Other Ace books edited by
Gardner Dozois
UNICORNS! (with Jack Dann)
MAGICATS! (with Jack Dann)
BESTIARY! (with Jack Dann)
MERMAIDS! (with Jack Dann)
SORCERERS! (with Jack Dann)
DEMONS! (with Jack Dann)
THE BEST OF
ISAAC ASIMOV'S
SCIENCE
FICTION
MAGAZINE
EDITED BY GARDNER DOZOIS
ACE BOOKS, NEW
YORK
The End of Life As We Know It" by Lucius
Shepard; copyright © 1984 by Davis
Publications, Inc.; reprinted by permission of the author.
"The Peacemaker" by Gardner Dozois;
copyright C 1983 by Davis Publications, Inc.; reprinted by permission of
Virginia Kidd, Literary Agent.
"Fire
Watch" by Connie Willis; copyright © 1982 by Connie Willis; reprinted by
per-mission of the author.
"Her
Furry Face" by Leigh Kennedy; copyright © 1985 by Davis Publications,
Inc.; reprinted by permission of the author.
"Hardfought" by Greg Bear; copyright ©
1983 by Davis Publications, Inc.; reprinted by permission of the author.
"Press Enter R" by John Varley; copyright © 1984 by Davis
Publications, Inc.; re-printed by permission of Blassingame, McCauley and Wood,
Agents.
"Bloodchild" by Octavia E. Butler;
copyright © 1984 by Davis Publications, Inc.; re-printed by permission of the
author.
THE BEST OF ISAAC ASIMOV'S SCIENCE
FICTION MAGAZINE
An Ace
Book/published by arrangement with
Davis Publications, Inc.
PRINTING HISTORY
Ace
edition/February 1988
All rights
reserved.
Copyright © 1988 by Davis Publications, Inc.
Cover art by John Harris.
This book may not be reproduced in whole or in part,
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For information address: The Berkley Publishing Group,
200 Madison Avenue, New York, New York 10016.
ISBN: 0-441-05498-6
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PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
CONTENTS
Foreword: Isaac Asimov's
Science Fiction Magazine Gardner Dozois vii
THE END OF LIFE
As WE KNOW IT Lucius Shepard 1
THE PEACEMAKER Gardner Dozois 33
FIRE WATCH Connie Willis 51
HER FURRY FACE Leigh Kennedy 92
HARDFOUGHT Greg Bear 111
PRESS ENTER John Varley 174
BLOODCHILD Octavio E. Butler 238
FOREWORD
Isaac Asimov's
Science Fiction Magazine
by Gardner Dozois
Ten years ago, in the lost and fabled days of
1976-gone now with the dodo and the dinosaur Isaac Asimov's Science Fiction
Magazine was born, the result of a series of discussions between Isaac
Asimov and Joel Davis, President of Davis Publications, Inc. George Scithers
was hired as Editor, he hired me as Associate Editor, and IAsfm was
launched. The almost unanimous critical opinion of the day was that the
magazine could not possibly last, that the climate of the SF publishing world
had changed to such a degree that it was no longer possible to found a
successful SF magazine. The most optimistic of the commentators gave us six
months.
They were wrong. I parted company with IAsfm
after the first year or so, four issues, more or less (we were quarterly
then), but the magazine itself continued on for years under the editorship of
George Scithers, who remained at the helm until the 51st issue. This was the
first great Age of the magazine, the Scitherian Era, and so far George holds
the record for the longest editorial regime. Under George, IAsfm became
an established and accepted part of the science fiction scene, progressing
from a quarterly to a monthly publication. (We are now actually a tetraweekly
publication, publishing thirteen issues a year, but never mind about that.)
After George stepped down, there was a brief period in which Kathleen Moloney
was in charge. Then Shawna McCarthy (who had already been associated with the
magazine for many years, first as assistant, and then, later, as Managing
Editor) was named as IAsfm's new Editor, and the curtain rose on the second
great Age of the magazine-the McCarthy Age. During Shawna's regime, IAsfm achieved
its greatest critical successes, becoming accepted by many commentators as the
most prestigious of all SF magazines, perhaps the foremost show-case of the
field. Stories purchased by Shawna won eight Nebula Awards, five Hugos, and a
World Fantasy Award, and Shawna herself won a well-deserved Hugo as Best Professional
Editor.
Evolution never stops, however, and the
McCarthy Age came to an end with our 100th issue, the January 1986 issue, when
Shawna stepped down and was replaced as Editor by me, Gardner Dozois-feeling a
bit odd about being back with and this time at the helm of a magazine I'd
helped to launch so many years before, but delighted to give it my best shot.
It is perhaps premature to speak of the Dozois Period (the Dozoisian Age? The
Dozoisite Era? the Dozoiscine?), but it should be interesting at some
indeterminate time down the road to examine the geological strata laid down and
see just exactly what it was that I did. As I said, evolution never stops.
Meanwhile, this anthology. Until recently,
there were regularly issued, non-theme IAsfm anthologies, drawn from
the contents of the magazine-so that the Scitherian Era, for instance, has been
fairly well documented. There is a gap in the fossile record, however. For a
few years now there have been no systematically issued, general, non-theme IAsfm
anthologies (Shawna did edit several anthologies during this period, two
of which-Space of Her Own and Fantasy-will later be issued by Ace, but
those were theme anthologies), so that much of that period remains
undocumented. This anthology, designed to remedy that situation, covers
(more or less) the period from 1982 to early 1985, roughly convergent with the
McCarthy Age. I have cheated' a little, to get "Fire Watch"
in on one end and "The End of Life As We Know It" in on the other,
but, for the most part, I have concentrated on the years 1983 and 1984,
deciding arbitrarily, for reasons of anthology length, not to use anything from
1985, Shawna's last year-material which I hope to save for possible future
anthologies. (Yes, I know, the Shepard story appeared in the January 1985
issue, but, as Emerson once said, a foolish consistency is the hobgoblin of
little minds. So there . . . ) Circumstances forcedother choices, and
other omissions, even of award-winning stories. Connie Willis's Nebula-winning
"A Letter From the Clearys" appears in Space of Her Own, for
instance, and Scott Baker's World Fantasy Award-winning "Still Life With
Scorpion" appears in Fantasy, and I didn't want to duplicate the
contents of those anthologies. Similarly, Octavia Butler's "Speech
Sounds" won a Hugo, but I've used her story "Bloodchild" instead
. . . and so on. Some first-rate stories were simply too long to fit into this
book with the stuff that had to be here. For the last few years, IAsfm
has been one of the last natural refuges of that endangered literary
lifeform, the novella, and many fine novellas have appeared there, but the
problem with novellas is that they are-after all-long, and that means that you
can't fit too many of them into one book all at once.
Since almost no one outside of the publishing
world understands the long lead-times involved in publishing a magazine, I
should emphasize again that the stories in this anthology were purchased either
by George or (mostly) by Shawna. No material purchased by me showed up in IAsfm
until the January 1986 issue of the magazine.
In closing, I'd like to thank George and Shawna
for having the good taste to buy this material in the first place (Shawna in .
particular for supplying me with historical detail); thank Managing Editor
Sheila Williams (who has labored behind the scenes on IAsfm for many
years and played a part in the decision-making process involved in the buying
of some of these stories); Editorial Assistant Tina Lee (who did much of the
thankless scut-work involved in producing this anthology); Cynthia Manson (who
set up this deal); and especially my own editor on this project, Susan Allison.
-Gardner Dozois
THE END OF LIFE
AS WE KNOW IT
by Lucius Shepard
"The End of Life As We
Know It" was purchased by Shawn McCarthy and appeared in the January 1985
issue of IAsfm, with a luminous cover and interior illustrations by J.K.
Potter. It went on to become one of the most popular and critically acclaimed
stories of the year, although it was edged out of a spot on that year's Final
Nebula Ballot by another Shepard story from a competing magazine, "The
Jaguar Hunter." Shepard made his first sale to IAsfm with the powerful
novella "A Traveller's Tale," in the July 1984 issue, and since then
has become one of the mainstays of the magazine. Pleasingly prolific, Shepard
has made more than a dozen sales to IAsfm in the last couple of years . . . and
we are pleased to announce that we still have several major stories by Shepard in
inventory. We hope to bring you lots more of him in the future.
Born in Lynchburg, Virginia,
Lucius Shepard has traveled widely in the Middle East, Europe, Latin America,
and the Caribbean, places that often serve as gritty and authentic settings for
his fiction. Shepard began publishing in 1983, and in a very short time has become
one of the most popular and prolific new writers to enter the genre in many
years. In 1985, Shepard won the John W. Campbell Award as the year's Best New
Writer, as well as being on the Nebula Award final ballot an unprecedented
three times, in three separate categories. He has also showed up on the Hugo
final ballot, as well as being a finalist for the British Fantasy Award, the John
W. Campbell Memorial Award, and the Philip K. Dick Award, and the World Fantasy
Award. His acclaimed first novel, Green Eyes, was an Ace Special. His most recent
books are a major new novel, Life During Wartime, from Bantam's New
Fiction line, and a collection, The Jaguar Hunter, from Arkham House. In
1987, he won the Nebula Award for his novella "R & R," another IAsfm
story.
What Lisa hated most about
Mexico were the flies, and Richard said, Yeah, the flies were bad, but it was
the lousy attitude of the people that did him in, you know, the way the waiters
ignored you and the taxi drivers sneered, the sour expressions of desk
clerks-as if they were doing you a big favor by letting you stay in their
fleabag hotels. All that. Lisa replied that she couldn't blame the people,
because they were probably irritated by the flies; this set Richard to
laughing, and though Lisa had not meant it to be funny, after a moment she
joined in. They needed laughter. They had come to Mexico to Save Their
Marriage, and things were not going well... except in bed, where things had
always gone well. Lisa had never been less than ardent with Richard, even
during her affair.
They were an attractive couple
in their thirties, the sort to whom a healthy sex life seems an essential of
style, a trendy accessory to pleasure like a Jacuzzi or a French food processor.
She was a tall, fey-looking brunette with fair skin, an aerobically nurtured
slimness, and a face that managed to express both sensuality and intelligence
("hooker eyes and Vassar bones," Richard had told her); he was lean
from handball and weights, with an executive touch of gray in his black hair
and the bland, firm-jawed handsomeness of a youthful anchorman. Once they had held
to the illusion that they kept fit and beautiful for one another, but all their
illusions had been tarnished and they no longer understood their reasons for
maintaining them.
For a while they made a game
of hating Mexico, pretending it was a new bond between them, striving to outdo
each other in pointing out instances of filth and native insensitivity; finally
they realized that what they hated most about the country were their own
perceptions of it, and they headed south to Guatemala where-they had been
informed-the atmosphere was conducive to romance. They were leery about the
reports of guerrilla activity, but their informant had assured them that the
dangers were overstated. He was a seasoned traveler, an elderly Englishman who
had spent his last twelve winters in Central America; Richard thought he was
colorful, a Graham Greene character, whereas Lisa described him in her journal
as "a deracinated old fag."
"You mustn't miss Lake
Atitlin," he'd told them. "It's absolutely breath-taking. Revolution
there is an aesthetic impossibility."
Before boarding the plane
Richard bought the latest Miami Herald, and he entertained himself during the
flight by bemoaning the decline of Western civilization. It was his conviction
that the United States was becoming part of the Third World and that their
grandchildren would inhabit a mildly poisoned earth and endure lives of
backbreaking drudgery under an increasingly Orwellian government. Though this
conviction was hardly startling, it being evident from the newspaper that such
a world was close upon them, Lisa accorded his viewpoint the status of wisdom;
in fact, she had relegated wisdom in general to be his preserve, staking claim
herself to the traditional feminine precincts of soulfulness and caring.
Sometimes back in Connecticut, while teaching her art class at the Y or manning
the telephones for PBS or Greenpeace or whatever cause had enlisted her
soulfulness, looking around at the other women, all-like her-expensively kept
and hopeless and with an eye cocked for the least glimmer of excitement, then
she would see how marriage had decreased her wattage; and yet, though she had
fallen in love with another man, she had clung to the marriage for almost a
year thereafter, unable to escape the fear that this was the best she could
hope for, that no matter what steps she took to change her situation, her life
would always be ruled by a canon of mediocrity. That she had recently stopped
clinging did not signal a slackening of fear, only that her fingers were slipping;
her energy no longer sufficient to maintain a good grip.
As the plane came down into
Guatemala City, passing over rumpled green hills dotted with shacks whose
colors looked deceptively bright and cheerful from a height, Richard began
talking about his various investments, saying he was glad he'd bought this and
that, because things were getting worse every day. "The shitstorm's a
'comin', babe," he said, patting her knee. "But we're gonna be
awright." It annoyed Lisa no end that whenever he was feeling particularly
accomplished his language became countrified, and she only shrugged in response.
After clearing customs they
rented a car and drove to Panajachel, a village on the shores of Lake Atitlan.
There was a fancy hotel on the shore, but in the spirit of "roughing
it" Richard insisted they stay at a cheaper place on the edge of town-an
old green stucco building with red trim and an arched entranceway and a
courtyard choked with ferns; it catered to what he called "the
bleeding-ear set," a reference to the loud rock 'n' roll that blasted from
the windows. The other guests were mostly college-age vacationers, a mixture of
French and Scandinavians and Americans, and as soon as they had unpacked, Lisa
changed into jeans and a work shirt so she would fit in among them. They ate
dinner in the hotel dining room, which was cramped and furnished with red
wooden tables and chairs and had the menu painted on the wall in English and
Spanish. Richard appeared to be enjoying himself; he was relaxed, and his
speech was peppered with slang that he hadn't used in almost a decade. Lisa
liked listening to the glib chatter around them, talk of dope and how the
people treat you in Huehuetenango and watch out if you're goin' to Bogota, man,
'cause they got packs of street kids will pick you clean.... These
conversations reminded her of the world in which she had traveled at Vassar
before Richard had snatched her up during her junior year. He had been just
back from Vietnam, a medic, full of anguish at the horrors he had seen, yet
strong for having seen them; he had seemed to her a source of strength, a
shining knight, a rescuer. After the wedding, though, she had not been able to
recall why she had wanted to be rescued; she thought now that she had derived
some cheap thrill from his aura of recent violence and had applied it to
herself out of a romantic need to feel imperiled.
They lingered over dinner,
watching the younger guests drift off into the evening and being watched
themselves-at least in Lisa's case-by a fortyish Guatemalan man with a
pencil-line mustache, a dark suit, and patent-leather hair. He stared at her as
he chewed, ducking his eyes each time he speared a fresh bite, then resuming
his stare. Ordinarily Lisa would have been irritated, but she found the man's conspicuous
anonymity appealing and she adopted a flirtatious air, laughing too loudly and
fluttering her hands, in hopes that she was frustrating him.
"His name's Raoul,"
said Richard. "He's a white slaver in the employ of the Generalissimo, and
he's been commissioned to bring in a new gringa for the harem."
"He's somebody's
uncle," said Lisa. "Here to settle a family dispute. He's married to
a dumpy Indian woman, has seven kids, and he's wearing his only suit to impress
the Americans."
"God, you're a romantic!"
Richard sipped his coffee, made a face and set it down.
Lisa bit back a sarcastic
reply. "I think he's very romantic. Let's say he's staring at me because
he wants me. If that's true, right now he's probably thinking how to do you in,
or maybe wondering if he could trade you his truck, his means of livelihood,
for a night with me. That's real romance. Passionate stupidity and bloody
consequences."
"I guess," said
Richard, unhappy with the definition; he took another sip of coffee and changed
the subject.
At sunset they walked down to
the lake. The village was charming enough-the streets cobbled, the houses
white-washed and roofed with tile; but the rows of tourist shops and the
American voices acted to dispel the charm. The lake, however, was beautiful.
Ringed by three volcanoes, bordered by palms, Indians poling canoes toward
scatters of light on the far shore. The water was lacquered with vivid crimson
and yellow reflection, and silhouetted against an equally vivid sky, the palms
and volcanic cones gave the place the look of a prehistoric landscape. As they
stood at the end of a wooden pier, Richard drew her into a kiss and she felt
again the explosive dizziness of their first kiss; yet she knew it was a sham,
a false magic born of geography and their own contrivance. They could keep
traveling, keep filling their days with exotic sights, lacquering their lives
with reflection, but when they stopped they would discover that they had merely
been preserving the forms of the marriage. There was no remedy for their
dissolution.
Roosters crowing waked her to
gray dawn light. She remembered a dream about a faceless lover, and she
stretched and rolled onto her side. Richard was sitting at the window, wearing
jeans and a T-shirt; he glanced at her, then turned his gaze to the window, to
the sight of a pale green volcano wreathed in mist. "It's not
working," he said, and when she failed to respond, still half-asleep, he
buried his face in his hands, muffling his voice. "I can't make it without
you, babe."
She had dreaded this moment,
but there was no reason to put it off. "That's the problem," she
said. "You used to be able to." She plumped the pillows and leaned
back against them.
He looked up, baffled.
"What do you mean?"
"Why should I have to
explain it? You know it as well as I do. We weaken each other, we exhaust each
other, we depress each other." She lowered her eyes, not wanting to see
his face. "Maybe it's not even us. Sometimes I think marriage is this big
pasty spell of cakes and veils that shrivels everything it touches."
"Lisa, you know there
isn't anything I wouldn't ..."
"What? What'll you
do?" Angrily, she wadded the sheet. "I don't understand how we've
managed to hurt each other so much. If I did I'd try to fix it. But there's
nothing left to do. Not together, anyway."
He let out a long sigh-the
sigh of a man who has just finished defusing a bomb and can allow himself to
breathe again. "It's him, right? You still want to be with him."
It angered her that he would
never say the name, as if the name were what counted. "No," she said
stiffly. "It's not him."
"But you still love
him."
"That's not the point! I
still love you, but love . . ." She drew up her legs and rested her forehead
on her knees. "Christ, Richard. I don't know what more to tell you. I've
said it all a hundred times."
"Maybe," he said
softly, "maybe this discussion is premature."
"Oh, Richard!"
"No, really. Let's go on
with the trip."
"Where next? The
Mountains of the Moon? Brazil? It won't change anything."
"You can't be sure of
that!" He came toward the bed, his face knitted into lines of despair.
"We'll just stay a few
more days. We'll visit the villages on the other side of the lake, where they
do the weaving."
