'I
can't see you, sir,' he whispered.
'Feel your way,' ordered Sheerin in a
strained voice.
'But I can't see you, sir.' The newsman
was breathing harshly. 'I can't see anything.'
'What did you expect?' came the grim
reply. 'Come here and sit down!'
The footsteps sounded again, waveringly,
approaching slowly. There was the sound of someone fumbling with a chair.
Theremon's voice came thinly, 'Here I am. I feel . . . ulp . . . all right.'
'You like it, do you?'
'N -- no. It's pretty awful. The walls
seem to be -- ' He paused. 'They seem to be closing in on me. I keep wanting to
push them away. But I'm not going mad! In fact, the feeling isn't as bad as it
was.'
'All right. Draw the curtain back again.'
There were cautious footsteps through the
dark, the rustle of Theremon's body against the curtain as he felt for the
tassel, and then the triumphant roo-osh of the curtain slithering back. Red
light flooded the room, and with a cry of joy Theremon looked up at the sun.
Sheerin wiped the moistness off his
forehead with the back of a hand and said shakily, 'And that was just a dark
room.'
'It can be stood,' said Theremon lightly.
'Yes, a dark room can. But were you at the
Jonglor Centennial Exposition two years ago?'
'No, it so happens I never got around to
it. Six thousand miles was just a bit too much to travel, even for the
exposition.'
'Well, I was there. You remember hearing
about the "Tunnel of Mystery" that broke all records in the amusement
area -- for the first month or so, anyway?'
'Yes. Wasn't there some fuss about it?'
'Very little. It was hushed up. You see,
that Tunnel of Mystery was just a mile-long tunnel -- with no lights. You got
into a little open car and jolted along through Darkness for fifteen minutes.
It was very popular -- while it lasted.'
'Popular?'
'Certainly. There's a fascination in being
frightened when it's part of a game. A baby is born with three instinctive
fears: of loud noises, of falling, and of the absence of light. That's why it's
considered so funny to jump at someone and shout "Boo!" That's why
it's such fun to ride a roller coaster. And that's why that Tunnel of Mystery
started cleaning up. People came out of that Darkness shaking, breathless, half
dead with fear, but they kept on paying to get in.'
'Wait a while, I remember now. Some people
came out dead, didn't they? There were rumors of that after it shut down.'
The psychologist snorted. 'Bah! Two or
three died. That was nothing! They paid off the families of the dead ones and
argued the Jonglor City Council into forgetting it. After all, they said, if people
with weak hearts want to go through the tunnel, it was at their own risk -- and
besides, it wouldn't happen again. So they put a doctor in the front office and
had every customer go through a physical examination before getting into the
car. That actually boosted ticket sales.'
'Well, then?'
'But you see, there was something else.
People sometimes came out in perfect order, except that they refused to go into
buildings -- any buildings; including palaces, mansions, apartment houses,
tenements, cottages, huts, shacks, lean-tos, and tents.'
Theremon looked shocked. 'You mean they
refused to come in out of the open? Where'd they sleep?'
'In the open.'
'They should have forced them inside.'
'Oh, they did, they did. Whereupon these
people went into violent hysterics and did their best to bat their brains out
against the nearest wall. Once you got them inside, you couldn't keep them
there without a strait jacket or a heavy dose of tranquilizer.'
'They must have been crazy.'
'Which is exactly what they were. One
person out of every ten who went into that tunnel came out that way. They
called in the psychologists, and we did the only thing possible. We closed down
the exhibit.' He spread his hands.
'What was the matter with these people?'
asked Theremon finally.
'Essentially the same thing that was the
matter with you when you thought the walls of the room were crushing in on you
in the dark. There is a psychological term for mankind's instinctive fear of
the absence of light. We call it "claustrophobia", because the lack
of light is always tied up with enclosed places, so that fear of one is fear of
the other. You see?'
'And those people of the tunnel?'
'Those people of the tunnel consisted of
those unfortunates whose mentality did not quite possess the resiliency to
overcome the claustrophobia that overtook them in the Darkness. Fifteen minutes
without light is a long time; you only had two or three minutes, and I believe
you were fairly upset.
'The people of the tunnel had what is
called a "claustrophobic fixation". Their latent fear of Darkness and
enclosed places had crystalized and become active, and, as far as we can tell,
permanent. That's what fifteen minutes in the dark will do.'
There was a long silence, and Theremon's
forehead wrinkled slowly into a frown. 'I don't believe it's that bad.'
'You mean you don't want to believe,'
snapped Sheerin. 'You're afraid to believe. Look out the window!'
Theremon did so, and the psychologist
continued without pausing. 'Imagine Darkness -- everywhere. No light, as far as
you can see. The houses, the trees, the fields, the earth, the sky -- black!
And Stars thrown in, for all I know -- whatever they are. Can you conceive it?'
'Yes, I can,' declared Theremon
truculently.
And Sheerin slammed his fist down upon the
table in sudden passion. 'You lie! You can't conceive that. Your brain wasn't
built for the conception any more than it was built for the conception of
infinity or of eternity. You can only talk about it. A fraction of the reality
upsets you, and when the real thing comes, your brain is going to be presented
with the phenomenon outside its limits of comprehension. You will go mad,
completely and permanently! There is no question of it!'
He added sadly, 'And another couple of
millennia of painful struggle comes to nothing. Tomorrow there won't be a city
standing unharmed in all Lagash.'
Theremon recovered part of his mental
equilibrium. 'That doesn't follow. I still don't see that I can go loony just
because there isn't a sun in the sky -- but even if I did, and everyone else
did, how does that harm the cities? Are we going to blow them down?'
But Sheerin was angry, too. 'If you were
in Darkness, what would you want more than anything else; what would it be that
every instinct would call for? Light, damn you, light!'
'Well?'
'And how would you get light?'
'I don't know,' said Theremon flatly.
'What's the only way to get light, short
of a sun?'
'How should I know?'
They were standing face to face and nose
to nose.
Sheerin said, 'You burn something, mister.
Ever see a forest fire? Ever go camping and cook a stew over a wood fire? Heat
isn't the only thing burning wood gives off, you know. It gives off light, and
people know that. And when it's dark they want light, and they're going to get
it.'
'So they burn wood?'
'So they burn whatever they can get.
They've got to have light. They've got to burn something, and wood isn't handy
-- so they'll burn whatever is nearest. They'll have their light -- and every
center of habitation goes up in flames!'
Eyes held each other as though the whole
matter were a personal affair of respective will powers, and then Theremon
broke away wordlessly. His breathing was harsh and ragged, and he scarcely
noted the sudden hubbub that came from the adjoining room behind the closed door.
Sheerin spoke, and it was with an effort
that he made it sound matter-of-fact. 'I think I heard Yimot's voice. He and
Faro are probably back. Let's go in and see what kept them.'
'Might as well!' muttered Theremon. He
drew a long breath and seemed to shake himself. The tension was broken.
The room was in an uproar, with members of
the staff clustering about two young men who were removing outer garments even
as they parried the miscellany of questions being thrown at them.
Aton hustled through the crowd and faced
the newcomers angrily. 'Do you realize that it's less than half an hour before
deadline? Where have you two been?'
Faro 24 seated himself and rubbed his
hands. His cheeks were red with the outdoor chill. 'Yimot and I have just
finished carrying through a little crazy experiment of our own. We've been
trying to see if we couldn't construct an arrangement by which we could
simulate the appearance of Darkness and Stars so as to get an advance notion as
to how it looked.'
There was a confused murmur from the
listeners, and a sudden look of interest entered Aton's eyes. 'There wasn't
anything said of this before. How did you go about it?'
'Well,' said Faro, 'the idea came to Yimot
and myself long ago, and we've been working it out in our spare time. Yimot
knew of a low one-story house down in the city with a domed roof -- it had once
been used as a museum, I think. Anyway, we bought it -- '
'Where did you get the money?' interrupted
Aton peremptorily.
'Our bank accounts,' grunted Yimot 70. 'It
cost two thousand credits.' Then, defensively, 'Well, what of it? Tomorrow, two
thousand credits will be two thousand pieces of paper. That's all.'
'Sure.' agreed Faro. 'We bought the place
and rigged it up with black velvet from top to bottom so as to get as perfect a
Darkness as possible. Then we punched tiny holes in the ceiling and through the
roof and covered them with little metal caps, all of which could be shoved
aside simultaneously at the close of a switch. At least we didn't do that part
ourselves; we got a carpenter and an electrician and some others -- money
didn't count. The point was that we could get the light to shine through those
holes in the roof, so that we could get a starlike effect.'
Not a breath was drawn during the pause
that followed. Aton said stiffly, 'You had no right to make a private -- '
Faro seemed abashed. 'I know, sir -- but
frankly, Yimot and I thought the experiment was a little dangerous. If the
effect really worked, we half expected to go mad -- from what Sheerin says
about all this, we thought that would be rather likely. We wanted to take the
risk ourselves. Of course if we found we could retain sanity, it occurred to us
that we might develop immunity to the real thing, and then expose the rest of
you the same way. But things didn't work out at all -- '
'Why, what happened?'
It was Yimot who answered. 'We shut
ourselves in and allowed our eyes to get accustomed to the dark. It's an
extremely creepy feeling because the total Darkness makes you feel as if the
walls and ceiling are crushing in on you. But we got over that and pulled the
switch. The caps fell away and the roof glittered all over with little dots of
light -- '
'Well?'
'Well -- nothing. That was the whacky part
of it. Nothing happened. It was just a roof with holes in it, and that's just
what it looked like. We tried it over and over again -- that's what kept us so
late -- but there just isn't any effect at all.'
There followed a shocked silence, and all
eyes turned to Sheerin, who sat motionless, mouth open.
Theremon was the first to speak. 'You know
what this does to this whole theory you've built up, Sheerin, don't you?' He
was grinning with relief.
But Sheerin raised his hand. 'Now wait a
while. Just let me think this through.' And then he snapped his fingers, and when
he lifted his head there was neither surprise nor uncertainty in his eyes. 'Of
course -- '
He never finished. From somewhere up above
there sounded a sharp clang, and Beenay, starting to his feet, dashed up the
stairs with a 'What the devil!'
The rest followed after.
Things happened quickly. Once up in the
dome, Beenay cast one horrified glance at the shattered photographic plates and
at the man bending over them; and then hurled himself fiercely at the intruder,
getting a death grip on his throat. There was a wild threshing, and as others
of the staff joined in, the stranger was swallowed up and smothered under the
weight of half a dozen angry men.
Aton came up last, breathing heavily. 'Let
him up!'
There was a reluctant unscrambling and the
stranger, panting harshly, with his clothes torn and his forehead bruised, was
hauled to his feet. He had a short yellow beard curled elaborately in the style
affected by the Cultists. Beenay shifted his hold to a collar grip and shook
the man savagely. 'All right, rat, what's the idea? These plates -- '
'I wasn't after them,' retorted the
Cultist coldly. 'That was an accident.'
Beenay followed his glowering stare and
snarled, 'I see. You were after the cameras themselves. The accident with the
plates was a stroke of luck for you, then. If you had touched Snapping Bertha
or any of the others, you would have died by slow torture. As it is -- ' He
drew his fist back.
Aton grabbed his sleeve. 'Stop that! Let
him go!'
The young technician wavered, and his arm
dropped reluctantly. Aton pushed him aside and confronted the Cultist. 'You're
Latimer, aren't you?'
The Cultist bowed stiffly and indicated
the symbol upon his hip. I am Latimer 25, adjutant of the third class to his
serenity, Sor 5.'
'And' -- Aton's white eyebrows lifted --
'you were with his serenity when he visited me last week, weren't you?'
Latimer bowed a second time.
'Now, then, what do you want?'
'Nothing that you would give me of your
own free will.'
'Sor 5 sent you, I suppose -- or is this
your own idea?'
'I won't answer that question.'
'Will there be any further visitors?'
'I won't answer that, either.'
Aton glanced at his timepiece and scowled.
'Now, man, what is it your master wants of me? I have fulfilled my end of the
bargain.'
Latimer smiled faintly, but said nothing.
'I asked him,' continued Aton angrily,
'for data only the Cult could supply, and it was given to me. For that, thank
you. In return I promised to prove the essential truth of the creed of the
Cult.'
'There was no need to prove that,' came
the proud retort. It stands proven by the Book of Revelations.'
'For the handful that constitute the Cult,
yes. Don't pretend to mistake my meaning. I offered to present scientific
backing for your beliefs. And I did!'
The Cultist's eyes narrowed bitterly.
'Yes, you did -- with a fox's subtlety, for your pretended explanation backed
our beliefs, and at the same time removed all necessity for them. You made of
the Darkness and of the Stars a natural phenomenon and removed all its real
significance. That was blasphemy.'
'If so, the fault isn't mine. The facts
exist. What can I do but state them?'
'Your "facts" are a fraud and a
delusion.'
Aton stamped angrily. 'How do you know?'
And the answer came with the certainty of
absolute faith. 'I know!'
The director purpled and Beenay whispered
urgently. Aton waved him silent. 'And what does Sor 5 want us to do? He still
thinks. I suppose, that in trying to warn the world to take measures against
the menace of madness, we are placing innumerable souls in jeopardy. We aren't
succeeding, if that means anything to him.'
'The attempt itself has done harm enough,
and your vicious effort to gain information by means of your devilish
instruments must be stopped. We obey the will of the Stars, and I only regret
that my clumsiness prevented me from wrecking your infernal devices.'
'It wouldn't have done you too much good,'
returned Aton. 'All our data, except for the direct evidence we intend
collecting right now, is already safely cached and well beyond possibility of
harm.' He smiled grimly. 'But that does not affect your present status as an
attempted burglar and criminal.'
He turned to the men behind him. 'Someone
call the police at Saro City.'
There was a cry of distaste from Sheerin.
'Damn it, Aton, what's wrong with you? There's no time for that. Here' -- he
hustled his way forward -- 'let me handle this.'
Aton stared down his nose at the
psychologist. 'This is not the time for your monkeyshines, Sheerin. Will you
please let me handle this my own way? Right now you are a complete outsider
here, and don't forget it.'
Sheerin's mouth twisted eloquently. 'Now
why should we go to the impossible trouble of calling the police -- with Beta's
eclipse a matter of minutes from now -- when this young man here is perfectly
willing to pledge his word of honor to remain and cause no trouble whatsoever?'
The Cultist answered promptly, 'I will do
no such thing. You're free to do what you want, but it's only fair to warn you
that just as soon as I get my chance I'm going to finish what I came out here
to do. If it's my word of honor you're relying on, you'd better call the
police.'
Sheerin smiled in a friendly fashion.
'You're a determined cuss, aren't you? Well, I'll explain something. Do you see
that young man at the window? He's a strong, husky fellow, quite handy with his
fists, and he's an outsider besides. Once the eclipse starts there will be
nothing for him to do except keep an eye on you. Besides him, there will be
myself -- a little too stout for active fisticuffs, but still able to help.'
'Well, what of it?' demanded Latimer
frozenly.
'Listen and I'll tell you,' was the reply.
'Just as soon as the eclipse starts, we're going to take you, Theremon and I,
and deposit you in a little closet with one door, to which is attached one giant
lock and no windows. You will remain there for the duration.'
'And afterward,' breathed Latimer
fiercely, 'there'll be no one to let me out. I know as well as you do what the
coming of the Stars means -- I know it far better than you. With all your minds
gone, you are not likely to free me. Suffocation or slow starvation, is it?
About what I might have expected from a group of scientists. But I don't give
my word. It's a matter of principle, and I won't discuss it further.'
Aton seemed perturbed. His faded eyes were
troubled.
'Really, Sheerin, locking him -- '
'Please!' Sheerin motioned him impatiently
to silence. 'I don't think for a moment things will go that far. Latimer has
just tried a clever little bluff, but I'm not a psychologist just because I like
the sound of the word.' He grinned at the Cultist. 'Come now, you don't really
think I'm trying anything as crude as slow starvation. My dear Latimer, if I
lock you in the closet, you are not going to see the Darkness, and you are not
going to see the Stars. It does not take much knowledge of the fundamental
creed of the Cult to realize that for you to be hidden from the Stars when they
appear means the loss of your immortal soul. Now, I believe you to be an
honorable man. I'll accept your word of honor to make no further effort to
disrupt proceedings, if you'll offer it.'
A vein throbbed in Latimer's temple, and
he seemed to shrink within himself as he said thickly, 'You have it!' And then
he added with swift fury. 'But it is my consolation that you will all be damned
for your deeds of today.' He turned on his heel and stalked to the high
three-legged stool by the door.
Sheerin nodded to the columnist. 'Take a
seat next to him, Theremon -- just as a formality. Hey, Theremon!'
But the newspaperman didn't move. He had
gone pale to the lips. 'Look at that!' The finger he pointed toward the sky
shook, and his voice was dry and cracked.
There was one simultaneous gasp as every
eye followed the pointing finger and, for one breathless moment, stared
frozenly.
Beta was chipped on one side!
The tiny bit of encroaching blackness was
perhaps the width of a fingernail, but to the staring watchers it magnified
itself into the crack of doom.
Only for a moment they watched, and after
that there was a shrieking confusion that was even shorter of duration and
which gave way to an orderly scurry of activity -- each man at his prescribed
job. At the crucial moment there was no time for emotion. The men were merely
scientists with work to do. Even Aton had melted away.
Sheerin said prosaically. 'First contact
must have been made fifteen minutes ago. A little early, but pretty good
considering the uncertainties involved in the calculation.' He looked about him
and then tiptoed to Theremon, who still remained staring out the window, and
dragged him away gently.
'Aton is furious,' he whispered, 'so stay
away. He missed first contact on account of this fuss with Latimer, and if you
get in his way he'll have you thrown out the window.'
Theremon nodded shortly and sat down.
Sheerin stared in surprise at him.
'The devil, man,' he exclaimed, 'you're
shaking.'
'Eh?' Theremon licked dry lips and then
tried to smile. 'I don't feel very well, and that's a fact.'
The psychologist's eyes hardened. 'You're
not losing your nerve?'
'No!' cried Theremon in a flash of
indignation. 'Give me a chance, will you? I haven't really believed this
rigmarole -- not way down beneath, anyway -- till just this minute. Give me a
chance to get used to the idea. You've been preparing yourself for two months
or more.'
'You're right, at that,' replied Sheerin
thoughtfully. 'Listen! Have you got a family -- parents, wife, children?'
Theremon shook his head. 'You mean the
Hideout, I suppose. No, you don't have to worry about that. I have a sister,
but she's two thousand miles away. I don't even know her exact address.'
'Well, then, what about yourself? You've
got time to get there, and they're one short anyway, since I left. After all,
you're not needed here, and you'd make a darned fine addition -- '
Theremon looked at the other wearily. 'You
think I'm scared stiff, don't you? Well, get this, mister. I'm a newspaperman
and I've been assigned to cover a story. I intend covering it.'
There was a faint smile on the
psychologist's face. 'I see. Professional honor, is that it?'
'You might call it that. But, man. I'd
give my right arm for another bottle of that sockeroo juice even half the size
of the one you bogged. If ever a fellow needed a drink, I do.'
He broke off. Sheerin was nudging him
violently. 'Do you hear that? Listen!'
Theremon followed the motion of the
other's chin and stared at the Cultist, who, oblivious to all about him, faced
the window, a look of wild elation on his face, droning to himself the while in
singsong fashion.
'What's he saying?' whispered the
columnist.
'He's quoting Book of Revelations, fifth
chapter,' replied Sheerin. Then, urgently, 'Keep quiet and listen, I tell you.'
The Cultist's voice had risen in a sudden
increase of fervor: ' "And it came to pass that in those days the Sun, Beta,
held lone vigil in the sky for ever longer periods asthe revolutions passed;
until such time as for full half a revolution, it alone, shrunken and cold,
shone down upon Lagash.
' "And men did assemble in the public
squares and in the highways, there to debate and to marvel at the sight, for a
strange depression had seized them. Their minds were troubled and their speech
confused, for the souls of men awaited the coming of the Stars.
' "And in the city of Trigon, at high
noon, Vendret 2 came forth and said unto the men of Trigon, 'Lo, ye sinners!
Though ye scorn the ways of righteousness, yet will the time of reckoning come.
Even now the Cave approaches to swallow Lagash; yea, and all it contains.'
' "And even as he spoke the lip of
the Cave of Darkness passed the edge of Beta so that to all Lagash it was
hidden from sight. Loud were the cries of men as it vanished, and great the
fear of soul that fell upon them.
' "It came to pass that the Darkness
of the Cave fell upon Lagash, and there was no light on all the surface of
Lagash. Men were even as blinded, nor could one man see his neighbor, though he
felt his breath upon his face.
' "And in this blackness there
appeared the Stars, in countless numbers, and to the strains of music of such
beauty that the very leaves of the trees cried out in wonder.
' "And in that moment the souls of
men departed from them, and their abandoned bodies became even as beasts; yea,
even as brutes of the wild; so that through the blackened streets of the cities
of Lagash they prowled with wild cries.
' "From the Stars there then reached
down the Heavenly Flame, and where it touched, the cities of Lagash flamed to
utter destruction, so that of man and of the works of man nought remained.
'Even then -- " '
There was a subtle change in Latimer's
tone. His eyes had not shifted, but somehow he had become aware of the absorbed
attention of the other two. Easily, without pausing for breath, the timbre of
his voice shifted and the syllables became more liquid.
Theremon, caught by surprise, stared. The
words seemed on the border of familiarity. There was an elusive shift in the
accent, a tiny change in the vowel stress; nothing more -- yet Latimer had
become thoroughly unintelligible.
Sheerin smiled slyly. 'He shifted to some
old-cycle tongue, probably their traditional second cycle. That was the
language in which the Book of Revelations was originally written, you know.'
'It doesn't matter; I've heard enough.'
Theremon shoved his chair back and brushed his hair back with hands that no
longer shook. 'I feel much better now.'
'You do?' Sheerin seemed mildly surprised.
'I'll say I do. I had a bad case of
jitters just a while back. Listening to you and your gravitation and seeing
that eclipse start almost finished me. But this' -- he jerked a contemptuous
thumb at the yellow-bearded Cultist -- 'this is the sort of thing my nurse used
to tell me. I've been laughing at that sort of thing all my life. I'm not going
to let it scare me now.'
He drew a deep breath and said with a
hectic gaiety, 'But if I expect to keep on the good side of myself. I'm going
to turn my chair away from the window.'
Sheerin said, 'Yes, but you'd better talk
lower. Aton just lifted his head out of that box he's got it stuck into and
gave you a look that should have killed you.'
Theremon made a mouth. 'I forgot about the
old fellow.' With elaborate care he turned the chair from the window, cast one
distasteful look over his shoulder, and said, 'It has occurred to me that there
must be considerable immunity against this Star madness.'
The psychologist did not answer
immediately. Beta was past its zenith now, and the square of bloody sunlight
that outlined the window upon the floor had lifted into Sheerin's lap. He
stared at its dusky color thoughtfully and then bent and squinted into the sun
itself.
The chip in its side had grown to a black
encroachment that covered a third of Beta. He shuddered, and when he
straightened once more his florid cheeks did not contain quite as much color as
they had had previously.
With a smile that was almost apologetic,
he reversed his chair also. 'There are probably two million people in Saro City
that are all trying to join the Cult at once in one gigantic revival.' Then,
ironically. 'The Cult is in for an hour of unexampled prosperity. I trust
they'll make the most of it. Now, what was it you said?'
'Just this. How did the Cultists manage to
keep the Book of Revelations going from cycle to cycle, and how on Lagash did
it get written in the first place? There must have been some sort of immunity,
for if everyone had gone mad, who would be left to write the book?'
Sheerin stared at his questioner ruefully.
'Well, now, young man, there isn't any eyewitness answer to that, but we've got
a few damned good notions as to what happened. You see. there are three kinds
of people who might remain relatively unaffected. First, the very few who don't
see the Stars at all: the seriously retarded or those who drink themselves into
a stupor at the beginning of the eclipse and remain so to the end. We leave
them out -- because they aren't really witnesses.
'Then there are children below six, to
whom the world as a whole is too new and strange for them to be too frightened
at Stars and Darkness. They would be just another item in an already surprising
world. You see that, don't you?'
The other nodded doubtfully. 'I suppose
so.'
'Lastly, there are those whose minds are
too coarsely grained to be entirely toppled. The very insensitive would be
scarcely affected -- oh, such people as some of our older, work-broken
peasants. Well, the children would have fugitive memories, and that, combined
with the confused, incoherent babblings of the half-mad morons, formed the
basis for the Book of Revelations.
'Naturally, the book was based, in the
first place, on the testimony of those least qualified to serve as historians;
that is, children and morons; and was probably edited and re-edited through the
cycles.'
'Do you suppose,' broke in Theremon, 'that
they carried the book through the cycles the way we're planning on handing on
the secret of gravitation?'
Sheerin shrugged. 'Perhaps, but their
exact method is unimportant. They do it, somehow. The point I was getting at
was that the book can't help but be a mass of distortion, even if it is based
on fact. For instance, do you remember the experiment with the holes in the
roof that Faro and Yimot tried -- the one that didn't work?'
'Yes.'
'You know why it didn't w -- ' He stopped
and rose in alarm, for Aton was approaching, his face a twisted mask of
consternation. 'What's happened?'
Aton drew him aside and Sheerin could feel
the fingers on his elbow twitching.
'Not so loud!' Aton's voice was low and
tortured. 'I've just gotten word from the Hideout on the private line.'
Sheerin broke in anxiously. 'They are in
trouble?'
'Not they.' Aton stressed the pronoun
significantly. 'They sealed themselves off just a while ago, and they're going
to stay buried till day after tomorrow. They're safe. But the city. Sheerin --
it's a shambles. You have no idea -- ' He was having difficulty in speaking.
'Well?' snapped Sheerin impatiently. 'What
of it? It will get worse. What are you shaking about?' Then, suspiciously, 'How
do you feel?'
Aton's eyes sparked angrily at the
insinuation, and then faded to anxiety once more. 'You don't understand. The
Cultists are active. They're rousing the people to storm the Observatory --
promising them immediate entrance into grace, promising them salvation,
promising them anything. What are we to do, Sheerin?'
Sheerin's head bent, and he stared in long
abstraction at his toes. He tapped his chin with one knuckle, then looked up
and said crisply, 'Do? What is there to do? Nothing at all. Do the men know of
this?'
'No, of course not!'
'Good! Keep it that way. How long till
totality?'
'Not quite an hour.'
'There's nothing to do but gamble. It will
take time to organize any really formidable mob, and it will take more time to
get them out here. We're a good five miles from the city -- '
He glared out the window, down the slopes
to where the farmed patches gave way to clumps of white houses in the suburbs;
down to where the metropolis itself was a blur on the horizon -- a mist in the
waning blaze of Beta.
He repeated without turning. 'It will take
time. Keep on working and pray that totality comes first.'
Beta was cut in half, the line of division
pushing a slight concavity into the still-bright portion of the Sun. It was
like a gigantic eyelid shutting slantwise over the light of a world.
The faint clatter of the room in which he
stood faded into oblivion, and he sensed only the thick silence of the fields
outside. The very insects seemed frightened mute. And things were dim.
He jumped at the voice in his ear.
Theremon said. 'Is something wrong?'
'Eh? Er -- no. Get back to the chair.
We're in the way.' They slipped back to their comer, but the psychologist did
not speak for a time. He lifted a finger and loosened his collar. He twisted
his neck back and forth but found no relief. He looked up suddenly.
'Are you having any difficulty in
breathing?'
The newspaperman opened his eyes wide and
drew two or three long breaths. 'No. Why?'
'I looked out the window too long, I
suppose. The dimness got me. Difficulty in breathing is one of the first symptoms
of a claustrophobic attack. '
Theremon drew another long breath. 'Well,
it hasn't got me yet. Say, here's another of the fellows.'
Beenay had interposed his bulk between the
light and the pair in the corner, and Sheerin squinted up at him anxiously. 'Hello,
Beenay.'
The astronomer shifted his weight to the
other foot and smiled feebly. 'You won't mind if I sit down awhile and join in
the talk? My cameras are set, and there's nothing to do till totality.' He
paused and eyed the Cultist, who fifteen minutes earlier had drawn a small,
skin-bound book from his sleeve and had been poring intently over it ever
since.
'That rat hasn't been making trouble, has
he?'
Sheerin shook his head. His shoulders were
thrown back and he frowned his concentration as he forced himself to breathe
regularly. He said, 'Have you had any trouble breathing, Beenay?'
Beenay sniffed the air in his turn. 'It
doesn't seem stuffy to me.'
'A touch of claustrophobia,' explained
Sheerin apologetically.
'Ohhh! It worked itself differently with
me. I get the impression that my eyes are going back on me. Things seem to blur
and -- well, nothing is clear. And it's cold, too.'
'Oh, it's cold, all right. That's no
illusion.' Theremon grimaced. 'My toes feel as if I've been shipping them
cross-country in a refrigerating car.'
'What we need,' put in Sheerin, 'is to
keep our minds busy with extraneous affairs. I was telling you a while ago,
Theremon, why Faro's experiments with the holes in the roof came to nothing.'
'You were just beginning,' replied
Theremon. He encircled a knee with both arms and nuzzled his chin against it.
'Well, as I started to say, they were
misled by taking the Book of Revelations literally. There probably wasn't any
sense in attaching any physical significance to the Stars. It might be, you
know, that in the presence of total Darkness, the mind finds it absolutely
necessary to create light. This illusion of light might be all the Stars there
really are.'
'In other words,' interposed Theremon,
'you mean the Stars arc the results of the madness and not one of the causes.
Then, what good will Beenay's photographs be?'
'To prove that it is an illusion, maybe;
or to prove the opposite; for all I know. Then again -- '
But Beenay had drawn his chair closer, and
there was an expression of sudden enthusiasm on his face. 'Say, I'm glad you
two got onto this subject.' His eyes narrowed and he lifted one finger. 'I've
been thinking about these Stars and I've got a really cute notion. Of course
it's strictly ocean foam, and I'm not trying to advance it seriously, but I
think it's interesting. Do you want to hear it?'
He seemed half reluctant, but Sheerin
leaned back and said, 'Go ahead! I'm listening.'
'Well, then, supposing there were other
suns in the universe.' He broke off a little bashfully. 'I mean suns that are
so far away that they're too dim to see. It sounds as if I've been reading some
of that fantastic fiction, I suppose.'
'Not necessarily. Still, isn't that
possibility eliminated by the fact that, according to the Law of Gravitation,
they would make themselves evident by their attractive forces?'
