Farthest
star
The
saga of Cuckoo 1
©
1975 Frederik Pohl and Jack Williamson
Part
1
Doomship
1
The
place was called Sun One. It had begun as an asteroid, circling a young
blue-white giant in the great dense cloud called the Orion Nebula. Over
centuries it had been built upon, sheathed and tunnelled; and what it had
become was the closest thing there was to a central headquarters of the loose
association of intelligent races in the Galaxy that had made contact with one
another.
In one of the inner shells two members of a
very junior race were meeting. They came from Earth. They loved each other.
They were young. They planned to marry. All these things made them curiosities
to the races which possessed personal curiosity, and they were widely watched,
heard or sensed as they came towards each other. They didn't mind. Ben Charles
Pertin saw the girl and launched himself in a shallow three-percent gravity
dive over the heads of a thing like a dragon, a creature composed mostly of a
single great blue eye and a couple of scurrying collective creatures from one
of the core stars. 'Sorry,' he cried down at them, caught the laughing girl's
hand and stopped hard beside her.
“Ouch,” she said, releasing a holdfast with
her other hand. “I'd appreciate a little less enthusiasm next time.”
He kissed her and took her arm. “It's part of
the image,” he said cheerfully. “You know what the chief of delegation says.
Make them know we're here. Earth may be the newest planet in the association
but it isn't going to be the least important. We have a duty to Earth to make
ourselves known throughout the Galaxy, and a duty to the Galaxy to contribute
our strength and our know-how.”
“I think,” said the girl, “that if you're
going to talk like that you'd better buy me a drink.”
At this shell of Sun One the curvature of the
spherical surface they walked on was noticeably sharp. They found it was easier
to leap than to stroll. To travel arm in arm, which is how Ben Charles Pertin
chose to walk with his girl, required practice and a lot of discomfort - not
only to them but to the other sentients in the concourse. Pertin and Zara
shifted grips, so that each had an arm around the other's waist; then Pertin
caught the holdfast webbing with his free hand and partly tugged, partly kicked
them into the air. They shot past the dragonlike creature, narrowly missed a steelwork
vertical strut, touched down again next to something that looked like a
soft-bodied beetle with three dozen legs and were in sight of the little
refreshment plat-form they liked.
Pertin said “Hi!” to a thing like a green bat
as it flapped by.
It
hissed something shrill that his personal translator repeated into his ear as,
“I recognize your identity, Ben Charles Pertin.” The girl nodded, too, although
all members of that particular race, which was called the T'Worlie, looked
alike to her, and in any event the T'Worlies did not have the custom of nodding
since they had no more neck than bats.
As they waited for traffic to clear, the
girlsaid, “How did your meeting go?”
“About as usual. Things are all fouled up on
the probe.” He was watching a tumbling box-like robot that was coming towards
them on a tangent, correcting its course with methodical jets of steam from the
faces of its cubical body; but the tone of his voice made the girl look at him
sharply.
“What is it, Ben?”
He gave her a caught-in-the-cookie-jar smile.
“I'll tell you about it when we sit down.”
“You’ll tell me now.”
“Well—” He hesitated, then cried, “All right,
we can make it now!” But the girl wrapped her fingers around the webbing of the
holdfast.
“Ben!”
He relaxed and looked at her. He didn’t say
anything, but he didn’t have to.
“Ben! Not again!”
He said defensively, “I have to, Zara. The
other one’s dying.
There’s nobody from Earth on the probe now to
represent us.
So I agreed to carry the ball.”
He looked appraisingly at the traffic of
aliens, then back at her; then he looked at her with a sudden shock of
surprise. The girl looked as if she had come very close to crying.
“Oh, Zara,” he said, half-touched and half-annoyed.
“What are you making a big thing about? It’s nothing we haven’t done before.”
“I know," she said, and blinked hard.
“It’s only - well, it’s sort of silly. But I hate the idea of your dying out
there while we’re on our honeymoon.”
Pertin found that he was blinking himself; he
was touched. He patted the girl’s hand and said seriously, “Honey, one of the
traits I like best in you is that you’re not afraid to be sentimental at the
right time. Don’t knock it. I love you for it. Now Let’s go get that drink.”
The little cafe was nearly empty. That was one
of the things they liked about it. It had actual waiters, purchased people.
They didn’t have much personality to display, but they were actually human,
genetically speaking. Pertin and his fiancee enjoyed ordering in their
rudimentary Italian - not their own language, to be sure, but at least a human
language, and one for which they did not need the Pmal translators.
Pertin pulled his feet up, crossed them in the
air and settled gently on to his chair. They looked about while waiting for
their drinks to be brought. Pertin had been on Sun One for more than two years
now, the girl for several months. Even so, familiarity had not dulled their
interest in the place where they were stationed or in the work they did there.
The girl was a news- writer, broadcasting to Earth every week on the stereo
stage.
Pertin was an engineer. His job on Sun One
didn’t involve much engineering. It did involve an interesting mixture of
skills. He functioned partly as a sort of legalized spy and partly as a
goodwill ambassador from Earth to the rest of the universe.
The mere fact that a job like this existed was
still secretly thrilling to Ben Charles Pertin. He was not yet thirty. Even so,
he was old enough to remember the time when the human race thought it was alone
in the Galaxy.
Space travel itself was not new. The old
“nations” had put up their chemical rockets and sent them chugging to Venus,
Mars and the Moon in his grandfather’s time. They had looked for life, and come
up empty every time. Nuclear probes a generation later investigated the outer
planets, the satellites and even the asteroids, with the same result. No life.
By the time Ben was twelve years old, the juice had run out of space travel.
There were still a lot of on-going projects,
such as the close-orbiting satellites that photomapped the Earth and relayed TV
programmes from Rangoon to Rochester and back. An occasional plodding probe was
sent out to sample a comet’s gases or measure the solar flux. And of course
there was always the Farside base on the Moon, where radio astronomy had
retreated when the world’s communications systems had ruined reception for
every ground-based dish. But no excitement was generated by any of that. There
was not even any interest. If some pollster had sampled the Earth’s billions
with a question like, “Do you think intelligent life exists elsewhere in the
universe?”, he would have been likely to receive as a general response, “Don’t
know; don’t care.”
Then came Contact.
It happened just as Ben Pertin was turning
thirteen. Something had been found on Pluto. An artifact, half-buried under
Pluto’s mirror of ice. The Earth suddenly looked outward again. The stereo
stages were full of it: the first fumbling attempts to patch it together, the
first daring experiment at putting power through it. Everybody talked about it.
Ben and his parents watched the glowing figures on their stage, enthralled.
Their evening meals grew cold because they forgot to eat. In school, the kids
made the discovery the main subject of every class.
And when the ancient communicator came to life
and the first alien face peered out of its screen and looked into the face of a
human from Earth, the world went mad.
"I
don’t want to hear any more of that cockamamie Earthman’s Burden talk,” said
Zara Doy, “I heard too much of it when I was a kid. I don’t want you going out
to die. Stay here with me.”
Pertin said fondly, “You’re sweet, Zara. But
this is important. The situation on the probe is exploding; the beings are
fighting. They”re dying uselessly. I can’t back out just for some sentimental
ideas of—”
“Sentimental be damned! Look. When we get
married I want you right in bed with me, all of you. I don’t want to be
thinking about part of you dying way off in nowhere!”
“I’ll be with you, honey. All of me.”
“You know what I mean,” she said angrily.
He hesitated. The last thing he wanted was to
quarrel with his fiancee two days before they were to get married - and less
than two days before he kept his promise to go to the probe ship. He rubbed his
troth ring and said, “Zara, I have to go to the probe.”
First, I said I would; and the boss has passed
the word to all the other top brass on Sun One. Second, it’s important. It’s
not "Earthman’s Burden", It’s simple logic. We’re new and pretty far
behind, compared to the Scorpians or the methane crowd or the T’Worlie. But
look what We’ve done already. We have Earth people on every major planet,
working in every big project taking part in everything that’s happening. The
others are getting used to us. They consult us now. If I back out, who else is
there to go? Earth won’t be represented—”
“I don’t care.”
“It’s not as if I haven’t done it before—”
“The other time you went we weren’t going to
be married,’the girl responded fiercely.
“All right, that’s true. Now I owe you
something. But I owe our planet something too. We’re just beginning to
contribute our share of leadership in the Galaxy, Zara. I mean, look at that
waiter! Half the purchased people around are human beings, now. When the
nonviables edit a copy for Sun One, say, what shape do they copy? Human! The
human shape is as familiar in the Galaxy now as the Sheliaks - and all in
twenty years!”
Zara sucked at the last of her drink and put
it down in its cage. She stared at the waiter, who was smoking a cigarette and
thinking whatever thoughts a blanked-out personality was allowed to think; then
she shook her head.
“I’ll lay it out nice and orderly like an
engineer for you, Ben” she said. “First, if they copy human shape, is it
because they respect us or because they have some crazy methane sense of
humour? Second, if they buy our convicts for purchased people, likely enough
it’s because we have more criminals to sell. Third, I don’t like the whole idea
of Earth trying to dominate the Galaxy. Fourth—”
“Dominate! I said "leadership". It’s
not the same thing at all.”
“It’s a prerequisite. Not sufficient, but
necessary. Fourth, I still hate it all on personal grounds, and I’m not talking
about idealism, I’m talking about sex. I’ll get over it. I know that. But it’s
going to take some of the joy out of going to bed with you, Ben, thinking that
at the same time somewhere else you’re getting eaten by a Sheliak or dying of
radiation burn. I’m sorry it’s so, but it’s so.”
Ben said doubtfully, after a moment, “Would it
be better if we postponed the wedding a little bit?”
“I don’t know. Let me think.”
He waited, finished his drink, looked
cautiously at the girl. There was no anger or misery on her pretty face; she
was simply staring thoughtfully out at the other beings in the concourse.
Pertin beckoned to the waiter and paid the
bill. “They thank you,” said the waiter, staring appraisingly at Pertin and the
girl.
“Will
there be anything else?”
“No, we’re going.” But still the girl sat
there. Then she sighed, and smiled at him.
“Well. You want to go pretty badly. Feeling
the way you do, I suppose you ought to go. I won’t stop you, Ben, and it’s
silly to put off getting married. But there is one thing I want you to do.”
He waited warily.
“Give me your ring. No, just to hold. When
you’re finished going to the probe I’ll give it back to you. But I don’t want
you wearing my ring when you die.”
Last-minute
briefing was in the tachyon transport chamber, out at the far shell of Sun One,
and heavily shielded. Dr Gerald York Bielowitz checked Pertin out himself. He
was a methodical man - one of the reasons he was head of the mission to Sun
One: and he read from a sound-scripted list.
“We’ve got about ten minutes, Ben Charles.
Let’s see. Object Lambda. You know as much about it as I do. It’s anomalous,
it’s exciting, the only way to find out about it is this probe, and it’s in
Earth’s interest to make the probe succeed.”
He dropped his eyes to the page and went on:
“There’s no possibility of survival on the probe, of course, and this has
undoubtedly had some effect on the psyches of all the beings there. To the
extent they have what we can map as psyches, I mean.
But in my opinion, the physical problems have
caused the trouble. Some of the beings are dying - your predecessor among them,
of course. Others are functioning poorly, probably because of ionization
interference with their nervous systems - or whatever corresponds to nervous
systems.
“At any rate,” he said, checking off another
point, “the beings on the probe no longer constitute an orderly system. There’s
violence. Some of the deaths are from fights or murders. This is seriously
interfering with the operation of the probe, and threatening its very success.
You know how important that is. If we blow this, it’s more than a hundred years
before we get another chance.
“And finally,” he said, folding the list and
putting it in his sporran, “your account here will be credited with double-rate
pay for your services on the probe. Your equipment will follow, along with Doc
Chimp here.” He nodded civilly to the hairy little handyman who crouched next
to Pertin. “And good luck to you both!”
"Thank you, Gerald York,” said Pertin
gravely. He stepped up to the transport portal, waited for the signal and
entered, giving a half wave to Bielowitz as the door closed behind him.
This was the fourth time he had found himself
in a tachyon transporter box, or at least the fourth time that he remembered,;
or that it had actually happened to him. They all looked about the same. On the
inside they were featureless except for what looked like studded nail heads
almost completely covering each of the six interior surfaces. He stood there
for a moment, and felt nothing.
But something was going on. The sensors were
counting, locating and identifying every atom in his body, measuring their
bonds to adjacent atoms, charting them in a precise three-dimensional matrix.
The information obtained they encoded into a string of binary numbers;
whereupon the great tachyon generators glowed into life, transmitting the
numbers at a billibit per second in the direction of a point outside the
farthest spiral arm of the Galaxy. It took only moments.
Then Ben Charles Pertin stepped out of the box
and shook hands with his head of mission. “You’re the best man I’ve got,” said
Bielowitz solemnly. “Thanks.”
Pertin then went back to his office and worked
through the rest of the afternoon. He left a little early to meet his fiancée
and take her to dinner. Over the coffee she returned his troth ring to him.
2
At about the same time that Ben Charles Pertin
was putting his ring back on his finger, as much as time at two points separated
by relativistic distances and velocities can be called the ‘same”, Ben James
Pertin pushed his way out of another, almost identical box on the probe ship.
He stopped just outside the portal, moving
slightly to allow it to close behind him. His expression was grim. “Lucked
out,” he said aloud, looking around the unfamiliar chamber.
There was no one to hear, or to see the bitter
and despondent look on his face. The chamber was deserted. The probe was in
free fall, and Pertin floated slowly away from the transport; but nothing else
was floating in the room. There was no litter, no sign that any other being of
any sort was within thousands of light-years and, as he listened, not even any
sound.
He swore softly to himself and twisted his
body around to face the crated personal effects that were nudging their way out
of the box. There wasn’t a great deal to come: some tapes; some changes of
clothing, personal items. All his belongings were in a couple of crates, and at
the end of the string of transmissions came his companion on the mission, Doc
Chimp.
Doc Chimp thrust out a long arm and caught the
handle of the door as he went by. He hung there for a moment, staring at his
environment with an expression that was a parody of Pertin’s own. “Oh, wow, Ben
Charles,” he said sadly. “What a place.”
“It’ll be "Ben James", I think,”
said Pertin.
“Sure,” said Doc Chimp dismally. “Me, I’m not
going to bother. If you want to call me something different, call me stupid.”
Doc Chimp was Earthborn, but he was not human.
He was five feet three inches tall, weighed more than two hundred pounds and,
in high-G environments, habitually walked on feet and knuckles. His parents had
been chimpanzees. But Doc Chimp was something different.
For one thing, he had a sense of humour. He
reflected it in the clothes he wore. Over his hairy barrel chest he wore a
little red vest, open, with the coarse black fur sprouting through. He didn’t
need it for comfort or for modesty; he wore it to please his own sense of the
comic, and for pockets to hold his automatic translator, the key to his private
suitcase and a supply of macadamia nuts, of which he was very fond. For modesty
he wore shiny brown lederhosen. On his head he sported a kepi with a sand veil
around sides and back, and over its visor a bright green plume.
Even the plume was sagging dejectedly as he
said, “I think I’m going to hate this place, Ben James.”
“We didn’t come here to have fun. Where the
hell is everybody?”
“Don’t know, Ben James. Can’t say.”
“Stow our stuff then. This thing won’t stay in
free fall long; we’d better find somebody before it starts firing again.”
“Certainly, Ben James. But there’s somebody
coming now." Pertin said, startled: “I don’t hear anything.”
“Neither do I. But I smell it. It’s a
T’Worlie, coming fast.”
The probe ship was T’Worlie property, but
fortunately for the other races of the Galaxy the T’Worlies didn’t have a very
strong territorial imperative.
They had been civilized for a long, long time.
They were an inquisitive race, in their unhurried way, and no doubt that was
why they had been sending their probes out for hundreds of generations. Little
T’Worlie rockets had radiated in all directions from their mother star, some of
them aimed at other stars, some at nothing closer than the Great Nebula in
Andromeda, ten million years” travel time away.
Only a race like that, deploying probes as
lavishly and patiently as it had, could have discovered the curious
astronomical object called Lambda. No other race would have been in a position
to do it. Sirians, with their limited time-binding capacities that reached no
more than a week into the future, wouldn’t have bothered. Nothing that promised
a remote payoff interested the Sirians at all - which made them unattractive
partners, but inoffensive foes. Humans of course had no chance; their
technology wasn’t up to the job, and the farthest terrestrial probe was still
climbing towards the turnover point on its now senseless journey towards 40
Eridani A.
But the T’Worlies thought long, slow thoughts,
and they were gently but persistently curious about everything. If their race
lived long enough it would learn everything there was to know.
None
of them seemed to mind that no T’Worlie now alive would be present to learn it.
Lambda had been discovered first by an
unmanned T’Worlie scout ship and reported in a routine synoptic survey. It
attracted no attention at all. When first observed its great distance and low
luminosity put it at the very threshold of detectability, and the traits which
made it unique had not been noted.
Subsequent observations attracted more
attention. Its weak spectral lines seemed to shift towards the violet, rather
than the red - which is to say, it was moving towards the Galaxy instead of
away from it. Curious. But the lines were so very weak, the point so very
distant, and the orderly T’Worlies had many other things on their agenda to
investigate.
Then, by accident, another scout turned up the
same object in a survey.
It might not have been recognized if the
computers of the T’Worlies had not been so patient and painstaking. The second
scout had been launched five thousand years earlier, its vector several degrees
away. From its point of view, Object Lambda was in a wholly different part of
the sky, and its rate of approach, indicated by the spectral shift, quite
different.
But the computers had sensed a possible match
and had clucked over the figures until they confirmed it. There existed a
specific, if hypothetical, orbit and velocity which, seen from those two scouts
at those recorded times, would have given exactly those readings.
From the estimated elements the computers made
a prediction. They requested a special observation from still a third unmanned
scout. Lo! It turned out as they had predicted.
Object Lambda was not more than twenty
thousand light-years from the edge of the Galaxy, and was approaching it at
about one sixth of light-speed.
At this point the T’Worlies announced their
discovery to the Galactic civilization at large, and began a study of their
existing drones in that general part of space.
The T’Worlie drones were as small as interstellar
probes can be made: a scoop, a hydrogen ram, some instruments and a tachyon
installation. The T’Worlies had been launching them, thousands at a time, for
tens of thousands of years. As they had never invented war, they were able to
accumulate large quantities of surplus capital, and so the probes were not at
first a particularly expensive project for them. Like most early-industrial
races, they had energy to burn. They burned it. Their planet was largely water
covered; though they looked like bats, they were somewhat more analogous to
flying fish. The water was rich in D²O, and they spent its fusion energies
profligately.
The T’Worlie drone model was standardized
early. A programme was set up under which each drone, upon reaching a point
suitably distant from all others, flashed a tachyonic signal to the T’Worlie
planet, whereupon the tachyon transmitters scanned, encoded and transmitted
whole new drones to the mother drone’s unit. As each new drone flashed into
being, it signalled in to the T’Worlie planet, was given a course and programme
of its own and went onward. The effect was that of an enormous globe of drones,
at the end thousands of millions of them, expanding outward like the shell of a
dead super-nova.
The programme was fully automatic and
economical of everything but the energy eaten up by the tachyon transmitters,
and for ten thousand years there seemed to be an endless supply of that.
In the end even the T’Worlies began to realize
that their energy resources, though huge, were not infinite. The drone
programme was cut to a trickle. But it was never stopped, and the great
swelling bubble of drone ships expanded out, into globular clusters, out
towards the neighbouring galaxies, along the spiral arms, in towards the core
of the Milky Way itself. It was a T’Worlie drone that had buried itself on
Pluto and been found by the exploration from Earth. In fact, T’Worlie drones
had brought into the Galactic society at least a hundred races at one time or
another, almost half of the total so far located.
Another race might have thought of using that
fact to establish dominance for itself, but the T’Worlies didn’t think that
way. They had never invented empires, either. So when the T’Worlies began to be
deeply interested in Object Lambda it was easy enough to find some hundreds of
drones on courses and at points that were not too remote from it.
The next job for the T’Worlie computers was
calculating which of these drones was on the course that would involve least
time and energy in diverting it to the neighbourhood of Lambda, with its huge
Galaxy-ward velocity. Fortunately a handful of drones in that section had been
redirected inward long before, to fill gaps in the global screen. Among them
was one that was, by the best of luck, on a course that could match Lambda in
less than five years.
Alter that there was no problem. The drone’s
matter receiver was put to work giving birth to automatic tools, hull sections,
drive units, instruments, finally people. The tools went to work, assembling
the hull sections, installing the drives, making room for the people. What had
been a tiny kick-ram, no bigger than Earth’s early Apollo capsule, was
transformed and expanded into a thousand-metre vessel with room for a crew of
several hundred.
There was, to be sure, one problem.
The rebuilt T’Worlie ship, now named Aurora,
was big; but it needed to be big. It did not possess a great deal of surplus
mass.
The ship was driven by the sequential
explosion of hydrogen fusion charges, directional in a cone-shaped blast
against a great battering plate at its base. Not much of the ionizing radiation
from the fusion explosions seeped through the base plate, but enough did so
that the members of the crew were constantly bathed in it.
T’Worlie and Sheliaks, purchased people and
Boaty-bits, robots and humans - all responded to this in their individual and
idiosyncratic racial ways. But few complex chemical or electronic processes can
operate without damage in the presence of ionizing radiation. It didn’t matter
who they were. In the long run it came to much the same for all of them. They
died.
Pertin
and the chimp scrambled to the corridor entrance and peered out. The vinegary
T’Worlie smell was strong now, and they could hear the sounds of something
happening outside: a puncture-tyre hiss, a faint high-pitched singing.
A circus procession was sailing towards them
down the centre of the corridor. First was a T’Worlie, a bat’s head on
butterfly body, no bigger than a pigeon but strong enough to be dragging with
it a kitten-sized furry creature with enormous saucer eyes as it flew with
powerful strokes of its green-spotted filmy wings. Behind the T’Worlie and the
being it carried was a glittering cloud of steel-blue particles, like a swarm
of gnats in the sun; and behind them, coming fast but decelerating strongly
because of its mass, the square-edged form of a Scorpian robot, all fore jets
pumping reaction mass.
The T’Worlie made its shrill whistling sounds,
and the Pmal translator on Pertin’s shoulder rattled into life. “I identify you
as a Pertin,” it said with mechanical precision. “I propose you transfer at
once to high-G accommodations suitable to your structure, mode urgent.”
“Why, Nimmie!" cried Ben James, suddenly,
inexplicably, foolishly glad. “It’s good to see you.”
The T’Worlie braked with its filmy wings, and
the five pattered eyes studied Pertin. “Verify your statement of identity” the
Pmal translator rattled in his ear. “Query implications. Request
clarification.”
“Why, it’s me, Ben Ch— Ben James Pertin. From
Sun One. Why, just yesterday I saw you in the social concourse, remember?” But
he stopped; this copy of the T’Worlie he had known would not remember.
The T’Worlie hesitated. It was some Nimmie or
other, Pertin was sure; the key to recognizing T’Worlies was not the five eyes,
or the small sphincter mouth with its cat’s-whisker vibrissae, but the patterns
on the wings. Green spots predominating on a pale yellow background; five of
the bigger spots arranged in a sort of wobbly letter W, like the constellation
Cassiopeia from Earth; yes, it was Nimmie, all rights Pertin knew. But perhaps
a Nimmie he had never met, in some different line of descent.
The vinegary smell deepened; it was a sign of
polite cogitation in a T’Worlie, like a human being’s Hmmm. But Nimmie did not
respond exactly. He was distracted by the swarm of tiny beings, who swept into
the tachyon transport room, swirled around Pertin and the chimp and re-formed
under the T’Worlie’s wings.
The kitten-like creature spoke, with a voice
like a purr. The translator rendered it as: “No time kidding around, get hell
out!”
And the T’Worlie concurred:
"Mode urgent. Accept transportation via
robot. Your physical safety at risk!”
Doc Chimp chattered: I told you I wasn’t going
to like this place, Ben James. It isn’t safe. Of course, I’m only a monkey, so
it doesn’t matter much about me. It’s you I worry about.”
"You’re an ape,” Pertin corrected
automatically, his brain concentrating on what the T’Worlie had said.
“Sure, but an ape that knows what isn’t safe.
Come on, Ben James! Let’s do like Bat-Ears says and split!”
Suddenly, the decision was taken from Pertin.
The Scorpian robot hissed slowly by, still decelerating, came to a stop,
reversed itself and began to pick up momentum for the return. And as it passed
Pertin and Doc Chimp it simply caught them up, each under a silvery tentacle,
and bore them away. In reverse order the procession steamed away: first the
robot with the two terrestrial primates, then the swarm of bit-creatures, then
the T’Worlie and its passenger.
The
probe was powered by huge nuclear thrusters; the power was only off for short
periods, long enough to permit instrument readings or other work that could not
be carried on during deceleration times, and the rest of the time the entire
environment suffered under a surging uneven pulsing drive that averaged nearly
seven gravities.
The welcoming-and-transport committee barely
got them to a place of refuge before the thrusters started again. The
Boaty-Bits had darted away at the first warning white-noise blast; they could
not operate at all under thrust and had to find safety lest they be stepped on.
The T’Worlie and his passenger were next to go, leaving only the robot to see
to tucking Pertin and Doc Chimp in. The robot had no particular objection to
high gravity - Pertin had noticed that on the trip from the tachyon chamber;
when the robot had to change direction it simply braced itself with a few of
the steel-coil tentacles, stopped against whatever was in the way and pushed
off in another direction. The sensation for Pertin was like being tossed around
at the end of a cracking whip, but he survived it.
The thrusting started before the robot had
finished sealing their cocoons, and it was even worse than the ride. The
cocoons, meant to protect them against the thrust, were tailor-made to their
dimensions, equipped with the best of springing devices and every comfort. But
there was no such thing as antigravity, and that was what was needed.
The robot tarried for a moment. It could no
longer jet about, but its tentacles held it easily off the floor, octopus-like.
As the thrusts came the appendages gave gently, then returned to position.
The robot seemed to be trying to communicate.
Pertin, looking out of the cocoon faceplate, shrugged and spread his hands. One
Scorpian looked like another, but if this one had come from Sun One it might
recognize the human gesture. The trouble was, there was no way to tell whether
it was responding to it.
Then the Pmal crackled into life: “—not move.
Prerequisite explanations to you. I am repeating this on all comm frequencies,
will. Imperative you not move. Prerequisite—”
The Pmal faded again, as the robot evidently
shifted to another possible frequency. “All right,” said Pertin, “We’ll wait”
But whether the robot understood him or not he
could not say; it rested there on its tentacles, swaying under the thrust for a
few moments more, and then slithered undulatingly away. The probe was
decelerating furiously now: a roller coaster ride, multiplied by a hundred.
There was a lot more noise than Pertin had expected, both the distant rumble of
the nuclear explosions and the screeching of the torsion-bar shock absorbers
that did their best to level out the thrust. But the cocoon was designed for
it.
“Doc!” he called. “Can you hear me?”
The chimp’s cocoon was only yards away, but
the thuuud-screech! drowned out all other sounds. Pertin stared around.
The room was half machine. Bright metal
valves, grey plastic tubes coiling like dead entrails, coloured screens where
enigmatic symbols flickered and vanished. The walls were a sick, off-colour
green. No human would have designed a room like this, but of course it had not
been designed for humans in the first place. It was a standard T’Worlie cocoon
container; modified to take terrestrials; and the T’Worlies merely allowed them
to use it.
The thuuud-screech went on and on.
Experimenting with the cocoon, Pertin discovered that it would meter an
anaesthetic dose into his veins, or even a selective analgesic to deaden the
auditory nerve for a time to block out the remorseless nuclear thunder. But he
didn’t want to sleep, and he wasn’t tired; he wanted to get about his business.
When your time is running out, he thought, you don’t like to lose any of it.
Then he discovered that the cocoon had a
built-in stereo stage.
The apparatus was not wholly familiar, but
with any luck he should be able to reach Doc Chimp, at least. His first attempt
was not a success. He gently turned a knurled pointer under the hollow silver
hemisphere of the stage and was delighted to see it fill with the shining
silver mist that indicated it was operating.
But when the mist abruptly condensed it was to
show the image of a nude blonde girl. “Mr Pertin, sir,” she carolled sweetly,
“welcome aboard! Tonight for your entertainment, sir, you may watch me star in
The Belle of Bellatrix. A thriller-drama of the love of a human beauty for a
mutated alien and its fatal consequences. Feel the fear of the terrified girl!
Share the wrath of her human lover! Feel the coils of the monster around her!
Taste its dying blood! All these available by using the sen-cat coils in the
small cabinet by your right hand. We have many other stereo-stage fiches, Mr
Pertin, and—”
He finally got that fiche turned off, and the
nude blonde vanished, still smiling. She dissipated as the camera zoomed in at
her until at the end all that was left was a Cheshire-cat smile and the memory
of her pale, slim figure.
Then the stereo stage blinked, swirled with
colour, solidified and Doc Chimp’s homely face was staring out at him.
“Got you first time," cried Pertin,
pleased. “I didn’t think I would be so lucky.”
“You weren’t,” said the chimp. “I called you.
I want to volunteer for something.” The chimpanzee face looked subdued.
Pertin said, “What?”
“I think I ought to take a look around,” said
Doc Chimp sadly,
“God
knows I don’t want to. But most of the beings will be tied down to pressure
cocoons and I’m not. Quite.”
“Good idea,” said Pertin, a little surprised.
He hadn’t known the chimp well on Sun One - it wasn’t that he was prejudiced
against mutated animals, but of course they didn’t have much in common. But he
had an impression of Doc Chimp’s personality that was at variance with the act
of volunteering for a solitary excursion into what might be trouble. Humorous,
pleasure seeking, a little lazy - that’s how he would have described the chimp.
“And thanks,” he added. “Meanwhile I’ll just send back a report to Sun One, if
I can figure out how to use this stereo stage.”
“Ah,” said Doc Chimp, the mocking light in his
eyes again, “allow me to instruct you, mighty human. You know, I figured you’d
be too involved with high-level considerations to take much interest in
hardware. So I checked out all the instrumentation with the T’Worlies on Sun
One before we left.”
Pertin
needed only a few minutes to learn to operate the component in his cocoon; it
was not, after all, anything but a stereo stage, and they were common all over
the Galaxy. Then he lifted himself on one elbow against the surging thrusts of
the drive, the cocoon’s self-adjusting circuits buzzing busily to try to
compensate for his unusual position; and he watched the chimp cautiously lever
himself over the side of his own cocoon - timing his movements to the surging
of the drive – drop clumsily to the floor, mutter to himself angrily for a
moment and then slowly, painfully lumber off on all fours. He did not look
back.
Pertin felt curiously better, as if he had
discovered a friend where he had expected only an inadequate tool. He worked
the controls of the stereo stage, got himself a circuit through to the
recording fiches of the tachyon communicator and spoke:
“This
is Ben James Pertin,” he said, “reporting in to Sun One. Doc Chimp and I have
arrived safely. There was no apparent problem from the transmission; at least,
we look all right, we’re breathing, our hearts are working. Whether our brains
are scrambled or not, I could not say. No more than when we volunteered for
this, anyway, I’d guess. We have seen very little of the probe, have contacted
only a few of the personnel; but in general the situation appears much as we
understood it. At present I am in an acceleration couch, waiting for the next period
of free fall for further investigation. Doc Chimp, who is per forming very well
and deserves credit, has voluntarily left on a scouting mission.
“I’ll report again when I have something to
say,” he finished, “and - personal to Ben Charles Pertin: have a good time on
my honeymoon.”
He snapped off the stage before he could
decide to erase the last part of the message.
In spite of the best efforts of the cocoon,
his kidneys were beginning to feel bruised. The noise was even more of a
problem. Efficient soundproofing kept it out of the cocoon as noise - at least,
as airborne vibrations - but there was too much of it, the amplitude too great,
to be shut out entirely; and it seeped through as a continual thunder and
squeal.
Pertin shut it out of his mind, thought of
sleep, decided to brush up on his knowledge of the “hardware”.
His first attempt at the fiche library of the
stereo stage was only half successful. He just managed to avert the appearance
of the bare-skinned blonde and found he had secured a record transmitted by
another member of the crew - race unspecified - apparently for a sort of public
stereo-stage broadcast on its home planet. He shut out of his mind the public
broadcaster he should have been getting ready to marry about this time - some
thousands of light-years away, was getting ready to marry - and discovered that
the name of the vessel was the Aurora, or Dawn - the sound was of course
different in the T’Worlie tongue, and they had named it; but it had the same
shared meanings of new day and bright glowing promise. He discovered that it
had only limited facilities for recreation - well, he had known that. There
were tape-fiche libraries for almost every known race and some special
high-pressure atmosphere chambers for a few of the exotics. That was it.
This was not exactly what he wanted, so he
tried again. But instead of getting a fiche on the ship itself, he got one on
its mission, evidently a briefing record dubbed for humans. The narration was
by a man Pertin recognized, about sixty, plump, freckled; he had been a minor
functionary on Sun One. He spoke in a high-pitched voice, smiling emptily at
the stereo pickup.
“We will show you all that is known about
Object Lambda. First we will locate it, as it would be seen from Earth if
visible at that distance.”
Behind him another stereo-stage tank glowed,
shimmered and filled with a universe of stars. Two of the brighter ones pulsed
to call attention to themselves as the man spoke.
“Those stars are Benetnasch, in Ursa Major,
and Cor Caroli, in Canes Venatici. Those faint stars over there—” as he spoke a
faint line of light ran around an area of the tank, enclosing it in a square -
“are in Coma Berenices, near the north galactic pole. Now we’ll take a closer
look.”
Benetnasch and Cor Caroli swam aside. The
faint stars of Coma Berenices grew brighter, spreading apart, as the whole
field of stars seemed to move. To Ben James Pertin it felt as if he were
plunging head-on into a sea of stars. The bright points fled out of the sides
of the stage, and the few remaining ones became brighter, until only a few were
left, and beyond them ghostly faint blurs that were no longer part of the Milky
Way but galaxies in their own right.
Then the illusion of motion stopped.
Another square of light formed around a patch
of blackness in the centre of the stage, indistinguishable from the emptiness
around it.
The man said, “Now we’ve reached the limits of
Sol-orbiting instruments. Object Lambda is at the centre of that square, but it
is invisible. It is slightly better in the far infra-red.”
The pattern of stars shimmered; some became
brighter, some dimmer, and in the centre of the square there was what might
have been a faint and shapeless glow.
“This is not instantaneous,” explained the
lecturer. “It’s long exposure and image-intensified. It. would never have been
detected in routine sweeps from Sol-based instruments. Even the
T’Worlie
scouts first detected it only because of the chance occultation of some stars
in the Milky Way itself, seen from beyond. What we will show you next is not an
actual observation but an artifact as it would look from Earth, as deduced from
all available observations.”
The object brightened half a dozen magnitudes as
he spoke.
“As you see, it has a sort of tipped-disc
shape, like certain classifications of external galaxies. However, that’s not
what it is. First of all, it is far too small, perhaps only two or three AU.
Second, its spectrum is wrong.
“At its apparent distance, as determined by
its angular diameter - as if it were indeed a galaxy - it should be receding at
a major fraction of the speed of light. Of course, we know from triangulation
from the T’Worlie ships that that distance is wrong by a good many orders of
magnitude. But according to its spectrum displacement, it is actually
approaching the Milky Way at nearly relativistic speeds."
The image blurred and disappeared, and the
plump human was standing there by himself. He said with satisfaction, “The
T’Worlie scout has confirmed the speed as accurate, in the range of fifty
thousand kps. Its position, relative to Earth, is some thirty thousand
light-years from Sol, in the direction of a point near the northern fringe of
Coma Berenices. It is not an object from our galaxy. There are no spiral arms
in that direction, nor many isolated stars or clusters much nearer than Sol
itself.
"The T’Worlies back-plotted its position
from all observations of their drones, as recorded over the past several
thousand years. Most of the data is ambiguous, but they did establish a
probable line of flight. Their hope was to find a galaxy from which the object
might have been ejected, and then to try to discover the reason for its high
velocity. The T’Worlies were only partly successful - I should say, only
possibly successful. No such galaxy was detected. They did, however, find
scattered star swarms which they believe to be the fragments of a galaxy that
collapsed and then exploded more than half a billion years ago. It is the
present working hypothesis that Object Lambda was ejected from that galaxy - by
what means we cannot say.”
The man’s expression became enthusiastic.
“Because of the anomalous nature of Object Lambda,” he said, “the all-race
conference on Sun One determined to transmit a full-size scout ship through the
drone equipment, and to staff it with a crew of volunteers of all races.”
Volunteersl thought Pertin, grimacing. “And after considerable effort in
negotiating, it was agreed to include Earth humans as part of the crew. The
political implications of this step are of enormous consequence and reflect the
true coming of age of Earth humanity in the Galaxy-wide confraternity of
civilized peoples. Thank you,” he said, bowed, smiled and disappeared as the
fiche came to an end.
Not a minute too soon, thought Pertin. A
little more of that and he would have been ill. The cocoon had a fine built-in
waste handling system, but there was no sense in overloading it.
He began to see what Zara had been talking
about when she accused him of an “Earthman’s Burden” complex. It sounded
pompous, stupid and faintly threatening, he realized, at least as expressed by
the man in the briefing fiche. Pertin tried to get his mind off that track -
because he didn’t want to question the cause for which he was eventually going
to die, and because above all he didn’t want to think about Zara Doy. He was in
the middle of trying to get The Belle of Bellatrix back on the stage when he
became aware that something was scratching angrily at his cocoon.
For a moment he thought he was dreaming. He
glanced back at the fading nude on the screen, then outside at the nude girl
who stood there.
But Pertin was a pretty superior type, and he
oriented himself quickly. It was no girl. It was not even human. It was a
female young Earth person in shape, but the stuff of which the shape was
constructed was not flesh and blood. It was silvery and bright, with a metallic
hue. The eyes were orange and glowing. The hair was not separate tendrils; it
was a single solid piece, sculptured slightly for cosmetic effect. The creature
was, he realized, an “edited” version of some methane-breather or one of
even
more exotic chemistry, some being who was structurally nonviable in
oxygen-bearing air and had had itself transmitted in an altered form to take up
its duties on Aurora. And it was holding a scrap of what looked like paper.
It was not right-side up. Pertin gestured, and
finally the girl understood and rotated what she held until he could read its
message. Then he signalled her to stop. It said: Sorry, Ben James, but you’ve
got to get out of there. Things are worse than we thought. Aphrodite here will
carry you to me. They guarantee she won’t drop you and squash you; and,
actually, Ben James, it seems to be a matter of life and death.
Doc.
The girl did not speak, but the orange eyes
blazed imperatively, and the hands beckoned.
Pertin sighed, and opened the lid of his
cocoon. “Okay, Aphrodite,” he said. “Carry me off.”
Astonishingly, being carried by the pseudogirl
was actually worse than being toted by the robot; but this trip was slower, and
Pertin had a chance to see something of the Aurora. It was roughly cone-shaped.
At the nose and through the midsection were living quarters for the several
score individuals who manned the ship. Since the crew varied widely, they
needed a good deal of room. Space had been provided for methane-dwellers,
space-flyers and cold creatures as well as for the more common forms based on carbon,
oxygen and water. However, most of the non-viables either stayed home or sent
proxies or edited copies, so these spaces were mostly empty. “Below” the living
quarters and the space for the exotics were the hardware - instrument sections.
Below them still - in the sense of being sternward, towards the thrusters - was
a layer of dense liquid for a radiation shield. It wasn’t very effective; but
of course, Pertin thought, the shield didn’t have to be effective enough to
keep them alive forever since there was neither hope for nor point in that.
Below the shield was the tachyon transmission deck, where Pertin and the chimp
had arrived. And beyond that deck, the shock-absorbing gear and thrusters.
Since the Aurora was decelerating, it happened that the ‘stern” of the ship
came first in line of flight; but that made little difference to anyone aboard.
It was “down”. And down was the direction they were going. The pseudogirl had
wrapped Pertin in a thick blanket of something like heavy-duty plastic foam. It
was not as good as his cocoon by a long shot, but it kept him from dying of the
ceaseless grinding changes in gravity as the thrusters shoved and the “girl”
levered herself down a ladder-like series of projecting rods. She did not
speak, nor acknowledge Pertin’s efforts to speak to her. Either there was
something wrong with his Pmal translator, or she simply was not a
conversationalist. But she was considerate enough, and when they reached the
instrument deck Pertin was bruised and sick, but alive.
“Ben James!” cried a familiar voice. “I told
you Aphrodite would get you here all right!”
Doc Chimp, thin lips grinning widely,
scrambled over to help the silvery girl put him down, propping him against a
sloping bulkhead so he could look around. They were worth looking at, a
nightmare crew if he ever saw one. Besides the pseudogirl and the mutated
chimp, there was a Sheliak in its high-G mode, looking like a flattened baker’s
bun on the deck, another web of plastic foam that hid an apparently human-sized
figure, and a row of small cocoons. Two were empty; the third contained a
T’Worlie. From a speaker outside the cocoon a T’Worlie voice whistled a
greeting and Pertin’s Pmal translated: “I recognize your identity, Ben James
Pertin. It is advantageous to all of us that you are here.”
Thanks, Nummie,” said Pertin, but he was
staring at the other plastic wrappings. A human being seemed to be concealed in
them; but apart from himself he knew of only one human being on the Aurora, one
he didn’t really want to think about.
He said aside, “Doc, who’s over there?”
Doc Chimp said, “Who? Her? Oh, I don’t know
her name. She’s purchased people for some low-G type or other. But she’s on our
side.” The web stirred and a face peered out. It was human enough as far as
features went, but the emptiness in the eyes told Pertin that Doc Chimp was
right. “Anyway,” chattered the chimp, “I better fill you in. Hell’s really
broken loose, Ben James. A bunch of beings tried to wreck the telescope. Not
sure but what they’ve done it, too; the Scorpian’s trying to see how much can
be salvaged. If it and Aphrodite here hadn’t come along, we’d be out of
business until they could send new instruments through - and by then it would
likely be too late.”
The thuuud-screech was a lot closer here;
apart from everything else, it was making Pertin’s head pound. “What beings?”
he managed to croak.
“Didn’t see them. I just saw somebody
disappearing into a passage, and then the Sheliak here came hell-fire fast
after him and saw me. For a minute he thought I was them.” Doc Chimp cocked his
head ruefully. “You could’ve found yourself short a monkey right there, Ben
James, if I hadn’t talked fast. Then the Sheliak commandeered me to help, and
we came down here to hold the fort. Oh, how sore my soles and knuckles are, Ben
James, against the pounding of those rockets! But I did my duty. Then we got
the observatory deck sealed off - they’d used a chemical explosive on the
telescope and sprung a port – and then I happened to think of my human master,
off there watching The Belle of Bellatrix without a care, and I persuaded
Aphrodite to fetch you.”
Pertin frowned. “I don’t quite see why,” he
objected. “I Can’t help.”
“You can stay alive,” declared the chimp. “I
didn’t tell you all of it. When they came for the telescope they had to get
past the T’Worlies here. Well, you know T’Worlies Can’t do much against any
being that can operate in high-G. But they tried to do what they could. And two
of them got killed.”
That was a shocker if ever there was one; the
one cardinal rule among the races of the Galaxy was that no race could ever
kill or seriously maim a member of another. Even on Sun One, what disciplinary
problems arose were handled within the delegation of the race that produced the
problem; there was some provision for a body of other races sitting in
judgement if the offending race failed to deal with the problem, but that law
had never had to be invoked. Pertin would hardly have believed the chimp if
Nummie hadn’t confirmed it.
“They’re crazy, then,” said Pertin. “All
right. We’ll have to get a report back to Sun One. Nummie, is your stereo stage
operating?”
“Confirm that it is operative,” sang the Pmal
in his ear. “State that such a transmission has already been sent.”