"Why, Richard? God, I
don't even understand why you still want me ..."
"Please, Lisa. Please.
After eleven years you can try for a few more days."
"All right," she
said, weary of hurting him. "A few days." "And you'll try?"
I've always tried, she wanted
to say; but then, wondering if it were true, as true as it should be, she
merely said, "Yes."
The motor launch that ran back
and forth across the lake between Panajachel and San Augustin had seating room
for fifteen, and nine of those places were occupied by Germans, apparently
members of a family-kids, two sets of parents, and a pair of portly,
red-cheeked grandparents. They reeked of crudity and good health, and made Lisa
feel refined by comparison. The young men snapped their wives' bra straps; grandpa
almost choked with laughter each time this happened; the kids whined; the women
were heavy and hairy-legged. They spent the entire trip taking pictures of one
another. They must have understood English, because when Richard cracked a joke
about them they frowned and whispered and became standoffish. Lisa and Richard
moved to the stern, a superficial union imposed, and watched the shore glide
past. Though it was still early, the sun reflected a dynamited white glare on
the water; in the daylight the volcanoes looked depressingly real, their slopes
covered by patchy grass and scrub and stunted palms.
San Augustin was situated at
the base of the largest volcano, and was probably like what Panajachel had been
before tourism. Weeds grew between the cobblestones, the white-wash was flaked
away in places, and grimy, naked toddlers sat in the doorways, chewing sugar
cane and drooling. Inside the houses it was the Fourteenth Century. Packed dirt
floors, iron cauldrons suspended over fires, chickens pecking and pigs asleep.
Gnomish old Indian women worked at hand looms, turning out strange
tapestries-as, for example, a design of black cranelike birds against a
backdrop of purple sky and green trees, the image repeated over and over-and
bolts of dress material, fabric that on first impression seemed to be of a
hundred colors, all in perfect harmony. Lisa wanted to be sad for the women, to
sympathize with their poverty and particular female plight, and to some extent
she managed it; but the women were uncomplaining and appeared reasonably
content and their weaving was better work than she had ever done, even when she
had been serious about art. She bought several yards of the material, tried to
strike up a conversation with one of the women, who spoke neither English or
Spanish, and then they returned to the dock, to the village's only
bar-restaurant-a place right out of a spaghetti western, with a hitching rail
in front and skinned sapling trunks propping up the porch roof and a handful of
young, long-haired American men standing along the bar, having an early-morning
beer. "Holy marijuana!" said Richard, winking. "Hippies! I wondered
where they'd gone." They took a table by the rear window so they could
see the slopes of the volcano. The scarred varnish of the table was dazzled by
sunlight; flies buzzed against the heated panes.
"So what do you
think?" Richard squinted against the glare.
"I thought we were going
to give it a few days," she said testily.
"Jesus, Lisa! I meant,
what do you think about the weaving?" He adopted a pained expression.
"I'm sorry." She
touched his hand, and he shook his head ruefully. "It's beautiful ...I
mean, the weaving's beautiful. Oh, God, Richard. I don't intend to be so
awkward."
"Forget it." He
stared out the window, deadpan, as if he were giving serious consideration to
climbing the volcano, sizing up the problems involved. "What did you think
of it?"
"It was beautiful,"
she said flatly. The buzzing of the flies intensified, and she had the notion
that they were telling her to try harder. "I know it's corny to say, but
watching her work . . . What was her name?"
"Expectacion."
"Oh, right. Well,
watching her I got the feeling I was watching something magical, something that
went on and on . . ." She trailed off, feeling foolish at having to
legitimize with conversation what had been a momentary whimsy; but she could
think of nothing else to say. "Something that went on forever," she
continued. "With different hands, of course, but always that something the
same. And the weavers, while they had their own lives and problems, that was
less important than what they were doing. You know, like the generations of
weavers were weaving something through time as well as space. A long, woven
magic." She laughed, embarrassed.
"It's not corny. I know
what you're talking about." He pushed back his chair and grinned.
"How about I get us a couple of beers?"
"Okay," she said
brightly, and smiled until his back was turned. He thought he had her now. That
was his plan - to get her a little drunk, not drunk enough for a midday
hangover, just enough to get her happy and energized, and then that afternoon
they'd go for a ride to the next village, the next exotic attraction, and more
drinks and dinner and a new hotel. He'd keep her whirling, an endless date, an
infinitely prolonged seduction. She pictured the two of them as a pair of
silhouetted dancers tangoing across the borders of map-colored countries.
Whirling and whirling, and the thing was, the very sad thing was, that sooner
or later, if he kept her whirling, she would lose her own momentum and be
sucked into the spin, into that loving-the-spin-I'm-in-old-black-magic routine.
Then final rinse. Final spin. Then the machine would stop and she'd be
plastered to the side of the marriage like a wet blouse, needing a hand to lift
her out. She should do what had to be done right now. Right this moment. Cause
a scene, hit him. Whatever it took. Because if she didn't . . . He thunked down
a bottle of beer in front of her, and her smile twitched by reflex into place.
"Thanks," she said.
"Por nada." He
delivered a gallant bow and sat down. "Listen ..."
There was a clatter from
outside, and through the door she saw a skinny, bearded man tying a donkey to
the hitching rail. He strode on in, dusting off his jeans cowboy-style, and ordered
a beer. Richard turned to look and chuckled. The man was worth a chuckle. He
might have been the Spirit of the Sixties, the Wild Hippie King. His hair was a
ratty brown thatch hanging to his shoulders, and braided into it were long gray
feathers that dangled still lower; his jeans were festooned with painted
symbols, and there were streaks of what appeared to be green dye in his thicket
of a beard. He noticed them staring, waved, and came toward them.
"Mind if I join you
folks?" Before they could answer, he dropped into a chair. "I'm
Dowdy. Believe it or not, that's a name, not a self-description." He
smiled, and his blue eyes crinkled up. His features were sharp, thin to the
point of being wizened. It was hard to tell his age because of the beard, but
Lisa figured him for around thirty-five. Her first reaction had been to ask him
to leave; the instant he had started talking, though, she had sensed a cheerful
kind of sanity about him that intrigued her. "I live up yonder," he
went on, gesturing at the volcano. "Been there goin' on four years."
"Inside the
volcano?" Lisa meant it for a joke.
"Yep! Got me a little
shack back in under the lip. Hot in the summer, freezin' in the winter, and
none of the comforts of home. I got to bust my tail on Secretariat there-he
waved at the donkey-"just to haul water and supplies." In waving he
must have caught a whiff of his underarm-he gave it an ostentatious sniff.
"And to get me a bath. Hope I ain't too ripe for you folks." He
chugged down a third of his beer. "So! How you like Guatemala?"
"Fine," said
Richard. "Why do you live in a volcano?" "Kinda peculiar, ain't
it," said Dowdy by way of response; he turned to Lisa. "And how you
like it here?"
"We haven't seen
much," she said. "Just the lake."
"Oh, yeah? Well, it ain't
so bad 'round here. They keep it nice for the tourists. But the rest of the
country ... whooeee! Violent?" Dowdy made a show of awed disbelief.
"You got your death squads, your guerrillas, your secret police, not to
mention your basic crazed killers. Hell, they even got a political party
called the Party of Organized Violence. Bad dudes. They like to twist people's
arms off. It ain't that they're evil, though. It's just the land's so full of
blood and brimstone and Mayan weirdness, it fumes up and freaks 'em out. That's
how come we got volcanoes. Safety valves to blow off the excess poison. But
things are on the improve."
"Really?" said
Richard, amused.
"Yes, indeed!" Dowdy
tipped back in his chair, propping the beer bottle on his stomach; he had a
little pot belly like that of a cartoon elf. "The whole world's changing.
I s'pose y'alI have noticed the way things are goin' to hell back in the
States?"
Lisa could tell that the
question had mined Richard's core of political pessimism, and he started to frame
an answer; but Dowdy talked through him.
"That's part of the
change," he said. "All them scientists say they figured out reasons
for the violence and pollution and economic failure, but what them things
really are is just the sound of consensus reality scrapin' contrary to the flow
of the change. They ain't nothin' but symptoms of the real change, of
everything comin' to an end."
Richard made silent speech
with his eyes, indicating that it was time to leave.
"Now, now," said
Dowdy, who had caught the signal. "Don't get me wrong. I ain't talkin'
Apocalypse, here. And I for sure ain't no Bible basher like them Mormons you
see walkin"round the village. Huh! Them suckers is so scared of life they
travel in pairs so's they can keep each other from bein' corrupted. `Watch it
there, Billy! You're steppin' in some sin!'" Dowdy rolled his eyes to the
ceiling in a parody of prayer. "'Sweet Jesus gimme the strength to scrape
this sin off my shoe!' Then off they go, purified, a couple of All-American
haircuts with souls stuffed fulla white-bread gospel and crosses 'round their
necks to keep off the vampire women. Shit!" he leaned forward, resting his
elbows on the table. "But I digress. I got me a religion all right. Not
Jesus, though. I'll tell you 'bout it if you want, but I ain't gonna force it
down your throat."
"Well," Richard
began, but Lisa interrupted.
"We've got an hour until
the boat," she said. "Does your religion have anything to do with
your living in the volcano?"
"Sure does." Dowdy
pulled a hand-rolled cigar from his shirt pocket, lit it, and blew out a plume
of smoke that boiled into a bluish cloud against the windowpanes. "I used
to smoke, drink"-he flourished his beer-"and I was a bear for the
ladies. Praise God, religion ain't changed that none!" He laughed, and
Lisa smiled at him. Whatever it was that had put Dowdy in such good spirits
seemed to be contagious. "Actually," he said, "I wasn't a
hell-raiser at all. I was a painfully shy little fella, come from backwoods
Tennessee. Like my daddy'd say, town so small you could spit between the city
limits signs. Anyway, I was shy but I was smart, and with that combination it
was a natural for me to end up in computers. Gave me someone I could feel
comfortable talkin' to. After college I took a job designin' software out in
Silicon Valley, and seven years later there I was . . . Livin' in an apartment
tract with no real friends, no pictures on the walls, and a buncha terminals. A
real computer nerd. Wellsir! Somehow I got it in mind to take a vacation. I'd never
had one. Guess I figured I'd just end up somewhere weird, sittin' in a room and
thinkin' 'bout computers, so what was the point? But I was determined to do it
this time, and I came to Panajachel. First few days I did what you folks
probably been doin'. Wanderin', not meetin' anyone, buyin' a few gee-gaws. Then
I caught the launch across the lake and ran into ol' Murcielago." He
clucked his tongue against his teeth. "Man, I didn't know what to make of
him at first. He was the oldest human bein' I'd ever seen. Looked centuries
old. All hunched up, white-haired, as wrinkled as a walnut shell. He couldn't
speak no English, just Cakchiquel, but he had this mestizo fella with him who
did his interpretin', and it was through him I learned that
Murcielago was a brujo."
"A wizard," said
Lisa, who had read Casteneda, to Richard, who hadn't.
"Yep," said Dowdy.
"'Course I didn't believe it. Thought it was some kinda hustle. But he
interested me, and I kept hang-in' 'round just to see what he was up to. Well,
one night he says to me-through the mestizo fella-`I like you,' he said. `Ain't
nothin' wrong with you that a little magic wouldn't cure. I'd be glad to make
you a gift if you got no objections.' I said to myself, `Oh-oh, here
it comes.' But I reckoned it couldn't do me no harm to let him play his hand,
and I told him to go ahead. So he does some singin' and rubs powder on my mouth
and mutters and touches me, and that was it. `You gonna be fine now,' he tells
me. I felt sorta strange, but no finer than I had. Still, there wasn't any
hustle, and that same night I realized that his magic was doin' its stuff.
Confused the hell out of me, and the only thing I could think to do was to hike
on up to the volcano, where he lived, and ask him about it. Murcielago was writin'
for me. The mestizo had gone, but he'd left a note explainin' the situation.
Seems he'd learned all he could from Murcielago and had taken up his own post,
and it was time the ol' man had a new apprentice. He told me how to cook for
him, wished me luck, and said he'd be seein' me around." Dowdy twirled his
cigar and watched smoke rings float up. "Been there ever since and ain't
regretted it a day."
Richard was incredulous.
"You gave up a job in Silicon Valley to become a sorcerer's
apprentice?"
"That's right."
Dowdy pulled at one of the feathers in his hair. "But I didn't give up
nothin' real, Richard."
"How do you know my
name?"
"People grow into their
names, and if you know how to look for it, it's written everywhere on 'em.
'Bout half of magic is bein' able to see clear."
Richard snorted. "You
read our names off the passenger manifest for the launch."
"I don't blame you for
thinkin' that," said Dowdy. "It's hard to accept the existence of
magic. But that ain't how it happened." He drained the dregs of his beer.
"You were easy to read, but Lisa here was sorta hard 'cause she never
laced her name. Ain't that so?"
Lisa nodded, surprised.
"Yeah, see, when a person
don't like their name it muddies up the writin' so to speak, and you gotta
scour away a lotta half-formed names to see down to the actual one." Dowdy
heaved a sigh and stood. "Time I'm takin' care of business, but tell you
what! I'll bring ol' Murcielago down to the bar around seven o'clock and you
can check him out. You can catch the nine o'clock boat back. I know he'd like
to meet you."
"How do you know?"
asked Richard.
"It ain't my place to
explain. Look here, Rich. I ain't
gonna twist your arm, but if
you go back to Panajachel you're just gonna wander 'round and maybe buy some
garbage. If you stay, well, whether or not you believe Murcielago's a brujo,
you'll be doin' somethin' out of the ordinary. Could be he'll give you a
gift."
"What gift did he give
you?" asked Lisa.
"The gift of gab,"
said Dowdy. "Surprised you ain't deduced that for yourself, Lisa, 'cause
I can tell you're a perceptive soul. 'Course that was just part of the gift.
The gift wrappin', as it were. It's like Murcielago says, a real gift ain't
known by its name." He winked at her. "But it took pretty damn good,
didn't it?"
As soon as Dowdy had gone,
Richard asked Lisa if she wanted a last look at the weaving before heading
back, but she told him she would like to meet Murcielago. He argued briefly,
then acquiesced. She knew what he was thinking. He had no interest in the
brujo, but he would humor her; it would be an Experience, a Shared Memory,
another increment of momentum added to the spin of their marriage. To pass the
time she bought a notebook from a tiny store, whose entire inventory would have
fit in her suitcases, and sat outside the bar sketching the volcanoes, the
people, the houses. Richard oohed and ahhed over the sketches, but in her
judgment they were lifeless-accurate, yet dull and uninspired. She kept at it,
though; it beat her other options.
Toward four o'clock black
thunderheads muscled up from behind the volcano, drops of cold rain splattered
down, and they retreated into the bar. Lisa did not intend to get drunk, but
she found herself drinking to Richard's rhythm. He would nurse each beer for a
while, shearing away the label with his thumbnail; once the label had been
removed he would empty the bottle in a few swallows and bring them a couple
more. After four bottles she was tipsy, and after six walking to the bathroom
became an adventure in vertigo. Once she stumbled against the only other
customer, a long-haired guy left over from the morning crowd, and caused him to
spill his drink. "My pleasure," he said when she apologized, leering,
running his hands along her hips as he pushed her gently away. She wanted to
pose a vicious comeback, but was too fuddled. The bathroom served to make her
drunker. It was a chamber of horrors, a hole in the middle of the floor with a
ridged foot-print on either side, scraps of brown paper strewn about, dark
stains everywhere, reeking. There was a narrow window which-if she stood on
tip-toe-offered a view of two volcanoes and the lake. The water mirrored the
grayish-black of the sky. She stared through the smeared glass, watching waves
pile in toward shore, and soon she realized that she was staring at the scene
with something like longing, as if the storm held a promise of resolution. By
the time she returned to the bar, the bartender had lit three kerosene lamps;
they added a shabby glory to the place, casting rich gleams along the countertop
and gemmy orange reflections in the windowpanes. Richard had brought her a
fresh beer.
"They might not come,
what with the rain," he said. "Maybe not." She downed a swallow
of beer, beginning to like its sour taste.
"Probably for the
best," he said. "I've been thinking, and I'm sure he was setting us
up for a robbery."
"You're paranoid. If he
were going to rob us, he'd pick a spot where there weren't any soldiers."
"Well, he's got something
in mind ... though I have to admit that was a clever story he told. All that
stuff about his own doubts tended to sandbag any notion that he was hustling
us."
"I don't believe he was
hustling us. Maybe he's deluded, but he's not a criminal."
"How the hell could you
tell that?" He picked at a stubborn fleck of beer label. "Feminine
intuition? God, he was only here a few minutes."
"You know," she said
angrily, "I deserve that. I've been buying that whole feminine intuition
chump ever since we were married. I've let you play the intelligent one, while
I"-she affected a southern accent and a breathy voice-"I just get
these little flashes. I swear I don't know where they come from, but they turn
out right so often I must be psychic or somethin'. Jesus!"
"Lisa, please."
He looked utterly defeated but
she was drunk and sick of all the futile effort and she couldn't stop.
"Any idiot could've seen that Dowdy was just a nice, weird little guy. Not
a threat! But you had to turn him into a threat so you could feel you were protecting
me from dangers I was too naive to see. What's that do for you? Does it wipe
out the fact that I've been unfaithful, that I've walked all over your
self-respect? Does it restore your masculine pride?"
His face worked, and she hoped
he would hit her, punctuate the murkiness of their lives with a single
instance of shock and clarity. But she knew he wouldn't. He relied on his sadness
to defeat her. "You must hate me," he said.
She bowed her head, her anger
emptying into the hollow created by his dead voice. "I don't hate you. I'm
just tired." "Let's go home. Let's get it over with."
She glanced up, startled. His
lips were thinned, a muscle clenching in his jaw.
"We can catch a flight
tomorrow. If not tomorrow, the next day. I won't try to hold you anymore."
She was amazed by the panic
she felt; she couldn't tell if it resulted from surprise, the kind you feel
when you haven't shut the car door properly and suddenly there you are, hanging
out the side, unprepared for the sight of the pavement flowing past; or if it
was that she had never really wanted freedom, that all her protest had been a
means of killing boredom. Maybe, she thought, this was a new tactic on his
part, and then she realized that everything between them had become tactical.