'Not if they were far enough off,'
rejoined Beenay, 'really far off -- maybe as much as four light years, or even
more. We'd never be able to detect perturbations then, because they'd be too
small. Say that there were a lot of suns that far off; a dozen or two, maybe.'
Theremon whistled melodiously. 'What an
idea for a good Sunday supplement article. Two dozen suns in a universe eight
light years across. Wow! That would shrink our world into insignificance. The
readers would eat it up.'
'Only an idea,' said Beenay with a grin,
'but you see the point. During an eclipse, these dozen suns would become
visible because there'd be no real sunlight to drown them out. Since they're so
far off, they'd appear small, like so many little marbles. Of course the
Cultists talk of millions of Stars, but that's probably exaggeration. There
just isn't any place in the universe you could put a million suns -- unless
they touch one another.'
Sheerin had listened with gradually
increasing interest. 'You've hit something there, Beenay. And exaggeration is
just exactly what would happen. Our minds, as you probably know, can't grasp
directly any number higher than five; above that there is only the concept of "many".
A dozen would become a million just like that. A damn good idea!'
'And I've got another cute little notion,'
Beenay said. 'Have you ever thought what a simple problem gravitation would be if
only you had a sufficiently simple system? Supposing you had a universe in
which there was a planet with only one sun. The planet would travel in a
perfect ellipse and the exact nature of the gravitational force would be so
evident it could be accepted as an axiom. Astronomers on such a world would
start off with gravity probably before they even invented the telescope.
Naked-eye observation would be enough.'
'But would such a system be dynamically
stable?' questioned Sheerin doubtfully.
'Sure! They call it the
"one-and-one" case. It's been worked out mathematically, but it's the
philosophical implications that interest me.'
'It's nice to think about,' admitted
Sheerin, 'as a pretty abstraction -- like a perfect gas, or absolute zero.'
'Of course,' continued Beenay, 'there's
the catch that life would be impossible on such a planet. It wouldn't get
enough heat and light, and if it rotated there would be total Darkness half of
each day. You couldn't expect life -- which is fundamentally dependent upon
light -- to develop under those conditions. Besides -- '
Sheerin's chair went over backward as he
sprang to his feet in a rude interruption. 'Aton's brought out the lights.'
Beenay said, 'Huh,' turned to stare, and
then grinned halfway around his head in open relief.
There were half a dozen foot-long,
inch-thick rods cradled in Aton's arms. He glared over them at the assembled
staff members.
'Get back to work, all of you. Sheerin,
come here and help me!'
Sheerin trotted to the older man's side
and, one by one, in utter silence, the two adjusted the rods in makeshift metal
holders suspended from the walls.
With the air of one carrying through the
most sacred item of a religious ritual, Sheerin scraped a large, clumsy match
into spluttering life and passed it to Aton, who carried the flame to the upper
end of one of the rods.
It hesitated there awhile, playing
futilely about the tip, until a sudden, crackling flare cast Aton's lined face
into yellow highlights. He withdrew the match and a spontaneous cheer rattled
the window.
The rod was topped by six inches of
wavering flame! Methodically, the other rods were lighted, until six
independent fires turned the rear of the room yellow.
The light was dim, dimmer even than the
tenuous sunlight. The flames reeled crazily, giving birth to drunken, swaying
shadows. The torches smoked devilishly and smelled like a bad day in the
kitchen. But they emitted yellow light.
There was something about yellow light,
after four hours of somber, dimming Beta. Even Latimer had lifted his eyes from
his book and stared in wonder.
Sheerin warmed his hands at the nearest,
regardless of the soot that gathered upon them in a fine, gray powder, and
muttered ecstatically to himself. 'Beautiful! Beautiful! I never realized
before what a wonderful color yellow is.'
But Theremon regarded the torches
suspiciously. He wrinkled his nose at the rancid odor and said, 'What are those
things?'
'Wood,' said Sheerin shortly.
'Oh, no, they're not. They aren't burning.
The top inch is charred and the flame just keeps shooting up out of nothing.'
'That's the beauty of it. This is a really
efficient artificial-light mechanism. We made a few hundred of them, but most
went to the Hideout, of course. You see' -- he turned and wiped his blackened
hands upon his handkerchief -- 'you take the pithy core of coarse water reeds,
dry them thoroughly, and soak them in animal grease. Then you set fire to it
and the grease burns, little by little. These torches will burn for almost half
an hour without stopping. Ingenious, isn't it? It was developed by one of our
own young men at Saro University.'
After the momentary sensation, the dome
had quieted. Latimer had carried his chair directly beneath a torch and
continued reading, lips moving in the monotonous recital of invocations to the
Stars. Beenay had drifted away to his cameras once more, and Theremon seized
the opportunity to add to his notes on the article he was going to write for
the Saro City Chronicle the next day -- a procedure he had been following for
the last two hours in a perfectly methodical, perfectly conscientious and, as
he was well aware, perfectly meaningless fashion. But, as the gleam of
amusement in Sheerin's eyes indicated, careful note-taking occupied his mind
with something other than the fact that the sky was gradually turning a
horrible deep purple-red, as if it were one gigantic, freshly peeled beet; and
so it fulfilled its purpose.
The air grew, somehow, denser. Dusk, like
a palpable entity, entered the room, and the dancing circle of yellow light
about the torches etched itself into ever-sharper distinction against the
gathering grayness beyond. There was the odor of smoke and the presence of
little chuckling sounds that the torches made as they burned; the soft pad of
one of the men circling the table at which he worked, on hesitant tiptoes; the
occasional indrawn breath of someone trying to retain composure in a world that
was retreating into the shadow.
It was Theremon who first heard the
extraneous noise. It was a vague, unorganized impression of sound that would
have gone unnoticed but for the dead silence that prevailed within the dome.
The newsman sat upright and replaced his
notebook. He held his breath and listened; then, with considerable reluctance,
threaded his way between the solarscope and one of Beenay's cameras and stood
before the window.
The silence ripped to fragments at his
startled shout: 'Sheerin!'
Work stopped! The psychologist was at his
side in a moment. Aton joined him. Even Yimot 70, high in his little lean-back
seat at the eyepiece of the gigantic solarscope, paused and looked downward.
Outside, Beta was a mere smoldering
splinter, taking one last desperate look at Lagash. The eastern horizon, in the
direction of the city, was lost in Darkness, and the road from Saro to the
Observatory was a dull-red line bordered on both sides by wooded tracts, the
trees of which had somehow lost individuality and merged into a continuous
shadowy mass.
But it was the highway itself that held
attention, for along it there surged another, and infinitely menacing, shadowy
mass.
Aton cried in a cracked voice, 'The madmen
from the city! They've come!'
'How long to totality?' demanded Sheerin.
'Fifteen minutes, but . . . but they'll be
here in five.'
'Never mind, keep the men working. We'll
hold them off. This place is built like a fortress. Aton, keep an eye on our
young Cultist just for luck. Theremon, come with me.'
Sheerin was out the door, and Theremon was
at his heels. The stairs stretched below them in tight, circular sweeps about
the central shaft, fading into a dank and dreary grayness.
The first momentum of their rush had
carried them fifty feet down, so that the dim, flickering yellow from the open
door of the dome had disappeared and both above and below the same dusky shadow
crushed in upon them.
Sheerin paused, and his pudgy hand
clutched at his chest. His eyes bulged and his voice was a dry cough. 'I can't
. . . breathe . . . Go down . . . yourself. Close all doors -- '
Theremon took a few downward steps, then
turned.
'Wait! Can you hold out a minute?' He was
panting himself. The air passed in and out his lungs like so much molasses, and
there was a little germ of screeching panic in his mind at the thought of
making his way into the mysterious Darkness below by himself.
Theremon, after all, was afraid of the
dark!
'Stay here,' he said. I'll be back in a
second.' He dashed upward two steps at a time, heart pounding -- not altogether
from the exertion -- tumbled into the dome and snatched a torch from its
holder. It was foul-smelling, and the smoke smarted his eyes almost blind, but
he clutched that torch as if he wanted to kiss it for joy, and its flame
streamed backward as he hurtled down the stairs again.
Sheerin opened his eyes and moaned as
Theremon bent over him. Theremon shook him roughly. 'All right, get a hold on
yourself. We've got light.'
He held the torch at tiptoe height and,
propping the tottering psychologist by an elbow, made his way downward in the
middle of the protecting circle of illumination.
The offices on the ground floor still
possessed what light there was, and Theremon felt the horror about him relax.
'Here,' he said brusquely, and passed the
torch to Sheerin. 'You can hear them outside.'
And they could. Little scraps of hoarse,
wordless shouts.
But Sheerin was right; the Observatory was
built like a fortress. Erected in the last century, when the neo-Gavottian
style of architecture was at its ugly height, it had been designed for
stability and durability rather than for beauty.
The windows were protected by the
grillwork of inch-thick iron bars sunk deep into the concrete sills. The walls
were solid masonry that an earthquake couldn't have touched, and the main door
was a huge oaken slab rein -- forced with iron. Theremon shot the bolts and
they slid shut with a dull clang.
At the other end of the corridor, Sheerin
cursed weakly. He pointed to the lock of the back door which had been neatly
jimmied into uselessness.
'That must be how Latimer got in,' he
said.
'Well, don't stand there,' cried Theremon
impatiently. 'Help drag up the furniture -- and keep that torch out of my eyes.
The smoke's killing me.'
He slammed the heavy table up against the
door as he spoke, and in two minutes had built a barricade which made up for what
it lacked in beauty and symmetry by the sheer inertia of its massiveness.
Somewhere, dimly, far off, they could hear
the battering of naked fists upon the door; and the screams and yells from
outside had a sort of half reality.
That mob had set off from Saro City with
only two things in mind: the attainment of Cultist salvation by the destruction
of the Observatory, and a maddening fear that all but paralyzed them. There was
no time to think of ground cars, or of weapons, or of leadership, or even of organization.
They made for the Observatory on foot and assaulted it with bare hands.
And now that they were there, the last
flash of Beta, the last ruby-red drop of flame, flickered feebly over a
humanity that had left only stark, universal fear!
Theremon groaned, 'Let's get back to the
dome!'
In the dome, only Yimot, at the
solarscope, had kept his place. The rest were clustered about the cameras, and
Beenay was giving his instructions in a hoarse, strained voice.
'Get it straight, all of you. I'm snapping
Beta just before totality and changing the plate. That will leave one of you to
each camera. You all know about . . . about times of exposure -- '
There was a breathless murmur of
agreement.
Beenay passed a hand over his eyes. 'Are
the torches still burning? Never mind, I see them!' He was leaning hard against
the back of a chair. 'Now remember, don't. . . don't try to look for good
shots. Don't waste time trying to get t-two stars at a time in the scope field.
One is enough. And . . . and if you feel yourself going, get away from the
camera.'
At the door, Sheerin whispered to
Theremon, 'Take me to Aton. I don't see him.'
The newsman did not answer immediately.
The vague forms of the astronomers wavered and blurred, and the torches
overhead had become only yellow splotches.
'It's dark,' he whimpered.
Sheerin held out his hand. 'Aton.' He
stumbled forward. 'Aton!'
Theremon stepped after and seized his arm.
'Wait, I'll take you.' Somehow he made his way across the room. He closed his
eyes against the Darkness and his mind against the chaos within it.
No one heard them or paid attention to
them. Sheerin stumbled against the wall. 'Aton!'
The psychologist felt shaking hands
touching him, then withdrawing, a voice muttering, 'Is that you, Sheerin?'
'Aton!' He strove to breathe normally.
'Don't worry about the mob. The place will hold them off.'
Latimer, the Cultist, rose to his feet,
and his face twisted in desperation. His word was pledged, and to break it
would mean placing his soul in mortal peril. Yet that word had been forced from
him and had not been given freely. The Stars would come soon! He could not
stand by and allow -- And yet his word was pledged.
Beenay's face was dimly flushed as it
looked upward at Beta's last ray, and Latimer, seeing him bend over his camera,
made his decision. His nails cut the flesh of his palms as he tensed himself.
He staggered crazily as he started his
rush. There was nothing before him but shadows; the very floor beneath his feet
lacked substance. And then someone was upon him and he went down with clutching
fingers at his throat.
He doubled his knee and drove it hard into
his assailant. 'Let me up or I'll kill you.'
Theremon cried out sharply and muttered
through a blinding haze of pain. 'You double-crossing rat!'
The newsman seemed conscious of everything
at once. He heard Beenay croak, 'I've got it. At your cameras, men!' and then
there was the strange awareness that the last thread of sunlight had thinned
out and snapped.
Simultaneously he heard one last choking
gasp from Beenay, and a queer little cry from Sheerin, a hysterical giggle that
cut off in a rasp -- and a sudden silence, a strange, deadly silence from
outside.
And Latimer had gone limp in his loosening
grasp. Theremon peered into the Cultist's eyes and saw the blankness of them,
staring upward, mirroring the feeble yellow of the torches. He saw the bubble
of froth upon Latimer's lips and heard the low animal whimper in Latimer's
throat.
With the slow fascination of fear, he
lifted himself on one arm and turned his eyes toward the blood-curdling
blackness of the window.
Through it shone the Stars!
Not Earth's feeble thirty-six hundred
Stars visible to the eye; Lagash was in the center of a giant cluster. Thirty
thousand mighty suns shone down in a soul-searing splendor that was more
frighteningly cold in its awful indifference than the bitter wind that shivered
across the cold, horribly bleak world.
Theremon staggered to his feet, his
throat, constricting him to breathlessness, all the muscles of his body
writhing in an intensity of terror and sheer fear beyond bearing. He was going
mad and knew it, and somewhere deep inside a bit of sanity was screaming,
struggling to fight off the hopeless flood of black terror. It was very
horrible to go mad and know that you were going mad -- to know that in a little
minute you would be here physically and yet all the real essence would be dead
and drowned in the black madness. For this was the Dark -- the Dark and the Cold
and the Doom. The bright walls of the universe were shattered and their awful
black fragments were falling down to crush and squeeze and obliterate him.
He jostled someone crawling on hands and
knees, but stumbled somehow over him. Hands groping at his tortured throat, he
limped toward the flame of the torches that filled all his mad vision.
'Light!' he screamed.
Aton, somewhere, was crying, whimpering
horribly like a terribly frightened child. 'Stars -- all the Stars -- we didn't
know at all. We didn't know anything. We thought six stars in a universe is
something the Stars didn't notice is Darkness forever and ever and ever and the
walls are breaking in and we didn't know we couldn't know and anything -- '
Someone clawed at the torch, and it fell
and snuffed out. In the instant, the awful splendor of the indifferent Stars
leaped nearer to them.
On the horizon outside the window, in the
direction of Saro City, a crimson glow began growing, strengthening in
brightness, that was not the glow of a sun.
The long night had come again.
By Arthur C. Clarke
Is history ever pure
unadulterated fact?
No one could remember when
the tribe had begun its long journey. The land of great rolling plains that had
been its first home was now no more than a half-forgotten dream.
For many years Shann and his
people had been fleeing through a country of low hills and sparkling lakes, and
now the mountains lay ahead. This summer they must cross them to the southern
lands. There was little time to lose. The white terror that had come down from
the Poles, grinding continents to dust and freezing the very air before it, was
less than a day's march behind.
Shann wondered if the
glaciers could climb the mountains ahead, and within his heart he dared to
kindle a little flame of hope. This might prove a barrier against which even
the remorseless ice would batter in vain. In the southern lands of which the
legends spoke, his people might find refuge at last.
It took weeks to discover a
pass through which the tribe and the animals could travel. When midsummer came,
they had camped in a lonely valley where the air was thin and the stars shone
with a brilliance no one had ever seen before.
The summer was waning when
Shann took his two sons and went ahead to explore the way. For three days they
climbed, and for three nights slept as best they could on the freezing rocks,
and on the fourth morning there was nothing ahead but a gentle rise to a cairn
of gray stones built by other travelers, centuries ago.
Shann felt himself trembling,
and not with cold, as they walked toward the little pyramid of stones. His sons
had fallen behind. No one spoke, for too much was at stake. In a little while
they would know if all their hopes had been betrayed.
To east and west, the wall of
mountains curved away as if embracing the land beneath. Below lay endless miles
of undulating plain, with a great river swinging across it in tremendous loops.
It was a fertile land; one in which the tribe could raise crops knowing that
there would be no need to flee before the harvest came.
Then Shann lifted his eyes to
the south, and saw the doom of all his hopes. For there at the edge of the
world glimmered that deadly light he had seen so often to the north-the glint
of ice below the horizon.
There was no way forward.
Through all the years of flight, the glaciers from the south had been advancing
to meet them. Soon they would be crushed beneath the moving walls of ice . . .
Southern glaciers did not
reach the mountains until a generation later. In that last summer the sons of
Shann carried the sacred treasures of the tribe to the lonely cairn overlooking
the plain. The ice that had once gleamed below the horizon was now almost at
their feet. By spring it would be splintering against the mountain walls.
No one understood the
treasures now. They were from a past too distant for the understanding of any
man alive. Their origins were lost in the mists that surrounded the Golden Age,
and how they had come at last into the possession of this wandering tribe was a
story that now would never be told. For it was the story of a civilization that
had passed beyond recall.
Once, all these pitiful
relics had been treasured for some good reason, and now they had become sacred
though their meaning had long been lost. The print in the old books had faded
centuries ago though much of the lettering was still visible-if there had been
any to read it. But many generations had passed since anyone had had a use for
a set of seven-figure logarithms, an atlas of the world, and the score of
Sibelius' Seventh Symphony printed, according to the flyleaf, by H. K. Chu and
Sons, at the City of Pekin in the year 2371 A.D.
The old books were placed
reverently in the little crypt that had been made to receive them. There
followed a motley collection of fragments-gold and platinum coins, a broken
telephoto lens, a watch, a cold-light lamp, a microphone, the cutter from an
electric razor, some midget radio tubes, the flotsam that had been left behind
when the great tide of civilization had ebbed forever.
All these treasures were
carefully stowed away in their resting place. Then came three more relics, the
most sacred of all because the least understood.
The first was a strangely
shaped piece of metal, showing the coloration of intense heat. It was, in its
way, the most pathetic of all these, symbols from the past, for it told of
man's greatest achievement and of the future he might have known. The mahogany
stand on which it was mounted bore a silver plate with the inscription:
Auxiliary Igniter from
Starboard Jet Spaceship "Morning Star" Earth-Moon, A.D. 1985
Next followed another miracle
of the ancient science-a sphere of transparent plastic with strangely shaped
pieces of metal imbedded in it. At its center was a tiny capsule of synthetic
radio element, surrounded by the converting screens that shifted its radiation
far down the spectrum. As long as the material remained active, the sphere
would be a tiny radio transmitter, broadcasting power in all directions. Only a
few of these spheres had ever been made.-They had been designed as perpetual
beacons to mark the orbits of the asteroids. But man had never reached the
asteroids and the beacons had never been used.
Last of all was a flat,
circular tin, wide in comparison with its depth. It was heavily sealed, and
rattled when shaken. The tribal lore predicted that disaster would follow if it
was ever opened, and no one knew that it held one of the great works of art of
nearly a thousand years before.
The work was finished. The
two men rolled the stones back into place and slowly began to descend the mountainside.
Even to the last, man had given some thought to the future and had tried to
preserve something for posterity.
That winter the great waves
of ice began their first assault on the mountains, attacking from north and
south. The foothills were overwhelmed in the first onslaught, and the glaciers
ground them into dust. But the mountains stood firm, and )When the summer came
the ice retreated for a while.
So, winter after winter, the
battle continued, and the roar of the avalanches, the grinding of rock and the
explosions of splintering ice filled the air with tumult. No war of man's had
been fiercer than this, and even man's battles had not quite engulfed the globe
as this had done.
At last the tidal waves of
ice began to subside and to creep slowly down the flanks of the mountains they
had never quite subdued. The valleys and passes were still firmly in their
grip. It was stalemate. The glaciers had met their match, but their defeat was
too late to be of any use to man.
So the centuries passed, and
presently there happened something that must occur once at least in the history
of every world in the universe, no matter how remote and lonely it may be.
The ship from Venus came five
thousand years too late, but its crew knew nothing of this. While still many
millions of miles away, the telescopes had seen the great shroud of ice that
made Earth the most brilliant object in the sky next to the sun itself.
Here and there the dazzling
sheet was marred by black specks that revealed the presence of almost buried
mountains. That was all. The rolling oceans, the plains and forests, the
deserts and lakes -all that had been the world of man was sealed beneath the
ice, perhaps forever.
The ship closed in to Earth
and established an orbit less than a thousand miles away. For five days it
circled the planet, while cameras recorded all that was left to see and a
hundred instruments gathered information that would give the Venusian
scientists many years of work.
An actual landing was not
intended. There seemed little purpose in it. But on the sixth day the picture
changed. A panoramic monitor, driven to the limit of its amplification,
detected the dying radiation of the five-thousand-year-old beacon. Through all
the centuries, it had been sending out its signals with ever-failing strength
as its radioactive heart steadily weakened.
The monitor locked on the
beacon frequency. In the control room, a bell clamored for attention. A little
later, the Venusian ship broke free from its orbit and slanted down toward
Earth, toward a range of mountains that still towered proudly above the ice,
and to a cairn of gray stones that the years had scarcely touched . . . .
The great disk of the sun
blazed fiercely in a sky no longer veiled with mist, for the clouds that had
once hidden Venus had now completely gone. Whatever force had caused the change
in the sun's radiation had doomed one civilization, but had given birth to
another. Less than five thousand years before, the half-savage people of Venus
had seen sun and stars for the first time. Just as the science of Earth had
begun with astronomy, so had that of Venus, and on the warm, rich world that
man had never seen progress had been incredibly rapid.
Perhaps the Venusians had
been lucky. They never knew the Dark Age that held man enchained for a thousand
years. They missed the long detour into chemistry and mechanics but came at
once to the more fundamental laws of radiation physics. In the time that man
had taken to progress from the Pyramids to the rocket-propelled spaceship, the Venusians
had passed from the discovery of agriculture to antigravity itself-the ultimate
secret that man had never learned.
The warm ocean that still
bore most of the young planet's life rolled its breakers languidly against the
sandy shore. So new was this continent that the very sands were coarse and
gritty. There had not yet been time enough for the sea to wear them smooth.
The scientists lay half in
the water, their beautiful reptilian bodies gleaming in the sunlight. The
greatest minds of Venus had gathered on this shore from all the islands of the
planet. What they were going to hear they did not know, except that it
concerned the Third World and the mysterious race that had peopled it before
the coming of the ice.
. The Historian was standing
on the land, for the instruments he wished to use had no love of water. By his
side was a large machine which attracted many curious glances from his
colleagues. It was clearly concerned with optics, for a lens system projected
from it toward a screen of white material a dozen yards away.
The Historian began to speak.
Briefly he recapitulated what little had been discovered concerning the Third
Planet and its people.
He mentioned the centuries of
fruitless research that had failed to interpret a single word of the writings
of Earth. The planet had been inhabited by a race of great technical ability.
That, at least, was proved by the few pieces of machinery that had been found
in the cairn upon the mountain.
"We do not know why so
advanced a civilization came to an end," he observed. "Almost
certainly, it had sufficient knowledge to survive an ice Age. There must have
been some other factor of which we know nothing. Possibly disease or racial degeneration
may have been responsible. It has even been suggested that the tribal conflicts
endemic to our own species in prehistoric times may have continued on the Third
Planet after the coming of technology.
"Some philosophers
maintain that knowledge of machinery does not necessarily imply a high degree
of civilization, and it is theoretically possible to have wars in a society
possessing mechanical power, flight, and even radio. Such a conception is alien
to our thoughts, but we must admit its possibility. It would certainly account
for the downfall of the lost race.
"it has always been
assumed that we should never know anything of the physical form of the
creatures who lived on Planet Three. For centuries our artists have been
depicting scenes from the history of the dead world, peopling it with all
manner of fantastic beings. Most of these creations have resembled us more or
less closely, though it has often been pointed out that because we are reptiles
it does not follow that all intelligent life must necessarily be reptilian.
"We now know the answer
to one of the most baffling problems of history. At last, after hundreds of
years of research, we have discovered the exact form and nature of the ruling
life on the Third Planet."
There was a murmur of
astonishment from the assembled scientists. Some were so taken aback that they
disappeared for a while into the comfort of the ocean, as all Venusians were
apt to do in moments of stress. The Historian waited until his colleagues
reemerged into the element they so disliked. He himself was quite comfortable,
thanks to the tiny sprays that were continually playing over his body. With
their help he could live on land for many hours before having to return to the
ocean.
The excitement slowly
subsided and the lecturer continued:
"One of the most
puzzling of the objects found on Planet Three was a flat metal container
holding a great length of transparent plastic material, perforated at the edges
and wound tightly into a spool. This transparent tape at first seemed quite featureless,
but an examination with the new subelectronic microscope has shown that this is
not the case. Along the surface of the material, invisible to our eyes but
perfectly clear under the correct radiation, are literally thousands of tiny
pictures. It is believed that they were imprinted on the material by some
chemical means, and have faded with the passage of time.
"These pictures
apparently form a record of life as it was on the Third Planet at the height of
its civilization. They are not independent. Consecutive pictures are almost
identical, differing only in the detail of movement. The purpose of such a
record is obvious. It is only necessary to project the scenes in rapid
succession to give an illusion of continuous movement. We have made a machine
to do this, and I have here an exact reproduction of the picture sequence.
"The scenes you are now
going to witness take us back many thousands of years, to the great days of our
sister planet. They show a complex civilization, many of whose activities we
can only dimly understand. Life seems to have been very violent and energetic,
and much that you will see is quite baffling.
"It is clear that the
Third Planet was inhabited by a number of different species, none of them
reptilian. That is a blow to our pride, but the conclusion is inescapable. The
dominant type of life appears to have been a two-armed biped. It walked upright
and covered its body with some flexible material, possibly for protection
against the cold, since even before the Ice Age the planet was at a much lower
temperature than our own world. But I will not try your patience any further.
You will now see the record of which I have been speaking."
A brilliant light flashed
from the projector. There was a gentle whirring, and on the screen appeared
hundreds of strange beings moving rather jerkily to and fro. The picture
expanded to embrace one of the creatures, and the scientists could see that the
Historian's description had been correct.
The creature possessed two
eyes, set rather close together, but the other facial adornments were a little
obscure. There was a large orifice in the lower portion of the head that was
continually opening and closing. Possibly it had something to do with the
creature's breathing.
The scientists watched
spellbound as the strange being became involved in a series of fantastic
adventures. There was an incredibly violent conflict with another, slightly
different creature. It seemed
certain that they must both
be killed, but when it was all over neither seemed any the worse.
Then came a furious drive
over miles of country in a four wheeled mechanical device which was capable of
extraordinary feats of locomotion. The ride ended in a city packed with other
vehicles moving in all directions at breathtaking speeds. No one was surprised
to see two of the machines meet head-on with devastating results.
After that, events became
even more complicated. It was now quite obvious that it would take many years
of research to analyze and understand all that was happening. It was also clear
that the record was a work of art, somewhat stylized, rather than an exact
reproduction of life as it actually had been on the Third Planet.
Most of the scientists felt
themselves completely dazed when the sequence of pictures came to an end. There
was a final flurry of motion, in which the creature that had been the center of
interest became involved in some tremendous but incomprehensible catastrophe.
The picture contracted to a circle, centered on the creature's head.
The last scene of all was an
expanded view of its face, obviously expressing some powerful emotion. But
whether it was rage, grief, defiance, resignation or some other feeling could
not be guessed. The picture vanished. For a moment some lettering appeared on
the screen, then it was all over.
For several minutes there was
complete silence, save for the lapping of the waves upon the sand. The
scientists were too stunned to speak. The fleeting glimpse of Earth's
civilization had had a shattering effect on their minds. Then little groups began
to start talking together, first in whispers and then more and more loudly as
the implications of what they had seen became clearer. Presently the Historian
called for attention and addressed the meeting again.
"We are now
planning," he said, "a vast program of research to extract all
available knowledge from this record. Thousands of copies are being made for
distribution to all workers. You win appreciate the problems involved. The
psychologists in particular have an immense task confronting them.
"But I do not doubt that
we shall succeed. In another generation, who can say what we may not have
learned of this wonderful race? Before we leave, let us look again at our
remote cousins, whose wisdom may have surpassed our own but of whom so little
has survived."
Once more the final picture
flashed on the screen, motionless this time, for the projector had been
stopped. With something like awe, the scientists gazed at the stiff figure from
the past, while in turn the little biped stared back at them with its
characteristic expression of arrogant bad temper.
For the rest of time it would
symbolize the human race. The psychologists of Venus would analyze its actions
and watch its every movement until they could reconstruct its mind. Thousands
of books would be written about it. Intricate philosophies would be contrived
to account for its behavior.
But all. this labor, all this
research, would be utterly in vain. Perhaps the proud and lonely figure on the
screen was smiling sardonically at the scientists who were starting on their
age-long fruitless quest.
Its secret would be safe as
long as the universe endured, for no one now would ever read the lost language
of Earth. Millions of times in the ages to come those last few words would
flash across the screen, and none could ever guess their meaning:
............................A
Walt Disney Production.
by William H Shiras
Teachers and future
teachers of America please note this story. What is hiding behind the norm of
conformity in your classroom?
Peter Welles, psychiatrist,
eyed the boy thoughtfully. Why had Timothy Paul's teacher sent him for
examination?
"I don't know, myself,
that there's really anything wrong with Tim," Miss Page had told Dr.
Welles. "He seems perfectly normal. He's rather quiet as a rule, doesn't
volunteer answers in class or anything of that sort. He gets along well enough
with other boys and seems reasonably popular, al though he has no special
friends. His grades are satisfactory he gets B faithfully in all his work. But
when you've been teaching as long as I have. Peter, you get a feeling about
certain ones. There is a tension about him—a look in his eyes sometimes and he
is very absent minded."
"What would your guess
be?" Welles had asked. Sometimes these hunches were very valuable. Miss
Page had taught school for thirty-odd years; she had been Peter's teacher in
the past, and he thought highly of her opinion.
"I ought not to
say," she answered. "There's nothing to go on yet. But he might be
starting something, and if it could be headed off"
"Physicians are often
called before the symptoms are sufficiently marked for the doctor to be able to
see them," said Welles. "A patient, or the mother of a child, or any
practiced observer, can often see that something is going to be wrong. But it's
hard for the doctor in such cases. Tell me what you think I should look
for."
