by
Donald Westlake
From the
beginning of Time, man has been on the move, ever outward. First
he spread over his own planet, then across the solar system, then
outward to the Galaxies, all of them dotted, speckled, and measled
with the colonies of Man.
Then, one day in the year eleven thousand four hundreds and six
(11, 406), an incredible discovery was made in the Master Imperial
Computer back on Earth. Nearly 500 years before, a clerical error
had erased from the computer’s memory more than 1000 colonies,
all in sector F.U.B.A.R. 3. For half a millenium, those colonies,
young and struggling when last heard from, had had no contact with
the rest of humanity.
The Galaxy Patrol Interstellar Ship Hopeful, Captain Gregory Standforth
commanding, was at once dispatched to re-establish contact with
the Thousand Lost Colonies and return them to the bosom of mankind.
WHEN THE SKY FILLED with the roar of the descending ship, they
all slithered into their holes to wait.

“You know,” Captain
Standforth said, unclenching his fingers from the controls as the
ship shuddered its last and sagged onto the ground, “I think
I’m beginning to get the hang of this landing business.”
Groans answered him. Chipper young
Lieutenant Billy Shelby, the person who normally dealt with landings – Captain
Standforth was apt to take the term planetfall literally – managed a
cheerful smile and even injected a little perkiness into his voice as he said, “Much better,
sir. Why, this was quite smooth!”
Chief Engineer Hester Hanshaw, blunt in
body, mind and mouth, gave Billy a look. “Not as smooth as you,
you little toady.”
Billy’s handsome if not brilliant
face clouded. He said, “What’s a toady?”
Astrogator Pam Stokes, who had been lost
in study of her ancestral slide rule, wondering if it had been damaged in the
landing, looked up and said, “Thursday, I think. Back on Earth,
that is.”
In the baffled silence this created, Captain
Standforth mused, “It’s that tricky business of not turning the
engines off until you actually touch down; that’s the part I
have the trouble with.”
“If we’ve landed on the damn
planet,” Ensign Kybee Benson said, struggling out of the pod that had
absorbed the brunt – though not all – of the impact, “let’s
take a look at it.” A social engineer, an expert in comparative
societies, Ensign Benson was responsible for studying each lost colony when
it was found and describing its 500 years of unsung history. Being the
only one aboard the Hopeful likelier to be interested in the planet than
in the landing, he was the first to cross the command deck to the
viewscreens, switch them on and look out at a rolling and nearly treeless savanna
that looked much like the Rift Valley in Kenya in August, before the rains. Each
screen showed the landscape from a different direction, all the views very
similar, each with low tan hills far in the background. “Hmmmm,” said
Ensign Benson.
The five other travelers in the Hopeful
crowded around: Captain Standforth, tall and craggy; Pam, beautiful,
brainy and blind to passion; Hester, the human fireplug; Billy, the idealist;
and Councilman Morton Luthguster, portly as a plum pudding, representative
of the Galactic Council, who harrumphed and said, “Fine farmland, I should
think.”
“Oh, should you?” Ensign Benson
snarled. He despised his shipmates, each and every. They were
here because they were misfits, home base delighted to be rid of them on this
endless journey; but why was he here? Furious by nature, he
said savagely, “We aren’t here for real estate, Councilman. Where’s
the colony? Pam? You steered us here.”
“This is definitely the nexus,” Pam
told him, the slide rule flashing in her slender fingers. “We are
on the planet Matrix, fourth from the star Mohonk, gravity and air compatible
with Earth—“
“It’s a big planet,” commented
Ensign Benson.
“One point one nine three times
the size of Earth,” Pam agreed. “Earth density to one point—“
“It’s a small colony,” the
ensign interrupted.
“Oh, it’s here,” Pam
assured him, getting the idea. “This is the place. The coefficients
are—“
Billy, peering at one of the viewscreens,
said, “I see something out there. Little boxes or something.”
Everyone peered at the same screen. Thirty
yards away on the tundra were low, slender structures of some kind. “Then
let’s take a look,” Ensign Benson said.

They watched the new creatures
emerge from the giant silver ship. One, two, three, four,
five, six. They watched, and absorbed, and studied. Then,
for the moment, they slid deeper into their holes, drawing the
earth closed above them.