They played each other without conscious effort, and their games bordered on
the absurd. To her further amazement she heard herself say in a tremulous
voice, "Is that what you want?"
"Hell, no!" He
smacked his palm against the table, rattling the bottles. "I want you! I
want children, eternal love . . . all those dumb bullshit things we wanted in
the beginning! But you don't want them anymore, do you?"
She saw how willingly she had
given him an opening in which to assert his masculinity, his moral position,
combining them into a terrific left hook to the heart. Oh, Jesus, they were
pathetic! Tears started from her eyes, and she had a dizzying sense of
location, as if she were looking up from a well-bottom through the strata of
her various conditions. Drunk, in a filthy bar, in Guatemala, shadowed by
volcanos, under a stormy sky, and-spanning it all, binding it all together-the
strange webs of their relationship.
"Do you?" He frowned
at her, demanding that she finishthe game, speak her line, admit to the one
verity that prevented them from ever truly finishing-her uncertainty.
"I don't know," she
answered; she tried to say it in a neutral tone, but it came out hopeless.
The storm's darkness passed,
and true darkness slipped in under cover of the final clouds. Stars pricked out
above the rim of the volcano. The food in the bar was greasy-fried fish, beans,
and a salad that she was afraid to eat (stains on the lettuce)-but eating
steadied her, and she managed to start a conversation about their recent meals.
Remember the weird Chinese place in Merida, hot sauce in the Lobster Cantonese?
Or what had passed for crepes at their hotel in Zihuatenejo? Things like that.
The bartender hauled out a portable record player and put on an album of
romantic ballads sung by a man with a sexy voice and a gaspy female chorus; the
needle kept skipping, and finally, with an apologetic smile and a shrug, the
bartender switched it off. It came to be seven-thirty, and they talked about
Dowdy not showing, about catching the eight o'clock boat. Then there he was.
Standing in the door next to a tiny, shrunken old man, who was leaning on a
cane. He was deeply wrinkled, skin the color of weathered mahogany, wearing
grungy white trousers and a gray blanket draped around his shoulders. All his
vitality seemed to have collected in an astounding shock of thick white hair
that-to Lisa's drunken eyes-looked like a white flame licking up from his
skull.
It took the old man almost a
minute to hobble the length of the room, and a considerable time thereafter to
lower himself; wheezing and shaking, into a chair. Dowdy hauled up another
chair beside him; he had washed the dye from his beard, and his hair was clean,
free of feathers. His manner, too, had changed. He was no longer breezy, but
subdued and serious, and even his grammar had improved.
"Now listen," he
said. "I don't know what Murcielago will say to you, but he's a man who
speaks his mind and sometimes he tells people things they don't like to hear.
Just remember he bears you no ill-will and don't be upset. All right?"
Lisa gave the old man a
reassuring smile, not wanting him to think that they were going to laugh; but
upon meeting his eyes all thought of reassuring him vanished. They were ordinary
eyes. Dark, wet-looking under the lamplight. And yet they were compelling-like
an animal's eyes, they radiated strangeness and pulled you in. They made the
rest of his ruined face seem irrelevant. He muttered to Dowdy.
"He wants to know if you
have any questions," said Dowdy.
Richard was apparently as
fascinated by the old man as was Lisa; she had expected him to be glib and
sardonic, but instead he cleared his throat and said gravely, "I'd like to
hear about how the world's changing."
Dowdy repeated the question in
Cakchiquel, and Murcielago began to speak, staring at Richard, his voice a
gravelly whisper. At last he made a slashing gesture, signaling that he was
finished, and Dowdy turned to them. "It's like this," he said.
"The world is not one but many. Thousands upon thousands of worlds. Even
those who do not have the power of clear sight can perceive this if they
consider the myriad realities of the world they do see. It's easiest to
imagine the thousands of worlds as different-colored lights all focused on a
single point, having varying degrees of effectiveness as to how much part they
play in determinin' the character of that point. What's happenin' now is that
the strongest light-the one most responsible for determinin' this character-is
startin' to fade and another is startin' to shine bright and dominate. When it
has gained dominance, the old age will end and the new begin."
Richard smirked, and Lisa
realized that he had been putting the old man on. "If that's the
case," he said snottily, "then ..." Murcielago broke in with a
burst of harsh, angry syllables. "He doesn't care if you believe
him," said Dowdy. "Only that you understand his' words. Do you?"
"Yes." Richard
mulled it over. "Ask him what the character of the new age will be."
Again, the process of
interpretation.
"It'll be the first age
of magic," said Dowdy. "You see, all the old tales of wizards and
great beasts and warriors and undyin' kings, they aren't fantasy or even
fragments of a distant past. They're visions, the first unclear glimpses seen
long ago of a future that's now dawnin'. This place, Lake Atitlan, is one of
those where the dawn has come early, where the lightof the new age shines the
strongest and its forms are visible to those who can see." The old man
spoke again, and Dowdy arched an eyebrow. "Hmm! He says that because he's
tellin' you this, and for reasons not yet clear to him, you will be more a part
of the new age than the old."
Richard gave Lisa a nudge
under the table, but she chose to ignore it. "Why hasn't someone noticed
this change?" he asked.
Dowdy translated and in a
moment had a response. "Murcielago says he has noticed it, and asks if
you have not noticed it yourself. For instance, have you not noticed the
increased interest in magic and other occult matters in your own land? And
surely you must have noticed the breakdown of systems, economies, governments.
This is due to the fact that the light that empowered them is fadin', not to
any other cause. The change comes slowly. The dawn will take centuries to
brighten into day, and then the sorrows of this age will be gone from the
memories of all but those few who have the ability to draw upon the dawnin'
power and live long in their mortal bodies. Most will die and be reborn. The
change comes subtly, as does twilight change to dusk, an almost imperceptible
merging of light into dark. It will be noticed and it will be recorded. Then,
just as the last age, it will be forgotten."
"I don't mean to be
impertinent," said Richard, giving Lisa another nudge, "but
Murcielago looks pretty frail. He can't have much of a role to play in all
this."
The old man rapped the floor
with his cane for emphasis as he answered, and Dowdy's tone was peeved.
"Murcielago is involved in great struggles against enemies whose nature
he's only beginnin' to discern. He has no time to waste with fools. But because
you're not a total fool, because you need instruction, he will answer. Day by
day his power grows, and at night the volcano is barely able to contain his
force. Soon he will shed this fraility and flow between the forms of his
spirit. He will answer no more of your questions." Dowdy looked to Lisa.
"Do you have a question?"
Murcielago's stare burned into
her, and she felt disoriented, as insubstantial as one of the gleams slipping
across his eyes. "I don't know," she said. "Yes. What does he
think about us?"
"This is a good
question," said Dowdy after consulting with Murcielago, "because it
concerns self-knowledge, and all important answers relate to the self. I will
not tell you what you are. You know that, and you have shame in the knowledge.
What you will be is manifest, and soon you will know that. Therefore I will
answer the question you have not asked, the one that most troubles you. You and
the man will part and come together, part and come together. Many times. For
though you are lovers, you are not true companions and you both must follow
your own ways. I will help you in this. I will free the hooks that tear at you
and give you back your natures. And when this is done, you and the man may
share each other, may part and come together without sadness or weakness."
Murcielago fumbled for
something under his blanket, and Dowdy glanced back and forth between Richard
and Lisa. "He wants to make you a gift," he said.
"What kind of gift?"
asked Richard.
"A gift is not known by
its name," Dowdy reminded him. "But it won't be a mystery for
long."
The old man muttered again and
stretched out a trembling hand to Richard; in his palm were four black seeds.
"You must swallow them
one at a time," said Dowdy. "And as you do, he will channel his power
through them."
Richard's face tightened with
suspicion. "It's some sort of drug, right? Take four and I won't care what
happens."
Dowdy reverted to his
ungrammatical self. "Life is a drug, man. You think me and the of boy are
gonna get you high and boost your traveler's checks. Shit! You ain't thinkin'
clear."
"Maybe that's exactly
what you're going to do," said Richard stonily. "And I'm not falling
for it."
Lisa slipped her hand into
his. "They're not going to hurt us. Why don't you try it?"
"You believe this old
fraud, don't you?" He disengaged his hand, looking betrayed. "You
believe what he said about us?"
"I'd like to believe
it," she said. "It would be better than what we have, wouldn't
it?"
The lamplight flickered, and a
shadow veered across his face. Then the light steadied, and so it seemed did
he. It was as if the orange glow were burning away eleven years of
wrong-thinking, and the old unparanoid, sure-of-himself Richard was shining
through. Christ, she wanted to say, you're really in there!
"Aw, hell! He who steals
my purse steals only forty cents on the dollar, right?" He plucked the
seeds from Murcielago's hand, picked one up and held it to his mouth.
"Anytime."
Before letting Richard swallow
the seeds, Murcielago sang for a while. The song made Lisa think of a comic
fight in a movie, the guy carrying on a conversation in between ducking and
throwing punches, packing his words into short, rushed phrases. Murcielago
built it to a fierce rhythm, signaled Richard, and grunted each time a seed
went down, putting-Lisa thought-some magical English on it.
"God!" said Richard
afterward, eyes wide with mock awe. "I had no idea! The colors, the
infinite harmony! If only..." He broke it off and blinked, as if suddenly
waking to an unaccustomed thought.
Murcielago smiled and gave out
with a growly, humming noise that Lisa assumed was a sign of satisfaction.
"Where are mine?" she asked.
"It's different for
you," said Dowdy. "He has to anoint you, touch you."
At this juncture Richard would
normally have cracked a joke about dirty old men but he was gazing out the
window at shadowy figures on the street. She asked if he were okay, and he
patted her hand. "Yeah, don't worry. I'm just thinking."
Murcielago had pulled out a bottle
of iodine-colored liquid and was dipping his fingers into it, wetting the tips.
He began to sing again-a softer, less hurried song with the rhythm of fading
echoes-and Dowdy had Lisa lean forward so the old man wouldn't have to strain
to reach her. The song seemed to be all around her, turning her thoughts slow
and drifty. Calloused brown fingers trembled in front of her face; the
callouses were split, and the splits crusted with grime. She shut her eyes. The
fingers left wet, cool tracks on her skin, and she could feel the shape he was
tracing. A mask. Widening her eyes, giving her a smile, drawing curlicues on
her cheeks and forehead. She had the idea that he was tracing the conformation
of her real face, doing what the lamplight had done for Richard. Then his
fingers brushed her eyelids. There was a stinging sensation, and dazzles
exploded behind her eyes.
"Keep 'em shut,"
advised Dowdy. "It'll pass."
When at last she opened them,
Dowdy was helping Murcielago to his feet. The old man nodded but did not smile
at her as he had with Richard; from the thinned set of his mouth she took it
that he was either measuring her or judging his work.
"That's all folks!"
said Dowdy, grinning. "See? No dirty tricks, nothin' up his sleeve. Just
good of new-fangled, stick-to-your-soul magic." He waved his arms high
like an evangelist. "Can you feel it, brothers and sisters? Feel it
wormin' its way through your bones?"
Richard mumbled affirmatively.
He seemed lost in himself, studying the pattern of rips his thumb had scraped
on the label of the beer bottle, and Lisa was beginning to feel a bit lost
herself. "Do we pay him anything?" she asked Dowdy; her voice sounded
small and metallic, like a recorded message.
"There'll come a day when
the answer's yes," said Dowdy. "But not now." The old man
hobbled toward the door, Dowdy guiding him by the arm.
"Goodbye," called
Lisa, alarmed by their abrupt exit. "Yeah," said Dowdy over his
shoulder, paying more attention to assisting Murcielago. "See ya."
They were mostly silent while
waiting for the launch, limiting their conversation to asking how the other
was doing and receiving distracted answers; and later, aboard the launch, the
black water shining under the stars and the motor racketing, their silence
deepened. They sat with their hips pressed together, and Lisa felt close to
Richard; yet she also felt that the closeness wasn't important; or if it was,
it was of memorial importance, a tribute to past closeness, because things were
changing between them. That, too, she could feel. Old postures were being
redefined, webs were tearing loose, shadowy corners of their souls were coming
to light. She knew this was happening to Richard as well as herself, and she
wondered how she knew, whether it was her gift to know these things. But the
first real inkling she had of her gift was when she noticed that the stars were
shining different colors-red, yellow, blue, and white-and there were pale
gassy shapes passing across them. Clouds, she realized. Very high clouds that
she would not ordinarily have seen. The sight frightened her, but a calm
presence inside her would not admit to fright; and this presence, she further
realized, had been there all along. Just like the true colors of the stars. It
was her fearfulself that was relatively new, an obscuring factor, and it-like
the clouds-was passing. She considered telling Richard, but decided that he
would be busy deciphering his gift. She concentrated on her own, and as they
walked from the pier to the hotel, she saw halos around leaves, gleams coursing
along electrical wires, and opaque films shifting over people's faces.
They went straight up to their
room and lay without talking in the dark. But the room wasn't dark for Lisa.
Pointillistic fires bloomed and faded in mid-air, seams of molten light spread
along the cracks in the wall, and once a vague human shape-she identified it as
a ghostly man wearing robes-crossed from the door to the window and vanished.
Every piece of furniture began to glow golden around the edges, brighter and
brighter, until it seemed they each had a more ornate shape superimposed. There
came to be so much light that it disconcerted her, and though she was unafraid,
she wished she could have a moment's normalcy just to get her bearings. And her
wish was granted. In a wink the room had reverted to dim bulky shadows and a
rectangle of streetlight slanting onto the floor from the window. She sat bolt
upright, astonished that it could be controlled with such ease. Richard pulled
her back down beside him and asked, "What is it?" She told him some
of what she had seen, and he said, "It sounds like hallucinations."
"No, that's not how it
feels," she said. "How about you?"
"I'm not hallucinating,
anyway. I feel restless, penned in, and I keep thinking that I'm going
somewhere. I mean, I have this sense of motion, of speed, and I can almost tell
where I am and who's with me. I'm full of energy; it's like I'm sixteen again
or something." He paused. "And I'm having these thoughts that ought
to scare me but don't."
"What, for
instance?"
"For instance"-he
laughed-"and this really the most important `for instance', I'll be
thinking about us and I'll understand that what the old guy said about us
parting is true, and I don't want to accept it. But I can't help accepting it.
I know it's true, for the best. All that. And then I'll have this feeling of
motion again. It's like. I'm sensing the shape of an event or. . ." He
shook his head, befuddled. "Maybe they did drug us, Lisa. We sound like a
couple of acidheads out of the Sixties."
"I don't think so,"
she said; and then, after a silence, she asked, "Do you want to make
love?"
He trailed his fingers along
the curve of her stomach. "No offense, but I'm not sure I could
concentrate on it just now." "All right. But ..."
He rolled onto his side and
pressed against her, his breath warm on her cheeks. "You think we might
not have another chance?"
Embarrassed, she turned her
face into his chest. "I'm just horny is all."
"God, Lisa. You pick the
weirdest times to get aroused." "You've picked some pretty weird
times yourself."
"I've always been absolutely
correct in my behavior toward you, madam," he said in an English accent.
"Really? What about the
time in Jim and Karen's bathroom?"
"I was drunk."
"Well? I'm nervous now.
You know how that affects me."
"A common glandular
condition, fraulein." German accent this time. "Correctable by simple
surgery." He laughed and dropped the accent. "I wonder what Karen and
Jim would be doing in our shoes."
For a while they told stories
about what their various friends might do, and afterward they lay quietly, arms
around each other. Richard's heart jolted against Lisa's breast, and she
thought back to the first time they had been together this way. How protected
she had felt, yet how fragile the strength of his heartbeat had made him seem.
She'd had the idea that she could reach into his chest and touch his heart. And
she could have. You had that much power over your lover; his heart was in your
care, and at moments like this it was easy to believe that you would always be
caring. But the moments failed you. They were peaks, and from them you slid
into a mire where caring dissolved into mistrust and selfishness, where you saw
that your feeling of being protected was illusory, and the moments were few
and far-between. Marriage sought to institutionalize those moments, by law, to
butter them over a ridiculous number of years; but all it did was lessen their
intensity and open you up to a new potential for failure. Everyone talked about
"good marriages," ones that evolved into hallowed friendships, an
emeritus passion of thespirit. Maybe they did exist. Maybe there were-as Murcielago
had implied-true companions. But most of the old marrieds Lisa had known were
simply exhausted, weary of struggling, and had reached an accommodation with
their mates based upon mutual despair. If Murcielago were right, if the world
were changing, possibly the condition of marriage would change. Lisa doubted
it, though. Hearts would have to be changed as well, and not even magic could
affect their basic nature. Like with seashells, you could put your ear to one and
hear the sad truth of an ocean breaking on a deserted shore. They were always
empty, always unfulfilled. Deeds fill them, said an almost-voice inside her
head, and she almost knew whose voice it had been; she pushed the knowledge
aside, wanting to hold onto the moment.
Somebody shrieked in the
courtyard. Not unusual. Groups of people frequently hung around the courtyard
at night, smoking dope and exchanging bits of travel lore; the previous night
two French girls and an American boy had been fighting with water pistols, and
the girls had shrieked whenever they were hit. But this time the shriek was
followed by shouts in Spanish and in broken English, a scream of pure terror,
then silence. Richard sprang to his feet and cracked the door. Lisa moved up behind
him. Another shout in Spanish-she recognized the word doctor. Richard put a
finger to his lips and slipped out into the hall. Together they edged along the
wall and peeked down into the courtyard. About a dozen guests were standing
against the rear wall, some with their hands in the air; facing them, carrying
automatic rifles, were three young men and a girl. Teenagers. Wearing jeans and
polo shirts. A fourth man lay on the ground, his hands and head swathed in
bandages. The guests were very pale-at this distance their eyes looked like
raisins in uncooked dough-and a couple of the women were sobbing. One of the
gunmen was wounded, a patch of blood staining his side; he was having to lean
on the girl's shoulder, and his rifle barrel was wavering back and forth. With
all the ferns sprouting around them, the pots of flowers hanging from the green
stucco wall, the scene had an air of mythic significance-a chance meeting
between good and evil in the Garden of Eden.