“Good. I’ll have to send one too, and I think
the rest of us should; but that can wait.” Pertin tried to shift position as
the floor surged particularly viciously, suppressed a groan and thought, “Since
we’re here, they probably won’t try anything
right
away.” Then he said, “What we need is a comb-out. Get every being on board to
account for his whereabouts and try to identify the ones who did it. For that
we need a little free-fall. Can we arrange that?”
The silvery girl spoke at last. Apparently she
had heard everything, had simply seen no need to comment. “We can have a little
free-fall. We can have a little comb-out. But we probably won’t need to arrange
it right away as the next observation period is only—” A meaningless squawk,
but Doc Chimp filled in:
“She means about fifteen minutes away.”
It took a moment for Pertin to realize that
the girl’s words had been in English. He looked at her curiously, but there was
no time to think about that. Tine,” he said. “How many were involved in the
bombing?”
“Not less than three nor more than eight,”
piped the Pmal translator, responding to the T’Worlie’s whistle, “Out of how
many in the crew?”
The T’Worlie hesitated. “There are in excess
of three hundred thousand beings at present existing within the ship’s hull. Of
these, a large number are collective creatures.”
“Not counting the Boaty-Bits, I mean how many
individuals?”
“There are not less than two hundred forty nor
more than two hundred fifty.”
Pertin said, “So the troublemakers are a tiny
fraction. That’s good. Well broadcast a ship wide alarm. Most of the crew will
cooperate—”
He stopped, staring at the silver pseudogirl.
“What’s the matter?”
She had stretched out her fingertips towards
the entrance port, almost in the traditional pose of a human sleepwalker.
“The
matter,” she said in her incongruous colloquial English, the tones as deep as
Pertin’s own, “is that the tiny fraction of troublemakers is coming back.”
A
moment later no one needed the silvery girl’s fingers to hear for them; the
sound of a rush grew rapidly louder: a crackling electrical sound, like the
patter of a collapsing charge field. Into the room burst what looked at first
like a single huge blue eye.
“Sirian!”
howled Doc Chimp in terror, and tried to leap out of the way. But not even his
simian muscles had the strength to leap, and the surging G-force of the rockets
made him stumble and fall heavily on his side against the silvery girl. At one
stroke, two-thirds of the beings able to move at all in the high-G field were
immobilized; the T’Worlie, the purchased person and Ben Pertin himself were
wholly useless while the rockets were on. The Sirian, moving by electrostatic
forces, was immune to mere ten and twelve-G thrusts; and he bore with him
something that glittered, carried under the great forward eye in a pair of
crablike pincers, tiny and almost invisible.
Pertin, laid heedlessly just inside the
portal, was first in the creature’s path. He did not even have time to realize
he was in danger before the Sirian was upon him. Then, queerly, the great eye
stared at him and the Sirian paused, hesitated, and turned away. It propelled
its glittering metal object at the bulkhead and at once reversed its field and
sped away.
If that was another bomb, Pertin thought,
they’d all had it now; beyond that bulkhead was empty space from the last
attack. The rest of the ship might be saved if the automatic seals worked fast
enough, but they would be boiled into outer space - himself, the purchased person,
Doc Chimp and the T’Worlie, at least.
Pertin had forgotten the Sheliak. The soggy
baker’s bun that slumped on the deck and had taken no part in the conversation
was still in fact an able and intelligent being. It acted faster than Pertin
would have believed possible. The bun shape elongated itself into a sort of
stemmed sea-anemone, flowed like lightning up and down around the bomb,
surrounding it, drowning it in alien flesh.
It exploded.
The only sign the rest of them could see was a
quick convulsive shudder of the Sheliak’s tissue. Even the noise was muffled
and almost inaudible, in the constant thunder of the rockets.
But the Sheliak glowed brilliant gold for a
moment with a flash of the last light of its life, and died.
They had defended themselves, but at the cost
of one of their allies.
As if on cue, the thunder of the rockets
stopped, and they found themselves blessedly free of the crushing G forces. Doc
Chimp, struggling to untangle himself from the silvery girl, went flying across
the chamber, ricocheted against a wall and brought up short next to where
Pertin was struggling to disassociate himself from the plastic foam.
“Are you all right, Ben James?” Doc Chimp
yelled.
Pertin pushed himself free and caught the outstretched
chimpanzee arm for stability. He ached in every bone and muscle, and he was
drenched in sweat - from the heat of the plastic wrap or from fear, he could
not say which.
“I think so,” he said. “Why do you suppose he
did that?”
“What? Who? You mean the Sheliak? Why, I guess
it’s their nature, Ben James—”
“No, not the Sheliak,” Pertin said but he
didn’t say out loud what it was that was perplexing him. He only thought it to
himself. Why had the Sirian looked at him with death in his eye, then stopped
and turned away?
3
It
turned out there were two things wrong with Pertin’s calculations. First, the
odds weren’t quite as favourable as he had guessed; he had not remembered that
the bombers might have allies who were as gravity-bound as himself, and so
hadn’t put in an appearance. Second, he had not realized that a large
proportion of the beings aboard the Aurora simply didn’t want to be bothered.
They were apathetic, hopeless, detached, or in some exotic mood with no human
analogue; or perhaps, here and there, they just weren’t about to take orders
from an up-start biped jackanapes from - what was the name of it? -Earth.
The other problem was that the work of the
Aurora was in observing Object Lambda, not in tracking down aberrant entities.
Not even the fact that beings of one or two races had killed beings of another
race could change their minds. The Scorpian robot, when it returned from
patching together what it could of the damaged optical equipment, would not even
take time to talk to Pertin; it went at once to its assigned place in the
instrument chamber and began to oversee the series of observations which was
what the thrust stoppage was for.
Pertin could not even get the free-fall period
extended to permit a full-scale search of the ship. The T’Worlies pointed out
to him, reasonably enough, that as they were all going to die anyhow the first
priority was the errand for which they had all undertaken to give their lives:
to complete the observation of Object Lambda. And the laws of celestial
dynamics were remorseless. A certain quantum of delta-V had to be applied to
Aurora’s course. There was only finite time in which to do it. If they failed
to put in the necessary velocity change the probe would fly by Object Lambda
too fast to accomplish the mission to which it was assigned. So the T’Worlies
were going to work on their instrument observations and nothing else, although
they certainly wished him well, they indicated, in his search for the guilty
ones.
The search team turned out to be a party of
five: Pertin, Doc Chimp, the pseudogirl, the purchased-people woman and the
little kittenish object who had joined the party to greet them on arrival. They
couldn’t even recruit the Boaty-Bits to their cause.
As soon as the collective creatures had
learned of the bombing attempt they had departed en masse to swarm in some
obscure corner of the vessel and unite all of their intelligence in the problem
of deciding what to do about it.
Pertin saw a great deal of the ship, but found
no criminals. The one being they had certainly identified, the Sirian, eluded
their search. If a being the size of a horse, emitting an electrostatic crackle
every time it moved, could avoid the searchers, what chance had they for locating
a party of unidentified marauders? No chance, answered Echo; and they found
nothing.
About all they really accomplished was to move
the acceleration cocoons for the low-G beings they had come to think of as
friends close enough together so that they could watch out for each other when
the delta-V thrust immobilized them. There were many such periods. By the
nature of things, there had to be. It was thuuud-screech! at least eighty
percent of the time, cut up the individual portions as they would. The Aurora
had thousands of kps of velocity to shed as it overtook Lambda, if they were to
avoid over-running it too fast to orbit their package. It made little
difference how it felt to the members of the crew.
To Pertin it felt like being kicked in the
kidneys four or five times a minute, for hours on end. With allowances for
variations in anatomy, it felt very much like that to most of the beings. Frail
little creatures like the T’Worlies were particularly hard hit, or would have
been if it hadn’t been for the fact that the Aurora was their own design,
cocoons and all, and many thousands of years of thought had gone into reducing
the damage to a T’Worlie frame in a cocoon. It was an advantage of a sort, but
against it was the overpowering debit that on their native planet the surface
gravity was less than a quarter-G. They were not creatures designed for strain.
It was the unfelt pain that was the worst.
Every explosion produced noise and thrust, but it also sleeted a few more
curies of radiation through their bodies and brought them a few hours nearer to
death. As it was not felt, and as there was nothing that could be done about
it, they seldom spoke of it to each other.
For half a dozen periods there was no further
violence from anyone on board, and the Aurora went on about its business.
Pertin reserved the time in the cocoon for taping his endless reports to Sun
One, and for inspecting and studying the observation results on Object Lambda.
When there was the blissful floating surcease, for half an hour or so at a
time, he used it to roam around the ship. His announced purpose was to watch
out for trouble. As time passed and trouble did not come, he stopped talking
about it, but continued to roam. He was interested in the ship on its own
merits. Simply by its novelty it helped take his mind off the growing number of
things he didn’t want to think about. This was the first real spaceship he had
ever seen. That seemed strange to him, when he considered how many tens of
thousands of light-years he had travelled since he volunteered for tachyon
transmission from Earth. It was normal enough, though. Sun One was thick with
beings who had crossed and re-crossed the Galaxy a dozen times, and never seen
a spaceship at all.
Object Lambda was getting perceptibly closer -
not to the eye, to be sure. No eye on the ship was in a position to see it
anyway. But the cameras were able to make out more and more detail - not easily
or well because its intrinsic luminosity was so very low, and in the low-energy
long-wave part of the spectrum at that. They had even discovered that Lambda
was not alone in space. Huge as it was, nearly two AU in diameter, it carried
with it little orbiting fleas. The biggest of them was not much more than a
mile through and the distance was still enormous; but the T’Worlie instruments
managed to detect them, even identify them. The longest periods of free-fall
were when the T’Worlies deployed their photon mirrors at the end of a tether,
far from even the vibration of a footstep or shifting weight of robot mass in
the ship; then their optical emulsions greedily drank up the scant flow of
photons from Lambda and converted them into images.
If they had had a great deal of time, they
could have answered all questions from there, or nearly all. They were in
intergalactic space, and there was no such thing as haze, beyond the advance
scattering of their own rocket ejecta. But they had no time: the delta-V
equation still ruled them, and one of its tricky parentheses said that
deceleration early was worth twice much deceleration late, since it gave them
more time for deceleration before they reached the neighbourhood of Lambda. And
then there was the mere fact of their rapid approach. The image did not remain
still in the T’Worlie mirrors. It grew, minutely, to be sure, but enough that
an exposure for more than an hour or so began to fuzz.
Even so, they learned. The nearest thing to
pleasure Pertin ever found in a T’Worlie was when a particularly fine series of
photographs had been taken, and it was discovered that they showed a hint, a
shadow, finally an orbital line for the biggest of the objects that circled
Lambda. The pleasure was spoiled for
Pertin
when the calculations of orbit and time turned out to be impossible; Lambda
would have had to have the density of the solar wind to have so slow a
satellite. But the T’Worlies didn’t mind. Explanations would come. If not then,
later. If not to the present generation, to the next. Meanwhile they were
accruing information.
Between
the hours of thudding acceleration and the briefer periods of frenzied
activity, darting about the ship, Pertin was nearly always bone-weary and
aching. Sleep did not rest him.
Communication
with Sun One was more and more an effort.
The
twelve-hour wait between transmission and reply - often it was more, when the
other beings on the ship had queued up for their own transmissions - destroyed
the rhythm of the communication; by the time he had a response to his report of
the attack on the instrument chamber, he was already relaxing in the continued
comfort of the experience that the attack had not been repeated. Once it was
himself, or anyway that other self named Ben Charles Pertin, who reported to
him. That put him in a tailspin that only a carefully metered dose of
tranquillizers from the cocoon’s store could deal with. From the expression on
the other Ben Pertin’s face, it was some strain for him too. But the worst from
Sun One was not from his other self, it was from Gerald York Bielowitz, who
acknowledged a report, suggested some additional instrument readings that would
be desirable, started to sign off, hesitated, and then added: “Oh, you’ll be
interested, I think. Zara Doy and Ben Charles were married three hours ago.”
Pertin did not remember cutting the stereo
stage or seeing the little figure collapse. He lay there for a long time while
the cocoon stroked and soothed him, lifted him, lowered him, gently massaged
what pains it could from his limbs. At some point he fell asleep. In his dream
Ben Charles Pertin married Zara Doy, but he was Ben Charles, and the two of
them, intoxicated with the wine they drank and with each other, spoke sadly and
wistfully about the other Ben Pertin who was busy about the task of dying on an
alien spaceship a Galaxy away. When he woke up and discovered he was the other
Ben Pertin he was in an instant unfocused rage.
It was Doc Chimp who woke him. “Boss,” he
whined. “Listen, wake up. I’ve been limping around this hellhole of a ship
looking for the Scorpian robot, and—”
“Shut up,” snarled Pertin through the outside
communicator of his cocoon. His tone took the chimp aback. He slumped on his
haunches, staring at Pertin’s cocoon. He was in bad shape, Pertin saw,
unwilling to care about what he saw: the bright green plume was sagging under
the thrust of the rockets, the paws and knuckles were scarred and stained. That
was why he was there, of course: feet and paws, he could withstand the
constantly varying G-force of the thrusters with only a good deal of pain, so
it was his job to do what Pertin could not when he was bound to the cocoon. A
part of Pertin’s brain told him that if he tried he probably could find ways of
making the job easier.
The chimp’s expression was no longer
woebegone, it was angry.
“Sure,”
he said thickly, “I’ll shut up. Why not? We’ll all shut up before long. Dead
beings are all pretty quiet.”
Pertin fought to control his own anger. “We’ll
be dead all right. What difference does it make? Do you think this is a real
life, what we’re doing here? Back on Sun One we’re alive and well; this is only
a dream!”
The chimp wailed, “Ben James, I’m tired and I
hurt. I’m sorry if I said something wrong. Look, I’ll go away and come back,
only—”
“Do that,” snapped Pertin, turning off the
outside communicator.
His agitated hairy face stared dolefully in at
him. Doc Chimp was by no means a jungle primate. The shape of his skull was
different, the structure of his respiratory system was different, the very
chemicals that flowed in his blood were different. But he was not human,
either. Doc Chimp – his formal name was not that, but it was all Pertin had
ever called him - was one of the mutated animals who had been constructed for
special purposes in the molecular biology plants on Earth.
His
quadridexterous hands and feet made him particularly useful even in free fall,
where he could fling himself about with perfect ease from toe-rest to
hand-hold, while humans like Pertin clumsily sprawled and spun. But he had his
drawbacks.
A chimpanzee is simply not a human. His
physiology is one count against him. He cannot develop the brain of a human
because his skull is the wrong shape, and because the chemistry of his blood
does not carry enough nourishment to meet the demands of abstract thought. He
cannot speak because he lacks the physical equipment to form the wide variety
of phonemes in human language. The molecular-biology people knew how to deal
with that: things like widening the angle of the cranium called the “kyphosis”,
thus allowing the brain to round out full frontal lobes, restructuring tongue
and palate, even adding new serum components to the blood like the
alphas-globulins that bind human haemoglobin.
In practical terms what had been done to Doc
Chimp and his siblings was to speed up evolution. But that was not quite
enough. Two generations back Doc Chimp’s ancestors could form only one or two
of the simplest words and learn rote tricks; they lacked conceptual thought
entirely. Doc Chimp had capacity. He did not have background or tradition. His
sixty-degree kyphosis was close to the human average, so that his skull was
domed; he possessed a forehead; he could remember complicated instructions and
perform difficult tasks; he was capable of assimilating the equivalent of a
trade-school education in skill and of conducting the equivalent of
cocktail-party conversation in performance. What he lacked was ego. His
psychological profile was high in cyclothymia but also in ergic tension; his
moods shifted drastically, and he was always adventurous, always afraid. His
emotional index was about equal to that of a human five-year-old. Frightened,
he ran. Angered, he struck out. Baffled, he wept.
Staring back through the cover of the cocoon,
Pertin relented. “Sorry,” he said, snapping the communicator back on. “What
were you trying to tell me?”
“I’ve lost the Scorpian,” wailed the chimp.
“Well? Are you supposed to be his keeper?”
“Be easy on me, Ben James,” begged the
chimpanzee. “I hurt all over. The robot was supposed to be getting ready for
some new instruments that were coming in. He isn’t there. The stuff’s piling up
in the transmission chamber and nobody to do anything about it. I’m afraid
it’ll get damaged.”
“What about what’s-her-name, Aphrodite? Can’t
she store it?”
“She is trying to, but the Scorpian is a
specialist in this stuff and she isn’t. None of the other high-G creatures is,
as far as I can tell, and, oh, Ben James, I’ve travelled so far trying to find
someone who can help!”
He was a pitiable sight, his fur unpreened,
his gay clothes smudged and wrinkled. Pertin said, “You’ve done your best, Doc.
There’s nothing I can do until the thrust stops - half an hour or so. Why don’t
you rest up for a while?”
“Thanks, Ben James!” cried the chimp
gratefully. “I’ll just take a few minutes. Wake me, will you? I – I —”
But he was already clambering into the cocoon,
his spiderlike arms shaking with strain. Pertin lay back and closed his own
eyes, allowing the cocoon to do its best, which amounted to increasing its rate
of stroking his back muscles, trying mindlessly to calm him down.
It had seemed very easy, back on Sun One, to
volunteer for a task even though the end of it was his certain death. He had
not counted on the fact that death did not come like the turning of a switch
but slowly and with increasing pain, or that he would be watching friends die
before him.
Pertin
didn’t wake the chimp when he could finally move; he thrust his own way to the
tachyon transmission chamber, hurling himself down the corridors carelessly and
almost diving into what turned out to be the silver pseudogirl. He didn’t
recognize the creature at first, for she had unfurled enormous silver-film
wings and looked like a tinsel Christmas-tree angel as she drove past him.
In the tachyon chamber he found Nummie
supervising an octopoidal creature from one of the Core stars in transporting
crated equipment to an empty chamber. “What’s happened? Where did Aphrodite go?
What’s this stuff?” he demanded, all at once.
Nummie paused and hung in the air before him,
balancing himself against stray currents of air with casual movements of his
wings. He whistled a methodical answer, and the Pmal translator converted it to
this stately and precise form of speech in English: “Of those events which have
occurred, that which appears most significant is the arrival of eight hundred
mass units of observing equipment. A currently occurring event is that this
equipment is in process of being installed. A complicating event is that the
Scorpian artificial intelligence being has elected to engage his attention in
other areas. There are other events but of lesser significance. The being you
name Aphrodite has gone to bring the Beta Boötis collective beings to assist in
the aforesaid installation. The reason for this is that they are catalogued as
possessing qualification on this instrumentation similar to that of the
artificial intelligence Scorpian.
The
precise nature of the stuff is tachyar-observing equipment. I offer an
additional observation: the purpose of it is to map and survey Object Lambda. I
offer another additional observation: it will add to the radiation load by a
factor of not less than three nor more than eight.”
The T’Worlie hung silently in front of him,
waiting for him to respond.
It had a long wait. Pertin was trying to
assimilate the information he had just received. A factor of not less than
three.
But that meant that his life expectancy was
not a matter of months or weeks. It might only be days!
Tachyar was simple enough in concept. It was
like the ancient electromagnetic radar sets of Earth; the difference was that
it used the faster-than-light tachyons to scan a distant object and return an
echo of its shape and size. It was expensive – all tachyon transmission was
expensive. Its only justification was that it was indispensable.
If you wanted to get a man, or an instrument,
from one point in the universe to some other point across interstellar
distances, you had only two choices. One was to build a rocket - preferably
fusion-powered, like the Aurora. You then had to launch it, set it on its way
and wait anywhere from a decade to a geologic era for it to reach a nearby
star. If you wanted to go farther than that, you would wait forever. A voyage
from a spiral arm to the core, or from any point in the Galaxy to the deeps of
intergalactic space where they now were, was simply out of the time
consciousness of any race but the T’Worlies.
The other method was faster. It dispensed with
attempting to transport matter at all. Instead of sending an object, you sent a
blueprint of the object, and had it built from plan at the destination.
It was not a simple procedure. It required
enormous expenditures of energy to generate the tachyon stream that carried the
blueprint. It required complex scanning devices to measure every atom and
molecule in the object to be transmitted, and to encode positions and
relationships for transmission. Above all, it required a tachyon receiver at
the point to which you wanted to go.
But granted all those things, you could
“travel” at the speed of the tachyons, those particles whose lower speed limit
was the velocity of light, and whose upper limit had never been measured.
Of course, the original object remained
behind. It was scanned and its blueprints were encoded, and then it was
returned unharmed. The man who volunteered for a tachyon trip also stayed at
home. What flashed across space was a description of himself, and what emerged
from the receiving chamber at destination was a new-built identical copy. There
was no detectable difference between original and copy. It would have been a
foolproof method of counterfeiting or of duplicating rare art objects - if it
had not been so expensive in terms of power consumption that there was little
worth the cost of duplicating.
Tachyar was only one use of tachyons. Like
ancient radar and sonar, it generated a beam and measured reflections. The
problem in using tachyar was the magnitude of the beam. Vast energies were
used, and the fraction which was wasted because of the natural inefficiency of
the process produced ionizing radiation in large amplitudes.
Sun One must be taking the question of Object
Lambda’s satellites seriously if it was sending tachyar equipment to study them.
The cost was high. It would be paid in the lives of those aboard.
The single planet of the golden-yellow star
Beta Boötis was like a cooler, older Venus. Because it was farther from its
sun, it was spared the huge flow of heat that cooked Venus sterile; but it
possessed the same enormously deep, enormously dense atmosphere. It was spared
the loss of its liquid water, and so its surface was covered an average of
thirty miles deep in an
Oceanic
soup. That was where the Boaty-Bits had evolved.
Aquatic
in origin, they could survive on Sun One or the probe ship only in edited forms
adapted for air-breathing; they could not live on high-gravity planets at all,
since they had only the feeblest mechanisms for propelling themselves about
their native seas. An individual Boaty-Bit was about as useful as an infant
jellyfish, and not much more intelligent. That didn’t matter; the Boaty-Bits
never operated as individuals. Their swarming instinct was overpowering, and
once linked together they had a collective intelligence that was a direct
function of their number. A quarter of a million Boaty-Bits equalled a man. On
their home planet they sometimes linked up in collectives of four or five
million or more, but those groupings could be maintained only briefly even in
their oceans and were never attained in their air-breathing edited forms.
When they arrived in the tachyon receiver
chamber, they immediately took command. They were not specialists in tachyar
gear. They were generalists. The skills required to assemble and install the
crated instruments were built into their collective intelligence. What they
lacked was operating organs, but the T’Worlie, his octopoidal assistant, Ben
James Pertin and every other being who came nearby were conscripted to be their
hands and legs. It was slow work that would have been impossible in a gravity
field for the T’Worlie, or even for Pertin himself; but in free fall they were
able to tug and guide the components into place, and the T’Worlie had mass
enough to make the connections and calibrate the equipment. When they were
nearly done Doc Chimp turned up, angry because he had been left behind, and his
muscle finished the job quickly.
As they were finishing up, there was a blast
of white sound from the tachyon receiving chamber and warning lights flashed.
Doc Chimp spun around, his wide jaw gaping.
“Something important coming in?” he guessed.
“I don’t know, but Let’s go look.” They thrust
themselves towards the chamber, got there just as the portal opened.
Three Sheliaks emerged.
They flashed out of the lock with a hollow
hooting, long black shapes that rocketed towards the watching Terrestrials and
bounced down on the green metal surface of the chamber. They clung in spite of
the lack of gravity, and flowed abruptly into a new shape, black velvet globes,
thigh high, three more emerged, and three more. When fifteen had come to rest
on the floor of the chamber the transmission stopped. Without a detectable
sign, all of them moved in synchronization. From flattened spheres, like
baker’s buns set in a tray, they suddenly turned luminous, flowing with
patterns of soft colour, then elongated themselves and stretched up tapered
necks that rose as tall as a man.
The tallest of them, the first through the
chamber and the nearest to Ben James Pertin, made a noise like escaping gas
from a compressed-air cylinder. In Pertin’s ear his Pmal unit translated for
him: Take notice! We are under the direction of the collective council of Sun
One. We are to take command of this vessel, and all other beings aboard are to
follow our orders!”
Pertin’s curiosity was suddenly transmuted
into anger, a radiant rage that flooded his mind and over-ruled his
inhibitions. “The hell you say!” he shouted. “I’ve had no such instructions from
the Earth representatives, and I deny your authority!”
The Sheliak paused, the long neck swaying back
and forth, “Your wishes are immaterial,” it stated at last. “We can destroy
you.”
Doc Chimp chattered nervously. “Don’t make him
mad, Ben James. You know how Sheliaks are.” Pertin did; they were among the few
races which had built-in weaponry. On the infrequent occasions when the Galaxy
found itself troubled by unruly barbarians, it was usually Sheliaks who were
employed to quiet the opposition; they were the Foreign Legion of the Galaxy.
The long neck swayed towards the mutated
chimpanzee. From the narrow orifice at its tip the sound exploded again, and
the translators shouted at the chimp: “Your name! Your function! Reply at
once!”
“I am Napier Chimski, technician,” the chimp
replied bravely.
The vase shape swung towards Pertin. “Your
name and function!”
“Oh, Ben James Pertin,” he said, distracted by
hearing Doc Chimp’s real name for the first time. “I’m an engineer. But don’t
go so fast! I’ve just come from Sun One myself, and I know There’s no authority
for one race to impose its will on another. I will certainly report this at
once!”
The Sheliak swayed silently for a moment,
towards him then away. At last it said, “No orders for you at present. Go about
your business.”
Pertin
drew himself up, holding to a wall brace. “You’re my business!” he shouted.
“There are murdering beings aboard this
If
you’re here by order of Sun One, as you say, why don’t you go find them and leave
us alone?”
The Sheliak did not reply. All fifteen of them
were swaying silently now. Perhaps they were conferring with each other, Pertin
thought; Sheliaks had learned vocal sound only to talk to other races of the
Galaxy, and the riddle of how they communicated among themselves was still
unsolved,
“I certainly will report this,” Pertin added.
There was still no response. The pointless
confrontation might have gone on, but it was interrupted by the bright
thrice-repeated flash of white light that meant the thrusters were about to go
into operation again.
“Oh, hell,” groaned Pertin. “Doc, we’d better
get back to our cocoons.”
“Never too soon for me, Ben James,” agreed the
chimp fervently, staring at the Sheliaks. “Let’s go!”
They raced for the cocoons. The warning had
caught others short; the corridors were full of low-G beings hurrying back to
safety before the fusion rockets began again. The Boaty-Bits arrowed past them
at top velocity, like a cartoon drawing of a swarm of wasps. The octopoidal
creature launched itself from a wall at the end of the corridor with a multiple
thrust of its legs and spun, tentacles waving crazily, past them. There was a
thundering roar, and three Sheliaks raced past them, then another three and another,
in Vees. A being like a six-legged spider monkey bounced back and forth,
scratching and clawing for footholds, whining irritably to itself in a
high-pitched tone.
And abruptly: “Ben James! Look!”
Doc Chimp was staring down a broad transverse
corridor as they soared by it. Pertin looked, saw a creature like an enormous
blue eye, at least a foot across. It swerved as he looked, revealing the body
behind it, a tapered torpedo shape, glittering with patterned scales like blue
glass. A stubby wing spread on each side, the leading edge thick and scaled,
flowing smoothly into the body, the thin trailing edge a flutter of blue. And
beyond it was something bright, metallic and angular.
“It’s the Sirian, Ben James! The one that
tried to kill us all. And wasn’t that
the Scorpian robot with him?”
Pertin reached out, grabbed a handhold and
checked himself.
The
chimpanzee reacted a moment later and also stopped himself, a yard or two
farther down. “What are you doing, Ben James?” he chattered.
“I’m going after them!” Pertin snapped. “The
Sirian’s one of the murderers. And the robot’s up to something, too.”
“No, Ben James! You can’t take the G-force.
Let’s let the Sheliaks take care of them, that’s what they’re here for.”
The featureless green light of the corridor
faded and changed to a dull crimson glow. That was the short-term warning; they
had less than thirty seconds now before the rockets began.
Pertin cursed. The chimp was right, of course,
and he knew it; it didn’t make it any more enjoyable, though. “Oh, hell,” he
groaned. “All right, Let’s go!”
They
made it - not with any time to spare. They rolled into their cocoons just as
the first giant thrust struck, and a moment later the regular repeated sound of
the rockets reached them. The webbing spread itself over Pertin; he fell into
the warm, receiving shape of the cocoon, but he resisted its comfort. While it
was still adjusting to his shape, he was already stabbing at the controls of
the stereo stage, trying to summon all the cocoon-bound beings on the ship into
a conference call. The automatic dialling circuits were equal to the job; it
was not something that was often done, but the physical capacity for it
existed.
But not this time. All lines were busy. Every
being on the ship, it appeared, was already using his stereo stage for purposes
of his own - most likely for trying to transmit a tachyon message to his own
people at Sun One, Pertin knew.
He fell back and let the cocoon massage him as
soothingly as it could.
Thuuud-screech, Thuuud-screech. The thrust
felt more powerful than before, the tempo a bit faster. The thunder and groan
of the drive made it nearly impossible for Pertin to think, but he had to think.
The problem on his mind was not any of the
obvious ones: what to do about the Sheliaks, how to deal with the murderers,
the completion of the mission. His mind worried at those a moment at a time and
then let them go; they required action, not thought, and action was not
available to him while the fusion rockets roared.
Instead, he thought about an unpleasant
discovery. The discovery was that there wasn’t much in being a hero. His
heroism had been entered into lightly enough, but he supposed that was not in
itself rare; how many soon-to-be Medal of Honour winners had volunteered for
combat patrols simply because they were bored with sitting in foxholes, and
found themselves caught up in events which made them immortal reputations?
But his heroism was not even going to get him
a medal. No one would ever really know what was happening on this ship, because
it was absolutely certain there would be no survivors. Either Aurora’s mission
would succeed, in which event the Galaxy at large would accept their sacrifice
complacently, or it would fail. Then they would all be thought of, when they
were thought of at all, as that sorry bunch that wasted themselves for nothing.
With the thud and rasp of metal roaring at
him, his cocoon seesawing to the violent deceleration of the rockets, tired,
half-sick, angry and hopeless, Ben James Pertin faced the fact that there was
nothing left in his life anywhere that would give him one moment’s joy.
Another
Ben Pertin tens of thousands of light-years away was trying to soothe his
bride. He said, “Honey, I knew what I was getting into when I volunteered. I
was willing to go through with it. That other me on the ship doesn’t feel any
different about it.”
Zara Pertin said harshly, “That other you is
going to die, Ben Charles.”
“But I’ll still be alive!”
“And he’ll be dead. Don’t you understand me? I
love you! And he is you, and I don’t
like to think about what is happening to him.” She turned over, giving her back
a chance to collect some of the UV tan from the lamps overhead and took off her
goggles. She said, “What’s it like there now, Ben?”
“Well—” he said.
“No, I want to know. Tell me.”
Ben Charles looked around the little simulated
beach beside the great water tank that was their “ocean”. There was no one
around but themselves. They’d come here for that reason, but Ben Charles found
himself wishing for an interruption. She turned her head and looked at him, and
he shrugged.
“All right. It’s bad,” he said. "The
sensors in his acceleration cocoon report some destruction of the white
corpuscles already.
Pretty
soon he’ll start having nosebleeds, then he’ll bleed internally. He’ll be
getting weaker, running a temperature, and before long he’ll die.” He paused,
then answered the unspoken question. “Probably within a week.”
He propped himself up on one arm - easily
enough; even here the effective gravity was only a fraction of Earth-normal. He
looked out at the thousand-foot cusp of water, curving upward to meet the
bulkhead at its far end and added: “That’s if he dies as a result of radiation,
but he might not last that long. Some of the beings are getting violent. The
electronic ones are malfunctioning, because the radiation affects their
synapses. Insane, really. A lot of the organic ones are sick. All of them are
scared. There - there have been deaths.”
“I should have gone with you,” Zara said
thoughtfully.
“Oh, now, really! That’s stupid! What would be
the point?”
“I would have felt better about it, and so
would you. He.” She stood up, smiling, her mind made up. “If you have to go
again, dear,” she said, “I’m going too. Now I’m hungry. Race you back to the
apartment."
4
The
tachyar verified the orbits of the little bodies orbiting Lambda; the mass
estimates were right, thus the density estimates were right. Object Lambda’s
average density was about that of a high vacuum. Nevertheless, it appeared to
have a solid surface.
Pertin greeted the news with apathy. There
were more immediately important developments on the ship, and the ultimate
purpose for which the ship existed didn’t seem particularly interesting any
more.
For one thing, the tachyon transmission
chamber was shut down. For better or for worse, there would be no more imports,
no additional beings, no new crewmembers, no nothing.
Its last function had been to bring in new
structural members and drive units. Inside the former receiving chamber of the
Aurora
they were being assembled into a new, small ship. It took form as a squat,
dense object, all fusion drive and instruments, with no living space for a
crew. It would have no crew. It would carry nothing but itself, and the tachyon
receiving crystal that had been the Aurora’s.
Pertin had no part in the construction
project. The Boaty-Bits directed it, and the metal pseudogirl and a few other
high-G types carried it out. He looked in on it once or twice. Besides the new
members brought in on the tachyon receiver, before it was rehoused in its new
body, the small ship used bulkheads and beams from Aurora itself. It seemed to
Ben James Pertin that vital structural parts were being seriously weakened. As
an engineer, that interested him. As a living human being whose life depended
on the structural integrity of the Aurora, he didn’t even think it worth
mentioning. Whatever was happening was planned. If the life of the Aurora was
being shortened thereby, it was because the beings doing the planning had decided
the ship was wholly expendable.
The only nonexpendable part of the Aurora now
was the little drone being put together in its belly.
The drone comprised only three elements: a
tiny tachyon receiving unit, built around the crystal from Aurora’s own, in a
globular body fitted with weak handling propulsors, suitable only for
correcting minor errors in the elements of an orbit. A thick half-shell of
metal-bonded ceramics on one side, an ablation shield designed to flake and
burn away, disposing of excess heat. And, outside the ablation shield, the
enormous fusion-propulsion engines.
It was a high-deceleration drone. It would be
launched from the mother ship at some point near Object Lambda. Its fusion jets
would slow it radically. Stressed as it was, with no living creatures aboard,
it could endure hundred-G delta-V forces. But Pertin’s engineer’s eye
recognized the implications of the design. Even those forces would not be
enough. The drone would make use of Object Lambda’s enormously deep atmosphere
as well. It would dip into it, shedding velocity by burning it off as friction,
blazing like a meteorite from its ablation surfaces. That frightful crunch
would slow it to manageable relative speeds; as it came out of its first skip
into Lambda’s air it would be near enough to orbital velocity for capture. Then
its handling propulsors could take over the simpler job of neatening up the
elements of the orbit, and a tachyon receiver would be in place around Object
Lambda.
What about the mother ship?
All the evidence Pertin needed was there in
the construction of the probe. If such forces were needed to put the probe in
orbit, there was no hope that Aurora could join it. Its kilotons of mass were
simply too great for the forces available to deal with. Even if the forces were
available, its living cargo would be pulped by the delta-V.
Aurora would drop its cargo, flash by Object
Lambda and continue through intergalactic space. It would no longer have fusion
mass for its reactors. It would stop decelerating; to all intents and purposes,
it would be only another chunk of intergalactic debris on a pointless orbit to
nowhere.
Its course would continue to take it towards
the Galaxy itself and in time, perhaps, it would approach some of the inhabited
worlds within mere light-years.
But that time would be too late to matter to
anyone. It was a matter of thousands of years from even the fringe stars of the
Galaxy, and by men there would be little left of even the dust of its crew. They had been written off.
Meanwhile,
the deceleration phases were getting longer, the zero-G pauses for observation
shorter and less frequent. Sun One had lost interest in the observations that
could be conducted from Aurora. They were only waiting for the probe to go into
orbit.
All through the ship, the living crewmembers
were showing the effects. They were weaker and less rational, less capable of
fine distinctions. The automatic machinery was running the ship.
As it poured the last of its fuel reserves
into space to break its flight, it manufactured enormous clouds of radioactive
gas.
They
were not a hazard to the ship’s crew; it was too late for such trivial affairs
to matter to the doomed beings. But they had caused some concern to the
planners on Sun One. A thousand generations later perhaps they would be a
pollution problem, as the newly manufactured clouds of gas preceded the ship in
entering well-travelled portions of space. But by then some of the deadlier
elements would have burned themselves out, their short half-lives expended. In
any case, that was a problem for I lie thousandth generation - by which time,
no doubt, tachyon transport would itself have been superseded, and no one would
any longer trouble with such primitive concerns as the crude slower-than-light
transport of mass.
The gas clouds as they departed did leave some
trace of ionizing radiation, added to the larger increments from the blasts
themselves and from the tachyar. The combined radiation was a witches” brew of
gammas and alphas and betas, now and then primary particles that coursed
through the entire space of the ship from hull to hull and did little harm,
except when they struck an atomic nucleus and released a tiny, deadly shower of
secondaries.
It was the secondaries, the gammas, that did
the dirty work.
They
interfered with the electronic functions of the computers, robots and metal
beings. They damaged the instrumentation of the ship. Above all, they coursed
through the organic matter they encountered, knocking out an electron here,
loosening a molecular bond there, damaging a cell nucleus, making a blood
vessel more permeable. The whole organic crew was on hourly doses of antirads,
giving support to their internal workings. It was not enough. Still the
radiation soaked in and struck at them. Blood, ichor, sap or stew or exotic
biologies, the fluids that circulated in their bodies changed and grew less
capable of supporting life. Physically they grew weaker. Mentally they became
cloudy.
Taken out of the environment and rushed to an
antirad clinic, like the victims of an industrial accident, most of them still
could have been saved.
There was no hope of that. There was no place
to take them. No part of the ship was free of penetrating ionizing radiation
now, and every hour more and more of the chemistry of their bodies was damaged.
“Ben James, Ben James,” sobbed the voice of
Doc Chimp.
Pertin roused himself. The thud and screech of
the drive was still loud in his ear. Every time the floor drove up to meet the
cocoon the single huge bruise that his body had become screamed with pain.
Inside his chest his lungs felt as if they had broken loose and were being
beaten sore against the inside of his rib cage.
He peered blearily out of the cocoon. The
chimp was staring pathetically up at him. The great green plume of his hat was
broken, his fur splotched with dirt and blood. The rubbery features of his face
looked almost as they always had, except for an open cut along the flat,
sculptured nose.
“What?” demanded Pertin thickly.
“I have to hide, Ben James. The Sheliaks are
after me.”
Pertin tried to sit up and could not. “They’re
not here to hurt you,” he pointed out.
The chimp whimpered, bobbing on all four limbs
as he braced himself against the rocket thrust. “They will! They’re mad, Ben
James. They killed the T’Worlie, for nothing, just killed him. And they almost
killed me,”
“What were you doing?”
“Nothing! Well, I - I was watching their
mating ritual. But that wasn’t it...”
“You idiot,” groaned Pertin. “Look, can you
climb in here with me?”
“No, Ben James, I don’t have the strength,”
“It’s either that or let them catch you.”
The chimpanzee whimpered in fear, then
abruptly, on the upsurge of the ship against its shock absorbers, sprang to the
side of the cocoon. Pertin grabbed at him and pulled him inside just as the
next thrust caught them. Doc Chimp weighed some two hundred pounds at Earth’s
surface. The delta-V gave him a momentary weight of nearly half a ton, all
concentrated on Pertin’s shoulder and chest. He grunted explosively. The chimp
was caught with part of his side still across the metal lip of the cocoon, but
he made no sound beyond the steady sotto-voce mumble of fear.
Pertin tried to make room behind him, in a
place where the cocoon had never been designed to take a load. It tried its
mechanical best to give support to the double mass. It was not adequate to the
job. Pertin discovered when the next thrust came that his arm was still caught
under the chimp. He yelped, managed to free it on the upsurge, discovered it
was not broken. He slammed down the privacy curtain, hoping the Sheliaks would
not look inside if they came.
“Now,” he panted, “what did you say about
Nummie?”
“He’s dead, Ben James. They killed him. I
didn’t mean any harm,” the chimp sobbed. “You know how the Sheliaks reproduce -
by budding, like terrestrial plants. The young ones sprout out of the old ones,
and grow until they’re mature enough to be detached.”
“I know.” Pertin had only the vaguest
acquaintance with Sheliaks, but everybody knew that much. They didn’t have
sexes, but the conjugation provided a union that shuffled up the genes.
“Well, that didn’t look like fun to me, but I
wanted to see. Nummie told me to go
away. He couldn’t; he was in one of the spare cocoons and couldn’t move. But he
said they’d be mad.”
The
chimp switched position and Pertin shouted in pain as his upper thigh took part
of the chimp’s weight on a rocket thrust.
“Sorry,
Ben James. It was disgusting, the way they did it! Any two of them can get the
urge. They sort of melt down and flow together like jelly. All the body cells
migrate, pair off and fuse.
Finally
they form again into a sort of cactus-shaped vegetable thing that buds off
haploid, mobile creatures. Those are the Sheliaks we see.”
“You wanted to watch that?” asked Pertin, almost
able to laugh in spite of his discomfort, in spite of Nummie, in spite of
everything.
“Yes, Ben James. Just for curiosity. And then
“There’s my friend, Fireball. He’s the Sheliak who was here all along. He was
nice, Ben James. I miss him.”
“I didn’t know you knew any Sheliaks.”
“Not well. But he was with me, helping to
guard all of you, and we talked.”
“You sound as if he’s dead, too.”
“Might as well be. That union is a sort of
individual suicide. It’s something you do for the race, and because your glands
push you that way. But it’s the end for the individual. It wipes out all
conscious memory and individual personality. I guess that’s why Fireball
couldn’t understand our notions of sex.
“Anyway,” he said, “it was all right while
Fireball was here alone. He wasn’t lonely; or anyway, he didn’t want any other
Sheliaks around. When they’re in danger, you see, they can’t help conjugating.
It’s a survival mechanism. The radiation was danger, and he knew that the only
way for him to keep alive was to stay away from his own people. When the new
ones came aboard he was actually afraid of them. He knew when they came close
they were likely to set off a biological process they couldn’t control. And
when it was over—”
The chimp swallowed. He thrust himself up on
an elbow, regardless of the pain, and stared into Pertin’s eyes.
“He didn’t know me, Ben James! The two new
ones that were half him, they came after me. The T’Worlie saw what was
happening and tried to stop them - and that’s how I got away, while they were
killing him. So I ran. But where is there to run to, in this ship?”
When they could move again they found the
T’Worlie easily enough. He was floating upside down, purplish drops of blood,
perfectly round, floating beside him. The little vibrissae around his sphincter
mouth, more like cat’s whiskers than anything on a proper earthly bat, were
perfectly still. Nummie was rigid. The pattern of five eyes was unmoving. The
intricate pattern of blotches of colour on his filmy wings was fading.
There was no one else around. “What’ll we do
with him, Ben James?” chattered the chimp.
“Throw him out in to space, I guess,” Pertin
said harshly. Normally the mass would be useful in the tachyon receiver, but
there were to be no more incoming tachyon transmissions.
It didn’t do to think of that. He stared at
the T’Worlie. A slow encrustation of thick gel was matting the fluffy surface
of Nummie’s chest, and where it had once protruded sharply, like a bird’s
wishbone, it was crushed and concave.
Pertin felt the muscles on his face drawing
taut, perhaps partly because of the intense vinegar reek. He said, “Why would
the Sheliaks break up equipment?”
The chimpanzee stared at the mess in the room.
Bright green and orange transistors and microchips were scattered like jigsaw
pieces in the air. “I don’t know, Ben James! None of that was that way when I
ran out of here. Do you suppose they just lost their temper?”
“Sheliaks don’t lose their temper that way.
They broke up instruments on purpose. What was coming in before you decided to
play Peeping Tom?”
“Oh—” The chimp thought. “More reports on
Object Lambda. The density was confirmed. Very low. Like a sparse cloud of
interstellar gas.”