"You won't pay too much
attention to me? It's just what occurred to me. Peter; I know I'm not a trained
psychiatrist. But it could be delusions of grandeur. Or it could be a
withdrawing from the society of others. I always have to speak to him twice to
get his attention in class and he has no real chums."
Welles had agreed to see what
he could find, and promised not to be too much influenced by what Miss Page
herself called "an old woman's notions."
Timothy, when he presented
himself for examination, seemed like an ordinary boy. He was perhaps a little
small for his age, he had big dark eyes and close-cropped dark curls, thin
sensitive fingers and yes, a decided air of tension. But many boys were nervous
on their first visit to the psychiatrist. Peter often wished that he was able
to concentrate on one or two schools, and spend a day a week or so getting
acquainted with all the youngsters. In response to Welles' preliminary
questioning, Tim replied in a clear, low voice, politely and without wasting
words. He was thirteen years old, and lived with his grandparents. His mother
and father had died when he was a baby, and he did not remember them. He said
that he was happy at home, and that he liked school "pretty well,"
that he liked to play with other boys. He named several boys when asked who his
friends were.
"What lessons do you
like at school?"
Tim hesitated, then said:
"English, and arithmetic . . . and history . . . and geography," he
finished thoughtfully. Then he looked up, and there was something odd in the
glance.
"What do you like to do
for fun?"
"Read, and play
games."
"What games?"
"Ball games . . . and
marbles . . . and things like that. I like to play with other boys," he
added, after a barely perceptible pause, "anything they play."
"Do they play at your
house?"
"No; we play on the
school grounds. My grandmother doesn't like noise."
Was that the reason? When a
quiet boy offers explanations, they may not be the right ones.
"What do you like to
read?"
But about his reading Timothy
was vague. He liked, he said, to read "boys' books," but could not
name any. Welles gave the boy the usual intelligence tests. Tim seemed willing,
but his replies were slow in coming. Perhaps, Welles thought, I'm imagining
this, but he is too careful, too cautious. Without taking time to figure
exactly, Welles knew what Tim's I.Q. would be about 120.
"What do you do outside
of school?" asked the psychiatrist.
"I play with the other
boys. After supper, I study my lessons."
"What did you do
yesterday?"
"We played ball on the
school playground."
Welles waited a while to see
whether Tim would say anything of his own accord. The seconds stretched into
minutes.
"Is that all?" said
the boy finally. "May I go now?"
"No; there's one more
test I'd like to give you today. A game, really. How's your imagination?"
"I don't know."
"Cracks on the ceiling—like
those over there—do they look like anything to you? Faces, animals, or
anything?" Tim looked.
"Sometimes. And clouds,
too. Bob saw a cloud last week that was like a hippo." Again the last
sentence sounded like something tacked on at the last moment, a careful
addition made for a reason.
Welles got out the Rorschach
cards. But at the sight of them, his patient's tension increased, his wariness
became unmistakably evident. The first time they went through the cards, the
boy could scarcely be persuaded to say anything but, "I don't know."
"You can do better than
this," said Welles. "We're going through them again. If you don't see
anything in these pictures, I’ll have to mark you a failure," he
explained.
"That won't do. You did
all right on the other things. And maybe next time we'll do a game you’ll like
better."
"I don't feel like
playing this game now. Can't we do it again next time?"
"May as well get it done
now. It's not only a game, you know, Tim; it's a test. Try harder, and be a
good sport." So Tim, this time, told what he saw in the ink blots. They
went through the cards slowly, and the test showed Tim's fear, and that there
was something he was hiding; it showed his caution, a lack of trust, and an
unnaturally high emotional self-control.
Miss Page had been right; the
boy needed help.
"Now," said Welles
cheerfully, "that's all over. Well just run through them again quickly and
I’ll tell you what other people have seen in them."
A flash of genuine interest
appeared on the boy's face for a moment.
Welles went through the cards
slowly, seeing that Tim was attentive to every word. When he first said,
"And some see what you saw here," the boy's relief was evident. Tim
began to relax, and even to volunteer some remarks. When they had finished he
ventured to ask a question.
"Dr. Welles, could you
tell me the name of this test?"
"It's sometimes called
the Rorschach test, after the man who worked it out."
"Would you mind spelling
that?"
Welles spelled it, and added:
"Sometimes it's called the ink-blot test."
Tim gave a start of surprise,
and then relaxed again with a visible effort.
"What's the matter? You
jumped."
"Nothing."
"Oh, come on! Let's have
it," and Welles waited.
"Only that I thought
about the ink-pool in the Kipling stories," said Tim, after a minute's
reflection. "This is different."
"Yes, very
different," laughed Welles. "I've never tried that. Would you like
to?"
"Oh, no, sir,"
cried Tim earnestly.
"Youre a little jumpy
today," said Welles. "We've time for some more talk, if you are not
too tired."
"No, I'm not very
tired," said the boy warily. Welles went to a drawer and chose a
hypodermic needle. It wasn't usual, but perhaps I'll just give you a little
shot to relax your nerves, shall I? Then we'd get on better." When he
turned around, the stark terror on the child's face stopped Welles in his
tracks.
"Oh, no! Don't! Please,
please, don't!"
Welles replaced the needle
and shut the drawer before he said a word.
"I won't," he said,
quietly. "I didn't know you didn't like shots. I won't give you any,
Tim."
The boy, fighting for
self-control, gulped and said nothing.
"It's all right,"
said Welles, lighting a cigarette and pretending to watch the smoke rise.
Anything rather than appear to be watching the badly shaken small boy shivering
in the chair opposite him. "Sorry. You didn't tell me about the things you
don't like, the things you're afraid of." The words hung in the silence.
"Yes," said Timothy
slowly. "I'm afraid of shots. I hate needles. It's just one of those
things." He tried to smile.
"We'll do without them,
then. You've passed all the tests, Tim, and I'd like to walk home with you and
tell your grandmother about it. Is that all right with you?"
"Yes, sir."
"We'll stop for
something to eat," Welles went on, opening the door for his patient.
"Ice cream, or a hot dog." They went out together.
Timothy Paul's grandparents,
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Davis, lived in a large old-fashioned house that spelled
money and position. The grounds were large, fenced, and bordered with
shrubbery. Inside the house there was little that was new, everything was
well-kept. Timothy led the psychiatrist to Mr. Davis's library, and then went
in search of his grandmother.
When Welles saw Mrs. Davis,
he thought he had some of the explanation. Some grandmothers are easygoing,
jolly, comparatively young. This grandmother was, as it soon became apparent,
quite different.
"Yes, Timothy is a
pretty good boy," she said, smiling on her grandson. "We have always
been strict with him. Dr. Welles, but I believe it pays. Even when he was a
mere baby, we tried to teach him right ways. For example, when he was barely
three I read him some little stories. And a few days later he was trying to tell
us, if you will believe it, that he could read I Perhaps he was too young to
know the nature of a lie, but I felt it my duty to make him understand. When he
insisted, I spanked him. The child had a remarkable memory, and perhaps he
thought that was all there was to reading. Well! I don't mean to brag of my
brutality," said Mrs. Davis, with a charming smile. "I assure you,
Dr. Welles, it was a painful experience for me. We've had very little occasion
for punishments. Timothy is a good boy."
Welles murmured that he was
sure of it.
"Timothy, you may
deliver your papers now," said Mrs. Davis. "I am sure Dr. Welles will
excuse you." And she settled herself for a good long talk about her
grandson. Timothy, it seemed, was the apple of her eye. He was a quiet boy, an
obedient boy, and a bright boy.
"We have our rules, of
course. I have never allowed Timothy to forget that children should be seen and
not heard, as the good old-fashioned saying is. When he first learned to turn
somersaults, when he was three or four years old, he kept coming to me and
saying, 'Grandmother, see me!' I simply had to be firm with him. 'Timothy,' I
said, let us have no more of this! It is simply showing off. If it amuses you
to turn somersaults, well and good. But it doesn't amuse me to watch you
endlessly doing it. Play if you like, but do not demand admiration.'"
"Did you never play with
him?"
"Certainly I played with
him. And it was a pleasure to me also. We, Mr. Davis and I, taught him a great
many games, and many kinds of handicraft. We read stories to him and taught him
rhymes and songs. I took a special course in kindergarten craft, to amuse the
child and I must admit that it amused me also!" added Tim's grandmother,
smiling reminiscently. "We made houses of toothpicks, with balls of clay
at the corners. His grandfather took him for walks and drives. We no longer
have a car, since my husband's sight has begun to fail him slightly, so now the
garage is Timothy's workshop. We had windows cut in it, and a door, and nailed
the large doors shut."
It soon became clear that
Tim's life was not all strictures by any means. He had a workshop of his own,
and upstairs beside his bedroom was his own library and study.
"He keeps his books and
treasures there," said his grandmother, "his own little radio, and
his schoolbooks, and his typewriter. When he was only seven years old, he asked
us for a typewriter. But he is a careful child, Dr. Welles, not at all
destructive, and I had read that in many schools they make use of typewriters
in teaching young children to read and write and to spell. The words look the
same as in printed books, you see; and less muscular effort is involved. So his
grandfather got him a very nice noiseless typewriter, and he loved it dearly. I
often hear it purring away as I pass through the hall. Timothy keeps his own
rooms in good order, and his shop also. It is his own wish. You know how boys
are—they do not wish others to meddle with their belongings. 'Very well,
Timothy,' I told him, 'if a glance shows me that you can do it yourself
properly, nobody will go into your rooms; but they must be kept neat.' And he
has done so for several years. A very neat boy, Timothy."
"Timothy didn't mention
his paper route," remarked Welles. "He said only that he plays with
other boys after school."
"Oh, but he does,"
said Mrs. Davis. "He plays until five o'clock, and then he delivers his
papers. If he is late, his grandfather walks down and calls him. The school is
not very far from here, and Mr. Davis frequently walks down and watches the
boys at their play. The paper route is Timothy's way of earning money to feed
his cats. Do you care for cats, Dr. Welles?"
"Yes, I like cats very
much," said the psychiatrist. "Many boys like dogs better."
"Timothy had a dog when
he was a baby—a collie." Her eyes grew moist. "We all loved Ruff
dearly. But I am no longer young, and the care and training of a dog is
difficult. Timothy is at school or at the Boy Scout camp or something of the
sort a great part of the time, and I thought it best that he should not have
another dog. But you wanted to know about our cats, Dr. Welles. I raise Siamese
cats."
"Interesting pets,"
said Welles cordially. "My aunt raised them at one time."
"Timothy is very fond of
them. But three years ago he asked me if he could have a pair of black
Persians. At first I thought not; but we like to please the child, and he
promised to build their cages himself. He had taken a course in carpentry at
vacation school. So he was allowed to have a pair of beautiful black Persians.
But the very first litter turned out to be short-haired, and Timothy confessed
that he had mated his queen to my Siamese torn, to see what would happen. Worse
yet, he had mated his torn to one of my Siamese queens. I really was tempted to
punish him. But, after all, I could see that he was curious as to the outcome
of such crossbreeding. Of course I said the kittens must be destroyed. The
second litter was exactly like the first—all black, with short hair. But you
know what children are. Timothy begged me to let them live, and they were his
first kittens. Three in one litter, two in the other. He might keep them, I
said, if he would take full care of them and be responsible for all the
expense. He mowed lawns and ran errands and made little footstools and
bookcases to sell, and did all sorts of things, and probably used his
allowance, too. But he kept the kittens and has a whole row of cages in the
yard beside his workshop."
"And their
offspring?" inquired Welles, who could not see what all this had to do
with the main question, but was willing to listen to anything that might lead
to information.
"Some of the kittens
appear to be pure Persian, and others pure Siamese. These he insisted on
keeping, although, as I have explained to him, it would be dishonest to sell
them, since they are not purebred. A good many of the kittens are black
short-haired and these we destroy. But enough of cats, Dr. Welles. And I am
afraid I am talking too much about my grandson."
"I can understand that
you are very proud of him," said Welles.
"I must confess that we
are. And he is a bright boy. When he and his grandfather talk together, and
with me also, he asks very intelligent questions. We do not encourage him to
voice his opinions—I detest the smart-Aleck type of small boy—and yet I believe
they would be quite good opinions for a child of his age."
"Has his health always
been good?" asked Welles.
"On the whole, very
good. I have taught him the value of exercise, play, wholesome food and
suitable rest. He has had a few of the usual childish ailments, not seriously.
And he never has colds. But, of course, he takes his cold shots twice a year
when we do."
"Does he mind the
shots?" asked Welles, as casually as he could.
"Not at all. I always
say that he, though so young, sets an example I find hard to follow. I still
flinch, and really rather dread the ordeal."
Welles looked toward the door
at a sudden, slight sound. Timothy stood there, and he had heard. Again, fear
was stamped on his face and terror looked out of his eyes.
"Timothy," said his
grandmother, "don't stare."
"Sorry, sir," the
boy managed to say.
"Are your papers all
delivered? I did not realize we had been talking for an hour, Dr. Welles. Would
you like to see Timothy's cats?" Mrs. Davis inquired graciously.
"Timothy, take Dr. Welles to see your pets. We have had quite a talk about
them."
Welles got Tim out of the
room as fast as he could. The boy led the way around the house and into the
side yard where the former garage stood.
There the man stopped.
"Tim," he said,
"you don't have to show me the cats if you don't want to."
"Oh, that's all
right."
"Is that part of what
you are hiding? If it is, I don't want to see it until you are ready to show
me."
Tim looked up at him then.
'Thanks," he said.
"I don't mind about the cats. Not if you like cats really."
"I really do. But, Tim,
this I would like to know: You're not afraid of the needle. Could you tell me
why you were afraid . . . why you said you were afraid . . . of my shot? The
one I promised not to give you after all?" Their eyes met.
"You won't tell?"
asked Tim.
"I won't tell."
"Because it was
pentothal. Wasn't it?"
Welles gave himself a slight
pinch. Yes, he was awake. Yes, this was a little boy asking him about
pentothal. A boy who—yes, certainly, a boy who knew about it.
"Yes, it was," said
Welles. "A very small dose. You know what it is?"
"Yes, sir. I . . . I read
about it somewhere. In the papers."
"Never mind that. You
have a secret—something you want to hide. That's what you are afraid about,
isn't it?" The boy nodded dumbly.
"If it's anything wrong,
or that might be wrong, perhaps I could help you. You'll want to know me
better, first. You'll want to be sure you can trust me. But I'll be glad to
help, any time you say the word, Tim. Or I might stumble on to things the way I
did just now. One thing though1 never tell secrets."
"Never?"
"Never. Doctors and priests
don't betray secrets. Doctors seldom, priests never. I guess I am more like a
priest, because of the kind of doctoring I do."
He looked down at the boy's
bowed head.
"Helping fellows who are
scared sick," said the psychiatrist very gently. "Helping fellows in
trouble, getting things straight again, fixing things up, unsnarling tangles.
When I can, that's what I do. And I don't tell anything to anybody. It's just
between that one fellow and me." But, he added to himself, I'll have to
find out. I'll have to find out what ails this child. Miss Page is right—he
needs me. They went to see the cats.
There were the Siamese in
their cages, and the Persians in their cages, and there, in several small
cages, the shorthaired black cats and their hybrid offspring. "We take
them into the house, or let them into this big cage, for exercise,"
explained Tim. "I take mine into my shop sometimes. These are all mine.
Grandmother keeps hers on the sun porch."
"You'd never know these
were not all pure-bred," observed Welles. "Which did you say were the
full Persians? Any of their kittens here?"
"No; I sold them."
"I'd like to buy one.
But these look just the same—it wouldn't make any difference to me. I want a
pet, and wouldn't use it for breeding stock. Would you sell me one of
these?"
Timothy shook his head.
"I'm sorry. I never sell
any but the pure-breds." It was then that Welles began to see what problem
he faced. Very dimly he saw it, with joy, relief, hope and wild enthusiasm.
"Why not?" urged
Welles. "I can wait for a pure-bred, if you'd rather, but why not one of
these? They look just the same. Perhaps they'd be more interesting." Tim
looked at Welles for a long, long minute.
"I'll show you," he
said. "Promise to wait here? No, III let you come into the workroom. Wait
a minute, please." The boy drew a key from under his blouse, where it had
hung suspended from a chain, and unlocked the door of his shop. He went inside,
closed the door, and Welles could hear him moving about for a few moments. Then
he came to the door and beckoned.
"Don't tell
grandmother," said Tim. "I haven't told her yet. If it lives, I'll
tell her next week."
In the corner of the shop
under a table there was a box, and in the box there was a Siamese cat. When she
saw a stranger she tried to hide her kittens; but Tim lifted her gently, and
then Welles saw. Two of the kittens looked like little white rats with stringy
tails and smudgy paws, ears and noses. But the third—yes, it was going to be a
different sight. It was going to be a beautiful cat if it lived. It had long,
silky white hair like the finest Persian, and the Siamese markings were showing
up plainly.
Welles caught his breath.
"Congratulations, old
man! Haven't you told anyone yet?"
"She's not ready to
show. She's not a week old."
"But you're going to
show her?"
"Oh, yes, grandmother
will be thrilled. She’ll love her. Maybe there'll be more."
"You knew this would
happen. You made it happen. You planned it all from the start," accused
Welles.
"Yes," admitted the
boy.
"How did you know?"
The boy turned away.
"I read it
somewhere," said Tim.
The cat jumped back into the
box and began to nurse her babies. Welles felt as if he could endure no more.
Without a glance at anything else in the room--and everything else was hidden
under tarpaulins and newspapers--he went to the door.
"Thanks for showing me,
Tim," he said. "And when you have any to sell, remember me. I'll
wait. I want one like that."
The boy followed him out and
locked the door carefully.
"But Tim," said the
psychiatrist, "that's not what you were afraid I'd find out. I wouldn't
need a drug to get you to tell me this, would I?"
Tim replied carefully,
"I didn't want to tell this until I was ready. Grandmother really ought to
know first. But you made me tell you."
"Tim," said Peter
Welles earnestly, "I’ll see you again. Whatever you are afraid of, don't
be afraid of me. I often guess secrets. I'm on the way to guessing yours
already. But nobody else need ever know."
He walked rapidly home, whistling
to himself from time to time. Perhaps he, Peter Welles, was the luckiest man in
the world.
He had scarcely begun to talk
to Timothy on the boy's next appearance at the office, when the phone in the
hall rang. On his return, when he opened the door he saw a book in Tim's hands.
The boy made a move as if to hide it, and thought better of it.
Welles took the book and
looked at it.
"Want to know more about
Rorschach, eh?" he asked.
"I saw it on the shelf.
I--"
"Oh, that's all
right," said Welles, who had purposely left the book near the chair Tim
would occupy. "But what's the matter with the library?"
"They've got some books
about it, but they're on the closed shelves. I couldn't get them." Tim
spoke without thinking first, and then caught his breath.
But Welles replied calmly:
"I'll get it out for you. Ill have it next time you come. Take this one
along today when you go. Tim, I mean it--you can trust me."
"I can't tell you
anything," said the boy. "You've found out some things. I wish . . .
oh, I don't know what I wish! But I'd rather be let alone. I don't need help.
Maybe I never will. If I do, can't I come to you then?" Welles pulled out
his chair and sat down slowly.
"Perhaps that would be
the best way, Tim. But why wait for the ax to fall? I might be able to help you
ward it off what you're afraid of. You can kid people along about the cats;
tell them you were fooling around to see what would happen. But you can't fool
all of the people all of the time, they tell me. Maybe with me to help, you
could. Or with me to back you up, the blowup would be easier. Easier on your
grandparents, too."
"I haven't done anything
wrong!"
"I'm beginning to be
sure of that. But things you try to keep hidden may come to light. The kitten--you
could hide it, but you don't want to. You've got to risk something to show
it."
"I'll tell them I read
it somewhere."
"That wasn't true, then.
I thought not. You figured it out." There was silence.
Then Timothy Paul said:
"Yes, I figured it out. But that's my secret."
"It's safe with
me."
But the boy did not trust him
yet. Welles soon learned that he had been tested. Tim took the book home, and
returned it, took the library books which Welles got for him, and in due course
returned them also. But he talked little and was still wary. Welles could talk
all he liked, but he got little or nothing out of Tim. Tim had told all he was
going to tell. He would talk about nothing except what any boy would talk
about.
After two months of this,
during which Welles saw Tim officially once a week and unofficially several
times--showing up at the school playground to watch games, or meeting Tim on
the paper route and treating him to a soda after it was finished. Welles had
learned very little more. He tried again. He had probed no more during the two
months, respected the boy's silence, trying to give him time to get to know and
trust him.
But one day he asked:
"What are you going to do when you grow up, Tim? Breed cats?"
Tim laughed a denial.
"I don't know what, yet.
Sometimes I think one thing, sometimes another."
This was a typical boy
answer. Welles disregarded it.
"What would you like to
do best of all?" he asked. Tim leaned forward eagerly. "What you
do!" he cried.
"You've been reading up
on it, I suppose," said Welles, as casually as he could, "Then you
know, perhaps, that before anyone can do what I do, he must go through it
himself, like a patient. He must also study medicine and be a full-fledged
doctor, of course. You can't do that yet. But you can have the works now, like
a patient."
"Why? For the
experience?"
"Yes. And for the cure.
You'll have to face that fear and lick it. You'll have to straighten out a lot
of other things, or at least face them."
"My fear will be gone
when I'm grown up," said Timothy. "I think it will. I hope it
will."
"Can you be sure?"
"No," admitted the
boy. "I don't know exactly why I'm afraid. I just know I must hide things.
Is that bad, too?"
"Dangerous,
perhaps." Timothy thought a while in silence. Welles smoked three
cigarettes and yearned to pace the floor, but dared not move.
"What would it be
like?" asked Tim finally.
"You'd tell me about
yourself. What you remember. Your childhood--the way your grandmother runs on when
she talks about you."
"She sent me out of the
room. I'm not supposed to think I'm bright," said Tim, with one of his
rare grins.
"And you're not supposed
to know how well she reared you?"
"She did fine,"
said Tim. "She taught me all the wisest things I ever knew."
"Such as what?"
"Such as shutting up.
Not telling all you know. Not showing off."
"I see what you
mean," said Welles. "Have you heard the story of St. Thomas
Aquinas?"
"No."
"When he was a student
in Paris, he never spoke out in class, and the others thought him stupid. One
of them kindly offered to help him, and went over all the work very patiently
to make him understand it. And then one day they came to a place where the
other student got all mixed up and had to admit he didn't understand. Then
Thomas suggested a solution and it was the right one. He knew more than any of
the others all the time; but they called him the Dumb Ox."
Tim nodded gravely.
"And when he grew
up?" asked the boy.
"He was the greatest
thinker of all time," said Welles.
"A fourteenth-century
super-brain. He did more original work than any other ten great men; and he
died young." After that, it was easier.
"How do I begin?"
asked Timothy.
"You'd better begin at
the beginning. Tell me all you can remember about your early childhood, before
you went to school."
Tim gave this his
consideration.
"I'll have to go forward
and backward a lot," he said.
"I couldn't put it all
in order."
"That's all right. Just
tell me today all you can remember about that time of your life. By next week
you'll have remembered more. As we go on to later periods of your life, you may
remember things that belonged to an earlier time; tell them then. We'll make
some sort of order out of it."
Wellcs listened to the boy's
revelations with growing excitement. He found it difficult to keep outwardly
calm.
"When did you begin to
read?" Welles asked.
"I don't know when it
was. My grandmother read me some stories, and somehow I got the idea about the
words. But when I tried to tell her I could read, she spanked me. She kept
saying I couldn't, and I kept saying I could, until she spanked me. For a while
I had a dreadful time, because I didn't know any word she hadn't read to me1
guess I sat beside her and watched, or else I remembered and then went over it
by myself right after. I must have learned as soon as I got the idea that each
group of letters on the page was a word."
'The word-unit method,"
Welles commented. "Most self-taught readers learned like that."
"Yes. I have read about
it since. And Macaulay could read when he was three, but only upside-down,
because of standing opposite when his father read the Bible to the
family."
"There are many cases of
children who learned to read as you did, and surprised their parents. Well? How
did you get on?"
"One day I noticed that
two words looked almost alike and sounded almost alike. They were 'can' and
'man.' I remember staring at them and then it was like something beautiful
boiling up in me. I began to look carefully at the words, but in a crazy
excitement. I was a long while at it, because when I put down the book and
tried to stand up I was stiff all over. But I had the idea, and after that it
wasn't hard to figure out almost any words. The really hard words are the
common ones that you get all the time in easy books. Other words are pronounced
the way they are spelled."
"And nobody knew you
could read?"
"No. Grandmother told me
not to say I could, so I didn't. She read to me often, and that helped. We had
a great many books, of course. I liked those with pictures. Once or twice they
caught me with a book that had no pictures, and then they'd take it away and
say, I’ll find a book for a little boy.' "
"Do you remember what
books you liked then?"
"Books about animals, I
remember. And geographies. It was funny about animals--"
Once you got Timothy started,
thought Welles, it wasn't hard to get him to go on talking,
"One day I was at the
Zoo," said Tim, "and by the cages alone. Grandmother was resting on a
bench and she let me walk along by myself. People were talking about the
animals and I began to tell them all I knew. It must have been funny in a way,
because I had read a lot of words I couldn't pronounce correctly, words I had
never heard spoken. They listened and asked me questions and I thought I was
just like grandfather, teaching them the way he sometimes taught me. And then
they called another man to come, and said, 'Listen to this kid; he's a scream!'
and I saw they were all laughing at me."
Timothy's face was redder
than usual, but he tried to smile as he added, "I can see now how it must
have sounded funny. And unexpected, too; that's a big point in humor. But my
little feelings were so dreadfully hurt that I ran back to my grandmother crying,
and she couldn't find out why. But it served me right for disobeying her. She
always told me not to tell people things; she said a child had nothing to teach
its elders."
"Not in that way,
perhaps--at that age."
"But, honestly, some
grown people don't know very much," said Tim. "When we went on the
train last year, a woman came up and sat beside me and started to tell me
things a little boy should know about California. I told her I'd lived here all
my life, but I guess she didn't even know we are taught things in school, and
she tried to tell me things, and almost everything was wrong."
"Such as what?"
asked Welles, who had also suffered from tourists.
"We . . . she said so
many things . . . but I thought this was the funniest: She said all the Missions
were so old and interesting, and I said yes, and she said, 'You know, they were
all built long before Columbus discovered America,' and I thought she meant it
for a joke, so I laughed. She looked very serious and said, 'Yes, those people
all come up here from Mexico.' I suppose she thought they were Aztec
temples."
Welles, shaking with
laughter, could not but agree that many adults were sadly lacking in the
rudiments of knowledge.
"After that Zoo
experience, and a few others like it, I began to get wise to myself,"
continued Tim. "People who knew things didn't want to hear me repeating
them, and people who didn't know, wouldn't be taught by a four-year-old baby. I
guess I was four when I began to write."
"How?"
"Oh, I just thought if I
couldn't say anything to anybody at any time, I'd burst. So I began to put it
down in printing, like in books. Then I found out about writing, and we had
some old-fashioned schoolbooks that taught how to write. I'm left-handed. When
I went to school, I had to use my right hand. But by then I had learned how to
pretend that I didn't know things. I watched the others and did as they did. My
grandmother told me to do that."
"I wonder why she said
that," marveled Welles.
"She knew I wasn't used
to other children, she said, and it was the first time she had left me to
anyone else's care. So, she told me to do what the others did and what my
teacher said," explained Tim simply, "and I followed her advice
literally. I pretended I didn't know anything, until the others began to know
it, too. Lucky I was so shy. But there were things to learn, all right. Do you
know, when I was first sent to school, I was disappointed because the teacher
dressed like other women. The only picture of teachers I had noticed were those
in an old Mother Goose book, and I thought that all teachers wore hoop skirts.
But as soon as I saw her, after the little shock of surprise, I knew it was
silly, and I never told."
The psychiatrist and the boy
laughed together.
"We played games. I had
to learn to play with children, and not be surprised when they slapped or
pushed me. I just couldn't figure out why they'd do that, or what good it did
them. But if it was to surprise me. I'd say 'Boo' and surprise them some time
later; and if they were mad because I had taken a ball or something they
wanted. I'd play with them."
"Anybody ever try to
beat you up?"
"Oh, yes. But I had a
book about boxing, with pictures. You can't learn much from pictures, but I got
some practice too, and that helped. I didn't want to win, anyway. That's what I
like about games of strength or skill1m fairly matched, and I don't have to be
always watching in case I might show off or try to boss somebody around."
"You must have tried
bossing sometimes."
"In books, they all
cluster around the boy who can teach new games and think up new things to play.
But I found out that doesn't work. They just want to do the same thing all the
time--like hide and seek. It's no fun if the first one to be caught is 'it'
next time. The rest just walk in any old way and don't try to hide or even to
run, because it doesn't matter whether they are caught. But you can't get the
boys to see that, and play right, so the last one caught is 'it'." Timothy
looked at his watch.
"Time to go," he
said. "I've enjoyed talking to you. Dr. Welles. I hope I haven't bored you
too much." Welles recognized the echo and smiled appreciatively at the
small boy.
"You didn't tell me
about the writing. Did you start to keep a diary?"
"No. It was a newspaper.
One page a day, no more and no less. I still keep it," confided Tim.
"But I get more on the page now. I type it."
"And you write with
either hand now?"
"My left hand is my own
secret writing. For school and things like that I use my right hand."
When Timothy had left, Welles
congratulated himself. But for the next month he got no more. Tim would not
reveal a single significant fact. He talked about ball-playing, he described
his grandmother's astonished delight over the beautiful kitten, he told of its
growth and the tricks it played. He gravely related such enthralling facts as
that he liked to ride on trains, that his favorite wild animal was the lion,
and that he greatly desired to see snow falling. But not a word of what Welles
wanted to hear. The psychiatrist, knowing that he was again being tested,
waited patiently. Then one afternoon when Welles, fortunately unoccupied with a
patient, was smoking a pipe on his front porch, Timothy Paul strode into the
yard.
"Yesterday Miss Page
asked me if I was seeing you and I said yes. She said she hoped my grandparents
didn't find it too expensive, because you had told her I was all right and
didn't need to have her worrying about me. And then I said to grandma, was it
expensive for you to talk to me, and she said, 'Oh no, dear; the school pays
for that. It was your teacher's idea that you have a few talks with Dr.
Welles.'"