The slender structures were
gravestones, made of metal. “Oh, dear,” said
Pam.
Ensign Benson looked around at the bare
land. A slight breeze blew. “There were forty colonists,” he
said. “There are thirty-seven graves.”
Captain Standforth, who had been scanning
the sky – bird taxidermy was his one passion – said, “What’s
that? You mean the colony never survived at all?”
“Look at the dates,” Ensign
Benson told him, gesturing at the letters and numbers etched into the metal. “Not
one person was born here, and none of the original colonists lasted more than
four years after arrival.”
Hester said, “But they didn’t
all die at once, so it wasn’t poisoned water or an attack from hostile
creatures.”
Billy said, “Forty colonists and
only thirty-seven graves? How come, do you suppose?”
“Well,” Ensign Benson said,
being uncharacteristically patient with Billy, his natural animosity softened
by the presence of all those headstones, “I suppose there wasn’t
anybody around to bury the last one, and the other two could have died away
from the colony. After five hundred years, you know, Billy, they’d
all be gone by now, anyway.”
“I guess so,” Billy said,
nodding but glancing surreptitiously toward the horizon.
Councilman Luthguster pointed at something
beyond the cemetery, farther from the ship. “Is that some sort
of ruin?”
It was. They approached it and found
that it was at the crest of a low fold in the land, with more ruins on the
slope down from them. Crumbled remnants of poured quasi-parquet flooring,
stubby bits of pseudostone wall, the entire area scattered with artifacts of
domesticity: pots, coat hangers, plastic picture frames. During
500 years of neglect, accumulated rust, wind and dirt had gnawed at the husk
of the fledgling colony, working tirelessly to make it unexist, coming closer
to that goal with every passing year.
At the bottom of the fold in the terrain,
among coatless buttons and doorless handles, the crew found a sturdy metal
footlocker half-buried in the earth; buried deeper on one side, indicating
the direction of the prevailing wind. The locker’s catches were
closed, but it wasn’t padlocked. Inside were sheets of paper that
had all but rotted away, photos faded to a nearly uniform beige and what looked
like a video tape, but not of a sort Ensign Benson had ever seen. Picking
it up, removing the cassette from its metal box, he showed it to Hester, saying, “Any
idea what this is?”
“If that’s a tape,” Hester
commented, “it’s goddam old.”
“Hester,” the ensign said, “if
it’s anything in this forsaken place, it’s goddam old.”
“Well, that’s true,” Hester
admitted. She took the cassette from the ensign’s hands and studied
it. “Tape seems all right,” she said, “but we don’t
have anything to play this on.”
“Then it doesn’t matter if
it’s all right or not,” the ensign pointed out.
“Well, I’m wondering,” she
said, turning the cassette in her hands, “if I could adapt it. If
you read this tape the same way our machine does, with a laser, with the same kind of
laser, maybe I could rewind it or something, fix the machine to take it.” She
turned. “Captain?”
Captain Standforth guiltily looked down
from the skies. “Yes, Hester?”
“Want me to see if I can play this
tape?”
“Excellent t idea,” the captain
told her.