“We already knew it was Cloud-Cuckoo Land.
That couldn’t have had any effect on them.”
“Something did, Ben James,” cried the chimp.
“Look, We’ve got to do something. They’ll be looking for me, and—”
“Unless,” said Pertin thoughtfully, “it wasn’t
the Sheliaks who did it. The robot was up to something. And there are still a
couple of purchased people not accounted for. And—”
Too late!” howled the chimp. “Listen, Ben
James! Somebody’s coming!”
But
it wasn’t the Sheliaks who came in on them, it was Aphrodite, the silver pseudogirl,
the heavy-planet creature in human form. Her fingers were outstretched towards
them, listening, as her great foil wings drove her forward.
Behind her was the Scorpian robot.
They made an eerie pair, the striking
orange-eyed girl with her coif of metallic hair and steel-bright body hues, and
the mechanical creature shaped like a metal octopus. Its central body was a
massive disc, the colour of the pseudogirl’s flesh, and its silvery tentacles
made a fringe of snakes around it. A greenish membrane that bulged above the
upper surface of the disc fluttered, producing a drum-roll of sound. Pertin’s
Pmal translator obediently turned it into recognizable words: “DO NOT RESIST.
WE WISH YOU TO COME WITH US.”
“Where?” he demanded.
There was no answer, at least not in words.
Pertin was caught in something like a metal whip that stung a trail of fire
around his waist. It was one of the robot’s tentacles that had caught him; it
pinned his arms, and the pseudogirl launched herself at him, her metal fist
catching him full in the face. Floating as he was, the blow was robbed of some
of its force, but it doubled him, flung him back against the robot’s lash,
dazed with pain and sobbing for breath.
He heard a cry of anguish from Doc Chimp, but
could not turn to see what was happening. The vinegary smell of the dead
T’Worlie penetrated his nostrils, mixing with the tang of his own blood.
“Why?” he croaked, and tried to raise his arms
to defend himself as the girl dropped towards him again. She did not answer.
She was on him like a great silvery bat, metal feet kicking, shining fists
flying. The lights went out. He lost touch with space and time.
Pertin was not wholly unconscious, but he was
so near to it, so filled with pain and confusion, that he could hardly remember
what happened next. He had a fugitive impression of great shapes whirling
around him, then of being carried away while someone behind him sobbed his
name, the voice diminishing in the distance.
A long time later he opened his eyes.
He was alone, in a part of the ship he knew
only sketchily. A large open cocoon hung from a wall, and inside it was what
looked like one of the purchased people. Pertin’s face was swollen and his eyes
not focusing well at all; he squinted, but could not make out the features on
the person in the cocoon. It appeared to be male, however, and it appeared to
be in the last stages of dissolution.
It moved and looked towards him. A caricature
of a smile disturbed the weeks-old beard, and the dry tongue licked the lips. A
cracked voice muttered something, the tone hoarse and indistinguishable.
“Who are you? What do you want?” demanded Ben
James Pertin.
The figure rasped a sort of hacking cough,
that perhaps was meant for a chuckle. It tried again, and this time its words
came clear enough - clear, and familiar, in a way that Pertin had not expected.
“I want to talk to you, Ben,” it croaked. “We
have a lot in common, you know.”
Pertin frowned, then his swollen eyes widened.
He pushed himself towards the swathed figure, caught himself at the lip of the
cocoon and stared down. The eyes that looked up at him were pain-filled but
very familiar. He was looking into his own, battered, obviously dying face.
Pertin remembered a time, months ago.
He had gone to the tachyon transmitter and
light-heartedly enough given his blueprint to the scanners and allowed one self
of him to be beamed to the Aurora. It had not seemed like an important thing to
do. At that tune, it was not clear that the Aurora was a doomed ship. At that
time he had no one to consult but himself; Zara Doy was still only a casual
acquaintance, the new girl from Earth with the pretty face.
“Ben Frank,” he whispered.
“Right as rain,” croaked the ghastly voice.
“And I know about you well enough. You’re Ben James Pertin, and you’ve been
aboard two weeks now. Not very thoughtful of you, failing to visit a dying
relative.”
“But I thought you were dead already! They
said -I mean, I wouldn’t have had to come, if—”
“Blaming me, Ben James? Well, why shouldn’t
you? How often have I laid here, blaming you, and me, and all the Ben Pertins
there ever were.” A spasm of coughing racked him, but he talked rightly through
it. “I wanted them to think I was dead. Only fair, isn’t it? They were killing
me, and now I’ve killed their Project Lambda.”
“You?”
“With a lot of help. My Sirian friends were
the first and best, but there have been plenty since. It was the Sirians who
told me you were aboard; you gave one of them quite a start, when he saw you in
the instrument room. Wrecked his mission, you did.”
Coughing drowned the voice out; the other Ben
Pertin convulsively clutched at the cocoon monitor controls. A warning panel
lit over the bed. He was very near death; but the cocoon was not yet defeated;
it metered coloured fluids into the external blood supply that was trying to
replace the destroyed blood cells.
“I only have a few minutes,” Ben Frank Pertin
gasped. “I don’t mind. But I’m not finished, Ben James. You have to finish for
me. Destroy that probe! I don’t want it to succeed; I don’t want
Sun
One to get its orbiting body around Object Lambda.”
“But then we - then we’ll all have died in
vain!”
“Of course it is in vain! What’s the use of it
all? A chunk of useless matter - thousands of light-years from anywhere – going
nowhere! Do you know how many lives it’s cost? I want you to wreck it for me,
Ben James, so those fools on Sun One will know better than to try this same
stunt another time!”
“But it’s not a stunt,” objected Ben James
Pertin. “It’s important. That object is something special, solid but like a
cloud—”
“Cloud-Cuckoo Land! It’s not worth a single
life. Anyway, it’s done already, Ben James, my friends are wrecking the probe
right now. I only called you here because—”
He paused, coughing terribly. The face that
was so much like
Ben
James’s own was aged with the weary agony of radiation death.
“Because,” he gasped, I want some part of me
to stay alive. If you keep the tachyon receiver you can live, Ben James. Weeks
- maybe months! But once it goes there will be no more food, no more air, no
more fuel. I want—”
But what he wanted to say at the last Ben
James Pertin would never know. His duplicate suddenly gasped for breath, made a
strangling sound and was still.
After a moment Ben James pulled the privacy
screen over the face that was his own face and turned to leave.
Halfway to the launch chamber he ran into the
Sheliaks. They were in pursuit of two beings, one of them the purchased people
woman, the other Doc Chimp. The Sheliaks looked strange, and in a moment Pertin
realized why. They were smaller than they had been; essentially they were children
now, some of their mass lost when they budded. But their behaviour was childish
only in its reckless disregard for consequences; it was lethal, as far as their
quarry was concerned.
Pertin did not pause to speculate on issues.
Doc Chimp was in danger, and he dived to the rescue.
He collided head-on with one of the Sheliaks.
It was like tackling a six-foot lump of chilled, damp dough. No bones, no
cushioning fat, just a great dense mass of muscular fibre. The Sheliak
automatically cupped around him and, linked, they went flying into the wall.
The corridor spun around him, a nightmare of blue-green light and red-black
shadow and corpse-coloured beings.
“Stop!” roared Pertin. “Wait! Listen to me!”
But no one wanted to talk. They were all on him, thrusting, striking, crushing,
with whatever offensive weapons their mobile anatomies gave them. He fought
back, using a skill he had never known he had. His hands were black and
slippery with blood, no doubt much of it his own. Bravely the woman and Doc
Chimp had turned back to fight, but it was three of them against more than a
dozen Sheliaks, and the issue was not in doubt.
What saved them was Aphrodite, the silver
pseudogirl. Her carven face remote as an angel’s, she drove towards them with
great sweeps of her wings. Coronas of electrostatic fire haloed her fingers and
wingtips; something gun-shaped and deadly was in her hands. The Sheliaks, all
at once and in unison, turned to meet her. The gun-shaped thing hissed and a
white jet crackled towards them. It passed near enough to Pertin for him to
feel a breath of icy death, but it did not strike him; it grazed the Sheliak
who held him, and at once the being stiffened and began to drift. Behind them,
where the jet had struck, the wall was hidden with a broad patch of glittering
frost. A cloud of white vapour billowed out around it.
In the haze Pertin caught sight of Doc Chimp
and the purchased people woman, momentarily forgotten as the Sheliaks turned
against the stronger foe. The woman was badly hurt; Doc Chimp was helping her,
his hairy face turned fearfully towards the Sheliaks. Pertin joined them and
the three of them moved inconspicuously away.
When they were two corridors away and the
sounds of battle had diminished they paused and inspected their injuries.
Pertin himself had only added a few bruises to a total that was already too
large to worry about; the chimp was even more battered, but still operational.
The woman was worst off of any of them. She was bleeding profusely from, among
other places, a gash on the upper arm; her face was grotesquely puffed, both
eyes blackened; and one leg was bent at an angle anatomically impossible to a
whole bone. But she did not appear to feel pain. When Pertin spoke to her, she
answered in English: “They don’t consider it important. It will not prevent
moving about and performing necessary functions.”
Doc Chimp was groaning and sobbing in pain.
“Those Sheliaks!” he cried, feebly trying to groom his matted fur.
"They’re wholly out of control, Ben James. They tried again to wreck the
probe - may have done it by now, if they’ve got enough power of concentration
to remember what they were doing when we diverted their attention. And if
Aphrodite hasn’t killed them all.”
Pertin said, with a confidence he didn’t feel:
“She’ll stop them. As long as we’ve got her on our side—”
“On our side!" cried Doc Chimp. “Ben
James, you don’t know what you’re saying. She’s worse than they are!”
“But she tried to rescue you.”
The purchased woman said calmly, “That is
wrong. She merely wanted to kill the Sheliaks.”
“That’s right, Ben James! She’s against all
organic beings now. She’s not ionizable. Radiation is only an annoyance to her.
The
only thing that can kill her is deprivation of energy sources, and that means
the tachyon receiver; once it’s gone, she will die as soon as the fuel runs
out.”
Pertin said slowly: “Is it the same with the
Scorpian robot?”
The battered face nodded, the stub of the
green plume jerking wildly.
“Then,” said Pertin, “that means we have to
assume all non-organic beings will feel the same and try to prevent the launch.
What
about the other organics?”
The purchased woman recited emotionlessly:
“T’Worlies, all dead. Boaty-Bits, more than half destroyed; the remainder too
few to make a collective entity intelligent enough to matter. Sirians and Core
Stars races, not observed in recent hours and must be presumed dead or
neutralized. Sheliaks, destructive and purposeless.”
Pertin absorbed the information without shock,
without reaction of any kind, except a strange impulse to laugh. “But – but who
does that leave to see that the launch occurs?”
“Nobody!” cried Doc Chimp, “Nobody at all, Ben
James - except us!”
5
They
reached the launch chamber ahead of the Sheliaks after all. There was no one
there.
The capsule, with its tiny bright tachyon
crystal at its heart lay silent and unmoving, connected to the main bulk of the
ship only by a jettisonable canopy now. There had been destruction all around
it, but it was still intact.
There was less than an hour until launch.
“We’ll build barricades,” said Pertin.
“Anything. Those wrecked instrument boards - the spare plates and braces.
Whatever we can move, we’ll put it up against the entrance. All we have to do
is delay them—”
But they had barely begun when bright silver
glinted in the approach corridor, and the silvery pseudogirl came towards them,
followed by the tumbling form of the Scorpian robot. They brought up short at
the entrance, the robot with one slim tentacle coiled caressingly around the
silver girl.
Pertin put his weight behind the channel iron
he had been about to emplace at the door and launched it towards the pair. The
pseudogirl made a sound that was half a laugh and half the singing of a single
piercing note, and the Scorpian uncoiled a long silver sting as they moved
aside, easily dodging the missile.
The
sting reached out and touched Pertin. A blinding light stabbed from it, jolting
him with a strong electric shock.
The girl glided in, spreading her now-tattered
wings. The stirred air bathed him in a strong scent, ether-sweet, with
undertones like the pits of peaches. Pertin searched the bright silvery face
and found no expression. It was no more human than a doll’s. The Scorpian’s
silver tentacles thrust away the pitiful instructions, making a sound like an
enormous gong which Pertin’s Pmal refused to translate.
The purchased woman intervened, hurling
herself towards the robot, and was brushed heedlessly aside. She struck against
the side of the probe ship, a blow which must have been agony to her human
nervous system, but she did not cry out. Awkwardly she tried to project herself
again into the fight. Pertin, his muscles beginning to relax their spasm,
forced himself to join her.
A bird-like trilling from outside indicated
that others were coming, and behind the great winged hulk of the pseudogirl
Pertin could see black shadow-shapes moving across the dimly lighted shaft,
growing rapidly as they approached.
“Oh, no!” moaned Doc Chimp. “Sheliaks and a
Sirian!”
The robot’s single-minded purpose was not
deflected; it floated towards Pertin, green dome pulsing. An elongating
tentacle struck out at Pertin like an endless silver snake, not to sling this
time but to snare. It wrapped him in slick, chill coils. He fought free, was
caught again, and then at last the Scorpian turned to confront the other
beings. It arched its stinging jet, but held poised, waiting.
The Sirian was first into the launch chamber,
a tapered, blue-scaled torpedo shape fifteen feet long, all pliant wing and
shining eye. With a ripple of trailing edges it flashed at the Scorpian.
The sting coiled, jetting white light into the
wide blue eye.
The
Sirian was not defenceless; its own forces gathered the robot’s charge and
repelled it, sending the jet back at the robot, reinforced and multiplied.
The pseudogirl turned with great strokes of
her wings, her three-fingered hand coming up with the gun-shaped something that
had killed Sheliaks. Desperately Pertin twisted to intercept her. Her wings
were sadly battered now, but still gave her superior mobility; he missed her on
the first try and crashed against a wall. Half blind with his own blood, flowing
ink-black in the greenish light, he doubled his legs under him and launched
himself at her again.
The gun-shaped thing swung to meet him. It
clicked in the pseudogirl’s bright silver hand, and the white jet hissed at
him. He heard a brittle crackling sound in the air, and felt the cold breath of
death.
But the jet had missed, and he was on her.
With one hand he swung at her wrist. It was like striking a crowbar with his
bare hand, but it jarred the weapon loose; and just then the battle between
Scorpian and Sirian reached its climax.
The Sirian’s triply potent return jet struck a
vital place in the great green dome of the robot. It exploded. The mellow
booming sound the robot made became a hollow jangle. The tentacles writhed and
recoiled. It sprawled in the air, a grotesque huddle of tortured metal,
spilling green fire and drops of an acid that sizzled and burned where they
struck.
If robots have life, that life was gone; it
was dead. The silvery girl abandoned the fight with Pertin. With a great stroke
of her wings she propelled herself to the robot, hovered over it, wailing an
unearthly sound.
And the great blue eye of the Sirian turned
towards Pertin. Behind it the Sheliaks, late on the scene but ready for battle,
were elongating their wrinkled necks towards him.
Pertin cried desperately: “Wait! They - they
were misleading you. They were trying to prevent the launch, to save their own
lives!”
The eye hesitated.
“We’re dead already,” he croaked. “Nothing can
help us now, not any organic creature. The radiation will kill us before long,
even the Sheliaks. But the robot and the girl—”
He could hear his voice translating and
hissing or singing out of the aliens’ Pmals.
“The robot,” he repeated, “and the altered
copy that looks like a terrestrial female - they weren’t radiation-vulnerable.
They could go on indefinitely. But the rest of us - if we let them succeed in
stopping the launch, then we will die for nothing!"
The eye paused irresolute.
Then the foremost of the Sheliaks cried:
“Fool! We too are not radiation-vulnerable! We simply need to conjugate, and be
born again. But we must have the tachyon receiver, and if you try to keep us
from it you must die!”
And the three tapered teardrop shapes, like a
school of sharks in formation, plunged towards them, blazing with their own
crimson light.
The Sirian eye irresolutely turned towards
them, then back towards Pertin; then, with decision, whirled to confront them.
Contemptuously the Sheliaks changed course to
meet it. The leading Sheliak widened a ruff of flesh like an instant air-brake
and stopped in the air, flowed with a dazzle of colour, narrowed a neck towards
the Sirian eye.
The thin neck spat a stream of yellow fluid.
It struck the Sirian eye and clung, acid, adhesive, agonizing. The Sirian made
an unearthly wailing noise at the sudden pain of the attack against which it
had no built-in defences. The great blue eye turned milky white; the horse-huge
body knotted itself in agony.
But it still had strength for a final blow. It
fired the jet of energy that had destroyed the robot against the Sheliaks.
Electrical energy paralysed their muscular
systems; heat seared the life from them. They died instantly, all three of
them. But it was the last effort of the Sirian. All its stored energy had gone
into that pulse. The reflected cascade of burning energy came bouncing back
upon them all, bathed the silvery girl and sent her reeling soundlessly into a
wall, to collapse into an ungainly contorted mass that didn’t move. Pertin was
farther away and partly shielded by what was left of the robot; even so, it
lanced his skin with pain.
But he was alive.
Slowly, and very painfully, he caught a hold-fast
on the wall, steadied himself while he looked around.
The purchased people woman was dead, either
bled empty or caught in that last furious bolt. The Sirian eye floated
aimlessly, broken and no longer moving, a milky ooze coming from its body. The
robot was destroyed; the pseudogirl was drifting impotently away; the Sheliaks
were cinders.
The chamber was filled with the stench of many
different kinds of death, but Pertin was still alive.
Suddenly remembering, he cried, “Doc Chimp!”
The ape was out of sight. Furiously Pertin
ransacked the chamber, and found him at last, wedged between the wall of the
probe and the ship’s canopy, not quite dead but very unconscious.
Pertin looked down at him sadly and
affectionately. It was nearly time to launch the probe, and the question in
Pertin’s mind was: was it better to wake him up, or to let him sleep as the
probe was launched, the canopy jettisoned, and all the air in the chamber
puffed instantly and murderously away into space?
The question was taken out of his hand as the
ape stirred moaned softly and opened his eyes. He looked up at Ben James Pertin
and said thickly, “The probe?”
“It’s all right,” said Pertin. “We’ll have to
launch it by hand.”
“When, Ben James?”
Pertin checked the time. “Just a few minutes
now,” he said. The ape grinned painfully. That’s good to know, Ben James,” he
said. “No more problems. No more aches and pains. I always thought I’d be
afraid of dying, but you know? To tell you the truth, I’m kind of looking
forward to it.”
The
process that animated the body of the silvery pseudogirl was more like
electrophoresis than chemistry, but it was vulnerable to attack. It was damaged
now; but she was not dead. The great wings were broken and useless, but her
limbs still moved, the inappropriate angel face still showed its bleak, proud
expression.
She was in great pain; that is to say, all the
sensory nets of the edited body were transmitting messages of malfunction,
damage and warning. She did not perceive them as a human perceives a toothache,
a sensation so blinding that it can lead to suicide; but they did not interfere
with the few pleasure-bound processes left to her: reminiscence, forevision,
contemplation. In the sense that these messages were pain, she had experienced
pain from the moment she floated out of the tachyon receiver on Aurora. All
edited members of her race did. There was no way to rearrange their structures
into forms viable in atmosphere and low-G that was comfortable for them.
Time was when Aphrodite had experienced pain
only infrequently, and in ways that were soon mended. Time was when she had
lain with her sisters in the icy methane slush of her native planet, absorbing
energy from the radioactive elements that swam about them, growing, learning
from the tutorials of her orthofather, competing in the endless elimination
battles of her race that finally won her her choice of assignments and
ultimately led her to the Aurora and its imminent doom. Her race was not
greatly interested in astronomy; they had known almost nothing of it until the
first T’Worlie probe survived the crushing pressures of their atmosphere and
brought them into contact. From the surface of their enormous planet, there
were no stars to be seen. Even their aircraft never reached an altitude beyond
the dense yellow-grey clouds.
What brought her to Aurora was the trait that
her whole upbringing had trained into her: the competitive need to go farther
and do more. It was not goal-oriented. It gained nothing from victories except
the opportunity for further victories. And the only victory now open to
Aphrodite was to survive; and there was but one way to do it - by preventing
the launching of the probe.
She calculated she had strength enough left to
destroy the two organic creatures in her way, but only just; and only if she
acted now.
It
was Pertin who saw her first: he froze with his hand on the release lever, and
it was Doc Chimp who acted. He flung himself on the pseudogirl. “Hurry up, Ben
James!” he shouted. “She’s too strong for me—” And his voice stopped,
punctuated with a screech of pain as the silvery arm thrust him away like a
cannon-shot. The chimp went flying into the floating wreckage of the Scorpian
robot. The soft, frail dome of the skull, so cleverly mutated nearly into the
shape of man’s own, impaled itself on a steel shard, and the thoughtful,
considering brain was destroyed.
Pertin hardly even saw it. He was past the
point for sorrow. It would be easy to let the pseudogirl destroy him. At least
one life would be saved, her own. His no longer counted. He could hope for a
few days, a week or two at the most, of being able to move and breathe. But
what would it be like? Increasing pain. Hopeless fear. Regret. Envy-
He pressed the lever just as her fingers
touched him.
The instant sharp slap of the explosion was
the last sound he ever heard.
At the second Ben James Pertin pressed the
release explosive shears cut the aft end of the ship free. The canopy flew out
and away. The air puffed into emptiness. The probe rocket dropped free and
began to align itself with the now near great disc of
Object
Lambda.
The first thing Pertin felt was the sharp pain
of the explosion, then the second, longer, more deadly pain as the air pressure
dropped to instant zero and his own blood and body fluids, the air in his own
lungs, the gases dissolved in his blood tried to expand to fill the enormous
emptiness all around. He caught a glimpse of the silvery girl, arms, legs and
broken wings flailing, as she shot past him, careened off the jagged edge of
metal where the shears had cut the probe satellite free and ricocheted out into
emptiness. If she made a sound, he could not hear it.
There was no longer a way for him to hear
sound. There was no longer a continuous medium of air to carry it.
He had just a glimpse of the huge near surface
of Object Lambda - the body he had called “Cuckoo” - as it hung like a great
dull circle in the empty sky, cutting off one spiral limb of his own, eternally
lost, Galaxy.
He did not see the orienting jets of the
satellite spurt carefully controlled measures of flame to position it for its
final thrust.
He did not see the great violet flare of the
fusion rockets that began to slow it. He could not see any of that, because by
then he was dead.
Neither he nor anyone else in the probe ship
saw the great series of flares as the satellite fought to slow itself. Aurora
flew on, back towards the Galaxy, without power, containing only the least
flickerings of life for a few of its beings. The probe left it as it drew more
and more rapidly away. The distance between them was millions of miles before
the satellite made its first meteoric contact with the outer layers of that
anomalously thick atmosphere around Cuckoo.
It was a spectacle worth watching, if there
had been eyes left in Aurora to see. The satellite plunged through a carefully
planned chord of the atmosphere. Its ablative surface burned and tore away in a
flare like all the Fourth of July fireworks in man’s history going off at once.
But there was none to see, not Sirian eye nor Sheliak sensors, not T’Worlie nor
Earthman nor alien of any kind; where life remained at all, it lacked strength
for curiosity, and it would not remain very long.
Fifty thousand years later Aurora might pass
near some sun of an outstretched spiral arm. But by then it would no longer
matter to anyone, except as a historical curiosity from a time about which no
one any longer cared.
6
Some
days later, the sensors on Sun One reported that the probe was in a stable
orbit. The beings on Sun One responded with pleasure; everyone was delighted
that the project was a success.
Now stable, the probe began to do the work for
which it had been designed.
The complex H-bomb sequencing units and the
small, strong pressure-plate shock absorbers fell away, responding to remote
controls from Sun One. They would never be used again.
The tachyon-receiving unit began to emit a
stream of tiny metallic shards, none larger than a few inches in its greatest
measure.
When some hundreds of them were through,
floating like a metallic mist around the drone, a quick small machine came
through and began to catch them and link them together. Time passed, hours and
then days. A queer box-like shape took form and became a larger tachyon
receiver, ready for action.
From tens of thousands of light-years away an
angular, crystalline machine flashed along the tachyon patterns and emerged in
the new receiver. It was not alive. Was not even a robot, or a proxy like the
purchased people. It was simply an automatic machine that sensed certain
potentials and charges, double-checked the strength of the materials and the
solidity of the joints, directed the hummingbird-sized construction machine to
correct a few faults and then reported that Cuckoo Station, the orbiting body
around what had been called Object Lambda, was now ready to be built.
A few hours later the first girders of a
thousand-metre revolving wheel were being joined together.
Plates appeared to surround the girders with
an airtight sheath. Machines arrived to be stored in them. Atmosphere was
pumped through to fill the chambers. The handling machines were busy, taxed
beyond their capacities; more handling machines were sent and soon the orbiting
station was whole, supplied, and being-rated.
The first living beings appeared. A Sheliak,
naked to the cold of intergalactic space - but for the brief time of its
transition to the orbiting wheel unharmed by it. A dozen T’Worlies in a single
elastic air bubble, scurrying into the protection of the orbital wheel. There
were Sirians, reptilian Aldebaranians, a hive of Boaty-Bits, and, at the last,
a couple of humans.
One of them was named Ben Line Pertin.
He floated out of the tachyon receiver in his
pressure suit, his thruster unit ready in his hands.
He did not use it at once; he paused a moment,
to look around.
The first thing he did was to stare down at
the enormous flat surface of Cuckoo, so near, so huge, so incredible as it hung
like an endless shield in the sky.
The second was to look back to where the
Galaxy lay, sparkling like the sea of stars it was.
He could not see the doomship, but he knew it
must be somewhere in his line of sight. There were no signals from it any more.
There was no way of detecting it, and would not be for tens of thousands of
years.
He stared for a moment, then half-shrugged.
“Poor bastards,” he whispered, and turned and drove towards the wheel awaiting
him.
PART
TWO
The
Org's Egg
ONE
*
The
mountain was a friendly mountain. It had been growing for half a billion years,
as mountains nat¬urally did. Its slow cells fed on rain and air and wind¬blown
dust, compacting them into a core of solid quartz.
On
other planets, Earth for example, mountains also grew, but in a different way.
Terrestrial mountains were thrust up from below by the slow violence of
shifting continental crusts and the shock of volcanic eruptions. Here mountains
grew more gently.
A
boy, whose name was Fifteenth, lived on this mountain with his people. When he
was little it was his whole world and he had not imagined anything beyond it.
Now he was nearly grown. From time to time he looked beyond the mountain, but
always came back to it. It was home.
It
was not all hospitable. Its summit was a rounded crown, carved with winding
fissures, glowing with a blue bioluminescence brighter than the storms that
of¬ten boiled around it. Lower down, where the winds were now too warm and dry,
its surface film of shfeifig life was tattered iifto drying shreds. With the
life-coat dying, the age-eaten stone beneath was caving away from the vertical
cliffs, adding black and shattered masses to the boulder slopes below, where
the wild orgs nested. The boy never went that high. It was too dangerous.
But
lower still, there was home! The dead stuff of the mountain had rotted into
rich black soil that spread in delta-plains and marshes all around its foot.
Floods
from
its stormy heights ran down to water the forests and mosslands that reached all
the way to the grassy flat- land where the people ranged to find food and
trophies, and bring them back to the sweet slopes of the mountain.
Fifteenth's
people were nomadic wingmen. From the heights on the side of the mountain they
could launch themselves into always-present orographic updrafts, and spiral out
of them to overfly the green rainpaths of the plain. There were roots and
fruits, waterholes and game. When they found what they wanted they swooped down
and possessed it. It was a good life. It was flie only life Fifteenth had
known, but it was not good enough.
And
when he was just coming bearded, he looked around the camp of his people and
sat in thought for a long time, testing a thought that had come to him. He
looked out across the flat plains to that other distant, seemingly barren
mountain that his people called Knife- in-the-Sky. It was hard to see in the
uncertain light from the plains and the few forested parts of its slopes. The
boy's people had never seen daylight, or for that matter night; they marked the
passing of time by their own body cycles or by changes in the trees and
animals, since they had no other clock on a world that showed nothing in its
sky but clouds and, rarely, some faint misty distant gleam that looked like a
swirl of muted silvery fire. But even when they could not see Knife-in- the-Sky
they knew it was there. For every org on the boy's own mountain there were a
thousand on Knife-in- the-Sky. On his own mountain their clutches were scant,
and often the eggs produced weaklings; but al¬ways there were new orgs coming
from Knife-in-the- Sky to replenish the stocks. The boy sat staring at the
distant jagged peak for many thousands of breaths, and then he went to tell his
brother that he had resolved to leave his people, to cross the plain, to climb
Knife-in- the-Sky and steal a wild org's egg.
"You
are young," his brother said wearily and
fretfully,
"and you are foolish. Other youths have gone org-hunting. They do not come
back."
Fifteenth
stood stubbornly silent, hanging his head. His brother was the head of his
clan, the clan in which fourteen other males were older and therefore more
powerful than himself. The boy did not want to show disrespect to his brother
by disagreeing, but he could not make himself promise to give up his plan.
"Only
those whose minds are on the ground hunt orgs," his brother warned.
The
boy still did not speak. They were standing out¬side his brother's new tent,
pitched in the yellow light of a clump of fire-trees. His brother's new wife
was sing¬ing in the tent, grinding grain for their next meal. From beyond the
fire-trees the slow clang of a blacksmith's anvil rang: that was the boy's
cousin, Second.
The
brother carefully worked his awl through a dou¬ble thickness of leather before
speaking again. Then he looked up. "If you stay with us, I will share my
skills with you," he offered.
The
boy showed his astonishment. Their father had been a wingwright. As was proper,
his skills had come down to the eldest of his sons. With a new wife, First
would surely have sons of his own before long, and to give wingwright skills to
Fifteenth would be depriving his own get of what was rightly theirs. "I
thank you," the boy said. "But I will go."
"Knife-in-the-Sky
is farther than it looks," his brother said. "Why go there when there
are orgs here, if you are determined to die?"
"There
are better orgs on Knife-in-the-Sky. I have never seen their lairs there. I
know what they are here."
"From
your mother," First said gloomily. "Of course. But there are more
orgs and stronger orgs there, and they take care of their eggs. Besides—"
He
looked UD from the harness he was mending and scowled across at the jagged
distant mountain.
"Besides
the orgs, there are the Watchers."
"Why
should the Watchers bother me?"
"They
do not tell us why!" His brother looked up angrily and incautiously,
pricked his finger with an awl, and grimaced with pain. He put the finger in
his mouth and said around it, "They live beyond the mountains. They ride
in the sky in machines the size of twenty orgs, and attack all creatures that
don't obey them. And there are new Watchers now. Little ones. No one knows what
they may do."
"I've
never seen a Watcher," the boy said.
"Not
on the mountain. But to get to Knife-in-the-Sky you must cross the plain and
marshland. You cannot do it all by wing. You must walk for many sleeps. I'm
afraid the Watchers will find you."
"But
if they do not," the boy said, "I will come back riding an org."
"You—riding
an org!" The brother took his finger out of his mouth and spat blood.
"You've never seen an org close up."
"My
mother did," the boy said.,
He
turned and scowled across the plains toward Knife-in-the-Sky. He was a strong
young man, tall even among his people, who averaged better than seven feet in
height. If he had been on Earth he would have weighed no more than a hundred
and sixty pounds—here much less—he looked not like a reed but a whip.
He
looked a great deal like his mother—his father's second wife, whom his father
had stolen away from an¬other band. She had been a First Man's daughter, and
her father had pursued them on a tamed org, until the fleeing couple set fire
to dried grass and escaped under the smoke. She had handed on her lore of
org-training to the boy: where the eggs were found, how the hatchlings could be
tamed.
The
time had come for him to use that knowledge, because he was of an age to use
it—and for another reason. For the girl who had become his brother's new wife
had been the girl Fifteenth himself had wanted.
The
brother picked up his awl again. "If you have to be a fool—" He
shrugged and suddenly grinned. "I'll make a new harness for you."
And
so, for many meals, the boy hunted meat while his brother made the harness. The
dark-eyed girl who had become his brother's wife helped him smoke the meat, and
if her presence near him was a steady pain he never showed it, and if she knew
she never told.
When
the harness was finished and fitted he loaded himself and the three of them
trudged up the friendly mountain toward the finest of the launching places.
There where the slope fell steeply away for a thousand feet, the gentle,
cradling updraft never failed. From this cliff edge one could circle and soar
more than a mile into the thick, sweet air of their world, and launch one¬self
many sleeps away across the plain in a single flight
They
stood and stared at Knife-in-the-Sky, and then the dark-haired girl caught her
breath and cried, "A fire in the clouds! Look!"
Before
them, even higher than Knife-in-the-Sky, a lance of silvery light was extending
itself in a soaring arc down through the bright, living clouds. Neither the boy
nor his brother was frightened, although it was a strange thing to them; their
world knew nothing of me¬teorites, since near them there was nothing small
enough to fall into their air. It was not unique. It was rare.
The
brother muttered, "There was such a flame a hundred sleeps ago, and after
that the small Watchers appeared."
"Has
anyone been harmed by a small Watcher?" the boy demanded.
The
brother shook his head no, though what he meant was "not yet."
"Then
I will not fear if there are more. Good-bye," the boy said, kissed them
both, grasped his buttocks with his hands, and leaped headfirst into the air. When
he was well clear of the rock he swept his arms up in the sinuous stroke of the
wingman, extended the filmy
wings
of scraped leather, and flapped and soared until his brother and the girl were
all but invisible to him, tiny, staring figures no larger than pebbles.
And
then he turned out of the updraft and stroked through the air toward
Knife-in-the-Sky.
He
did not look behind him.
Even
if he had looked, he might not have seen that something shared the air with
him, a cube of metal, bright on all its faces, brighter still with lights and
lenses on the face toward him. It was no larger than Fif¬teenth's fist and a
long way behind as it stolidly punched a passage through the air, borne on
magnetic forces of which none of the boy's people had ever heard. The boy did
know it was there. He was not meant to.
TWO
*
A
long distance away in terms of the boy's world—but only a step in astronomical
distances—a man named Ben Line Pertin watched a holographic vir¬tual image of
the flying boy and turned away, shaking his head. "They're skinny and
funny-looking," he said, "but by God they're human. Figure that for
me, Ve¬nus."
The
girl beside him was not a girl. She did not look like a human girl except in
the way that a statue does; she was silvery metal, thixotropic, anisotropic,
tamed by the science of her people to flow and move like flesh. Oh her home
world Venus had not looked human at all; for that matter she had not been
female, because her race had not bothered with sexual distinctions in its
development. She said, "Not only human beings live on Cuckoo, Ben Line. We
have already found Sheliaks and Boaty-Bits, or beings genetically parallel to
them. And we have only begun to look."
"None
of your folks, though," Ben Line observed cheerfully. "Guess you
weren't popular."
"As
to that, Ben Line, how could you tell?"
He
grinned. Venus was an edited form, specially tailored to operate well in the
near Earth-normal en¬vironment of Cuckoo Station.
"Well,"
he said, "I suppose we might as well retrans¬mit these tapes. I think we
need help, Venus. More equipment, more survey scouts. And more beings. I think
it's about time we sent people down to Cuckoo. What do you say?"
The
silvery girl was silent for a moment. Ben Line knew that, through her Pmal
translator, she was com¬municating with FARLINK, the computer that processed
all the manifold information-handling procedures on the orbiter called Cuckoo
Station.
FARLINK
was the station's nerve center. It processed the tachyonic transmissions that replicated
new person¬nel for die station. It coordinated the reports from the drones they
sent down to the surface of the strange ob¬ject itself. It stored their
cumulative data and solved their research problems; and it sent their findings—
such as they were—back to Sim One.
Its
main terminal was a ring-shaped console inside the hollow hemisphere where
Pertin, the silvery girl, and other beings were working. The beings on duty sat
inside the console, or rested or clung or stood there as their anatomies dictated,
with input devices within reach of their manipulative organs. The output
flashed and shimmered on the screens that lined the dome, translated into the
visual symbols of half a hundred cul¬tures.
Ben
Line became impatient. "What's the matter, V&- nus?"
She
did not move but her expression, as far as she could be said to have one,
seemed to cloud. "There is difficulty," she said.
"Difficulty?"
That seemed unlikely! FARLINK was as close to perfect as any machine ever made.
Many tachy¬onic channels linked it to the banks of the even larger computers
and research teams back on Sun One, and it had its own built-in power sources.
And yet—
And
yet abruptly, before his very eyes, the myriad screens suddenly flickered and
went black!
There
was an instant rumble of consternation. Cries and hoots and clangs of shock
rang out all around the ring. From the console position nearest his own a
scorched-fur scent of TWorlie dismay came from the bat-headed, butterfly-winged
being named Nammie.
"What
the devil!" he cried. The screens were black
for
only a second; then they glowed with the green computer symbols that spelled
out the same message in half a hundred languages:
"REGRET
INTERRUPTION, INTERFERENCE DISTORTING
INCOMING
SIGNALS. ORIGIN OF INTERFERENCE NOT KNOWN."
Venus
whispered, "But we've never had any interfer¬ence before . . ."
Pertin
had no answer. Suddenly he felt very lonely. The tachyonic channels were their
only bridge of thought and communication across that gulf of space that was too
vast for anything material to cross. With the bridge broken, the thirty
thousand light-years be¬tween all of them and all of their diverse homes became
terribly real.
The
T'Worlie beside him was fluttering on frantic wings above its console position,
stabbing at the keys and whistling at its mike. After a moment it rose from the
keyboard and turned its five-eyed face to him.
"Mode
emergency!" it shrilled. "Query implications of signal
distortion."
"I
wish I knew," Pertin said, shaking his head.
"Propose
conjecture! Assume sentient masters of Cuckoo. Query: Have they discovered us?
Are they initi¬ating contact? Query probable intentions."
"I
don't know, Nammie. What about DFing? Do we know where the source comes
from?"
The
T'Worlie spun and punched a combination; and all the myriad screens lighted up:
"SOURCE
UNKNOWN. DF PROGRAM INITIATED."
And
then abruptly the green symbols shimmered off the screen. Patterns of color
flashed and vanished in the deep tanks that were their three-D vision screens.
A new message appeared:
"INTERFERENCE
FADING. STAND BY. SIGNAL RECEP¬TION RESUMING."
The
Sun One sign burned itself onto the screens: a red disk inside a thin green
ellipse—the artificial satel¬lite called Sun One, inside the Galaxy itself.
Before it
appeared
the tall, glowing cone of a Sheliak official, back at Sun One. He was speaking,
apparently obliv¬ious to the interruption, while his translator turned his soft
hooting into Earth English on Ben Line's screen. Green symbols overrode the
image for a moment:
"INTERFERENCE
HAS CEASED. SOURCE NOT TRACKED."
Venus
and Ben line looked at each other.
"What
was that all about?" he demanded.
Slowly
she shook her silvery head. "At any rate, it's over." All around the
dome, beings were resuming their interrupted chores. "One moment, Ben
Line," she added gravely; and then, "Yes, we have concurrence. We
authorize you to transmit a call for additional sur¬vey forces."
Ben
Line Pertin nodded and cued in the tachyon transmitter. Carefully he began to
phrase the report that the supervelocity tachyons would flash toward the
distant Galaxy, to the artificial planet called Sun One— where all the races of
the Galaxy maintained the head¬quarters that had launched this survey party—and
from there on to the home planets of scores of kinds of beings. His own words
might sooner or later reach his own world, Earth.
Ben
Line wondered if somehow, back on Earth, that original Ben Pertin who had
volunteered for tachyon transmission long before might hear the voice of his
double, and if so what he might think. v But that was not profitable wondering.
Behind it lay too much pain, too much loss, too many regrets for what could
never be undone. Behind it lay the memory of the girl he had married on Sun
One. Zara had not lost her husband; but Ben, her husband, in this copy at
least, had lost his wife forever. And it hurt.
THREE
*
Although
the boy named Fifteenth was strong, launching himself from the ground was very
hard work, only for emergencies. When at last he began to run out of strength
on his first long flight across the plain to¬ward Knife-in-the-Sky he was
careful to choose a spot where hillocks gave him a small height advantage for
the next launch. A tall tree would have been better, but here there were only
fire-trees and bee-trees, and nei¬ther was any good for climbing. When you
climbed fire- trees no matter how careful you were some of the fire clung to
your skin and, although it did not seem to do immediate harm, after a time you
sickened and died. And bee-trees, of course, were guarded by their bees. These
were not really bees in any sense, but they shared with Earthly bees a
disposition to assault invaders en masse, so the boy avoided them.
He
did not sleep on his first landing, only ate from the stocks he carried, rested
drowsily for a thousand breaths, and then launched himself again. It was
unsat¬isfying flying over the marshes that he soon encoun¬tered. There were few
updrafts, and only weak ones, to climb in. Nearer home, generations of wingmen
had lo¬cated reliable springs of rising air in many places— where the lowest
slopes of the mountain shaped the wind, or where for some reason the ground was
always warm. But he was at the edge of the known world al¬ready, as far as his
people were concerned. He could recognize some helpful signs. Nearly always
fire-trees meant rising air, not because the trees themselves were
warm
but because they only grew in warm soil. But the stands of fire-trees here in
the marshes were spindly and infrequent. Better than nothing. Not very good.
So
he climbed mostly with the power of his lean, long arms and chest muscles, and
flying was steady work. Better than walking. Still, not good.
It
did not matter. The boy's purpose held, and after every rest or meal or sleep
he launched himself again and drove on toward Knife-in-the-Sky.
He
had known that mountain all his life, but he hadn't known how far it was. He
slept twenty-three times crossing the alternating marsh and flatlands past the
edge of the grass, and eighteen times more crossing what was pure marsh, where
he could rest only on hil¬locks and the steamy mist that rose around him while
he slept was malodorous and cloying. Each time he knotted the count into the
cord around his throat when he woke, and looked toward Knife-in-the-Sky; and
still it seemed no larger.
Beyond
the marshes he crossed an endless carpet of thick, bright moss that had a
queerly sharp smell which he associated with the electrical storms that rolled
around the upper reaches of his mountain—but he had no name for
"ozone." Something in the air above the mossland made him sneeze. The
moss bore no fruit and it gave him no game. He counted twenty-eight sleeps on
his way across it, and came out giddy with hunger and thirst.
He
came down, with the last of his strength, on the bank of a shallow river that
rimmed the moss world. Flying off again would be hard work, but it couldn't be
helped. He knelt and drank the black water until he began to feel ill, and then
looked for food in the forest on the far bank. Its plants were club-shaped and
leaf¬less, shining with their own cold light like dwarfed, warped fire-trees.
Shining daggers of thorns guarded the hard red nuts they bore. He picked a few
doubt¬fully, and looked farther. But there was none of the game he knew from
the grasslands near his home, none
of
the fleet four-legged herd animals, or the horned, two-legged hoppers. His
arrows killed a small weakly flying thing that fed on the nuts, but its flesh
was taste¬less and dry. He roasted some of the nuts, and felt sicker after
eating them than he had before.
He
summoned the strength to pitch his wings to¬gether to make a tent, pegged
against one of the club- shaped trees. He rolled inside, curled up in a ball,
and tried to sleep. It was not easy. The boy had never known what insomnia was,
but he had heard old people speak of it sometimes and now he understood what
they meant. He was drained and aching. For the first time he began to wonder if
he were not as crazy as his brother had said. His brains truly felt as if they were
bound to the ground. His thoughts could not rise and fly over him; they were
limited to fear and misery and depression.
After
a time he decided that he must eat, no matter what, and rose again.
Here
in the marshes the sky was darker than on the slopes of his mountain; there
were fewer fire-trees, and the light from the steely bright moss on the far
side of the river was of little help. The boy had never heard of concepts like
"day" or "night." He had never seen a sun in his sky, or for
that matter a moon or stars. There were none to be seen, except for the
occasional rare coils of silvery haze that, he had no way of knowing, were
distant galaxies. One time was as good as another to sleep, or to eat, or to
hunt. But he was not used to being hungry or ill.