"I'm glad you came to
me, Tim, and I'm sure you didn't give me away to either of them. Nobody's
paying me. The school pays for my services if a child is in a bad way and his
parents are poor. It's a new service, since 1956. Many maladjusted children can
be helped--much more cheaply to the state than the cost of having them go crazy
or become criminals or something. You understand all that. But sit down, Tim. I
can't charge the state for you, and I can't charge your grandparents. You're
adjusted marvelously well in every way, as far as I can see; and when I see the
rest, I'll be even more sure of it."
"Well gosh! I wouldn't
have come" Tim was stammering in confusion. "You ought to be paid. I
take up so much of your time. Maybe I'd better not come any more."
"I think you'd better.
Don't you?"
"Why are you doing it
for nothing. Dr. Welles?"
"I think you know
why." The boy sat down in the glider and pushed himself meditatively back
and forth. The glider squeaked.
"You're interested.
You're curious," he said.
"That's not all,
Tim." Squeak-squeak. Squeak-squeak.
"I know," said
Timothy. "I believe it. Look, is it all right if I call you Peter? Since
we're friends."
At their next meeting,
Timothy went into details about his newspaper. He had kept all the copies, from
the first smudged, awkwardly printed pencil issues to the very latest neatly
typed ones. But he would not show Welles any of them.
"I just put down every
day the things I most wanted to say, the news or information or opinion I had
to swallow unsaid. So it's a wild medley. The earlier copies are awfully funny.
Sometimes I guess what they were all about, what made me write them. Sometimes
I remember. I put down the books I read too, and mark them like school grades,
on two points--how I liked the book, and whether it was good. And whether I had
read it before, too."
"How many books do you
read? What's your reading speed?"
It proved that Timothys
reading speed on new books of adult level varied from eight hundred to nine
hundred fifty words a minute. The average murder mystery--he loved them--took
him a little less than an hour. A year's homework in history, Tim performed
easily by reading his textbook through three or four times during the year. He
apologized for that, but explained that he had to know what was in the book so
as not to reveal in examinations too much that he had learned from other
sources. Evenings, when his grandparents believed him to be doing homework he
spent his time reading other books, or writing his newspaper, "or
something." As Welles had already guessed, Tim had read everything in his
grandfather's library, everything of interest in the public library that was
not on the closed shelves, and everything he could order from the state
library.
"What do the librarians
say?"
"They think the books
are for my grandfather. I tell them that, if they ask what a little boy wants
with such a big book, Peter, telling so many lies is what gets me down. I have
to do it, don't I?"
"As far as I can see,
you do," agreed Welles, "But here's material for a while in my
library. There'll have to be a closed shelf here, too, though, Tim."
"Could you tell me why?
I know about the library books. Some of them might scare people, and some are--"
"Some of my books might
scare you too, Tim. I'll tell you a little about abnormal psychology if you
like, one of these days, and then I think you'll see that until you're actually
trained to deal with such cases, you'd be better off not knowing too much about
them."
"I don't want to be
morbid," agreed Tim. "All right. I'll read only what you give me. And
from now on I'll tell you things. There was more than the newspaper, you
know."
"I thought as much. Do
you want to go on with your tale?"
"It started when I first
wrote a letter to a newspaper--of course, under a pen name. They printed it.
For a while I had a high old time of it--a letter almost every day, using all
sorts of pen names. Then I branched out to magazines, letters to the editor
again. And stories1 tried stories." He looked a little doubtfully at
Welles, who said only:
"How old were you when
you sold the first story?"
"Eight," said
Timothy. "And when the check came, with my name on it, 'T. Paul,' I didn't
know what in the world to do."
"That's a thought. What
did you do?"
"There was a sign in the
window of the bank. I always read signs, and that one came back to my mind.
'Banking By Mail.' You can see I was pretty desperate. So I got the name of a
bank across the Bay and I wrote them--on my typewriter--and said I wanted to
start an account, and here was a check to start it with. Oh, I was scared
stiff, and had to keep saying to myself that, after all, nobody could do much
to me. It was my own money. But you don't know what it's like to be only a
small boy! They sent the check back to me and I died ten deaths when I saw it.
But the letter explained. I hadn't endorsed it. They sent me a blank to fill
out about myself. I didn't know how many lies I dared to tell. But it was my
money and I had to get it. If I could get it into the bank, then some day I
could get it out. I gave my business as 'author' and I gave my age as
twenty-four. I thought that was awfully old."
"I'd like to see the
story. Do you have a copy of the magazine around?"
"Yes," said Tim.
"But nobody noticed it-I mean, 'T. Paul' could be anybody. And when I saw
magazines for writers on the newsstands and bought them, I got on to the way to
use a pen name on the story and my own name and address up in the comer. Before
that I used a pen name and sometimes never got the things back or heard about
them. Sometimes I did, though."
"What then?"
"Oh, then I'd endorse
the check payable to me and sign the pen name, and then sign my own name under
it. Was I scared to do that! But it was my money."
"Only stories?"
"Articles, too. And
things. That's enough of that for today. Only I just wanted to say--a while
ago, T. Paul told the bank he wanted to switch some of the money over to a
checking account. To buy books by mail, and such. So, I could pay you. Dr.
Welles," with sudden formality.
"No, Tim," said
Peter Welles firmly. "The pleasure is all mine. What I want is to see the
story that was published when you were eight. And some of the other things that
made T. Paul rich enough to keep a consulting psychiatrist on the payroll. And,
for the love of Pete, will you tell me how all this goes on without your
grandparents' knowing a thing about it?"
"Grandmother thinks I
send in box tops and fill out coupons," said Tim. "She doesn't bring
in the mail. She says her little boy gets such a big bang out of that little
chore. Anyway that's what she said when I was eight. I played mailman. And
there were box tops1 showed them to her, until she said, about the third time,
that really she wasn't greatly interested in such matters. By now she has the
habit of waiting for me to bring in the mail."
Peter Welles thought that was
quite a day of revelation. He spent a quiet evening at home, holding his head
and groaning, trying to take it all in.
And that IQ 120, nonsense!
The boy had been holding out on him. Tim's reading had obviously included
enough about IQ tests, enough puzzles and oddments in magazines and such, to
enable him to stall successfully. What could he do if he would co-operate?
Welles made up his mind to
find out.
He didn't find out. Timothy
Paul went swiftly through the whole range of Superior Adult tests without a
failure of any sort. There were no tests yet devised that could measure his
intelligence. While he was still writing his age with one figure, Timothy Paul
had faced alone, and solved alone, problems that would have baffled the average
adult. He had adjusted to the hardest task of all--that of appearing to be a
fairly normal, B-average small boy.
And it must be that there was
more to find out about him. What did he write? And what did he do besides read
and write, learn carpentry and breed cats and magnificently fool his whole
world?
When Peter Welles had read
some of Tim's writings, he was surprised to find that the stories the boy had
written were vividly human, the product of close observation of human nature.
The articles, on the other hand, were closely reasoned and showed thorough
study and research. Apparently Tim read every word of several newspapers and a
score or more of periodicals.
"Oh, sure," said
Tim, when questioned. "I read everything. I go back once in a while and
review old ones, too."
"If you can write like
this," demanded Welles, indicating a magazine in which a staid and
scholarly article had appeared, "and this"--this was a man-to-man
political article giving the arguments for and against a change in the whole
Congressional system--then why do you always talk to me in the language of an
ordinary stupid schoolboy?"
"Because I’m only a
boy," replied Timothy. "What would happen if I went around talking
like that?"
"You might risk it with
me. You've showed me these things."
"I'd never dare to risk
talking like that. I might forget and do it again before others. Besides, I
can't pronounce half the words."
"What!"
"I never look up a
pronunciation," explained Timothy. "In case I do slip and use a word
beyond the average, I can anyway hope I didn't say it right."
Welles shouted with laughter,
but was sober again as he realized the implications back of that
thoughtfulness.
"You're just like an
explorer living among savages," said the psychiatrist. "You have studied
the savages carefully and tried to imitate them so they won't know there are
differences."
"Something like
that," acknowledged Tim.
"That's why your stories
are so human," said Welles. "That one about the awful little
girl"
They both chuckled.
"Yes, that was my first
story," said Tim. "I was almost eight, and there was a boy in my
class who had a brother, and the boy next door was the other one, the one who
was picked on."
"How much of the story
was true?"
"The first part. I used
to see, when I went over there, how that girl picked on Bill's brother's
friend, Steve. She wanted to play with Steve all the time herself and whenever
he had boys over, she'd do something awful. And Steve's folks were like I said--they
wouldn't let Steve do anything to a girl. When she threw all the watermelon
rinds over the fence into his yard, he just had to pick them all up and say
nothing back; and she'd laugh at him over the fence. She got him blamed for
things he never did, and when he had work to do in the yard she'd hang out of
her window and scream at him and make fun. I thought first, what made her act
like that, and then I made up a way for him to get even with her, and wrote it
out the way it might have happened."
"Didn't you pass the
idea on to Steve and let him try it?"
"Gosh, no! I was only a
little boy. Kids seven don't give ideas to kids ten. That's the first thing I
had to learn--to be always the one that kept quiet, especially if there was any
older boy or girl around, even only a year or two older. I had to learn to look
blank and let my mouth hang open and say, 1 don't get it,' to almost
everything."
"And Miss Page thought
it was odd that you had no close friends of your own age," said Welles.
"You must be the loneliest boy that e’er walked this earth, Tim. You've
lived in hiding like a criminal. But tell me, what are you afraid of?"
"I'm afraid of being
found out, of course. The only way I can live in this world is in disguise--until
I'm grown up, at any rate. At first it was just my grandparents' scolding me
and telling me not to show off, and the way people laughed if I tried to talk
to them. Then I saw how people hate anyone who is better or brighter or
luckier. Some people sort of trade off; if you're bad at one thing you're good
at another, but they'll forgive you for being good at some things, if you're
not good at others so they can balance it off. They can beat you at something.
You have to strike a balance. A child has no chance at all. No grownup can
stand it to have a child know anything he doesn't. Oh, a little thing if it
amuses them. But not much of anything. There's an old story about a man who
found himself in a country where everyone else was blind. I'm like that--but
they shan't put out my eyes. I’ll never let them know I can see anything."
"Do you see things that
no grown person can see?" Tim waved his hand towards the magazines.
"Only like that, I
meant. I hear people talking in street cars and stores, and while they work,
and around. I read about the way they act in the news. I'm like them, just like
them, only I seem about a hundred years older--more matured."
"Do you mean that none
of them have much sense?"
"I don't mean that
exactly. I mean that so few of them have any, or show it if they do have. They
don't even seem to want to. They're good people in their way, but what could
they make of me? Even when I was seven, I could understand their motives, but
they couldn't understand their own motives. And they're so lazy--they don't
seem to want to know or to understand. When I first went to the library for
books, the books I learned from were seldom touched by any of the grown people.
But they were meant for ordinary grown people. But the grown people didn't want
to know things--they only wanted to fool around. I feel about most people the
way my grandmother feels about babies and puppies. Only she doesn't have to
pretend to be a puppy all the time," Tim added, with a little bitterness.
"You have a friend now,
in me."
"Yes, Peter," said
Tim, brightening up. "And I have pen friends, too. People like what I
write, because they can't see I'm only a little boy. When I grow up--"
Tim did not finish that
sentence. Welles understood, now, some of the fears that Tim had not dared to
put into words at all. When he grew up, would he be as far beyond all other
grownups as he had, all his life, been above his contemporaries? The adult friends
whom he now met on fairly equal terms--would they then, too, seem like babies
or puppies?
Peter did not dare to voice
the thought, either. Still less did he venture to hint at another thought. Tim,
so far, had no great interest in girls; they existed for him as part of the
human race, but there would come a time when Tim would be a grown man and would
wish to marry. And where among the puppies could he find a mate?
"When you're grown up,
we'll still be friends," said Peter.
"And who are the
others?" It turned out that Tim had pen friends all over the world. He
played chess by correspondence--a game he never dared to play in person, except
when he forced himself to move the pieces about idly and let his opponent win
at least half the time. He had, also, many friends who had read something he
had written, and had written to him about it, thus starting a
correspondence-friendship. After the first two or three of these, he had
started some on his own account, always with people who lived at a great distance.
To most of these he gave a name which, although not false, looked it. That was
Paul T. Lawrence. Lawrence was his middle name; and with a comma after the
Paul, it was actually his own name. He had a post office box under that name,
for which T. Paul of the large bank account was his reference.
"Pen friends abroad? Do
you know languages?" Yes, Tim did. He had studied by correspondence, also;
many universities gave extension courses in that manner, and lent the student
records to play so that he could learn the correct pronunciation. Tim had taken
several such courses, and learned other languages from books. He kept all these
languages in practice by means of the letters to other lands and the replies
which came to him.
"I'd buy a dictionary,
and then I'd write to the mayor of some town, or to a foreign newspaper, and
ask them to advertise for some pen friends to help me learn the language. We'd
exchange souvenirs and things."
Nor was Welles in the least
surprised to find that Timothy had also taken other courses by correspondence.
He had completed, within three years, more than half the subjects offered by
four separate universities, and several other courses, the most recent being
Architecture. The boy, not yet fourteen, had competed a full course in that
subject, and had he been able to disguise himself as a full-grown man, could
have gone out at once and built almost anything you'd like to name, for he also
knew much of the trades involved.
"It always said how long
an average student took, and I'd take that long," said Tim, "so, of
course, I had to be working several schools at the same time."
"And carpentry at the
playground summer school?"
"Oh, yes. But there I
couldn't do too much, because people could see me. But I learned how, and it
made a good cover-up, so I could make cages for the cats, and all that sort of
thing. And many boys are good with their hands. I like to work with my hands. I
built my own radio, too--it gets all the foreign stations, and that helps me
with my languages."
"How did you figure it
out about the cats?" said Welles.
"Oh, there had to be
recessives, that's all. The Siamese coloring was a recessive, and it had to be
mated with another recessive. Black was one possibility, and white was another,
but I started with black because I liked it better. I might try white too, but
I have so much else on my mind" He broke off suddenly and would say no
more.
Their next meeting was by
prearrangement at Tim's workshop. Welles met the boy after school and they
walked to Tim's home together; there the boy unlocked his door and snapped on
the lights.
Welles looked around with
interest. There was a bench, a tool chest. Cabinets, padlocked. A radio,
clearly not store purchased. A file cabinet, locked. Something on a table,
covered with a cloth. A box in the corner--no, two boxes in two corners. In
each of them was a mother cat with kittens. Both mothers were black Persians.
"This one must be all
black Persian," Tim explained. "Her third litter and never a Siamese
marking. But this one carries both recessives in her. Last time she had a
Siamese shorthaired kitten. This morning1 had to go to school. Let's see."
They bent over the box where the new-born kittens lay. One kitten was like the
mother. The other two were Siamese-Persian; a male and a female.
"You've done it again,
Tim!" shouted Welles. "Congratulations!"
They shook hands in
jubilation.
"I'll write it in the
record," said the boy blissfully. In a nickel book marked
"Compositions" Tim's left hand added the entries. He had used the correct
symbolsFi, Fs, Fs; Ss, Bl.
"The dominants in
capitals," he explained, "B for black, and S for short hair; the
recessives in small letters--s for Siamese, l for long hair. Wonderful to write
ll or ss again, Peter! Twice more. And the other kitten is carrying the Siamese
marking as a recessive."
He closed the book in
triumph.
"Now," and he
marched to the covered thing on the table,
"My latest big
secret," Tim lifted the cloth carefully and displayed a beautifully built
doll house. No, a model house--Welles corrected himself swiftly. A beautiful
model, and--yes, built to scale.
"The roof comes off.
See, it has a big storage room and a room for a play room or a maid or
something. Then I lift off the attic"
"Good heavens!"
cried Peter Welles. "Any little girl would give her soul for this!"
"I used fancy wrapping
papers for the wallpapers. I wove the rugs on a little hand loom," gloated
Timothy. "The furniture's just like real, isn't it? Some I bought; that's
plastic. Some I made of construction paper and things. The curtains were the
hardest; but I couldn't ask grandmother to sew them-"
"Why not?" the
amazed doctor managed to ask.
"She might recognize
this afterwards," said Tim, and he lifted off the upstairs floor.
"Recognize it? You
haven't showed it to her? Then when would she see it?"
"She might not,"
admitted Tim. "But I don't like to take some risks."
"That's a very livable
floor plan you've used," said Welles, bending closer to examine the house
in detail.
"Yes, I thought so. It's
awful how many house plans leave no clear wall space for books or pictures.
Some of them have doors placed so you have to detour around the dining room
table every time you go from the living room to the kitchen, or so that a whole
corner of a room is good for nothing, with doors at all angles. Now, I designed
this house to--"
"You designed it, Tim!"
"Why, sure. Oh, I see--you
thought I built it from blueprints I'd bought. My first model home, I did, but
the architecture courses gave me so many ideas that I wanted to see how they
would look. Now, the cellar and game room" Welles came to himself an hour
later, and gasped when he looked at his watch.
"It's too late. My
patient has gone home again by this time. I may as well stay--how about the
paper route?"
"I gave that up.
Grandmother offered to feed the cats as soon as I gave her the kitten. And I
wanted the time for this. Here are the pictures of the house."
The color prints were very
good.
"I'm sending them and an
article to the magazines," said Tim. "This time I'm T. L. Paul.
Sometimes I used to pretend all the different people I am were talking together--but
now I talk to you instead. Peter."
"Will it bother the cats
if I smoke? Thanks. Nothing I'm likely to set on fire, I hope? Put the house
together and let me sit here and look at it. I want to look in through the
windows. Put its lights on. There."
The young architect beamed,
and snapped on the little lights.
"Nobody can see in here.
I got Venetian blinds; and when I work in here, I even shut them sometimes."
"If I'm to know all
about you, I'll have to go through the alphabet from A to Z," said Peter
Welles. "This is Architecture. What else in the A's?"
"Astronomy. I showed you
those articles. My calculations proved correct. Astrophysics1 got A in the course,
but haven't done anything original so far. Art, no. I can't paint or draw very
well, except mechanical drawing. I've done all the Merit Badge work in
scouting, all through the alphabet."
"Darned if I can see you
as a Boy Scout," protested Welles.
"I'm a very good Scout.
I have almost as many badges as any other boy my age in the troop. And at camp
I do as well as most city boys."
"Do you do a good turn
every day?"
"Yes," said
Timothy. "Started that when I first read about Scouting1 was a Scout at
heart before I was old enough to be a Cub. You know. Peter, when you're very
young, you take all that seriously about the good deed every day, and the good
habits and ideals and all that. And then you get older and it begins to seem
funny and childish and posed and artificial, and you smile in a superior way
and make jokes. But there is a third step, too, when you take it all seriously
again. People who make fun of the Scout Law are doing the boys a lot of harm;
but those who believe in things like that don't know how to say so, without
sounding priggish and platitudinous. I'm going to do an article on it before
long."
"Is the Scout Law your
religion==if I may put it that way?"
"No," said Timothy.
"But 'a Scout is Reverent.' Once I tried to study the churches and find
out what was the truth. I wrote letters to pastors of all denominations--all
those in the phone book and the newspaper--when I was on a vacation in the
East, I got the names, and then wrote after I got back. I couldn't write to
people here in the city. I said I wanted to know which church was true, and
expected them to write to me and tell me about theirs, and argue with me, you
know. I could read library books, and all they had to do was recommend some, I
told them, and then correspond with me a little about them."
"Did they?"
"Some of them
answered," said Tim, "but nearly all of them told me to go to
somebody near me. Several said they were very busy men. Some gave me the name
of a few books, but none of them told me to write again, and . . . and I was
only a little boy. Nine years old, so I couldn't talk to anybody. When I
thought it over, I knew that I couldn't very well join any church so young,
unless it was my grandparents' church. I keep on going thereit is a good church
and it teaches a great deal of truth, I am sure. I'm reading all I can find, so
when I am old enough I'll know what I must do. How old would you say I should
be, Peter?"
"College age,"
replied Welles. "You are going to college? By then, any of the pastors
would talk to you--except those that are too busy!"
"It's a moral problem,
really. Have I the right to wait? But I have to wait. It's like telling lies. I
have to tell some lies, but I hate to. If I have a moral obligation to join the
church as soon as I find it, well, what then? I can't until I'm eighteen or
twenty?"
"If you can't, you
can't. I should think that settles it. You are legally a minor, under the
control of your grandparents, and while you might claim the right to go where
your conscience leads you, it would be impossible to justify and explain your
choice without giving yourself away entirely just as you are obliged to go to
school until you are at least eighteen, even though you know more than most
Ph.D.'s. It's all part of the game, and He who made you must understand
that."
"I'll never tell you any
lies," said Tim. "I was getting so desperately lonely--my pen pals
didn't know anything about me really. I told them only what was right for them
to know. Little kids are satisfied to be with other people, but when you get a
little older you have to make friends, really."
"Yes, that's a part of
growing up. You have to reach out to others and share thoughts with them.
You've kept to yourself too long as it is."
"It wasn't that I wanted
to. But without a real friend, it was only pretense, and I never could let my
playmates know anything about me. I studied them and wrote stories about them
and it was all of them, but it was only a tiny part of me."
"I'm proud to be your
friend, Tim. Every man needs a friend. I'm proud that you trust me."
Tim patted the .cat a moment
in silence and then looked up with a grin.
"How would you like to
hear my favorite joke?" he asked.
"Very much," said
the psychiatrist, bracing himself for almost any major shock.
"It's records. I
recorded this from a radio program." Welles listened. He knew little of
music, but the symphony which he heard pleased him. The announcer praised it
highly in little speeches before and after each movement. Timothy giggled.
"Like it?"
"Very much. I don't see
the joke."
"I wrote it."
"Tim, you're beyond me!
But I still don't get the joke."
"The joke is that I did
it by mathematics. I calculated what ought to sound like joy, grief, hope,
triumph, and all the rest, and it was just after I had studied harmony; you
know how mathematical that is."
Speechless, Welles nodded.
"I worked out the
rhythms from different metabolisms the way you function when under the
influences of these emotions; the way your metabolic rate varies, your
heartbeats and respiration and things. I sent it to the director of that
orchestra, and he didn't get the idea that it was a joke—of course I didn't
explain how I produced the music. I get nice royalties from it, too."
"You'll be the death of
me yet," said Welles in deep sincerity. "Don't tell me anything more
today; I couldn't take it. I’m going home. Maybe by tomorrow I'll see the joke
and come back to laugh. Tim, did you ever fail at anything?"
"There are two cabinets
full of articles and stories that didn't sell. Some of them I feel bad about.
There was the chess story. You know, in 'Through the Looking Glass,' it wasn't
a very good game, and you couldn't see the relation of the moves to the story very
well."
"I never could see it at
all."
"I thought it would be
fun to take a championship game and write a fantasy about it, as if it were a
war between two little old countries, with knights and foot-soldiers, and
fortified walls in charge of captains, and the bishops couldn't fight like
warriors, and, of course, the queens were women- people don't kill them, not in
hand-to-hand fighting and . . . well, you see? I wanted to make up the attacks
and captures, and keep the people alive, a fairytale war you see, and make the
strategy of the game and the strategy of the war coincide, and have everything
fit. It took me ever so long to work it out and write it. To understand the
game as a chess game and then to translate it into human actions and motives, and
put speeches to it to fit different kinds of people. I'll show it to you. I
loved it. But nobody would print it. Chess players don't like fantasy, and
nobody else likes chess. You have to have a very special kind of mind to like
both. But it was a disappointment. I hoped it would be published, because the
few people who like that sort of thing would like it very much."
"1m sure I'll like
it."
"Well, if you do like
that sort of thing, it's what you've been waiting all your life in vain for.
Nobody else has done it." Tim stopped, and blushed as red as a beet.
"I see what grandmother means. Once you get started bragging, there's no
end to it. I'm sorry. Peter."
"Give me the story. I
don't mind, Tim--brag all you like to me; I understand. You might blow up if
you never expressed any of your legitimate pride and pleasure in such
achievements. What I don't understand is how you have kept it all under for so
long."
"I had to," said
Tim.
The story was all its young
author had claimed. Welles chuckled as he read it, that evening. He read it
again, and checked all the moves and the strategy of them. It was really a fine
piece of work. Then he thought of the symphony, and this time he was able to
laugh. He sat up until after midnight, thinking about the boy. Then he took a
sleeping pill and went to bed.
The next day he went to see
Tim's grandmother. Mrs. Davis received him graciously.
"Your grandson is a very
interesting boy," said Peter Welles carefully. "I'm asking a favor of
you. I am making a study of various boys and girls in this district, their
abilities and backgrounds and environment and character traits and things like
that. No names will ever be mentioned, of course, but a statistical report will
be kept, for ten years or longer, and some case histories might later be
published. Could Timothy be included?"
"Timothy is such a good,
normal little boy, I fail to see what would be the purpose of including him in
such a survey."
"That is just the point.
We are not interested in maladjusted persons in this study. We eliminate all
psychotic boys and girls. We are interested in boys and girls who succeed in
facing their youthful problems and making satisfactory adjustments to life. If
we could study a selected group of such children, and follow their progress for
the next ten years at least--and then publish a summary of the findings, with
no names used--"
"In that case, I see no
objection," said Mrs. Davis.
"If you'd tell me, then,
something about Timothy's parents their history?"
Mrs. Davis settled herself
for a good long talk.
"Timothy's mother, my
only daughter, Emily," she began, "was
a lovely girl. So talented. She played the violin charmingly. Timothy is like
her, in the face, but has his father's dark hair and eyes. Edwin had very fine
eyes."
"Edwin was Timothy's
father?"
"Yes. The young people
met while Emily was at college in the East. Edwin was studying atomics
there."
"Your daughter was
studying music?"
"No; Emily was taking
the regular liberal arts course. I can tell you little about Edwin's work, but
after their marriage he returned to it and . . . you understand, it is painful
for me to recall this, but their deaths were such a blow to me. They were so
young."
Welles held his pencil ready
to write.
"Timothy has never been
told. After all, he must grow up in this world, and how dreadfully the world
has changed in the past thirty years. Dr. Welles! But you would not remember
the day before 1945- You have heard, no doubt of the terrible explosion in the
atomic plant, when they were trying to make a new type of bomb? At the time,
none of the workers seemed to be injured. They believed the protection was
adequate. But two years later they were all dead or dying."
Mrs. Davis shook her head,
sadly. Welles held his breath, bent his head, scribbled.
"Tim was born just
fourteen months after the explosion, fourteen months to the day. Everyone still
thought that no harm had been done. But the radiation had some effect which was
very slow1 do not understand such things- Edwin died, and then Emily came home
to us with the boy. In a few months she, too, was gone.
"Oh, but we do not
sorrow as those who have no hope. It is hard to have lost her. Dr. Welles, but
Mr. Davis and I have reached the time of life when we can look forward to
seeing her again. Our hope is to live until Timothy is old enough to fend for
himself. We were so anxious about him; but you see he is perfectly normal in
every way."
"Yes."
"The specialists made
all sorts of tests. But nothing is wrong with Timothy."
The psychiatrist stayed a
little longer, took a few more notes, and made his escape as soon as he could.
Going straight to the school, he had a few words with Miss Page and then took
Tim to his office, where he told him what he had learned.
"You mean I'm a
mutation?"
"A mutant. Yes, very
likely you are. I don't know. But I had to tell you at once."
"Must be a dominant,
too," said Tim, "coming out this way in the first generation. You mean
there may be more? I'm not the only one?" he added in great excitement.
"Oh, Peter, even if I grow up past you I won't have to be lonely?"
There. He had said it.
"It could be, Tim.
There's nothing else in your family that could account for you."
"But I have never found
anyone at all like me. I would have known. Another boy or girl my age like me,
I would have known."
"You came West with your
mother. Where did the others go, if they existed? The parents must have
scattered everywhere, back to their homes all over the country, all over the
world. We can trace them, though. And. Tim, haven't you thought it's just a
little bit strange that with all your pen names and various contacts, people
don't insist more on meeting you? Everything gets done by mail? It's almost as
if the editors are used to people who hide. It's almost as if people are used
to architects and astronomers and composers whom nobody ever sees, who are only
names in care of other names at post office boxes. There's a chance, just a
chance, mind you, that there are others. If there are, we'll find them,"
"I'll work out a code
they will understand." said Tim his face screwed up in concentration.
"In articles--I'll do it in several magazines and in letters I can enclose
copies--some of my pen friends may be the ones"
"I’ll hunt up the
records they must be on file somewhere psychologists and psychiatrists know all
kinds of tricks we can make some excuse to trace them all the birth
records" Both of them were talking at once, but all the while Peter Welles
was thinking sadly, perhaps he had lost Tim now. If they did find those others,
those to whom Tim rightfully belonged, where would poor Peter be? Outside,
among the puppies-
Timothy Paul looked up and
saw Peter Welles's eyes on him. He smiled.
"You were my first
friend. Peter, and you shall be forever," said Tim. "No matter what,
no matter who."
"But we must look for
the others," said Peter.
"I'll never forget who
helped me," said Tim. / An ordinary boy of thirteen may say such a thing
sincerely, and a week later have forgotten all about it. But Peter Welles was
content. Tim would never forget. Tim would be his friend always. Even when
Timothy Paul and those like him should unite in a maturity undreamed of, to
control the world if they chose. Peter Welles would be Tim's friend not a
puppy, but a beloved friend as a loyal dog loved by a good master, is never
cast out.
By Poul Anderson
The new Sherlock Holmes of
the spaceways will delight the Baker Street Irregulars.
THE SIGNAL was picked up when
the ship was still a quarter million miles away, and recorded voices summoned
the technicians. There was no haste, for the ZX28749, otherwise called the Jane
Brackney, was right on schedule; but landing an unmanned spaceship is always a
delicate operation. Men and machines prepared to receive her as she came down,
but the control crew had the first order of business.
Yamagata, Steinmann, and
Ramanowitz were in the GCA tower, with Hollyday standing by for an emergency.
If the circuits should fail - they never had, but a thousand tons of cargo and
nuclear - powered vessel, crashing into the port, could empty Phobos of human
life. So Hollyday watched over a set of spare assemblies, ready to plug in
whatever might be required.
Yamagata's thin fingers
danced over the radar dials. His eyes were intent on the screen. "Got
her," he said. Steinmann made a distance reading and Ramanowitz took the
velocity off the Dopplerscope. A brief session with a computer showed the
figures to be almost as predicted.
"Might as well
relax," said Yamagata, taking out a cigarette. "She won't be in control
range for a while yet."