"Sssst!" A hiss
behind Lisa's shoulder. It was the Guatemalan man who had watched her during
dinner the night before; he had a machine pistol in one hand, and in the other
he was flapping a leather card case. ID. He beckoned, and they moved after him
down the hall. "Policia!" he whispered, displaying the ID; in the
photograph he was younger, his mustache so black it appeared to have been
painted on for a joke. His nervous eyes and baggy suit and five o'clock shadow
reminded Lisa of 1940s movie heavies, the evil flunky out to kill George
Sanders or Humphrey Bogart; but the way his breath whined through his nostrils,
the oily smell of the gun, his radiation of callous stupidity, all that reduced
her romantic impression. "Malos!" he said, pointing to the courtyard.
"Communistas! Guerrillas!" He patted the gun barrel.
"Okay," said
Richard, holding up both hands to show his neutrality, his non-involvement. But
as the man crept toward the courtyard, toward the balcony railing, Richard
locked his hands together and brought them down on the back of the man's neck,
then fell atop him, kneeing and pummeling him. Lisa was frozen by the attack,
half-disbelieving that Richard was capable of such decisive action. He
scrambled to his feet, breathing hard, and tossed the machine pistol down into
the courtyard, "Amigos!" he shouted, and turned to Lisa, his mouth
still open from the shout.
Their eyes met, and that stare
was a divorce, an acknowledgement that something was happening to separate
them, happening right now, and though they weren't exactly sure what, they were
willing to accept the fact and allow it to happen. "I couldn't let him
shoot," said Richard. "I didn't have a choice." He sounded
amazed, as if he hadn't known until this moment why he had acted.
Lisa wanted to console him, to
tell him he'd done the right thing, but her emotions were locked away, under
restraint, and she sensed a gulf between them that nothing could bridge-all
their intimate connections were withdrawing, receding. Hooks, Murcielago had
called them.
One of the guerrillas, the
girl, was sneaking up the stairs, gun at the ready. She was pretty but on the
chubby side, with shiny wings of black hair falling over her shoulders. She motioned
for them to move back and nudged the unconscious man with her toe. He moaned,
his hand twitched. "You?" she said, pointing at Richard and then to
the man.
"He was going to
shoot," said Richard hollowly.
From the girl's blank expression
Lisa could tell that she hadn't understood. She rummaged in the man's jacket,
pulled out the ID case and shouted in rapid-fire Spanish. "Vamanos!"
she said to them, indicating that they should precede her down the stairs. As
Lisa started down there was a short burst of automatic fire from the hall;
startled, she turned to see the girl lifting the barrel of her rifle from the
man's head, a stippling of red droplets on the green stucco. The girl frowned
and trained the rifle on her, and Lisa hurried after Richard, horrified. But
before her emotional reaction could mature into fear, her vision began to
erode.
Glowing white flickers were
edging every figure in the room, with the exception of the bandaged man, and as
they grew clearer, she realized that they were phantom human shapes; they were
like the afterimages of movement you see on benzedrine, yet sharper and slower
to fade, and the movements were different from those of their originals-an arm
flailing, a half-formed figure falling or running off. Each time one vanished
another would take its place. She tried to banish them, to will them away, but
was unsuccessful, and she found that watching them distracted her from thinking
about the body upstairs.
The tallest of the
guerrillas-a gangly kid with a skull face and huge dark eyes and a skimpy
mustache-entered into conversation with the girl, and Richard dropped to his
knees beside the bandaged man. Blood had seeped through the layers of wrapping,
producing a grotesque striping around the man's head. The gangly kid scowled
and prodded Richard with his rifle.
"I'm a medic,"
Richard told him. "Como un doctor." Gingerly, he peeled back some
layers of bandage and looked away, his face twisted in disgust. "Jesus
Christ!"
"The soldiers torture
him." The kid spat into the ferns. "They think he is guerrillero,
because he's my cousin."
"And is he?" Richard
was probing for a pulse under the bandaged man's jaw.
"No." The kid leaned
over Richard's shoulder. "He studies at San Carlos University. But because
we have killed the soldiers, now he will have to fight." Richard sighed,
and the kid faltered. "It is good you are here. We think a friend is here,
a doctor. But he's gone." He made a gesture toward the street.
"Pasado."
Richard stood and cleaned his
fingers on his jeans. "He's dead."
One of the women who had been
sobbing let out a wail, and the kid snapped his rifle into firing position and
shouted, "Cayete, gringa!" His face was stony, the vein in his temple
throbbed. A balding, bearded man wearing an embroidered native shirt embraced
the woman, muting her sobs, and glared fiercely at the kid; one of his
afterimages raised a fist. The rest of the imprisoned guests were terrified,
their Adam's apples working, eyes darting about; and the girl was arguing with
the kid, pushing his rifle down. He kept shaking her off. Lisa felt detached
from the tension, out of phase with existence, as if she were gazing down from
a higher plane.
With what seemed foolhardy
bravado, the bearded guy called out to Richard. "Hey, you! The American!
You with these people or somethin'?"
Richard had squatted beside
the wounded guerrilla-a boy barely old enough to shave-and was probing his
side. "Or something," he said without glancing up. The boy winced and
gritted his teeth and leaned on his friend, a boy not much older.
"You gonna let 'em kill
us?" said the bearded guy. "That's what's happenin', y'know. The
girl's sayin' to let us go, but the dude's tellin' her he wants to make a
statement." Panic seeped into his voice. "Y'understand that, man? The
dude's lookin' to waste us so he can make a statement."
"Take it easy."
Richard got to his feet. "The bullet needs to come out," he said to
the gangly kid. "I ..."
The kid swiped at Richard's
head with the rifle barrel, and Richard staggered back, clutching his brow;
when he straightened up, Lisa saw blood welling from his hairline. "Your
friend's going to die," he said stubbornly. "The bullet needs to come
out." The kid jammed the muzzle of the rifle into Richard's throat,
forcing him to tip back his head.
With a tremendous effort of
will Lisa shook off the fog that had enveloped her. The afterimages vanished.
"He's trying to help you," she said, going toward the kid.
"Don't you understand?" The girl pushed her back and aimed her rifle at
Lisa's stomach. Looking into her eyes, Lisa had an intimation of the depth of
her seriousness, the ferocity of her commitment. "He's trying to
help," Lisa repeated. The girl studied her, and after a moment she called
over her shoulder to the kid. Some of the hostility drained from the kid's face
and was replaced by suspicion.
"Why?" the kid asked
Richard. "Why you help us?"
Richard seemed confused, and
then he started to laugh; he wiped his forehead with the back of his hand,
smearing the blood and sweat, and laughed some more. The kid was puzzled at
first, but a few seconds later he smiled and nodded as if he and Richard were
sharing a secret male joke. "Okay," he said. "Okay. You help
him. But here is danger. We go now."
"Yeah," said
Richard, absorbing this. "Yeah, okay." He stepped over to Lisa and
drew her into a smothering hug. She gripped his shoulders hard, and she thought
her emotions were going to break free; but when he stepped back, appearing
stunned, she sensed again that distance between them. . . . He put his arm
around the wounded boy and helped him through the entrance; the others were
already peering out the door. Lisa followed. The rows of tourist shops and
restaurants looked unreal-a deserted stage set-and the colors seemed streaky
and too bright. Parked under a streetlight near the entrance, gleaming toylike
in the yellow glare, was a Suzuki mini-truck, the kind with a canvas-draped
frame over the rear. Beyond it the road wound away into darkened hills. The
girl vaulted the tailgate and hauled the wounded boy after her; the other two
climbed into the cab and fired the engine. Only Richard was left standing on
the cobblestones.
"base prisa!" The
girl banged on the tailgate.
As Richard hesitated there was
a volley of shots. The noise sent Lisa scuttling away from the entrance toward
the lake. Three policemen were behind a parked car on the opposite side of the
street. More shots. The girl returned their fire, blowing out the windshield of
the car, and they ducked out of sight. Another shot. Sparks and stone chips
were kicked up near Richard's feet. Still he hesitated.
"Richard!" Lisa had
intended the shout as a caution, but the name floated out of her, not
desperate-sounding at all-it had the ring of an assurance. He dove for the
tailgate. The girl helped him scramble inside, and the truck sped off over the
first rise. The policemen ran after it, firing; then, like Keystone Kops, they
put on the brakes and ran in the opposite direction.
Lisa had a flash-feeling of
anguish that almost instantly began to subside, as if it had been the freakish
firing of a nerve. Dazedly, she moved further away from the hotel entrance. A
jeep stuffed with policemen came swerving past, but she hardly noticed. The
world was dissolving in golden light, every source of light intensifying and
crumbling the outlines of things. Streetlights burned like novas, sunbursts
shone from windows, and even the cracks in the sidewalk glowed; misty shapes
were fading into view, overlaying the familiar with tall, peak-roofed houses
and carved wagons and people dressed in robes. All rippling, illusory. It was
as if a fantastic illustration were coming to life, and she was the only
real-life character left in the story, a contemporary Alice with designer jeans
and turquoise earrings, who had been set to wander through a golden fairytale.
She was entranced, and yet at the same time she resented the fact that the
display was cheating her of the right to sadness. She needed to sort herself
out, and she continued toward the lake, toward the pier where she and Richard
had kissed. By the time she reached it, the lake itself had been transformed
into a scintillating body of light and out on the water the ghost of a sleek
sailboat, its canvas belling, glided past for an instant and was gone.
She sat at the end of the
pier, dangling her feet over the edge. The cool roughness of the planks was a
comfort, a proof against the strangeness of the world . . . or was it worlds?
The forms of the new age. Was that what she saw? Weary of seeing it, she willed
the light away and before she could register whether or not she had been
successful, she shut her eyes and tried to think about Richard. And, as if
thought were a vehicle for sight, she saw him. A ragged-eyed patch of vision appeared
against the darkness of her closed eyes, like a hole punched through black
boards. He was sitting on the oil-smeared floor of the truck, cradling the
wounded boy's head in his lap; the girl was bending over the boy, mopping his
forehead, holding onto Richard's shoulder so the bouncing of the truck wouldn't
throw her off-balance. Lisa felt a pang of jealousy, but she kept watching for
a very long time. She didn't wonder how she saw them. It all meant something,
and she knew that meaning would come clear.
When she opened her eyes, she
found it had grown pitch-dark. She couldn't see her hand in front of her face
and she panicked, thinking she had gone blind; but accompanying the panic was a
gradual brightening, and she realized that she must have willed away all light.
Soon the world had returned to normal. Almost. Though the slopes of the
volcanos were unlighted-shadows bulking against the stars-above each of their
cones blazed a nimbus of ruby glow, flickering with an inconstant rhythm. The
glow above Murcielago's volcano was the brightest-at least it was for a few
seconds. Then it faded, and in its place a fan of rippling white radiance
sprayed from the cone, penetrating high into the dark. It was such an eerie
sight, she panicked. Christ, what was she doing just sitting here and watching
pretty lights? And what was she going to do? Insecurity and isolation combined
into an electricity that jolted her to her feet. Maybe there was an antidote
for this, maybe the thing to do would be to go see Murcielago . . . And she
remembered Dowdy's story. How he'd been afraid and had gone to Murcielago, only
to find that the old apprentice had taken up his own post, leaving a vacancy.
She looked back at the other two volcanos, still pulsing with their ruby glow.
Dowdy and the mestizo? It had to be. The white light was Murcielago's vacancy
sign. The longer she stared at it, the more certain that knowledge became.
Stunned by the prospect of
setting out on such an eccentric course, by the realization that everything she
knew was dissolving in light or fleeing into darkness, she walked away from
the pier, following the shoreline. She wanted to hold onto Richard, to
sadness-her old familiar and their commons woe-but with each step her mood
brightened, and she ' couldn't even feel guilty about not being sad. Four or
five hours would take her to the far side of the lake. A long walk, alone, in
the dark, hallucinations lurking behind every bush. She could handle it,
though. It would give her time to work at controlling her vision, to understand
some of what she saw, and when she had climbed the volcano she'd find a rickety
cabin back in under the lip, a place as quirky as Dowdy him-self. She saw it
the same way she had seen Richard and the girl. Tilting walls; ferns growing
from the roof; a door made from the side of a packing crate, with the legend
THIS END UP upside down. Tacked to the door was a piece of paper, probably
Dowdy's note explaining the care and feeding of wizards. And inside, the
thousandfold forms of his spirit compacted into a gnarled shape, a nugget of
power (she experienced an upwelling of sadness, and then she felt that power
surging through her, nourishing her own strength, making her aware of the
thousands of bodies of light she was, all focused upon this moment in her
flesh), there Murcielago would be waiting to teach her power's usage and her
purpose in the world. Oh, God, Richard, goodbye.
THE PEACEMAKER
by Gardner Dozois
The appearance of "The Peacemaker" in
these pages is somewhat embarassing to me, since an anthologist who includes
his own work in his own anthology is leaving himself wide-open to charges of
shooting fish in a barrel. My original impulse, therefore, was to leave
"The Peacemaker" out of this anthology, but, after some argument, I
am bowing to pressure from Isaac, Sheila Williams, Shawna, Susan Allison,
Cynthia Manson, and others, and am, somewhat reluctantly, putting it in the
book after all. So, it is All Their Fault. Nevertheless, I'm sure I'll get
letters, and I'll just have to hope that the fact that the story was an important one for the magazine is
enough to justify its inclusion.
"The Peacemaker" was purchased by
Shawna McCarthy, and appeared in the August 1983 issue of IAsfm, with an
evocative cover by Val Lakey and a beautiful interior illustration by Bob
Walters. It won the Nebula Award for 1983, and was also a Hugo Finalist that
year.
In addition to editing IAsfm, I am the author or editor
of twenty-two books, including the novel Strangers and the short-story collection The
Visible Man. I am also the editor of the annual anthology series The
Year's Best Science Fiction, from St. Martin's Press, and, with Jack Dann,
of the "Magic Tales" anthology series, from Ace. My most recent books
are The Year's Best Science Fiction, Fourth Annual Collection, and,
with Jack Dann, the anthologies Sorcerers! and Demons! My story
"Morning Child" won another Nebula in 1984.
Roy had dreamed of the sea, as he often
did. When he woke up that morning, the wind was sighing through the trees
outside with a sound like the restless murmuring of surf, and for a moment he
thought that he was home, back in the tidy brick house by the beach, with
everything that had happened undone, and hope opened hotly inside him, like a
wound.
"Mom?" he said. He sat up,
straightening his legs, expecting his feet to touch the warm mass that was his
dog, Toby. Toby always slept curled at the foot of his bed, but already
everything was breaking up and changing, slipping away, and he blinked through
sleep-gummed eyes at the thin blue light coming in through the attic window,
felt the hardness of the old Army cot under him, and realized that he wasn't
home, that there was no home anymore, that for him there could never be a home
again.
He pushed the blankets aside and stood up.
It was bitterly cold in the big attic room-winter was dying hard, the most
terrible winter he could remember-and the rough wood planking burned his feet
like ice, but he couldn't stay in bed anymore, not now.
None of the other kids were awake yet; he
threaded his way through the other cots-accidently bumping against one of them
so that its occupant tossed and moaned and began to snore in a higher
register-and groped through cavernous shadows to the single high window. He was
just tall enough to reach it, if he stood on tiptoe. He forced the window open,
the old wood of its frame groaning in protest, plaster dust puffing, and
shivered as the cold dawn wind poured inward, hitting him in the face, tugging
with ghostly fingers at his hair, sweeping past him to rush through the rest of
the stuffy attic like a restless child set free to play.
The wind smelled of pine resin and wet
earth, not of salt flats and tides, and the bird-sound that rode in on that
wind was the burbling of wrens and the squawking of bluejays, not the raucous
shrieking of seagulls . . . but even so, as he braced his elbows against the
window frame and strained up to look out, his mind still full of the broken
fragments of dreams, he half-expected to see the ocean below, stretched out to
the horizon, sending patient wavelets to lap against the side of the house.
Instead he saw the nearby trees holding silhouetted arms up against the graying
sky, the barn and the farmyard, all still lost in shadow, the surrounding
fields, the weathered macadam line of the road, the forested hills rolling
away into distance. Silver mist lay in pockets of low ground, retreated in
wraithlike streamers up along the ridges.
Not yet. The sea had not chased him
here-yet.
Somewhere out there to the east, still
invisible, were the mountains, and just beyond those mountains was the sea that
he had dreamed of, lapping quietly at the dusty Pennsylvania hill towns, coal
towns, that were now, suddenly, seaports. There the Atlantic waited, held at
bay, momentarily at least, by the humpbacked wall of the Appalachians, still
perhaps forty miles from here, although closer now by leagues of swallowed land
and drowned cities than it had been only three years before.
He had been down by the seawall that long-ago morning,
playing some forgotten game, watching the waves move in slow oily swells, like
some heavy, dull metal in liquid form\ watching the tide come in . .
. and come in . . . and come in.... He had been excited at first, as the sea
crept in, way above the high-tide line, higher than he had ever seen it before,
and then, as the sea swallowed the beach entirely and began to lap patiently
against the base of the seawall, he had become uneasy, and then, as the
sea continued to rise up toward the top of the seawall itself, he had begun to
be afraid.... The sea had just kept coming in, rising slowly and inexorably,
swallowing the land at a slow walking pace, never stopping, always coming in,
always rising higher. . . . By the time the sea had swallowed the top of
the seawall and begun to creep up the short grassy slope toward his house,
sending glassy fingers probing almost to his feet, he had started to scream,
and as the first thin sheet of water rippled up to soak his sneakers, he had
whirled and run frantically up the slope, screaming hysterically for his
parents, and the sea had followed patiently at his heels... .
A "marine transgression," the
scientists called it. Ordinary people called it, inevitably, the Flood.
Whatever you called it, it had washed away the old world forever. Scientists
had been talking about the possibility of such a thing for years-some of them
even pointing out that it was already as warm as it had been at the peak of the
last interglacial, and getting warmer-but few had suspected just how fast the
Antarctic ice could melt. Many times during those chaotic weeks, one scientific
King Canute or another had predicted that the worst was over, that the tide
would rise this high and no higher . . . but each time the sea had come
inexorably on, pushing miles and miles further inland with each successive
high-tide, rising almost 300 feet in the course of one disastrous summer,
drowning lowlands around the globe until there were no lowlands anymore.