It
made him feel dizzy and faint, and when he crawled out of his wing-tent and saw
the bright cube that whirled away out of sight he thought at first it was the
imagining of sickness.
Sick
as he was, his brain cleared almost at once. Once or twice before, in the long
flights over grass and marsh and moss, he had thought he had glimpsed
some¬thing small and bright and far behind. But it had always hung just at the
threshold of visibility. He knew that the
Watchers
traveled in huge things that were bright and shiny. But this did not seem very
large, nor did it ever come closer. He had heard of the small new Watchers that
his brother had told him about. Was this one of them? He could not say.
All
he could be sure of was that it had not harmed him so far, at least, and
certainly there would never be a better chance to do him harm than while he lay
shak¬ing and weak in the wing-tent.
It
gave him much to think about, but he could think without fear, for somehow he
did not believe that this small Watcher intended to hurt him.
Curiously,
the effort of thinking, perhaps also the sense that some sort of creature was
not far away, even if hiding, seemed to sharpen his mind and his will. He stood
up, drank again from the river, and began to search for the sprays of flame-bright
red bloom he had seen from the air. These marked a thick-rooted plant. When he
found them he dug out roots, and found among them nests of blood-red worms
that, he thought, he had heard the older wingmen of his people describe as
edible in bad times.
The
roots were sweet and white and good, the worms less good. They were gritty and
revolting raw, but he made a fire and soon learned to clean them of their
digestive sacs before broiling them. He made his first satiating meal in many
sleeps, rolled back into the wing-tent, and slept soundly and well. He stayed
by the river bank for three more sleeps, and then felt strong enough to pack
himself with roots and smoked worms and go on again.
He
flew steadily and low, saving his wasted energy, careful with the now-worn
bands of his harness. He strained his neck with watching, ceaselessly scanning
the sky all around for orgs, or Watchers, or for another sight of the small
Watcher that had fled from him by the river—all the time searching the forest
for food, studying the horizon for signs of updrafts that might help him.
The
dully glowing forests sloped sharply upward now. He slept seven times in a belt
of fog and rain. With Knife-in-the-Sky now lost in the lowering sky his target
was gone. He set his course as much as he could by following the upward slopes.
When those signs failed, or were doubtful, he drew from his harness the one
gift his mother had given him that had been her father's.
The
crystal-cased object that glittered like the small Watcher was the size of the
boy's thumb. Inside it a needle spun about, but ever seemed to quiver toward a
single direction with the end that was brighter than the other. His mother had
not known much about it, except that the wingmen of her people used the devices
to mark the direction of flight when landmarks failed.
The
air grew cooler as he climbed. When he camped for one sleep on a moss-grown
rock he woke shivering and chilled. He crept stiffly from beneath his tented
wings and found the low clouds gone.
He
looked up and caught his breath.
Knife-in-the-Sky
filled all the world ahead. The for¬ests lifted toward it forever, rising piles
of pale brown and gray and ivory, splashed with vast black masses of fallen
stone.
So
high he had to stretch his neck to look, the moun¬tain itself rose out of those
broken boulders. Walls of dead rock marched up and at the top of that unclimb-
able wall, higher than he could imagine, the jagged sum¬mit slashed across the
rippling colors of the sky.
He
studied that summit for a long time, looking for orgs while the damp wind that
blew down the slopes of the mountain numbed him with unexpected cold. He knew
they were there. They were always there, when they were not sweeping down to
the lower slopes and the marsh and the grasslands and forests, seeking their
prey. Perhaps those distant black spots, so hard to dis¬tinguish from the motes
of dust that one sees on the surface of one's own eye, were orgs; he could not
tell. Whatever, they were still a long way off. He stepped
back
to see more clearly over that giddy wall, felt a sudden gust as he was caught
off stride; and the ground slid away under him. He grabbed wildly for the
anchor rope that secured his tented wings, but his chilled fin¬gers slid off
it. The wind spun him off the rock; he flailed his arms, trying to get his
balance; the moss was slippery, the cold had made him clumsy and he went
sprawling over the edge.
The
fall was only twenty times his own height—say, a hundred and fifty feet by
Earth measures—so there was no real danger. Even without wings he could glide
to some extent, as Earthly sky divers used to direct their fall before allowing
their chutes to open. He picked out a landing spot where a bank of crimson moss
promised some cushion, stretched out his arms, writhed with his body, spun
around like a cat dropped from a table, and landed not too badly, considering
the sluggishness of his muscles from the cold. A pink cloud of spores rose
around his plowing feet and half blinded him. He sprawled, sneezing and
choking, and then stood up and looked around.
The
clouds below had shifted, and he could see across the great bowl of marsh and
plain almost to the slopes of his own mountain. Past the brown and yellow
slopes beneath him, the moss world made an endless sea; past it, the marshes,
overhung with cloud, traced with thin black lines of rivers. In the hollows
white fog lay.
He
had not realized home was so far, but he could spare no thought for it. He
turned and looked up the rock to where his tented wings and supplies were.
With¬out wings he could not fly, but he could still climb; un¬fortunately, the
rock was very steep and he could not trust his stiffened fingers to seek out
holds in its crev¬ices. He would have to climb the long way around.
The
boy had no lack of practice in climbing, but as a wingman he disliked it very
much. Without wings it could be dangerous. The combination of low gravity and
dense atmosphere that his world possessed made
the
lifting of mass easy, but unbalanced the equation of wind versus inertia;
caught by a gust on a vertical face, it was quite possible he could be flung so
far out that even the slow acceleration of his world would crush him when he
struck ground again. So he sought an easy way and sprang carefully from point
to point, and was con¬centrating so hard on his task that he almost did not see
the small Watcher as it swooped past his head and then spun away upward toward
the place where his gear waited for him.
The
boy shrank back into a crevice in the moss and waited for attack.
The
attack did not come. Actually, he had not thought it would; this small Watcher
for some reason did not seem menacing to him. And yet what could it be doing
with his gear? He could hear nothing. He could see nothing—then, in a flash, he
saw something star¬tling: a bright flare of golden light that washed the side
of the mountain and disappeared in a moment.
Cautiously
the boy eased his way out of the little fold in the terrain and stretched
himself to peer upward. He listened; he looked; he smelled; he reached out with
all of his senses toward the top of the rock, but there was nothing.
He
knelt on folded legs for a hundred breaths, con¬sidering. Strictly speaking,
there was nothing on the rock that he could not do without. Food, spear, bow,
wings, harness—he could not make them as well as the specialists among his
people, but he could make them well enough to get buy. The wings and harness
would be the most difficult, but he had seen enough of his brother's work to
know that replacing them would not be impossible.
Still
... the thing was, the gear on the top of the rock was his gear, and he wanted
it back.
If
the small Watchers were the same as the big ones there would be no question.
His only option would be to flee, and that would almost certainly be useless,
if his
brother's
stories were halfway true. But he did not think there was any hostility stored
in the glittering little cube he had seen.
So
with great daring, very slowly and cautiously at first but then more quickly
and openly, the boy made his way around a boss on the mountainside, up and over
it, and emerged higher than the rock where he had slept, looking down on it, an
easy spring from it.
He
had not known what to expect, but he had not expected what he saw.
The
cube was no longer just a cube. It hung in air a yard above the moss, not far
from his wing-tent, steady as if it were nailed there, not dipping or even
trembling in the winds. But it was growing something. From one face of it a
glowing, filmy bubble of something was spreading to form a sphere almost the
height of the boy—then taller, while he watched.
The
sphere stopped growing. The boy looked and pondered, wondering whether to
approach. For dozens of breaths nothing happened, unless a shadowy sort of
movement inside the sphere was real, and was some¬thing happening.
llie
boy could see his gear, waiting for him. He could detect no harm in the cube or
in the bubble.
He
did not come to a conscious decision; but in a moment he discovered that his
legs were gathering un¬der him and he sprang toward the top of the rock. He
turned in air to bring his feet under him, landed well, spun around to face the
small Watcher.
And
then something did happen. There was another flash of that intense golden
explosion of silent light, and for a moment he was blinded. And when he could
see again at all he saw that the bubble was burst open, sliced from within,
like an org's egg with the hatchling just coming out; and out of it was
stepping—what? A man? Short, fat, squat, dark, curiously clothed—but yes, a
man!
FOUR
*
The
figure that came out of the bubble was twice as broad as the boy, and nearly a
head shorter. To the boy it looked like one of his own people, but somehow
squashed down and wearing strange bright clothing such as he had never seen
before.
The
wingmen and their women wore no more than they had to: the harness to hold
their wallets and fasten to their wings, a few square inches of cloth or shaved
leather for ornament, a few more for modesty.
By
the boy's standards, the man was fearsomely over¬dressed. His clothing covered
nearly all of him. From waist to feet he wore a sort of bright yellow leotard,
ending under bright-colored soft boots. From waist to shoulders he wore a
sleeveless tunic. His wrists were ornamented with broad, bright-colored bands
that looked as if they had the feel of leather, but were col¬ored in blues and
greens and mauves; they held little pouches and bright shiny things that
glittered and seemed to move. Even the man's head was covered, with a soft cap
which (the boy did not know) could come down to protect his eyes against dust
or glare, or if need be could shield the entire upper part of him against rain
or cold. And that was a bright orange color; taken all in all, the man was
queerly and fear¬somely garbed, the boy marveled. With such apparel he could
never hope to avoid being seen by org or Watcher or game!
His
costume and his queer proportions were not all that was queer about him. Even
his face was strange.
He
was surely much older than the boy, two or three thousand sleeps at least. But
his face did not show it. It was not weathered or lined from wind or storm. His
teeth were bright and even, as perfect as the boy's own, and far more so than,
say, those of the boy's older brother, who had used them to nip off ends of
leather for the five thousand sleeps of his adult life.
All
this the boy saw in the same photographic glance in which he observed that the
man carried no weapon. None at all; neither bow nor knife. Not even a club.
Even so, the boy judged, he might not be without dan¬ger. His squat frame had
the look of strength.
The
man took a step toward the boy. It was not men¬acing. It was comic. The boy had
never seen anything like it; the man's step was grotesquely energetic, it pro¬pelled
him unmeaning into the air. He came down, stumbled, caught himself, fell again
in overreaction, and sprawled to the ground. The expression on his broad face
was funnier than his ungainly tumbling act itself. The boy could not help
laughing. From the ground the man laughed, too.
Then
the man stood up, quite carefully, with a wink and exaggerated caution. He
spread his hands as if to show he had no weapons. The boy knew that already; he
made no move.
The
man, slowly and carefully, as if to show that he meant no harm, grasped one
wrist with the fingers of the other hand and did something to the shiny baubles
on it. Then he spoke to the boy.
When
he did, his voice came from two places at once. It came from his mouth in the
normal way. An¬other voice, harsher and more metallic than his own, came
stumbling from the bauble on his wrist. The sounds from the thing on his wrist
were not the same as the sounds from his mouth, but the boy could under¬stand
neither of them. He bent his head in the gesture of negation.
The
man looked as if he were irritated with his toy. He touched it again, and spoke
once more.
This
time the boy thought he caught the suggestion of a word. Strangely, it came
from the man's wrist, not his mouth. It sounded rather like the word the boy's
people used for "what?" But there was more to it, and the rest was
gibberish.
The
man shrugged and let his arm fall to his side. Then he grinned, touched his
chest, and said a single word. The sound of it was "Ben." The man
waited in¬quiringly, as if expecting a response.
The
boy was not sure what was expected of him, other than that the man seemed to
want him to speak. The man gestured, pointed to his wrist, and made sev¬eral
other sounds. One sounded like "Pmal," pro¬nounced very slowly and
carefully, but what it meant the boy had no idea.
He
said slowly, "I don't know what you want me to do."
The
man applauded, grinned, motioned for more.
"Well,"
the boy said, "I am Fifteenth of the men in my people." He paused, a
little suspiciously, but the man urged him on. It seemed foolish, but there did
not seem to be anything dangerous in it. Hesitantly he went on: "But I am
far from my people and no longer one of them," he soliloquized. "So
perhaps I can have only a word-name, like an outlaw or a woman. Are you an
outlaw? But I am going to get an org's egg. I will hatch it and tame the org.
Perhaps I will call myself Org Ri¬der!" he finished, and fell silent,
listening to the pleas¬ing sound of the name in his mind's ear.
Excited,
the man touched his wrist and spoke again. This time the words from his wrist
made sense; they were poorly pronounced, but clearly enough they said: "I
am Ben. You are Org Rider!"
From
the boy's expression the man saw that commu¬nication had begun. His own face
reflected joy. He spoke again, and the thing on his wrist stuttered, emit¬ted a
few nonsense syllables, and then, very clearly, said: "My people
far."
He
gestured for the boy to speak on.
But
the boy had heard another sound. Frowning, he turned to search the sky.
It
was a strangely ominous sound, like the hum of a bee-tree. The boy's first
thought was Org! Yet the sound was wrong, not the harsh scream his mother had
described, but even more fearsome.
Then
he saw it: a faint gray glint against the poly¬chrome sky, diving toward them,
very fast.
Watcher!
It
was like a spearpoint arrowing toward them in the sky; it had no wings, but it
moved so fast the boy could hardly realize what was happening. The man heard
it, too. Astonishment spread across his broad face. He turned, bounced toward
the silently hovering small Watcher, fell clumsily but righted himself and
touched it with quick, skillful hands.
At
once one face of the small Watcher flared with a bright golden flame, and a
bubble began to grow out of it.
The
boy did not stand watching this performance. He ran for his weapons. He did not
know what good they would be against a Watcher, but he had no other op¬tions
open to him than to use them.
A
bright flash of light from above gave him a split second's warning, then
something crashed nearby. Queer sudden yellow flowers bloomed on the black
rock, and faded into pale smoke. A sharp reek of burn¬ing choked him.
The
bubble from the side of the small Watcher had grown tall as the boy now;
abruptly it flared brightly gold. Unfortunately for the boy he was staring
directly at it when it happened. For a moment he was blinded. Bright lights
were out of his experience entirely, except for lightning and the smoky glow of
a campfire; the eyes of his people did not have quick recovery mecha¬nisms,
since they had no sun in their sky to contend with and no need. He clawed at
his eyes in acute pain. He could not distinguish just what was happening.
The
man named Ben was clawing at the bubble,
trying
to drag out of it some glittering object that had appeared inside. The boy
could not recognize it; he could barely see the outlines, could barely see when
again there was that sudden crash, and a flash of light behind and above him,
and yellow flame and smoke exploded on Ben himself. The boy heard a terrible
scream, felt splinters of rock as they tore at his flesh, smelled a queerly hot
choking odor that took his breath.
Then
blackness drowned him. His bow was in his hand, but he had not had time to
raise it, or even see what it was that had killed Ben and was almost killing
himself.
Consciousness
returned, out of a crazy pain-filled fantasy that was not a dream but a memory.
He lay face down on hard, wet gravel. He was shivering to a cold, slow rain.
His
first thought was astonishment at being alive, his second to get his wings to
wrap around him, covering his nakedness against the rain.
When
he tried to move something wrapped around his neck, so tight that he could
hardly breathe, tugged him back.
Panic
shook him. He tugged at the coil around his neck; it would not loosen. His hand
flashed to his knife, but it was gone. He was tied by the neck, like a food-
beast awaiting slaughter.
Sitting
up more carefully, he saw that he was tied to a great machine,
spearhead-shaped, that lay on the gravel. It was mottled in brown and yellow,
but under it was the glint of silvery metal.
Ten
paces away lay the squat butchered corpse of Ben. A faint pathetic mechanical
squeal came from the silvery cube of the small Watcher that had brought him; it
would bring no one ever again, for the explosion that had killed Ben had
blasted it as well, and it lay sparking feeblv, cracked and broken, on the
gravel.
"Good
to see you awake, boy!"
The
booming voice caught Org Rider by surprise. He moved suddenly and was jerked
back by the choking coil around his neck. When he caught his balance he saw a
man, taller than himself, red-bearded, green- eyed, half grinning, rocking on
his feet by the small pile of the boy's weapons and wings.
"Who
are you?" the boy demanded.
"Why,"
the man said, "you can call me Redlaw. You're a long way from home,
Fifteenth."
The
boy kept off his face the sinking astonishment that this man knew his name.
"I am not Fifteenth any¬more," he said stubbornly. "My name is
Org Rider."
The
man's laugh boomed out. "An Org Rider without an org? Your brother was
right, boy, you're a fool." Then he said, not unkindly, "Oh, don't be
sur¬prised. The Watchers don't only watch. They listen as well. We've been
listening to you for a long time."
"How?"
the boy cried. "I never saw you before!" The man only shrugged and
smiled. "I've never seen any Watcher," the boy said. "And you
have never been on our mountain I am certain."
"You're
making a wrong assumption," the man said. Tm not a Watcher. I work for
them. As butcher in their galleys"—he gestured at the bloodstained apron
he wore—"and sometimes as translator, when they want to know what people
like you are saying. But I know you are truthful when you say you've never seen
a Watcher, because they don't look a bit like you or me."
"Then
where are the Watchers?" Org Rider cried.
"You'll
see them soon enough." The man stirred the boy's weapons with a foot, and
peered at the boy out of shrewd green eyes. "It's not you they care about,
you know," he said suddenly. "It's your dead friend here. What do you
know about him?"
"Nothing,"
Org Rider said proudly, fighting back the pain and dizziness that were tearing
at him. Dried blood on his arms and in his hair showed where he had been
struck. No one had troubled to do anything about it while he was unconscious.
"He appeared from
nowhere.
I do not know how. I had never seen him be¬fore. This is true."
"Oh,"
Redlaw said, "I believe you. Whether the watchers will or not is something
else. But you'll find out—one way or another—because here they come now."
A
section out of the middle of the ship dropped flat, to make a wide door and a
ramp. Five creatures came flapping out and dropped to the rock around Redlaw,
staring from a distance at the boy.
Though
they waddled on two legs when they were not flying, they did not look human.
They were squat and powerful-looking, like the man who had died so quickly and
uselessly. Even more so; they were hardly half the height of Org Rider or
Redlaw. But the ways in which they differed from human were extreme.
They
wore slick bright armor that looked as if it grew on them, black on their
humped backs and red on their bellies; an Earthling would have thought of an
in¬sect's chitin, but there were no true insects for compari¬son in the boy's
world. Their armored arms looked thick and muscular, and their wings were
yellow- streaked leather—it looked frighteningly like tanned human skin to the
boy—that stretched from their arms to their stubby legs. Their faces were
beaked. They had no necks. Wide black flexible ears spread out from each side
of their beaks. Their multiple eyes were greenish bulges, set on each side of
the head, protruding out, behind the ears.
Their
hands horrified the boy when he looked at them more closely. For fingers they
had short, boneless bundles of what looked like squirming pink food- worms.
These twisting worms were palping every seam of his tented wings, every strap
of his flying gear.
They
emitted a foul odor that struck him in a suffo¬cating wave. It took his breath
and stung his eyes, with a sour scent like death-weeds burning. Even Redlaw,
who clearly had had opportunity to get used to it, was wrinkling his nose and
showing distaste.
The
creatures squeaked to each other and then paused, with big ears spread, as if
expecting an answer. One of them was holding the needled guide that had been
his mother's gift, the direction-showing trinket. The boy shouted: "That's
mine! You have no right to rob me!"
"Easy,
boy," Redlaw said tightly. "You're very close to being dead right
now. Don't push it."
The
Watchers squeaked to each other, then once again went through the routine of
palping his wings, his garments, his waterskin, his firepot, knife, coils of
rope, empty pots. Then they moved, like stumps rocking across the graveled
rock, to where the dead man lay. They did not touch him, perhaps from fear. But
they squeaked again, this time peremptorily. I
Redlaw
scowled uneasily, and puckered his lips to whistle some sort of message. It was
not much like the squeaks of the Watchers but it was as close as a hu¬man could
come, Org Rider thought; and the Watchers seemed to understand it. They
replied.
Redlaw
nodded and turned to the boy. "I've told them what you say. Two of them
think you are lying. One thinks you are too stupid to lie. The other two have
not yet made up their minds."
The
boy was silent, letting that information soak through his brain.
"You
see," Redlaw said, "this strange-looking fellow here is very
disconcerting to them." He squinted thoughtfully at the racked body that
lay staring sight¬lessly at nothing. "In a way they know that what you say
is true. In another way, they are not sure. Why did he come to you, boy? By
accident? They'll never be¬lieve that."
"I
know nothing more than what I've told you," said Org Rider stubbornly.
"If I die for it."
"You
just might," Redlaw observed mildly, then flinched as a blast of whistling
came from the Watch¬ers.
In
quite a different tone he demanded: "Why don't you carry the Watchman's
eye?"
"What
is it?"
"The
talisman of their service!" Redlaw touched a sort of medallion he wore
around his own neck. "Like this, boy! To show you are their friend and
servant, like me!"
"My
people are not servants," the boy declared.
"Maybe
that used to be true," Redlaw acknowl¬edged. "Your people lived
almost out of range. But times are changing. This fellow here is making them
change. I think you will go away from here wearing an eye if you go away at
all, Org Rider."
A
burst of peremptory whistling, and two of the Watchers waddled toward the boy.
The yellow coil around his neck tightened, half-strangling him, forcing him to
his knees. The man warned: "Don't resist them, boy! It's your life."
The
bitter reek set him sneezing even while he gasped for breath. A leather wing
slapped him into si¬lence, knocked him down. A hot, hard-armored body fell on
him, and those pink, writhing fingers searched his body, prying into mouth and
nostrils, anus and ears. The weight, the pain, the indignity, the lack of air
all combined to fill the boy with a helpless fury. He could not cope with it,
he could only rage inside himself, in pain and fear, until at last the weight
came off him and the Watchers took their foul reek away, whistling
dis¬agreeably among themselves.
What
they were doing was at that moment of no in¬terest to the boy. He was
preoccupied inside himself. He had never been so treated. He had never been so
helpless, not even when the girl he was interested in had whispered to him that
she had pledged to marry his brother, not even when he was tiny and his mother
died. Not ever.
In
pain and anger, Org Rider was conscious of one certainty. Whatever happened, he
would see the Watch¬ers paid for this.
*
* *
At
length Redlaw's voice boomed: "You can stand
up,
boy. I've made a deal for you."
He
whistled sharply, and the yellow rope fell away
from
the boy's neck.
"You're
to wear the watchman's eye," Redlaw or-
dered.
"It will show them everything you see. If you
have
any further contact with these funny-looking fel-
lows,
they want to know about it."
"What
if I refuse?" the boy blazed.
Redlaw
scowled. "I don't care what you do!" he
shouted.
"It's your life." He tapped the square-bladed
knife
at his waist. "Maybe I didn't tell you that they
have
a taste for human flesh."
The
boy said staunchly, more staunchly than he felt,
•Til
throw it away the minute you leave me."
"Tie
it to a bubble-seed if you want," Redlaw grum-
bled.
"If they know you do it they'll kill you. If they
don't—it's
your gamble, not mine."
He
paused, looking toward the ship. From the gaping
hatch
a sixth, and larger, Watcher flapped down. It was
darker
than the others as well as bigger, its stubby
wings
almost black. It flew directly to Org Rider and
caught
him in a reeking hug, clasping something around
his
neck. "Careful now!" Redlaw shouted, but the boy
had
already taught himself not to resist. It lasted only a
moment,
then the large Watcher fell away.
The
object was a heavy black globe, twice the size of
the
ball of Org Rider's thumb. A slick black cord of
some
sort of leather held it around his neck.
"Our
captain asked me to tell you," Redlaw said,
"that
if you take it off he will do you the honor to eat
you
himself." He glanced over his shoulder. The cap-
tain
of the Watchers had already returned to the ship;
the
others were flapping slowly after him, no longer ap-
pearing
interested in the boy or in the body.
"Good-bye,
Org Rider," the man said, almost reluc-
tantly,
as if he had more he wanted to say.
If
he had, he did not say it. He turned away and
entered
the ship. The hatch closed. At once, a small curved shell tipped down outside
the longer shell of the ship. Something whined. A gust of warm wind sent the
boy rocking away across the gravel, sliding onto the moss.
The
ship rose and slid whining away through the sky. Org Rider watched it until he
was sure it was not com¬ing back.
Then
he set about gathering his lost gear. None of it was gone, or badly damaged,
though it was scattered all over the rock and all of it stank of the death-weed
reek of the Watchers.
As
soon as he had it, he strapped his harness on, loaded himself with what he had
to carry. His torn body was sending messages of pain from the crusted wounds in
scalp and arms, and his stomach fought against the clinging reek of the
Watchers. He put them out of his mind. He did not even look again at the dead
creature who had appeared out of the bubble, or the glittering, broken toy that
had brought him.
He
turned his back on the campsite that had become so hateful to him, launched
himself into the air, turned, and with great, painful strokes continued toward
the distant peak of Knife-in-the-Sky. He did not look back.
FIVE
*
More
than a hundred million miles away, far beyond the great broad curve of the
horizon, the spinning wheel of the orbiter marched through its endless sweep.
On
it Ben Pertin turned away from the monitor screen. The image it showed was as
cracked and shat¬tered as the small cube of the monitor itself. All it showed
was a ghastly view of Ben's own dead, staring eye, peering emptily forever up
into the gaudily clouded sky of Cuckoo.
Ben
looked guiltily at the silvery girl he called Ve¬nus. He did not think even an
alien like her would fail to see the emotions on his face, and he was not proud
of those emotions. It was an unsettling thing to see one¬self die. The Ben
Pertin who had just had his skull smashed and his body blasted on the distant
surface of Cuckoo was as much himself as this other body he was inhabiting
here, in the orbiting wheel of the survey sat¬ellite.
"I'm
sorry, Venus," he said.
"Sorry?"
she fluted.
He
said, "I guess that was a bust. Well, we've learned something from it.
First and most important, next time we send somebody down we'd better arm him
for bear. No more waiting till he asks for weapons, and trying to get them to
him in a hurry."
"Concurred,"
said Venus. "Also editing appears nec¬essary due to the gravity
differential."
"Right.
That one-percent gravity is tricky. I—he was sprawling all over the
place." Ben Line Pertin managed
a
smile. "I've never been transmitted in an edited form before," he
said. "I don't know how well I like the idea."
"It
does not hurt, Ben Line."
"Of
course not."
The
silvery girl curled one wing and moved closer to him, studying him carefully.
"It is established," she said in her chiming voice, "that my
people and Scorpian ro¬bots, for example, experience less ego displacement in
transmission than do you or, for example, the TWorlie. Suggestion. One of us
can go on the next transmission to the surface of Cuckoo."
"That's
an idea. We'll keep it in mind," Ben Line said. In his heart he knew he
didn't want to do it that way. When the next transmission went, he would make
it. There were two reasons, one practical, the other not. The practical reason
was that, confusing and inexplica¬ble though it was, Earthmen looked like the
people who roamed this portion of the surface of Cuckoo. With ed¬iting, to
stretch them out and reduce their musculature, they would look even more so;
and the first job of com¬munication with them, building up the store of
language that the Pmal translators needed to work, was difficult enough even
so. Asking one of these primitives to talk to a robot, or to a TWorlie, or to a
creature like the silvery girl was out of the question.
The
other reason was the important one. Ben Line Pertin had thought it over
carefully and, all in all, he had no particular reason to want to go on living.
Ben
Pertin was not the first human being in the his¬tory of the race to reach that
conclusion. It happened often enough, for reasons far more trivial than his
own. The thing that graveled Ben Pertin, almost more than the real pains and
troubles that infested his head, was that his options were curiously
circumscribed. With tachyon transmission, you could die and die and die . . .
and still be alive. However many times Ben Pertin let the tachvon scanners
memorize his body structure and translate an exact duplicate to the surface of
Cuckoo,
and however many times that duplicate met a gory death, he would still be alive
in orbit. And he would still be hurting.
Other
men in his position could fling their lives away in a reckless gamble against
death, and find oblivion. He could not. The only gamble he could take was in a
fixed game that he could not lose. It made a mockery of courage . . .
"I
said," the silvery girl repeated tonelessly, "the T'Worlie Nammie is
speaking to you.'
"Oh,
sorry." Ben Line shook himself into attention and attempted a smile to the
butterfly-winged being that hung in the air beside him. "Hi, Nammie.
What's new?"
"Theory,"
the T'Worlie whistled, "FARLINK proposes explication of tachyon
interference."
"Really?"
Ben Line was diverted from his internal pain. "What's that?"
"FARLINK
identifies sourse of interference as exogen¬ous to Cuckoo. Originates
elsewhere. Trace-scanning, locates source as tight-beam signal generated in our
own Galaxy. Vector closely equivalent to that of human sun, called Sol."
Pertin
frowned blankly at the little bat-winged crea¬ture.
"I
don't know about that," he muttered blankly. "It doesn't seem
reasonable. After all, there is only one tachyon station on Earth capable of
this distance and that's locked in to Sun One. Certainly it couldn't inter¬fere
with reception here—"
"FARLINK
adds," shrilled the T'Worlie, fluttering up and down on its bright
butterfly wings, "interfering sig¬nal can be identified as mating call of
female of human species, beamed from your home world, called Earth, to self, here."
"Ridiculous!"
Ben Line exploded. "Nammie, that's insane! Why—"
He
paused as a strong ammonia scent made him
sneeze.
"Wait a minute," he said. "What does that smell mean?"
"Query:
Smell, Ben Line?"
"The
gaseous emission, which registers in my chemical-stimuli-detecting nerve
sensors. I know you T'Worlie express emotions chemically."
"It
is laughter," the T'Worlie shrilled triumphantly.
"Ah,"
said Ben Line, satisfied at last. "Then that was a joke."
"Confirmation,"
the T'Worlie cried. "Successful one, queiy?"
"Pretty
good. Sorry. You caught me off guard, or I would have laughed, too."
A
whiff of etherlike sweetness expressed the T'Wor¬lie analog of hurt.
"Regret joke unsuccessful," Nammie piped sadly. "Not all of
communication falsified for purposes of humor. True that FARLINK locates source
as near Earth in vector, distance not confirmed. Extreme attenuation of signal
renders distance estimate unde- pendable."
"Strange,"
the silvery girl chimed. "Perhaps we should instruct FARLINK to assemble
conjectural expla¬nations oLthis phenomenon."
"You
two go ahead," Ben Line said. "I have to get some sleep."
"We
will carry on while you are unconscious," the T'Worlie whistled. Neither
he nor Venus slept them¬selves, and they were critical of human slumber.
"Per¬sonal conjecture: Whatever explanations, they will complicate our
mission."
And
indeed they would, thought Ben Line Pertin as he headed toward his living
quarters, out at the higher- gravity shell of the satellite. TTiere should be
no random tachyonic transmissions coming in, especially from the Galaxy itself,
where all known tachyon sources had been long since identified, located, and
compensated for. It was one more irritation in a life that had become
increasingly overweighted on the downbeat side.
"What
I need," Ben Line murmured to himself, "is a meal, a bath, and bed.
In that order."
There
would not be much pleasure there either, to be sure. The meal would be out of a
dry-pack and into a microwave oven, and it would taste like it. With only three
human beings on the wheel, and a dozen other races with different diets* also
aboard, there was not much space to waste on epicurean cookery. The bath would
be not much better. The wheel was in freefall, so the only way to bathe was
through a sort of hosedown from jets inside a thing like a huge bottle, and it
was all business, even after you learned how to get clean with¬out inhaling
several gallons of water. And the bed, of course, would be solitary.
Ben
Pertin hurled himself out of the communications room, in a savage mood. He was
the first human being to reach this point in space, tens of thousands of light-
years outside the galactic spiral.
He
was a conqueror, by any standards the history books could measure.
What
he felt like was a victim.
Pertin's
"bed" was a cocoon. It felt like a prison. Fed and bathed, he floated
in it but could not sleep.
There
was a sore place in his mind to which his con¬sciousness always returned, like
something caught in a tooth that the tongue cannot resist probing.
That
something was himself. Another self: the Ben Pertin from which he had been
copied. That Ben Pertin was forty thousand light-years away, in the artificial
satellite that hung in the Orion gas cloud and was called Sun One. To Ben Line
Pertin, he seemed both farther, in the sense of being something unattainable,
and closer than his own skin.
That
other Ben Pertin—Ben Charles—would be en¬joying the domestic pleasures of
marriage, as well as an interesting and productive career with all the
amenities Sun One offered its citizens. Lucky man, thought Ben Line, hating
him.
Yet
that man too was himself. Only a couple of months earlier they had been not
only identical but coincident. That was before Ben Line had come here. He
remembered perfectly well what had happened. He had got up that morning out of
the arms of his new bride, kissed her good-bye, but only as any suburban
commuter kisses his wife good-bye at the station, and entered into the
tachyon-transmission chamber on Sun One.
There
the tachyon beams had scanned his body, built up a pattern of atoms and
molecules and transmitted that pattern on the super-speed waves of the
tachyons, the particles whose lower limiting velocity is the speed of light.
And that pattern had been received here, on the orbiting wheel that spun around
the strange astro¬nomical object called Cuckoo, forty thousand light- years
away. And here it had been reconstructed, atom for atom and Jink for link.
So
on Sun One, one Ben Pertin had walked out of the chamber, in no way different
than he had gone in. He had done whatever he had had to do in the balance of
that working day, and at the end of it returned again to Zara, his/their wife.
But
on the wheel, another Ben Pertin had floated out of the receiving chamber and
had felt the instant shock of knowing that he had lost the gamble. He was the
one on the wheel, which he looked at with some curiosity but not much pleasure.
If
you had put the two Ben Pertins side by side, no clue could have told you which
was "original" and which "copy." Both were originals.
Neither was a copy—except in some abstract, irrelevant sense that meant nothing
when it was considered that each had a complete store of everything Ben Pertin
had ever had, from DNA linkage to the last, most evanescent, half- gone memory
of infancy.
There
was only one real difference: one was there, the other was here. One was living
a normal life on Sun
One.
The other was doing a necessary job, without joy, on the orbiter, which he
would never leave.
That
was the paradox of tachyon transmission: since it was only a pattern that was
transmitted, the object being transmitted remained unchanged. No matter how
often you left, you always stayed behind.
Ben
Line Pertin tossed angrily against the restraining web of his cocoon. That was
the damned unfair part of it! his mind cried. Why couldn't Zara join him?
It
would cost her nothing! Like him, one of her would walk out of the tachyon
chamber on Sun One, the other would be here. They would be together. He would
be no longer alone . . .
He
groaned resentfully, angrily, petulantly.
The
worst part of his resentment was that, in the end, it was directed against
himself. It was his own fault that Zara was not here now. It was he who had
persuaded her not to come with him at first, not until the orbiter had been
made more comfortable. She had wanted to come. But she had listened to him,
finally agreed, promised to come later.
Lying
deceitful promise! Now she not only had not come, she would not even answer his
tachyon messages. Not for weeks! First he had suggested she might come—then
asked outright—finally pleaded. No an¬swer.
When
Ben Line Pertin finally fell asleep, his dreams were harsh and punitive.
He
woke in time for an all-hands review of the mate¬rial gathered on Cuckoo.
In
all, there were forty-one beings living on the orbiter at that moment, counting
collective entities as a single creature. They fit nicely into a cylindrical
chamber not much more than fifteen feet across, partly because most of them
were rather smaller than human beings, mostly because in free-fall, placement
was volumetric rather than planar. The sole T'Worlie acted as sort of
general
chairman for the meeting. Out of the bat's head perched on his butterflylike
body he squeaked a short sentence, and all around the room the Pmal translators
of the various beings rendered it into their own lan¬guages:
"I
will display the information gathered so far on Cuckoo."
In
the center of the chamber a stereostage display quickened into life. It showed
a deep red sphere, float¬ing in nothingness. There was no hint of size, because
there was nothing nearby to compare it with; but the voice accompaniment to the
display began to give the values for its physical characteristics, and all the
Pmal translators faithfully relayed the information to their owners. Radius,
slightly under one A.U. Mass, about equal to Sol. Density, very low—less than
what in some Earthly laboratories was considered a hard vacuum. And yet the
thing had a solid surface.
This
was a familiar wonder to Ben Line and the other beings, but they listened
anyway. So much about Cuckoo was still unbelievable, even now. Not only did it
have a surface, but on that surface creatures lived. The sphere grew and broke
off a section, which ex¬panded, turning slowly to present itself to each of the
creatures in the room. It grew larger, and they were looking down on a
landscape between two enormous mountains, and there was the strangest thing of
all. Not only did creatures live there; they were creatures bio¬logically close
to some races of the Galaxy itself.
That
was impossible.
Cuckoo
had never been part of the Galaxy. Its pres¬ent course was aimed arrow-straight
at the Orion arm of the Galaxy. It had clearly been on that course for a very
long time, and it had originated somewhere else, from some starcloud other than
our own.
Ben
Line Pertin, listening and watching, realized something was touching him. He
turned, and it was the woman of the Purchased People who was there as proxy for
some water-breathing race from a star on the
far
side of the Galaxy, always invisible to Earth and never named by it. She said
tonelessly, "While you were sleeping, Ben Line Pertin, this came addressed
to you with the last lot of supplies."
He
nodded thanks—not to her, heaven knows; the imprisoned personality inside the
skull neither expected thanks nor would know what to do with it; but to the
distant mollusklike creature that owned her and oper¬ated through her body.
He
was about to turn back to the hologram, when he realized what the woman had
given him. It was a mes¬sage cassette. There was no reason for anyone to send
him a sealed cassette unless it was private; there was only one person who
would want to send him a private message.
That
person was Zara.
Suddenly
Ben Line wanted nothing so much as he wanted that meeting to end so that he
could put that cassette in his private stereostage. But it wouldn't end, and he
could not leave, now that the topic had toned to one of his own specialties,
the meteorology of Cuck¬oo. Long since the orbiter had dropped automatic
weather stations all along its trail, and they had begun to show tentative
patterns for the climatology and air- mass movements of the enormous sphere. It
was only a beginning. In that immense ocean of air, the seeded sta¬tions
sketched out only a line, but still Ben Line had to summarize what was known.
As
he finished, the FARLINK screens lit up with an overriding message:
"ATTENTION,
PROGRESS REPORTED ON TACHYONIC
INTERFERENCE.
FOLLOWING SAMPLE ANALYZED."
The
computer blanked out, then displayed shaped waves glowing on the screens,
followed by endless strings of binary numbers, while bird chirps sounded in the
speakers. "Conjecture," whispered the TWorlie that hung beside him, a
vinegary scent of excitement showing that its equivalent of adrenalin was
flowing. "Analysis shows message!"
But
Nammie's conjecture was wrong. The curved
screens
flashed again with the all-stations call indicating
urgency,
then lit up with the message in half a hundred
scripts:
"LINGUISTIC
ANALYSIS OF THIS SAMPLE NEGATIVE.
TECHNICAL
STUDIES, HOWEVER, IDENTIFY SIGNAL AS
COMMUNICATION
OF TUNING DATA FOR TACHYONIC
REPLICATION
TRANSMISSION. PRESUMPTION: SOME
MATTER
IS TO BE REPLICATED FROM CUCKOO TO
SOURCE."
"Ben
Line," the silvery girl chimed in sudden com-
prehension,
"do you understand what that means? It
means
we can replicate our own matter at the source of
this
transmission. We can send a copy of one of us! We
can
see where this signal comes from, by sending some-
one
there who can report back, in a language we can
understand!"
"If
he lives long enough," Pertin grunted. He under-
stood
the importance of what was being said, but in his
personal
scale of values there was nothing quite so im-
portant
as the cassette he had been clutching all this
long
while in his hand.
And
at last he was able to excuse himself, hurl him-
self
through the passages of the orbiter to his private
cocoon,
squirm in, seal, and then slip the cassette into
the
sterostage.
A
silvery glitter of cloud sprang up before him and .
condensed
into the face and form of Zara, his wife,
looking
meltingly beautiful and overpoweringly sad.
She
gazed at him silently for a moment, as if unsure
of
what to say. And then—
"Dear
Ben," she said, "I don't know how to tell you
this.
I'm sorry to answer you this way. The truth is, I
just
can't face you."
She
paused, biting her lip.
"You
see," she said, "I'm not going to come to join
you.
I know how disappointed you will feel—
disappointed
in me, because I promised. But I can't.
"I'm
pregnant, dear," she said. She hesitated, and
added,
"You know that Ben and I—I mean, you and I wanted to have a child. We got
permission before— before you left. Well, now we're going to, in about five
months.
"So
you see I can't come now. It would be one thing for you and me to live on the
orbiter and to know that we'll die there. Being together would make all that
worthwhile. But not our baby, Ben! I just can't do that.
"Of
course, after the baby is born ... if you still want me—
"Well,
well talk about it then. I promise you, Ben, dear, I want to be with you. All
of me wants to be with all of you! There must be a way!
"But
for now I can't see what it is. I—" She hesi¬tated, then said in a rush,
"I'm going to stop now, Ben, because I'm going to have to cry. I do love
you! Oh, God . . ."
And
the image faded and was gone, leaving Ben Line Pertin more alone than he had
ever been.
SIX
*
Org
Rider washed his torn garments in a rain pool and spread them on a rock to dry,
but the death-weed stench of the Watchers was still in his nostrils. He was out
of the storm area now, the rock where the stranger had been killed and where
the Watchers had treated him with such contempt far out of sight in the rain
clouds. He was cold, and his aches and pains were enormous; but he was alive
and free. It was more than he expected.
He
fished bare-handed in the pool for horny brown scuttling creatures and kindled
a small fire to broil them. They were quite like pond-dwellers he knew from his
own mountain, and when they were cooked they tasted as good. He was
overpoweringly weary, but he forced himself to catch more of the scuttlers and
prop them over the fire to smoke for his pack.
Then
he wrapped himself in his wings, and was im¬mediately asleep.
When
he awoke the first thing he felt was the black weight of the Watchman's eye
against his throat.
His
fingers closed around it, and he was close to rip¬ping it off and throwing it
in the pool. But it could not harm him while he was wearing it, he thought, and
he had not forgotten the warning about what would hap¬pen to him if he took it
off.
He
put it out of his mind. Warm and dry, he filled his waterskin, caught and
broiled one more meal of scuttlers, then strapped on his gear and dove out from
the hillside to catch the wind.
He
was more cautious than ever now, turning unex¬pectedly to search the sky behind
him to see what might be following. Nothing was, neither small Watcher nor ship
carrying the repellent creatures who had marked him with the thing around his
neck. He was not so far from the rocky, desolate upper reaches of Knife-in-the-
Sky that orgs would be unexpected. But he saw nothing like an org . . .
Until
it was almost too late.
The
far thin scream drew his eyes aloft. A pale brown fleck was dropping out of
that high gray haze, sliding down across the long blade of the summit.
It
grew as it came toward him, taking shape and color. A slim, winged fish-form of
bronze and silver: the body bronze, tapering to a narrow waist behind the
stubby wings; the tail and wingtips shining silver. It was beautiful and
terrible.
And
it was coming toward him.
Org
Rider woke out of the trance that held him and realized his danger. This was
not a dream, it was a creature that could kill him in a single careless rake of
claw or tooth. And he was exposed in the open air, where its speed and skill
were far greater than his own.
He
dived, flapping desperately, staring over his shoulder to watch it come. It
grew so close that he could see the shape of the individual lapped triangular
scales, bronze and silver. Its powerful legs unfolded, spreading cruel black
talons that stretched toward him. He closed his own wings and arrowed toward a
black crevice below, where two great boulders had tumbled together. Even in
that moment the beauty of the org choked his throat. To own that power! It was
worth the risk of his life . . .
But
it seemed his life was already forfeit; his fall was slower than the org's
dive. His weapons were useless; the bow hanging from his harness, the spear
impotent in this free-fall. Even the knife would only annoy the org, it could
not hope to prevail against that wide red mouth spiked with shining fangs.
On
impulse, without thought, he snatched the cold hard sphere of the Watchman's
eye from his throat. He did not even feel the bite of the thong as it broke
free. He flung it into the org's great mouth.