His eyes roved over the
crowded room and out its window. From the tower he had a view of the spaceport:
unimpressive, most of its shops and sheds and living quarters being
underground. The smooth concrete field was chopped off by the curvature of the
tiny satellite. It always faced Mars, and the station was on the far side, but
he could remember how the planet hung enormous over the opposite hemisphere,
soft ruddy disc blurred with thin air, hazy greenish - brown mottlings of heath
and farmland. Though Phobos was clothed in vacuum, you couldn't see the hard
stars of space: the sun and the floodlamps were too bright.
There was a knock on the
door. Hollyday went over, almost drifting in the ghostly gravity, and opened
it. "Nobody allowed in here during a landing," he said. Hollyday was
a stocky blond man with a pleasant, open countenance, and his tone was less
peremptory than his words.
"Police." The
newcomer, muscular, round - faced, and earnest, was in plain clothes, tunic and
pajama pants, which was expected; everyone in the tiny settlement knew
Inspector Gregg. But he was packing a gun, which was not usual, and looked
harried.
Yamagata peered out again and
saw the port's four constables down on the field in official spacesuits,
watching the ground crew. They carried weapons. "What's the matter?"
he asked.
"Nothing ... I
hope." Gregg came in and tried to smile. "But the Jane has a very
unusual cargo this trip."
"Hm?" Ramanowitz's
eyes lit up in his broad plump visage. "Why weren't we told?"
"That was deliberate.
Secrecy. The Martian crown jewels are aboard." Gregg fumbled a cigarette
from his tunic.
Hollyday and Steinmann nodded
at each other. Yamagata whistled. "On a robot ship?" he asked.
"Uh - huh. A robot ship
is the one form of transportation from which they could not be stolen. There
were three attempts made when they went to Earth on a regular liner, and I hate
to think how many while they were at the British Museum. One guard lost his
life. Now my boys are going to remove them before anyone else touches that ship
and scoot 'em right down to Sabaeus."
"How much are they
worth?" wondered Ramanowitz.
"Oh . . they could be
fenced on Earth for maybe half a billion UN dollars," said Gregg.
"But the thief would do better to make the Martians pay to get them back .
. no, Earth would have to, I suppose, since it's our responsibility." He
blew nervous clouds. "The jewels were secretly put on the Jane, last thing
before she left on her regular run. I wasn't even told till a special messenger
on this week's liner gave me the word. Not a chance for any thief to know
they're here, till they're safely back on Mars. And that'll be safe!"
Ramanowitz shuddered. All the
planets knew what guarded the vaults at Sabaeus.
"Some people did know,
all along," said Yamagata thoughtfully. "I mean the loading crew back
at Earth."
"Uh - huh, there is
that." Gregg smiled. "Several of them have quit since then, the
messenger said, but of course, there's always a big turnover among spacejacks -
they're a restless bunch." His gaze drifted across Steinmann and Holly
day, both of whom had last worked at Earth Station and come to Mars a few ships
back. The liners went on a hyperbolic path and arrived in a couple of weeks;
the robot ships followed the more leisurely and economical Hohmann A orbit and
needed 258 days. A man who knew what ship was carrying the jewels could leave
Earth, get to Mars well ahead of the cargo, and snap up a job here - Phobos was
always shorthanded.
"Don't look at me!"
said Steinmann, laughing. "Chuck and I knew about this - of course - but
we were under security restrictions. Haven't told a soul."
"Yeah. I'd have known it
if you had," nodded Gregg. "Gossip travels fast here. Don't resent
this, please, but I'm here to see that none of you boys leaves this tower till
the jewels are aboard our own boat."
"Oh, well. It'll mean
overtime pay."
"If I want to get rich
fast, I'll stick to prospecting," added Hollyday.
"When are you going to
quit running around with that Geiger in your free time?" asked Yamagata.
"Phobos is nothing but iron and granite."
"I have my own ideas about
that," said Hollyday stoutly.
"Hell, everybody needs a
hobby on this God - forsaken clod," declared Ramanowitz. "I might try
for those sparklers myself, just for the excitement-" He stopped abruptly,
aware of Gregg's eyes.
"All right,"
snapped Yamagata "Here we go. Inspector, please stand back out of the way,
and for your life's sake don't interrupt us."
The Jane was drifting in, her
velocity on the carefully pre - calculated orbit almost identical with that of
Phobos. Almost, but not quite - there had been the inevitable small disturbing
factors, which the remote - controlled jets had to compensate, and then there
was the business of landing her. The team got a fix and were frantically busy.
In free fall, the Jane
approached within a thousand miles of Phobos - a spheroid 500 feet in radius,
big and massive, but lost against the incredible bulk of the satellite. And yet
Phobos is an insignificant airless pill, negligible even beside its seventh -
rate planet. Astronomical magnitudes are simply and literally incomprehensible.
When the ship was close
enough, the radio directed her gyros to rotate her, very, very gently, until
her pickup antenna was pointing directly at the field. Then her jets were cut
in, a mere whisper of thrust. She was nearly above the spaceport, her path
tangential to the moon's curvature. After a moment Yamagata slapped the keys
hard, and the rockets blasted furiously, a visible red streak up in the sky. He
cut them again, checked his data, and gave a milder blast.
"Okay," he grunted.
"Let's bring her in."
Her velocity relative to
Phobos's orbit and rotation was now zero, and she was falling. Yamagata slewed
her around till the jets were pointing vertically down. Then he sat back and
mopped his face while Ramanowitz took over; the job was too nerve - stretching
for one man to perform in its entirety. Ramanowitz sweated the awkward mass to
within a few yards of the cradle. Steinmann finished the task, easing her into
the berth like an egg into a cup. He cut the jets and there was silence.
"Whew! Chuck, how about
a drink?" Yamagata held out unsteady fingers and regarded them with an
impersonal stare.
Hollyday smiled and fetched a
bottle. It went happily around. Gregg declined. His eyes were locked to the
field, where a technician was checking for radioactivity. The verdict was
clean, and he saw his constables come soaring over the concrete, to surround
the great ship with guns. One of them went up, opened the manhatch, and slipped
inside.
It seemed a very long while
before he emerged. Then he came running. Gregg cursed and thumbed the tower's
radio board. "Hey, there! Ybarra! What's the matter?"
The helmet set shuddered a
reply: "Señor . . Señor Inspector . . . the crown jewels are gone."
Sabaeus is, of course, a
purely human name for the old city nestled in the Martian tropics, at the
juncture of the "canals" Phison and Euphrates. Terrestrial mouths
simply cannot form the syllables of High Chlannach, though rough approximations
are possible. Nor did humans ever build a town exclusively of towers broader at
the top than the base, or inhabit one for twenty thousand years. If they had,
though, they would have encouraged an eager tourist influx; but Martians prefer
more dignified ways of making a dollar, even if their parsimonious fame has
long replaced that of Scotchmen. The result is that though interplanetary trade
is brisk and Phobos a treaty port, a human is still a rare sight in Sabaeus.
Hurrying down the avenues
between the stone mushrooms, Gregg felt conspicuous. He was glad the airsuit muffled
him. Not that the grave Martians stared; they varkled, which is worse.
The Street of Those Who
Prepare Nourishment in Ovens is a quiet one, given over to handicrafters,
philosophers, and residential apartments. You won't see a courtship dance or a
parade of the Lesser Halberdiers on it: nothing more exciting than a continuous
four - day argument on the relativistic nature of the null class or an
occasional gunfight. The latter are due to the planet's most renowned private
detective, who nests here.
Gregg always found it eerie
to be on Mars, under the cold deep - blue sky and shrunken sun, among noises
muffled by the thin oxygen - deficient air. But for Syaloch he had a good deal
of affection, and when he had gone up the ladder and shaken the rattle outside
the second - floor apartment and had been admitted, it was like escaping from
nightmare.
"Ah, Krech!" The
investigator laid down the stringed instrument on which he had been playing and
towered gauntly over his visitor. "An unexbectet bleassure to see hyou.
Come in, my tear chab, to come in." He was proud of his English - but
simple misspellings will not convey the whistling, clicking Martian accent.
Gregg had long ago fallen into the habit of translating it into a human
pronunciation as he listened.
The Inspector felt a cautious
way into the high, narrow room. The glowsnakes which illuminated it after dark
were coiled asleep on the stone floor, in a litter of papers, specimens, and
weapons; rusty sand covered the sills of the Gothic windows. Syaloch was not
neat except in his own person. In one corner was a small chemical laboratory.
The rest of the walls were taken up with shelves, the criminological literature
of three planets - Martian books. Terrestrial micros, Venusian talking stones.
At one place, patriotically, the glyphs representing the reigning Nest - mother
had been punched out with bullets. An Earthling could not sit on the
trapezelike native furniture, but Syaloch had courteously provided chairs and
tubs as well; his clientele was also triplanetary. Gregg found a scarred Duncan
Phyfe and lowered himself, breathing heavily into his oxygen tubes.
"I take it you are here
on official but confidential business." Syaloch got out a big - bowled
pipe. Martians have happily adopted tobacco, though in their atmosphere it must
include potassium permanganate. Gregg was thankful he didn't have to breathe
the blue fog.
He started. "How the
hell do you know that?"
"Elementary, my dear
fellow. Your manner is most agitated, and I know nothing but a crisis in your
profession would cause that in a good stolid bachelor. Yet you come to me
rather than the Homeostatic Corps . . so it must be a delicate affair."
Gregg laughed wryly. He
himself could not read any Martian's expression - what corresponds to a smile
or a snarl on a totally non - human face? But this overgrown stork -
No. To compare the species of
different planets is merely to betray the limitations of language. Syaloch was
a seven - foot biped of vaguely storklike appearance. But the lean, crested, red
- beaked head at the end of the sinuous neck was too large, the yellow eyes too
deep; the white feathers were more like a penguin's than a flying bird's, save
at the blue - plumed tail; instead of wings there were skinny red arms ending
in four - fingered hands. And the overall posture was too erect for a bird.
Gregg jerked back to
awareness. God in Heaven! The city lay gray and quiet; the sun was slipping
westward over the farmlands of Sinus Sabaeus and the desert of the Aeria; he
could just make out the rumble of a treadmill cart passing beneath the windows
- and he sat here with a story which could blow the Solar System apart!
His hands, gloved against the
chill, twisted together. "Yes, it's confidential, all right. If you can
solve this case, you can just about name your own fee." The gleam in
Syaloch's eyes made him regret that, but he stumbled on: "One thing,
though. Just how do you feel about us Earthlings?"
"I have no prejudices.
It is the brain that counts, not whether it is covered by feathers or hair or
bony plates."
"No, I realize that. But
some Martians resent us. We do disrupt an old way of life - we can't help it,
if we're to trade with you -"
"K'teh. The trade is on
the whole beneficial. Your fuel and machinery - and tobacco, yesss - for our kantz
and snull. Also, we were getting too . . stale. And of course space travel has
added a whole new dimension to criminology. Yes, I favor Earth."
"Then you'll help us?
And keep quiet about something which could provoke your planetary federation
into kicking us off Phobos?"
The third eyelids closed,
making the long - beaked face a mask. "I give no promises yet,
Gregg."
"Well . . damn it, all
right, I'll have to take the chance." The policeman swallowed hard.
"You know about your crown jewels, of course."
"They were lent to Earth
for exhibit and scientific study."
"After years of
negotiation. There's no more priceless relic on all Mars - and you were an old
civilization when we were hunting mammoths. All right. They've been
stolen."
Syaloch opened his eyes, but
his only other movement was to nod.
"They were put on a
robot ship at Earth Station. They were gone when that ship reached Phobos.
We've damn near ripped the boat apart trying to find them - we did take the
other cargo to pieces, bit by bit - and they aren't there!"
Syaloch rekindled his pipe,
an elaborate flint - and - steel process on a world where matches won't burn.
Only when it was drawing well did he suggest: "Is it possible the ship was
boarded en route?"
"No. It isn't possible.
Every spacecraft in the System is registered, and its whereabouts are known at
any time. Furthermore, imagine trying to find a speck in hundreds of millions
of cubic miles, and match velocities with it .. no vessel ever built could
carry that much fuel. And mind you, it was never announced that the jewels were
going back this way. Only the UN police and the Earth Station crew could know
till the ship had actually left - by which time it'd be too late to catch
her."
"Most interesting."
Syaloch puffed hard.
"If word of this gets
out," said Gregg miserably, "you can guess the results. I suppose
we'd still have a few friends left in your Parliament -"
"In the House of
Actives, yesss .. a few. Not in the House of Philosophers, which is of course
the upper chamber."
"It could mean a twenty
- year hiatus in Earth - Mars traffic - maybe a permanent breaking off of
relations. Damn it, Syaloch, you've got to find those stones!"
"Hm-m-m. I pray your
pardon. This requires thought." The Martian picked up his crooked
instrument and plucked a few tentative chords. Gregg sighed and attempted to
relax. He knew the Chlannach temperament; he'd have to listen to an hour of
minor-key caterwauling.
The colorless sunset was
past, night had fallen with the unnerving Martian swiftness, and the glowsnakes
were emitting blue radiance when Syaloch put down the demifiddle.
"I fear I shall have to
visit Phobos in person," he said. "There are too many unknowns for
analysis, and it is never well to theorize before all the data have been
gathered." A bony hand clapped Gregg's shoulder. "Come, come, old
chap. I am really most grateful to you. Life was becoming infernally dull. Now,
as my famous Terrestrial predecessor would say, the game's afoot . . and a very
big game indeed!"
A Martian in an Earthlike
atmosphere is not much hampered, needing only an hour in a compression chamber
and a filter on his beak to eliminate excess oxygen and moisture. Syaloch
walked freely about the port clad in filter, pipe, and tirstokr cap, grumbling
to himself at the heat and humidity. He noticed that all the humans but Gregg
were reserved, almost fearful, as they watched him - they were sitting on a
secret which could unleash red murder.
He donned a spacesuit and
went out to inspect the Jane Brackney. The vessel had been shunted aside to
make room for later arrivals, and stood by a raw crag at the edge of the field,
glimmering in the hard spatial sunlight. Gregg and Yamagata were with him.
"I say, you have been
thorough," remarked the detective. "The outer skin is quite stripped off."
The spheroid resembled an egg
which had tangled with a waffle iron: an intersecting grid of girders and
braces above a thin aluminum hide. The jets, hatches, and radio mast were the
only breaks in the checkerboard pattern, whose depth was about a foot and whose
squares were a yard across at the "equator."
Yamagata laughed in a
strained fashion. "No. The cops fluoroscoped every inch of her, but that's
the way these cargo ships always look. They never land on Earth, you know, or
any place where there's air, so streamlining would be unnecessary. And since
nobody is aboard in transit, we don't have to worry about insulation or air -
tightness. Perishables are stowed in sealed compartments."
"I see. Now where were
the crown jewels kept?"
"They were supposed to
be in a cupboard near the gyros," said Gregg. "They were in a locked
box, about six inches high, six inches wide, and a foot long." He shook
his head, finding it hard to believe that so small a box could contain so much
potential death.
"Ah .. but were they
placed there?"
"I radioed Earth and got
a full account," said Gregg. "The ship was loaded as usual at the
satellite station, then shoved a quarter mile away till it was time for her to
leave - to get her out of the way, you understand. She was still in the same
free - fall orbit, attached by a light cable - perfectly standard practice. At
the last minute, without anyone being told beforehand, the crown jewels were
brought up from Earth and stashed aboard."
"By a special policeman,
I presume?"
"No. Only licensed
technicians are allowed to board a ship in orbit, unless there's a life - and -
death emergency. One of the regular station crew - fellow named Carter - was
told where to put them. He was watched by the cops as he pulled himself along
the cable and in through the manhatch." Gregg pointed to a small door near
the radio mast. "He came out, closed it, and returned on the cable. The
police immediately searched him and his spacesuit, just in case, and he
positively did not have the jewels. There was no reason to suspect him of
anything - good steady worker - though I'll admit he's disappeared since then.
The Jane blasted a few minutes late and her jets were watched till they cut off
and she went into free fall. And that's the last anyone saw of her till she got
here - without the jewels."
"And right on
orbit," added Yamagata. "If by some freak she had been boarded, it
would have thrown her off enough for us to notice as she came in. Transference
of momentum between her and the other ship."
"I see." Behind his
faceplate, Syaloch's beak cut a sharp black curve across heaven. "Now
then, Gregg, were the jewels actually in the box when it was delivered?"
"At Earth Station, you
mean? Oh, yes. There are four UN Chief Inspectors involved, and HQ says they're
absolutely above suspicion. When I sent back word of the theft, they insisted
on having their own quarters and so on searched, and went under scop
voluntarily."
"And your own constables
on Phobos?"
"Same thing," said
the policeman grimly. "I've slapped on an embargo - nobody but me has left
this settlement since the loss was discovered. I've had every room and tunnel
and warehouse searched." He tried to scratch his head, a frustrating
attempt when one is in a spacesuit. "I can't maintain those restrictions
much longer. Ships are coming in and the consignees want their freight."
"Hnachla. That puts us
under a time limit, then." Syaloch nodded to himself. "Do you know,
this is a fascinating variation of the old locked room problem. A robot ship in
transit is a locked room in the most classic sense." He drifted off into a
reverie.
Gregg stared bleakly across
the savage horizon, naked rock tumbling away under his feet, and then back over
the field. Odd how tricky your vision became in airlessness, even when you had
bright lights. That fellow crossing the field there, under the full glare of
sun and floodlamps, was merely a stipple of shadow and luminance . . what the
devil was he doing, tying a shoe of all things? No, he was walking quite
normally -
"I'd like to put
everyone on Phobos under scop," said Gregg with a violent note, "but
the law won't allow it unless the suspect volunteers - and only my own men have
volunteered."
"Quite rightly, my dear
fellow," said Syaloch. "One should at least have the privilege of
privacy in his own skull. And it would make the investigation unbearably
crude."
"I don't give a
fertilizing damn how crude it is," snapped Gregg. "I just want that
box with the crown jewels safe inside."
"Tut - tut! Impatience
has been the ruin of many a promising young police officer, as I seem to recall
my spiritual ancestor of Earth pointing out to a Scotland Yard man who - hm -
may even have been a physical ancestor of yours, Gregg. It seems we must try
another approach. Are there any people on Phobos who might have known the
jewels were aboard this ship?"
"Yes. Two men only. I've
pretty well established that they never broke security and told anyone else
till the secret was out."
"And who are they?"
"Technicians, Hollyday
and Steinmann. They were working at Earth Station when the Jane was loaded.
They quit soon after - not at the same time - and came here by liner and got
jobs. You can bet that their quarters have been searched!"
"Perhaps," murmured
Syaloch, "it would be worthwhile to interview the gentlemen in
question."
Steinmann, a thin redhead,
wore truculence like a mantle; Hollyday merely looked worried. It was no
evidence of guilt - everyone had been rubbed raw of late. They sat in the
police office, with Gregg behind the desk and Syaloch leaning against the wall,
smoking and regarding them with unreadable yellow eyes.
"Damn it, I've told this
over and over till I'm sick of it!' Steinmann knotted his fists and gave the
Martian a bloodshot stare. "I never touched the things and I don't know
who did. Hasn't any man a right to change jobs?"
"Please," said the
detective mildly. "The better you help the sooner we can finish this work.
I take it you were acquainted with the man who actually put the box aboard the
ship?"
"Sure. Everybody knew
John Carter. Everybody knows everybody else on a satellite station." The
Earthman stuck out his jaw. "That's why none of us'll take scop. We won't
blab out all our thoughts to guys we see fifty times a day.
We'd go nuts!"
"I never made such a
request," said Syaloch.
"Carter was quite a good
friend of mine," volunteered Hollyday.
"Uh - huh," grunted
Gregg. "And he quit too, about the same time you fellows did, and went
Earthside and hasn't been seen since. HQ told me you and he were thick. What'd
you talk about?"
"The usual."
Hollyday shrugged. "Wine, women, and song. I haven't heard from him since
I left Earth."
"Who says Carter stole
the box?" demanded Steinmann. "He just got tired of living in space
and quit his job. He couldn't have stolen the jewels - he was searched,
remember?"
"Could he have hidden it
somewhere for a friend to get at this end?" inquired Syaloch.
"Hidden it? Where? Those
ships don't have secret compartments." Steinmann spoke wearily. "And
he was only aboard the Jane a few minutes, just long enough to put the box
where he was supposed to." His eyes smoldered at Gregg. "Let's face
it: the only people anywhere along the line who ever had a chance to lift it
were our own dear cops."
The Inspector reddened and
half rose. "Look here, you -"
"We've got your word
that you're innocent," growled Steinmann. "Why should it be any
better than mine?"
Syaloch waved both men back.
"If you please. Brawls are unphilosophic." His beak opened and
clattered, the Martian equivalent of a smile. "Has either of you, perhaps,
a theory? I am open to all ideas."
There was a stillness. Then
Hollyday mumbled: "Yes. I have one."
Syaloch hooded his eyes and
puffed quietly, waiting.
Hollyday's grin was shaky.
"Only if I'm right, you'll never see those jewels again."
Gregg sputtered.
"I've been around the
Solar System a lot," said Hollyday. "It gets lonesome out in space.
You never know how big and lonesome it is till you've been there, all by
yourself. And I've done just that - I'm an amateur uranium prospector, not a
lucky one so far. I can't believe we know everything about the universe, or
that there's only vacuum between the planets."
"Are you talking about
the cobblies?" snorted Gregg.
"Go ahead and call it
superstition. But if you're in space long enough . . well, somehow, you know.
There are beings out there - gas beings, radiation beings, whatever you want to
imagine, there's something living in space."
"And what use would a
box of jewels be to a cobbly?"
Hollyday spread his hands.
"How can I tell? Maybe we bother them, scooting through their own dark
kingdom with our little rockets. Stealing the crown jewels would be a good way
to disrupt the Mars trade, wouldn't it?"
Only Syaloch's pipe broke the
inward - pressing silence. But its burbling seemed quite irreverent.
"Well -" Gregg
fumbled helplessly with a meteoric paperweight. "Well, Mr. Syaloch, do you
want to ask any more questions?"
"Only one." The
third lids rolled back, and coldness looked out at Steinmann. "If you
please, my good man, what is your hobby?"
"Huh? Chess. I play
chess. What's it to you?" Steinmann lowered his head and glared sullenly.
"Nothing else?"
"What else is
there?"
Syaloch glanced at the
Inspector, who nodded confirmation, and then replied gently:
"I see. Thank you.
Perhaps we can have a game sometime. I have some small skill of my own. That is
all for now, gentlemen." They left, moving like things of dream through
the low gravity.
"Well?" Gregg's
eyes pleaded with Syaloch. "What next?"
"Very little. I think .
. yesss, while I am here I should like to watch the technicians at work. In my
profession, one needs a broad knowledge of all occupations."
Gregg sighed.
Ramanowitz showed the guest
around. The Kim Brackney was in and being unloaded. They threaded through a
hive of spacesuited men.
"The cops are going to
have to raise that embargo soon," said Ramanowitz. "Either that or
admit why they've clamped it on. Our warehouses are busting."
"It would be politic to
do so," nodded Syaloch. "Ah, tell me . . is this equipment standard
for all stations?"
"Oh, you mean what the
boys are wearing and carrying around? Sure. Same issue everywhere."
"May I inspect it more
closely?"
"Hm?" Lord, deliver
me from visiting firemen! thought Ramanowitz. He waved a mechanic over to him.
"Mr. Syaloch would like you to explain your outfit," he said with
ponderous sarcasm.
"Sure. Regular spacesuit
here, reinforced at the seams." The gauntleted hands moved about,
pointing. "Heating coils powered from this capacitance battery. Ten - hour
air supply in the tanks. These buckles, you snap your tools into them, so they
won't drift around in free fall. This little can at my belt holds paint that I
spray out through this nozzle."
"Why must spaceships be
painted?" asked Syaloch. "There is nothing to corrode the
metal."
"Well, sir, we just call
it paint. It's really gunk, to seal any leaks in the hull till we can install a
new plate, or to mark any other kind of damage. Meteor punctures and so
on." The mechanic pressed a trigger and a thin, almost invisible stream
jetted out, solidifying as it hit the ground.
"But it cannot readily
be seen, can it?" objected the Martian. "I, at least, find it
difficult to see clearly in airlessness."
"That's right. Light
doesn't diffuse, so .. well, anyhow, the stuff is radioactive - not enough to
be dangerous, just enough so that the repair crew can spot the place with a
Geiger counter."
"I understand. What is
the half - life?"
"Oh, I'm not sure. Six
months, maybe? It's supposed to remain detectable for a year."
"Thank you."
Syaloch stalked off. Ramanowitz had to jump to keep up with those long legs.
"Do you think Carter may
have hid the box in his paint can?" suggested the human.
"No, hardly. The can is
too small, and I assume he was searched thoroughly." Syaloch stopped and
bowed. "You have been very kind and patient, Mr. Ramanowitz. I am finished
now, and can find the Inspector myself."
"What for?"
"To tell him he can lift
the embargo, of course." Syaloch made a harsh sibilance. "And then I
must get the next boat to Mars. If I hurry, I can attend the concert in Sabaeus
tonight." His voice grew dreamy. "They will be premiering Hanyech's
Variations on a Theme by Mendelssohn, transcribed to the Royal Chlannach scale.
It should be most unusual."
It was three days afterward
that the letter came. Syaloch excused himself and kept an illustrious client
squatting while he read it. Then he nodded to the other Martian. "You will
be interested to know, sir, that the Estimable Diadems have arrived at Phobos
and are being returned at this moment."
The client, a Cabinet
Minister from the House of Actives, blinked. "Pardon, Freehatched Syaloch,
but what have you to do with that?"
"Oh . . . I am a friend
of the Featherless police chief. He thought I might like to know."
"Hraa. Were you not on
Phobos recently?"
"A minor case." The
detective folded the letter carefully, sprinkled it with salt, and ate it.
Martians are fond of paper, especially official Earth stationary with high rag
content. "Now, sir, you were saying -?"
The parliamentarian responded
absently. He would not dream of violating privacy - no, never - but if he had X
- ray vision he would have read:
"Dear Syaloch,
"You were absolutely
right. Your locked room problem is solved. We've got the jewels back,
everything is in fine shape, and the same boat which brings you this letter
will deliver them to the vaults. It's too bad the public can never know the
facts - two planets ought to be grateful to you - but I'll supply that much
thanks all by myself, and insist that any bill you care to send be paid in full.
Even if the Assembly had to make a special appropriation, which I'm afraid it
will."
"I admit your idea of
lifting the embargo at once looked pretty wild to me, but it worked. I had our
boys out, of course, scouring Phobos with Geigers, but Hollyday found the box
before we did. Which saved us a lot of trouble, to be sure. I arrested him as
he came back into the settlement, and he had the box among his ore samples. He
has confessed, and you were right all along the line.
"What was that thing you
quoted at me, the saying of that Earthman you admire so much? 'When you have
eliminated the impossible, whatever remains, however improbable, must be true.'
Something like that. It certainly applies to this case.
"As you decided, the box
must have been taken to the ship at Earth Station and left there - no other
possibility existed. Carter figured it out in half a minute when he was ordered
to take the thing out and put it aboard the Jane. He went inside, all right,
but still had the box when he emerged. In that uncertain light nobody saw him
put it 'down' between four girders right next to the hatch. Or as you remarked,
if the jewels are not in the ship, and yet not away from the ship, they must be
on the ship. Gravitation would hold them in place. When the Jane blasted off,
acceleration pressure slid the box back, but of course the waffle - iron
pattern kept it from being lost; it fetched up against the after rib and stayed
there. All the way to Mars! But the ship's gravity held it securely enough even
in free fall, since both were on the same orbit.
"Hollyday says that
Carter told him all about it. Carter couldn't go to Mars himself without being
suspected and watched every minute once the jewels were discovered missing. He
needed a confederate. Hollyday went to Phobos and took up prospecting as a
cover for the search he'd later be making for the jewels.
"As you showed me, when
the ship was within a thousand miles of this dock, Phobos gravity would be
stronger than her own. Every spacejack knows that the robot ships don't start
decelerating till they're quite close; that they are then almost straight above
the surface; and that the side with the radio mast and manhatch - the side on
which Carter had placed the box - is rotated around to face the station. The centrifugal
force of rotation threw the box away from the ship, and was in a direction
toward Phobos rather than away from it. Carter knew that this rotation is slow
and easy, so the force wasn't enough to accelerate the box to escape velocity
and lose it in space. It would have to fall down toward the satellite. Phobos
Station being on the side opposite Mars, there was no danger that the loot
would keep going till it hit the planet.
"So the crown jewels
tumbled onto Phobos, just as you deduced. Of course Carter had given the box a
quick radio - active spray as he laid it in place, and Hollyday used that to
track it down among all those rocks and crevices. In point of fact, its path
curved clear around this moon, so it landed about five miles from the station.
"Steinmann has been
after me to know why you quizzed him about his hobby. You forgot to tell me
that, but I figured it out for myself and told him. He or Hollyday had to be
involved, since nobody else knew about the cargo, and the guilty person had to
have some excuse to go out and look for the box. Chess playing doesn't furnish
that kind of alibi. Am I right? At least, my deduction proves I've been
studying the same canon you go by. Incidentally, Steinmann asks if you'd care
to take him on the next time he has planet leave.
"Hollyday knows where
Carter is hiding, and we've radioed the information back to Earth. Trouble is,
we can't prosecute either of them without admitting the facts. Oh, well, there
are such things as blacklists.
"Will have to close this
now to make the boat. I'll be seeing you soon - not professionally, I hope!
Admiring regards,
Inspector Gregg."
But as it happened, the
Cabinet minister did not possess X - ray eyes. He dismissed unprofitable
speculation and outlined his problem. Somebody, somewhere in Sabaeus, was
famiking the krats, and there was an alarming zaksnautry among the hyukus. It
sounded to Syaloch like an interesting case.
by P. Schuyler Miller
Suppose archaeological
research uncovered extraterrestrial traces in the Cretaceous? Adventure in the
age of the dinosaurs.
A long shadow fell across the
ledge. I laid down the curved blade with which I was chipping at the soft
sandstone, and squinted up into the glare of the afternoon sun. A man was
sitting on the edge of the pit, his legs dangling over the side. He raised a
hand in salutation.
"Hi!"
He hunched forward to jump.
My shout stopped him.
"Look out! You'll smash
them!"
He peered down at me,
considering the matter. He had no hat, and the sun made a halo of his blond,
curly hair.