In the United States alone, the sea had swallowed most of the East Coast east
of the Appalachians, the West Coast west of the Sierras and the Cascades, much
of Alaska and Hawaii, Florida, the Gulf Coast, East Texas, taken a big wide
scoop out of the lowlands of the Mississippi Valley, thin fingers of water
penetrating north to Iowa and Illinois, and caused the St. Lawrence and the
Great Lakes to overflow and drown their shorelines. The Green Mountains, the
White Mountains, the Adirondacks, the Poconos and the Catskills, the Ozarks,
the Pacific Coast Ranges-all had been transformed to archipelagos, surrounded
by the invading sea.
The funny thing was . . . that as the sea
pursued them relentlessly inland, pushing them from one temporary refuge to
another, he had been unable to shake the feeling that he had caused the
Hood: that he had done something that day while playing atop the seawall,
inadvertently stumbled on some magic ritual, some chance combination of gesture
and word that had untied the bonds of the sea and sent it sliding up over the
land . . . that it was chasing him, personally... .
A dog was barking out there now, somewhere
out across the fields toward town, but it was not his dog. His dog was
dead, long since dead, and its whitening skull was rolling along the ocean floor
with the tides that washed over what had once been Brigantine, New Jersey,
three hundred feet down.
Suddenly he was covered with gooseflesh,
and he shivered, rubbing his hands over his bare arms. He returned to his cot
and dressed hurriedly-no point in trying to go back to bed, Sara would be up to
kick them all out of the sack in a minute or two anyway. The day had begun; he
would think no further ahead than that. He had learned in the refugee camps to
take life one second at a time.
As he moved around the room, he thought
that he could feel hostile eyes watching him from some of the other bunks. It
was much colder in here now that he had opened the window, and he had
inevitably made a certain amount of noise getting dressed, but although they
all valued every second of sleep they could scrounge, none of the other kids
would dare to complain. The thought was bittersweet, bringing both pleasure and
pain, and he smiled at it, a thin, brittle smile that was almost a grimace. No,
they would watch sullenly from their bunks, and pretend to be asleep, and curse
him under their breath, but they would say nothing to anyone about it. Certainly
they would say nothing to him.
He went down through the still-silent house
like a ghost, and out across the farmyard, through fugitive streamers of mist
that wrapped clammy white arms around him and beaded his face with dew. His
uncle Abner was there at the slit-trench before him. Abner grunted a greeting,
and they stood pissing side by side for a moment in companionable silence,
their urine steaming in the gray morning air.
Abner stepped backward and began to
button\his pants. "You start playin' with yourself yet, boy?" he
said; not looking at Roy.
Roy felt his face flush. "No," he
said, trying not to stammer, "no sir."
"You growin' hair already," Abner said. He
swung himself slowly around to face Roy, as if his body was some ponderous
machine that could only be moved and aimed by the use of pulleys and levers.
The hard morning light made his face look harsh as stone, but also sallow and
old. Tired, Roy thought. Unutterably weary, as though it took almost more
effort than he could sustain just to stand there. Worn out, like the overtaxed
fields around them. Only the eyes were alive in the eroded face; they were hard
and merciless as flint, and they looked at you as if they were looking right
through you to some distant thing that nobody else could see. "I've tried
to explain to you about remaining pure," Abner said, speaking slowly.
"About how important it is for you to keep yourself pure, not to let
yourself be sullied in any way. I've tried to explain that, I hope you could
understand-"
"Yes, sir," Roy said.
Abner made a groping hesitant motion with
his hand, fingers spread wide, as though he were trying to sculpt meaning from
the air itself. "I mean-it's important that you understand, Roy.
Everything has to be right. I mean, everything's got to be just . . . right
...or nothing else will mean anything. You got to be right in your soul,
boy. You got to let the Peace of God into your soul. It all depends on you
now-you got to let that Peace inside yourself, no one can do it for you.
And it's so important ..."
"Yes, sir," Roy said quietly,
"I understand."
"I wish ... ," Abner said, and
fell silent. They stood there for a minute, not speaking, not looking at each
other. There was woodsmoke in the air now, and they heard a door slam somewhere
on the far side of the house. They had instinctively been looking out across
the open land to the east, and now, as they watched, the sun rose above the
mountains, splitting the plum-and-ash sky open horizontally with a long wedge
of red, distinguishing the rolling horizon from the lowering clouds. A lance of
bright white sunlight hit their eyes, thrusting straight in at them from the
edge of the world.
"You're going to make us proud, boy, I
know it," Abner said, but Roy ignored him, watching in fascination as the
molten disk of the sun floated free of the horizon-line, squinting against the
dazzle until his eyes watered and his sight blurred. Abner put his hand on the
boy's shoulder. The hand felt heavy and hot, proprietary, and Roy shook it
loose in annoyance, still not looking away from the horizon. Abner sighed,
started to say something, thought better of it, and instead said, "Come on
in the house, boy, and let's get some breakfast inside you."
Breakfast-when they finally did get to sit down to it,
after the usual rambling grace and invocation by Abner-proved to be unusually
lavish. For the brethren, there were hickory-nut biscuits, and honey, and cups
of chicory, and even the other refugee kids-who on occasion during the long
bitter winter had been fed as close to nothing at all as law and appearances
would allow-got a few slices of fried fatback along with their habitual
cornmeal mush. Along with his biscuits and honey, Roy got wild turkey eggs,
Indian potatoes, and a real pork chop. There was a good deal of tension around
the big table that morning: Henry and Luke were stern-faced and tense, Raymond
was moody and preoccupied, Albert actually looked frightened; the refugee kids
were round-eyed and silent, doing their best to make themselves invisible; the
jolly Mrs. Crammer was as jolly as ever, shoveling her food in with gusto, but
the grumpy Mrs. Zeigler, who was feared and disliked by all the kids, had
obviously been crying, and ate little or nothing; Abner's face was set like
rock, his eyes were hard and bright, and he looked from one to another of the
brethren, as if daring them to question his leadership and spiritual guidance.
Roy ate with good appetite, unperturbed by the emotional convection currents
that were swirling around him, calmly but deliberately concentrating on mopping
up every morsel of food on his plate-in the last couple of months he had put
back some of the weight he had lost, although by the old standards, the ones
his Mom would have applied four years ago, he was still painfully thin. At the
end of the meal, Mrs. Reardon came in from the kitchen and, beaming with the
well-justified pride of someone who is about to do the impossible, presented
Roy with a small, rectangular object wrapped in shiny brown paper. He was
startled for a second, but yes, by God, it was: a Hershey bar, the first one
he'd seen in years. A black market item, of course, difficult to get hold of in
the impoverished East these days, and probably expensive as hell. Even some of
the brethren were looking at him enviously now, and the refugee kids were
frankly gaping. As he picked up the Hershey bar and slowly and caressingly
peeled the wrapper back, exposing the pale chocolate beneath, one of the other
kids actually began to drool.
After breakfast, the other refugee
kids-"wetbacks," the townspeople sometimes called them, with
elaborate irony-were divided into two groups. One group would help the brethren
work Abner's farm that day, while the larger group would be loaded onto an
ox-drawn dray (actually an old flatbed truck, with the cab knocked off) and
sent out around the countryside to do what pretty much amounted to slave labor:
road work, heavy farm work, helping with the quarrying or the timbering,
rebuilding houses and barns and bridges damaged or destroyed in the chaotic
days after the Flood. The federal government-or what was left of the federal
government, trying desperately, and not always successfully, to keep a
battered and Balkanizing country from flying completely apart, struggling to
put the Humpty Dumpty that was America back together again-the federal
government paid Abner (and others like him) a yearly allowance in federal scrip
or promise-of-merchandise notes for giving room and board to refugees from the
drowned lands ... but times being as tough as they were, no one was going to
complain if Abner also helped ease the burden of their upkeep by hiring them
out locally to work for whomever could come up with the scrip, or sufficient
barter goods, or an attractive work-swap offer; what was left of the state and
town governments also used them on occasion (and the others like them, adult or
child), gratis, for work-projects "for the common good, during this time
of emergency..."
Sometimes, hanging around the farm with
little or nothing to do, Roy almost missed going out on the work-crews, but
only almost: he remembered too well the back-breaking labor performed on scanty
rations . . . the sickness, the accidents, the staggering fatigue . . . the
blazing sun and the swarms of mosquitoes in summer, the bitter cold in winter,
the snow, the icy wind . . . He watched the dray go by, seeing the envious and
resentful faces of kids he had once worked beside-Stevie, Enrique, Salturn
toward him as it passed, and, reflexively, he opened and closed his hands.
Even two months of idleness and relative luxury had not softened the thick and
roughened layers of callus that were the legacy of several seasons spent on the
crews. . . . No, boredom was infinitely preferable.
By midmorning, a small crowd of people had gathered in
the road outside the farmhouse. It was hotter now; you could smell the promise
of summer in the air, in the wind, and the sun that beat down out of a
cloudless blue sky had a real sting to it. It must have been uncomfortable out
there in the open, under that sun, but the crowd made no attempt to approach they
just stood there on the far side of the road and watched the house, shuffling
their feet, occasionally muttering to each other in voices that, across the
road, were audible only as a low wordless grumbling.
Roy watched them for a while from the porch
door; they were townspeople, most of them vaguely familiar to Roy, al-though
none of them belonged to Abner's sect, and he knew none of them by name. The
refugee kids saw little of the townspeople, being kept carefully segregated for
the most part. The few times that Roy had gotten into town he had been treated
with icy hostility-and God help the wetback kid who was caught by the town kids
on a deserted stretch of road! For that matter, even the brethren tended to
keep to themselves, and were snubbed by certain segments of town society,
although the sect had increased its numbers dramatically in recent years,
nearly tripling in strength during the past winter alone; there were new
chapters now in several of the surrounding communities.
A gaunt-faced woman in the crowd outside
spotted Roy, and shook a thin fist at him. "Heretic!" she shouted.
"Blasphemer!" The rest of the crowd began to buzz ominously, like a
huge angry bee. She spat at Roy, her face contorting and her shoulders heaving
with the ferocity of her effort, although she must have known that the spittle
had no chance of reaching him. "Blasphemer!" she shouted again. The
veins stood out like cords in her scrawny neck.
Roy stepped back into the house, but
continued to watch from behind the curtained front windows. There was shouting
inside the house as well as outside-the brethren 'tad been cloistered in the
kitchen for most of the morning, arguing, and the sound and ferocity of their
argument carried clearly through the thin plaster walls of the crumbling old
house. At last the sliding door to the kitchen slammed open, and Mrs. Zeigler
strode out into the parlor, accompanied by her two children and her scrawny,
pasty-faced husband, and followed by two other families of brethren-about nine
people altogether. Most of them were carrying suitcases, and a few had
backpacks and bindles. Abner stood in the kitchen doorway and watched them go,
his anger evident only in the whiteness of his knuckles as he grasped the
doorframe. "Go, then," Abner said scornfully. "We spit you up
out of our mouths!
Don't ever think to come back!" He
swayed in the doorway, his voice tremulous with hate. "We're better off
without you, you hear? You hear me? We don't need the weak-willed
and the short-sighted."
Mrs. Zeigler said nothing, and her steps
didn't slow or falter, but her homely hatchet-face was streaked with tears. To
Roy's astonishment-for she had a reputation as a harridan-she stopped near the
porch door and threw her arms around him. "Come with us," she said,
hugging him with smothering tightness, "Roy, please come with us!
You can, you know-we'll find a place for you, everything will work out
fine." Roy said nothing, resisting the impulse to squirm-he was uncomfortable
in her embrace; in spite of himself, it touched some sleeping corner of his
soul he had thought was safely bricked-over years before, and for a moment he
felt trapped and panicky, unable to breathe, as though he were in sudden danger
of wakening from a comfortable dream into a far more terrible and less
desirable reality. "Come with us," Mrs. Zeigler said again,
more urgently, but Roy shook his head gently and pulled away from her.
"You're a goddamned fool then!" she blazed, suddenly angry, her voice
ringing harsh and loud, but Roy only shrugged, and gave her his wistful,
ghostly smile. "Damn it-" she started to say, but her eyes filled
with tears again, and she whirled and hurried out of the house, followed by the
other members of her party. The children-wetbacks were kept pretty much segregated
from the children of the brethren as well, and he had seen some of these kids
only at meals-looked at Roy with wide, frightened eyes as they passed.
Abner was staring at Roy now, from across
the room; it was a hard and challenging stare, but there was also a trace of
desperation in it, and in that moment Abner seemed uncertain and oddly
vulnerable. Roy stared back at him serenely, unblinkingly meeting his eyes,
and after a while some of the tension went out of Abner, and he turned and
stumbled out of the room, listing to one side like a church steeple in the
wind.
Outside, the crowd began to buzz again as Mrs.
Zeigler's party filed out of the house and across the road. There was much
discussion and arm-waving and head-shaking when the two groups met, someone
occasionally gesturing back toward the farmhouse. The buzzing grew louder, then
gradually died away. At last, Mrs. Zeigler and her group set off down the road
for town, accompanied by some of the locals. They trudged away dispiritedly
down the center of the dusty road, lugging their shabby suitcases, only a few
of them looking back.
Roy watched them until they were out of
sight, his face still and calm, and continued to stare down the road after them
long after they were gone.
About noon, a carload of reporters arrived
outside, driving up in one of the bulky new methane-burners that were still
rarely seen east of Omaha. They circulated through the crowd of townspeople,
pausing briefly to take photographs and ask questions, working their way toward
the house, and Roy watched them as if they were unicorns, strange remnants from
some vanished cycle of creation. Most of the reporters were probably from State
College or the new state capital at Altoona-places where a few small
newspapers were again being produced-but one of them was wearing an armband
that identified him as a bureau man for one of the big Denver papers, and that
was probably where the money for the car had come from. It was strange to be
reminded that there were still areas of the country that were ... not
unchanged, no place in the world could claim that . . . and not rich, not by
the old standards of affluence anyway . . . but, at any rate, better off than here.
The whole western part of the country-from roughly the 95th meridian on
west to approximately the 122nd-had been untouched by the flooding, and
although the west had also suffered severely from the collapse of the national
economy and the consequent social upheavals, at least much of their industrial
base had remained intact. Denver-one of the few large American cities built 'on
ground high enough to have been safe from the rising waters-was the new federal
capital, and, if poorer and meaner, it was also bigger and busier than ever.
Abner went out to herd the reporters inside
and away from the unbelievers, and after a moment or two Roy could hear Abner's
voice going out there, booming like a church organ. By the time the reporters
came in, Roy was sitting at the dining room table, flanked by Raymond and
Aaron, waiting for them.
They took photographs of him sitting there, while he
stared calmly back at them, and they took photographs of him while he politely
refused to answer questions, and then Aaron handed him the pre-prepared papers,
and he signed them, and repeated the legal formulas that Aaron had taught him,
and they took photographs of that, too. And then-able to get nothing more out
of him, and made slightly uneasy by his blank composure and the remoteness of
his eyes-they left.
Within a few more minutes, as though
everything were over, as though the departure of the reporters had drained all
possible significance from anything else that might still happen, most of the
crowd outside had drifted away also, only one or two people remaining behind to
stand quietly waiting, like vultures, in the once-again empty road.
Lunch was a quiet meal. Roy ate heartily,
taking seconds of everything, and Mrs. Crammer was as jovial as ever, but
everyone else was subdued, and even Abner seemed shaken by the schism that had
just sundered his church. After the meal, Abner stood up and began to pray aloud.
The brethren sat resignedly at the table, heads partially bowed, some listening,
some not. Abner was holding his arms up toward the big blackened rafters of the
ceiling, sweat runneling his face, when Peter came hurriedly in from outside
and stood hesitating in the doorway, trying to catch Abner's eye. When it
became obvious that Abner was going to keep right on ignoring him, Peter
shrugged, and said in a loud flat voice, "Abner, the sheriff is
here."
Abner stopped praying. He grunted, a
hoarse, exhausted sound, the kind of sound a baited bear might make when,
already pushed beyond the limits of endurance, someone jabs it yet again with a
spear. He slowly lowered his arms and was still for a long moment, and then he
shuddered, seeming to shake himself back to life. He glanced speculatively-and,
it almost seemed, beseechingly-at Roy, and then straightened his shoulders and
strode from the room.
They received the sheriff in the parlor, Raymond and
Aaron and Mrs. Crammer sitting in the battered old armchairs, Roy sitting
unobtrusively to one side of the stool from a piano that no longer worked,
Abner standing a little to the fore with his arms locked behind him and his
boots planted solidly on the oak planking, as if he were on the bridge of a
schooner that was heading into a gale. County Sheriff Sam Braddock glanced at
the others-his gaze lingering on Roy for a moment-and then ignored them,
addressing himself to Abner as if they were alone in the room. "Mornin',
Abner," he said.
"Mornin', Sam," Abner said
quietly. "You here for some reason other than just t'say hello, I
suppose."
Braddock grunted. He was a short, stocky,
grizzled man with iron-gray hair and a tired face. His uniform was shiny and
old and patched in a dozen places, but clean, and the huge old revolver
strapped to his hip looked worn but serviceable. He fidgeted with his shapeless
old hat, turning it around and around in his fingers-he was obviously
embarrassed, but he was determined as well, and at last he said, "The
thing of it is, Abner, I'm here to talk you out of this damned
tomfoolery."
"Are you, now?" Abner said.
"We'll do whatever we damn well want
to do-" Raymond burst out, shrilly, but Abner waved him to silence.
Braddock glanced lazily at Raymond, then looked back at Abner, his tired old
face settling into harder lines. "I'm not going to allow it," he
said, most harshly. "We don't want this kind of thing going on in this
county."
Abner said nothing.
"There's not a thing you can do about
it, sheriff," Aaron said, speaking a bit heatedly, but keeping his
melodious voice well under control. "It's all perfectly legal, all the way
down the line."
"Well, now," Braddock said,
"I don't know about that ..."
"Well, I do know,
sheriff," Aaron said calmly. "As a legally sanctioned and recognized
church, we are protected by law all the way down the line. There is ample
precedent, most of it recent, most of it upheld by appellate decisions within
the last year: Carlton versus the State of Vermont, Tretiholm versus the
State of West Virginia, the Church of Souls versus the State of New
York. There was that case up in Tylersville, just last year. Why, the Freedom
of Worship Act alone ..."