Confused,
the creature broke away, lost momentum, soared past and away. It went by with a
roar of wind and a strange falling note in its scream. It recovered almost at
once, wheeled and returned . . .
But
by then Org Rider was deep in the crevice be¬tween the boulders.
For
many hundreds of breaths the org stayed near the crevice, moaning to itself in
anger and frustration, scrabbling at the rock with its claws. Its intelligence
was too high to let it come in after him; in the cramped quarters, his spear
was a more deadly weapon than its claws. And yet it did not leave.
Its
nest had to be nearby. Org Rider knew that noth¬ing else would keep the
creature there so long. There was prey in plenty easier to find. Mere hunger
did not account for its tenacity.
The
thought was like a sniff of dream-fungus, intoxi¬cating, dizzying, a little
frightening. Where there was a nest there were eggs. Where there were eggs was
one to steal.
Methodically
Org Rider unstrapped his wings and lightened his pack. He dared not fly so
close to the org's nest. He would have to move fast, and could carry nothing
that he did not urgently need. His only way to reach the nest was to thread the
maze of spaces be¬tween the boulders, where the org might not see him and would
hesitate to attack. He wondered briefly what had become of the Watchman's eye.
Had the org swal¬lowed it? Was it broken, so that the Watchers might come angry
and avenging at any time? He could not tell.
Leaving
everything behind except for knife, compass, and a coil of rope, he breathed
heavily to charge his muscles, rocked to test his footing, crouched and
jumped.
He was only in the open for a moment, in a long surge from shelter to shelter.
The org was out of sight. He could hear its baffled screaming, but did not see
it and assumed it therefore did not see him.
The
journey to the top of the boulder pile was long and hard, and beyond it a naked
cliff rose above the highest crevice, a dozen times his height.
Org
Rider could leap that far; any of his people could. Yet it tested his strength,
and he would be ex¬posed while leaping, off balance and vulnerable when he
landed. He peered out, saw no org, and leaped with¬out allowing himself time to
be afraid.
He
soared upward, caught the slippery rock at the rim of the cliff and pulled
himself up onto it.
Before
him lay a level mile of flat, black rock. In the middle of it rose a rough pink
cone.
The
org's nest.
Although
it was in view, no more than half a dozen long leaps away, it was not yet in
reach. A great org hovered over it, scales gleaming in the high blue light of
the peak. It had not seen him, but if he approached it would be a matter of
moments only. It would never let him reach the nest.
He
needed to think. He could not remain in the open for that purpose; he spotted a
narrow crevice and scut¬tled across the flat rock, hugging the ground as
incon¬spicuously as he could.
He
drowsed and thought for a long time, and at the end of it the solution to the
problem seemed as far away as when he began. It was maddening to have come so
far and to fail now. Yet where was the choice? He could stay there for a long
time hoping that the guardian org would wander away. That hope was fool¬ish.
Far more likely the other org would give up its fruitless sentry duty at the
crevice between the boulders or below, and come up to ioin its mate; and then
he would have two to avoid. With two adult orgs nearby it was no longer a
question of being able to steal an egg,
but
of survival. Sooner or later they would find him. And that would be his death.
But
as he crouched and drowsed his problem was being solved for him. He did not
know it at first. He heard the raucous shrieks of the org, realized tardily
that there were two orgs now crying out their rage and resentment, and heard
with his mind what his subcon¬scious had been listening to for long moments: a
dull, distant slam, slam, slam unlike any other sound he had ever heard.
Cautiously
Org Rider poked his head out of the crev¬ice and was just in time to see a
brilliant flare of golden light.
Dazzled
and half-blinded by afterimages, he knew at once that again one of the small
Watchers was nearby. Squinting to see what was happening, he saw a naked
machine in the air, quartering away from him, emitting the slamming sounds and
puffs of smoke. It was cu¬riously ugly, like a stick figure of an org or a
person; it had wings, but they did not move, were rigidly ex¬tended. And the
two orgs were attacking it, screaming in fierce rage. Pieces were falling from
it, broken bits that scattered down across the face of the mountain. One seemed
to have the shape of a man, and it was from it that the yellow flare had come.
But if it was a man he had forgotten his wings and did not know how to
hand-soar to guide his landing; he tumbled end over end, disappearing from
sight. The machine itself slammed crazily on.
There
would never be a better chance.
Blind
and caught unawares, Org Rider knew he had to act. He did not stop to think. He
was out of the crev¬ice and leaping for the pink cone in less than a breath.
Now
was when he needed wings! But he did not have them, and so could only leap,
guide himself with his hands, come down with his legs already under him, and
leap again. He could hear the distant slam-slam of the machine, and the scream
of the orgs, but he dared
not
leap high enough to see what they were doing, lest the orgs see what he was
doing. At least the sounds were still distant—and he was already tumbling over
the rim of the nest.
Built
of stones plastered with org manure, it had a good, clean, dry odor, a little
like the smell of parching grain. The shallow pink cup held a single egg.
Even
in his mad haste, Org Rider took time to look at it, and to feel his heart
catch at the sight. Smooth ball, mottled bronze and blue, it was too large for
his arms to close around it. The surface felt warm and elas¬tic, yielding
slightly when he touched it. It had a friendly feel.
But
the yells of the distant parents were not friendly. Gasping with his haste, Org
Rider wound and knotted his rope to make a sling for the egg. Its weight was
al¬most nothing, not much greater than his own. He slung it over his shoulder,
scrambled to the rim of the nest, and leaped away.
A
breeze had freshened, sliding down the mountain; it was at his back, and it
made each leap half again as long as before. At the second leap he craned his
neck around. Neither orgs nor the queer slamming machine were in sight. He
could hear the distant angry baying, but it seemed less furious now. That was
not advanta¬geous; it meant the adult orgs were calming down, pre¬sumably
having destroyed the machine. It would not be long before their fierce parental
pugnacity drove them back to the guarding of the nest—and when they found it
empty their rage would become incandescent, and all directed at him.
If
they could find him.
His
life depended wholly on making sure that they did not. He came to the edge of
the tableland and leaped straight out, not even looking back.
It
took all his skill to guide his descent into the best hiding place he could
see. The bulk of the egg was a sail that unbalanced and tumbled him; the one
free
hand
he had for air-swimming was not enough to make much difference. But in the
slow, gentle gravity of his home falling could seldom be dangerous, although he
was concerned about the safety of the egg. He hit hard when he hit. At the last
moment he had thrown himself around to cushion the egg with his own body.
He
was—for the moment, at least—safe.
And
the egg was his! I
He
had landed in a vale of boulders, half buried in banks of gray, mossy stuff. A
mountain stream purled and cascaded languidly down the slope. Org Rider had
chosen the spot for that reason; as soon as he could regain the breath that had
been smashed out of him and move he scratched and leaped his way to where a
thin, bright ribbon of water leaped out from a sill of rock, and slid and
scattered behind it.
What
he had hoped for was there—a dry place be¬hind the waterfall. It would do. The
sound would drown out any noise he made, even from the keen hear¬ing of the
orgs. The spray would carry scent away. The curtain of lazily falling water
would screen them from the vision of the parent orgs . . .
"Them."
With
a start, Org Rider realized he was already thinking of the egg as if it were
grown and mature. He let himself grin with wolfish joy; the worst part was
done, that dream would yet come true!
But
now he had work to do. Cautiously he ventured out and, one eye on the sky and
both ears alert, tore armloads of moss out of the hidden sides of the boul¬ders
and carried them back to make a nest for his egg. When at last it lay safe, he
took time to rock back on his haunches and inspect it.
It
was there, real and true, and truly his. He studied every inch of its blue,
bronze-speckled surface, so smooth and warm. It had no crack or flaw. It had
not been harmed by the abduction; and, best of all, from its
warmth
and certain mysterious sounds of movement in¬side it, it showed every
indication of being very near to its hatch time.
His
heart filled to bursting with joy and pride, Org Rider sat back and rested for
a long moment, planning what next to do.
As
near as he could tell, he had come down some¬where near where the cartwheeling
figure from the slamming machine had fallen, but a long, long way from where he
had left his weapons and supplies. He was in a sort of great natural chimney,
with steep rock on all sides. He drank his fill of water from the falls, and it
was cold and sweet. He found nuts with queer paperlike shells growing nearby,
and though they tasted faintly unripe and he did not want to eat very many of
them, they stilled his hunger.
His
first step was to try to get his cache.
He
crept to the edge of the falls and looked up.
As
soon as he was away from the gabble of the fall¬ing water, he heard the distant
agonized screams of the orgs. They had learned of their loss now, it was clear.
The long moaning bellows sounded of rage and the promise of revenge.
But
they were far away, perhaps as far as the other edge of the tableland where
they had built their nest.
There
was a cluster of bee-trees nearby. Org Rider regretted that; the creatures who
hived in the trees were dreadful enemies when aroused, and it was known that
they had some chemical loathing of orgs. This would perhaps make the adult orgs
approach only reluctantly, which was good. But what if they should smell out
and attack his egg?
He
could not guard against every contingency, he de¬cided with a pang of worry and
regret; it was the first lime in his life that he had felt like a parent.
Reluctandy
(but he had no choice!) he turned his back on the egg, and started out to hunt
for better food, his cache, and a good way out of the giant chimney in which
they lay.
The
boy was gone a long time, longer than he planned, for at one point in his
search the adult orgs came wheeling and shrieking overhead and he had to
hastily bury himself in the undergrowth beneath a stand of flame-trees. Small
creatures like red insects shared his hiding place with him and, although they
did not sting, their crawling over his flesh was maddening; but he dared not
leave. He lay motionless, half drowsing, for a long, long time, not even able
to lift his head to see what was happening when the bellowing screams of the
orgs were so close that it seemed certain they had spied him. They had not; of
this he was sure, because he was still alive. When they were more distant he
dozed again, and he dreamed a frightful dream in which his cherished egg
hatched and turned into a black- winged Watcher that stank of death-weed and
came at him with a throttling-noose that bore a watchman's eye . . .
He
woke trembling, and found the orgs were gone.
He
had not located his cache or a way out, but there was food of a sort, succulent
stalks from a purple bush that tasted sweet and meaty, some torpid red water-
snakes that were dull enough to allow themselves to be caught. He returned to
his waterfall feeling cheered and expectant, looking forward to seeing his egg,
touching it, listening for its tiny slow heartbeat and the stirring sounds
inside it.
With
a wary eye out for the orgs he ducked under the lazy waterfall, and shouted
with astonishment and anger.
The
egg was there, luminously blue in the half-light under the falls. But a
creature was crouching over it—a squat man-shape, blfck-haired and nearly
naked, smashing at the egg with a red-smeared rock. The man looked up in fear
and astonishment at Org Rider's yell.
And
then, for almost the first time in his life, Org Rider felt the creeping terror
of ru^erstitious fear. He knew that man; it was the stranger from the small
Watcher. He had seen him dead.
SEVEN
*
Some
tens of thousands of light-years away from Cuckoo, on the inner curve of one of
the spiral arms of the Galaxy toward which Cuckoo was hurtling, there was a
GO-type star of no great intrinsic interest that had in orbit around it the
planet Earth.
Earth
and its dominant race, humans, were new among the galactic races. They were
fully accepted as equal members. The streets of cities like Chicago and Peking
were already used to the sight of darting She- liaks, glittering Scorpian
robots, and a hundred other races. Every major city had its own tachyon-
transmission center, through which flowed the traffic of many worlds. All the
buildings were alike in that they were huge, new, towering over the structures
around them, filled with the enormous mass of hardware that met the power
requirements of tachyon transmission. Each wore proudly the gauzy spiral that
was the em¬blem of the Galaxy.
Across
the tiled flooring of the great concourse of die tachyon center in Old Boston a
young woman named Zara Gentry walked with grace and assurance. She had been
there before. She had been almost every¬where, for Zara Gentry was a famous
stereostage personality, known everywhere for her on-the-spot re¬portage of the
Earth's doings to the Earth's people. She had been everywhere and tried almost
everything. She had in fact been herself a volunteer for tachyon trans¬port,
several years before. One copy of her lived on Sim One. Another worked and
lived in an orbiting station
around
the planet inhabited by the Boaty-Bits, in the constellation Bootes. Those two
she knew of, for they were direct copies sent from Earth. There could well be
more. The tachyon duplicates could themselves have been duplicated; there could
be a hundred Zaras, or a thousand.
It
was strange, Zara reflected, how little she knew about those other selves. They
were so much herself, and yet so different; so close to her, and so impossibly
far away.
The
whole process of tachyon transport was loaded with trauma. She well remembered
the quirky fears that had beset her when first she volunteered to be scanned,
mapped, blueprinted, and recreated thousands of light- years away. It had been
unbelievably scary; she had signed up and called to cancel her signature;
signed again and withdrawn again. At the end it was only her conscience that
made her go through with it, because by then there had been such an investment
of time and training that she could not let it be wasted.
So
she had walked into the tachyon-transmission chamber—
And,
moments later, walked out again. And it seemed that nothing had happened at
all.
She
knew with one part of her mind that every atom in her body had been identified
and placed in its exact coordinates, and that the blueprint that carried her
mi¬nutest specifications was even then racing, tachyon- borne, through the
Galaxy toward Sim One.
The
other part of her mind was wholly occupied with wondering where her date would
take her that night for dinner; and that dichotomy had been as frightening as
the process itself.
It
was frightening and unsettling to think that some¬where someone who was
exactly, identically you was doing things you did not know about, might be
terrified or joyous, angry or ill; might even be dead, and you would never
know, except as you might hear of what
had
happened to some former acquaintance. It was frightening and unsettling, but
you could not go on being frightened and unsettled forever. So you put it out
of your mind. You told yourself that you would keep in touch with your other
selves. For a while you did. The two Zaras had exchanged tachyon
communica¬tions for weeks and months, and then, less frequently, for a year or
so. They had even spoken "face to face"—at least, in tachyon-borne
stereostage communi¬cation.
But
all that was now years in the past. When she had sent the second copy of
herself to the Bootian planet she had tried to keep in touch with her, also,
but that too had trailed off.
And
now she was about to expose herself to the trauma for the third time.
Zara
grinned to herself, dodging a Purchased Person who carried a hive of Boaty-Bits
as she made her way to the elevators. I never learn, she thought good-
humoredly.
But
it was exciting, you had to admit. Especially this time! This copy of herself
was going clear out of the Galaxy entirely, to the strange object identified as
Lambda One and more familiarly called Cuckoo. With less fear than anticipation,
she rose to the hundred and eighteenth floor and reported for her checkup
inter¬view.
The
man in charge of her transport was old, tanned, lean, good-looking; he had
bushy white eyebrows and a great sweep of white hair like high surf breaking
over his forehead. He maintained dignified objectivity in what he said, but
they had become friends over the last weeks. "Zara! It's nice to see you
again. Well. Tomor¬row you make the great leap forward. How do you feel about
it?"
On
her program Zara would have answered, "Thafs a dumb question—look at the
psych test profile in my
folder.
You know how I feel better than I do." But she wasn't on her stereostage
program; she said, "Well, a little scared. Otherwise fine." And she
smiled.
"That's
natural enough," he agreed absently, leafing through her folder.
"Mmm. Yes." Something in the folder seemed to attract his interest;
he stared at it thoughtfully for a long time. Then he raised his head and said
again, "Mmm. Yes. Have you seen the legal officer?"
"Not
yet," she confessed.
"Oh,
but that's very important!" He was upset. "Please don't put it off
any longer, Zara. The docu¬ments must be signed. You know that the copy of you
will be, to all legal intents and purposes, yourself. It can sign your name as
well as you can—no," he said, cor¬recting himself ruefully, "not
'it.' 'She.' She is the same as you, Zara. She has an equal right to all your
property and is equally obligated with you on the fulfillment of contracts,
unless you state clearly in advance which of you shall have which property and
responsibilities. You must file your statement of settlement at once!"
"I
will," she promised. "I have done this before, you know."
"Yes,
of course, but each time you create a copy you create the same problem."
Then he relented, smiling. "To be sure," he said, "when you come
right down to it, the problem is more legal than real. There isn't much chance
you'll ever see your copy again, is there? And a half-interest in a condominium
in Buzzard's Bay isn't going to mean much to the copy of you that's on Cuck¬oo.
But there is always the chance some question could arise, and so you have to
file that statement. Oth¬erwise they won't accept you for transmission."
"Don't
make that too tempting," said Zara, not wholly joking.
"Mmm,"
he said thoughtfully, and made a check¬mark on her personality-profile card.
"I
really do want to go," she said quickly. "Or at least, I'm going
to."
He
nodded. It was not an unfamiliar reaction; if the tachyon boards rejected
applicants who were doubtful they would never send anyone at all. "I see
you've been issued all the cassettes."
"And
listened to them," she said.
"So
you're about as well briefed on Cuckoo as you can get, I imagine. Do you have
any questions?"
She
said, "Well, those briefings are more distin¬guished for the questions
they raise than the answers they give, aren't they? I mean, nobody seems to
know exactly why the object's as funny as it is. The size is all wrong for the
mass, and nobody seems to understand how come there are creatures so much like
humans and Sheliaks and Boaty-Bits on it."
He
grinned. "If we knew things like that, we wouldn't have to send people
like you to find them out for you. That's why you're going." He hesitated,
look¬ing thoughtfully at her papers. "That in general, of course. But
there seems to be some particular reason for you. Do you happen to know why you
were re¬quested by name?"
"No,
I don't," she said. "And I've wondered. The request came from Sim
One, I understand. I have a copy there. I suppose she's behind it. But we
haven't been in touch lately, so I don't know any more than you do."
"We
could send her a message, if you like. You could ask for yourself."
"Oh,"
Zara said, "actually I'm rather intrigued by the mystery. I'm not fearful
about it. That other Zara can't have changed all that much in a couple of
years. If she thinks it's a good idea for me to go to Cuckoo, then it probably
is. I mean, after all, she is me." She hesitated, then said, "The
only thing that does puzzle me is why she doesn't send a copy of herself."
The
man said with visible pleasure, "You don't know how glad I am that you
asked that. I can answer it. It puzzles me too, so I got her records. The other
Zara, you'll be pleased to know, married a man named Ben
Pertin.
He's a copy too, of course; his identification is Ben Charles Pertin. And she
expects to bear their first child in a couple of months. My impression is that
she was anxious enough to go, but not with an unborn baby going along."
"Ah!"
said Zara, vastly relieved. "I'm glad for her. What a nice thing to hear
about yourself!"
"And
you yourself, Mrs. Gentry? I see you're mar¬ried. Are you planning a
family?"
"Why,
very likely," she said, "but I'm not pregnant now."
He
nodded and closed her folder. "I think that takes care of all the loose
ends," he said. "See the legal offi¬cer; get a few more shots. Then
you'll be all ready to
go."
"I'm
ready now," Zara Gentry said.
When
she was through with the legal officer—an episode which left her with the
feeling she had signed a part of herself into slavery—she took the express
eleva¬tor that dropped her into the physical-training rooms below ground. The
splat of firearms told her the weap¬ons class was in session. She tarried at
the door, looking in at the range. The cassettes had been quite candid about
the possibility of physical danger on Cuckoo. Several transportees had already
experienced close calls, and two were dead. Besides the known preda¬tors—winged
creatures like flying seals, armed savages, creatures like Sheliaks gone mad,
and others—there were countless trillions of square miles of surface that had
been only sketchily photomapped from orbit. What dangers they held no one could
tell.
The
other thing that troubled Zara in the conscious part of her mind was that the
Zara who went to Cuckoo would not be, quite, the Zara Gentry who filled the
stereostage receivers on Earth. Cuckoo's surface gravity was so preposterously
slight that the first transportees had nearly destroyed themselves leaping
about like jumping beans. Her physical attributes would therefore
be
slightly modified. They had promised that her ap¬pearance would not be changed,
but she would be a little weaker, a little slower in reaction time. Even so,
they said, she would have to watch herself; but it was thought that a little
extra strength and speed might be helpful, against the known and unknown
dangers of Cuckoo.
The
class was ending, and one of the men caught sight of her, grinned, waved,
checked his gun with the instructor, and came toward her. "Three
bull's-eyes and twelve in the first circle," he said proudly, running a
hand though his tousled mop of red hair. He was no taller than Zara, but
weighed more than she did, and had muscles like steel and a great barrel chest.
He would need a great deal of editing, she thought, leaning forward to be
kissed. "I'm all set, dear," she said. "We're due for shots in
half an hour, and that's the last."
"Great,"
her husband said, putting an arm around her. "Cuckoo, here come the
Gentrys!"
EIGHT
*
Org
Rider's knife was at the stranger's throat before he could check himself; but
the man was so help¬less, so battered, that even the white-hot rage that the
threat to the egg brought boiling up in him wavered.
The
man was both desperate and startled. He brought his arm up, less in a gesture
of defense than as pure reflex. He was tremendously strong. His gesture brushed
Org Rider's hand and knife away as if they be¬longed to a child. The violence
of his own movement set him lurching against the sheet rock wall behind the
waterfall; his head met rock, and he slumped to the ground, stunned.
Org
Rider dropped to his knees and embraced the egg fearfully. Its bright curve
showed no damage. He pressed an ear against its warm, pliant shell, and heard
the even, faint throb of the young org's heart, along with a random skittering
noise that, Org Rider knew, meant the creature was close to hatching.
Then
he turned to the intruder.
The
crawling sensation at his back was still there. There was no doubt of it, the
man who lay before him was the man the Watchers had killed. Yet here he was,
alive! Cut, scratched, battered—all of those things. But he was not dead,
although he had been.
The
boy studied him carefully. His clothing was not quite the same as before; the
colors were different, and the puff-sleeved tunic he wore was torn and filthy.
The bright metallic things on his arms seemed different, but
they
were the same class of things as he had worn be¬fore.
~
No doubt about it, it was the same man!
It
dawned on the boy that this man was the figure he had seen falling from the
slamming machine. Perhaps in that there was some sort of explanation; perhaps
the machine laid eggs that hatched into identical creatures like this one. He
had never heard of such a thing, but he had never heard of a dead man being
alive again, either.
Remembering
that the man in his previous life had spoken a few intelligible words, Org
Rider said care¬fully, "Are you hungry?"
The
man opened his eyes warily. There was no com¬prehension in them. He stroked die
metallic clutter on his wrist with his other hand as if the effort were too
much for him, and motioned the boy to speak again.
"Are
you hungry?" Org Rider repeated. "I have some food."
The
stranger shook his head, but his eyes fell on the pouch of food Org Rider had
dropped. He stretched out his hand toward it.
"You
are hungry, then," Org Rider said. Quickly he cut a slice of flesh from a
watersnake and tried it. The taste was sweetish and good. He put a thin strip
of it against the stranger's bearded lips. The man whimpered and sucked at it
eagerly.
"It
will be better cooked," the boy said, and offered some of the tender
purple stalks. The stranger chewed at them while Org Rider whittled a drill,
twirled it to light a fire, and set some of the snake meat to roast. It did not
take long, and the fragrant scent of roasting meat was as tantalizing to Org
Rider as to his guest; they shared the first half-cooked strips contentedly
while the rest were cooking.
Then
Org Rider forgot the stranger, because the egg made a sound like ripping cloth.
In
the nest, the egg was rocking from the thrusts of
some
internal eruption. A dark split opened, and spread across the luminious,
bronze-flecked blue shell.
Org
Rider squatted next to the nest, watching in fas¬cination, urgently needing to
help but not knowing how. Inside the egg dull thumping sounds accompanied
thrusts against the thick internal membrane. It ripped, and ripped again.
And
through the rips the boy could see the dark, wet head of the baby org glistening.
The
stranger limped over to watch him, then shrugged and went to the waterfall. He
drank thirstily out of the shell of a seed cone, his eyes fixed on the boy and
the hatching egg.
The
org's head burst through the slit, slick and black. Almost at once it began to
dry, changing to a pale, tawny color. The huge eyes opened, the pupils wide and
black and mysterious, rimmed with luminous blue. It fixed its gaze at once on
the boy.
Fascinated,
Org Rider stared back. It seemed to be resting, and he thought its gaze was
pleading with him. For what? He could not guess, until he saw that the infant
org was laboring for breath and realized that the effort to tear through the
membrane was exhausting for it. Org Rider seized the edge of the glistening
mem¬brane and hacked at it with his knife.
The
rest of the great head came free. The short trunk uncoiled, opened, waved. The
hatchling made a faint, strangled, mewing cry, and the odor of its breath came
up around the boy, a warm, sharp scent like the nest it had come from, a little
like the odor of parching grain. Org Rider leaned forward and wiped from the
tip of the infant's trunk a thick brown clot. It was breathing more freely now.
Satisfied,
the boy relaxed his attention and realized for the first time that, over the
clash of the waterfall, the stranger was shouting at him. Org Rider turned, and
saw the man, face savage with fear, pointing toward the sky.
The
boy ran out from under the waterfall, and peered
upward.
Was it the Org's parents, still hunting their off¬spring?
As
soon as he was out from under the falls the sound he heard told him it was not:
a roaring, familiar whine.
It
was the mottled ship of the Watchers, or one so much like it that he could not
tell the difference. It was flying low over the pool below the waterfall, its
sound magnified by the black walls surrounding him to a shout of distant
thunder.
In
sudden dread the boy realized he had been seen.
He
turned in indecision, peering back into the cave behind the torrent. Would they
take the tiny org away from him? Worse—he remembered the warning about the
Watchman's eye; and he had thrown it away. Would they punish him?
The
gaunt stranger babbled fresh gibberish and pointed again at the sky, and the
boy saw that a gray fleck had separated from the ship. The ship flew on, up
over the rim of the canyon and away; the fleck dropped toward the pool and in a
moment spread great wings and circled gently down toward where they were
stand¬ing.
Org
Rider pushed the stranger back inside the cave, and ran to his org. Its jaws
free, it had ripped the lumi¬nous membrane off, except for a few rags that
still clung stickily. Its tail unfolded, wet and delicate. Its whole body burst
out in a rich cloud of that parched- grain fragrance.
It
was twice the boy's length, now that its full dimen¬sions had unfolded out of
the egg, but it was still an infant, and drained of strength by the struggle to
hatch. Its short trunk lifted to sniff him, then it slumped to the damp rock
floor of the cave.
The
boy began to rub it down with his wadded shirt, drying it and warming it,
crooning to it a song he had learned from his mother. Sleepily the org arched
its thin body to meet the strokes of his hand, and it's voice seemed to echo
the song.
It
was out of the question to leave the org, and
impossible
to move it. It would be an hour or more before it could fly, and he could not
carry it and his food, and still manage the tricky rocks around the falls. He
stared desperately at the stranger, wondering how to get him to help.
And
then beyond the stranger, in the luminous arch under the edge of the waterfall,
another figure ap- - peared.
It
was not a watcher; it was human, tall, with a fire- red beard and keen green
eyes.
"Redlaw!"
the boy gasped.
"Young
Org Rider," acknowledged the giant, grin¬ning through die flowing beard.
"I see you've got your org after all!"
The
giant reached out for the boy's hand. Org Rider drew back instinctively,
fingers leaping toward his knife, before he decided the gesture was friendly
and allowed Redlaw to shake hands with him. "I followed you here,"
the giant boomed. "Saw two adult orgs look¬ing more frantic than usual,
and wondered if you were what they were worrying about. I see you were!"
The
boy grinned, then said, "Followed me? But how? I got rid of the Watchman's
eye—"
The
giant's laughter boomed. "Clever about it, too, weren't you? We located
it—inside an org! And the Watchers aren't going to like it if they see you
again, so I recommend you don't let them. So you'll have to get rid of
that!" And his finger shot out to point at the compass on the boy's wrist.
"But
that was my grandfather's!"
"No
doubt. But where he got it, or someone before him, was from the Watchers. It's
trade goods, and they can trace you by it as easily as by a Watchman's eye.
Made for that purpose."
"But—but,"
the boy said, "but if that's so, why didn't they come down and kill
me?"
"Thank
me, boy!" the giant boomed. "I convinced them you'd been eaten by
that org. When it came to explaining how one telltale was inside the org and
the
other
here, I really rose to the occasion! Said it had been excreted. But you'll have
to take it off before you leave this place, of they'll know you're still alive;
org excrement doesn't move from place to place by itself." He peered
wonderingly at the stranger, then at the egg. "What's all this?" he
demanded.
"My
org!" the boy said proudly. "Look, he's hun¬gry!" And ignoring Redlaw
for the moment, he ran to slice strips from the water-snake remnants and offer
them to the hatchling. It devoured them delightedly, great eyes fixed on the
boy. It had preened itself and its external surface was now nearly dry. Most of
its body became a pale gold, shading into white along the tips of its tail and
its wings. Not yet scaled like the adult orgs, it was covered with a fine
velvet that felt like fur but was in fact soft fleshy protuberances that would
turn into chitin.
Org
Rider fetched water in a seed-cone cup and doled it out to the infant, which
slobbered its gratitude and demanded more of the watersnake.
While
the boy was tending his org, Redlaw had dis¬covered the stranger. Org Rider
paid no attention until the giant called his name.
"We've
got to move on, boy," he said. "Take off that compass. Don't break
it; they'll know it if you do that. Just leave it here."
"Move
on where?" Org Rider asked. "My org shouldn't travel yet—"
"No
choice, boy," Redlaw boomed. "This fellow you've got here, he's what
the Watchers are looking for. Says his name's Ben Yale Pertin"—he
pronounced the alien syllables carefully—"whatever that means. And he's
from outside the sky."
"That's
insane," Org Rider said seriously. "There's no such place."
Redlaw
nodded somberly. "Time was I'd have agreed with you, but the Watchers
think there is. They spotted him somehow. It's not you they're looking for
right
now; it's him. And if we want to keep him alive we've got to get him where they
won't look."
"Where's
that?" the boy demanded bitterly, slipping the compass off his wrist and
gazing at it. "They know where this is. They must know you are here—"
"Not
necessarily," the giant boomed, but his voice was thoughtful. "I
crawled out through a disposal hatch when they weren't looking. —But you're
right about the telltale. When they miss me, they might come zero¬ing in on it.
And I don't know, boy, if the three of us can travel fast enough to get out of
range."
"Four
of us!" The boy turned to look at the org, now sleeping. It stirred and
crooned in its sleep, the pliant trunk lifting to sniff toward him.
"There's Babe," he said. "I won't leave him."
"Is
that his name, Babe?"
"It
is now. And he can't travel yet."
"You
mean he might travel right away from you, don't you?"
The
boy held his ground. "I'm not taking that chance!" he said.
"I
don't know, boy," Redlaw said at last. "Our friend here probably
can't travel very fast anyway. But we can't just stay here. They won't just
kill us, boy, they'll eat us right up, you and me and your org. This other
fellow might not be that lucky; they'll want him to talk."
"Talk
about what?"
"Where
he came from. Weapons. What he's up to, him and his friends that pop up all
over." Redlaw looked ill at ease, then suddenly he grinned. "I know!
We'll use their own telltale to confuse them! I can move fast enough by myself;
I'll take it a good long way down Knife-in-the-Sky and drop it off a cliff
some¬where. Let them hunt it there! They won't have any reason to come back
here then, and this is as cozy a spot as we'll find." He was already
standing, beginning to strap his wings on again. "Keep our friend fed,
boy,"
he
said. "Stay out of sight! I'll be back in a thousand breaths or so—if I'm
lucky!"
It
was more than a thousand breaths. It became fif¬teen hundred, then two
thousand.
Org
Rider could have stayed in the cave forever, de¬lighted with watching his
hatchling grow stronger every breath; but the growth required food, and he had
at last to steal out from under the waterfall and forage. Red- law had left his
cleaver; the boy took it and bounded along the river course to the forest,
where huge fat golden moths trailed gray wakes of sickly bittersweet fragrance.
The boy despaired of catching one of them without exposing himself, but the
trees themselves were sources of food; he leaped to hack off huge seed-cones
with the cleaver, split them open and found them full of edible seeds as well
as wriggling blind horned grubs, probably those of the moths.
When
he came back to the cave behind the waterfall the stranger called Ben Yale
Pertin was sleeping again. The boy regarded him with suspicion tinged with
fear. He had not forgotten that he had seen this man die once; he did not
understand how it was he was alive again, but something about it made the bristles
at the back of his neck crawl.
But
for the moment Babe was more important. The young org was awake and eager; he
drained the water Org Rider brought him, then whimpered and crooned for more
food. The grubs went into his capacious maw so fast that before the boy knew it
they were gone, and he and his sleeping guest—or captive?—were still unfed. No
matter. Tbe humans could go hungry. A new-hatched org had to eat or die.
The
stranger woke briefly, just long enough to drink some water, look around for
food, find a few scraps, and return to sleep. Org Rider sat with his hatchling,
singing softly to it as his mother had taught him. It pleased him immensely as
it responded; but it woke again to be fed, and the scraps that were left were
meager.
Another thousand breaths later the boy decided he had to forage once more. At
the waterfall's edge he paused uncertainly, then dived for the shelter of the
vegetation.
At
once he realized he was in danger. The sound of the waterfall had drowned die
sound that came from the sky, the shrieks of the angry adult orgs.
He
burrowed under a thick cluster of tough gray- green vines, inedible and useless
to him but not, he dis¬covered, to some tiny biting creatures that disputed
pos¬session with him. It was many hundreds of breaths before he dared venture
out.
He
stood beside the vines, listening. The shrieks of the orgs were far away again.
But there was something else; a clattering sound, more like the sound of the
stranger's slamming machine than anything else the boy could remember hearing,
but not much like that, either.
Something
appeared over the lip of the canyon and dropped toward him. As it hit the
pebbly fringe of the pool it made the clattering racket, was followed by
something else like it, and then by the huge form of Redlaw, dropping easily
down toward the boy.
"Hurry!"
the giant cried. "There are orgs up the slope, and a Watcher ship cruising
around. Get this stuff inside!"
"But
I've got to find food," the boy protested.
"You
won't have a mouth to eat it with if we don't get under cover," the giant
promised grimly. Org Rider could not argue with that clear wisdom. The
clattering things turned out to be collections of queer metal shapes, held
together by vines. He took one batch, Red- law the other, and they managed to
get them inside the cave.
Then,
panting hard, the giant said proudly: "I found it, boy! I found his
slamming machine! Couldn't carry the whole thing, it was banged up so bad. But
I took aU the loose pieces and brought them back."
From
the floor the stranger who called himself Ben Yale Pertin propped himself on an
elbow, staring at the
collection
of bits and pieces. He said something in his unintelligible speech and
creakingly got to his feet. Dried blood was black on his nearly naked,
half-starved body. Org Rider felt compassion for him, mingled with the dread
and the anger. Not much of the anger was left, since Babe had not been harmed
by the man's at¬tempt to crack the egg and eat it, but there was still a
vestigial core of dread.
The
man shuffled over in his curious stumbling gait and thumbed through the
hardware excitedly. He fumbled out a flat black oblong with a handle and
touched it in some way that Org Rider did not under¬stand; it sprang open,
revealing queer-shaped shining things that looked like tools. With them the
stranger be¬gan to assault the bangles he wore on his wrist. Org Rider
involuntarily stepped back, remembering how those bangles the other stranger
had seemed to speak to him with a voice of their own.
"Go
to it, Ben Yale Pertin," Redlaw boomed lustily. "Fix up your gadgets
for us! That's what I want you to do!"
"What
is?" Org Rider demanded.
"Why,
I want him to repair those trinkets of his. They're powerful things, boy!
Weapons. Machines. I don't understand them, but I know they're something that's
never been seen in the world before, and I want them."
"For
what?"
"Ah,"
Redlaw boomed in delight, "for the big job that's ahead of us, son! This
funny-looking fellow is our chance to deal with the Watchers. Nothing in the
flatworld has a chance to break their power, certainly not your people. Not
even me, and I know a good deal more than anyone else you've ever met about
weapons and how to use them. But this lad has weapons I mean to have."
Org
Rider stared at the scarecrow figure disbeliev- ingly. "He's only a
man," he said. "Not much of a man
at
that. Our potter was bigger than he is, and I beat the potter in fair
fight."
"You
won't beat this one, boy. He's stronger than you think."
"Stronger
than the Watchers?"
"His
weapons are! And he'll give them to us, I promise. Or—"
"Or
what?" the boy asked, as Redlaw came to a halt.
After
a moment the giant finished his thought som¬berly. "Or we'll kill him and
take the weapons away from him," he said.
NINE
*
When
they stepped out of the tachyon-trcmsport chamber, Jon and Zara Gentry were
greeted by a fe¬male creature, human in shape, but with great angel wings.
"Welcome
to Ground Station One," she chimed in a voice like sweet bells. "My
name is Valkyrie, and I am pleased to see the first representatives of Planet
Earth arrive on the surface of Cuckoo."
Zara
looked doubtfully at her husband, then reached out a hand, which Valkyrie took
politely. Clearly she had been with human beings in some other environment
before coming to Cuckoo; the custom of the handshake did not disturb her at
all.
Beyond
the silver girl floated a glittering cloud of Boaty-Bits that changed shape
like a swarm of diamond bees. Over them, partly obscured by their dazzle, a
T'Worlie swam gently in the air. From it came a shrill whistle that Zara's Pmal
rendered into, "I identify you, Zara Doy."
Zara
looked doubtfully at her husband, who shrugged. "I am Zara Doy," she
said. "Or was. This is my husband. In our custom I have taken his name and
so I am called Zara Gentry now."
The
T'Worlie did not respond. In the languid gravity of Cuckoo it did not need to
exert itself to fly, it was enough for it to ripple its wings slowly. From it
there came a sharp but not unpleasant odor like the pickle jar in a warm pantry.
Neither
of the Gentrys had ever seen individual
Boaty-Bits
or TWorlie in the flesh before—if "flesh" was the right word for the
Bootians, whose chemistry was not very like organic. They had no difficulty in
rec¬ognizing them from stereostage pictures, but nothing in the stereoviews had
prepared them for the sense of whirling power in the Boaty-Bits, or the acrid
odor of the T'Worlie. "My identity," it rapped metallically through
the Pmal translator—how quickly, Zara thought, they became accustomed to listening
to that rather than the shrill pipings of the T'Worlie itself— "can be
described as one Nommie. We did have mutual identification on Sun One, but I
perceive you are a dif¬ferent version."
"And
I knew you, too," sang the silver girl sweetly. "Will you look around
your new home?"
It
was a confusing new home. From the inside it was hard to make out a plan, but
Zara Gentry had seen stereo- stage images of it: spherical shells blown out of
some transparent golden-hued material, linked together and outfitted to meet
the needs of its inhabitants.
They
had arrived in the largest of the bubbles, which was elevated above the others.
From it Zara and her husband could look out to see a distant flat plain rimmed
by mountains. They were themselves on a mountain, for she could see, just
outside the bubble, rocky slopes that fell away endlessly. Turning to look out
the other side, she saw a shelf of woodland, and then die rest of the mountain
rising incredibly toward the sky. Its top was not in sight. Once, as they
ap¬proached a Sheliak, the shapeless bun exuded a stalk that formed lips and
made a sound their Pmal transla¬tors rendered as: "It gives joy to
encounter you once more."
It
was disconcerting to be recognized by creatures she had never seen. Flushing
faintly, Zara repeated her apologies for being a different version; it was soon
ap¬parent to her that nearly all the beings here were direct copies from
individuals on the artificial planetoid called Sun One, where all the races of
the Galaxy had
representatives
to mediate and interpret their differing interests and goals.
After
so long a voyage—tens of thousands of light- years—Zara felt she should rest
and freshen up. But of course tachyon transport was not tiring. The patterns of
their bodies, carried by faster-than-light tachyon parti¬cles, had not
"really" moved anywhere. When they were in transit they were only
concepts, so to speak; they were patterns, and had no more sensation or thought
than a schematic diagram. Nevertheless she was fatigued. It was culture shock,
she thought: the im¬pact of so much change in so short a time. She pleaded
fatigue in any case and without demurrer—no two races of the Galaxy really
understood each other's foi¬bles—Valkyrie showed them their own quarters.
In
the "morning" Zara woke to her first "day" on Cuckoo and
incautiously got out of her cocoon as if she were still on Earth. Even edited,
her muscles were dis¬proportionate to Cuckoo's needs. She flew off the airbed
as if it had exploded, catching her balance at the very last second necessary
to keep from crashing into the wall.
The
noise roused her husband, in the bunk over her own. He opened his eyes and
said, "I dreamed we were on Cuckoo." He looked around and added,
"I never had a dream turn out to be true before."
Zara
was listening only politely; she had gone at once to their stereostage, to
refresh her memory of the place to which they had exiled themselves for the
rest of their lives.
Cuckoo
was an enormous ball that hung in empty space, forty thousand light-years outside
the fringing arms of the Galaxy.
It
had been a puzzle for all the Galaxy's scientists since the cruising robot
scoutships of the bat-winged T'Worlie first detected it. It was a perfect monad
of polar opposites: huge and hard-crusted, yet with an av¬erage density not
much above that of a total vacuum.
Alone
in space in the emptiness between galaxies, heading toward the Milky Way at a
velocity that was a substantial fraction of c.
There
was no such thing as day or night on the sur¬face of Cuckoo. There was no
external object bright enough to light it up. What light there was to see by
came from bright phosphorescing clouds that hung in its thick air.
It
was as big as a solar system, nearly two A.U. in diameter. Did it rotate? Yes,
in a manner of speaking— to Zara the question was confusing, coming down to
ro¬tation relative to what? Relative to the nearest globular cluster of the
Milky Way Galaxy, Cuckoo turned on its axis once every eight hundred-odd Earth
days. To na¬tives of Cuckoo the rotation would have been difficult to
understand and of no importance at all; there was hardly ever anything to see
from the flatlands where they lived, and even from the high mountains it was
only occasionally that one might catch a glimpse of the Milky Way. It would take
many generations to realize that that tipped spiral puddle of light rose on one
hori¬zon and, over the course of an Earthly year and more, slowly climbed to
its zenith and disappeared below the western sky. The Milky Way was not the
only thing that could be seen in the sky—M-31 in Andromeda was quite visible
from the mountains, with a little luck, as were the Magellanic Clouds. But the
Milky Way was by far the biggest and brightest object, occupying nearly half
the sky when fully risen.
None
of these were of any use in telling time. Ground Station One was on galactic
arbitrary standard time, a metrication that cycled at some thirty Earth hours.
Zara found out quickly that it was close enough to a terrestrial day to be
recognizable, different enough to be disconcerting. It made their first
"day" very long.
Even
so, there was hardly time enough to do all they had to do. The briefings on
Earth had been intriguing and even useful; but here in the face of the massive
reality of Cuckoo, swelling all around them, both of the
Gentrys
had everything to learn. It was exhausting. They spent hours just in learning
to deal with the flimsy gravity of Cuckoo. Even in their down-muscled edited
forms, every step sent them flying at first. ("I know I've been trying to
lose a few pounds," Jon grinned, "but this is ridiculous.") They
had to learn to deal with the representatives of the nine other races in Ground
Station One. T'Worlie, Sheliaks, Scorpians, and all, each had its own purposes
and needs, and all had as much right to be there as Zara and Jon. More, thought
Zara fairly; the galactic culture exchange had been going on for thousands of
years before humanity had become aware of it.
And
above all they had to learn what was on Cuckoo itself.
There
existed, in the central workroom, a three- dimensional stereostage program
which, on command, conjured up a slowly spinning image of the body itself. Much
of it was blank even yet; the tachyar mapping, scanning the surface of Cuckoo
from the orbiting space station, had not completed even one full revolution,
and some ninety percent of the surface of Cuckoo had been mapped only at
extremely long range or not at all. This did not at first appear. The basic
sphere was wholly featureless to the naked eye, except for some blurry dis-
colorations. The program could on command magnify any desired portion. Where
the scan was complete, such portions showed seas, mountain ranges, forests,
deserts—a thousand different kinds of locales. This one littie area that they
were now exploring Zara saw with dismay, was only an insignificant point on the
globe— yet it stretched half the diameter of Europe! There was simply too much
to map. Less detail showed on their globe than the maps of the Elizabethan
admirals had showed of the interior of Africa.