For two days, while the rest
of the crew roamed and searched the surrounding area, collecting
basketfuls of detritus and trash, examining remnants and ruins,
learning nothing, Hester struggled with the ancient tape. “It’s
impossible,” she would announce at every meal, smudges of
machine oil on cheeks and knuckles, the banked fires of frustration
in her eyes. Sometimes it was impossible because the tape
was not scanned in the way the machine knew how to scan; sometimes
it was because the speed of the tape was unknown and d unknowable;
sometimes it was because of incompatibilities at the magnetic or
the electronic or simply the physical level. And always,
having announced the impossibility, Hester would grumble and sigh
and shake her head and wade back in to try some more.
Everyone else rooted for her, of course,
partly wanting Hester to succeed simply because she was their shipmate and
they wanted their shipmate to succeed, but also because they wanted to know
what had happened to the Matrix colony and assumed the tape would tell them. That
is, everybody but Ensign Benson assumed that. As the struggle to read
the tape grew more and more prolonged, he came to believe it would turn out – if
they ever did crack it – to be no damn use at all. Instead of the
Rosetta tape, instead of the answer to the mystery of the colony’s failure,
it would prove to be, in Ensign Benson’s private, unstated opinion, nothing
more than some silly piece of entertainment, songs and dances perhaps, some
piece of forgettable 500-year-old fluff brought along by the colonists to distract
themselves during the long nights of their settlement’s youth. In
a brand-new colony, after all, there is no downtown.
On the third day, Hester didn’t
appear for lunch, she was so engrossed in the complexities of her impossible
task. It was midafternoon when she emerged from the ship, looking as
disgruntled as ever but with some sort of firm line of satisfaction in her
jaw. She marched out across the dusty tan landscape toward
Ensign Benson, who had been studying the grave markers yet again, hoping to
find some inscription he hadn’t noticed before, some clue that had eluded
him up till then. Reaching him, she stopped and put her stubby hands
on her broad hips. “It’s there if you want it,” she
announced.
He straightened, one hand to his aching
back. “Hester? The tape?”
“That’s what I’ve been
working on, isn’t it?”
“You found a way to play it!”
“I invented a way to play
it,” Hester corrected, “and it wasn’t easy.”
“I’m sure it wasn’t.” Then,
unable to keep his doubts to himself any longer, he said, “What’s
on it? A sports roundup? A wet T-shirt contest?”
“Some gloomy-looking fellow sitting
g at a table,” she told him. “That’s all I know. I’m
sick of that damn thing, Kybee. You want to watch it, watch it.”
“I want to watch it,” he agreed.
“It’s in there, in my workroom
next to the engine room,” she told him. “Just push the green
button. It’s not the cleanest picture you’ve ever seen, but
you can make it out.”
Doubtful, he said, “You don’t
want to operate it yourself?”
“I don’t want to be
anywhere near it,” Hester told him. “Not for a while. Go
ahead, take a look.”

They were nearly ready. They
slithered and groped toward the surface, moving unfamiliar parts,
tiny clods of dirt dropping down past their shuuz. Shooz. Shoez. Shoes.