"They're fossils, aren't
they?" he objected. "Fossils I've seen were stone, and stone is hard.
What do you mean— I'll smash 'em?"
"I mean what I said.
This sandstone is soft and the bones in it are softer. Also, they're old.
Digging out dinosaurs is no pick-and-shovel job nowadays."
"Um-m-m." He rubbed
his nose thoughtfully. "How old would you say they were?"
I got wearily to my feet and
began to slap the dust out of my breeches. Evidently I was in for another siege
of questions. He might be a reporter, or he might be any one of the twenty-odd
farmers in the surrounding section. It would make a difference what I told him.
"Come on down here where
we can talk," I invited. "We'll be more comfortable. There's a trail
about a hundred yards up the draw."
"I'm all right." He
leaned back on braced arms. "What is it? What did it look like?"
I know when I'm beaten. I
leaned against the wall of the quarry, out of the sun, and began to fill my
pipe. I waved the packet of tobacco courteously at him, but he shook his head.
"Thanks.
Cigarette." He lighted one. "You're Professor Belden, aren't you? E.
J. Beldan. "E" stands for Ephratah, or some such. Doesn't affect your
digging any, though." He exhaled a cloud of smoke. "What's that thing
you were using?"
I held it up. "It's a
special knife for working out bones like these. The museum's model. When I was
your age we used butcher knives and railroad spikes—anything we could get our
hands on. There weren't any railroads out here then."
He nodded. "I know. My
father dug for 'em. Hobby of his, for a while. Changed over to stamps when he
lost his leg." Then with an air of changing the subject. "That thing
you're digging out—what did it look like? Alive, I mean."
I had about half of the
skeleton worked out. I traced its outline for him with the knife. "There's
the skull; there's the neck and spine, and what's left of the tail; this was
its left foreleg. You can see the remains of the crest along the top of the
skull, and the flat snout like a duck's beak. It's one of many species of
trachodon—the duckbilled aquatic dinosaurs. They fed along the shore lines, on
water plants and general browse, and some of them were bogged down and
drowned."
"I get it. Big
bruiser—little, front legs and husky hind ones with a tail like a kangaroo. Sat
on it when he got tired. Fin on his head like a fish, and a face like a duck.
Did he have scales?"
"I doubt it," I
told him. "More likely warts like a toad, or armor plates like an
alligator. We've found skin impressions of some of this one's cousins, south of
here, and that's what they were like."
He nodded again—that
all-knowing nod that gets my eternal goat. He fumbled inside his coat and
brought out a little leather folder or wallet, and leafed through its contents.
He leaned forward and something white came scaling down at my feet.
"Like that?" he
asked.
I picked it up. It was a
photograph, enlarged from a miniature camera shot. It showed the edge of a
reedy lake or river, with a narrow, sandy strip of beach and a background of
feathery foliage that looked like tree ferns. Thigh-deep in the water, lush
lily stalks trailing from its flat jaws, stood a replica of the creature whose
skeleton was embedded in the rock at my feet—a trachodon. It was a perfect
likeness—the heavy, frilled crest, the glistening skin with its uneven patches
of dark tubercles, the small, webbed forepaws on skinny arms.
"Nice job," I
admitted. "Is it one of Knight's new ones?"
"Knight?" He seemed
puzzled. "Oh—the Museum of Natural History. No—I made it myself."
"You're to be congratulated,"
I assured him. "I don't know when I've seen a nicer model. What's it
for—the movies?"
"Movies?" He
sounded exasperated. "I'm not making movies. I made the picture—the
photograph. Took it myself—here—or pretty close to here. The thing was alive,
and is still for all I know. It chased me."
That was the last straw.
"See here," I said, "if you're trying to talk me into backing
some crazy publicity stunt, you can guess again. I wasn't born yesterday, and I
cut my teeth on a lot harder and straighter science than your crazy newspaper
syndicates dish out. I worked these beds before you were born, or your father,
either, and there were no trachodons wandering around chasing smart
photographers with the dt's and no lakes or tree ferns for 'em to wander in. If
you're after a testimonial for some one's model of Cretaceous fauna, say so.
That is an excellent piece of work, and if you're responsible you have every
right to be proud of it. Only stop this blither about photographing dinosaurs
that have been fossils for sixty million years."
The fellow was stubborn.
"It's no hoax," he insisted doggedly. "There's no newspaper
involved and I'm not peddling dolls. I took that photograph. Your trachodon
chased me and I ran. And I have more of the same to prove it! Here."
The folder landed with a
thump at my feet. It was crammed with prints like the first—enlargements of
Leica negatives—and for sheer realism I have never seen anything like them.
"I had thirty
shots," he told me. "I used them all, and they were all beauties. And
I can do it again!"
Those prints! I can see them
now; landscapes that vanished from this planet millions of years before the
first furry tree shrew scurried among the branches of the first temperate
forests and became the ancestor of mankind; monsters whose buried bones and
fossil footprints are the only mementos of a race of giants vaster than any
other creatures that ever walked the earth; there were more of the trachodons—a
whole herd of them, it seemed, browsing along the shore of a lake or large
river, and they had that individuality that marks the work of the true artist
they were Corythosaurs, like the one I was working on—one of the better-known
genera of the great family of Trachodons. But the man who had restored them had
used his imagination to show details of markings and fleshy structure that I
was sure had never been shown by any recorded fossils.
Nor was that all. There were
close-ups of plants—trees and low bushes—that were masterpieces of minute
detail, even to the point of showing withered fronds, and the insects that
walked and stalked and crawled over them. There were vistas of rank marshland
scummed over with stringy algae and lush with tall grasses and taller reeds,
among which saurian giants wallowed. There were two or three other varieties of
Trachodon that I could see, and a few smaller dinosaurs, with a massive bulk in
what passed for the distance that might have been a brontosaurus hangover from
the Jurassic of a few million years before. I pointed to it.
"You slipped up there,"
I said. "We've found no traces of that creature so late in the Age of
Reptiles. It's a very common mistake, every fantastic novelist makes it when he
tries to write a time-traveling story. Tyrannosaurus eats brontosaurus and is
then gored to death by Triceratops. The trouble with it is that it couldn't
happen."
The boy ground his cigarette
butt into the sand. "I don't know about that," he said. "It was
there—I photographed it—and that's all there was to it. Tyrannosaurus I didn't
see —and I'm not sorry. I've read those yarns you're so supercilious about.
Good stuff—they arouse your curiosity and make you think. Triceratops—if he's
the chunky devil with three horns sticking out of his head and snout—I got in
profusion. You haven't come to him yet. Go down about three more.
I humored him. Sure enough,
there was a vast expanse of low rolling plains with some lumpy hills in the
distance. The thing was planned very poorly—any student would have laid it out
looking toward the typical Cretaceous forest, rather than away from it—but it
had the same startling naturalness that the others had. And there were indeed
Triceratops in plenty—a hundred or more, grazing stolidly in little family
groups of three or four, on a rank prairie grass that grew in great tufts from
the sandy soil.
I guffawed. "Who told
you that was right?" I demanded. "Your stuff is good—the best I've
ever seen—but it is careless slips like that that spoil everything for the real
scientist. Reptiles never herd, and dinosaurs were nothing but overgrown
reptiles. Go on—take your pictures to someone who has the time to be amused. I
don't find them funny or even interesting."
I stuffed them into the
folder and tossed it to him. He made no attempt to catch It. For a moment he
sat staring down at me, then in a shower of sand he was beside me. One
hobnailed boot gouged viciously across the femur of my dinosaur and the other
crashed down among its brittle ribs. I felt the blood go out of my face with
anger, then come rushing back. If I had been twenty years younger I would have
knocked him off his feet and dared him to come back for more. But he was as red
as I.
"Damn it," he
cried, "no bald-headed old fuzzy-wuzzy is going to call me a liar twice!
You may know a lot about dead bones, but your education with regard to living
things has been sadly neglected. So reptiles never herd? What about alligators?
What about the Galapagos iguanas? What about snakes? Bah—you can't see any
farther than your own nose and never will! When I show you photographs of
living dinosaurs, taken with this very camera twenty-four hours ago, not more
than three or four miles from where we're standing—well, it's high time you
scrap your hidebound, bone-dry theories and listen to a branch of science
that's real and living, and always will be. I photographed those dinosaurs! I
can do it again—any tune I like. I will do it."
He stopped for breath. I
simply looked at him. It's the best way, when some crank gets violent. He
colored and grinned sheepishly, then picked up the wallet from where it had
fallen at the base of the quarry cut. There was an inner compartment with a
covering flap which I had not touched. He rummaged in it with a finger and
thumb and brought out a scrap of leathery-looking stuff, porous and coated with
.a kind of shiny, dried mucous.
"Put a name to it,"
he demanded.
I turned it over in my palm
and examined it carefully. It was a bit of eggshell—undoubtedly a reptilian
egg, and a rather large one—but I could tell nothing more.
"It might be an
alligator or crocodile egg, or it might have been laid by one of the large
oviparous snakes," I told him. "That would depend on where you found
it.
I suppose that you will claim
that it is a dinosaur egg—a fresh egg."
"I claim nothing,"
he retorted. "That's for you to say. You're the expert on dinosaurs, not
I. But if you don't like that—what about this?"
He had on a hunting jacket
and corduroy breeches like mine. From the big side pocket he drew two eggs
about the length of my palm—misshapen and gray-white in color, with that
leathery texture so characteristic of reptile eggs. He held them up between
himself and the sun.
"This one's fresh,"
he said. "The sand was still moist around the nest. This other is from the
place where I got the shell. There's something in it. If you want to, you can
open it."
I took it. It was heavy and
somewhat discolored at the larger end, where something had pierced the shell.
As he had said, there was evidently something inside. I hesitated. I felt that
I would be losing face if I took him at his word to open it. And yet—
I squatted down and laying
the egg on a block of sandstone beside the weird, crested skull of the
Corythosaur, I ripped its leathery shell from end to end.
The stench nearly felled me.
The inside was a mass of greenish yellow matter such as only a very long-dead
egg can create. The embryo was well advanced, and as I poked around in the
noisome mess it began to take definite form. I dropped the knife and with my
fingers wiped away the last of the putrid ooze from the twisted, jellylike
thing that remained. I rose slowly to my feet and looked him squarely in the
eye.
"Where did you get that
egg?"
He smiled—that maddening,
slow smile. "I told you," he said. "I found it over there, a
mile or so, beyond the belt of jungle that fringes the marshes. There were
dozens of them—mounds like those that turtles make, in the warm sand. I opened
two. One was fresh; the other was full of broken shells—and this." He eyed
me quizzically. "And what does the great Professor Belden make of
it?"
What he said had given me an
idea. "Turtles," I mused aloud. "It could be a turtle—some rare
species—maybe a mutation or freak that never developed far enough to really
take shape. It must be!"
He sounded weary.
"Yes," he said flatly, "it could be a turtle. It isn't but that
doesn't matter to you. Those photographs could be fakes, and none-too-clever
fakes at that. They show things that couldn't happen—that your damned bone-dry
science says are wrong. All right—you've got me. It's your found. But I'm
coming back, and I'm coming to bring proof that will convince you and every
other stiff-necked old fuzz-buzz in the world that I, Terence Michael Aloysius
Donovan, have stepped over the traces into the middle of the Cretaceous era and
lived there, comfortably and happily, sixty million years before I was
born!"
He walked away. I heard his
footsteps receding up the draw, and the rattle of small stones as he climbed to
the level of the prairie. I stood staring down at the greenish mess that was
frying in the hot sun on the bright red sandstone. It could have been a turtle,
malformed in the embryo so that its carapace formed a sort of rudimentary,
flaring shield behind the beaked skull. Or it could be—something else.
If it was that something, all
the sanity and logic had gone out of the world, and a boy's mad,
pseudoscientific dream became a reality that could not possibly be real.
Paradox within paradox—contradiction upon contradiction. I gathered up my tools
and started back for camp.
During the days that followed
we worked out the skeleton of the Corythosaur and swathed it in plaster-soaked
burlap for its long journey by wagon, truck, and train back to the museum. I
had perhaps a week left to use as I saw fit. But somehow, try as I would, I
could not forget the young, blond figure of Terry Donovan, and the two strange
eggs that he had pulled out of his pocket.
About a mile up the draw from
our camp I found the remains of what had been a beach in Cretaceous times.
Where it had not weathered away, every ripple mark and worm burrow was intact.
There were tracks—remarkable fine ones—of which any museum would be proud.
Dinosaurs, big and little, had come this way, millions of years ago, and left
the mark of their passing in the moist sand, to be buried and preserved to
arouse the apish curiosity of a race whose tiny, hairy ancestors were still
scrambling about on all fours.
Beyond the beach had been
marshes and a quicksand. Crumbling white bones protruded from the stone in
incalculable profusion, massed and jumbled into a tangle that would require
years of careful study to unravel. I stood with a bit of crumbling bone in my
hand, staring at the mottled rock. A step sounded on the talus below me. It was
Donovan.
Some of the cocksure
exuberance had gone out of him. He was thinner and his face was covered with a
stubbly growth of beard. He wore shorts and a tattered shirt, and his left arm
was strapped to his side with bands of some gleaming metallic cloth. Dangling
from the fingers of his good hand was the strangest bird I have ever seen.
He flung it down at my feet.
It was purplish black with a naked red head and wattled neck. Its tail was
feathered as a sumac is leafed, with stubby feathers sprouting in pairs from a
naked, ratty shaft. Its wings had little three-fingered hands at the joints.
And its head was long and narrow, like a lizard's snout, with great, round,
lidless eyes and a mouthful of tiny yellow teeth.
I looked from the bird to
him. There was no smile on his lips now. He was staring at the footprints of
the rock.
"So you've found the
beach." His voice was a weary monotone. "It was a sort of sandy spit,
between the marshes and the sea, where they came to feed and be fed on. Dog eat
dog. Sometimes they would blunder into the quicksands and flounder and bleat
until they drowned. You see—I was there. That bird was there—alive when those
dead, crumbling bones were alive—not only in the same geological age but in the
same year, the same month—the same day! You've got proof now—proof that you
can't talk away! Examine it Cut it up. Do anything you want with it. But by the
powers, this time you've got to believe me! This time you've got to help!"
I stooped and picked the
thing up by its long scaly legs. No bird like it had lived, or could have
lived, on this planet for millions of years. I thought of those thirty
photographs of the incredible—of the eggs he had had, one of them fresh, one
with an embryo that might, conceivably, have been an unknown genus of turtle.
"All right," I
said. "I'll come. What do you want?"
He lived three miles away
across the open prairie. The house was a modernistic metal box set among
towering cottonwoods at the edge of a small reservoir. A power house at the dam
furnished light and electricity—all that he needed to bring civilized comfort
out of the desert.
One wing of the house was
windowless and sheer-walled with blower vents at intervals on the sloping roof.
A laboratory, I guessed. Donovan unlocked a steel door in the wall and pushed
it open. I stepped past him into the room.
It was bare. A flat-topped
desk stood in the corner near the main house, with a shelf of books over it. A
big switchboard covered the opposite wall, flanked by two huge DC generators.
There were cupboards and a long worktable littered with small apparatus. But a
good half of the room was empty save for the machine that squatted in the
middle of the concrete floor.
It was like a round, lead
egg, ten feet high and half as broad. It was set in a cradle of steel girders,
raised on massive insulators. Part of it stood open like a door, revealing the
inside—a chamber barely large enough to hold a man, with a host of dials and switches
set in an insulated panel in the leaden wall, and a flat bakelite floor. Heavy
cables came out of that floor to the instrument board, and two huge, copper bus
bars were clamped to the steel base.
The laboratory was filled
with the drone of the generators, charging some hidden battery, and there was a
faint tang of ozone in the air.
Donovan shut and locked the
door. "That's the Egg," he said, "I'll show it to you later,
after you've heard me out. Will you help me with this arm of mine, first?"
I cut the shirt away and
unwrapped the metallic gauze that held the arm tight against his body. Both
bones of the forearm were splintered and the flesh gashed as though by jagged
knives. The wound had been cleaned, and treated with some bright green
antiseptic whose odor I did not recognize. The bleeding had stopped, and there
was none of the inflammation that I should have expected.
He answered my unspoken
question. "She fixed it up— Lana. One of your little playmates—the kind I
didn't see the first time—wanted to eat me." He was rummaging in the
bottom drawer of the desk. "There's no clean cloth here," he said.
"I haven't time to look in the house. You'll have to use that again."
"Look here," I
protested, "you can't let a wound like that go untreated. It's serious.
You must have a doctor."
He shook his head. "No
time. It would take a doctor two hours to get out here from town. He'd need
another hour, or more, to fool around with me. In just forty minutes my
accumulators will be charged to capacity, and in forty-one I'll be gone—back
there. Make a couple of splints out of that orange crate in the corner and tie
me up again. It'll do—for as long as I'll be needing it."
I split the thin boards and
made splints, made sure that the bones were set properly and bound them tightly
with the strange silvery cloth, then looped the loose ends in a sling around
his neck. I went into the house to get him clean clothes. When I returned he
was stripped, scrubbing himself at the laboratory sink. I helped him clamber
into underwear, a shirt and breeches, pull on high-top shoes. I plugged in an
electric razor and sat watching him as he ran it over his angular jaw.
He was grinning now.
"You're all right, professor," he told me. "Not a question out
of you, and I'll bet you've been on edge all the while. Well—I'll tell you
everything. Then you can take it or leave it.
"Look there on the bench
behind you—that coiled spring. It's a helix—a spiral made up of two-dimensional
cross sections twisted in a third dimension. If you make two marks on it, you
can go from one to the other by traveling along the spring, round and round,
for about six inches. Or you can cut across from one spiral to the next.
Suppose your two marks come right together—so. They're two inches apart, along
the spring—and no distance at all if you cut across.
"So much for that. You
know Einstein's picture of the universe—space and time tied up together in some
kind of four-dimensional continuum that's warped and bent in all sorts of weird
ways by the presence of matter. Maybe closed and maybe not. Maybe expanding
like a balloon and maybe shrinking like a melting hailstone. Well—I know what
that shape is. I've proved it. It's spiraled like that spring—spiraled in time!
"See what that means?
Look—I'll show you. This first scratch here in the spring, is today—now. Here
will be tomorrow, a little further along the wire. Here's next year. And here
is some later time, one full turn of the coil away, directly above the first
mark.
"Now watch. I can go
from today to tomorrow—to next year—like this by traveling with time along the
spring. That's what the world is doing. Only by the laws of physics —entropy
and all that—there's no going back. It's one-way traffic. And you can't get
ahead any faster than time wants to take you. That's if you follow the spring.
But you can cut across!
"Look—here are the two
marks I just made, now and two years from now. They're two inches apart, along
the coiled wire, but when you compress the spring they are together—nothing
between them but the surface of the two coils. You can stretch a bridge across
from one to the other, so to speak, and walk across—into a time two years from
now. Or you can go the other way, two years into the past.
"That's all there is to
it. Time is coiled like a spring. Some other age in earth's history lies next
to ours, separated only by an intangible boundary, a focus of forces that keeps
us from seeing into it and falling into it. Past time—present time—future time,
side by side. Only it's not two years, or three, or a hundred. It's sixty
million years from now to then the long way around!
"I said you could get
from one coil of time to the next one if you build a bridge across. I built
that bridge—the Egg. I set up a field of forces in it—no matter how—that
dissolve the invisible barrier between our time and the next. I give it an
electromagnetic shove that sends it in the right direction, forward or back.
And I land sixty million years in the past, in the age of dinosaurs."
He paused, as if to give me a
chance to challenge him. I didn't try. I am no physicist, and if it was as he
said—if time was really a spiral, with adjacent coils lying side by side, and
if his leaden Egg could bridge the gap between— then the pictures and the eggs
and the bird were possible things. And they were more than possible. I had seen
them.
"You can see that the
usual paradoxes don't come in at all," Donovan went on. "About
killing your grandfather, and being two places at once—that kind of thing. The
time screw has a sixty-million-year pitch. You can slide from coil to coil,
sixty million years at a time, but you can't cover any shorter distance without
living it. If I go back or ahead sixty million years, and live there four days,
I'll get back here next Tuesday, four days from now. As for going ahead and learning
all the scientific wonders of the future, then coming back to change the
destiny of humanity, sixty million years is a long time. I doubt that there'll
be anything human living then. And if there is—if I do learn their secrets and
come back—it will be because their future civilization was built on the fact
that I did so. Screwy as it sounds, that's how it is."
He stopped and sat staring at
the dull gray mass of the Egg. He was looking back sixty million years into an
age when giant dinosaurs ruled the earth. He was watching herds of Triceratops
grazing on the Cretaceous prairie— seeing unsuspected survivors of the genus
that produced Brontosaurus and his kin, wallowing in some protected
swamp—seeing rat-tailed, purple-black Archaeopteryx squawking in the tree
ferns. And he was seeing more!
"I'll tell you the whole
story," he said. "You can believe it or not, as you like. Then I'll
go back. After that—well, maybe you'll write the end, and maybe not. Sixty
million years is a long time!"
He told me: how he hit on his
theory of spiraled time; how he monkeyed around with the mathematics of the
thing until it hung together—built little models of machines that swooped into
nothingness and disappeared; how he made the Egg, big enough to hold a man, yet
not too big for his generators to provide the power to lift it and him across
the boundary between the coils of time—and back again; how he stepped out of
the close, cramped chamber of the Egg into a world of steaming swamps and
desert plains, sixty million years before mankind!
That was when he took the
pictures. It was when the Corythosaur chased him, bleating and bellowing like a
monster cow, when he disturbed its feeding. He lost it among the tree ferns,
and wandered warily through the bizarre, luxurious jungle, batting at great
mosquitoes the size of horseflies and ducking when giant dragon flies zoomed
down and seized them in midair. He watched a small hornless dinosaur scratch a
hole in the warm sand at the edge of the jungle and ponderously lay a clutch of
twenty eggs. When she had waddled away, he took one— the fresh one he had
showed me—and scratched out another from a nest that had already hatched. He
had photographs—he had specimens—and the sun was getting low. Some of the
noises from the salt marshes along the seashore were not very reassuring. So he
came back. And I laughed at him and his proofs, and called him a crazy fake! He
went back. He had a rifle along this time—a huge thing that his father had used
on elephants in Africa. I don't know what he expected to do with it. Shoot a
Triceratops, maybe—since I wouldn't accept his photographs —and hack off its
ungainly, three-horned head for a trophy. He could never have brought it back,
of course, because it was a tight enough squeeze as it was to get himself and
the big rifle into the Egg. He had food and water in a pack—he didn't much like
the look of the water that he had found "over there"—and he was in a
mood to stay until he found something that I and every one like me would have
to accept.
Inland, the ground rose to a
range of low hills along the horizon. Back there, he reasoned, there would be
creatures a little smaller that the things he had seen buoying up their massive
hulks in the sea and marshes. So, shutting the door of the Egg and heaping cycad
fronds over it to hide it from inquisitive dinosaurs, he set out across the
plain toward the west.
The Triceratops herds paid
not the slightest attention to him. He doubted that they could see him unless
he came very close, and then they ignored him. They were herbivorous, and
anything his size could not be an enemy. Only once, when he practically fell
over a tiny, eight-foot calf napping in the tall grass, did one of the old ones
emit a snuffling, hissing roar and come trotting toward him with its three sharp
spikes lowered and its little eyes red.
There were many small
dinosaurs, light and fleet of foot, that were not so unconcerned with his
passage. Some of them were big enough to make him feel distinctly uneasy, and
he fired his first shot in self-defense when a creature the size of an ostrich
leaned forward and came streaking at him with obviously malicious intent. He
blew its head off at twenty paces, and had to duck the body that came clawing
and scampering after him. It blundered on in a straight line, and when it
finally collapsed he cooked and ate it over a fire of dead grass. It tasted
like iguana, he said, and added that iguana tasted a lot like chicken.
Finally, he found a stream
running down from the hills, and took to its bed for greater safety. It was
dry, but in the baked mud were the tracks of things that he hadn't seen and
didn't want to see. He guessed, from my description, that they had been made by
Tyrannosaurus or something equally big and dangerous.
Incidentally, I have
forgotten the most important thing of all. Remember that Donovan's dominating
idea was to prove to me, and to the world, that he had been in the Cretaceous
and hobnobbed with its flora and fauna. He was a physicist by inclination, and
had the physicist's flair for ingenious proofs. Before leaving, he loaded a
lead cube with three quartz quills of pure radium chloride that he had been
using in a previous experiment, and locked the whole thing up in a steel box.
He had money to burn, and besides, he expected to get them back.
The first thing he did when
he stepped out of the Egg on that fateful second trip was to dig a deep hole in
the packed sand of the beach, well above high tide, and bury the box. He had
seen the fossil tracks and ripple marks in the sandstone near his house, and
guessed rightly enough that they dated from some time near the age to which he
had penetrated. If I, or some one equally trustworthy, were to dig that box up
one time coil later, he would not only have produced some very pretty proof
that he had traveled in time—his name and the date were inside the cube—but an
analysis of the radium, and an estimate of how much of it had turned into lead,
would show how many years had elapsed since he buried it. In one fell swoop he
would prove his claim, and give the world two very fundamental bits of
scientific information: an exact date for the Cretaceous period and the
"distance" between successive coils in the spiral of time.
The stream bed finally
petered out in a gully choked with boulders. The terrain was utterly arid and
desolate, and he began to think that he had better turn back. There was nothing
living to be seen, except for some small mammals like brown mice that got into
his pack the first night and ate the bread he was carrying. He pegged a rock at
them, but they vanished among the boulders, and an elephant gun was no good for
anything their size. He wished he had a mousetrap. Mice were something that he
could take back in his pocket.
The morning of the second day
some birds flew by overhead. They were different from the one he killed
later—more like sea gulls—and he got the idea that beyond the hills, in the
direction they were flying, there would be either more wooded lowlands or an
arm of the sea. As it turned out, he was right.
The hills were the summit of
a ridge like the spine of Italy, jutting south into the Cretaceous sea. The sea
had been higher once, covering the sandy waste where the Triceratops herds now
browsed, and there was a long line of eroded limestone cliffs, full of the
black holes of wave-worn caves. From their base he looked back over the desert
plain with its fringe of jungle along the shore of the sea. Something was
swimming in schools, far out toward the horizon—something as big as whales, he
thought—but he had forgotten to bring glasses and he could not tell what they
were. He set about finding a way to climb the escarpment.
Right there was where he made
his first big mistake. He might have known that what goes up has to come down
again on the other side. The smart thing to do would have been to follow the
line of the cliffs until he got into the other valley, or whatever lay beyond.
Instead, he slung his gun around his neck and climbed.
The summit of the cliffs was
a plateau, hollowed out by centuries of erosion into a basin full of gaudy
spires of rock -with the green stain of vegetation around their bases. There
was evidently water and there might be animals that he could photograph or
kill. Anything he found up here, he decided, would be pretty small.
He had forgotten the caves.
They were high-arched, wave-eaten tunnels that extended far back into the
cliffs, and from the lay of the land it was probable that they opened on the
inside as well. Besides, whatever had lived on the plateau when it was at sea
level had presumably been raised with it and might still be in residence. Whether
it had wandered in from outside, or belonged there, it might be hungry—very
hungry. It was.
There was a hiss that raised
the short hair all along his spine. The mice that he had shied rocks at had
heard such hisses and passed the fear of them down to their descendents, who
eventually became his remote ancestors. And they had cause for fear! The thing
that lurched out of the rocky maze, while it didn't top him by more than six
feet and had teeth that were only eight inches long, was big enough to swallow
him in three quick gulps, gun and all.
He ran. He ran like a rabbit.
He doubled into crannies that the thing couldn't cram into and scrambled up
spires of crumbling rock that a monkey would have found difficult, but it knew
short cuts and it was downwind from him and it thundered along behind with very
few yards to spare. Suddenly he popped out of a long, winding corridor onto a
bare ledge with a sheer drop to a steaming, stinking morass alive with things
like crocodiles, only bigger. At the cliffs edge the thing was waiting for him.
One leap and it was between
him and the crevice. He backed toward the cliff, raising his rifle slowly. It
sat watching him for a moment, then raised its massive tail, teetered forward
on its huge hind legs, and came running at him with its tiny foreclaws pumping
like a sprinter's fists.
He threw up the gun and
fired. The bullet plowed into its throat and a jet of smoking blood sprayed him
as its groping claws knocked the rifle from his grasp. Its hideous jaws closed
on his upflung left arm, grinding the bones until he screamed. It jerked him
up, dangling by his broken arm, ten feet in the air, then the idea of death hit
it and it rolled over and lay twitching on the Wood-soaked rock. Its jaws
sagged open, and with what strength he had left Donovan dragged himself out of
range of its jerking claws. He pulled himself up with his back against a rock
and stared into the face of a second monster!
This was the one that had
trailed him. The thing that had actually tasted him was a competitor. It came
striding out of the shadowy gorge, the sun playing on its bronze armor, and
stopped to sniff at the thing Donovan had killed. It rolled the huge carcass
over and tore out the belly, then straightened up with great gouts of bloody
flesh dribbling from its jaws, and looked Donovan in the eye. Inch by inch, he
tried to wedge himself into the crack between the boulders against which he
lay. Then it stepped over its deceased relative and towered above him. Its
grinning mask swooped down and its foul breath was in his face.
Then it was gone!
It wasn't a dream. There were
the rocks—there was the carcass of the other beast—but it was gone! Vanished!
In its place a wisp of bluish vapor was dissipating slowly in the sunlight.
Vapor—and a voice! A woman's voice, in an unknown tongue.
She stood at the edge of the
rocks. She was as tall as he, with very white skin and very black hair, dressed
in shining metal cloth that was wound around her like bandage, leaving her arms
and one white leg free. She was made like a woman and she spoke like a woman,
in a voice that thrilled him in spite of the sickening pain in his arm. She had
a little black cylinder in her hand, with a narrowed muzzle and a grip for her
fingers, and she was pointing it at him. She spoke again, imperiously,
questioning him. He grinned, tried to drag himself to his feet, and passed out
cold.
It was two days before he
came to. He figured that out later. It was night. He was in a tent somewhere
near the sea, for he could hear it pounding on hard-packed sands. Above its
roar there were other noises of the night; mutterings and rumblings of great
reptiles, very far away, and now and then a hissing scream of rage. They
sounded un-real. He seemed to be floating in a silvery mist, with the pain in
his wounded arm throb, throb, throbbing to the rhythm of the sea.