Valkyrie
was a patient teacher and even-tempered friend. Zara found herself relating to
the silvery, winged creature as if she were another human. It was a shock to
remind herself that this shape was probably nothing
like
Val's "real" body, in whatever hellishly inhospita¬ble environment
she had lived in on her home world. It had been edited into a more viable form,
but Zara knew very well that the shape they saw was not her own.
Fortunately
for mankind, most of the races of the Galaxy were close enough to
oxygen-breathing, water- based mammals that the consensual common environ¬ment,
when races met, was usually in an atmosphere human beings could endure. Even
races like the Scorpi- ans and the Sheliaks could tolerate it; it was not what
they were used to, but it did not matter, since one was robot and the other so
protean that it could survive any¬where. For those races to whom oxygen and
water were poison, there were two alternatives. They could borrow the bodies of
oxygen-tolerating species— humans were very popular for this—by inserting
tachyon-coupled transponders into their brains. The bodies were then wholly
controlled by the creatures who had taken them over. Zara had seen enough of
such men and women, incurable criminals called Pur¬chased People; they were
common enough on Earth. The other alternative was to edit the
"pattern" trans¬ported by the tachyons into some form that could
stand air, water, and the temperature limits of the consensual environment.
Val's people had chosen that way to go.
To
be sure, editing was not uncommon for all races. Zara and Jon themselves were
edited. Their physical strength was an actual handicap on Cuckoo, so their new
bodies were altered in the physics and chemistry of the musculature to a sort
of compromise between what was appropriate to Earth, and what was desirable on
Cuck¬oo, where each of them weighed only a few pounds. At the same time their
proportions had been altered, making them taller and thinner, and thus less
strange for the natives of Cuckoo.
They
were impatient to start to explore the surface of Cuckoo; it was what they were
there for. Val apolo¬gized, in that voice like the tinkling of sweet bells:
their
equipment
was not yet ready; their flying-belts had to be made to measure, and their new
measurements had not been available. They would come soon, she prom¬ised.
Meanwhile—
Jon
halted her. "What I don't know," he said, "is what happened to
the other parties that have gone out. I understand they didn't come back. I
don't know why."
"They
died," Val chimed sweetly.
Zara
said, conscious of an unease in her body, "Well, we know that much. We
don't know what happened, though." There was something working inside her
that she could not quite analyze: a feeling that she should be more
terrified—it was death they were talking about— and an opposite, intellectual
understanding that said that this life they now had was only an appendage to a
"real" life back on Earth, and its death would be only an episode
that they "really" might not even ever know. It was fundamentally
disturbing, a thought she could not quite deal with and could not wholly
suppress.
But
Val was answering their questions: "We have dispatched eight individuals
to the surface direct from the orbiter, prior to the establishment of this
station," she chimed. "All eight have terminated contact with the
orbiter. Five are known to be dead. The other three are probably also dead. Six
of them were human beings and two Sheliaks—actually," she corrected
herself, "one was a human being and one a Sheliak, replicated respectively
six and two times."
"Persistent
human being," Jon commented grimly. "What killed him?—them?"
"It
is not known in all cases," Val said brightly. "Please come."
And she spread her great silvery wings and arrowed out of the smaller chamber
where they had been talking, into the great central bubble. A Sirian eye was
hovering just before a stereostage, patiently studying the scene it portrayed;
it did not look around as they came in, but there was a strong sting of ozone
in the air. Jon and Zara saw that there was a whole bank of
stages
beneath the transparent belt that gave them their view out onto the surface of
Cuckoo, each with a differ¬ent scene. Val touched the controls of an unused
stage and it filled with a shining silver mist that swirled and hardened into
an image of a mountain peak.
"This
is the top of the mountain we are on," Val explained. "Observe the
bare rocks. Look closely." She waved, and the peak shot nearer so that
they could see details. Something that glowed with a faint, unpleasant bluish
sheen was clinging to the rock. "That slime," she said, "appears
to be a part of a growth process in the mountain. It is violently
corrosive—whether through chemical or radioactive reactions we are not sure.
The second Sheliak came in contact with it, and literally rot¬ted to death
while still in communication."
Zara
shuddered. Jon said, "It sounds unpleasant."
Val
turned her harshly beautiful stare on him. "It is probably quite
undesirable for organic creatures," she agreed. "As you know,
Sheliaks do not experience pain in the same way as most sentients. This one was
able to describe what was happening until its central nervous system failed
entirely. It was not attractive," she fin¬ished thoughtfully. Zara
wonderingly thought that, whatever the metallic form Val wore as a convenience,
in her native state she might well be as frail and deli¬cate, even, as a human.
"There
may have been other deaths due to the slime," Val went on. "The three
of which we have cer¬tain knowledge, however—the other Sheliak and two of the
men—were due to flying creatures." She manipu¬lated the controls and
displayed an org. "Also," she said, "there are intelligent
machine-using creatures of which little is yet known. They may be involved.
And, of course, there are analogs of many galactic races. There is no shortage
of dangers on Cuckoo. We simply do not yet know what they all are."
Zara
Gentry turned slowly, studying the bank of stages. The ones that were in use
were panning slowly across a vista of woods, plains, and lakes. These were
only
monitors, through which the sentients present in Ground Station One could see
what was being transmit¬ted to the orbiter and on by tachyon transmission to
receivers all through the Galaxy itself, where the images were being recorded
and studied. As they watched, one of the stages emitted a harsh electronic
squeal for atten¬tion. It stopped panning and locked onto something large and
winged.
"Found
something," Val chimed. "That is one of the flying creatures. The
stage is programmed to follow it for a period of time, in case we wish to study
it. If not, it will resume scanning shortly. And over there"—she pointed
to the stage in front of the Sirian eye—"is what is perhaps the most
severe real danger."
The
stage revealed a vehicle. Zara asked in astonish¬ment, "The machine
users?"
"Yes,"
the silvery girl agreed. "Those creatures have no analog in the Galaxy.
They apparently are evolved au¬tochthons, and may be eligible for participation
in the galactic councils. But much of the other life is not na¬tive."
She
touched the controls again, and displayed a tree that seemed to be emitting a
sort of shimmering fog.
Zara
looked closer, and gasped in surprise: "Are they bees? No, wait—I think
they're Boaty-Bits!"
"Yes,"
Val chimed. "Bootians. And here is a re¬cording of Sheliaks." She
displayed another image, then another and another. "Antarans. Canopan
semilizards. Some of these are not to be found in this vicinity, but do exist
in other areas of the surface of Cuckoo. Alto¬gether twelve of the sentient
races of the Galaxy have been logged on Cuckoo, including—"
And
she touched the controls again, and showed the figure of a tall, spare woman in
a breechclout, grinding grain.
"Human
beings!" Zara Gentry cried. "How did they get here?"
"How
did any of them get here?" the silvery girl chimed. "That is a
primary mission for us, to find Out
how
that happened. It is definitely established that, however it happened, it was a
long time ago: there have been marked evolutionary changes. You can see some
physical differences in your own race, no doubt. And some of the
species—Canopans and Antarans in partic¬ular—have regressed to nonsentient
forms, or at least to nonculture forms. The Bootians may retain hive
intelligence, we're not sure because we have not been able to communicate and,
as you know, they do not un¬der normal circumstances employ artifacts. The only
ones we are sure are nonregressed are your own race, and a small colony of
Sheliaks, very far from here."
"It's
crazy," Jon Gentry said wonderingly.
The
silvery girl laughed like sleighbells. "Of course! Isn't that why the
object has its name? It was one of your own people, I think, who originally
called it 'Cuck¬oo.' "
Their
tailored flying equipment arrived, designed and built on Sun One and
transmitted via tachyon transport to them here. The Gentrys strapped it on
awkwardly. None of the other sentients in Ground Station One could be of much
help. Val had no need of the flying suits, having wings; as had the Sirian eye,
the Scorpian robot, and the T'Worlie. In any case the anatomies were so
different that the Sirian, for instance, simply could not understand the
concept of a belt.
The
first items they put on were wings. Zara stroked them between her fingers
doubtfully; they were ridicu¬lously tiny, proportionately smaller than the
membranes that supported a flying squirrel. "They are only for
di¬rectional control," Val chimed. "And perhaps for a gentle landing,
if for any reason your drive should fail."
Zara
was still doubtful. But her husband seemed to accept it, and she looked
further. The drive unit itself strapped to their backs. It was simple
pulse-jet. It was designed to require only water as "fuel"—not really
fuel, but a working medium that would have to be re¬placed as it was
discharged. The actual energy source
was
a compact star of radioisotopes, which released heat on command. The heat
flash-boiled the water. The exploding gas for the jet was only steam. The water
was carried in two kidney-shaped flasks of soft plastic strapped around their
waists.
"TTiey
look very small," Zara said doubtfully.
"The
first exploring parties had larger drive equip¬ment," Val chimed.
"Some had actual vessels, and they rode inside. It did not keep them
alive."
Jon
glanced at his wife, and said quickly: "Let's try them out!"
They
worked beautifully. The hammering sound of the jet was unpleasandy close to the
base of their skulls, but as they gained speed the sound seemed to dwindle
behind them.
They
returned to the bubble complex rather regret¬fully; it was a joyous thing to be
able to swoop and circle around in the thick air of Cuckoo!
The
rest of their equipment was simple enough. Per¬sonal necessities: soap,
toothbrushes, toilet paper, changes of clothing. Food—not much of it, just iron
rations, heavy on protein and vitamins but by no means tempting to the palate
or calculated to satisfy a large appetite. "I'm not too crazy about living
on that stuff for a week," Jon grunted.
"You
need not," Val sang. "You eaters can subsist off the native flora and
fauna well enough. You have eaten meals prepared from it already."
"That
steak last night?" Zara exclaimed.
"Yes.
And the salad. And the beverage. Of course, for myself I need only energy, and
I get that from the power packs. But I understand there is as much of the biota
here that is edible as there is on your own planet."
That
left only one item. With some dismay, Zara hefted a gun that had been
custom-built for her hand. "The lower trigger is a projectile,"
Valkyrie said. "The upper, a laser beam. Lower for food, upper to kill
in¬stantly."
"What
about you?" Jon demanded.
Valkyrie
tolled somberly, "I have my own weapons built in, Jon Gentry. We may need
them to defend our¬selves. Remember the first eight explorers!" She hung
in the air, slowly fanning her wings, regarding them with her bright, silver
eyes. "You will need to sleep again," she said. "And when you
wake we will begin."
Zara's
breath caught in her throat. "So soon?"
"So
soon," Val echoed.
When
her husband was already in his upper bunk, face turned away from the light and
the gentle sounds of his breathing becoming deeper with sleep, Zara Gen¬try
lingered in front of the tiny mirror, stroking her face with cream. She was not
looking at herself; she was staring into space and had forgotten what she was
doing.
What
had made her forget was something she had remembered: that tens of thousands of
light-years away, another Zara Gentry was, at that very hour, per¬haps making
her way through the crowded flyways of New York toward the stereostage studios
for her regu¬lar nightly appearance. What would she be talking about, this
other Zara? Her emotions when she volun¬teered for tachyon transport to Cuckoo?
Her immense relief when she stepped out of the chamber and found she was still
on Earth?
Zara
absently wiped the cream from her face and rested her chin on her hands,
framing the sentences in her mind that that other Zara Gentry would be using to
open the broadcast: "Well, friends, I walked out of the chamber and back
to Earth"— cut to long shot of the tachyon-transport building, pan of the
chamber itself with Zara coming out of it—"and it was queer. Queasy. I
don't know how to describe it. I knew that here I was. And yet at the same time
I was somewhere else: out on the surface of Cuckoo, so far away that I can't
even see it with the biggest telescope on Earth, / was entering a whole new
existence."
She
caught herself reaching for the stereostage
recorder,
to make a note for the opening of her next broadcast.
There
would be no need for that. Not here, not ever here. Whatever else happened,
this Zara Gentry was forever doomed to stay on Cuckoo. Oh, perhaps she could
physically be carried to the orbiting station in a rocket, if she swung
sufficient weight. But that was most unlikely, and that she would ever leave in
any other way was impossible.
But
after a moment she did reach for the stereostage recorder, and said into it:
"For transmission to Zara Day Gentry on Earth. Zara, dear—dear me!—myself,
dear ... I don't know how to address me! But I am here and well. Jon is also
well, and in a few hours we are going to begin to explore the surface of
Cuckoo. In my edited form I am tall and thin, just as I always wanted to be.
And—dear distant self—I can tell you one other thing about me: I am afraid. Not
panicky. Not crippled by it. But scared."
Scared
or not, she went on to give a bright, entertain¬ing ten minute account of what
had happened since ar¬riving on Cuckoo.
It
was the least a girl could do for herself, she re¬flected, settling gendy into
her cocoon. And it was oddly comforting, to know that she would in fact be on
the stereostage worldwide one more tme—herself, not just that other Zara
Gentry. As she drifted toward sleep she thought that a girl in her position
could use all the com¬fort she could get.
A
hundred and twenty degrees of arc around the cir¬cumference of Cuckoo swung the
orbiter called Cuckoo Station. It was a strange-looldng thing, about the size
of a three-story house in its main dimensions, but with ex¬tensions that shot
spindly towers half a mile into space and trailed filmy sheets of laminated
metal and plastic for more than three miles around it. It did not look as if it
could survive the faintest summer breeze. This was correct. It could not. It
never needed to, for Cuckoo
Station
had never known an atmosphere around it; it had been created in orbit, out of
the tachyon-transport cell dropped by the doomship that had brought the
Gal¬axy's eyes and ears to Cuckoo and then gone on with its dead or dying crew.
The
sentients who inhabited Cuckoo Station were quite similar to those on Ground
Station One. This was not surprising. Most of those on Ground Station One were
duplicated copies from the orbiter itself. One indi¬vidual who was not
duplicated in the station on the sur¬face of Cuckoo was the human being named
Ben Line Pertin. Partly this was because he had already been du¬plicated enough
times on the surface of Cuckoo; he had watched himself die three ways so far,
and suspected three others. Partly it was because, for the past few ga¬lactic
days, he had reported himself sick.
He
had felt sick. Sick and despairing. When he re¬ported himself back for duty it
was not because he really wanted to get back to his work on the orbiter, it was
only because it, or anything, was better than lying in his cocoon and watching
stale repeated dramas on the stereostage. He relieved his predecessor on the
monitoring detail, a T'Worlie named Nlem, and sucking a bubble of coffee to
wake himself up began to reel disinterestedly through the transmissions of the
last few days to see if anything had happened.
Something
had.
Pertin
sat up so abruptly that his motion jerked the bulb of coffee out of his hand.
Tiling, the Sirian eye who was conducting some incomprehensible research of its
own in the monitor chamber, emitted a staccato rip¬ping sound of electrical
energy as it flung itself desper¬ately away from the sprinkling drops of
liquid. Pertin's Pmal rang with the harsh, angry accusation: "Danger! Water
deleterious! Destructive! Hostile action per¬ceived!"
"Sorry,
sorry!" cried Pertin, trying to backtrack the stereo image and at the same
time activate the emer¬gency air-purification systems. He managed, but not
without
further anger from the Sirian—reasonably enough, Pertin knew, but he was not in
a mood to be reasonable.
As
soon as possible, he spun back to the beginning of the message he had sampled.
It had been aimed at Earth, and of course intercepted routinely by the orbi¬ter
for information purposes. It was a personal message, and the face of the girl
sending it was what had startled him.
It
was Zara!
He
listened to the whole message, then turned off the stereostage, sick again and
dazed.
Zara
Gentry.
And
here on Cuckoo—only light-minutes away!— but with Jon Gentry. Her husband.
Automatically
his hand reached out for the transmis¬sion switch: he keyed it to the ground
station and croaked: "Orbiter calling, personal communication, please
respond."
The
station was on its toes—or on whatever passed for toes in a T'Worlie. The
creature who responded al¬most instandy stared out at Ben Line Pertin and said
through its Pmal translator, "Greeting, Ben Line. I have joy that you are
well again."
"Thanks,
Nlem," Pertin said. "I want to—"
"It
is now Nloom," the T'Worlie said. "Nlem is the version still aboard
the orbiter with you. Nleem is the other version transported here."
"Nloom,
then, dammit! Please. I have to get a mes¬sage through right away."
"For
whom is your message?"
"For
my w—" Ben Line stopped and swallowed. "For Mrs. Zara Doy
Gentry," he croaked. "May I please speak to her at once?"
The
T'Worlie, who had known Ben Line well enough in their time together on the
orbiter, stared at him thoughtfully out of its five eyes. Finally the Pmal
chirped, "It was my conjecture you would have a mes¬sage for her."
"Sure
I would. Can I speak to her?"
"Negative.
She has left with a survey expedition. Their circuits are fully occupied with
telemetry and necessary administrative communications at this time. There will
however be a direct channel opening in"— the T'Worlie spun in the air to
look at something out of Ben Line's field of view, then spun back to look at
him—"in about two and one-half hours. I can then re¬lay a message if you
wish."
"I'd
rather talk to her direct, Nloom," Pertin pleaded. "Can you patch
through then?"
"Affirmative,"
the T'Worlie chirped, "although that is of course contingent on Zara Doy
Gentry's desire to use available time for that purpose." Nloom hung there
silently for a moment, and added: "Friend Ben Line, it is a different
version here. She does not know you, I think. What shall I tell her of your
desire to speak with her?"
Ben
Line hesitated.
Of
course the TWorlie was right. This Zara had come direct from Earth. If she had
heard of his exis¬tence at all, it was only casually—someone her Sun One
duplicate had met there and married. She did not know him; worse, she herself
was married to another man.
What
could he say to her?
To
that question he had no answer at all.
"I
don't know, Nloom," he said dismally. "I guess—I think you'd better
forget I called. I have to think this over."
He
flipped the switch that dissolved the compassion¬ate stare of the TWorlie into
a silvery mist as the stereo¬stage went blank. He sat there, staring into the empty
tank of the stage, seeing nothing, feeling nothing but a wretched, suffocating,
overwhelming ache of loss.
TEN
*
That
other Ben Pertin, who distinguished himself with the middle name
"Yale," sat, filthy, bruised, and exhausted, ravenously tearing with
his teeth at the flesh of a kind of watersnake, watching the skinny boy croon
at the monster called an org.
He
was delighted that the other human—or near- human, the one called Redlaw—had
found his equip¬ment and brought it to him. But it was badly damaged. He had
managed to repair the Pmal translator enough to get across a few words to the
man and the boy; but it was not functioning well. All he had been able to
un¬derstand was that they wanted to use him to fight some enemies—no doubt the
ones they called "Watchers." Why, he did not know. He also did not
know if he had any freedom of choice about fighting. Was he an ally or a
draftee?
But
at least he was alive, and he had not expected that much when the boy caught
him trying to break open the egg. The first thing Ben Yale tried to get across
through his Pmal translator was an apology for that. He hadn't known it was a
pet. He had only been hungry. Whether the boy had understood or not, he could
not tell. That lean, sharp Indian face was hard to read. The boy's words
through the spottily functioning Pmal had hardly been reassuring: "Mine
... not kill . . . punish!"
Now
the org was perched on a rock, swaying uncer¬tainly as it regarded the
watersnake in Ben Yale's
hands.
Pertin half-turned, watching the creature over his shoulder. It was still
learning to keep its balance. Wings not yet unfolded, it looked ridiculous,
like a trunk-faced, big-eyed fish with bird legs.
The
exploring trunk reached out toward him, and Ben Yale swore under his breath,
tore off a shred of the watersnake and threw it to the org. The boy cried
something, which the Pmal clucked over without pro¬ducing a single intelligible
word. From the curtain of spray that concealed lie cave, the man named Redlaw
said: "He says: 'Meat not spoiled? Not make org sick?'"
Ben
Yale shook his head. "It doesn't taste very good, but it doesn't seem to
be harming me any," he said. The giant muttered something to the boy, who
stared ap- praisingly at Pertin then, reluctantly, bobbed his head.
"Can
give more," the giant said generously through the Pmal.
"I
think Td rather have a drink," said Pertin, not caring whether the translator
dealt with it or not. He pushed past the giant, under the shrouding waterfall
and out toward the lake.
The
boy followed him, carefully scanning the sky. Pertin was not flattered. He knew
the boy's concern was not for his own safety, but for fear he might attract the
attention of some predator or enemy to the rest of them. Particularly to the
org.
Pertin
knelt on the gravel beach and leaned forward on his spread hands to drink. The
water was cold and good, but it gave him little pleasure.
His
position, when he thought it over carefully, was not very happy. The giant,
Redlaw, seemed to want to talk only about weapons, and he had none; they had
not been in the junk the giant had carried from the wreckage of his ship. To
the younger man, Org Rider, he appeared to be only an inconvenience, possibly
use¬ful to taste doubtful meat for the org but otherwise a net liability.
Neither of them seemed in the least inter¬ested in Pertin's reason for being on
their world. What
he
had tried to tell them of the great universe outside had been received by the
giant without comment, and by Org Rider, apparendy, without understanding; the
Pmal translator, in its damaged condition, seemed to function sporadically with
Redlaw and almost not at all with the boy.
Ben
Yale Pertin stood up and looked around him. He did not even notice the beauty
of the scene: the deep, rock-walled valley in which he stood, the lazy
waterfall behind him, the cold little lake with water so deep it looked black,
the strange, colorful vegetation. Back on the orbiter the prospect of exploring
these jun¬gles had seemed interesting, to the extent that anything could
interest him more than his own misery and loss without his wife and future.
Back on Sun One, when he and Zara had been together, it would have seemed
en¬chanting, a marvelous holiday surrounded by beauty. And farther back still,
on Earth, before he had ever submitted to tachyon transmission, when there was
still only one of him and that one knew nothing but cities and crowding, this
whole scene would have seemed a total fantasy.
Now
his eyes did not even register its color or its strangeness. It meant no more
to him than a cell.
By
the side of the lake Redlaw and the boy were building a fire, roasting nuts
they had gathered, mutter¬ing to each other, too far away for the Pmal to pick
up what they were saying and try to render it into English.
The
giant stood up and walked easily toward Pertin. His green eyes were cold and
judging. He put his fists on his hips as he stood before Pertin, towering over
him nearly two feet, and spoke in his liquid tongue, rapidly and at length.
The
Pmal, stammering to keep up, produced bursts of words: "Orgs gone.
Watchers gone. Safe to travel. Can now find other slamming machine, other man
like you. Can find killing things!"
Ben
Yale Pertin kicked a pebble aimlessly into the water. "Travel?" he
repeated. "You want me to come
with
you somewhere, to find another ship with weap¬ons?"
Redlaw
nodded vigorously, the bright beard bobbing. "Go soon now, two hundred
breaths," the Pmal rattled. "Travel long, hard. You become
ready."
Get
ready? Pertin looked around him, almost smil¬ing. What was there to do to get
ready? What to pack, what to miss? He was ready to go anywhere anytime . . .
But
for Ben Yale Pertin where was there to go?
They
did not dare fly, and Org Rider's muscles be¬gan to ache very soon with the
unaccustomed strain of trying to move at ground level, under the cover of the
trees. The young org—he called it "Babe," lovingly— wanted
desperately to fly, and so Org Rider's task was twice as hard, for sometimes he
carried the fledgling, and sometimes kept up a running stream of talk with it,
encouraging it to keep hopping along on its wobbly legs, cajoling it back when
it attempted to fly. That was what his mother had taught him to do: talk to the
in¬fant org, let it know always that you were there. She swore that the orgs
could even understand words after a while, like human children. And indeed Babe
had al¬ready seemed to know what words like "fish" and
"wa¬ter" and "meat" meant.
That
was more than the dumpy stranger knew. Org Rider did not like him. He had
gotten over the supersti¬tious fear he had felt when he first saw him bending
over Babe's unhatched egg; he could not understand how this man could be alive
when a dozen sleeps before he had seen him dead. But the puzzle had receded
into the back of his mind and lost its power to instill fear. He wanted
desperately to ask the man about it, but the clacking machine the stranger talked
through did not seem to work well with him, and Redlaw only shrugged and
reported that he could not understand what the man had said to him. "The
words are clear enough," Redlaw rumbled. "He says it was another him.
How can there be another? He could not say."
When
they had eaten four times they decided to sleep. They were a good distance from
the last place they had seen either orgs or Watchers, and so they risked
building another fire and roasting more of the green nuts that hung all about
them. The stranger moved a little way apart from them and flung himself on the
ground; in a moment he began to snore.
Org
Rider stroked Babe softly along the gently squirming length of its trunk and
listened to what Red- law was saying about the stranger: "He says he comes
from another world. He knows arts the Watchers don't—arts that I think are
strange and frightening to them. But he only speaks of these things, he does
not have the weapons to prove them." Redlaw scowled at the fire.
"What
is 'another world'?" Org Rider asked.
Redlaw
shrugged morosely. "What he says about his world is not to be believed. He
says it is not flat."
"Not
flat? You mean mountainous?"
"No,
not mountainous. Round. A little ball, so tiny that men have gone all the way
around it."
"That
is unlikely," Org Rider agreed.
"What
is even more unlikely," continued Redlaw, glowering across the fire at the
sleeping stranger, "is that he says our world is also curved like a ball.
This is clearly false, but he holds to it. He says that in his place everything
is very heavy. A man can't jump much above his own height. And he says, let me
see—oh, yes. He says that although there are trees and plants and clouds on his
world, they do not glow of their own light. None of them."
"How
strange! It must be a gloomy place. How does one see?"
"There
is one cloud," Redlaw said. "He does not call it a cloud, but it is
in the sky, so what else could it be? It is so bright that its light hurts your
eyes, and so high that it looks quite small."
"I
have never seen such a thing," Org Rider de¬clared. He peered around,
squinting through the leaves
at
the great flank of Knife-in-the-Sky rising above them. "Where is the way
to such a place? Over the mountain?"
"Farther!
Htf says you climb beyond the rain clouds and beyond the flying rocks. He says
you come up into a darkness where there is nothing at all. The darkness is
bigger than you can imagine—so big that, when you begin to cross it, our
flatworld shrinks to a point you can't even see, like an org flying out of sight
toward the top of the mountain."
"It
is all too strange for me," Org Rider said uneas¬ily, stroking Babe.
"If his world is so far away, how is it that he is just a man?"
"He
does not know, he says," Redlaw growled. "He says he and his friends
came here for learning, and that is one of the things they wish to learn: how
it is that he is so like a human person, though from so far away."
"I
wish him luck," Org Rider said dubiously. "I saw the machine he came
in. It made a great noise in the sky, like slam-bang-bang, slam-bang-bang. But
in spite of all the noise, it was slower than the orgs. They ripped the wings
off it and tore it apart in the sky. And when the Watchers caught him, he
died." Org Rider added thoughtfully, "I do not understand how that
can be, either. But I have seen it, so it is so."
Redlaw
rumbled impatiently, "It was another like him, he says. Part of that is
nonsense, for he says it is him and says it isn't him, both.
"What
is not nonsense," he added somberly, "is that he has something the Watchers
fear. I must have that from him, or he must die."
They
traveled fast and far, and the strain began to tell on all of them. Even Redlaw
grew short-tempered and gaunt-faced. In some ways his was the most diffi¬cult
job of all. Ben Yale Pertin was ill and injured; Org Rider had Babe to care for
and often to carry; so it fell to Redlaw to keep alert for Watchers or for wild
orgs, and there was never a moment while they were moving when he could relax.
When they rested over the camp-
fire
they no longer talked amiably, they bickered. It troubled Org Rider that Redlaw
seemed sometimes to believe in the stranger's insane stories, and other times
to hate and mistrust him. He could not hear the stranger directly; whatever the
machine was that Ben Yale Pertin had worn on his armbands, it seemed to respond
only to the squeals and whistles of the language of the Watchers, not to normal
human speech. So Org Rider could only communicate with him through Red- law's
imperfect understanding, and he was not sine how much was getting across.
Conscience
made him try to correct some of the stranger's errors. "I have
thought," he told Redlaw gravely, "and Ben Yale Pertin is wrong about
our flat- world. It is not round; my mother has told me this. And also I
understand how he looks so like us."
Redlaw
scowled at him, then guffawed. When he was done laughing he chirped for a
moment in the language of the Watchers, and then turned to Org Rider. "Ben
Yale wishes to be enlightened, young one," he said, his tone half laughing
but not pleasantly. "So do I. Please tell us what your mother has to
contribute."
The
boy said stubbornly, "It is truth, all people in my tribe agreed to that.
The flatworld was made by the makers." He peered into the fire, trying to
remember exactly. "My mother used to say they were terrible beings, taller
than people, shining with light of their own. They sang death songs, and the
songs themselves killed those who displeased them."
He
waited for Redlaw to finish translating, chuck¬ling, then went on:
"My_
people came from seven eggs the makers had made, in a cave down under the
bottom of the world. The eggs were guarded by seven keepers, but still they
were stolen by the Watchers. The evil creatures first blinded the keepers with
death-weed dust, and then stole the eggs for a feast. As our guest would have
done with my org," he added carefully.
Redlaw
chocked, but managed to translate and
receive
a reply. "He apologizes again for that," he re¬ported. "He says
he was hungry and did not know bet¬ter."
Org
Rider nodded and went on: "The feast was to be at the top of the
Watchman's tower, where the blinded keepers couldn't climb. But the makers were
angry, when they found the keepers blinded and the eggs gone. They did not sing
their death song, but they sang a spe¬cial song for the wild orgs. And the orgs
heard it as they flew over Knife-in-the-Sky.
"Seven
wild orgs dived on the feast, and carried the seven eggs in different
directions, all around Knife-in- the-Sky. The orgs hovered over the eggs,
keeping them warm. When each egg hatched, it produced a boy and a girl, and two
of every creature that is useful to a man.
"But
the Watchers spied where the orgs had gone, all but one. One by one, they found
the eggs just as they hatched, and devoured die hatchling creatures, and killed
the orgs that guarded them.
"But
the seventh org they did not kill. It flew out into the shadowworld, where
Knife-in-the-Sky hides the flatworld from the Watchman's tower. Here the hatch-
lings escaped. Green grass sprouted from the droppings of the creatures. The
boy baby and the girl baby were nursed by the wild org that had saved them.
They grew to be man and woman, and the parents of all our peo¬ple.
"And
what has come to me," Org Rider ended gravely, "is that one of the
other eggs did in fact get safely away, and its hatchlings were the parents of
Ben Yale Pertin!"
The
giant was laughing boisterously. Org Rider paused. "What's the
matter?" he demanded.
"What
rot, boy!" Redlaw boomed. "Ignorant super¬stition!"
Org
Rider leaped to his feet. "It is as my mother told it to me, Redlaw."
"It
is nonsense," Redlaw insisted. "You should spend a few sleeps with
the Watchers some time! You'll learn
the
difference between savage myths and scientific truths. I do not know whose
superstitions are worse, yours or Ben Yale Pertin's."
"And
what then is truth, all-knowing Redlaw?" the boy demanded stiffly.
"Ah,
that I don't know," the giant confessed. "Some of the things Ben Yale
Pertin says may have truth in them somewhere. He says our world may be
hollow—"
"Hollow!"
Org Rider cried scornfully.
"Yes.
Does that seem unlikely? It does to me, too, and yet I know there are levels
below. The tower of the Watchman guards one of the gates to those levels. I
have been there while a captive of the Watchers, and I know. And there is some
truth in what your mother told you, too, I think. There are such things as
keepers and Watchers, and that is where they live. But—"
He
was silent for a time, staring across the fire at the sleeping stranger. Then
he stood up.
"It
is time to sleep," he said, his voice hardening. "We are wasting
time."
Fast
and low, they kept going. They were halfway around the thrust of
Knife-in-the-Sky's largest bastion, carried by Redlaw's driving purpose. For
Org Rider that purpose seemed strange and remote; he could un¬derstand Redlaw's
burning hatred of the Watchers, who had enslaved him and threatened his life;
but now that they were free of the Watchers it seemed pointless to seek
revenge. The boy himself was most occupied with his young org, who seemed to
grow in size and intelli¬gence and maturity with every breath. When Org Rider
woke, the infant org was hopping unsteadily toward him, seeking not food—he was
capable of finding his own well enough by then—but affection, the ritual rub- down
of his golden fur with a handful of moss. Org Rider did not neglect the duties
his mother had de¬scribed to him. In particular he talked to the org,
crooningly, repetitiously, and was rewarded by having Babe repeat some of the
words to him. It was not rote
replaying,
like an earthly parrot's; it was almost like the first experimental use of
language of a human child. The org's delicate high-pitched voice could repeat
words like "food" when it was hungry, "sleep" when tired,
and a dozen others. If it mangled some of the syllables, it nevertheless made
itself clear.
Babe's
stubby wings began to unfold as the boy groomed them. Tapered triangular fins,
they had been molded invisibly into his sleek flanks. They looked al¬most too
thick and too narrow to be useful in flight, but the boy's caressing fingers
could feel their muscular power.
When
they were fully spread, the boy determined to show Babe how they were used. He
climbed a rock, the org hopping after him, spread his arms, and leaped to¬ward
another rock, flapping his arms.
To
his surprise, Babe understood at once—so quickly that before Org Rider had
reached his goal, Babe came sailing over him on quivering wings.
"Oh,
good for you, Babe!" the boy shouted in de¬light. But the delight faded
and congealed into panic, as the org kept going, past him and up, up over the
shel¬tering leaves of the forest screen. He wheeled in a climbing spiral and
screamed with a sound the boy had never heard him make.
Fear
took the boy's breath. Was Babe calling to the wild orgs above the cliffs? He
looked back to his com¬panions for help; they were no help—Redlaw sound asleep
under a mossy rock, Ben Yale Pertin watching apathetically. Without thinking,
Org Rider crouched on the rock and kicked himself into the air, using every bit
of strength in his legs and body, leaping a dozen times his own height,
straight at the wheeling org.
Babe
saw him and joyously dove to meet him. His young clumsiness made them collide,
spinning the boy off balance, knocking the breath out of his body. But the org
was up to the needs of the moment. Org Rider felt the velvet trunk coil around
him protectingly. Strong and supple, it held him, then lifted him to the
org's
sleek-furred back, just above the rippling wings.
The
boy lifted his voice in a shout of breathless triumph. "Now I am truly Org
Rider!" he crowed. "Faster, Babe! Faster and higher!" And the
org echoed in its piping voice: "Faster, Babe! Faster, faster!" Org
Rider clung with his knees, fists locked in the golden fur, leaning against the
wind of their flight. The throb of wings became a purr as Babe dived across the
treetops, climbed again, then wheeled toward a clear¬ing, so close above the
yellow-bladed shrubs that the boy saw the giant moths fluttering about in
terror. The boy's first alarm became a wild elation. His own wings had never
lifted him with such speed or strength. He clapped the org's golden flank and
called into the wind. "Good, Babe! Good!"
And
the org piped happily, "Good Babe!" as it cir¬cled and dived again.
At
last the boy found that Babe would respond to voice and tug of fists and kick
of heels. Thoughtfully he drove the org back toward the clearing where the
giant moths fluttered and cried, "Food, Babe! Eat! Get it!"
"Food
Babe!" the org echoed, and showed its under¬standing by diving at one of
the moths to catch it in spread talons. "Home Babe?" it piped
questioningly, and Org Rider cried:
"Yes,
Babe, home. We'll cook it and eat it. You've earned your food this time!"
They
flew high, while the boy searched the flank of the mountain for the place where
they had left Redlaw and Ben Yale Pertin. All the trees looked alike to him,
all the clearings much the same. He caught a glimpse of something metallic,
high above them on an outcrop¬ping, but it was not small enough to be Redlaw's
cleaver or the stranger's peculiar instruments. He began to feel dismay . . .
and then realized that Babe knew better than he; while he was searching the
treetops for a clue, the org had already zeroed in on their campsite and was
beating toward it powerfully.
When
they landed, the boy got off his org's back and said solemnly, "Now I am
truly Org Rider, and no longer a boy!"
Redlaw
was staring at him with anger, and a touch of wry admiration. "No longer a
boy, yes," he rumbled. "But a fool anyway! Listen, Org Rider who is
no longer a boy. What do you hear?"
The
boy, perplexed, stood still, ears tuned to—what? That distant shrill whistie?
"Do
you hear it? Do you see it?" Redlaw demanded. "Over there—beyond the
bee-tree. High in the sky!"
The
boy looked. He had not heard it, because of the whistle of wind in his own
ears, but now he heard it clearly and saw it, too, falling like a thick, blunt
spear toward the slope of the mountain. A ship of the Watch¬ers!
"If
they saw you," Redlaw muttered, "then, man who is no longer a boy,
you will not live to be a man very long."
The
sputtering Pmal translator on Ben Yale Pertin's wrist caught only a few words,
but they were enough to warn him. The Watchers were nearby.
Pertin
did not need to hear more; he had encoun¬tered the Watchers. They were the ones
who had shot his ship out of the sky of Cuckoo. Jn any other world they would
have killed him, for he had fallen more than a mile to earth; but in Cuckoo's
gentle surface gravita¬tion he had survived with only cuts and bruises—and
would have missed those if he had been less panicked and in better shape, he
knew.
That
kind of knowledge was no comfort. Pertin feared the Watchers. He feared dying,
even when he welcomed it; there was no kind of future that looked good to him,
unless by some miracle Zara should ap¬pear and offer a new life here. That was
fantasy. Real¬ity was that he would die here, and he would hate it.
The
boy, ignoring the danger from the sky, was split¬ting and skinning the body of
the golden-furred creature
like
a moth, spitting it over the fire. The yellow dust from the creature's fur gave
Pertin a fit of sneezing, but soon the aroma of its roasting meat reconciled
him to the dust. When it was done, Pertin humbly waited his turn. The best bits
went to the org. Redlaw had second choice, then the boy; then last came Pertin.
But there was still plenty left, and it was delicious.
By
the time they had finished it had begun to rain, great fat slow drops that touched
the fire and extin¬guished it. Gray clouds came dropping in to the tops of the
trees.
The
red haired giant bounded chuckling and happy over to him, and whistled
something that the Pmal translator rendered as: "Rain clouds hide us from
Watchers. Now we go! Youth has seen your ship, we find it, get weapons to kill
Watchers!"
"But
you have been to the wreckage of my ship," Pertin objected, perplexed.
"I had no weapons—"
"Not
your ship, like-your ship!" the Pmal crackled in response to the giant's
squeals. Pertin gave up the struggle to understand; it did not matter. What
mat¬tered was that they were to move again. This time the boy did not need to
worry about his org, who flew on above them, so he and the giant, unfettered,
made very fast time. It was all Pertin could do to keep up with them. They kept
on, and kept on. They did not stop even to eat, only paused long enough to pass
Pertin a handful of hard roasted moss nuts, now cold and almost tasteless; he
munched them as best he could while they went. Three times they ate, pausing
once to drink at a vine-covered stream and to relieve their bowels and
bladders, each time hurrying on.
Then
Redlaw and the boy stopped and waited for Pertin to struggle up next to him.
"There!"
the giant crowed. "Look! Beyond the gray moss, between the boulders. See!
What do you see?"
Dizzy
with Weariness, Pertin tried to focus his eyes. See? Yes, there was something
there, something bright that caught his eye.
The
glint of light was metal. He glanced at the oth¬ers, then joined them in a
stumbling, hopping run up the gentle slope, and there, half-hidden by purple-
flowered moss, was the wreck of a machine.
It
was not his ship. It was smaller, and it dearly had been there for a long time.
The moss had overgrown it completely, except for a few lengths of metal . . .
Metal?
Yes, clearly it was metal. But there was something strange about it. The color
was not clean sil¬ver, but stained with a watery bluish radiance that look
unfamiliar, but vaguely ominous.
He
scurried toward it. It must have been a man- carrying machine. Perhaps the
machine one of his pre¬decessors had used? He could not say. It was so torn and
broken that he could not be sure. He tore at the moss, peering inside through a
dark opening rimmed with shattered crystal. A sharp scent stung his nostrils;
it did not seem to be coming from the moss, but from the bluish coating on the
metal itself. Now that he touched it, it felt slick, slippery, moist—quite
repellent . . .
A
shrill squeal came from behind him, and his Pmal rapped out: "Do not
touch! Not! Not!"
Confused,
he stood up. Redlaw and Org Rider were coming toward him, anger and concern on
their faces. "What's the matter?"
They
looked at him—curiously, they were looking mosdy at his hands, it seemed—then
at each other. They did not speak for a moment, then Redlaw spoke, his voice
oddly gentle. "Clean hands," the Pmal transla¬tor rapped. "Wipe
on moss. Nol No! Do not touch metal!"
He
shrugged, not understanding. He seemed to have got some of the blue slime on
his fingers. Obediently, he bent and rubbed his hands on the soft gray moss—
What
he was rubbing against, he suddenly realized with a heart-stopping sensation of
nausea, had the shape and texture of a human skull.
He
clawed at the moss. It was a skull! A whole skele¬ton, in fact, the flesh
rotted away, but the bones still
queerly
dressed, under the moss, in the imperishable plastics of an explorer's jungle
garb, red top, orange- and-yellow pants, great white gauntlets, and on the
shrunken forearm bones the coils of translator, record¬er, direction-finder,
timekeeper, and all the other in¬struments one wore.
The
giant spoke, and the Pmal chattered: "Danger! Do not touch stranger bones.
Serious! Be warned!"
Pertin
looked up at them, aware of the bluish radi¬ance that clung to the bones, aware
that it still befouled his fingers, in spite of his efforts to rub them clean.
"Danger?"
he repeated dully. "Yes, I suppose so, if you say so. But you're wrong
about one thing. They're not a stranger's bones. I know those bones very well,
and I know the clothes they wear, too. I ought to. They're mine."
ELEVEN
*
Far
away, around the great bulk of Cuckoo, the orbiter was preparing to transmit
its observer along the tachyonic path FARLINK had charted to the source of the
interfering transmission in the Galaxy. They still didn't know how far it was,
exactly. Roughly in die di¬rection of Earth, yes; but at extragalactic
distances, that could mean anywhere from Rigel to Canopus, and far¬ther than
that in the line of flight from Cuckoo.
And
that was only one of the things they didn't know. Would the transmitted
duplicate find breathable air and bearable temperatures when he stepped out of
the receiving box?—or sphere, or inflatable bag, or whatever sort of enclosure
might contain an uninvited guest; it was only a convenience that made all the
inter¬communicating galactic races use essentially the same sort of equipment.
This wild card might take any form.
"I'm
glad I'm not going," Ben Line Pertin an¬nounced gloomily. He didn't sound
very glad, even to himself. He found precious little to be glad about these
days, and could look forward to not much better.
Venus
chimed softly, "I'm glad for you too, Ben Line. It is less hazardous for
an edited form like my¬self."
Ben
Line Pertin in quick confusion said, "Oh, I'm sorry. I was just
thinking—"
"That
it was dangerous and unsure, yes. But less so for me. In any event," she
continued melodiously, "FARLINK has chosen me and I have consented."
He
said miserably, "I am sorry, Venus. I've been
into
my own troubles and not thinking about yours. I know how it tears you up to
send a self away to suffer or die somewhere; I've done it often enough."
The
silvery girl looked at him curiously, "That is so, Ben Line. But—forgive
me—in this form it is less pain¬ful. If I were in my own true form I would feel
there was more to lose."
"Wait!"
the sentient ape named Doc Chimp II said, holding up a hand that contained a
banana. "There's a message—"
It
was FARLINK. In the recreation room where they were awaiting Venus' time for
the Tachyon transmitter there were no screens, but the wall speakers sang out
with the computer's electronic voice. "Stand by," it sig¬naled, the
Pmal of each being translating the words au¬tomatically into its own language.
"Wonder
what that is," Doc Chimp mused. "Well, cheers!" And he held up
his banana in a sort of toast. Pertin responded with his tumbler of Scotch and
water, while the silvery girl sniffed at cloudlets of luminescent mist she
sprayed out of an atomizer.