A terrible picture, with
green horizontal lines of interference and a pink glow around every
object. A raspy, furry buzz obscured the sound track. Ensign
Benson leaned forward, squinted and listened.
“I am Hafter Kass,” said the
frowning, bulky, steep-shouldered, despairing man seated at the black plastic
table, elbows and forearms on the table before him, fingers nervously twining. Behind
him was a blank wall with a closed door in it. “I am the real Hafter
Kass,” the man said, leaning forward, staring intensely at the camera. Then
rage broke through. “Do you hear me? The real Hafter
Kass! Goddam it, the real one!”
“I believe you,” Ensign Benson
murmured. “Honest, I do.”
As though reassured, Hafter Kass subsided
into his chair. He was about 40, wearing a rough plaid old-fashioned
tunic. He lifted a shaking hand to rub his mouth, then said, “Whoever
you are, if anybody ever sees this, get off Matrix. Get off now! Before—“
He stopped and looked quickly over his
shoulder, then back at the camera. “Have to get hold of myself,” he
said.
“Good idea,” agreed Ensign
Benson.
“We arrived three years ago,” Kass
went on, “and almost immediately lost contact with the mother ship. That’s
the worst of it, knowing there won’t be any help, ever. Not ever. Stuck
here, doomed here—“
Again, Kass visibly brought himself under
control. “They didn’t come out right away,” he said. “The—the things. But
then they-- No, wait, I’m not making any sense.”
“True,” Ensign Benson said.
“About two weeks after we landed,” Kass
said, voice trembling, “they appeared. Creatures that looked exactly
like us. Like specific ones of us.” He gestured
toward the door behind him. Out there, hundreds of Hafter Kasses. Hundreds
of Magla Damerons. Hundreds of—” He ran both hands through
thinning hair. “Their clothing is exactly like ours, they look
exactly like us, they have some kind of low-level telepathy, so they have our
memories, our gestures, our expressions. Stee Venking, our zoographer – well,
amateur zoographer – anyway, he says these creatures developed this as
a defense against predators. Become the predator and it can’t
eat you without being a cannibal.”
Kass gestured helplessly, looking around,
then back at the cameras. “At first, we didn’t realize the
horror of it. But then we found out what it means. You never know
if you’re talking to a human being g like yourself or one of them. You’re
alone. Every one of us is alone, surrounded by thousands of . . . whatever
they are.” He shook his head. “Well, we know what they
are. If you kill one, it reverts to its real shape, a kind of fat eight-foot-long
worm.”
“Ugh,” said Ensign Benson.
“There will never be a child born
in this colony,” Kass went on. “How could any of us, any
of us human beings, go to bed with-- Never knowing if-- That’s
a part of the creatures’ defense mechanism, too. They make the
predators die out, cease to reproduce.”
A chill ran through Ensign Benson at that;
a life without even the possibility of sex? Couldn’t you just go
along with what you saw, if what you saw was built the way, uh . . .
But then he frowned, thinking it through. What
you saw might be shaped any way at all, but if you knew the odds were hundreds
to one that the person in bed with you was really an eight-foot-long worm,
even the horniest human being would begin to lose enthusiasm. Bad news.
Hafter Kass was going on, saying, “Is
it any wonder most of us chose suicide?”
“No,” Ensign Benson told him. An
odd, uncomfortable feeling had crept over him, a warmth he rarely experienced. Could
it be sympathy? He watched the long-gone Hafter Kass with suspiciously
moist eyes.
“That’s the only way, finally,
we can tell us from them,” Kass went on. “When
they die, they revert to their real shape. At first, we tried shooting
them – each of us shooting his own imitations, because those were the
only ones anybody could be sure of – but there’s just too many
of them, an entire species. They never fight back, never try
to shoot us, but it doesn’t matter. Violence isn’t
part of their nature, because it doesn’t matter. They’ve
found the ultimate defensive weapon.”
Again, Kass rubbed a shaking hand across
his mouth. “One of the worst things,” he said, “is
that after one of us dies, they still go on with the imitation. Your
husband, your wife . . . You know they’re dead, but there
they are, walking around. And again. And again. Hundreds
of them. Smiling at you, calling you by the pet name that only the two
of you knew.”
The door behind Kass opened, and a cluster
of people, a dozen or more, came in, looking concerned, saying, “There you
are, Hafter,” or “Why are you hiding in here. Hafter?”
Kass didn’t even turn as the people
gathered around him. His expression bleak, he faced the camera. Beneath
the friendly cries of the newcomers – two of them, Ensign Benson realized
with a sudden shiver, identical Hafter Kasses – beneath their voices
but clear and passionate, Kass said to the camera, “Get away from
here. This is hell. This is the worst you can imagine. I
may even be the last human alive here, there’s no way to know. I’m
surrounded by people, and I’ve been in solitary confinement for three
years.”
“Oh, Hafter,” one of the others
cried, happy and careless, “you’re taping! Can I tape, too? Shall
I sing?”
“No,” Hafter said. Rising,
he moved the table, shoving the others out of his way as though they were dummies
on rollers – none objected – and darkness descended as he approached
the camera. There was a click, and the recording ended.
“Oh, boy,” Ensign Benson said. “Not
good.” Decisively, he got to his feet, left Hester’s workroom,
hurried through the ship to the exit and went down the ramp, looking around
for the rest of the crew.
The nearest was Pam, walking diagonally
away toward the ruined colony. “Pam!” Ensign Benson called,
and when she turned, he waved to her to stop, to wait for him. “We’ve
got to get into the ship!” he cried, trotting up to her.
She frowned as he approached. “Kybee? What’s
wrong?”
“I’ll tell you later. Just
get into the ship; I’ll go after the others.” And he hurried
past her toward the ruins. But when he looked back after a few half-running
paces, she was still standing there, frowning at him. “For God’s
sake, Pam!” he yelled. “Get going!”
“Kybee?” Pam said. “What’s
wrong? “ But her voice came from behind him.