Braddock sighed, tacitly admitting that he
knew Aaron was right-perhaps he had hoped to bluff them into obeying. "The
'Flood Congress' of '93," Braddock said, with bitter contempt. "They
were so goddamned panic-stricken and full of sick chatter about Armageddon that
you could've rammed any nonsense down their throats. That's a bad law, a
pisspoor law..."
"Be that as it may, sheriff, you have no
authority whatsoever-"
Abner suddenly began to speak, talking with
a slow heavy deliberateness, musingly, almost reminiscently, ignoring the
conversation he was interrupting-and indeed, perhaps he had not even been
listening to it. "My grandfather lived right here on this farm, and his
father before him-you know that, Sam? They lived by the old
ways, and they survived and prospered. Greatgranddad, there wasn't hardly
anything he needed from the outside world, anything he needed to buy, except
maybe nails and suchlike, and he could've made them himself, too, if he'd
needed to. Everything they needed, everything they ate, or wore, or used, they
got from the woods, or from out of the soil of this farm, right here. We don't
know how to do that anymore. We forgot the old ways, we turned our faces away,
which is why the Flood came on us as a Judgment, a Judgment and a scourge, a
scouring, a winnowing. The Old Days have come back again, and we've forgotten
so goddamned much, we're almost helpless now that there's no goddamned
K-mart down the goddamned street. We've got to go back to the old ways, or
we'll pass from the earth, and be seen no more in it . . ." He was
sweating now, staring earnestly at Braddock, as if to compel him by force of
will alone to share the vision. "But it's so hard, Sam.... We have
to work at relearning the old ways, we have to reinvent them as we go,
step by step ..."
"Some things we were better off
without," Braddock said grimly.
"Up at Tylersville, they doubled their
yield last harvest. Think what that could mean to a county as hungry as this
one has been-"
Braddock shook his iron-gray head and held
up one hand, as if he were directing traffic. "I'm telling you, Abner, the
town won't stand for this-I'm bound to warn you that some of the boys just
might decide to go outside the law to deal with this thing." He paused.
"And, unofficially of course, I just might be inclined to give them a
hand...."
Mrs. Crammer laughed. She had been sitting
quietly and taking all of this in, smiling good-naturedly from time to time,
and her laugh was a shocking thing in that stuffy little room, harsh as a
crow's caw. "You'll do nothing, Sam Braddock,"she said
jovially. "And neither will anybody else. More than half the county's with
us already, nearly all the country folk, and a good part of the town,
too." She smiled pleasantly at him, but her eyes were small and hard. "Just
you remember, we know where you live, Sam Braddock. And we know
where your sister lives, too, and your sister's child, over to Framington
..."
"Are you threatening an officer of the
law?" Braddock said, but he said it in a weak voice, and his face, when he
turned it away to stare at the floor, looked sick and old. Mrs. Crammer laughed
again, and then there was silence.
Braddock kept his face turned down for
another long moment, and then he put his hat back on, squashing it down firmly
on his head, and when he looked up he pointedly ignored the brethren and
addressed his next remark to Roy. "You don't have to stay with these
people, son," he said. "That's the law, too." He kept his
eyes fixed steadily on Roy. "You just say the word, son, and I'll take you
straight out of here, right now." His jaw was set, and he touched the butt
of his revolver, as if for encourgement. "They can't stop us. How about
it?"
"No, thank you," Roy said
quietly. "I'll stay."
That night, while Abner wrung his hands and
prayed aloud, Roy sat half-dozing before the parlor fire, unconcerned,
watching the firelight throw Abner's gesticulating shadow across the
white-washed walls. There was something in the wine they kept giving him, Roy
knew, maybe some-body's saved-up Quaaludes, but he didn't need it. Abner kept
exorting him to let the Peace of God into his heart, but he didn't need that
either. He didn't need anything. He felt calm and self-possessed and remote,
disassociated from everything that went on around him, as if he were looking down
on the world through the wrong end of a telescope, feeling only a mild
scientific interest as he watched the tiny mannequins swirl and pirouette. . .
. Like watching television with the sound off. If this were the Peace of God,
it had settled down on him months ago, during the dead of that terrible winter,
while he had struggled twelve hours a day to load foundation-stone in the face
of icestorms and the razoring wind, while they had all, wetbacks and brethren
alike, come close to starving. About the same time that word of the goings-on
at Tylersville had started to seep down from the brethren's parent church
upstate, about the same time that Abner, who until then had totally ignored
their kinship, had begun to talk to him in the evenings about the old ways... .
Although perhaps the great dead cold had
started to settle in even earlier, that first day of the new world, while they
were driving off across foundering Brigantine, the water already up over the
hubcaps of the Toyota, and he had heard Toby barking frantically somewhere
behind them.... His dad had died that day, died of a heart-attack as he fought
to get them onto an overloaded boat that would take them across to the
"safety" of the New Jersey mainland. His mother had died months later
in one of the sprawling refugee camps, called "Floodtowns," that had
sprung up on high ground everywhere along the new coastlines. She had just
given up-sat down in the mud, rested her head on her knees, closed her eyes,
and died. Just like that. Roy had seen the phenomenon countless times in the
Floodtowns, places so festeringly horrible that even life on Abner's farm, with
its Dickensian bleakness, forced labor, and short rations, had seemed-and was-a
distinct change for the better. It was odd, and wrong, and sometimes it
bothered him a little, but he hardly ever thought of his mother and father
anymore-it was as if his mind shut itself off every time he came to those
memories; he had never even cried for them, but all he had to do was close his
eyes and he could see Toby, or his cat, Basil, running toward him and meowing
with his tail held up over his back like a flag, and grief would come up like
black bile at the back of his throat... .
It was still dark when they left the
farmhouse. Roy and Abner and Aaron walked together, Abner carrying a large tattered
carpetbag. Hank and Raymond ranged ahead with shotguns, in case there was
trouble, but the last of the afternoon's gawkers had been driven off hours
before by the cold and the road was empty, a dim charcoal line through the
slowly lightening darkness. No one spoke, and there was no sound other than
the sound of boots crunching on gravel. It was chilly again that morning, and
Roy's bare feet burned against the macadam, but he trudged along stoically,
ignoring the bite of cinders and pebbles. Their breath steamed faintly against
thepaling stars. The fields stretched dark and formless around them to either
side of the road, and once they heard the rustling of some unseen animal
fleeing away from them through the stubble. Mist flowed slowly down the road to
meet them, sending out gleaming silver fingers to curl around their legs.
The sky was graying to the east, where the
sea slept behind the mountains. Roy could imagine the sea rising higher and
higher until it found its patient way around the roots of the hills and came
spilling into the tableland beyond, flowing steadily forward like the mist,
spreading out into a placid sheet of water that slowly swallowed the town, the
farmhouse, the fields, until only the highest branches of the trees remained,
held up like the beckoning arms of the drowned, and then they too would slide
slowly, peacefully, beneath the water... .
A bird was crying out now, somewhere in the
darkness, and they were walking through the fields, away from the road, cold
mud squelching underfoot, the dry stubble crackling around them. Soon it would
be time to sow the spring wheat, and after that, the corn... .
They stopped. Wind sighed through the dawn,
muttering in the throat of the world. Still no one had spoken. Then hands were
helping him remove the old bathrobe he'd . been wearing. . . . Before leaving
the house, he had been bathed, and annointed with a thick fragrant oil, and
with a tiny silver scissors Mrs. Reardon had clipped a lock of his hair for
each of the brethren.
Suddenly he was naked, and he was being
urged forward again, his feet stumbling and slow.
They had made a wide ring of automobile
flares here, the flares spitting and sizzling luridly in the wan dawn light,
and in the center of the ring, they had dug a hollow in the ground.
He lay down in the hollow, feeling his
naked back and buttocks settle into the cold mud, feeling it mat the hair on
the back of his head. The mud made little sucking noises as he moved his arms
and legs, settling in, and then he stretched out and lay still. The dawn breeze
was cold, and he shivered in the mud, feeling it take hold of him like a
giant's hand, tightening around him, pulling him down with a grip old and cold
and strong... .
They
gathered around him, seeming, from his low perspective, to tower miles into the
sky. Their faces were harsh and angular, gouged with lines and shadows that
made them look like something from a stark old woodcut. Abner bent down to
rummage in the carpetbag, his harsh woodcut face close to Roy's for a moment,
and when he straightened up again he had the big fine-honed hunting knife in
his hand.
Abner began to speak now, groaning out the
words in a loud, harsh voice, but Roy was no longer listening. He watched
calmly as Abner lifted the knife high into the air, and then he turned his head
to look last, as if he could somehow see across all the intervening miles of
rock and farmland and forest to where the sea waited behind the mountains... .
Is this enough? he thought disjointedly,
ignoring the towering scarecrow figures that were swaying in closer over him,
straining his eyes to look last, to where the Presence lived ... speaking now
only to that Presence, to the sea, to that vast remorseless deity, bargaining
with it cannily, hopefully, shrewdly, like a country housewife at market,
proffering it the fine rich red gift of his death. Is this enough? Will this
do?
Will you stop now?
FIRE WATCH
by Connie Willis
"Fire Watch" was purchased by George Scithers toward the
end of his reign as editor and appeared in the February 15, 1982 issue of IAsfm, with interior illustrations by James Odbert. Willis had
appeared on the Hugo final ballot the year before with her story "Daisy,
In The Sun," but "Fire Watch" was the story that finally
established her reputation, going on to win both the Nebula and the Hugo Award
in 1982. Her story "A Letter From The Clearys," purchased a few
months later during the McCarthy regime, also won a Nebula Award that year,
making Willis one of the few writers ever to win two Nebulas in the same year.
Over the next few years other IAsfm stories by Willis also appeared on
the final award ballots: "The Sidon in the Mirror" on both Nebula and
Hugo ballots in 1983, and "Blued Moon" on the Hugo ballot in 1984
-and she would become one of the magazine's major talents. As I write this,
several more stories by her are in inventory at IAsfm.
Connie
Willis lives in Greeley, Colorado, with a husband, a teenage daughter, and a
bulldog. Her first novel, written in collaboration with Cynthia Felice, was Water Witch, and another collaborative novel with Felice, Light
Raid, is coming up from Ace. Her most recent books are Fire Watch, a
collection of her short fiction, and Lincoln's Dreams, her first solo
novel.
"History
hath triumphed over time, which besides it nothing but eternity hath triumphed
over." -Sir Walter Raleigh
September 20-Of course the first thing I looked for was the
fire-watch stone. And of course it wasn't there yet. It wasn't dedicated until
1951, accompanying speech by the Very Reverend Dean Walter Matthews, and this
is only 1940. I knew that. I went to see the fire-watch stone only yesterday,
with some kind of misplaced notion that seeing the scene of the crime would
somehow help. It didn't.
The only things that would have helped were
a crash course in London during the Blitz and a little more time. I had not
gotten either.
"Travelling in time is not like taking
the tube, Mr. Bartholomew," the esteemed Dunworthy had said, blinking at
me through those antique spectacles of his. "Either you report on the
twentieth or you don't go at all."
"But I'm not ready," I'd said.
"Look, it took me four years to get ready to travel with St. Paul. St.
Paul. Not St. Paul's. You can't expect me to get ready for London in the
Blitz in two days."
"Yes," Dunworthy had said.
"We can." End of conversation.
"Two days!" I had shouted at my
roommate, Kivrin. "All because some computer adds an apostrophe s. And
the esteemed Dunworthy doesn't even bat an eye when I tell him. `Time travel is
not like taking the tube, young man,' he said. `I'd suggest you get ready.
You're leaving the day after tomorrow.' The man's a total incompetent."
"No," she said. "He isn't.
He's the best there is. He wrote the book on St. Paul's. Maybe you should
listen to what he says."
I had expected Kivrin to be at least a
little sympathetic. She had been practically hysterical when she got her
practicum changed from fifteenth to fourteenth century England, and how did
either century qualify as a practicum? Even counting infectious diseases they
couldn't have been more than a five. The Blitz is an eight, and St. Paul's
itself is, with my luck, a ten.
"You think I should go see Dunworthy
again?" I said. "Yes."
"And then what? I've got two days. I
don't know the money, the language, the history. Nothing."
"He's a good man," Kivrin said.
"I think you'd better listen to him while you can." Good old Kivrin.
Always the sympathetic ear.
The good man was responsible for my
standing just inside the propped-open west doors, gawking like the country boy
I was supposed to be, looking for a stone that wasn't there. Thanks to the good
man, I was about as unprepared for my practicum as it was possible for him to
make me.
I couldn't see more than a few feet into
the church. I could see a candle gleaming feebly a long way off and a closer
blur of white moving toward me. A verger, or possibly the Very Reverend Dean
himself. I pulled out the letter from my clergyman uncle in Wales that was
supposed to gain me access to the Dean, and patted my back pocket to make sure
I hadn't lost the microfiche Oxford English Dictionary, Revised, with
Historical Supplements, I'd smuggled out of the Bodleian. I couldn't pull
it out in the middle of the conversation, but with luck I could muddle through
the first encounter by context and look up the words I didn't know later.
"Are you from the ayarpee?" he
said. He was no older than I am, a head shorter and much thinner. Almost
ascetic looking. He reminded me of Kivrin. He was not wearing white, but
clutching it to his chest. In other circumstances I would have thought it was a
pillow. In other circumstances I would know what was being said to me, but
there had been no time to unlearn sub-Mediterranean Latin and Jewish law and
learn Cockney and air-raid procedures. Two days, and the esteemed Dunworthy,
who wanted to talk about the sacred burdens of the historian instead of telling
me what the ayarpee was.
"Are you?" he demanded again.
I considered shipping out the OED after
all on the grounds that Wales was a foreign country, but I didn't think they
had microfilm in 1940. Ayarpee. It could be anything, including a nickname for
the fire watch, in which case the impulse to say no was not safe at all.
"No," I said.
He lunged suddenly toward and past me and
peered out the open doors. "Damn," he said, coming back to me.
"Where are they then? Bunch of lazy bourgeois tarts!" And so much for
getting by on context.
He looked at me closely, suspiciously, as
if he thought I was only pretending not to be with the ayarpee. "The
church is closed," he said finally.
I held up the envelope and said, "My
name's Bartholomew. Is Dean Matthews in?"
He looked out the door a moment longer, as
if he expected the lazy bourgeois tarts at any moment and intended to attack
them with the white bundle, then he turned and said, as if he were guiding a
tour, "This way, please," and took off into the gloom.
He led me to the right and down the south
aisle of the nave. Thank God I had memorized the floor plan or at that moment,
heading into total darkness, led by a raving verger, the whole bizarre metaphor
of my situation would have been enough to send me out the west doors and back
to St. John's Wood. It helped a little to know where I was. We should
have been passing number twenty-six: Hunt's painting of "The Light of the
World"-Jesus with his lantern-but it was too dark to see it. We could have
used the lantern ourselves.
He stopped abruptly ahead of me, still
raving. "We weren't asking for the bloody Savoy, just a few cots. Nelson's
better off than we are-at least he's got a pillow provided." He brandished
the white bundle like a torch in the darkness. It was a pillow after all.
"We asked for them over a fortnight ago, and here we still are, sleeping
on the bleeding generals from Trafalgar because those bitches want to play tea
and crumpets with the tommies at Victoria and the Hell with us!"
He didn't seem to expect me to answer his
outburst, which was good, because I had understood perhaps one key word in
three. He stomped on ahead, moving out of sight of the one pathetic altar
candle and stopping again at a black hole. Number twenty-five: stairs to the
Whispering Gallery, the Dome, the library (not open to the public). Up the
stairs, down a hall, stop again at a medieval door and knock. "I've got to
go wait for them," he said. "If I'm not there they'll likely take
them over to the Abbey. Tell the Dean to ring them up again, will you?"
and he took off down the stone steps, still holding his pillow like a shield
against him.
He had knocked, but the door was at least a
foot of solid oak, and it was obvious the Very Reverend Dean had not heard. I
was going to have to knock again. Yes, well, and the man holding the pinpoint
had to let go of it, too, but even knowing it will all be over in a moment and
you won't feel a thing doesn't make it any easier to say, "Now!" So I
stood in front of the door, cursing the history department and the esteemed
Dunworthy and the computer that had made the mistake and brought me here to
this dark door with only a letter from a fictitious uncle that I trusted no
more than I trusted the rest of them.
Even the old reliable Bodleian had let me
down. The batch of research stuff I cross-ordered through Balliol and the main
terminal is probably sitting in my room right now, a century out of reach. And
Kivrin, who had already done her practicum and should have been bursting with
advice, walked around as silent as a saint until I begged her to help me.
"Did you go to see Dunworthy?"
she said.
"Yes. You want to know what priceless
bit of information he had for me? `Silence and humility are the sacred burdens
of the historian.' He also told me I would love St. Paul's. Golden gems from
the master. Unfortunately, what I need to know are the times and places of the
bombs so one doesn't fail on me." I flopped down on the bed. "Any
suggestions?"
"How good are you at memory
retrieval?" she said.
I sat up. "I'm pretty good. You think
I should assimilate?" "There isn't time for that," she said.
"I think you should put everything you can directly into long-term."
"You mean endorphins?" I said.
The biggest problem with using
memory-assistance drugs to put information into your long-term memory is that
it never sits, even for a micro-second, in your short-term memory, and that
makes retrieval complicated, not to mention unnerving. It gives you the most
unsettling sense of deja vu to suddenly know something you're positive
you've never seen or heard before.
The main problem, though, is not eerie
sensations but retrieval. Nobody knows exactly how the brain gets what it
wants out of storage, but short-term is definitely involved. That brief,
sometimes microscopic, time information spends in short-term is apparently used
for something besides tip-of-the-tongue availability. The whole complex
sort-and-file process of retrieval is apparently centered in short-term; and
without it, and without the help of the drugs that put it there or artificial
substitutes, information can be impossible to retrieve. I'd used endorphins
for examinations and never had any difficulty with retrieval, and it looked
like it was the only way to store all the information I needed in anything approaching
the time I had left, but it also meant that I would never have known any
of the things I needed to know, even for long enough to have forgotten them. If
and when I could retrieve the information, I would know it. Till then I was as
ignorant of it as if it were not stored in some cobwebbed corner of my mind at
all.
"You can retrieve without artificials,
can't you?" Kivrin said, looking skeptical.
"I guess I'll have to."