"Orders!"
FARLINK'S voice rapped out of the speak¬ers. "The transmission of
Replicate 4182, known as Venus, is canceled. A newly detected singularity in
the incoming signals has altered the estimate of require¬ments. Stand by for
assignment of replacement."
"Congratulations,
Venus," Doc Chimp cried. "That's a last-minute reprieve, if I ever
heard one. Wonder who they'll send instead? A Scorpian robot, maybe? A sheliak.
Or—"
"Orders,"
the wall speaker rasped. "The substitute for transmission is required to
proceed at once to the tachyon station for replication. He is Replicate 5153,
known as Ben Line Pertin."
"Oh,
no," Doc Chimp cried.
"Communication
of regret," shrilled the TWorlie, Nammie.
"I'm
sony, Ben Line," the silvery girl whispered.
Pertin
stood numb. He had not expected it; he did not know how to respond.
"Replicate
5153," FARLINK growled from the wall speakers. "There is the time
pressure. Proceed at once for replication!"
"Come
on, Ben Line," Doc Chimp said as gently as he knew how, taking one arm. He
gestured to Venus, who took the other; and the two of them walked the
unresisting Ben Line Pertin along the corridors to the radial shaft that led to
the tachyon transmitter. He let them. He felt nothing . . .
Nothing
while he was on his way to the transmitter.
Nothing
(except the sudden surprising hard metal lips of Venus against his own, just
before he went inside) as he entered the transmitter and stood through its
silent omniscient scan.
Nothing
when he looked around, and realized he was that he who had remained behind.
Nothing,
even, while the chimp and the silvery girl escorted him back to the rec room,
the TWorlie flutter¬ing behind. They chattered doubtfully among them¬selves,
then pooled their small quotas of open-choice mass to buy him two more
Scotches, doubles. He gulped them down, hardly tasting them. He was still here,
as nothing had happened. But he was also there.
And
he could never come back.
Later,
he was not sure how much later, there was a final message of progress from
FARLINK. "The trans¬mission," the speakers rasped, "has been
successful. First acknowledgment of arrival has been received, along with
samples for environmental analysis. Unfortunately they are not life-sustaining
beyond a fairly short pe¬riod."
There
was a small silence before Doc Chimp said, "Well, anyway, Ben Line,
congratulations. You ar¬rived."
"I
arrived," Ben Line agreed. "And I'm dead."
O
0 •
Down
inside the atmosphere of Cuckoo, nearly two hundred million miles away from the
orbiter on Cuck¬oo's far side, the exploring team was practicing its flying
skills.
The
expedition, so far, was going well. From their altitude, miles above Ground
Station One, miles out from the slope of the enormous mountain, even Cuckoo
looked almost small—not the great sweep of its surface, to be sure, but the
detail on it: tiny trees, winking bright puddle of lake, silvery thread of
river. In the air itself were the curious bright clouds that sailed around,
each seeking its own level, seeming to drop spores of some bright seedlings;
living glowing things that gave Cuckoo almost the only light it had, bar the
glow of plants and animals on the surface itself.
They
did not know these glowing clouds to be dan¬gerous, but they gave them a wide
berth. Anyway, there was plenty of room in the sky. Not only to travel to a
destination, but for pleasure too: Valkyrie and Zara and the T'Worlie took joy
in doing loops and barrel rolls, soaring far off from the little procession of
Scorpian robot, Sirian eye, and husband, as they chugged sedately along, and
returning. Zara found her¬self laughing from sheer physical joy. She weighed so
little in Cuckoo's air that it was almost irrelevant whether she was flying
head up or down. She followed the piping, frolicking T'Worlie up in a loop.
Below her the great sloping flank of the mountain seemed to sub¬side into a
plain; then the plain tipped and became a slope that rose in the other
direction, then passed out of sight completely as she topped out her loop and
began to come down.
In
her earplug communicator her husband's voice, faintly amused and faintly
annoyed, said "If you three will please stop playing, we'd better stay
close together. This is dangerous territory, you know."
Rebuked,
Zara flopped over and flailed her wings to get her bearing. The TWorlie, used
to flight, darted
back
and hung before her, exuding an odor that she would come to recognize as an
expression of rueful embarrassment, like a child caught in the cookie jar.
Zara
burst out laughing. She caught sight of the silver girl, far overhead, soaring
down toward them with great, strong strokes of her wings. Zara cried:
"Come on, Val, Nleem! Race you back to the others!" And she let them
signal agreement and start their powerful, effort¬less flight back toward the
sober, sedate members of the party. Then she aimed herself headfirst toward the
three distant dots, folded her wings except for a tiny web from wrists to hips
for control, and activated her pulse- jet. Thrump, thrump, thrump, thrump . . .
The radio¬isotopes poured heat into measured slugs of water, flashed them into
steam, expanded them into the pulse- jet, and she arrowed toward the others at
a hundred miles an hour, easily passing the gallant but small T'Worlie,
catching up with Valkyrie and leaving her be¬hind a thousand meters from the
steady three. Stopping was the problem; she shut off the jet and tried to lose
speed by zooming sharply up; but in Cuckoo's wan grip the loss to gravity was
so small she found herself loop¬ing the loop again, involuntarily, before,
laughing and dizzy, she was properly back in line with the rest of the party. '
Her
husband, in line ahead of her, turned to look disapprovingly at her over his
shoulder. "About time you got here," he grumbled.
Zara,
who was concentrating on an even, rippling flow of her wings, gave him a
docile, absentminded smile. What a butterball he was, she thought
dispassion¬ately; even in the stretched-out edited version for Cuck¬oo, his
round body and pipestem legs made him look like a stork. "The Scorpian's
getting a strong signal from one of the transponders," Jon added.
"That means we are getting near one of our objectives— probably a downed
exploring ship."
"How
nice," said Zara, winking at the silver girl.
Valkyrie
did not wink back; her copy of Earthly human anatomy was not close enough for
that. But Zara could hear her chuckle.
"
Three places ahead of her in line, the Sirian eye raised itself out of the file
on its crackling spread of electric forces, and turned to confront her. It had
no expression, but she felt reproof in its stare. The tiny sphincter mouth,
surrounded by the forty crablike little legs, worked convulsively. Zara could
hear no sound from it; Sirians used sound for communication, but the
frequencies were far higher than Man's; twenty thou¬sand Hertz was a low
basso-profundo note for them. But the Pmal caught it, and rapped reprovingly in
her ear: "Estimate: Your use of jet propulsion has in¬creased our risk.
Assumption: Such sounds in past have attracted predators. Validation:
Air-palping reveals several unidentified traces moving toward us at three
hundred and seventeen degrees right ascension, minus six degrees
declination."
"Confirmed,"
the Scorpian robot stated without pas¬sion. It did not speak aloud at all. Its
talk circuits used radio waves, but the Pmals picked up and faithfully
translated the messages.
Zara
pressed her elbows into her sides and felt her¬self begin to drop. It was not
what she had intended, but it was better than floundering around while she
tried to adjust her telescopic visor. She caught a glimpse of something at the
indicated position, realized she was falling farther behind and below the
others than she wanted, flapped herself back into position and at last got a
clear look at what the Sirian had reported.
There
were three of them, all right. But of what? A body gleaming like metallic
copper; stubby wings that shone silver at the tips; great claws that were
coming out of concealment from under the creatures' body, in anticipation of
combat.
For
a moment she knew terror; then she heard her husband's voice, triumphant and
challenging. "Tally- ho!" he shouted. "I've got 'em!"
And
without waiting for comment from the others, he aimed himself and fired his
jet.
From
directly behind, Zara got the full roar of the pulse jet as it thrumped giant
smoke rings of steam, thrusting him like an arrow toward the onrushing orgs.
There was a confusion of argument that the Pmals were unable to handle, too
many beings shouting at once. What they were saying was clear enough, but Jon
Gen¬try was paying no attenion. He had the taste of blood on his lips, and he
was on the hunt.
The
orgs were wise in warfare. They split up to come at this lone attacker from
three directions at once. Against any of the beings that were their natural
prey the strategy was winning. Against galactic weapons, it was hopeless.
Gentry's
hours on the practice range on Earth had not been wasted. The first spark-hiss
that marked the firing of his laser was a miss, but the second found a target.
Three times then the cobalt-blue streak of his laser reached out to touch an
org. Three times the crea¬ture hit screamed, the pain bellow of a tortured
beast, and each time the scream was cut off as the blue ray burned through
scales and flesh in a split second. Each org flamed briefly, and then tumbled,
slowly and un¬gracefully, toward the mountain flank far below.
Gentry
stopped his pulse-jet, and returned to them by wing power alone. As he came
close, Zara could hear that he was singing. He swooped past her, touch¬ing her
with what might have been meant for a caress of affection, but sent her
spinning. "Got 'em!" he shouted. "That was worth the whole trip,
Zara!"
The
silver girl chimed, "It is true that you killed those creatures. I do not
think it was wise to attack single-handed, however."
And
the Scorpian robot muttered through its Pmal, "Confirm statement as to
organic creatures. Propose consequential probability. Premise: Organic
creatures are not principal adversaries. Second premise: Use of laser weapons
may be counterproductive at this time."
"Ah,"
Gentry grumbled, "you're just scared—" Elog- ically, Zara thought
with resentment; all the Galaxy knew that Scorpians could not be frightened,
since they were not only very nearly physically indestructible but had little
emotional attachment to life.
Val
chimed: "I suggest we proceed to our objective. I have a strong
transponder trace from a point on the mountainside fifteen kilometers away,
nearly in direc¬tion of flight. The characteristics are compatible with one of
the previous exploration ships."
"Propose
we go there now," the T'Worlie twittered through the translator.
"Why
not?" Jon Gentry said with careless courage. "I think we've seen we
can deal with any problems that come up."
Zara
dropped back a few meters, looking at her hus¬band curiously. This—what was
that old word? machis¬mo?—this kind of behavior was a side of her husband she
had not known very well. Of course, on placid Earth there was little occasion
for physical conflict, but even so she could hardly reconcile this fire-eyed
war¬rior with the gentle, sedentary, rather dull man she had been married to
for three years on Earth. She had never questioned his courage. It had simply
never occurred to her to consider it. If she had been aware of it at all, she
might have considered it as a sort of mildly disturbing anachronism, like an
excess of body hair or a desire for raw meat.
She
was jolted out of her reverie by a sudden gabble in the Pmals. Once again
several members of the party were speaking at once. The first clear
transmission was from Val, who cried: "I think we are in trouble!"
And it was confirmed by the Sirian's little sphincter mouth, which squeaked its
inaudible message that the Pmal translated as:
"Air
palping now registers three new high-speed traces vectoring toward us.
Correction. Four traces. Correction. Five, six, six-plus traces. Points of origin
widely
separated. Suggest indications are that techno¬logical intervention is now
occurring."
T'Worlie
and humans, plus Val, tried desperately to see what the Sirian and the Scorpian
had detected. Even for Val, however, they were still out of sight, but Val
confirmed the locating: "I have the trace," she agreed.
"Recommend
seeking cover," chattered the Pmal, re¬sponding to the Scorpian's signal.
Jon
Gentry snorted, "What, run away? Not me! We've got weapons, let's use
them."
Val
pealed, "That is countersurvival, Jon Gentry. I have an alternative
proposal. You organics seek cover. The Scorpian and I will intercept the
opponents."
"Concurring,"
the Scorpian chattered through the Pmal translator at once.
"No
bloody chance!" Jon Gentry blazed. "I guess you don't know much about
Earthmen! Fighting's nothing strange to us. We came here to carry an equal
share of the load, and that includes fighting. We're not going to hide behind a
bunch of aliens!"
"He
means," Zara cried quickly, "that we feel an ob¬ligation to help. And
honestly, Val—don't you think we can take care of ourselves?"
The
silvery girl swept her great wings up to a point over her head, thus dropping
and turning toward Zara. "Doubt it very much," she pealed.
"Please study the approaching objects at thirty-four degrees right
ascen¬sion, eighteen degrees plus declination." She paused while Zara
struggled with her telescopic visor.
"Oh,"
Zara said at last. "They are—formidable look¬ing, aren't they?"
They
were that. Blunt spearpoints, mottled in colors of bronze and gray that glinted
with underlying metal, they were arrowing toward the galactic party at easily
supersonic speeds. And those were only two. How many had the Scorpian reported?
More than six—
These
were not animals or primitives, these were complex and powerful technological
devices, and, Zara
T
thought
with a sinking heart, no doubt armed accord¬ingly.
"I
accept offer," the T'Worlie chirped. "Come!" And Nleem stood on
his head in the air, and swam his de¬ceptively filmy wings to drive himself
straight down¬ward at the forest cover beneath them. There was a spatter of
electrical fields, and he was followed by the Sirian eye.
Zara
wailed nervously, "Please, Jon! Let's do what Val says." She tried to
catch her husband's eye, but he was already higher than she, peering toward the
ap¬proaching Watcher ships eagerly. "Please?" she coaxed.
"Not
a chance!" he snapped. "You go ahead. I'm going to fight this
out!"
"Then
I'd better stay, too—"
"No
way! Damned if you will, Zara! Now get out of the way—there's going to be a
fight, and I don't want to have to worry about you getting hurt!"
Angry,
and in a way she could not define, afraid—it was not physical fear, it was a
deadly feeling that some¬thing was changing irrevocably in her life—Zara turned
herself oyer in the air, aimed herself at the rapidly diminishing forms of the
T'Worlie and the Sirian, and activated the pulse jet. Thrump, thrump,
thrump,—the acceleration was terrific. She was catching up on the Sirian and
the T'Worlie very rapidly.
Her
previous experience had made her cautious. She did not want to overshoot this
time; that would mean driving herself into the ground below. She judged the
distance as well as she could, allowed the jet to build up speed for a moment,
then, when she gauged she had plenty of margin left, cut the pulse and arrowed
down on inertia for a few seconds. Then she rotated herself and applied maximum
counterthrust with the jet to slow her fall.
Zara
h3d thought she had left herself a large margin on the side of caution. In
fact, she had started the coun¬terthrust far too late. It slowed her headlong
drop— feebly, tardily; just enough so that when she struck the
treetops
she was traveling at something like thirty miles an hour.
She
hit hard, broke off sprigs and branches, went flying through a tangle of vines
that ripped at her skin and bruised her brutally. Every snag hurt her, but
every snag slowed her a fraction, so that when she hit the soggy, mossy marsh
under the trees she knocked herself unconscious, but lived.
When
she came to, she was alone.
She
could see very little of the sky, but in it were neither husband nor allies,
nor even the enemy ships that had been attacking them; and of the T'Worlie and
the Sirian eye that she had been trying to join there was no trace at all.
TWELVE
*
Org
Rider involuntarily started to move forward to help Ben Yale Pertin, but Redlaw
caught his arm.
"Don't
touch him!" the giant rumbled. Then, look¬ing past Org Rider to the
stranger, he lowered his voice, adding, "There's nothing you can do for
him now. That slime doesn't thrive on vegetation. But it eats flesh. He's done
for."
"But—but
it's only some kind of sap, or something like that. We can take him to the
river, wash it off—"
"You're
not hearing me, boy. There's no chance for him at all. If he's lucky, he'll be
dead in five sleeps. If he's not, he'll linger on for a dozen. But there's no
way to clean him now, and he's death to touch."
Pertin
was staring at them, aware they were talking about him, suspicious of what they
were saying. He asked a question that Org Rider could not understand, but
Redlaw chirped some sort of answer in the whis¬tling screech of the Watchers.
Under his breath he said to the boy, "He said those bones were his. What
can he mean by that?"
Org
Rider said, with the uneasy fascination of hor¬ror, "It is as it was
before, Redlaw. Remember? He died already, and was alive again. Can it be that
he dies many times, and always lives again?"
"If
he lives again after that blue slime gets through with him I'll be
astonished," the giant rumbled. "Ah, well. We can't help him, but we
can feed him. I'll get some food. You build a fire."
"What
about the slamming machine?" the boy cried.
The
giant nodded somberly. "There it is," he agreed. "We'll ask Ben
Yale Pertin if there are weapons there. But if they've got that blue slime on
them, it will be ticklish work to find a way to use them."
"Can't
we clean them?"
"Ah,
yes, clean them. But it's being sure they're clean that's the hard part. And
one single drop of the blue murder, so tiny you might not even see it, is
enough for death. If you see it anywhere on you, boy, on toe or finger,
wherever, don't wait. If it's on a toe, lop off the foot! It's miserable work
to do, but it's your life if you don't!"
Numbly,
the boy nodded and turned to his org. "Don't go near him, Babe," he
ordered. The soft trunk squirmed out to touch him reassuringly.
"What
I think," ruminated Redlaw, staring at Ben Yale Pertin, who was scrabbling
feverishly in the wreckage'of the ship, "is that this slamming machine is
not his but another's. Identical ships. Maybe identical people. I think it
landed on the living peak of Knife-in- the-Sky, touched the slime, and then it
came down here. Its occupant, perhaps another Ben Pertin, came out and touched
the slime. When he did that, it was too late for him."
The
boy nodded somberly. "Stay with this one, Red- law," he said.
"Perhaps you can help him. I will get food." But he felt as he left the
org with a cautioning word and turned into the forest that there was no way for
Redlaw to help Pertin, and that his real reason for going after food was that
he could not bear to see him doomed thus to die. To die a third time! It was
heavy enough to die once. What courage these people must have, to die again and
again!
He
was fortunate almost at once, scouring the wet black gravel along a sluggish
stream, when something like a buried log humped itself and sprang free of the
black muck. The boy caught his knife and waited; in a moment he was rewarded,
as the "log" ripped suddenly down the back.
A
wild-flower sweetness exploded into the air, and a delicate pink shape thrust
and thrust, struggling to es¬cape from its black prison. Org Rider paused,
en¬tranced. It was almost too beautiful to kill for food! But he thought of the
dying Ben Yale Pertin, and of his org; he had no choice. He waited only until
the lacelike wings of black-veined rose unfolded, and the new- hatched creature
gripped the sides of the canoelike shell and slowly pulled itself free. Huge
luminous eyes, glow¬ing with the rosy red of live coals, gazed blankly at him
and were just beginning to focus when he was upon it with his knife, stabbing
the new life out of it.
When
they had the skinned and gutted body of the butterfly-creature broiling over
the low fire Redlaw had made, the giant took him aside. "Here is what I
have secured," he said with satisfaction. "Look!" And he
of¬fered a handful of gleaming objects to the boy.
Org
Rider recoiled. "They're from the slamming ma¬chine!" he cried.
"Yes,"
Redlaw agreed. "But I have taken them out myself, from the interior, where
the blue slime did not penetrate. Ben Yale is angry at me because I would not
let him touch them. I made him understand that the blue slime is very deadly to
us—though I did not say that it was also deadly to him," he added in an
under¬tone.
"What
do they do?"
"This,"
Redlaw said proudly, "is a weapon." He held up a thing shaped like a
short seed-cone, with a slim cylinder perched at an angle across its tip.
"It is not what I had hoped for," he admitted. "It is only a
laser. The Watchers, too, have lasers. Still, it is better than any¬thing we
have had so far!
"And
this"—he held up a thing like tiny windows, set in an elastic
band—"is for far-seeing. Look through it, Org Rider! You will see as far
as you can travel in a dozen sleeps!"
The
boy took it gingerly. The elastic part clasped his skull gently but firmly as
he put it on; the transparent
part
hung just over his eyebrows. Squinting upward, he caught strange, bent glimpses
of the treetops and clouds, like watersnakes seen through the turbulence of a
rapid. He shook his head, and the visor popped into place in front of his eyes.
Suddenly
the great broad yellow leaves of the tree over his head rushed in on him, and
the bright golden clouds beyond swooped down almost within arm's length.
Involuntarily he ducked and yelped.
Redlaw
guffawed. "Startles you, doesn't it?" he rum¬bled. "But you'll
see Watchers coming at you through that a hundred breaths before your bare eyes
will see them, boy. And this thing—Ben Yale Pertin calls it an 'audio log,'
whatever that is—listen!" And he touched a switch on it, and a voice—Ben's
voice, the boy real¬ized—began to speak from inside the box somewhere. Org
Rider could not understand what it said, to be sure; it was in that strange
gibberish tongue the stranger used. But it was his voice, beyond doubt.
Redlaw's
mood changed. He dropped the audio log to the ground and stared at it angrily.
"But there's not what I wanted," he muttered. "Not a weapon that
the Watchers don't already have. Not anything that will let us destroy
them!"
"Perhaps
Ben Pertin does not have any such weap¬ons," Org Rider offered.
"He
has them! Or his people do. I'd kill him, if it would make him get them for me!
But how can you kill a man who's dying already?" He stared at the squat
man, then glanced past him at the woods. "Boy, what's the matter with your
org?"
Tardily
Org Rider realized that Babe had wandered away from his side, was on the
hillside above the wrecked slamming machine. He leaped to his feet, tensely
afraid that the org might somehow brush against the blue death. But it was not
near the machine and showed no interest in it; something else was engaging its
attention. It stood upthrust on its great talons, huge
eyes
staring frozen into the sky, soft pink trunk squirm¬ing upward as to feel what
the eyes were looking at.
"What
is it?" Org Rider demanded sharply. The org did not even look at him. Then,
reflected in the org's eye, he saw a peculiar flash of bright cobalt blue;
star¬tled, he looked upward through the leaf canopy and saw, lancing through
the sky, a line of cobalt fire that winked, flashed again in a different place,
and again. The light was so intense it almost blinded him, who had seen few
bright sources of light in his life, but he was almost sure he saw several
small dots around the bright blue beams. A distant rushing sound, as of cloth
tear¬ing, came to him from where those bright beams flashed, and was repeated
again and again. "Lasers!" Redlaw bellowed.
Remembering
what he wore, Org Rider jerked the far-seeing visor into place, and after a
moment of fran¬tic search, found the magnified images of what was going on
above him. A man! A man wearing a queer tree-trunklike thing strapped to his
back, pointing something like the weapon Redlaw had showed him; and around and
below the man, falling like dead leaves through the sky, two, no three orgs.
Dead. Slain by those bright blue bolts.
The
boy peered under the glasses, trying to make sense of what he saw, and became
aware that there were other dots in the sky. It took him time to find them
through the visor, but there they were—four or five creatures, and what strange
creatures they were! Something that looked like a winged woman made of silvery
metal! A tiny creature with frail wings and a hideous five-eyed head! A thing
that looked like an enormous eye, unsupported in the air! A machine, a— what?
he could not say for sure, but something that looked like a single great cube
of metal with metal at¬tachments hanging from it—also floating unsupported in
the air. And with them—
Org
Rider caught his breath, steadied the glasses,
and
looked again. A woman. A girl. Dressed like Ben Yale Pertin, or the man who had
beamed down the orgs; but a girl whose pale face and bright eyes were like no
other woman he had ever seen.
He
was jolted out of his reverie by Redlaw. "Give me that far-seer," the
giant growled, snatching it off Org Rider's head. He bounded over to a
clearing, jamming the visor onto his own head, upward. "Blood and
death!" he muttered. "What are those things?" He lifted the
lenses away from his eyes and stared blankly at the boy. "Did you see
them?" he demanded. "Queer machine things! Animals like nothing I've
ever seen!"
Org
Rider nodded soberly. He heard the distant screams of orgs, wondered if they
were the three he had seen killed, the sound reaching them so late because of
distance; then realized it would not be that. These screams were nearer.
And
suddenly the strange sights he had seen in the sky were driven from his mind,
as he heard those wild screams repeated—less raucously, but closer at hand. He
turned and shouted, "Babe! What are you doing?"
The
young org turned the great eyes on him. The trunk was quivering and snaking
out, now toward Org Rider, now toward the sky. The boy bounded over to the org,
caught it around the neck. "Don't listen, Babe!" he begged, and the
org mimicked, in his own voice:
"Listen
. . . listen . . . listen!"
"Stay,
Babe," he coaxed, stroking the org's quivering head. He could feel a
roughness beneath the velvet, along the ridges over the great staring eyes, and
knew that the hard bronze scales of maturity were beginning to form there. The
shrieks of the wild orgs sounded again, nearer. "Please, Babe," he
begged.
The
org's trembling stopped. It froze, staring into the sky, and die boy saw what
its huge eyes had discovered. Black and narrow and swift against the gray sky,
two orgs were scudding over the treetops, up-mountain, away from where their
fellows had just been slain. And
the
cries they were shrilling were of fear and warning.
The
drives of his genes and chromosomes were too strong to resist. Babe answered
with a hoarse, hooting cry, and launched himself into the air.
The
first stroke of his powerful wing struck Org Rid¬er, sent him tumbling across
the mossy rock. As the boy picked himself up, Babe paused for an instant high
above him. "Please," it screamed, hoarsely mimicking the boy's own
voice. "Please . . . please . . ,"
And
it spun in air and climbed into the bright sky to follow its wild kin.
Alone
and desolate, Org Rider stood watching until Babe and the others were out of
sight.
THIRTEEN
*
Ben
Yale Pertin had not been fooled by the red- haired giant's pitiful attempts to
dissemble. He had caught enough of the giant's meaning through the trans¬lator
to know that, from Redlaw's point of view at least, the blue slime was very bad
medicine indeed. Pertin was not unconcerned about that; he was very much
concerned indeed, but he also was sure that these bar¬barians did not know much
about medicine. His first concern was to find the medicpac in the wrecked
explo¬ration ship. He did not trouble to clean the slime off; not after the
first trial at swabbing it from his skin had taught him something new about
pain. But he swabbed it with anesthetizing and antiseptic creams from the pac,
covered it with self-sealing bandages, and sterilized the whole area with a
cleansing spray. The bone-deep itching began to fade away at once, and the pain
went with it. Pertin then fished out the bottles of vitamin supplements and
swallowed a week's ration at once, be¬fore he went looking for proper food. A
self-heating can of beef stew, another self-heating can that produced instant
black coffee, a can of peaches in thick syrup— he stopped eating at last not
because he was no longer hungry, but because he began to think he would burst.
Then
he turned his attention to less immediate prob¬lems, such as the two barbarians
he was with. They seemed much taken with the laser gun, the telescopic visor,
and the audio log; well, let the giant play. It did not matter. The log was only
a spare. The weapon was more serious, in a way, but as he had been at their
mercy
for—what? a week? a month? How could one tell in this place where there was
never anything like day or night—and they had not killed him as yet. Giv¬ing
them a weapon did not much change anything. Of course, if he had kept the
weapon it would have put the odds in his favor, he mused. But he still had the
ba¬zooka—and his own superiority over these savages . . .
He
watched incuriously while Org Rider stroked his hatchling and the giant puzzled
over the hardware, idly stroking the bandages on arms and legs. They were
be¬ginning to tingle again, he realized. That was odd, but there was no real
pain. The only necessary thing was to get himself in contact with civilization
again, where¬upon full medical treatment would of course be avail¬able.
Unfortunately,
this exploring ship was of a different model from the one he himself had been
shot down in, and although there was a radio he could not make it work.
Batteries run down? That seemed unlikely; most electrical systems were powered
by radioisotopes and they didn't run down. Broken in the crash? It didn't seem
to be. He came to the conclusion that it was work¬ing, after all, but that the
frequency on which it was operating was simply not monitored any longer. He
ex¬plored further around the craft, and came across the prime audio log.
Maybe
that would give him a clue, he reasoned, and thumbed it back to the beginning
of the record, then turned it to PLAY.
"Ben
Tom Pertin," it whispered in his earplug, "re¬porting on landing on
surface of Cuckoo."
Hearing
his own voice in his ears gave him a thrill of unexpected unease; that voice
came from vocal chords that had once lodged in that blue-smeared skeleton
be¬fore him. But the voice was going on:
"First
entry into atmosphere accomplished without difficulty; initial target,
anomalous formations on top of mountain. I landed without exiting vehicle
because of low air pressure at this altitude. The top of the mountain
was
bare rock, which seemed to be covered by a blue lichen or greasy substance of
some sort, which glowed quite brightly. I observed the anomalous forma¬tions
and have photographed them for transmission. I do not understand them. There
appears to be a sort of crater on top of this mountain, although it is clearly
not volcanic; there is nothing resembling a lava flow, out- gassing, or
anything else indicating activity of that sort. On the lips of the crater are
some truncated cones which have the appearance of artifacts . . ." There
was a click, and then the voice resumed: "At this point the viewports of
the vehicle began to cloud over and vision began to be impaired. I do not know
the cause of this. Perhaps the temperature differential caused the ports to fog
up. As I cannot leave the vehicle I am breaking off this section of the survey
to attempt a landing at a lower altitude."
There
was another click, and then the voice re¬sumed—but a different, fearful,
worried voice now: "Report two: Vision did not improve. I was forced to fly
and land by radar, and landed with some difficulty. I do not know if the
vehicle is damaged. The blue mate¬rial appears to be covering the viewports. I
will recon- noiter outside and return for further report." Click . . .
And
then nothing, nothing but the faint distant hiss of the recorder coil unwinding
under the scanner heads.
Ben
Yale let it run through, hoping against hope for more word, but there was none.
He had felt there would not be. He could write the rest of the story him¬self.
He stood at the port of the vehicle, looking out at the great yellow-tipped
trees, the marshland and moss, the distant river; and'he could imagine that
other he standing in that place and looking at that same view, and venturing
out to explore this strange new world . . . and never noticing the blue slime
that clung to him as he swabbed experimentally at the viewports, or steadied
himself against the landing skids. And then, lat¬er, trying to get back to the
vehicle and medicpacs, and not quite making it—as the skeleton outside attested
. . .
Ben
Yale scowled, rubbing absentiy at his bandages, refusing to entertain the
unwanted thought that kept popping into his head: suppose this other Ben Pertin
had used the medicpacs . . . and suppose modern ga¬lactic medicine had not been
enough to stop the inroads of the blue slime?
Belatedly
he became aware of the excitement out¬side. What were they rattling on about?
He
activated the Pmal translator on his arm, and managed to catch a few words of
what the giant was shouting. Something about aliens in the sky?
At
once Ben Yale was all attention. Now he remem¬bered hearing the zzzzt of laser
weapons, and the screams of those creatures like the one the boy ap¬peared to
keep for a pet. Something was surely going on, but what? .
He
leaped to the top of the vehicle, staring toward the sky. Yes, there was
something there, tantalizingly at the very limit of visibility, something that
looked like tiny dots proceeding in file across the broad dome of Cuckoo's
heaven. They were terribly near some of the bright clouds in Pertin's line of
vision, which made the identification of them even harder; but surely that one
creature that glinted so brilliantly had to be one of the winged girls?
And
that other—was it human?
He
stood benumbed until he heard the screams of wild orgs passing overhead, and
remembered to scram¬ble out of sight just in time; he did not want them din¬ing
off him! He saw the boy's org join them without any particular interest, and
then realized something was going on overhead.
The
straight line of beings had broken up. Several were dropping away, the others
changing course. He heard the scream of high-speed transport, and caught the
distant glint of some sort of air vehicles moving in toward the dissolving
party of creatures.
Ben
Yale pawed at his forehead, and realized the
visors
were gone; the red-haired giant had picked them up, now seemed to be playing
with them. Pertin bounded over and grabbed for them.
To
his surprise, the giant fled from him as if he were carrying the plague.
"Give me my glasses!" Pertin roared, pursuing. The giant ripped off a
series of words, which the Pmal struggled over and produced:
"Don't
touch! Stay away! I'll kill!"
"They're
mine!" Pertin said stubbornly, and, hesi¬tantly, Redlaw glanced at the
boy, shrugged, and slowly drew them off his head. He did not hand them directly
to Ben Yale but dropped them on the ground and stepped quickly back.
Ben
Yale didn't care; he snatched them up and put them on, staring blindly at the
sky.
It
was so hard to find anything at this extreme dis¬tance! Twice he caught a
corner of one of the bright clouds, and the magnified light dazzled him. Then
he found something, lost it, zeroed in on it again: It was a vessel, like the
ones the giant had called "Watcher ships." It looked ugly and
dangerous, and it was head¬ing purposefully, at high speed, toward where the
party had been sailing along. He sought the party again, with success until he
heard the thrump-thrump-thrump of a steam rocket. Peering under the glasses, he
saw the string of steam puffs the jet left behind, and managed to get the
person who was using it in quick focus just a moment before it dropped out of
sight.
Before
she dropped out of sight.
Ben
Yale stood transfixed, heedless of the shouts of the boy and the giant, staring
emptily in to the now empty sky where he had just seen, diving at breakneck
speed for the jungle, the girl he had left behind him on Sun One and had
thought never to see again in this life, Zara Doy.
FOURTEEN
*
When
Zara realized that she was alone on this strange planet, she was not so much
afraid as deeply resentful. She had not had the practice of much physi¬cal
fear. There was little occasion for it on tamed, human-filled Earth. The sorts
of fear she had learned to experience were fear of the unknown, as when she had
volunteered for this assignment—and that was more excitement, really—and, from
time to time, the fear, or the angry suspicion to be more exact, that some
rival was going to damage her standing with the stereo audiences, or that she
might fail to perform well in a broadcast.
It
was only as time passed, and the only nearby sounds she heard were of stirrings
and whisperings in the forest around her, that she began to understand that
that quivering in her shoulders, that jumpy need to look around all 360 degrees
at once, were the beginnings of terror.
She
was not quite alone. She had her communica¬tions equipment. She could be in
touch with the ground station in any moment. She might even hear, through the
Pmal links, some message from her partners, if they happened to come close
enough to her. But nothing came from the Pmal, and she drew her hand back a
dozen times from the switch that would activate the long-range communicator.
Something had drawn those enemy ships toward them—homing on their
transmis¬sions? She did not know, but until she felt more sure she was
reluctant to risk bringing them back.
And
she could hear them, could even catch glimpses from time to time that had to be
them, circling low over the treetops, searching. Searching, she felt quite
sure, for such of their quarry as had evaded them—like her¬self.
What
had become of the others?
Of
only one thing was she sure: in the fight, her side had not triumphed, because
there the stranger ships were, roaming boldly around. Val and the Scorpian had
lost that battle, and if they survived they too were in hiding.
She
thought of her husband and wondered if he had taken part in that fight, or if,
at the last moment, he had sheared off and followed after her. There were two
conclusions from that thought. If he had followed her, he should be nearby. If
he had not, he was probably dead.
At
that moment she realized the drone of the enemy ships was no longer distant.
She
crept to the edge of a fern-bordered lake, and peered cautiously upward. The
drone grew louder, a ceaseless, crushing, killing sound, and something
ap¬peared over the trees.
It
was long and tapered, with finlike wings at the end and mottled markings that
were no doubt a form of camouflage. It poked into the little circle of sky oyer
the lake like a thick, blunt spear.
Zara
Gentry' cautiously pulled back, away from the black water of the lake, into the
doubtful shelter of the trees. The Watcher ship floated out over the lake,
sup¬porting itself easily with the thrust of its propulsive jets against the
light gravity of Cuckoo. A thin golden snake was trailing below it, slipping
around the treetops, dropping into the black water. A snooper device, Zara
guessed, and tried to be perfectly still.
The
mottled vessel slowed still more, the golden snake growing slack in the water,
seeming to writhe around as it sought for something to strike at. Inch by inch
Zara crept backward, until she was wholly covered
by
a patch of great vines with bright blue flowers. She was not alone in her
hiding place. Insectlike beings were there too, and welcomed her presence
enthusiasti¬cally as a source of nourishment.
The
mottled ship dropped gently toward the beach and came to rest, not more than
fifty yards away. A wide door fell open in its side, and became a gang¬plank.
Zara
could not help gasping at what came out. TWorlie, Sheliaks, Sirians, and all
had not prepared her for the hideousness of the creatures in the ship. An
armored, black-beaked, hunchbacked creature waddled out across the lowered
platform, and flapped down to the beach on stubby yellow wings.
Zara
wriggled uncomfortably, trying to dislodge the small bloodsucking insects, at
the same time uneasily conscious of a bad smell of some sort. She could not
identify it. Then it hit her hard, and she realized it came from the creature
on the beach, a foul odor of carrion and decay, even at this distance strong
enough almost to turn her stomach.
The
creature flapped awkwardly into the air and flew around the perimeter of the
lake. As it came near, Zara willed herself to look down without moving a
mus¬cle. The reek was overpowering as the creature flapped overhead.
After
a moment she dared to look up, and saw that the Watcher had returned to the
beach. It shrilled some sort of message at the unseen crew of the brown-mottled
ship, and slowly other creatures like it began to come out of that dark doorway.
One by one they vaulted across the flat platform and glided into a ragged line
before the first Watcher.
All
of them engaged in a colloquy of whistles and screeches, until another appeared
from the ship and hopped and flew down to them with what looked like a bundle
of white staves or lances, which he passed out to the others. The squat Watcher
squealed something, and all of them rose hooting into the air.
Zara
realized she was in desperate trouble. This was a search party, no doubt of it,
and more likely than not she was the quarry. Perhaps they had seen her dive
into the forests here, or perhaps she had given herself away in some other
manner. No matter; they were intent on a trail, and at the end of it would be
Zara Doy Gentry.
She
whimpered in fear, trying to decide what to do. But her choices were so few!
She could use the laser weapon at her belt, hoping to kill a few of the
creatures before the others killed her. She could try to flee—but where? And
with what hope of success? Or she could continue to cower in her' bower of
vines, being eaten by the tiny biting insects, until the creatures found her.
None of those was very attractive . . .
And
the time when she would be found did not seem very far away. One of the
Watchers was circling near her. She heard it shriek, almost overhead, saw the
bright-spotted'blackness of its slick hard body, saw the flash of its bright
yellow wings. She couldn't tell which way its huge, bulging greenish eyes were
looking, but for a moment she thought it had seen her.
But
then its great, pliant ears cupped toward some¬thing ahead. Squealing, it
flapped out of sight, brandish¬ing the long white staff. She caught a gasp of
relief— tainted with the creature's evil reek.
She
lay quiet, while the hoots and squeals of the searchers kept up an insane
dialogue all around -her, until finally they seemed to concentrate and grow
far¬ther away.
She
dared to peer out, and saw that, one by one, they were landing near their
vessel again. v Had they given up the search? Were they about to get back in
their ship and go away?
She
crawled out of the tangle of vines to see. They were in a confused, bickering
huddle around the ship. The golden snake that had hung into the water was
wriggling insensately about, touching them and recoiling, darting into the
underbrush and rushing blindly back. They ignored it. They seemed to reach a
conclusion,
then,
and two of them leaped ponderously back onto the platform and disappeared into
the ship.
In
a moment they reappeared, bearing great platters of what looked like raw meat.
They dropped in their ungainly way to the beach and began to parcel out bits of
meat among their fellows.
It
was lunchtime, Zara realized. Their table man¬ners—pretending they chose to use
a table, which they did not—were atrocious. They bickered and fought over the
choicer pieces, throwing the bones and offal carelessly into the woods. The
squealing noises did not stop while they ate; they clearly had no compunction
about talking with their mouths full, if indeed so gross a species had
compunctions about anything.
At
that point it occurred to Zara that she had been thinking of them as animals.
But
they were not animals. They used advanced technology. They communicated among
themselves.
And
if she could get a little closer to them, her Pmal translator might be able to
pick up enough of their squeals and screeches to give her some idea of what
those communications were.
With
agonizing care she slipped along the margin of the lake, eyes firmly on the
feeding Watchers, until she was less than a dozen yards from the sandy beach
where they had landed. She activated the Pmal and held it to her ear. It would
take time for it to store up enough speech to be able to deduce meanings, but
it should only be a few minutes before it could at least identify and translate
a few words . . .
Time
was growing short. They were close to finished with their meal. A few of them
had evidently been de¬tailed to the task of cleaning up, and were picking up
left-over pieces from the platform of the ship. One flapped and waddled toward
her.
She
became conscious of her exposed position, but the Watcher did not seem
interested in exploring the undergrowth; it was only looking for a place to
dump its tray of slop. It did so, and turned away.
For
just a moment Zara felt a quick thrill of relief.
Then
she saw what the slop consisted of.
"Dear
God!" she moaned aloud, unable to prevent
it.
The
hooting and squealing rose like a barnyard cho¬rus as the Watchers caught the
sound. Hopping and flapping their great yellow wings, they came at her, and the
golden snake that had hung from their ship writhed faster than any of them.
Before she could move it had slipped across the beach with the sine-wave
wriggle of a sidewinder, touched her gently, then locked on her.
She
was held so tightly she could hardly breathe, much less run.
But
she hadn't been able to run before that, either— not run, and not even stand
up. Not since she looked at the trash and offal the creature was throwing away,
and saw one rounded bit of waste, melon-sized and bloody, roll languorously
toward her and stop . . .
She
knew then what these creatures had been feeding on, when she realized that she
was looking at the sev¬ered head of her husband.
What
followed was for Zara a desert of half- understood misery. The choking coils of
the golden rope seemed to have intelligence of their own. They wrapped
themselves around her, bearable when she was still, tightening cruelly with
every move she made to work them off. She was tumbled face-down on the talc-
white beach, with the hideous squeals and hoots of the Watchers piping
querulously or menacingly all around her, their foul reek choking her nostrils.
All that was merely painful. What was unbearable was the memory of the empty,
staring eyes of her husband, fixed on eternity. If Zara had been asked to
describe her mar¬riage, back on Earth, she would have defended it as a
convenient thing that cost little to maintain and, if it gave little in return,
was no burden to her. His death had killed no part of herself. But it was pain
nevertheless, pain to see this close person destroyed so callously,
used
so demeaningly, to stuff the maws of these-filthy creatures.
It
was only then that Zara began to realize that she might share that same fate
herself.
She
struggled to turn over, free her mouth from the choking sand. The golden coils
punished her, but gasp¬ing and panting she managed to flop onto her side.
"Please!" she begged. "I mean you no harm! Give me that metal
thing there—it will let us talk to each other." And she tried, at terrible
cost of agony as the golden coils remorselessly fought her movements, to point
to the Pmal translator, whispering away to itself on the sand.
The
hideous mask-faces thrust themselves at her, hooting and whistling. She knew
what they said was a language of a sort, and it was frustration to know that a
few yards away the Pmal was surely translating faith¬fully every word—but inaudibly,
because she had set the sound so low lest they hear her. "Please!"
she screamed as one came near her with a great curved cleaver. It paused,
seeming to enjoy her fear. The gab¬bling whistles and honks burst like laughter
around her.
She
closed her eyes, and tried to remember her brief training. What were her
options? Talking was useless, with the Pmal gone. Her laser weapon was long
since taken away. They had left her only the other instru¬ments strapped to her
arms—medicpac, chronometer, communicator . . .
Communicator!
She
took a deep breath, and forced herself to relax. She lay still as stone for
long seconds, remembering where the transmit switch was on the communicator,
feeling with her body-image senses where her hands were, where the switch was.
There would not be much freedom of action.
Then
she flung herself onto her back, forcing her hands together, clawing with the
fingers of her right hand for the forearm of her left.
The
golden coils responded at once by tightening so
violently
that she thought she felt bones snap; but she had touched the switch!
"Help!" she screamed. "This is Zara Doy Gentry calling! Help!
Please! Help me!"
A
hundred-odd degrees of arc around the great bulk of Cuckoo, Ben Line Pertin was
talking to himself.
On
his watch duty, desolately killing time while trying to solve the insoluble
problem of what to do about the wife that was not his, he had observed a
curi¬osity. The comm frequency that had been abandoned because no transmissions
had been received and its owner, that other avatar of himself named Ben Tom
Pertin, was presumed dead had suddenly come back to life.
When
he first beheld himself he was aghast. This devastated face, harried, sick, and
in pain, was himself! "Ben Tom!" he cried. "What's the
matter?"
The
face in the stereostage reflected annoyance. 'Tm not Ben Tom," it snapped.
"And I don't know what you mean. What's the matter with you people? I've
been trying to call for—I don't know, days!"
"Sorry,"
Ben Line Pertin said. "But what do you mean, you're not Ben Tom?"