When Pam saw the strange
woman beyond Kybee, she couldn’t understand who it might
be. A survivor from the colony, for 500 years? One
of the three without graves? But that was impossible. This
attractive-looking woman was young, was certainly no more—
Was herself.
Dread touched Pam. All at once,
she was not an astrogator, not a scientist, not a rational, civilized person,
but a primitive creature feeling a sudden surge of the most basic fear. She
stared, not understanding, and the woman stared back at her with an expression
of horror. “Kybee!” they cried together. “What’s
happening?”
He stared from one to the other. “Which--- Which—“
“Kybee, it’s me! It’s
Pam!” But it was the other one who said that.
Pam hurried toward Kybee, crying, “Don’t
listen to her! She’s—She’s-- I don’t know
what she is!”
“The ship,” Kybee muttered,
dazed. “Save the ship.”
“Yes,” Pam said, reaching
for his arm, her terror deepening when he pulled away. “We’ll
go into the ship,” she said. “We’ll figure out—“
But he was backing away, staring from
her to the impostor, his eyes terrified. “How do I— How
can I-- You don’t get inside the ship!” And he turned
and ran.

The Billys and the Hesters
and the Ensign Bensons were building sheds and lean-tos. The
Councilman Luthgusters were sorting through the food supplies Kybee
had pushed out of the ship the day before so that the real crew
members wouldn’t starve to death. The Pams were cooking
on the makeshift stoves the Hesters had constructed. Most
of the Captain Standforths had quit banging on the Hopeful’s
door and yelling on the monitor cameras and had wandered off across
the landscape, presumably in search of birds suitable for taxidermy.
In a horrible way, it was fascinating
to see how the creatures worked it. The fear and disbelief and repugnance
that were the natural reaction of the real crew members were perfectly mirrored
in all the imitations. Then, as time went by without any change in the
situation, with no further events, no escalation of threat, as horror became
dulled, that, too, was echoed, the real and the fakes all calming together,
getting used to this madness together.
If he were out there with the rest of them, would he behave any
differently from the headshaking wide-eyed Ensign Bensons he watched
on the viewscreens? No, he would not.
It was two days since Kybee had run back
into the ship and sealed the entrance behind him, and he had not yet slept. What
was he going to do? What were any of them going to do? They were
doomed here, just like the original colonists. He couldn’t fly
the ship alone, and even if he could, what about the others? He couldn’t
just abandon them here, in this hell on Earth. Or hell on Matrix. “In
this case,” Kybee muttered to himself, watching the mobs on the viewscreens, “hell
really is other people.”
It was strange how circumstances changed
attitudes. Kybee had always felt impatient loathing toward his shipmates,
knowing himself to be the only truly sharp – and sharp-edged – person
on the ship. He had thought it miserably unfair that he should be assigned
to this team of losers on this mission into oblivion; what did he have
in common with them?
It was only now, in this extremity, that
he found himself drawing parallels, that he saw his own social prickliness
as much of a liability as Hester’s bluntness or Pam’s unworldliness
or the councilman’s pomposity. Damn it, somehow, damn it, in the
course of their voyage, damn it, they had become a team, damn it, a unit, while
his back was turned, damn it, some kind of stupid tribe. His shipmates
were in trouble out there, damn it, and he was the only one in the universe
who could help.
Except, of course, that he couldn’t. What
was there to do? Forty colonists had spent four years trying to solve
this problem, without success. How could he hope to do anything but keep
the interior of the ship free of impostors by banning everything?
There’s something comforting about
despair. When Kybee realized that there truly was no way out, that they
were all stuck on Matrix for the rest of their lives, himself inside the ship
and the rest of the crew outside amid the crowds of ersatz, A kind of peace
descended on him. There’s nothing to be done; doom is at hand;
no point struggling. Yawning, easy at last in his mind, warmed by the
hopelessness of their situation, Kybee left the viewscreens and went to bed.

It was dark. He was
suddenly wide awake. Sitting up, he spoke into the black
room. “It isn’t the same. The
colonists had to live here, somehow, live with those creatures
forever. All I have to do is find the right five
people and get them on the ship. That’s all.”

It was light. Kybee
drank nearcoffee and brooded at the viewscreens. More of
them were out there today. A couple of thousand by now. Food
would become a problem soon. And as for finding the right
Pam, the right Billy . . .
No. It was still impossible.
Nevertheless, the comfort of despair had
been wrested from him. He had no choice. The task might be impossible,
but he was going to have to try it, anyway. “The tape,” he
told himself. “I’ll watch it again. I’ll watch
it a hundred times if I have to. Maybe there’s a clue in it, maybe
there’s something. . .” He sighed and finished his nearcoffee
and went off to watch again the final testament of Hafter Kass.