"Under stress? Without sleep? Low body
endorphin levels?" What exactly had her practicum been? She had never said
a word about it, and undergraduates are not supposed to ask. Stress factors in
the Middle Ages? I thought everybody slept through them.
"I hope so," I said.
"Anyway, I'm willing to try this idea if you think it will help."
She looked at me with that martyred expression
and said, "Nothing will help." Thank you, St. Kivrin of Balliol.
But I tried it anyway. It was better than
sitting in Dunworthy's rooms having him blink at me through his historically
accurate eyeglasses and tell me I was going to love St. Paul's. When my
Bodleian requests didn't come, I overloaded my credit and bought out
Blackwell's. Tapes on World War II, Celtic literature, history of mass transit,
tourist guidebooks, everything I could think of. Then I rented a high-speed
recorder and shot up. When I came out of it, I was so panicked by the feeling
of not knowing any more than I had when I started that I took the tube to
London and raced up Ludgate Hill to see if the firewatch stone would trigger
any memories. It didn't.
"Your endorphin levels aren't back to
normal yet," I told myself and tried to relax, but that was impossible
with the prospect of the practicum looming up before me. And those are real
bullets, kid. Just because you're a history major doing his practicum doesn't
mean you can't get killed. I read history books all the way home on the tube
and right up until Dunworthy's flunkies came to take me to St. John's Wood this
morning.
Then I jammed the microfiche OED in
my back pocket and went off feeling as if I would have to survive by my native
wit and hoping I could get hold of artificials in 1940. Surely I could get
through the first day without mishap, I thought; and now here I was, stopped
cold by almost the first word that was spoken to me.
Well, not quite. In spite of Kivrin's advice
that I not put anything in short-term, I'd memorized the British money, a map
of the tube system, a map of my own Oxford. It had gotten me this far. Surely I
would be able to deal with the Dean.
Just as I had almost gotten up the courage
to knock, he opened the door, and as with the pinpoint, it really was over
quickly and without pain. I handed him my letter, and he shook my hand and said
something understandable like, "Glad to have another man,
Bartholomew." He looked strained and tired and as if he might collapse if
I told him the Blitz had just started. I know, I know: Keep your mouth shut.
The stared silence, etc.
He said, "We'll get Langby to show you
round, shall we?" I assumed that was my Verger of the Pillow, and I was
right. He met us at the foot of the stairs, puffing a little but jubilant.
"The cots came," he said to Dean
Matthews. "You'd have thought they were doing us a favor. All high heels
and hoity-toity. 'You made us miss our tea, luv,' one of them said to me. `Yes,
well, and a good thing, too,' I said. `You look as if you could stand to lose a
stone or two.
Even Dean Matthews looked as though he did
not completely understand him. He said, "Did you set them up in the
crypt?" and then introduced us. "Mr. Bartholomew's just got
in from Wales," he said. "He's
come to join our volunteers." Volunteers, not fire watch.
Langby showed me around, pointing out
various dimnesses in the general gloom and then dragged me down to see the ten
folding canvas cots set up among the tombs in the crypt, also in passing Lord
Nelson's black marble sarcophagus. He told me I didn't have to stand a watch
the first night and suggested I go to bed, since sleep is the most precious
commodity in the raids. I could well believe it. He was clutching that silly
pillow to his breast like his beloved.
"Do you hear the sirens down
here?" I asked, wondering if he buried his head in it.
He looked round at the low stone ceilings.
"Some do, some don't. Brinton has to have his Horlich's. Bence-Jones would
sleep if the roof fell in on him. I have to have a pillow. The important thing
is to get your eight in no matter what. If you don't, you turn into one of the
walking dead. And then you get killed."
On that cheering note he went off to post
the watches for tonight, leaving his pillow on one of the cots with orders for
me to let nobody touch it. So here I sit, waiting for my first air-raid siren
and trying to get all this down before I turn into one of the walking or
nonwalking dead.
I've used the stolen OED to decipher
a little Langby. Middling success. A tart is either a pastry or a prostitute
(I assume the latter, although I was wrong about the pillow). Bourgeois is a
catchall term for all the faults of the middle class. A Tommy's a soldier.
Ayarpee I could not find under any spelling and I had nearly given up when
something in the long-term about the use of acronyms and abbreviations in
wartime popped forward (bless you, St. Kivrin) and I realized it must be an
abbreviation. ARP. Air Raid Precautions. Of course. Where else would you get
the bleeding cots from?
September 21-Now that I'm past the first shock of being here, I
realize that the history department neglected to tell me what I'm supposed to
do in the three-odd months of this practicum. They handed me this journal, the
letter from my uncle, and a ten-pound note, and sent me packing into the past.
The ten pounds (already depleted by train and tube fares) is supposed to last
me until the end of December and get me back to St. John's Wood for pickup when
the second letter calling me back to Wales to sick uncle's bedside comes. Till
then I live here in the crypt with Nelson, who, Langby tells me, is pickled in
alcohol inside his coffin. If we take a direct hit, will he burn like a torch
or simply trickle out in a decaying stream onto the crypt floor, I wonder.
Board is provided by a gas ring, over which are cooked wretched tea and
indescribable kippers. To pay for all this luxury I am to stand on the roofs of
St. Paul's and put out incendiaries.
I must also accomplish the purpose of this
practicum, whatever it may be. Right now the only purpose I care about is
staying alive until the second letter from uncle arrives and I can go home.
I am doing makework until Langby has time
to "show me the ropes." I've cleaned the skillet they cook the foul
little fishes in, stacked wooden folding chairs at the altar end of the crypt
(flat instead of standing because they tend to collapse like bombs in the
middle of the night), and tried to sleep.
I am apparently not one of the lucky ones
who can sleep through the raids. I spent most of the night wondering what St.
Paul's risk rating is. Practica have to be at least a six. Last night I was
convinced this was a ten, with the crypt as ground zero, and that I might as
well have applied for Denver.
The most interesting thing that's happened
so far is that I've seen a cat. I am fascinated, but trying not to appear so
since they seem commonplace here.
September 22-Still in the crypt. Langby comes dashing through,
periodically cursing various government agencies (all abbreviated) and
promising to take me up on the roofs. In the meantime, I've run out of makework
and taught myself to work a stirrup pump. Kivrin was overly concerned about my
memory retrieval abilities. I have not had any trouble so far. Quite the
opposite. I called up fire-fighting information and got the whole manual with
pictures, including instructions on the use of the stirrup pump. If the kippers
set Lord Nelson on fire, I shall be a hero.
Excitement last night. The sirens went early and some
of the chars who clean offices in the City sheltered in the crypt with us. One
of them woke me out of a sound sleep, going like an air raid siren. Seems she'd
seen a mouse. We had to go whacking at tombs and under the cots with a rubber
boot to persuade her it was gone. Obviously what the history department had in
mind: murdering mice.
September 24-Langby took me on rounds. Into the choir, where I had
to learn the stirrup pump all over again, assigned rubber boots and a tin
helmet. Langby says Commander Allen is getting us asbestos firemen's coats,
but hasn't yet, so it's my own wool coat and muffler and very cold on the roofs
even in September. It feels like November and looks it, too, bleak and cheerless
with no sun. Up to the dome and onto the roofs which should be flat, but in
fact are littered with towers, pinnacles, gutters, and statues, all designed to
catch and hold incendiaries out of reach. Shown how to smother an incendiary
with sand before it burns through the roof and sets the church on fire. Shown
the ropes (literally) lying in a heap at the base of the dome in case somebody
has to go up one of the west towers or over the top of the dome. Back inside
and down to the Whispering Gallery.
Langby kept up a running commentary through
the whole tour, part practical instruction, part church history. Before we went
up into the Gallery he dragged me over to the south door to tell me how
Christopher Wren stood in the smoking rubble of Old St. Paul's and asked a
workman to bring him a stone from the graveyard to make the cornerstone. On the
stone was written in Latin, "I shall rise again," and Wren was so impressed
by the irony that he had the words inscribed above the door. Langby looked as
smug as if he had not told me a story every first-year history student knows,
but I suppose without the impact of the firewatch stone, the other is just a
nice story.
Langby raced me up the steps and onto the
narrow balcony circling the Whispering Gallery. He was already halfway round to
the other side, shouting dimensions and acoustics at me. He stopped facing the
wall opposite and said softly, "You can hear me whispering because of the
shape of the dome. The sound waves are reinforced around the perimeter of the
dome. It sounds like the very crack of doom up here during a raid. The dome is
one hundred and seven feet across. It is eighty feet above the nave."
I looked down. The railing went out from
under me and the black-and-white marble floor came up with dizzying speed.
Ihung onto something in front of me and dropped to my knees, staggered and sick
at heart. The sun had come out, and all of St. Paul's seemed drenched in gold.
Even the carved wood of the choir, the white stone pillars, the leaden pipes of
the organ, all of it golden, golden.
Langby was beside me, trying to pull me free.
"Bartholomew," he shouted, "What's wrong? For God's sake,
man."
I knew I must tell him that if I let go,
St. Paul's and all the past would fall in on me, and that I must not let that
happen because I was an historian. I said something, but it was not what I
intended because Langby merely tightened his grip. He hauled me violently free
of the railing and back onto the stairway, then let me collapse limply on the
steps and stood back from me, not speaking.
"I don't know what happened in
there," I said. "I've never been afraid of heights before."
"You're shaking," he said
sharply. "You'd better lie down." He led me back to the crypt.
September 25-Memory retrieval: ARP manual. Symptoms of bombing
victims. Stage one-shock; stupefaction; unawareness of injuries; words may not
make sense except to victim. Stage two-shivering; nausea; injuries, losses
felt; return to reality. Stage three-talkativeness that cannot be controlled;
desire to explain shock behavior to rescuers.
Langby must surely recognize the symptoms,
but how does he account for the fact there was no bomb? I can hardly explain my
shock behavior to him, and it isn't just the sacred silence of the historian
that stops me.
He has not said anything, in fact assigned
me my first watches for tomorrow night as if nothing had happened, and he seems
no more preoccupied than anyone else. Everyone I've met so far is jittery (one
thing I had in short-term was how calm everyone was during the raids) and the
raids have not come near us since I got here. They've been mostly over the East
End and the docks.
There was a reference tonight to a UXB, and
I have been thinking about the Dean's manner and the church being closed when
I'm almost sure I remember reading it was open through the entire Blitz. As
soon as I get a chance, I'll try to retrieve the events of September. As to
retrieving anything else, I don't see how I can hope to remember the right
information until I know what it is I am supposed to do here, if anything.
There are no guidelines for historians, and
no restrictions either. I could tell everyone I'm from the future if I thought
they would believe me. I could murder Hitler if I could get to Germany. Or
could I? Time paradox talk abounds in the history department, and the graduate
students back from their practica don't say a word one way or the other. Is
there a tough, immutable past? Or is there a new past every day and do we, the
historians, make it? And what are the consequences of what we do, if there are
consequences? And how do we dare do anything without knowing them? Must we interfere
boldly, hoping we do not bring about all our downfalls? Or must we do nothing
at all, not interfere, stand by and watch St. Paul's burn to the ground if need
be so that we don't change the future?
All those are fine questions for a
late-night study session. They do not matter here. I could no more let St.
Paul's burn down than I could kill Hitler. No, that is not true. I found that
out yesterday in the Whispering Gallery. I could kill Hitler if I caught him
setting fire to St. Paul's.
September 26-I met a young woman today. Dean Matthews has opened
the church, so the watch have been doing duties as chars and people have
started coming in again. The young woman reminded me of Kivrin, though Kivrin
is a good deal taller and would never frizz her hair like that. She looked as
if she had been crying. Kivrin has looked like that since she got back from her
practicum. The Middle Ages were too much for her. I wonder how she would have
coped with this. By pouring out her fears to the local priest, no doubt, as I
sincerely hoped her lookalike was not going to do.
"May I help you?" I said, not
wanting in the least to help. "I'm a volunteer."
She looked distressed. "You're not
paid?" she said and wiped at her reddened nose with a handkerchief.
"I read about St. Paul's and the fire watch and all and I thought, perhaps
there's a position there for me. In the canteen, like, or something. A paying
position." There were tears in her red-rimmed eyes.
"I'm afraid we don't have a
canteen," I said as kindly as I could, considering how impatient Kivrin
always makes me, "and it's not actually a real shelter. Some of the watch
sleep in the crypt. I'm afraid we're all volunteers, though."
"That won't do, then," she said.
She dabbed at her eyes with the handkerchief. "I love St. Paul's, but I
can't take on volunteer work, not with my little brother Tom back from the
country." I was not reading this situation properly. For all the outward
signs of distress, she sounded quite cheerful and no closer to tears than when
she had come in. "I've got to get us a proper place to stay: With Tom
back, we can't go on sleeping in the tubes."
A sudden feeling of dread, the kind of
sharp pain you get sometimes from involuntary retrieval, went over me.
"The tubes?" I said, trying to get at the memory.
"Marble Arch, usually," she went
on. "My brother Tom saves us a place early and I go-" She stopped,
held the handkerchief close to her nose, and exploded into it. "I'm
sorry," she said, "this awful cold!"
Red nose, watering eyes, sneezing.
Respiratory infection. It was a wonder I hadn't told her not to cry. It's only
by luck that I haven't made some unforgivable mistake so far, and this is not
because I can't get at the long-term memory. I don't have half the information
I need even stored: cats and colds and the way St. Paul's looks in full sun.
It's only a matter of time before I am stopped cold by something I do not know.
Nevertheless, I am going to try for retrieval tonight after I come off watch.
At least I can find out whether and when something is going to fall on me.
I have seen the cat once or twice. He is
coal-black with a white patch on his throat that looks as if it were painted on
for the blackout.
September 27-I have just come down from the roofs. I am still
shaking.
Early in the raid the bombing was mostly
over the East End. The view was incredible. Searchlights everywhere, the sky
pink from the fires and reflecting in the Thames, the exploding shells
sparkling like fireworks. There was a constant, deafening thunder broken by the
occasional droning of the planes high overhead, then the repeating stutter of
the ack-ack guns.
About midnight the bombs began falling
quite near with a horrible sound like a train running over me. It took every
bit of will I had to keep from flinging myself flat on the roof, but Langby was
watching. I didn't want to give him the satisfaction of watching a repeat
performance of my behavior in the dome. I kept my head up and my sandbucket
firmly in hand and felt quite proud of myself.
The bombs stopped roaring past about three,
and there was a lull of about half an hour, and then a clatter like hail on the
roofs. Everybody except Langby dived for shovels and stirrup pumps. He was
watching me. And I was watching the incendiary.
It had fallen only a few meters from me,
behind the clock tower. It was much smaller than I had imagined, only about
thirty centimeters long. It was sputtering violently, throwing greenish-white
fire almost to where I was standing. In a minute it would simmer down into a
molten mass and begin to burn through the roof. Flames and the frantic shouts
of firemen, and then the white rubble stretching for miles, and nothing,
nothing left, not even the firewatch stone.
It was the Whispering Gallery all over
again. I felt that I had said something, and when I looked at Langby's face he
was smiling crookedly.
"St. Paul's will burn down," I
said. "There won't be anything left."
"Yes," Langby said. "That's
the idea, isn't it? Burn St. Paul's to the ground? Isn't that the plan?"
"Whose plan?" I said stupidly.
"Hitler's, of course," Langby
said. "Who did you think I meant?" and, almost casually, picked up
his stirrup pump.
The page of the ARP manual flashed suddenly
before me. I poured the bucket of sand around the still sputtering bomb,
snatched up another bucket and dumped that on top of it. Black smoke billowed
up in such a cloud that I could hardly find my shovel. I felt for the smothered
bomb with the tip of it and scooped it into the empty bucket, then shovelled
the sand in on top of it. Tears were streaming down my face from the acrid
smoke. I turned to wipe them on my sleeve and saw Langby.
He had not made a move to help me. He
smiled. "It's not a bad plan, actually. But of course we won't let it
happen.
That's what the fire watch is here for. To
see that it doesn't happen. Right, Bartholomew?"
I know now what the purpose of my practicum
is. I must stop Langby from burning down St. Paul's.
September 28-I must try to tell myself I was mistaken about Langby
last night, that I misunderstood what he said. Why would he want to burn down
St. Paul's unless he is a Nazi spy? How can a Nazi spy have gotten on the fire
watch? I think about my faked letter of introduction and shudder.
How can I find out? If I set him some test,
some fatal thing that only a loyal Englishman in 1940 would know, I fear I am
the one who would be caught out. I must get my retrieval working
properly.
Until then, I shall watch Langby. For the
time being at least that should be easy. Langby has just posted the watches for
the next two weeks. We stand every one together.
September 30-I know what happened in September. Langby told me.
Last night in the choir, putting on our
coats and boots, he said, "They've already tried once, you know."
I had no idea what he meant. I felt as
helpless as that first day when he asked me if I was from the ayarpee.
"The plan to destroy St. Paul's.
They've already tried once. The tenth of September. A high explosive bomb. But
of course you didn't know about that. You were in Wales.
I was not even listening. The minute he had
said, "High explosive bomb," I had remembered it all. It had burrowed
in under the road and lodged on the foundations. The bomb squad had tried to
defuse it, but there was a leaking gas main. They decided to evacuate St.
Paul's, but Dean Matthews refused to leave, and they got it out after all and
exploded it in Barking Marshes. Instant and complete retrieval.
"The bomb squad saved her that
time," Langby was saying. "It seems there's always somebody
about."
"Yes," I said. "There
is," and walked away from him.
October 1-I thought last night's retrieval of the events of September tenth
meant some sort of breakthrough, but I have been lying here on my cot most of
the night trying for Nazi spies in St. Paul's and getting nothing. Do I have to
know exactly what I'm looking for before I can remember it? What good does that
do me?
Maybe Langby is not a Nazi spy. Then what
is he? An arsonist? A madman? The crypt is hardly conducive to thought, being
not at all as silent as a tomb. The chars talk most of the night and the sound
of the bombs is muffled, which somehow makes it worse. I find myself straining
to hear them. When I did get to sleep this morning, I dreamed about one of the
tube shelters being hit, broken mains, drowning people.