Then he saw that the light
was moonlight, and the silver the sheen of the woman's garment. She sat at his
feet, in the opening of the tent, with the moonlight falling on her hair. It
was coiled like a coronet about her head, and he remembered thinking that she
must be a queen in some magic land, like the ones in fairy tales.
Someone moved, and he saw
that there were others— men—crouched behind a breastwork of stone. They had
cylinders like the one that woman had carried, and other weapons on tripods
like parabolic microphones—great, polished reflectors of energy. The wall
seemed more for concealment than protection, for he remembered the blasting
power of the little cylinder and knew that no mere heap of rock could withstand
it. Unless, of course, they were fighting some foe who lacked their science. A
foe native to this Cretaceous age—hairy, savage men with stones and clubs.
Realization struck him. There
were no men in the Cretaceous. The only mammals were the mouselike marsupials
that had robbed his pack. Then—who was the woman and how had she come here? Who
were the men who guarded her? Were they—could they be—travelers in time like
himself?
He sat up with a jerk that
made his head swim. There was a shimmering flowing movement in the moonlight
and a small, soft hand was pressed over his mouth, an arm was about his
shoulders, easing him back among the cushions. She called out and one of the
men rose and came into the tent. He was tall, nearly seven feet, with silvery
white hair and a queer-shaped skull. He stared expressionlessly down at
Donovan, questioning the woman in that same strange tongue. She answered him,
and Donovan felt with a thrill that she seemed worried. The other shrugged—that
is, he made a queer, quick gesture with his hands that passed for a shrug—and
turned away. Before Donovan knew what was happening, the woman gathered him up
in her arms like a babe and started for the door of the tent.
Terry Donovan is over six
feet tall and weighs two hundred pounds. He stiffened like a naughty child. It
caught her off guard and they went down with a thud, the woman underneath. It
knocked the wind out of her, and Donovan's arm began to throb furiously, but he
scrambled to his feet and with his good hand helped her to rise. They stood
eyeing each other like sparring cats, and then Terry laughed.
It was a hearty Irish guffaw
that broke the tension, but it brought hell down on them. Something spanged on
the barricade and went whining over their heads. Something else came arching
through the moonlight and fell at their feet—a metal ball the size of his head,
whirring like a clock about to strike.
Donovan moved like greased
lightning. He scooped the thing up with his good hand and lobbed it high and
wide in the direction from which it came, then grabbed the woman and ducked. It
burst in midair with a blast of white flame that would have licked them off the
face of the earth in a twinkling—and there was no sound, no explosion such as a
normal bomb should make! There was no bark of rifles off there in the darkness,
though slugs were thudding into the barricade and screaming overhead with
unpleasant regularity. The tent was in ribbons, and seeing no reason why it
should make a better target than need be, he kicked the pole out from under it
and brought it down in a billowing heap.
That made a difference, and
he saw why. The material of the tent was evanescent, hard to see. It did
something to the light that fell on it, distorted it, acting as a camouflage.
But where bullets had torn its fabric, a line of glowing green sparks shone in
the night.
The enemy had lost their
target, but they had the range. A bullet whined evilly past Donovan's ear as he
dropped behind the shelter of the wall. His groping hand found a familiar
shape—his rifle. The cartridge belt was with it. He tucked the butt between his
knees and made sure that it was loaded, then rose cautiously and peeped over
the barricade.
Hot lead sprayed his cheek as
a bullet pinged on the stone beside him. There was a cry from the woman. She
had dropped to her knees beside the tent, and he could see that the ricochet
had cut her arm. The sight of blood on her white skin sent a burning fury
surging through him. He lunged awkwardly to his feet, resting the rifle on top
of the wall, and peered into the darkness.
Five hundred yards away was
the jungle, a wall of utter blackness out of which those silent missiles came.
Nothing was visible against its shadows—or was that a lighter spot that slipped
from tree to tree at the very edge of the moonlight? Donovan's cheek nestled
against the stock of his gun and his eyes strained to catch that flicker of
gray in the blackness. It came—the gun roared—and out of the night rang a
scream of pain. A hit!
Twice before sunup he fired
at fleeting shadows, without result. Beside him, the oldest of the four men—the
one he had seen first—was dressing the woman's wound. It was only a scratch,
but Donovan reasoned that in this age of virulent life forms, it was wise to
take every precaution. There might be germs that no one had even heard of,
lurking everywhere. The others were about his own age, or seemed to be, with
the same queer heads and white hair as their companion's. They seemed utterly
disinterested in him and what he was doing.
As the first rays of the sun
began to brighten the sky behind them, Donovan took stock of the situation.
Their little fortress was perched on a point of rock overlooking the sea, with
the plateau behind it. Salt marshes ran inland as far as he could see, edged
with heavy jungle. And in the no-man's-land between the two was the queerest
ship he had ever seen.
It was of metal,
cigar-shaped, with the gaping mouths of rocket jets fore and after and a row of
staring portholes. It was as big as a large ocean vessel and it answered his
question about these men whose cause he was championing. They had come from
space—from another world!
Bodies were strewn in the
open space between the ship and the barricade. One lay huddled against a huge
boulder, a young fellow, barely out of his teens as we would gauge it.
Donovan's gaze wandered away, then flashed back. The man had moved!
Donovan turned eagerly to the
others. They stared at him, blank-faced. He seized the nearest man by the
shoulder and pointed. A cold light came into the other's eyes, and Donovan saw
his companions edging toward him, their hands on the stubby cylinders of their
weapons. He swore. Damn dummies! He flung the rifle down at the woman's
sandaled feet and leaped to the top of the wall. As he stood there he was a
perfect target, but no shot came. Then he was among the scattered rocks,
zigzagging toward the wounded man. A moment later he slid safely into the niche
behind the boulder, and lifted the other into a sitting position against his
knee. He had been creased— an ugly furrow plowed along his scalp—but he seemed
otherwise intact.
Donovan got his good shoulder
under the man's armpit and lifted him bodily. From the hill behind the
barricade a shot screamed past his head. Before he could drop to safety a
second slug whacked into the body of the man in his arms, and the youth's slim
form slumped in death.
Donovan laid him gently down
in the shelter of the boulder. He wondered whether this would be the beginning
of the end. Under fire from both sides, the little fortress could not hold out
for long. A puff of vapor on the hillside told him why the fire was not being
returned. The damned cylinders had no range. That was why the enemy was using
bullets—air guns, or whatever the things were. All the more reason why he
should save his skin while the saving was good. He ducked behind the rock, then
straightened up and streaked for the shelter of the trees.
Bullets sang around him and
glanced whistling from the rocks. One whipped the sleeve that hung loose at his
side and another grooved the leather of his high-top boots. All came from behind—from
the hill above the camp—and as he gained the safety of the forest he turned and
saw the foe for the first time.
They were deployed in a long
line across the top of the ridge behind the camp. They had weapons like
fat-barreled rifles, with some bulky contraption at the breach. As he watched
they rose and came stalking down the hillside, firing as they came.
They were black, but without
the heavy features of a Negro. Their hair was as yellow as corn, and they wore
shorts and tunics of copper-colored material. Donovan saw that they were
maneuvering toward a spur from which they could fire down into the little
fortress and pick off its defenders one by one. With the man at the barricade
gone, they would be coming after him. If he started now, he might make his way
through the jungle to a point where he could cut back across the hills and
reach the Egg. He had a fifty-fifty chance of making it. Only—there was the
woman. It was murder to leave her, and suicide to stay.
Fate answered for him. From
the barricade he heard the roar of his rifle and saw one of the blacks spin and
fall in a heap. The others stood startled, then raced for cover. Before they
reached it, two more were down, and Donovan saw the woman's sleek black head
thrust above the top of the rocky wall with the rifle butt tucked in the hollow
of her shoulder.
That settled it. No one with
her gumption was going to say that Terry Donovan had run out on her.
Cautiously, he stuck his head out of the undergrowth and looked to left and
right. A hundred feet from him one of the blacks lay half in and half out of
the forest. One of the outlandish-looking rifles was beside him. Donovan pulled
his head back and began to pry his way through the thick undergrowth.
The Donovan luck is famous.
The gun was intact, and with it was a belt case crammed with little metal cubes
that had the look of ammunition. He poked the heavy barrel into the air and
pushed the button that was set in the butt. There was a crackling whisper,
barely audible, and a slug went tearing through the fronds above him. He tried
again, and an empty cube popped out into his palm. He examined it carefully.
There was a sliding cover that had to be removed before the mechanism of the
gun could get at the bullets it contained. He slipped in one of the loaded
cubes and tried again. A second shot went whistling into space. Then, tucking
the gun under his arm, he set out on a flanking trip of his own.
He knew the range of the
weapon he was carrying, if not its nature and he knew how to use it. He knew that
if he could swing far around to the east, along the sea, he might come up on
the ridge behind the blacks and catch them by surprise. Then, if the gang in
the fort would lend a hand, the war was as good as over.
It was easier said than done.
A man with one mangled arm strapped to his side, and a twenty-pound rifle in
his good hand, is not the world's best mountaineer. He worked his way through
the jungle into the lee of the dunes that lay between the cliffs and the beach,
then ran like blue blazes until he was out of sight of the whole fracas, cut
back inland, took his lip in his teeth and began to climb.
There were places where he
balanced on spires the size and sharpness of a needle, or so he said. There
were places where he prayed hard and trod on thin air. Somehow he made it and
stuck his head out from behind a crimson crag to look down on a very pretty
scene.
The ten remaining blacks were
holed upon the crest of the ridge. They were within range of the camp, but they
didn't dare get up and shoot because of whoever was using the rifle. That
"whoever"—the woman, as Donovan had suspected—was out of sight and
stalking them from the north just as he was doing from the south. The fighting
blood of his Irish ancestors sizzled in his veins. He slid the misshapen muzzle
of his weapon out over the top of the rock and settled its butt in the crook of
his good arm. He swiveled it around until it pointed in the direction of two of
the blacks who were sheltering under the same shallow ledge. Then he jammed
down the button and held on.
The thing worked like a
machine gun and kicked like one. Before it lashed itself out of his grip one of
the foe-men was dead, two were flopping about like fish out of water, and the
rest were in full flight. As they sprang to their feet the woman blazed away at
them with the elephant gun. Then the men from the barricade were swarming over
the rock wall, cylinders in hand, and mowing the survivors down in a succession
of tiny puffs of blue smoke. In a moment it was over.
Donovan made his way slowly
down the hillside. The woman was coming to meet him. She was younger than he
had thought—a lot younger—but her youth did not soften her. He thought that she
might still be a better man than he, if it came to a test. She greeted him in
her soft tongue, and held out the rifle. He took it, and as he touched the cold
metal a terrific jolt of static electricity knocked him from his feet.
He scrambled up ruefully. The
woman had not fallen, but her eyes blazed with fury. Then she saw that he had
not acted intentionally, and smiled. Donovan saw now why the blacks wore metal
suits. Their weapons built up a static charge with each shot, and unless the
gunner was well grounded it would accumulate until it jumped to the nearest
conductor. His rubber-soled shoes had insulated him, and the charge built up on
him until he touched the barrel of the rifle, whereupon it grounded through the
steel and the woman's silvery gown.
They went down the hillside
together. Donovan had given the woman the gun he had salvaged, and she was
examining it carefully. She called out to the men, who stood waiting for them
and they began to search the bodies of the blacks for ammunition. Half an hour
later they were standing on the beach in the shadow of the great rocket. The
men had carried their equipment from the camp and stowed it away, while Donovan
and the woman stood outside bossing the job. That is, she bossed while he
watched. Then he recalled who and where he was. Helping these people out in
their little feud was one thing, but going off with them, Heaven knew where,
was another. He reached down and took the woman's hand.
"I've got to be
going," he said.
Of course, she didn't
understand a word he said. She frowned and asked some question in her own
tongue. He grinned. He was no better at languages than she. He pointed to
himself, then up the beach to the east where the Egg should be. He saluted
cheerfully and started to walk away. She cried out sharply and in an instant
all four men were on him.
He brought up the rifle in a
one-handed swing that dropped the first man in his tracks. The gun went
spinning out of his hand but before the others could reach him he had vaulted
the man's body and caught the woman to him in a savage, one-armed hug that made
her gasp for breath. The men stopped, their ray guns drawn. One second more and
he would have been a haze of exploded atoms but none of them dared fire with
the woman in the way. Over the top of her sleek head he stared into their cold,
hard eyes. Human they might be, but there was blessed little of the milk of
human kindness in the way they looked at him.
"Drop those guns,"
he ordered, "or I'll break her damned neck!" None of them moved.
"You hear me!" he barked. "Drop 'em!"
They understood his tone.
Three tapering cylinders thudded on the sand. He thrust the woman forward with
the full weight of his body and trod them into the sand.
"Get back," he
commanded. "Go on. Scram!"
They went. Releasing the
woman, he leaped back and snatched up the weapon she had dropped. He poked its
muzzle at her slender waist and fitted his fingers cozily about the stock. He
jerked his head back, away from the ship.
"You're coming with
me," he said.
She stared inscrutably at him
for a moment, then, without a word, walked past him and set off up the beach.
Donovan followed her. A moment later the dunes had hidden the ship and the
three men who stood beside it.
Then began a journey every
step of which was a puzzle. The girl—for she was really little more—made no
attempt to escape. After the first mile Donovan thrust the ray gun into his
belt and caught up with her. Hours passed, and still they were slogging wearily
along under the escarpment. In spite of the almost miraculous speed with which
it was healing, the strain and activity of the past few hours had started his
arm throbbing like a toothache. It made him grumpy, and he had fallen behind
when a drumming roar made him look up.
It was the rocket ship. It
was flying high, but as he looked at it, it swooped down on them with
incredible speed. A thousand feet above it leveled off and a shaft of violet
light stabbed down, missing the girl by a scant ten feet. Where it hit the sand
was a molten pool, and she was running for her life, zigzagging down like a
frightened rabbit, streaking for the shelter of the cliffs. With a shout
Donovan raced after her.
A mile ahead the ship zoomed
and came roaring back at him. A black hole opened in the face of the cliff. The
girl vanished in its shadows, and as the thunder of the rocket sounded
unbearably loud in his ears, Donovan dived after her. The ray slashed across
the rock above his head and droplets of molten magma seared his back. The girl
was crouching against the wall of the cave. When she saw him she plunged into
the blackness beyond.
He had had enough of hide and
seek. He wanted a showdown and he wanted it now. With a shout, he leaped after
the girl's receding figure and caught her by the shoulder, spinning her around.
Instantly he felt like an
utter fool. He could say nothing that she could understand. The whole damned
affair was beyond understanding. He had strongarmed her into coming with
him—and her own men had tried to burn her down. Her—not him. Somehow, by
something he had done, he had put her in danger of her life from the only
people in the entire universe who had anything in common with her. He couldn't
leave her alone in a wilderness full of hungry dinosaurs, with a gang of gunmen
on her trail, and he couldn't take her with him. The Egg would barely hold one.
He was on a spot, and there was nothing he could do about it.
There was the sound of
footsteps on the gravel behind them. In the dim light he saw the girl's eyes go
wide. He wheeled. Two men were silhoutted against the mouth of the cave. One of
them held a ray gun. He raised it slowly.
Donovan's shoulder flung the
girl against the wall. His hand flicked past his waist and held the gun. Twice
it blazed and the men were gone in a puff of sparkling smoke. But in that
instant, before they were swept out of existence, their guns had exploded in a
misdirected burst of energy that brought the roof crashing down in a thundering
avalanche, sealing the cave from wall to wall.
The shock flung Donovan to
the ground. His wounded arm smashed brutally into the wall and a wave of agony
left him white and faint. The echoes of that stupendous crash died away slowly
in the black recesses of the cave. Then there was utter silence.
Something stirred beside him.
A small soft hand touched his face, found his shoulder, his hand. The girl's
voice murmured, pleading. There was something she wanted—something he must do.
He got painfully to his feet and awaited her next move. She gently detached the
ray gun from his fingers, and before he knew it he was being hustled through
utter darkness into the depths of the cave.
He did a lot of thinking on
that journey through blackness. He put two and two together and got five or six
different answers. Some of them hung together to make sense out of a nightmare.
First, the girl herself. The
rocket, and Donovan's faith in a science that he was proving fallible, told him
that she must have come from another planet. Her unusual strength might mean
that she was from some larger planet, or even some star. At any rate, she was
human and she was somebody of importance.
Donovan mulled over that for
a while. Two races, from the same or different planets, were thirsting for each
other's blood. It might be politics that egged them on, or it might be racial
trouble or religion. Nothing else would account for the fury with which they
were exterminating each other. The girl had apparently taken refuge with her
bodyguard on this empty planet. Possession of her was important. She might be a
deposed queen or princess—and the blacks were on her trail. They found her and
laid siege—whereupon Terry Donovan came barging into the picture.
That was where the
complications began. The girl, reconnoitering had saved him from the dinosaur
which was eating him. Anyone would have done as much. She lugged him back to
camp. Donovan flushed at the thought of the undignified appearance he must have
made—and they patched him up with the miraculous green ointment. Then the scrap
began, and he did his part to bring them out on top. Did it damn well, if any
one was asking. Donovan didn't belong to their gang and didn't want to, so when
they started for home he did likewise. Only it didn't work out that way.
She had ordered her men to
jump him. She wanted to hang on to him, whether for romantic reasons, which was
doubtful, or because she needed another fighting man. They didn't get very far
with their attempt to gang up on him.
That was where the worst of
the trouble began.
Grabbing her as he had had
been a mistake. Somehow that act of touching her—of doing physical violence to
her person—made a difference. It was as though she were a goddess who lost
divinity through his violence, or a priestess who was contaminated by his
touch. She recognized that fact. She knew then that she would have short shrift
at the hands of her own men if she stayed with them. So she came along.
Strangely enough, the men did not follow for some time. It was not until they
returned to the rocket, until they received orders from whoever was in that
rocket, that they tried to kill her.
Whoever was in the rocket!
The thought opened new possibilities. A priest, enforcing the taboos of his
god. A politician, playing party policy. A traitor, serving the interests of
the blacks. None of these did much to explain the girl's own attitude, nor the
reason why this assumed potentate, if he was in the rocket during the battle,
had done nothing to bring one side or the other to victory. It didn't explain
why hours had passed before the pursuit began. And nothing told him what he was
going to do with her when they reached the Egg, if they ever did.
The cave floor had been
rising for some time when Donovan saw a gleam of light ahead. At once the
girl's pace quickened, and she dropped his arm. How, he wondered, had she been
able to traverse that pitch-black labyrinth so surely and quickly? Could she
see in the dark, or judge her way with some strange sixth sense? It added one
more puzzle to the mysteries surrounding her.
He could have danced for joy
when they came out into the light. They had passed under the ridge and come out
at the foot of the cliffs which he had climbed hours before. The whole
landscape was familiar; the gullies in the barren plain, the fringe of swamp
and jungle, and the reefs over which the oily sea was breaking. There, a few
miles to the north, the Egg was hidden. There was safety—home—for one.
She seemed to know what he
was thinking. She laid a reassuring hand on his arm and smiled up at him. This
was his party from now on. Then she saw the pain in his eyes. His arm had taken
more punishment than most men could have stood and stayed alive. Her nimble
fingers peeled away the dressing and gently probed the wound to test the
position of the broken bones. Evidently everything was to her liking, for she
smiled reassuringly and opened a pouch at her waist, from which she took a
little jar of bright-green ointment and smeared it liberally on the wound.
It burned like fire, then a
sensuous sort of glow crept through his arm and side, deadening the pain. She
wadded the dirty bandages into a ball and threw them away. Then, before Donovan
knew what was happening, she had ripped a length of the metallic-looking fabric
from her skirt and was binding the arm tightly to his side.
Stepping back, she regarded
him with satisfaction, then turned her attention to the gun she had taken from
him. A lip of the firing button and an empty cartridge cube popped out into her
palm. She looked at him and he at her. It was all the weapon they had, and it
was empty. Donovan shrugged. Nothing much mattered anyway. With an answering
grimace she sent it spinning away among the rocks. Side by side, they set off
toward the coast and the Egg.
It was the sky that Donovan
feared now. Dinosaurs they could outwit or outrun. He thought he could even
fight one of the little ones, with her to cheer him on. But heat rays shot at
them from the sky, with no cover within miles, was something else again.
Strangely enough, the girl seemed to be enjoying herself. Her voice was a joy
to hear, even if it didn't make sense, and Donovan thought that he got the
drift of her comments on some of the ungainly monstrosities that blemished the
Cretaceous landscape.
Donovan had no desire to be
in the jungle at night, so they took their time. He had matches, which she
examined with curiosity, and they slept, back to back, beside a fire of grass
and twigs in the lee of a big boulder. There was nothing to eat, but it didn't
seem to matter. A sort of silent partnership had been arrived at, and Donovan,
at least, was basking in its friendly atmosphere.
Every road has its ending.
Noon found them standing beside the leaden hulk of the Egg, face to face with
reality. One of them and only one could make the journey back. The Egg would
not hold two, nor was there power enough in its accumulators to carry more than
one back through the barrier between time coils. If the girl were to go, she
would find herself alone in a world unutterably remote from her own, friendless
and unable to understand or to make herself understood. If Donovan returned, he
must leave her alone in the Cretaceous jungle, with no food, no means of
protection from man or beast, and no knowledge of what might be happening sixty
million years later which would seal her fate for good.
There was only one answer. Her
hand went to his arm and pushed him gently toward the open door of the Egg. He,
and he alone, could get the help which they must have and return to find her.
In six hours at the outside the Egg should be ready to make its return trip. In
that six hours Donovan could find me, or some friend, and enlist my aid.
Fortune played into his
hands. There was a patter of footsteps among the fallen fronds, and a small
dinosaur appeared, the body of a bird in its jaws. With a whoop, Donovan sprang
at it. It dropped the bird and disappeared. The creature was not dead, but
Donovan wrung its scrawny neck. Here was proof that must convince me of the
truth of his story—that would bring me to their aid!
He stepped into the machine.
As the door swung shut, he saw the girl raise her hand in farewell. When it
opened again, he stepped out on the concrete floor of his own laboratory, sixty
million years later.
His first thought was for the
generators that would recharge the batteries of the Egg. Then, from the house
and the laboratory, he collected the things that he would need; guns, food,
water, clothing. Finally, he set out to fetch me.
He sat there, his broken arm
strapped to his side with that queer metallic cloth, the torn flesh painted
with some aromatic green ointment. A revolver in its holster lay on the desk at
his elbow; a rifle leaned against the heap of duffel on the floor of the Egg.
What did it all mean? Was it part of some incredibly elaborate hoax, planned
for some inconceivable purpose? Or—fantastic as it seemed—was it truth?
"I'm leaving in ten
minutes," he said. "The batteries are charged."
"What can I do?" I
asked. "I'm no mechanic—no physicist."
"I'll send her back in
the Egg," he told me. "I'll show you how to charge it—it's perfectly
simple—and when it's ready you will send it back empty for me. If there is any
delay, make her comfortable until I come."
I noted carefully everything
he did, every setting of every piece of apparatus, just as he showed them to
me. Then, just four hours after he threw that incredible bird down at my feet,
I watched the leaden door of the Egg swing shut. The hum of the generators rose
to an ugly whine. A black veil seemed to envelop the huge machine—a network of
emptiness which ran together and coalesced into a hole into which I gazed for
interminable distances. Then it was gone. The room was empty. I touched the
switch that stopped the generators.
The Egg did not return—not on
that day, nor the next, nor ever while I waited there. Finally, I came away. I
have told his story—my story before—but they laugh as I did. Only there is one
thing that no one knows.
This year there were new
funds for excavation. I am still senior paleontologist at the museum, and in
spite of the veiled smiles that are beginning to follow me, I was chosen to
continue my work of previous seasons. I knew from the beginning what I would
do. The executors of Donovan's estate gave me permission to trace the line of
the ancient Cretaceous beach that ran across his property. I had a word picture
of that other world as he had seen it, and a penciled sketch, scrawled on the
back of an envelope as he talked. I knew where he had buried the cube of radium
And it might be that this beach of fossil sands, preserved almost since the
beginning of time, was the same one in which Terry Donovan had scooped a hole
and buried a leaden cube, sealed in a steel box.
I have not found the box. If
it is there, it is buried under tons of rock that will require months of labor
and thousands of dollars to remove. We have uncovered a section of the beach in
whose petrified sands every mark made in that ancient day is as sharp and clear
as though it was made yesterday; the ripples of the receding tide—the tracks of
sea worms crawling in the shallow water—the trails of the small reptiles that fed
on the flotsam and jetsam of the water's edge.
Two lines of footprints come
down across the wet sands of that Cretaceous beach, side by side. Together they
cross the forty-foot slab of sandstone which I have uncovered, and vanish where
the rising tide has filled them. They are prints-of a small queerly made sandal
and a rubber-soled hiking boot—of a man and a girl.
A third line of tracks
crosses the Cretaceous sands and overlies those others—huge, splayed,
three-toed, like the prints of some gigantic bird. Sixty million years ago,
mighty Tyrannosaurus and his smaller cousins made such tracks. The print of one
great paw covers both the girl's footprints as she stands for a moment,
motionless, beside the man. They, too vanish at the water's edge.
That is all, but for one
thing; an inch or two beyond the point where the tracks vanish, where the
lapping waters have smoothed the sand, there is a strange mark. The grains of
sand are fused, melted together in a kind of funnel of greenish glass that
reminds me of the fulgurites that one often finds where lightning has struck
iron-bearing sand, or where some high-voltage cable has grounded. It is
smoother and more regular than any fulgurite that I have ever seen.
Two years ago I saw Terry
Donovan step into the leaden Egg that stood in its cradle on the floor of his
laboratory, and vanish with it into nothingness. He has not returned. The
tracks which I have described, imprinted in the sands of a Cretaceous beach,
are very plain, but workmen are the only people beside myself who have seen
them. They see no resemblance to human footprints in the blurred hollows in the
stone. They know, for I have told them again and again during the years that I
have worked with them, that there were no human beings on the earth sixty million
years ago. Science says—and is not science always right?—that only the great
dinosaurs of the Cretaceous age left their fossil footprints in the sands of
time.
from:
ROUND THE MOON by Jules Verne
Round
the Moon first appeared in 1865. Compare this with the take-off of our
astronauts.
PRELIMINARY
CHAPTER:During the year 186-, the whole world was greatly excited by a
scientific experiment unprecedented in the annals of science. The members of the
Gun Club, a circle of artillerymen formed at Baltimore after the American war,
conceived the idea of putting themselves in communication with the moon!-- yes,
with the moon-- by sending to her a projectile. Their president, Barbicane, the
promoter of the enterprise, having consulted the astronomers of the Cambridge
Observatory upon the subject, took all necessary means to ensure the success of
this extraordinary enterprise, which had been declared practicable by the
majority of competent judges. After setting on foot a public subscription,
which realized nearly L1,200,000, they began the gigantic work.
According
to the advice forwarded from the members of the Observatory, the gun destined
to launch the projectile had to be fixed in a country situated between the 0
and 28th degrees of north or south latitude, in order to aim at the moon when
at the zenith; and its initiatory velocity was fixed at twelve thousand yards
to the second. Launched on the 1st of December, at 10hrs. 46m. 40s. P.M., it
ought to reach the moon four days after its departure, that is on the 5th of
December, at midnight precisely, at the moment of her attaining her perigee,
that is her nearest distance from the earth, which is exactly 86,410 leagues
(French), or 238,833 miles mean distance (English).
The
principal members of the Gun Club, President Barbicane, Major Elphinstone, the
secretary Joseph T. Maston, and other learned men, held several meetings, at
which the shape and composition of the projectile were discussed, also the
position and nature of the gun, and the quality and quantity of powder to be
used. It was decided: First, that the projectile should be a shell made of
aluminum with a diameter of 108 inches and a thickness of twelve inches to its
walls; and should weigh 19,250 pounds. Second, that the gun should be a
Columbiad cast in iron, 900 feet long, and run perpendicularly into the earth.
Third, that the charge should contain 400,000 pounds of gun-cotton, which,
giving out six billions of litres of gas in rear of the projectile, would
easily carry it toward the orb of night.
These
questions determined President Barbicane, assisted by Murchison the engineer,
to choose a spot situated in Florida, in 27@ 7' North latitude, and 77@ 3' West
(Greenwich) longitude. It was on this spot, after stupendous labor, that the
Columbiad was cast with full success. Things stood thus, when an incident took
place which increased the interest attached to this great enterprise a
hundredfold.
A
Frenchman, an enthusiastic Parisian, as witty as he was bold, asked to be
enclosed in the projectile, in order that he might reach the moon, and
reconnoiter this terrestrial satellite. The name of this intrepid adventurer
was Michel Ardan. He landed in America, was received with enthusiasm, held
meetings, saw himself carried in triumph, reconciled President Barbicane to his
mortal enemy, Captain Nicholl, and, as a token of reconciliation, persuaded
them both to start with him in the projectile. The proposition being accepted,
the shape of the projectile was slightly altered. It was made of a
cylindro-conical form. This species of aerial car was lined with strong springs
and partitions to deaden the shock of departure. It was provided with food for
a year, water for some months, and gas for some days. A self-acting apparatus
supplied the three travelers with air to breathe. At the same time, on one of
the highest points of the Rocky Mountains, the Gun Club had a gigantic
telescope erected, in order that they might be able to follow the course of the
projectile through space. All was then ready.
On
the 30th of November, at the hour fixed upon, from the midst of an
extraordinary crowd of spectators, the departure took place, and for the first
time, three human beings quitted the terrestrial globe, and launched into
inter-planetary space with almost a certainty of reaching their destination.
These bold travelers, Michel Ardan, President Barbicane, and Captain Nicholl,
ought to make the passage in ninety-seven hours, thirteen minutes, and twenty
seconds. Consequently, their arrival on the lunar disc could not take place
until the 5th of December at twelve at night, at the exact moment when the moon
should be full, and not on the 4th, as some badly informed journalists had
announced.
But
an unforeseen circumstance, viz., the detonation produced by the Columbiad, had
the immediate effect of troubling the terrestrial atmosphere, by accumulating a
large quantity of vapor, a phenomenon which excited universal indignation, for
the moon was hidden from the eyes of the watchers for several nights.
The
worthy Joseph T. Maston, the staunchest friend of the three travelers, started
for the Rocky Mountains, accompanied by the Hon. J. Belfast, director of the
Cambridge Observatory, and reached the station of Long's Peak, where the
telescope was erected which brought the moon within an apparent distance of two
leagues. The honorable secretary of the Gun Club wished himself to observe the
vehicle of his daring friends.