Kybee was slapping Hesters. His
hand had begun to sting as he left reddened cheek after reddened
cheek in his wake, but he persisted. “Kybee!” the
Hesters cried, blinking, putting their hands up to their slapped
faces. “What are you doing?” they cried, or, “What
was that for?” or, “What’s the big idea?”
He didn’t answer, not a one of the
stinking worms. He’d left the ship, sealing the entrance behind
him, carrying the only electronic key that would work with the combination
he’d just created, and now he was moving among the crowd, slapping and
slapping.
What a mob there was, more than ever,
and how they liked to mill around. Kybee shoved Billys and
Ensign Bensons out of his way, seeking out the Hesters, slapping them, slapping
them, and at last, one of the Hesters yelled, “What the hell
was that for?” and slugged him back.

Seated at the viewscreens,
Hester watched Kybee rove through the crowd, tweaking councilmen’s
noses. “The bastard’s enjoying himself,” she
told the air, watching Luthguster after Luthguster recoil, fat
hands flailing the air, piggy eyes filling with tears, noses reddening.
Her own cheek still stung from that hefty
wallop the bastard had given her. Having now watched that poor
doomed fellow, Hafter Kass, on the tape, and having had Kybee point out to
her that Kass described the worms as nonviolent, she could understand that
violence was the only way to find the real wolf when surrounded by sheep in
wolf’s clothing, but that still didn’t excuse him for hitting so hard. It’s
because he was enjoying it, that’s all.
Still, being rescued from the legion of
look-alikes was worth it, no matter what the cost. It had been really
frightening down there for a while, not knowing who anybody was, surrounded
by piss-poor imitations of herself – why couldn’t Kybee simply
have noticed that the fake Hesters were dumpier and uglier than the original? – and
never knowing if the ship would up and leave, abandoning her to an entire population
of Captain Standforths and
Councilman Luthgusters and second-rate Hesters for the rest of
her life.
(The true long-range horror hadn’t
occurred to her while she was out there and probably hadn’t yet occurred
to the rest of the Earthlings still trapped out there, but now that she’d
seen Hafter Kass’s description of life on Matrix, she knew just how horrible
it would have been and how lucky she was not to be nonviolent.)
Outside, Kybee moved off the edge of one
viewscreen’s range and was picked up by another, tweaking Luthgusters
left and right. All reacted in the same roly-poly fashion, pained and
astonished, waving arms and legs, and Kybee kept moving. And then one
Luthguster, after Kybee turned his back, yanked off a shoe, ran up behind him
and whammed him over the head with the heel.
“Now,” said Hester, smiling, “why
didn’t I think of that?”
Out there, Luthguster kept swinging the
shoe, shouting in rage, letting out all the mad emotions created by their mad
situation, while the surrounding throng backed away, like cattle slightly disturbed
at there feeding. Kybee went down under the rain of blows, huddling to
the ground, and the councilman started kicking the fallen social engineer with
his shod foot. Kybee rolled away, tumbling a nearby Billy and a Hester
like ninepins, and Councilman Luthguster pursued him, hopping on one foot,
that massive belly, like Falstaff’s flacon of sack, blooping
over the ground. Kybee managed to scramble to his feet and come running
toward the ship, Luthguster and his furious paunch bounding along in his wake.
“There you go, Kybee,” Hester
said, nodding. “That’s the way to bring him home.”
The ship’s entryway controls were
at her fingertips. Across the viewscreens came Kybee at a dead run, bowling
a path through the shoals of Pams and pseudo ensigns, the councilman following,
bobbing like an escaped grapefruit. Up the ramp came Kybee, heelmarks
on his forehead and cheeks, eyes wild, voice echoing from the intercom, “Hester! Open
up! Open up!”
Her fingers hovered on the controls. Luthguster
came panting up the ramp, looking now more like a lobster than a grapefruit,
and gave Kybee just one more whop. Then Hester opened up.