The
ravaged face split in an unpleasant smile. "Glad I'm not," he said.
"Ben Tom's dead. I'm Ben Yale. Re¬member? When you—we—volunteered for the
sixth time? Well, that's me. I lost my ship, nearly lost my life. I've been
through hell, Ben Line! But at that I'm better off than Ben Tom, because his
bones are twenty feet away from me. This is his ship I've found; my own was
destroyed, communications and all."
"You
look as if you've been through hell," Ben Line agreed fervently.
"What are those bandages?"
The
walking skeleton looked incuriously at his arms and legs. "Oh, some sort
of fungus, I think," he said. "It itches. It hurts, too, but I've
blocked it with stuff from the medicpac. But I imagine I'll need
treatment."
"Well,"
cried Ben Line, finding something to be cheerful about for the first time in
some days, "I think
I've
got good news for you, Ben Yale. We've just been transmitting a new model
exploring ship to the ground station. This one's armed and armored, ready for
any¬thing, and it's got full ground-to-space capability! We can get it over to
you and have you up here in orbit in jig time—as soon as it's ready."
"Fine,"
Ben Yale said—strangely, thought his dupli¬cate; why wasn't he more excited?
But he was looking narrowly at Ben Line. He said at last tangentially,
"Have you heard anything from Zara?"
Ben
Line shook his head. Then he corrected himself. "Yes, as a matter of fact
I did," he said. "I don't re¬member—did you split off before I got
her message about not coming because she was pregnant?"
"Pregnant?"
Ben Yale demanded. "I don't believe it!"
"Well,
it's true. That is—it's true of our Zara. But there's another copy of
her—" He stopped. He was not sure how much he wanted to say.
"On
Cuckoo, right?" Ben Yale cried. "I knew it! I saw her, Ben Line!
She's in trouble. Not more than five thousand yards from here!"
"Trouble?
No, I don't think so . . ." Ben Line started.
"Don't
be a fool, Ben Line!" his avatar cried. "I tell you, I saw her!"
Ben
Line Pertin hesitated, filled with confusion and a painful mixture of hope and
fear. Another Zara, so close? But in danger?
"Stand
by," he said. "I'll scan that vector." And his fingers danced
over his console to FARLINK, ordering a search for transmissions from a point
five thousand yards at twenty-seven degrees from Ben Yale's signal.
From
her perch across the console from him, Venus sat quietly regarding Ben Line
Pertin. "What is the matter?" she asked, spraying a tiny violet
cloudlet from her atomizer.
He
shook his head as the rich menthol scent reached
him.
"It's Zara," he said. "Something I don't under¬stand. And one of
my replicates down there, looking— well, I don't know what's keeping him
alive."
"I
ache with your pains," Venus said sofdy. Though her stare had always
seemed blankly opaque, he felt her compassion through it. "So difficult
for you, to see yourself. I have at least been spared that. I have no contact
with my replicates, save one or two—and then, for one of us to die in this
edited form would not be bad."
Distracted,
Ben Line scowled at the console. There was no response to the search, although
he could see that the program was functioning. Lately he had found it more and
more difficult to distinguish sleep from waking. His sleep was filled with
troubled dreams, and his waking life was a nightmare.
The
dreams lingered with him, even when he was awake. He shivered, remembering one
dream—
"SCAN
UNSUCCESSFUL," FARLINK'S screen reported. "NO UNIDENTIFIED
TRANSMISSIONS FROM AREA."
"Continue,"
snapped Ben Line, reinforcing the ver¬bal order with his keyboard.
And
he stared into space, remembering that one dream. In it he had been a child
again. On Earth. Not the Earth he had left—so many replications before!— but
the Earth he imagined, as it had been before the first contact with the Galactic
civilizations. He had been sitting at a child's desk, in an upstairs room with
an open window, looking out over a sunny yard, read¬ing a book, when something
had come in from outside. It had fluttered through the window, lit on the page
in front of him. When he raised his hand to slap it it had leaped away, and he
saw it was no common fly but a tiny five-eyed bat shape with bright butterfly
wings. When he heard it squeaking, and caught its faint vine¬gar scent, he knew
it was a T'Worlie—incongruously there in that pregalactic age, but somehow
Earth's first visitor from deep space.
He
seized a flyswatter to kill it. Its shrill scream of
protest
hurt his ears, and its fear was a carrion reek. Wings whirring, it rose to fly
away, but he smashed it on the open page.
For
a moment he felt secure in that dream . . .
And
then he heard a droning roar from outside. The sun darkened. Shadows filled the
window. When he looked out he saw that the sky had turned black with alien
beings descending—T'Worlie and Sheliaks, Boaty-Bits and Scorpians, endless
processions of a thousand shapes and sizes all arrowing down upon him . . .
He
had wakened then briefly, tossed and turned, and drifted off again . . .
To
even worse horror.
Now
he dreamed that he was his other self, Replicate 5160, at the strange tachyonic
station to which he had been transmitted. But his form was no longer human. He
had been edited, transformed into a thick metal block, unable to move. He
understood at last— attempting to shudder, and failing—the silvery girl's
abhorrence of the form into which her own body had been recast to survive in an
oxygen atmosphere. His case was worse. He was a chess piece in a three-sided
match; he stood on a queer triangular game board, a hapless piece in a game
that FARLINK played against two terrible opponents.
One
opponent was a bright thing of lambent white flame, writhing and twisting and
flickering, without any ordered shape. The other was equally shapeless; but
black instead of bright. They reached across the board with curling tongues of
bright fire and terrible empty blackness, as if to move their pieces; but Ben
Line could not see their pieces, only the ones on his own side. One was the
pseudogirl Venus, her silver body frozen rigid. Another was Zara Doy, alive and
moving but imprisoned under a bell jar, pale and gasping, ago¬nized for air. A
third was Doc Chimp, a lifeless figure in brightly painted metal like a cheap
child's toy, hold¬ing out a tin cup. The pieces moved, or the board itself
moved
them, responding to FARLINK'S rapped electronic orders; but FARLINK was losing
the game. Most of its triangular spaces were already empty. The last move had
isolated Ben Line, far from his companions. A flut¬tering tentacle of icy
blackness stretched out toward him, and he knew that it was going to remove him
from the board and then the game would be ultimately, irre¬trievably lost . . .
"Ben
Line," chimed the voice of the silvery girl, "where are you?"
He
came back to the reality of the orbiter and the screen. "Sorry,
Venus," he muttered. "I was thinking about . . ." His voice died
out, but hers picked up the thought from him:
"About
that other Ben Pertin? About Replicate 5160? About all those others of you, Ben
Line?"
He
nodded. There had been no other signal from the copy of himself sent back along
the tachyon trace to whatever that galactic source of interference had been:
one more dead Pertin, he thought; the Universe is get¬ting seriously polluted
with my corpses . . .
He
sat up abruptly and realized FARLINK was still methodically scanning the
surface of Cuckoo for a sig¬nal that did not seem to be coming. He sighed and
reached from the console to terminate the program—
And
at that moment the screen lit up:
"STAND
BY! FREQUENCY DETECTED! NO COMMUNI¬CATION AS YET!"
And
while his fingers were still poised over the con¬sole he heard it. There was no
doubt.
On
the emergency frequency.
Zara's
voice.
And
the words:
"Help!
This is Zara Doy Gentry calling! Help! Please! Help me!"
In
the wrecked survey vessel on the surface, Ben Yale Pertin heard Zara's voice
repeated from the orbi¬ter. That voice had traveled nearly half a billion
miles,
round
trip, to get to him, but on the instant flash of tachyon transmission it had
taken less time than was measurable. The time the message had taken to travel
from the speaker on the satellite to the microphone three yards away that had
picked it up was longer than the time for the message to fly on the backs of
tachyons through space.
He
burst out of the vehicle, limping and rubbing at his bandages, but traveling as
fast as ever he had moved in his life. He was not in pain now. He had been
stead¬ily doping himself with pills and salves from the medic- pac; he was no
longer quite sober or sane. Although the pain of the ulcers under the bandages
was blocked, the effects of the blocks were shaking the stability of his mind.
All things seemed possible. The entire Universe seemed ready to meet his
commands. He scrambled through the undergrowth toward Redlaw and Org Ri¬der,
shouting, "My wife! She's in danger! We've got to help her!"
FIFTEEN
*
Org
Rider way too full of mourning for the loss of Babe to feel any great concern
about the dying strang¬er's excitement—until Redlaw translated some of what he
said.
"I
do not understand all," Redlaw said, "but it is a woman of his people
and she is a captive of the Watch¬ers. I expect they will eat her," he
added, moodily stroking his cleaver. "He wishes us to save her. And he
says, too, that if we do this a great ship of his people will come to battle
the Watchers for us."
Redlaw
paused, uncertain. "I do not know if he is telling the truth," he
said. "He is a dying man. Perhaps he has the madness of the dying?"
Org
Rider shrugged, but he was thinking about what Redlaw had said. With Babe gone,
he was not happy enough to care much about danger. And the woman die stranger
spoke about. If she was the one he had seen so briefly as she dashed herself
into the treetops—but was that possible? could she have survived that nightmare
plunge?—no matter; if it was she, there had been some¬thing about her that had
appealed powerfully to him.
He
said mournfully, "What does it matter if he lies? Let us do as he asks.
Where is this woman?"
Redlaw
scowled and gestured down the slope of Knife-in-the-Sky. "He says he knows
precisely and will show us. But how can he travel? I have seen men be¬fore,
eaten alive by that blue slime. They do not travel through the jungle! But he
is doing it. It is something in those cloths he puts on his ulcers, perhaps, or
in those
small
things he eats and drinks from the metal box. I wish I knew—" Redlaw gazed
doubtfully at Ben Yale Pertin, still shouting and gesticulating at them to
hurry. "And there is so much more he says that I cannot un¬derstand."
"No
matter," Org Rider said. "Let us save the woman. For him," he
added politely, as an after¬thought.
Even
so, they were far too slow for Ben Yale's liking; and then the trek through the
jungle was longer and harder than they had expected, more than two thousand
breaths, because Ben Yale insisted that they wait for him. He chose to carry
some great metal thing from the ship that he called "bazooka." It was
a wonder he could move at all, even without that weight. Beneath the stained
bandages—though he had replaced them just before they left—the blue slime oozed
out, always spreading, always etching new ulcers into his flesh. And it was a
constant peril to be near him in his clumsy lunging through the trees. A single
accidental touch of the blue slime might have meant death for either of them.
But
the two thousand breaths were over, and in time they reached a point where they
could see the distant black gleam of the tiny lake. There on the far shore
loomed the mottled hulk of the Watcher vessel.
Org
Rider wished for the far-seeing glasses, but of course they were no longer safe
to use: Ben Yale had touched them. He squinted across the lake. With mounting
excitement he saw: yes—there she was! The very girl he had seen. Wrapped like
the prey of a cord spinner in the golden coils of the Watchers' device, lying
helpless on the blinding white sands of the little beach.
Even
so, even at that distance, she was beautiful. Dis¬ordered as her hair was, it
had the reddish glint of far lightning. Something about her made him think of
his brother's wife. Yet this girl was more beautiful by far, in spite of the
drained pale cast of her face and the terror in her expression.
He
glanced at Redlaw, and started to move toward the lake.
The
giant stopped him.
"Wait!"
he rumbled. "Ben Yale says he has a plan. He says that this 'bazooka' is a
weapon. He wishes us to go around the lake, to be ready to attack the Watchers
from the forest. He says from here, with this weapon that he has carried, he
will destroy the Watcher ship. When he has done that, we are to kill those who
survive with his weapon and"—he patted his cleaver—"this one!"
"What
weapon does he have that will destroy the ship?" Org Rider demanded
suspiciously. "You told me he had no such weapon."
"He
lied," the giant growled moodily. "I knew he lied. And perhaps he is
lying now, how can I tell? I can understand so little of what he says!"
"What
does it matter?" repeated Org Rider, quelling the rising surge of feeling
in himself. "Let us do as he asks."
They
left Ben Yale just inside the undergrowth, lying on the scarlet moss, peering
over the sights of his tree- trunklike weapon, chuckling and muttering to
himself in his strange language. And they moved like ghosts through the
vegetation, circling around.
They
paused fifty yards from the beach. The foul deathweed stench of the Watchers
reeked in their nos¬trils as Org Rider whispered savagely, "How do we know
when he will destroy the ship? We should have arranged a signal."
"Should
have, should have," Redlaw rumbled. "But we didn't, boy." He
scowled toward the beach. "If only I were sure of him. I hate like poison
to get closer! Those golden ropes of theirs can smell a man, and they never
sleep. Still—" He sighed. "I'll try to get them with this
thing"—he patted the laser weapon—"and you go after them with your
bow. With any luck they'll be disorganized . . ."
He
broke off. There was a sharp, flat crack from across the lake and a puff of
grayish smoke. Out of the smoke emerged a needlelike metal object lancing
across the lake toward the Watcher vessel. It struck, and opened into a bright
flower of flame.
Blam.
The
sound of the explosion was far louder than they had expected. The mottled
vessel of the Watchers seemed to lift off the sand, and fall slowly. Bright
flame spouted from the hole that the stranger's weapon had made in its side.
"Curse
him," Redlaw howled, "we should have been closer! Do the best you
can, boy!" And he loped to¬ward the Watchers, firing with the laser
weapon. Sounds like the tearing of paper came from it, and Watchers fell before
it.
Org
Rider ran to the side of the lake, dropped to one knee, and began launching
arrows toward the Watchers. While one was still in the air he was notching and
aim¬ing the next. He did not wait to see how successful he was, but out of the
corner of one eye he saw one Watcher leap high over the vessel with a startled
squeal, an arrow protruding clear through him. An¬other, squalling and hooting,
lay on the ground, tugging at a shaft through his throat, while his drumming
feet revolved him in a complete circle around his shoulders.
"They've
broken!" Redlaw exulted over his shoul¬der. "Come on, boy! Let's go
in and finish them off!" As he spoke his laser weapon sliced through the
golden coils, and another blast from it burned a crisply sizzling hole through
a Watcher skull. Now the giant flung the laser to the winds and, screaming as
he leaped, bowled in on the Watchers, hacking at them with his cleaver. Org
Rider was just behind. The two of them drove the Watchers back like avenging
angels. With every stroke of Redlaw's cleaver and the boy's knife a Watcher
squealed and fell from their paths.
Zzzzzzatl
The
noise was louder than anything Org Rider had ever heard, and for a moment he
did not understand what it was.
Then
he saw that the Watcher vessel was not, after all, quite dead.
From
a round bulge on its top something flashed like lightning, and the great
ripping sound lashed at his ears again. The Watcher ship was firing its main
armament. Not at them, Org Rider realized—not that there was any question about
that; if the laser cannon had been aimed at them they would never have known
what hit them—but probing across the lake for the bazooka. Zzzzzzatf, and a
bee-tree went up in smoke, smitten by a lightning bolt Zzzzzat.', and a sudden
corridor opened up in a stand of deathweed.
"Grab
the girl!" Redlaw bawled. "Let's get out of here before they finish
with Pertin and start on us!"
There
were still Watchers alive and Org Rider yearned to catch and kill every one;
but he knew Red- law was right. He bounded to the side of the girl. She was
just beginning to sit up. The blood had been squeezed out of her limbs for so
long she was numbed and tottering.
Org
Rider felt almost as dizzy as she was. All this was so terribly new and
confusing! The needle-bright light of the laser, the harsh explosions and
lightning- bolt sizzling of the long-range battle across the lake were entirely
out of his experience, in a life lived in the perpetual pink-gray dawn of
Cuckoo. He was not afraid; but he was disoriented.
Still
he had to act. He grabbed the girl's arm and pulled her away. She did not
resist, except to break free for a moment and pick up a piece of metallic
equip¬ment. Then she was with him, bounding as fast as they could into the
shelter of the woods, Redlaw close be¬hind. The last Watcher on his feet outside
the ship chal¬lenged Redlaw, but lost his head and half his trunk to the
keen-edged cleaver. Then the giant was beside
them,
shouting, "Hurry! We've got to get out of sight!" The girl could not
have understood his words; but she didn't have to, the need was clear.
At
last there was another bazooka shot from across the lake, and this one was
clean and true on the bulge at the top of the Watcher ship. It blew up in a
gout of flame.
All
three of them cheered.
"We
did it, boy!" the giant bellowed. "Beat the Watchers in fair fight!
It's the first time it ever hap¬pened in all the time of the world!"
Org
Rider crowed in pleasure, pummeling the girl's back as though she were another
man. Exultant, laugh¬ing, as delighted as he, she clapped him on the shoulder
with a force that sent him spinning.
He
picked himself off the ground and looked at her with new respect. She was no
timid, frail maiden! She was as strong as he. And yet—she seemed more femi¬nine
than any woman he had ever seen. More so even than the girl who had married his
brother. A glow of color began to light her death-pale face, and he found
himself staring into her widening eyes. They were a bright-flicked brown, like
the wild flowers that colored the grassworld after the rain. Even with the hated
reek of the Watchers still fouling his nostrils he could smell the faint scent
that came from her, a clean sweetness that swept away the Watchers' fetor and
left him with the fragrance of the rain itself, after the flatworld had been
brown and dry.
"Stop
mooning, boy!" Redlaw ordered, laughing as he said it. "We've beaten
one shipload of Watchers, but they're not through yet. There'll be more. When
this ship doesn't report in, they'll send another to look for it. If they
managed to send off a distress report, that ship is on its way now!"
Org
Rider tore his eyes off the girl. "All right. Which way?"
The
giant gazed about. "We'll have to go back around the lake," he
decided. "First place, we'd best try
to
find Ben Yale, if he's still alive. Second, I don't think we can get out this
way. That's bare rock up there. We'd be easy targets on it—and I see blue on
those rocks, boy; I think it's the slime. We don't want to go near that."
Org
Rider nodded and turned to the girl. Speaking as clearly as he could, gesturing
to make his meaning plain, he said: "Come. We leave here. Now."
She
laughed. She touched the metallic thing she had picked up and spoke, and from
the thing came a flat, dead voice that said: "I understand. I agree.
And"—to Org Rider even the lifeless metallic tone of the transla¬tor could
not keep all feeling out of the words—"with all my heart I thank you
both."
The
boy was enraptured. He recognized the speaking machine; it was the same as Ben
Yale's, but whole and working properly. In Ben Yale's conversations with Redlaw
he had become accustomed to being excluded; it had not occurred to him that an
undamaged machine would make it possible for him to be in one-to-one con¬tact
with this wondrous person.
He
caught the girl's hand, and they followed Redlaw back toward the lake margin—
And
stopped.
From
behind the wrecked Watcher vessel a lance of green fire spat out at them.
Redlaw
shrieked in agony and spun away, clutching his arm. "Run!" he bawled,
setting them an example. They blundered after him, and at every leap Org Rider
expected that green fire to burn through their backs.
They
stopped almost up against the bare rock wall that cupped that edge of the lake.
"There was one still alive," Redlaw gasped, holding the place on his
upper arm that had blossomed into a blood-red blister of pain. "It's lucky
he fired when he did! If he'd waited he'd have had me clean, and you two as
well." He scowled up at the mountain. "We can't go up that way,"
he mut¬tered. "And we can't go back to the lake, because he's waiting
there."
Org
Rider risked raising himself to peer around the multiple boles of a flame-tree.
He could see the Watcher, broad yellow wings slowly stirring. One was damaged,
and dragged; the Watcher had been hurt, too. But he held the thing that looked
like a black stick, and spat green flame, without faltering.
"If
we can't go forward," Org Rider said, "and can't go back—and can't
stay here, because they'll be an¬other Watcher ship before long—then what do we
do?"
They
waited and watched, but the creature remained steadfastly alert.
"We
have no choice," Redlaw groaned at last. "We have to kill him. His
gun outranges our weapons, and his bug eyes can see us in every direction. It
won't be easy."
Redlaw
scowled at his cleaver.
"The
only way I see to take him is to rush from all sides. He may kill us all, but I
don't think so. One of us will get him. But the other two—"
He
hesitated, then he finished: "At least one of the other two will be
dead."
"No!"
the boy shouted. "Not her. She has suffered enough from the Watchers. You
and I can do it, Red- law!"
The
girl, listening, shook her head. She spoke in that pretty, singing voice, and
the metal voice from her arm echoed, "I can perform my share. I thank you
for your good heart."
Org
Rider stared at her and said, "Please don't. I don't know your name—"
She
said in her own voice, not through the translator, "Zara." It sounded
like music to him as he rehearsed it several times, tasting its flavor.
"Zara.
Please, Zara, don't do this. You are not a warrior. Redlaw and I can handle the
Watcher."
The
giant thundered, "Idiot boy, we can't! Our only hope is three attacks at
once. That is a faint enough hope—two is suicide!"
The
girl spoke, and the Pmal rattied flady, "It is de¬cided, Org Rider. I
again thank you, but now let us act. Tell me what I must do."
The
giant rasped, "Come in from behind the ship. Get close to him. The beast
has a hard shell, but there are soft joints. One is where his neck would be, if
he had a neck. There's a pale stripe above his black hump. Stab him deep in the
middle of that, if you can."
Org
Rider watched the girl go on her longer, round¬about trip with his breath caught
in his throat. She would not die! He would see to it. The first one to display
himself to the Watcher would surely be the first one fired on; the other two
would have a chance at least minutely better. Org Rider determined to be that
first one.
But
it would be foolish, would even endanger them, for his break to come much
before their own. It would simply mean that the . Watcher would pick him off
quickly, and then have only two foes to confront. So he squirmed to his place
and waited, watching the faint ripples in the underbrush that marked the
movements of Redlaw and the girl. Could the Watcher see and un¬derstand those
same ripples? He did not know. He could only hope.
Something
was tugging at the back of his mind. What was it?
Then
he recognized the growing sound from the sky, and looked up. Down at him dived
a great org.
Org
Rider froze. It was his death he saw coming. With only the knife left—the bow
was long since cast away—he could not prevail against talon and fang. All he
could do was stare at its savage splendor. He crouched numbly, waiting for the
hooked black talons to strike.
Even
in that moment he saw the blue beauty of its huge, hooded eyes, the bright flow
of its form, the even sheen of bronze scales shading into the silver flash of
its narrowed wings. Wonder at its clean, sleek power made
his
throat ache. Orgs were better and greater than men! Surely they were more
beautiful. It was his death . . . but if he had to perish, here on
Knife-in-the-Sky, it was better to be killed by this mighty org than by die
wait¬ing Watcher.
But
dying that way would not serve Zara . . .
Org
Rider leaped to his feet, yelling and bounding toward the Watcher ship.
As
he had expected, the Watcher was staring up with his great blind eyes,
distracted by the org. Perhaps after the org finished with him it would go for
the Watcher next! Org Rider glanced toward the Watcher, husband¬ing his charges
as he nervously waited under the shelter of the ship, then back toward the org.
It
screamed again.
The
bright wings opened a little, flaring it toward him out of the bottom of the
dive, and he saw the scars that marred its lean perfection. A long, dark wound,
not fully healed, where the scales had been ripped from its flank. A break in
the brightness of one wide wing.
The
screaming changed . . . and queerly, became words.
"Babe!"
blared the mighty voice of the org, repeat¬ing his own voice like a tape under
maximum gain. "Babe come back!"
The
boy heard his own voice thunder down at him from the sky and could hardly
understand. But what the words did not explain the actions did. The org dipped
down over him. Its golden-scaled trunk snatched him up into the air, squeezed
him almost too hard, flexed to set him on its back above the widened wings.
Then
recognition hit him.
It
was Babe! Changed—older—hurt, but Babe! Scales had replaced the infant fur. The
healing scars told of combat. But it was he!
A
laser scream spat past his ear and brought him out of his dreaming. He kicked
the org strongly and shouted, "Fast, Babe! Over the trees!"
The
beast responded instantly, putting the loom of the ship between them and the
Watcher. And Org Rid¬
er
sobbed, "Babe! I'm so glad!" He stroked the bronze scales. Yards
below he could see the top of the trees and caught a glimpse of Zara's
terrified pale face, staring up at them. What could she be thinking? Had she
ever seen an org before? Did she understand that Org Rider was master, not
prey?
But
looking at her brought him back to the needs of that moment. He wheeled Babe
around, low over the treetops, and shouted down: "Now! Let's get
him!"
And
as he saw the mighty form of Redlaw leap free and begin to run toward the
Watcher, he gouged his heels into Babe's scaled side and commanded, "Kill,
Babe! The Watcher! Kill him!"
The
chaos of the next moments was indescribable. Org Rider heard the shouts of Redlaw
and the shriller, fainter cry of the girl. He saw the cleaver glinting in the
hands of the giant.
Then
he was around the ship and beating back in toward the Watcher.
The
black stick crackled. Bright light blasted Org Rid¬er's eyes; a sudden electrical
stench choked him. But it had been a miss; he was still alive!
And
then they were on top of the Watcher. Babe bel¬lowed as his striking talons
ripped the Watcher out from under the hull. They all tumbled in a slow-motion
heap, boy, org, and Watcher together. The reek of the squealing Watcher stung
his throat as he stabbed and stabbed with his knife to find the death place.
In
the end it was Babe that took the last of the life from the Watcher, the great
claws simply wrenching the hideous head free of its body. The shrilling scream
stut¬tered and stopped abruptly, and the ugly carcass top¬pled slowly forward
in death.
"We
did it!" Org Rider called. "Babe, you're a hero! Babe—"
But
the org did not respond.
Shaken,
Org Rider lifted his head free and stared. The delicate pink trunk was
trembling violently. The
huge
eyes were dulled. As Org Rider reached out to touch him, Babe screamed in pain.
The
Watcher's laser had found its mark after all.
As
Redlaw and the girl came running up, Babe fum¬bled out to touch the boy with
his shuddering trunk. The voice that mimicked Org Rider's own said, "Babe
go. Babe go . .
The
light went out of the great eyes, and the org was dead.
Org
Rider sat mourning with the great head in his lap, Redlaw and the girl standing
helplessly by, until at last Redlaw rumbled, "Sorry, boy, but we've got to
get out of here. The Watchers'll be after us any time now."
Org
Rider looked up and nodded somberly. "I know." He got up, reaching a
hand to the girl. "Are you all right?" She smiled, in both
reassurance and compassion; he needed no translator to understand that, or the
look of sympathy in her eyes.
There
was a sudden scream of high speed from the sky, and all three of them looked
upward in instant re¬awakened fear.
"Too
late!" Redlaw raged. "Friends of hell! There's the Watcher ship on
us, while we're standing around like fools! We can't get away now. We'll have
to fight—and we've nothing to fight with but the Watch¬er's own lance!" He
dove to the side of the decapitated beast, choking in fury as much as the evil
cloud of its deathweed stink.
The
girl stopped him.
Her
clear voice, repeated through the translator on her arm, said: '"It's all
right. It's not a Watcher ship. Look."
Unbelieving,
Redlaw and the boy craned their necks to stare upward.
The
vehicle that was settling down on them was far larger than any Watcher ship
either had ever seen. Even the colors were different: bright silver, crisp
black, a flare of yellow-white gas from its underjets.
"They've
come to rescue us," Zara said. "We're safe now. All of us."
SIXTEEN
*
In
the orbiter Ben Line Pertin watched in a fever of excitement as the survey ship
picked up Zara and her two companions. He stared at her image in pain and
wonder. So tall and thin she was, in her edited version! So worn and pale, with
the stresses of her batde with the Watchers! He wanted desperately to talk to
her, to say words of love and welcome; but although he was hard pressed with
grief and loneliness he was not mad, and he understood that their relationship
would have to mature in its own way. To him she was his loved and missed wife.
To her, coming from an earlier Zara Doy, he was a stranger.
And
then there was the solved puzzle of why she called herself "Zara Doy
Gentry." She had married someone else! He had scarcely felt that shock
when he learned that that husband was dead, fodder for the maws of the
Watchers. Shock again! This time a differ¬ent kind of shock, a reprieve, even
if purchased at the cost of a man's life—who could not have been a bad man, Ben
Line told himself with one reasoning part of his mind, for Zara to meet and
marry him. But another part of his mind was bursting with joy. How strange for
his wife to be a widow and a wooable stranger, all at once!
And
suddenly he was exhausted. He had stayed by the communicator for twenty-two
hours, past the time of his regular duty, through the new Zara's cry for help,
up to the moment of rescue and for some time beyond. Now he had to sleep. He
decided against attempting
if
even
to leave a message for this to-be-won Zara, and headed for his cocoon. There
would be time. It was a long voyage up from Cuckoo and around to where the
orbiter swung, nearly half a billion miles now. It seemed even longer in the
urgency of his anticipation.
Yet
there was no way to shorten it. Even with nu¬clear rockets, the acceleration of
the survey ship was limited to what its rescued passengers could stand. That
was not much. Redlaw and Org Rider had lived all their lives in the gentle pull
of Cuckoo, and even Zara and Ben Yale Pertin, in their edited versions, could
hardly stand a single gravity of acceleration. For Ben Yale even that much was
dangerous; he had been swept from the jungle into full medical cocooning,
instantly.
Ben
Line fell asleep, thinking of Ben Yale coming up from Cuckoo, battered and foul
with the ulcers of the blue slime . . . and of that other Ben Pertin,
Repli¬cate 5160, lost somewhere at the transmitter of the tachyon interference,
at a point unknown inside the Galaxy . . . and, above all, of the sweet and
smiling face of Zara Doy, now Zara Gentry, who might some¬time soon be Zara
Pertin again . . .
He
woke to Doc Chimp screaming in his ear:
"Ben!
Ben Line! Wake up! You've been found, you're still alive. Oh, wake up, Ben Line
Pertin, there's a signal from you coming in!"
Heavy
with sleep, Ben Line Pertin stumbled after Doc Chimp to the terminal dome. His
mind was fuzzed with visions of himself in all his myriad guises. Some¬times he
was not sure which he was: the innocent back on Earth who had never left, the
one on Sun One who was still happily married to Zara Doy and happy father of
her child, any of the dead ones ... all of them . . .
But
one dead one was not dead!
In
the dome, the huge image of a haggard human face was repeated on half a hundred
screens, all around the curve. Half of the face was haggard with dirt and
grime, the other half caked with dark blood; a ragged wound on the scalp still
oozed, untended.
It
took Ben Pertin a moment to recognize himself: Replicate 5160.
"See!"
Doc Chimp chirped in his ear. "It's you, Ben! Not dead! The message
started coming in a few minutes ago. But it's awful bad, Ben Line; you can't
understand a word of it, without the Pmal translators."
Ben
Line was still stupid with sleep. "You mean I'm—he's speaking some other
language?"
"Not
that, Ben Line," the chimpanzee said gently. "Look at him! He can
hardly talk in any language. The Pmal has to put it into words we can
understand. Even then—well, it's in symbol-script, not sounds. He must have had
some bad times, Ben Line."
And
it was so: the soiled and battered mouth was moving, but no audible sound came
through the wall speakers. Instead bright computer symbols were danc¬ing under
each screen:
".
. . INCOMPLETELY EXPLORED. IN SHAPE, THIS OBJECT I FOUND MYSELF ON IS A LARGE,
FLAT DISK, ROTATING SLOWLY. MAYBE A THOUSAND FEET ACROSS. IT'S SOME SORT OF
SPACECRAFT, BUT IT DOES NOT AP¬PEAR TO BE UNDER POWER NOW—MAYBE NOT FOR A VERY
LONG TIME.
"THE
LEVELS TOWARD THE RIM ARE SEALED AND COLD. VERY COLD. I BELIEVE THE CREW IS
HIBERNAT¬ING THERE TO WAIT FOR THE NEXT PLANET. ONE PLACE LOOKS LIKE A CONTROL
FORM. SPHERICAL. STARS IM¬AGED ON ITS INSIDE SURFACE, AND A POD HUNG IN THE
CENTER
FOR THE PILOTS BUT THERE ARE NO
PILOTS
THERE.
HIBERNATING, I GUESS. I COULD NOT IDENTIFY THE STAR IMAGES, BUT I DID SEE WHAT
LOOKED LIKE A REPRESENTATION OF CUCKOO. ONLY IT WAS STRANGE. IT WAS ALL MADE OF
METAL. NO SOIL, ROCKS, SEAS, MOUNTAINS—JUST A GREAT SPHERE OF METAL.
"I
THINK—"
The
bloodied head turned suddenly and vanished from the screen.
For
an instant the screens were dark; then shape¬less blotches of color flickered
over them, FARLINK
interposed
its own message, in all the tongues of the viewers:
"TRANSMISSION
INTERRUPTED, STAND BY."
There
was a sudden rush of squeal, cry, shout, and roar from the beings in the
terminal room, as each one chattered to its neighbor about the message. Ben
Line, sick at the sight of his destroyed self, muttered, "I don't
understand. What is it?"
Venus
floated over toward him and filled him in quickly. "Your replicate
reported in a few minutes ago, Ben Line. He was in a ship, but some sort of
mechani¬cal device—a robot, but not a fully sentient one, I'm sure—attacked him
as he came out of the receiver, and it is only now that he has been able to
report."
"Ship?"
Ben Line shook his head, trying to clear it. The source of the distant
unidentified tachyon trans¬mission that they had actually intercepted en route
to Cuckoo—a ship? There were no ships equipped with tachyon facilities that could
possibly have a link with Cuckoo, not anywhere in the known Universe . . .
Of
course, there was always the unknown Universe, he thought, the muscles of his
back crawling.
"And
there were representations of many beings there, Ben Line," the silvery
girl went on excitedly. "Your people! Boaty-Bits. Sheliaks. Your replicate
thinks that the ship is a sort of advance guard for Cuck¬oo, sampling inhabited
planets, sending specimens back. That would account for— Wait, here it is
again!"
The
ravaged head shook itself together into view on the screens. It was more horrid
than ever; Pertin's repli¬cate had been in another fight. Fresh blood was
drib¬bling down the beard-spiked chin, and the lower front teeth were gone. The
hollowed eyes were darting franti¬cally from side to side, as the ruined mouth
tried to form soundless words.
"IT'S
LOCATED ME AGAIN," the bright words flashed. "UGLY THING, THICK OVAL
SLAB, BELTED WITH SEN¬SORS, CRAWLING AND JUMPING ON A FRINGE OF TENTA¬CLES. IT
DOESN'T COMMUNICATE, BUT IT HAS JUST
ABOUT
KILLED ME. WE'VE BEEN PLAYING HIDE AND SEEK. NOW / THINK IT HAS WON THE GAME,
AS SOON AS IT FINISHES BREAKING THE DOOR DOWN . . .
"ANYWAY,
THAT'S MY REPORT. KISS ZARA FOR ME— IF YOU CAN, BEN LINC. THAT'S ALL FOR—"
And
there was no more. The image exploded and died, and FARLINK underlined it after
a moment with:
"TRANSMISSION
TERMINATED. NO FURTHER PULSE FROM SOURCE."
The
belt of screens blazed and went blank.
A
stir of strain ran around the terminal chamber, and muted hootings and
clangings and shrillings of commu¬nication began.
Ben
Line Pertin shook his head slowly, trying to take it all in. There was so much,
all happening so fast. An¬other death of a double. A real flesh-and-blood Zara
on her way. And on the larger scale, the fantastic mystery of a scout ship from
Cuckoo, sampling inhabited plan¬ets.
He
tried to tell Nammie and Venus how he felt. He caught a burnt-fur scent from
the T'Worlie that sur¬prised him, until he recognized it.
Fear.
The
T'Worlie was afraid of what the message meant
For
a moment Ben Line allowed himself to share that fear of the terrible unknown,
of the race that must have built that ship; but thoughts came flooding back,
and his fear melted into anticipation; and that was how it was with Ben Line
Pertin on the orbiter.
With
Ben Yale Pertin on the survey ship, spiraling around toward the orbiter, things
were somewhat differ¬ent.
They
were better than they had been in a long time, he told himself. The survey
ship's medical facilities were dealing nicely with the blue slime. He spent
three days in the cocoon, while his skin was gently soaked away and a new one
grown on. Then, swathed like a mummy in circulating-field bandages, he was allowed
into the
tfommon
room where the others were gathered, his hu- manoid nurse, a Purchased Person,
following after him. "I'm all recovered," he announced.
Somewhat
warily, his three companions from the bat¬tle against the Watchers welcomed
him. They had re¬ceived medication too, and looked fine—especially Zara, Ben
Yale thought greedily, devouring her with his eyes. Redlaw and Org Rider
gravely shook his hand, a skill they had just learned. Zara came over and
patted his head. She drew back and looked at him. "Not really, I
think," she said. "Not all recovered. But far better than the last
time I saw you."
They
and the ship crew had been talking excitedly over the strange message from the
orbiter, which had been relayed to them. While the Purchased Person made him
comfortable in an open-end hammock, Ben Yale listened. "—explains so
much," said the Pmal, speaking for a horse-headed Canopan, the ship's
pilot. "Explains why some of you races are duplicated on Cuckoo. That
scout ship must have been twenty thou¬sand years sailing through the Galaxy,
picking up speci¬mens and sending them back. And of course some got loose and
multiplied. They wouldn't know they weren't indigenous."
Org
Rider rapped indignandy, "That is our home! Our people have lived there
forever—"
The
Canopan snickered a whinnying laugh. "No of¬fense," its Pmal said
good-naturedly. "But what puzzles me," he went on, "is that
picture of Cuckoo the repli¬cate found. All made of metal! But it isn't like
that, it's a world. A funny one, but still—"
"Wait,"
Org Rider cried through his own translator. "Perhaps I know something
here! For there is a part of our world that is metal. A desert, that lies far
beyond our grassworld, beyond the shadow of Knife-in-the-Sky. My mother heard
about it from a chief who owned an org. He tried to cross that metal desert
once, looking for another grassworld beyond the reach of the Watch¬ers. He
nearly died there."
The
other beings looked at Org Rider, who returned their various kinds of gaze
steadfasdy. "It's true," he said. "It is all bare metal, harder
than any axe or knife. There's nothing alive on it. No light except the dim
glow of the clouds. The chief flew until his org grew so weak he had to give it
all the food they carried for both of them. And then on the way back, trying to
return to save their lives, he grew weak too, so weak that it had to carry him
in its trunk. And," he cried, remembering more as he spoke, "that is
of course how our world be¬gan. Everyone knows this! It was a hard bare shell,
the first org's egg. Before the makers made their great fire to hatch all
things from it."
He
paused, puzzled. The beings were making a great variety of sounds, but the
Pmals were not translating them into language. They could not; the sounds were
laughter.
"But
it is true," he insisted.
Zara
smiled and gently put her hand in his. "It is puzzling," she said.
Ben
Yale Pertin cleared his throat.
"Zara,"
he called.
It
pleased him to see that she released the boy's hand to turn to him. "Yes,
Ben Yale?"
He
hesitated. How to tell her that she and he had once been married?—were married,
and having chil¬dren, on Sun One. He could not think of the right words, and as
it was so important to him, and he wanted to be able to touch her, to kiss her,
to hold her in his arms when he talked of these things, he tempor¬ized and
turned what he said a different way. "I'm sorry about—about your
loss." He could not bring him¬self to say, "about your husband's
death."
"Thank
you," she said. "It was a shock. But I've had a little time to get used
to it."
The
Purchased Person suddenly spoke, the voice hu¬man enough but the thought behind
it coming from heaven knew who, heaven knew where. "Had you
considered
yon could have him again?" it demanded, in a voice oddly, harshly male.
Zara
looked surprised, and Redlaw rumbled, "She said that before once, when you
weren't here. Have your husband make another copy and send it to you— whatever
that means," he added, knotting his brows and staring about. Redlaw had
never heard the expres¬sion "culture shock," but he was well on his
way to drowning in it. Org Rider seemed to accept everything with grave
interest and comfortable admiration; but he was younger, of course. For Redlaw
this sudden expo¬sure to such strangeness was difficult.
Zara
said thoughtfully, "Why, that never occurred to me."
From
his cocoon Ben Yale uttered a muffled groan. Damn that savage! he cursed
furiously. Giving her that idea—
She
was speaking again: "He might very well volun¬teer for replicating again,
at that. He was—is a kind person, Jon is. But—"
She
looked around and suddenly shook her head, smiling. "I'm sorry to be
bothering you with my per¬sonal problems," she said.
"No,
no," called Ben Yale, suffering. "We want to hear. What were you
going to say?"
"Well,
just that I wouldn't like to ask him to. I know it doesn't mean anything to be
transmitted, in real terms. You're not any less for having a copy made. But in
psychological terms it does, and you are. Expecially for Jon. It was hard
enough for him to volunteer the first time. I wouldn't want to put him through
it again."
Ben
Yale exulted in the cocoon. So Zara would stay free! Of course, he mused, that
did not mean she would marry him. Not necessarily. There was always that other
Ben Pertin, Ben Line, waiting hot-handed on the orbiter for them to arrive. Ben
Yale knew with what impatience his double would be waiting, and what his
intentions would be; he could not mistake them, be¬cause he shared them wholly
and exactly. And besides,
he
thought, he had time. The survey vessel still had two days to go before it
reached the orbiter. It had been three days already—days wasted, he complained
to himself; but there had been no way to help it, he had simply been physically
unable to court Zara. But now— now things would be different. He closed his
eyes, dreaming of how they would come to the orbiter. By then he would be out
of his bandages, and rid of this pestilential Purchased Person nurse. He would
take her to dinner—no, he thought regretfully, scratch that; there was no place
on the orbiter for anything like that. But he would take her aside. In the rec
room, at a time when not many others would be around.
She
would be grateful to him, he estimated compla- cendy; had he not saved her
life? Or at least helped to do so? And she would have the interest women always
felt for a hero in him. And he would tell her, very gent¬ly and simply, about
his love for herself, Zara Doy; and how they had been married, and how much
they had loved each other . . .
He
scowled. The thought of Ben Line Pertin intruded. Ben Line would have almost
the same advantages as himself, bar, of course, the couple of days before they
got there. But a couple of days might not be enough to awaken her romantic
interest.
He
nodded to himself, sealed up the end of the co¬coon with a quick
motion—startling the Purchased Per¬son who stood wide-eyed beside him—and
flipped on the stereostage, putting through a call to Ben Line Per¬tin on the
orbiter.
When
he saw himself, or the Ben Line version of himself, he was startled. So
haggard! So sad! For a moment he almost thought it was a replay of that
terri¬bly depressing version of himself from the unidentified ship; but then
Ben Line spoke. "Oh, it's you," he mut¬tered. "What do you
want?"
Ben
Yale said carefully, "I think you know, Ben Line. It's about Zara."
Ben
Line nodded lifelessly. "Yes. I suppose I should
have
expected you to call. I'm sorry, but—well. What can I do? I'll just go on being
lonely. I've had plenty of practice—as you know."
Startled,
Ben Yale stared at his duplicate. Elation and a nagging, suspicious fear fought
with each other in his mind; he struggled to keep his voice level, even as he
was wondering what had made Ben Line give up so easily. "I admire you for
taking it so well," he managed to say.
"You
do?" Ben Line looked surprised. Then, slowly, "Well, I kind of admire
you, too. I mean, you actually look content, and God knows I can't; I don't
feel it. Well, it's too bad we both had to be losers, but maybe it would be
even harder if we weren't." And without an¬other word he broke the
connection.
Losers?
Ben
Yale shook his swathed head, unbelievingly. Both of them losers?
And
then a sudden fear chilled him, and he opened the end of the cocoon once more
and peered out at Zara—
At
Zara and Org Rider, sitting quiefly, whispering at each other, the boy's hand
caught in the girl's two, their shoulders touching.
Losers.
A
couple of days had been time enough to awaken her romantic interest, after all.
But
not for him.
On
Earth astronomers were studying their tachyon transmissions of the object
called Cuckoo. Almost in¬visible in the flood of light from the bright stars
Benet- nasch and Cor Caroli it swam in toward the center of the Galaxy.
Its
course would take it very near the volume of space occupied by Sun and Earth.
It was very, very far away. It would not get there for many thousands of years
. . .
But it was coming.