The
accumulation of the clouds in the atmosphere prevented all observation on the
5th, 6th, 7th, 8th, 9th, and 10th of December. Indeed it was thought that all
observations would have to be put off to the 3d of January in the following
year; for the moon entering its last quarter on the 11th, would then only
present an ever-decreasing portion of her disc, insufficient to allow of their
following the course of the projectile.
At
length, to the general satisfaction, a heavy storm cleared the atmosphere on
the night of the 11th and 12th of December, and the moon, with half-illuminated
disc, was plainly to be seen upon the black sky.
That
very night a telegram was sent from the station of Long's Peak by Joseph T.
Maston and Belfast to the gentlemen of the Cambridge Observatory, announcing
that on the 11th of December at 8h. 47m. P.M., the projectile launched by the
Columbiad of Stones Hill had been detected by Messrs. Belfast and Maston-- that
it had deviated from its course from some unknown cause, and had not reached
its destination; but that it had passed near enough to be retained by the lunar
attraction; that its rectilinear movement had been changed to a circular one,
and that following an elliptical orbit round the star of night it had become
its satellite. The telegram added that the elements of this new star had not
yet been calculated; and indeed three observations made upon a star in three
different positions are necessary to determine these elements. Then it showed
that the distance separating the projectile from the lunar surface
"might" be reckoned at about 2,833 miles.
It
ended with the double hypothesis: either the attraction of the moon would draw
it to herself, and the travelers thus attain their end; or that the projectile,
held in one immutable orbit, would gravitate around the lunar disc to all
eternity.
With
such alternatives, what would be the fate of the travelers? Certainly they had
food for some time. But supposing they did succeed in their rash enterprise,
how would they return? Could they ever return? Should they hear from them?
These questions, debated by the most learned pens of the day, strongly
engrossed the public attention.
It
is advisable here to make a remark which ought to be well considered by hasty
observers. When a purely speculative discovery is announced to the public, it
cannot be done with too much prudence. No one is obliged to discover either a
planet, a comet, or a satellite; and whoever makes a mistake in such a case
exposes himself justly to the derision of the mass. Far better is it to wait;
and that is what the impatient Joseph T. Maston should have done before sending
this telegram forth to the world, which, according to his idea, told the whole
result of the enterprise. Indeed this telegram contained two sorts of errors,
as was proved eventually. First, errors of observation, concerning the distance
of the projectile from the surface of the moon, for on the 11th of December it
was impossible to see it; and what Joseph T. Maston had seen, or thought he
saw, could not have been the projectile of the Columbiad. Second, errors of
theory on the fate in store for the said projectile; for in making it a
satellite of the moon, it was putting it in direct contradiction of all
mechanical laws.
One
single hypothesis of the observers of Long's Peak could ever be realized, that
which foresaw the case of the travelers (if still alive) uniting their efforts
with the lunar attraction to attain the surface of the disc.
Now
these men, as clever as they were daring, had survived the terrible shock
consequent on their departure, and it is their journey in the projectile car
which is here related in its most dramatic as well as in its most singular
details. This recital will destroy many illusions and surmises; but it will
give a true idea of the singular changes in store for such an enterprise; it
will bring out the scientific instincts of Barbicane, the industrious resources
of Nicholl, and the audacious humor of Michel Ardan. Besides this, it will
prove that their worthy friend, Joseph T. Maston, was wasting his time, while
leaning over the gigantic telescope he watched the course of the moon through
the starry space.
CHAPTER
I
TWENTY
MINUTES PAST TEN TO FORTY-SEVEN MINUTES PAST TEN P. M.
As
ten o'clock struck, Michel Ardan, Barbicane, and Nicholl, took leave of the
numerous friends they were leaving on the earth. The two dogs, destined to
propagate the canine race on the lunar continents, were already shut up in the
projectile.
The
three travelers approached the orifice of the enormous cast-iron tube, and a
crane let them down to the conical top of the projectile. There, an opening
made for the purpose gave them access to the aluminum car. The tackle belonging
to the crane being hauled from outside, the mouth of the Columbiad was
instantly disencumbered of its last supports.
Nicholl,
once introduced with his companions inside the projectile, began to close the
opening by means of a strong plate, held in position by powerful screws. Other
plates, closely fitted, covered the lenticular glasses, and the travelers,
hermetically enclosed in their metal prison, were plunged in profound darkness.
"And
now, my dear companions," said Michel Ardan, "let us make ourselves
at home; I am a domesticated man and strong in housekeeping. We are bound to
make the best of our new lodgings, and make ourselves comfortable. And first
let us try and see a little. Gas was not invented for moles."
So
saying, the thoughtless fellow lit a match by striking it on the sole of his
boot; and approached the burner fixed to the receptacle, in which the
carbonized hydrogen, stored at high pressure, sufficed for the lighting and
warming of the projectile for a hundred and forty-four hours, or six days and
six nights. The gas caught fire, and thus lighted the projectile looked like a
comfortable room with thickly padded walls, furnished with a circular divan,
and a roof rounded in the shape of a dome.
Michel
Ardan examined everything, and declared himself satisfied with his
installation.
"It
is a prison," said he, "but a traveling prison; and, with the right
of putting my nose to the window, I could well stand a lease of a hundred
years. You smile, Barbicane. Have you any _arriere-pensee_? Do you say to
yourself, `This prison may be our tomb?' Tomb, perhaps; still I would not
change it for Mahomet's, which floats in space but never advances an
inch!"
While
Michel Ardan was speaking, Barbicane and Nicholl were making their last
preparations.
Nicholl's
chronometer marked twenty minutes past ten P.M. when the three travelers were
finally enclosed in their projectile. This chronometer was set within the tenth
of a second by that of Murchison the engineer. Barbicane consulted it.
"My
friends," said he, "it is twenty minutes past ten. At forty- seven
minutes past ten Murchison will launch the electric spark on the wire which
communicates with the charge of the Columbiad. At that precise moment we shall
leave our spheroid. Thus we still have twenty-seven minutes to remain on the
earth."
"Twenty-six
minutes thirteen seconds," replied the methodical Nicholl.
"Well!"
exclaimed Michel Ardan, in a good-humored tone, "much may be done in
twenty-six minutes. The gravest questions of morals and politics may be
discussed, and even solved. Twenty-six minutes well employed are worth more
than twenty-six years in which nothing is done. Some seconds of a Pascal or a
Newton are more precious than the whole existence of a crowd of raw
simpletons----"
"And
you conclude, then, you everlasting talker?" asked Barbicane.
"I
conclude that we have twenty-six minutes left," replied Ardan.
"Twenty-four
only," said Nicholl.
"Well,
twenty-four, if you like, my noble captain," said Ardan; "twenty-four
minutes in which to investigate----"
"Michel,"
said Barbicane, "during the passage we shall have plenty of time to
investigate the most difficult questions. For the present we must occupy
ourselves with our departure."
"Are
we not ready?"
"Doubtless;
but there are still some precautions to be taken, to deaden as much as possible
the first shock."
"Have
we not the water-cushions placed between the partition- breaks, whose
elasticity will sufficiently protect us?"
"I
hope so, Michel," replied Barbicane gently, "but I am not sure."
"Ah,
the joker!" exclaimed Michel Ardan. "He hopes!--He is not sure!-- and
he waits for the moment when we are encased to make this deplorable admission!
I beg to be allowed to get out!"
"And
how?" asked Barbicane.
"Humph!"
said Michel Ardan, "it is not easy; we are in the train, and the guard's
whistle will sound before twenty-four minutes are over."
"Twenty,"
said Nicholl.
For
some moments the three travelers looked at each other. Then they began to
examine the objects imprisoned with them.
"Everything
is in its place," said Barbicane. "We have now to decide how we can
best place ourselves to resist the shock. Position cannot be an indifferent
matter; and we must, as much as possible, prevent the rush of blood to the
head."
"Just
so," said Nicholl.
"Then,"
replied Michel Ardan, ready to suit the action to the word, "let us put
our heads down and our feet in the air, like the clowns in the grand
circus."
"No,"
said Barbicane, "let us stretch ourselves on our sides; we shall resist
the shock better that way. Remember that, when the projectile starts, it
matters little whether we are in it or before it; it amounts to much the same
thing."
"If
it is only `much the same thing,' I may cheer up," said Michel Ardan.
"Do
you approve of my idea, Nicholl?" asked Barbicane.
"Entirely,"
replied the captain. "We've still thirteen minutes and a half."
"That
Nicholl is not a man," exclaimed Michel; "he is a chronometer with
seconds, an escape, and eight holes."
But
his companions were not listening; they were taking up their last positions
with the most perfect coolness. They were like two methodical travelers in a
car, seeking to place themselves as comfortably as possible.
We
might well ask ourselves of what materials are the hearts of these Americans
made, to whom the approach of the most frightful danger added no pulsation.
Three
thick and solidly-made couches had been placed in the projectile. Nicholl and
Barbicane placed them in the center of the disc forming the floor. There the
three travelers were to stretch themselves some moments before their departure.
During
this time, Ardan, not being able to keep still, turned in his narrow prison
like a wild beast in a cage, chatting with his friends, speaking to the dogs
Diana and Satellite, to whom, as may be seen, he had given significant names.
"Ah,
Diana! Ah, Satellite!" he exclaimed, teasing them; "so you are going
to show the moon-dogs the good habits of the dogs of the earth! That will do
honor to the canine race! If ever we do come down again, I will bring a cross
type of `moon-dogs,' which will make a stir!"
"If
there _are_ dogs in the moon," said Barbicane.
"There
are," said Michel Ardan, "just as there are horses, cows, donkeys,
and chickens. I bet that we shall find chickens."
"A
hundred dollars we shall find none!" said Nicholl.
"Done,
my captain!" replied Ardan, clasping Nicholl's hand. "But, by the
bye, you have already lost three bets with our president, as the necessary
funds for the enterprise have been found, as the operation of casting has been
successful, and lastly, as the Columbiad has been loaded without accident, six
thousand dollars."
"Yes,"
replied Nicholl. "Thirty-seven minutes six seconds past ten."
"It
is understood, captain. Well, before another quarter of an hour you will have
to count nine thousand dollars to the president; four thousand because the Columbiad
will not burst, and five thousand because the projectile will rise more than
six miles in the air."
"I
have the dollars," replied Nicholl, slapping the pocket of this coat.
"I only ask to be allowed to pay."
"Come,
Nicholl. I see that you are a man of method, which I could never be; but indeed
you have made a series of bets of very little advantage to yourself, allow me
to tell you."
"And
why?" asked Nicholl.
"Because,
if you gain the first, the Columbiad will have burst, and the projectile with
it; and Barbicane will no longer be there to reimburse your dollars."
"My
stake is deposited at the bank in Baltimore," replied Barbicane simply;
"and if Nicholl is not there, it will go to his heirs."
"Ah,
you practical men!" exclaimed Michel Ardan; "I admire you the more
for not being able to understand you."
"Forty-two
minutes past ten!" said Nicholl.
"Only
five minutes more!" answered Barbicane.
"Yes,
five little minutes!" replied Michel Ardan; "and we are enclosed in a
projectile, at the bottom of a gun 900 feet long! And under this projectile are
rammed 400,000 pounds of gun-cotton, which is equal to 1,600,000 pounds of
ordinary powder! And friend Murchison, with his chronometer in hand, his eye
fixed on the needle, his finger on the electric apparatus, is counting the
seconds preparatory to launching us into interplanetary space."
"Enough,
Michel, enough!" said Barbicane, in a serious voice; "let us prepare.
A few instants alone separate us from an eventful moment. One clasp of the
hand, my friends."
"Yes,"
exclaimed Michel Ardan, more moved than he wished to appear; and the three bold
companions were united in a last embrace.
"God
preserve us!" said the religious Barbicane.
Michel
Ardan and Nicholl stretched themselves on the couches placed in the center of
the disc.
"Forty-seven
minutes past ten!" murmured the captain.
"Twenty
seconds more!" Barbicane quickly put out the gas and lay down by his
companions, and the profound silence was only broken by the ticking of the
chronometer marking the seconds.
Suddenly
a dreadful shock was felt, and the projectile, under the force of six billions
of litres of gas, developed by the combustion of pyroxyle, mounted into space.
CHAPTER
II
THE
FIRST HALF-HOUR
What
had happened? What effect had this frightful shock produced? Had the ingenuity
of the constructors of the projectile obtained any happy result? Had the shock
been deadened, thanks to the springs, the four plugs, the water-cushions, and
the partition-breaks? Had they been able to subdue the frightful pressure of
the initiatory speed of more than 11,000 yards, which was enough to traverse
Paris or New York in a second? This was evidently the question suggested to the
thousand spectators of this moving scene. They forgot the aim of the journey,
and thought only of the travelers. And if one of them-- Joseph T. Maston for
example-- could have cast one glimpse into the projectile, what would he have
seen?
Nothing
then. The darkness was profound. But its cylindro- conical partitions had
resisted wonderfully. Not a rent or a dent anywhere! The wonderful projectile
was not even heated under the intense deflagration of the powder, nor
liquefied, as they seemed to fear, in a shower of aluminum.
The
interior showed but little disorder; indeed, only a few objects had been
violently thrown toward the roof; but the most important seemed not to have
suffered from the shock at all; their fixtures were intact.
On
the movable disc, sunk down to the bottom by the smashing of the partition-breaks
and the escape of the water, three bodies lay apparently lifeless. Barbicane,
Nicholl, and Michel Ardan-- did they still breathe? or was the projectile
nothing now but a metal coffin, bearing three corpses into space?
Some
minutes after the departure of the projectile, one of the bodies moved, shook
its arms, lifted its head, and finally succeeded in getting on its knees. It
was Michel Ardan. He felt himself all over, gave a sonorous "Hem!"
and then said:
"Michel
Ardan is whole. How about the others?"
The
courageous Frenchman tried to rise, but could not stand. His head swam, from
the rush of blood; he was blind; he was a drunken man.
"Bur-r!"
said he. "It produces the same effect as two bottles of Corton, though
perhaps less agreeable to swallow." Then, passing his hand several times
across his forehead and rubbing his temples, he called in a firm voice:
"Nicholl!
Barbicane!"
He
waited anxiously. No answer; not even a sigh to show that the hearts of his
companions were still beating. He called again. The same silence.
"The
devil!" he exclaimed. "They look as if they had fallen from a fifth
story on their heads. Bah!" he added, with that imperturbable confidence
which nothing could check, "if a Frenchman can get on his knees, two
Americans ought to be able to get on their feet. But first let us light
up."
Ardan
felt the tide of life return by degrees. His blood became calm, and returned to
its accustomed circulation. Another effort restored his equilibrium. He
succeeded in rising, drew a match from his pocket, and approaching the burner
lighted it. The receiver had not suffered at all. The gas had not escaped.
Besides, the smell would have betrayed it; and in that case Michel Ardan could
not have carried a lighted match with impunity through the space filled with
hydrogen. The gas mixing with the air would have produced a detonating mixture,
and the explosion would have finished what the shock had perhaps begun. When
the burner was lit, Ardan leaned over the bodies of his companions: they were
lying one on the other, an inert mass, Nicholl above, Barbicane underneath.
Ardan
lifted the captain, propped him up against the divan, and began to rub
vigorously. This means, used with judgment, restored Nicholl, who opened his
eyes, and instantly recovering his presence of mind, seized Ardan's hand and
looked around him.
"And
Barbicane?" said he.
"Each
in turn," replied Michel Ardan. "I began with you, Nicholl, because
you were on the top. Now let us look to Barbicane." Saying which, Ardan
and Nicholl raised the president of the Gun Club and laid him on the divan. He
seemed to have suffered more than either of his companions; he was bleeding,
but Nicholl was reassured by finding that the hemorrhage came from a slight
wound on the shoulder, a mere graze, which he bound up carefully.
Still,
Barbicane was a long time coming to himself, which frightened his friends, who
did not spare friction.
"He
breathes though," said Nicholl, putting his ear to the chest of the
wounded man.
"Yes,"
replied Ardan, "he breathes like a man who has some notion of that daily
operation. Rub, Nicholl; let us rub harder." And the two improvised
practitioners worked so hard and so well that Barbicane recovered his senses.
He opened his eyes, sat up, took his two friends by the hands, and his first
words were--
"Nicholl,
are we moving?"
Nicholl
and Ardan looked at each other; they had not yet troubled themselves about the
projectile; their first thought had been for the traveler, not for the car.
"Well,
are we really moving?" repeated Michel Ardan.
"Or
quietly resting on the soil of Florida?" asked Nicholl.
"Or
at the bottom of the Gulf of Mexico?" added Michel Ardan.
"What
an idea!" exclaimed the president.
And
this double hypothesis suggested by his companions had the effect of recalling
him to his senses. In any case they could not decide on the position of the
projectile. Its apparent immovability, and the want of communication with the
outside, prevented them from solving the question. Perhaps the projectile was
unwinding its course through space. Perhaps after a short rise it had fallen
upon the earth, or even in the Gulf of Mexico-- a fall which the narrowness of
the peninsula of Florida would render not impossible.
The
case was serious, the problem interesting, and one that must be solved as soon
as possible. Thus, highly excited, Barbicane's moral energy triumphed over
physical weakness, and he rose to his feet. He listened. Outside was perfect
silence; but the thick padding was enough to intercept all sounds coming from
the earth. But one circumstance struck Barbicane, viz., that the temperature
inside the projectile was singularly high. The president drew a thermometer
from its case and consulted it. The instrument showed 81@ Fahr.
"Yes,"
he exclaimed, "yes, we are moving! This stifling heat, penetrating through
the partitions of the projectile, is produced by its friction on the
atmospheric strata. It will soon diminish, because we are already floating in
space, and after having nearly stifled, we shall have to suffer intense cold.
"What!"
said Michel Ardan. "According to your showing, Barbicane, we are already
beyond the limits of the terrestrial atmosphere?"
"Without
a doubt, Michel. Listen to me. It is fifty-five minutes past ten; we have been
gone about eight minutes; and if our initiatory speed has not been checked by
the friction, six seconds would be enough for us to pass through the forty
miles of atmosphere which surrounds the globe."
"Just
so," replied Nicholl; "but in what proportion do you estimate the
diminution of speed by friction?"
"In
the proportion of one-third, Nicholl. This diminution is considerable, but
according to my calculations it is nothing less. If, then, we had an initiatory
speed of 12,000 yards, on leaving the atmosphere this speed would be reduced to
9,165 yards. In any case we have already passed through this interval,
and----"
"And
then," said Michel Ardan, "friend Nicholl has lost his two bets: four
thousand dollars because the Columbiad did not burst; five thousand dollars
because the projectile has risen more than six miles. Now, Nicholl, pay
up."
"Let
us prove it first," said the captain, "and we will pay afterward. It
is quite possible that Barbicane's reasoning is correct, and that I have lost
my nine thousand dollars. But a new hypothesis presents itself to my mind, and
it annuls the wager."
"What
is that?" asked Barbicane quickly.
"The
hypothesis that, for some reason or other, fire was never set to the powder,
and we have not started at all."
"My
goodness, captain," exclaimed Michel Ardan, "that hypothesis is not
worthy of my brain! It cannot be a serious one. For have we not been half
annihilated by the shock? Did I not recall you to life? Is not the president's
shoulder still bleeding from the blow it has received?"
"Granted,"
replied Nicholl; "but one question."
"Well,
captain?"
"Did
you hear the detonation, which certainly ought to be loud?"
"No,"
replied Ardan, much surprised; "certainly I did not hear the
detonation."
"And
you, Barbicane?"
"Nor
I, either."
"Very
well," said Nicholl.
"Well
now," murmured the president "why did we not hear the
detonation?"
The
three friends looked at each other with a disconcerted air. It was quite an
inexplicable phenomenon. The projectile had started, and consequently there
must have been a detonation.
"Let
us first find out where we are," said Barbicane, "and let down this
panel."
This
very simple operation was soon accomplished.
The
nuts which held the bolts to the outer plates of the right-hand scuttle gave
way under the pressure of the English wrench. These bolts were pushed outside,
and the buffers covered with India-rubber stopped up the holes which let them
through. Immediately the outer plate fell back upon its hinges like a porthole,
and the lenticular glass which closed the scuttle appeared. A similar one was
let into the thick partition on the opposite side of the projectile, another in
the top of the dome, and finally a fourth in the middle of the base. They
could, therefore, make observations in four different directions; the firmament
by the side and most direct windows, the earth or the moon by the upper and
under openings in the projectile.
Barbicane
and his two companions immediately rushed to the uncovered window. But it was
lit by no ray of light. Profound darkness surrounded them, which, however, did
not prevent the president from exclaiming:
"No,
my friends, we have not fallen back upon the earth; no, nor are we submerged in
the Gulf of Mexico. Yes! we are mounting into space. See those stars shining in
the night, and that impenetrable darkness heaped up between the earth and
us!"
"Hurrah!
hurrah!" exclaimed Michel Ardan and Nicholl in one voice.
Indeed,
this thick darkness proved that the projectile had left the earth, for the
soil, brilliantly lit by the moon-beams would have been visible to the
travelers, if they had been lying on its surface. This darkness also showed
that the projectile had passed the atmospheric strata, for the diffused light
spread in the air would have been reflected on the metal walls, which
reflection was wanting. This light would have lit the window, and the window
was dark. Doubt was no longer possible; the travelers had left the earth.
"I
have lost," said Nicholl.
"I
congratulate you," replied Ardan.
"Here
are the nine thousand dollars," said the captain, drawing a roll of paper
dollars from his pocket.
"Will
you have a receipt for it?" asked Barbicane, taking the sum.
"If
you do not mind," answered Nicholl; "it is more business-like."
And
coolly and seriously, as if he had been at his strong-box, the president drew
forth his notebook, tore out a blank leaf, wrote a proper receipt in pencil,
dated and signed it with the usual flourish, [1] and gave it to the captain,
who carefully placed it in his pocketbook. Michel Ardan, taking off his hat,
bowed to his two companions without speaking. So much formality under such
circumstances left him speechless. He had never before seen anything so
"American."
[1]
This is a purely French habit.
This
affair settled, Barbicane and Nicholl had returned to the window, and were
watching the constellations. The stars looked like bright points on the black
sky. But from that side they could not see the orb of night, which, traveling
from east to west, would rise by degrees toward the zenith. Its absence drew
the following remark from Ardan:
"And
the moon; will she perchance fail at our rendezvous?"
"Do
not alarm yourself," said Barbicane; "our future globe is at its
post, but we cannot see her from this side; let us open the other."
"As
Barbicane was about leaving the window to open the opposite scuttle, his
attention was attracted by the approach of a brilliant object. It was an
enormous disc, whose colossal dimension could not be estimated. Its face, which
was turned to the earth, was very bright. One might have thought it a small
moon reflecting the light of the large one. She advanced with great speed, and
seemed to describe an orbit round the earth, which would intersect the passage
of the projectile. This body revolved upon its axis, and exhibited the
phenomena of all celestial bodies abandoned in space.
"Ah!"
exclaimed Michel Ardan, "What is that? another projectile?"
Barbicane
did not answer. The appearance of this enormous body surprised and troubled
him. A collision was possible, and might be attended with deplorable results;
either the projectile would deviate from its path, or a shock, breaking its
impetus, might precipitate it to earth; or, lastly, it might be irresistibly
drawn away by the powerful asteroid. The president caught at a glance the
consequences of these three hypotheses, either of which would, one way or the
other, bring their experiment to an unsuccessful and fatal termination. His
companions stood silently looking into space. The object grew rapidly as it
approached them, and by an optical illusion the projectile seemed to be
throwing itself before it.
"By
Jove!" exclaimed Michel Ardan, "we shall run into one another!"
Instinctively
the travelers drew back. Their dread was great, but it did not last many
seconds. The asteroid passed several hundred yards from the projectile and
disappeared, not so much from the rapidity of its course, as that its face
being opposite the moon, it was suddenly merged into the perfect darkness of
space.
"A
happy journey to you," exclaimed Michel Ardan, with a sigh of relief.
"Surely infinity of space is large enough for a poor little projectile to
walk through without fear. Now, what is this portentous globe which nearly
struck us?"
"I
know," replied Barbicane.
"Oh,
indeed! you know everything."
"It
is," said Barbicane, "a simple meteorite, but an enormous one, which
the attraction of the earth has retained as a satellite."
"Is
it possible!" exclaimed Michel Ardan; "the earth then has two moons
like Neptune?"
"Yes,
my friends, two moons, though it passes generally for having only one; but this
second moon is so small, and its speed so great, that the inhabitants of the
earth cannot see it. It was by noticing disturbances that a French astronomer,
M. Petit, was able to determine the existence of this second satellite and
calculate its elements. According to his observations, this meteorite will
accomplish its revolution around the earth in three hours and twenty minutes,
which implies a wonderful rate of speed."
"Do
all astronomers admit the existence of this satellite?" asked Nicholl.
"No,"
replied Barbicane; "but if, like us, they had met it, they could no longer
doubt it. Indeed, I think that this meteorite, which, had it struck the
projectile, would have much embarrassed us, will give us the means of deciding
what our position in space is."
"How?"
said Ardan.
"Because
its distance is known, and when we met it, we were exactly four thousand six
hundred and fifty miles from the surface of the terrestrial globe."
"More
than two thousand French leagues," exclaimed Michel Ardan. "That
beats the express trains of the pitiful globe called the earth."
"I
should think so," replied Nicholl, consulting his chronometer; "it is
eleven o'clock, and it is only thirteen minutes since we left the American
continent."
"Only
thirteen minutes?" said Barbicane.
"Yes,"
said Nicholl; "and if our initiatory speed of twelve thousand yards has
been kept up, we shall have made about twenty thousand miles in the hour."
"That
is all very well, my friends," said the president, "but the insoluble
question still remains. Why did we not hear the detonation of the
Columbiad?"
For
want of an answer the conversation dropped, and Barbicane began thoughtfully to
let down the shutter of the second side. He succeeded; and through the uncovered
glass the moon filled the projectile with a brilliant light. Nicholl, as an
economical man, put out the gas, now useless, and whose brilliancy prevented
any observation of the inter-planetary space.
The
lunar disc shone with wonderful purity. Her rays, no longer filtered through
the vapory atmosphere of the terrestrial globe, shone through the glass,
filling the air in the interior of the projectile with silvery reflections. The
black curtain of the firmament in reality heightened the moon's brilliancy, which
in this void of ether unfavorable to diffusion did not eclipse the neighboring
stars. The heavens, thus seen, presented quite a new aspect, and one which the
human eye could never dream of. One may conceive the interest with which these
bold men watched the orb of night, the great aim of their journey.
In
its motion the earth's satellite was insensibly nearing the zenith, the
mathematical point which it ought to attain ninety-six hours later. Her
mountains, her plains, every projection was as clearly discernible to their
eyes as if they were observing it from some spot upon the earth; but its light
was developed through space with wonderful intensity. The disc shone like a
platinum mirror. Of the earth flying from under their feet, the travelers had lost
all recollection.
It
was captain Nicholl who first recalled their attention to the vanishing globe.
"Yes,"
said Michel Ardan, "do not let us be ungrateful to it. Since we are
leaving our country, let our last looks be directed to it. I wish to see the earth
once more before it is quite hidden from my eyes."
To
satisfy his companions, Barbicane began to uncover the window at the bottom of
the projectile, which would allow them to observe the earth direct. The disc,
which the force of the projection had beaten down to the base, was removed, not
without difficulty. Its fragments, placed carefully against a wall, might serve
again upon occasion. Then a circular gap appeared, nineteen inches in diameter,
hollowed out of the lower part of the projectile. A glass cover, six inches
thick and strengthened with upper fastenings, closed it tightly. Beneath was
fixed an aluminum plate, held in place by bolts. The screws being undone, and
the bolts let go, the plate fell down, and visible communication was
established between the interior and the exterior.
Michel
Ardan knelt by the glass. It was cloudy, seemingly opaque.
"Well!"
he exclaimed, "and the earth?"
"The
earth?" said Barbicane. "There it is."
"What!
that little thread; that silver crescent?"
"Doubtless,
Michel. In four days, when the moon will be full, at the very time we shall
reach it, the earth will be new, and will only appear to us as a slender
crescent which will soon disappear, and for some days will be enveloped in
utter darkness."
"That
the earth?" repeated Michel Ardan, looking with all his eyes at the thin
slip of his native planet.
The
explanation given by President Barbicane was correct. The earth, with respect
to the projectile, was entering its last phase. It was in its octant, and
showed a crescent finely traced on the dark background of the sky. Its light,
rendered bluish by the thick strata of the atmosphere was less intense than
that of the crescent moon, but it was of considerable dimensions, and looked
like an enormous arch stretched across the firmament. Some parts brilliantly
lighted, especially on its concave part, showed the presence of high mountains,
often disappearing behind thick spots, which are never seen on the lunar disc.
They were rings of clouds placed concentrically round the terrestrial globe.
While
the travelers were trying to pierce the profound darkness, a brilliant cluster
of shooting stars burst upon their eyes. Hundreds of meteorites, ignited by the
friction of the atmosphere, irradiated the shadow of the luminous train, and
lined the cloudy parts of the disc with their fire. At this period the earth
was in its perihelion, and the month of December is so propitious to these
shooting stars, that astronomers have counted as many as twenty-four thousand
in an hour. But Michel Ardan, disdaining scientific reasonings, preferred
thinking that the earth was thus saluting the departure of her three children
with her most brilliant fireworks.
Indeed
this was all they saw of the globe lost in the solar world, rising and setting
to the great planets like a simple morning or evening star! This globe, where
they had left all their affections, was nothing more than a fugitive crescent!
Long
did the three friends look without speaking, though united in heart, while the
projectile sped onward with an ever-decreasing speed. Then an irresistible
drowsiness crept over their brain. Was it weariness of body and mind? No doubt;
for after the over-excitement of those last hours passed upon earth, reaction
was inevitable.
"Well,"
said Nicholl, "since we must sleep, let us sleep."
And
stretching themselves on their couches, they were all three soon in a profound
slumber.
But
they had not forgotten themselves more than a quarter of an hour, when
Barbicane sat up suddenly, and rousing his companions with a loud voice,
exclaimed----
"I
have found it!"
"What
have you found?" asked Michel Ardan, jumping from his bed.
"The
reason why we did not hear the detonation of the Columbiad."
"And
it is----?" said Nicholl.
"Because
our projectile traveled faster than the sound!"