It was breasts he tweaked
on Pam. In the first place, he simply couldn’t bring
himself to behave harshly toward that beautiful face or harm that
beautiful nose. And in the second place, when would he ever
again get the opportunity to cop a feel in a noble cause?
“Kybee! Stop that!” Pam
after Pam threw up protective arms, and when he reached for the second breast,
back-pedaled in horror and shame. Exactly like Pam, of course, but not
good enough. On he went.
If this doesn’t work, he told himself,
clutching breast after breast, I’ll just have to escalate. The
thought was not untinged with a kind of anticipation.
“Kybee! Stop that! What’s
got into you?”
“It’s what’s getting
into you, baby,” Kybee leered, and lunged for the other breast,
and this Pam slapped feebly at his lupine fingers.
Slapped? Was that meaningful? To
be certain, Kybee aimed for target number three.

“I’m sorry I
gave you a bloody nose, Kybee,” Pam said.
“Dad’s all wry,” Kybee
told her, tilting his head back, holding many blobs of absorbent cottonique
to his nose while Hester held an ice pack to the back of his neck. Councilman
Luthguster stood off to one side, looking, Kybee knew, pleased with this turn
of events.
“Now that I know there was nothing
personal in it,” Pam went on, “I’m not upset any more.”
Kybee rolled his eyes. Some problems
remain insoluble, no matter what.
“I think it’s stopped bleeding,” Hester
said, stepping back, giving him a critical look.
Kybee lowered the bloody rags from his
nose, straightened, breathed experimentally and said, “OK. Back
into the fray.”

“Gee whiz!” said all the
Billys.

“Kybee? Did I
have a fly on my nose?” asked all the captains.

“The problem is.” Kybee
said, back in the ship, in serious conclave with Hester, Pam and
the councilman on the control deck, “the real Billy and the
real captain are also nonviolent.”
Pam said, “Kybee, we can’t
just leave them there.”
Hester said, “There has to be a
way.”
“Glad to hear that,” Kybee
told her. “What’s the way?”
“Beats me,” Hester said.
The councilman brooded at the viewscreens,
where the walking, milling simulacra still included hundreds of himself. “Ghastly
out there,” he said. “To see myself in the mirror in the
morning and, of course, on election posters, that’s good enough for me.”
Kybee also looked at the viewscreens. “I
used to think sometimes,” he said, “I’d be really content
in a world where everybody was exactly like me. Well, half like me and
half like Pam. Well, like Pam, but with modifications.”
Blinking without comprehension, Pam said, “Kybee? What
can you mean?”
“But now,” Kybee went on,
ignoring her for one of the few times since they’d shipped out together, “I’m
going to have to find a new dream. When I’m shaving in—“
He stopped. He frowned at the viewscreens. “Could
they?”
The others all sensed the change in him. Hester
said, “Kybee, do you have something?”
“I don’t know.” Kybee
turned toward the others, his manner intent but distracted, as though he were
already outside, doing whatever it was. He said, “When we came
aboard, they put a lot of sports equipment on, didn’t they? Bats
and balls and rackets and all that?”
“Cluttering up my storage space,” Hester
grumped.
Kybee nodded at her. “Still
there, eh? Hester, get me a ball. A tennis ball or something.”

“Hey, Billy! Catch! Hey,
Billy! Toss it back!”
“Hey, Billy! Catch! Hey,
Billy! Toss it back!”
“Hey, Billy! Catch! Hey,
Billy! Toss it back!”
“Hey, Billy! Catch!”
And finally, out of a sea of lefties,
one Billy caught it right-handed. Beaming, holding it up, this Billy
called, “Want me to throw it back?”
“No, Billy, “ Kybee said. “You come
along with me.”

“Mirror image,” Kybee
explained to the others. “There was just a chance,
when they did their imitations, they wouldn’t match us,
they’d mirror us. Do what they see us doing,
which isn’t exactly like doing what we do.”
“Gee,” Billy said, smiling
at everybody, delighted and relieved to be back in the ship, “I don’t
know how you think of things all the time, Kybee.”
Kybee looked at him. “Variety
is good,” he said. “I’d be unhappy if everybody was
the same as me. I’ll have to keep reminding myself of that.” He
tossed the yellow tennis ball into the air and caught it. “And
now,” he said, “to bring in the captain.”

“Oops. Sorry,
Kybee,” said all the captains.

“And now the problem
is,” Kybee told the others back in the ship, “the captain
can’t catch a ball thrown at him. And even if he could,
he isn’t sure if he’s right- or left-handed.”
Sonorously, Councilman Luthguster said, “He’s
ambidextrous, you mean.” (He loved to say long words he could wrap
his tongue around.)
“That’s what I mean,” Kybee
agreed. “He’s equally inept with either hand.” He
looked at the viewscreens. Out there, in the lengthening shadows of afternoon,
the false crew members milled and trailed along, all except the Captain Standforths. One
by one, they were moving toward the ship, looking up at the monitor cameras,
waving and gesturing. Their thin reedy voices began to be heard on the
open intercom: “Kybee? Billy? How about me out here? Hester? Hi,
don’t forget about me! Hello?”
Pam stood beside Kybee, looking at the
viewscreens. “Kybee? How can we save him?”
“I wish I knew,” Kybee said.

They turned the intercom
off that night, but in the morning the captains were still there,
crowding around the ship, more of them than ever. The numbers
of the other faux crewpersons in the background seemed not to have
increased by much, as though it were harder to create imitations
once the original was gone, but the Captain Standforths had doubled
overnight.
“More and more of them,” Kybee
said grimly. “How are we ever going to sift through that mob?”
“O Captain, my captain,” Pam said,
and sighed.
“The captain of his soul,” Hester
said, and sighed.
“A captain courageous,” the
councilman said, but didn’t sigh.
“And a right good captain, too,” Billy
said, and brushed away a tear.
“Gimme a break,” Kybee said
and went away to his own room to think.

“Kybee? Pam? Anyone
at all?”
It was late afternoon. Captain Standforth
felt lonely, sad, tired, worried and confused as he stood with all these bumbling
fellows outside the Hopeful. Who were all these awkward people, anyway? “Why
don’t you be off about your business?” he told a few nearby louts. “Go
find your own ships.”
“This is my ship!” one
of them announced, poking himself in the eye in his agitation.
“My ship!” cried dozens of
others.
“Oh, really!” snapped the
captain and raised his plaintive face to the monitor camera high on the Hopeful’s
side. If only he’d caught that ball yesterday, things would be
so different now. But he’d never been any good at sports. Back
at the Academy—
“Captain. Listen up.”
It was Kybee’s voice, amplified
over the speakers. The captain – and all these oafs around him – alertly
listened up. Many of them even said, “Yes, Kybee?”
“Bad news, captain,” Kybee’s
voice said.
Oh, dear, the captain thought. If only I’d
caught that ball.
“There’s no way to tell which
of you is real,” Kybee’s voice went on. “We can’t
stay here forever. We have to leave. But if some other ship stumbled
onto this place and found you, we could be vaporized for mutiny.”
Ah, thought the captain, so they can’t
leave. No one wants to be vaporized.
“Tomorrow morning,” Kybee’s
voice continued, “before we leave, we’re coming out to shoot all
the captains. We’re sorry, Captain, but you can understand. That’s
the only way we’ll be safe.”
The captain gaped at the ship, astounded
and appalled. Shoot him? He looked around, and all the
other captains were also astounded and appalled. Shoot them all?
And yet, of course, Kybee wouldn’t
want to risk being vaporized by the authorities. It did make an awful
kind of sense.
“Oh, dear,” Captain Standforth
said. So did most of the others.

Morning. Kybee and
Hester went out onto the ramp, armed with heavy laser guns, and
looked around at a world crawling with thousands and thousands
of Pams, councilmen, Billys, Hesters and Ensign Bensons, many,
many more than ever before. But not one Captain Standforth.
“By golly, Kybee,” Hester
said, “you were right.”
“Of course I was,” Kybee said,
though he hadn’t, in fact, been at all certain it would work. “Tell
them that everybody who looks like the captain is going to get shot, then everybody
who can look like somebody else will.” He pointed
his laser gun at a nearby councilman, the largest available target: “Where’s
the captain?”
A hundred imitations pointed. “Betrayed!” wailed
the voice of Captain Standforth from the shed in which he’d taken cover.

It took quite a while to
convince the captain he wasn’t going to be shot, but even
then, he was too nervous to handle the take-off, so Billy did,
to everybody’s relief.

“That was fun,” said
a Billy, watching the great silver ship soar upward.
“Oh, I don’t know,” a
Hester said. “Let’s get out of these damn shoes.” Shoez. Shooz. Shuuz. Ssshhhuuuuu.
. .
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