October 4-I tried to catch the cat today. I had some idea of
persuading it to dispatch the mouse that has been terrifying the chars. I also
wanted to see one up close. I took the water bucket I had used with the stirrup
pump last night to put out some burning shrapnel from one of the anti-aircraft
guns. It still had a bit of water in it, but not enough to drown the cat, and
my plan was to clamp the bucket over him, reach under, and pick him up, then
carry him down to the crypt and point him at the mouse. I did not even come
close to him.
I swung the bucket, and as I did so,
perhaps an inch of water splashed out. I thought I remembered that the cat was
a domesticated animal, but I must have been wrong about that. The cat's wide
complacent face pulled back into a skull-like mask that was absolutely
terrifying, vicious claws extended from what I had thought were harmless paws,
and the cat let out a sound to top the chars.
In my surprise I dropped the bucket and it
rolled against one of the pillars. The cat disappeared. Behind me, Langby said,
"That's no way to catch a cat."
"Obviously," I said and bent to
retrieve the bucket.
"Cats hate water," he said, still
in that expressionless voice.
"Oh," I said and started in front
of him to take the bucket back to the choir. "I didn't know that."
"Everybody knows it. Even the stupid
Welsh."
October 8-We have been standing double watches for a week-bomber's
moon. Langby didn't show up on the roofs, so I went looking for him in the
church. I found him standingby the west doors talking to an old man. The man
had a newspaper tucked under his arm and he handed it to Langby, but Langby
gave it back to him. When the man saw me, he ducked out. Langby said,
"Tourist. Wanted to know where the Windmill Theater is. Read in the paper
the girls are starkers:"
I know I looked as if I didn't believe him
because he said, "You look rotten, old man. Not getting enough sleep, are
you? I'll get somebody to take the first watch for you tonight."
"No," I said coldly. "I'll
stand my own watch. I like being on the roofs," and added silently, where
I can watch you.
He shrugged and said, "I suppose it's
better than being down in the crypt. At least on the roofs you can hear the one
that gets you."
October 10-I thought the double watches might be good for me,
take my mind off my inability to retrieve. The watched pot idea. Actually, it
sometimes works. A few hours of thinking about something else, or a good
night's sleep, and the fact pops forward without any prompting, without any
artificials.
The good night's sleep is out of the
question. Not only do the chars talk constantly, but the cat has moved into the
crypt and sidles up to everyone, making siren noises and begging for kippers. I
am moving my cot out of the transept and over by Nelson before I go on watch.
He may be pickled, but he keeps his mouth shut.
October 11-I dreamed Trafalgar, ships' guns and smoe and falling
plaster and Langby shouting my name. My fist waking thought was that the
folding chairs had gone off. I could not see for all the smoke.
"I'm coming," I said, limping
toward Langby and pulling on my boots. There was a heap of plaster and tangled
folding chairs in the transept. Langby was digging in it. "Bartholomew!"
he shouted, flinging a chunk of plaster aside. "Bartholomew!"
I still had the idea it was smoke. I ran back for the
stirrup pump and then knelt beside him and began pulling on a splintered chair
back. It resisted, and it came to me suddenly, there is a body under here. I
will reach for a piece of the ceiling and find it is a hand. I leaned back
on my heels, determined not to be sick, then went at the pile again.
Langby was going far too fast, jabbing with
a chair leg. I grabbed his hand to stop him, and he struggled against me as if
I were a piece of rubble to be thrown aside. He picked up a large flat square
of plaster, and under it was the floor. I turned and looked behind me. Both
chars huddled in the recess by the altar. "Who are you looking for?"
I said, keeping hold of Langby's arm.
"Bartholomew," he said and swept
the rubble aside, his hands bleeding through the coating of smoky dust.
"I'm here," I said. "I'm all
right." I choked on the white dust. "I moved my cot out of the
transept."
He turned sharply to the chars and then
said quite calmly, "What's under here?"
"Only the gas ring," one of them
said timidly from the shadowed recess, "and Mrs. Galbraith's
pocketbook." He dug through the mess until he had found them both. The gas
ring was leaking at a merry rate, though the flame had gone out.
"You've saved St. Paul's and me after
all," I said, standing there in my underwear and boots, holding the
useless stirrup pump. "We might all have been asphyxiated."
He stood up. "I shouldn't have saved
you," he said.
Stage one: shock, stupefaction, unawareness
of injuries, words may not make sense except to victim. He would not know his
hand was bleeding yet. He would not remember what he had said. He had said he
shouldn't have saved my life.
"I shouldn't have saved you," he
repeated. "I have my duty to think of."
"You're bleeding," I said
sharply. "You'd better lie down." I sounded just like Langby in the
Gallery.
October 13-It was a high explosive bomb. It blew a hole in the
choir roof; and some of the marble statuary is broken; but the ceiling of the
crypt did not collapse, which is what I thought at first. It only jarred some
plaster loose.
I do not think Langby has any idea what he
said. That should give me some sort of advantage, now that I am sure where the
danger lies, now that I am sure it will not come crashing down from some other
direction. But what good is all this knowing, when I do not know what he will
do? Or when?
Surely I have the facts of yesterday's bomb
in long-term, but even falling plaster did not jar them loose this time. I am
not even trying for retrieval now. I lie in the darkness waiting for the roof
to fall in on me. And remembering how Langby saved my life.
October 15-The girl came in again today. She still has the cold,
but she has gotten her paying position. It was a joy to see her. She was
wearing a smart uniform and open-toed shoes, and her hair was in an elaborate
frizz around her face. We are still cleaning up the mess from the bomb, and
Langby was out with Allen getting wood to board up the choir, so I let the girl
chatter at me while I swept. The dust made her sneeze, but at least this time I
knew what she was doing.
She told me her
name is Enola and that she's working for the WVS, running one of the mobile
canteens that are sent to the fires. She came, of all things, to thank me for
the job. She said that after she told the WVS that there was no proper shelter
with a canteen for St. Paul's, they gave her a run in the City. "So I'll
just pop in when I'm close and let you know how I'm making out, won't I
just?"
She and her brother Tom are still sleeping
in the tubes. I asked her if that was safe and she said probably not, but at
least down there you couldn't hear the one that got you and that was a
blessing.
October 18-I am so tired I can hardly write this. Nine
incendiaries tonight and a land mine that looked as though it were going to
catch on the dome till the wind drifted its parachute away from the church. I
put out two of the incendiaries. I have done that at least twenty times since I
got here and helped with dozens of others, and still it is not enough. One
incendiary, one moment of not watching Langby, could undo it all.
I know that is partly why I feel so tired.
I wear myself out every night trying to do my job and watch Langby, making sure
none of the incendiaries falls without my seeing it. Then I go back to the
crypt and wear myself out trying to retrieve something, anything, about spies,
fires, St. Paul's in the fall of 1940, anything. It haunts me that I am not
doing .enough, but I do not know what else to do. Without the retrieval, I am
as helpless as these poor people here, with no idea what will happen tomorrow.
If I have to, I will go on doing this till
I am called home. He cannot bum down St. Paul's so long as I am here to put out
the incendiaries. "I have my duty," Langby said in the crypt.
And I have mine.
October 21-It's been nearly two weeks since the blast and I just
now realized we haven't seen the cat since. He wasn't in the mess in the crypt.
Even after Langby and I were sure there was no one in there, we sifted through
the stuff twice more. He could have been in the choir, though.
Old Bence-Jones says not to worry.
"He's all right," he said. "The jerries could bomb London right
down to the ground and the cats would waltz out to greet them. You know why?
They don't love anybody. That's what gets half of us killed. Old lady out in
Stepney got killed the other night trying to save her cat. Bloody cat was in
the Anderson."
"Then where is he?"
"Someplace safe, you can bet on that.
If he's not around St. Paul's, it means we're for it. That old saw about the
rats deserting a sinking ship, that's a mistake, that is. It's cats, not
rats."
October 25-Langby's tourist showed up again. He cannot still be
looking for the Windmill Theatre. He had a newspaper under his arm again today,
and he asked for Langby, but Langby was across town with Allen, trying to get
the asbestos firemen's coats. I saw the name of the paper. It was The
Worker. A Nazi newspaper?
November 2-I've been up on the roofs for a week straight,
helping some incompetent workmen patch the hole the bomb made. They're doing a
terrible job. There's still a great gap on one side a man could fall into, but
they insist it'll be all right because, after all, you wouldn't fall clear
through but only as far as the ceiling, and "the fall can't kill
you." They don't seem to understand it's a perfect hiding place for an
incendiary.
And that is all Langby needs. He does not
even have to set a fire to destroy St. Paul's. All he needs to do is let one
burn uncaught until it is too late.
I could not get anywhere with the workmen.
I went down into the church to complain to Matthews and saw Langby and his tourist
behind a pillar, close to one of the windows. Langby was holding a newspaper
and talking to the man. When I came down from the library an hour later, they
were still there. So is the gap. Matthews says we'll put planks across it and
hope for the best.
November 5-I have given up trying to retrieve. I am so far
behind on my sleep I can't even retrieve information on a newspaper whose name
I already know. Double watches the permanent thing now. Our chars have
abandoned us altogether (like the cat), so the crypt is quiet, but I cannot
sleep.
If I do manage to doze off, I dream.
Yesterday I dreamed Kivrin was on the roofs, dressed like a saint. "What
was the secret of your practicum?" I said. "What were you supposed to
find out?"
She wiped her nose with a handkerchief and
said, "Two things: One, that silence and humility are the sacred burdens
of the historian. Two," she stopped and sneezed into the handkerchief.
"Don't sleep in the tubes."
My only hope is to get hold of an artificial
and induce a trance. That's a problem. I'm positive it's too early for chemical
endorphins and probably hallucinogens. Alcohol is definitely available, but I
need something more concentrated than ale, the only alcohol I know by name. I
do not dare ask he watch. Langby is suspicious enough of me already. It's back
to the OED, to look up a word I don't know.
November 11-The cat's back. Langby was out with Allen again,
still trying for the asbestos coats, so I thought it was safe to leave St.
Paul's. I went to the grocer's for supplies and hopefully, an artificial. It
was late, and the sirens sounded before I had even gotten to Cheapside, but the
raids do not usually start until after dark. It took awhile to get all the groceries
and to get up my courage to ask whether he had any alcohol-he told me to go to
a pub-and when I came out of the shop, it was as if I had pitched suddenly into
a hole.
I had no idea where St.
Paul's lay, or the street, or the shop I had just come from. I stood on what
was no longer the sidewalk, clutching my brown-paper parcel of kippers and
bread with a hand I could not have seen if I held it up before my face. I
reached up to wrap my muffler closer about my neck and prayed for my eyes to
adjust, but there was no reduced light to adjust to. I would have been glad of
the moon, for all St. Paul's watch curses it and calls it a fifth columnist. Or
a bus, with its shuttered headlights giving just enough light to orient myself
by. Or a searchlight. Or the kickback flare of an ack-ack gun. Anything.
Just then I did see a bus,
two narrow yellow slits a long way off. I started toward it and nearly pitched
off the curb. Which meant the bus was sideways in the street, which meant it
was not a bus. A cat meowed, quite near, and rubbed against my leg. I looked
down into the yellow lights I had thought belonged to the bus. His eyes were
picking up light from somewhere, though I would have sworn there was not a
light for miles, and reflecting it flatly up at me.
"A warden'll get you for
those lights, old torn," I said, and then as a plane droned overhead,
"or a jerry."
The world exploded suddenly
into light, the searchlights and a glow along the Thames seeming to happen
almost simultaneously, lighting my way home.
"Come to fetch me, did
you, old tom?" I said gaily. "Where've you been? Knew we were out of
kippers, didn't you? I call that loyalty." I talked to him all the way
home and gave him half a tin of the kippers for saving my life. Bence-Jones
said he smelled the milk at the grocer's.
November 13—I dreamed I was lost in the blackout. I
could not see my 'hands in front of my face, and Dunworthy came and shone a
pocket torch at me, but I could only see where I had come from and not where I
was going.
"What good is that to
them?" I said. "They need a light to show them where they're
going."
"Even the light from the
Thames? Even the light from the fires and the ack-ack guns?" Dunworthy
said.
"Yes. Anything is better
than this awful darkness." So he came closer to give me the pocket torch.
It was not a pocket torch, after all, but Christ's lantern from the Hunt
picture inthe south nave. I shone it on the curb before me so I could find my
way home, but it shone instead on the firewatch stone and I hastily put the
light out.
November 20—I tried to talk to Langby today.
"I've seen you talking to the old gentleman," I said. It sounded like
an accusation. I meant it to. I wanted him to think it was and stop whatever he
was planning.
"Reading," he said.
"Not talking." He was putting things in order in the choir, piling up
sandbags.
"I've seen you reading
then," I said belligerently, and he dropped a sandbag and straightened.
"What of it?" he
said. "It's a free country. I can read to an old man if I want, same as
you can talk to that little WVS tart."
"What do you read?"
I said.
"Whatever he wants. He's
an old man. He used to come home from his job, have a bit of brandy and listen
to his wife read the papers to him. She got killed in one of the raids. Now I
read to him. I don't see what business it is of yours."
It sounded true. It didn't
have the careful casualness of a lie, and I almost believed him, except that I
had heard the tone of truth from him before. In the crypt. After the bomb.
"I thought he was a
tourist looking for the Windmill," I said.
He looked blank only a
second, and then he said, "Oh, yes, that. He came in with the paper and
asked me to tell him where it was. I looked it up to find the address. Clever,
that. I didn't guess he couldn't read it' for himself."\But it
was enough. I knew that he was lying.
He heaved a sandbag almost at
my feet. "Of course you wouldn't understand a thing like that, would you?
A simple act of human kindness?"
"No," I said
coldly. "I wouldn't."
None of this proves anything.
He gave away nothing, except perhaps the name of an artificial, and I can
hardly go to Dean Matthews and accuse Langby of reading aloud.
I waited till he had finished
in the choir and gone down to the crypt. Then I lugged one of the sandbags up
to the roof and over to the chasm. The planking has held so far, but everyone
walks gingerly around it, as if it were a grave. I cut the sandbag open and
spilled the loose sand into the bottom. If it has occurred to Langby that this
is the perfect spot for an incendiary, perhaps the sand will smother it.
November 21—I gave Enola some of "uncle's"
money today and asked her to get me the brandy. She was more reluctant than I
thought she'd be so there must be societal complications I am not aware of, but
she agreed.
I don't know what she came for.
She started to tell me about her brother and some prank he'd pulled in the
tubes that got him in trouble with the guard, but after I asked her about the
brandy, she left without finishing the story.
November 25—Enola came today, but without bringing the
brandy. She is going to Bath for the holidays to see her aunt. At least she
will be away from the raids for awhile. I will not have to worry about her. She
finished the story of her brother and told me she hopes to persuade this aunt
to take Tom for the duration of the Blitz but is not at all sure the aunt will
be willing.
Young Tom is apparently not
so much an engaging scapegrace as a near-criminal. He has been caught twice
picking pockets in the Bank tube shelter, and they have had to go back to Marble
Arch. I comforted her as best I could, told her all boys were bad at one time
or another. What I really wanted to say was that she needn't worry at all, that
young Tom strikes me as a true survivor type, like my own tom, like Langby,
totally unconcerned with anybody but himself, well equipped to survive the
Blitz and rise to prominence in the future.
Then I asked her whether she
had gotten the brandy.
She looked down at her
open-toed shoes and muttered unhappily, "I thought you'd forgotten all
about that."
I made up some story about
the watch taking turns buying a bottle, and she seemed less unhappy, but I am
not convinced she will not use this trip to Bath as an excuse to do nothing. I
will have to leave St. Paul's and buy it myself, and I don't dare leave Langby
alone in the church. I made her promise to bring the brandy today before she
leaves. But she is still not back, and the sirens have already gone.
November 26—No Enola, and she said their train left at noon. I
suppose I should be grateful that at least she is safely out of London. Maybe
in Bath she will be able to get over her cold.
Tonight one of the ARP girls
breezed in to borrow half our cots and tell us about a mess over in the East
End where a surface shelter was hit. Four dead, twelve wounded. "At least
it wasn't one of the tube shelters!" she said. "Then you'd see a real
mess, wouldn't you?"
November 30—I dreamed I took the cat to St. John's
Wood.
"Is this a rescue
mission?" Dunworthy said.
"No, sir," I said
proudly. "I know what I was supposed to find in my practicum. The perfect
survivor. Tough and resourceful and selfish. This is the only one I could
find. I had to kill Langby, you know, to keep him from burning down St. Paul's.
Enola's brother has gone to Bath, and the others will never make it. Enola
wears open-toed shoes in the winter and sleeps in the tubes and puts her hair
up on metal pins so it will curl. She cannot possibly survive the Blitz."
Dunworthy said, "Perhaps
you should have rescued her instead. What did you say her name was?"
"Kivrin," I said,
and woke up cold and shivering.
December 5—I dreamed Langby had the pinpoint bomb. He
carried it under his arm like a brown-paper parcel, coming out of St. Paul's
Station and up Ludgate Hill to the west doors.
"This is not fair,"
I said, barring his way with my arm. "There is no fire watch on
duty."
He clutched the bomb to his
chest like a pillow. "That is your fault," he said, and before I
could get to my stirrup pump and bucket, he tossed it in the front door.
The pinpoint was not even
invented until the end of the twentieth century, and it was another ten years
before the dispossessed Communists got hold of it and turned it into something
that could be carried under your arm. A parcel that could blow a quarter-mile
of the City into oblivion. Thank God that is one dream that cannot come true.
It was a sunlit morning in
the dream, and this morning when I came off watch the sun was shining for the
first time in weeks. I went down to the crypt and then came up again, making
the rounds of the roofs twice more, then the steps and the grounds and all the
treacherous alleyways between where an incendiary could be missed. I felt
better after that, but when I got to sleep I dreamed again, this time of fire
and Langby watching it, smiling.
December 15—I found the cat this morning. Heavy raids
last night, but most of them over towards Canning Town and nothing on the roofs
to speak of. Nevertheless the cat was quite dead. I found him lying on the
steps this morning when I made my own, private rounds. Concussion. There was
not a mark on him anywhere except the white blackout patch on his throat, but
when I picked him up, he was all jelly under the skin.
I could not think what to do
with him. I thought for one mad moment of asking Matthews if I could bury him
in the crypt. Honorable death in war or something. Trafalgar, Waterloo, London,
died in battle. I ended by wrapping him in my muffler and taking him down
Ludgate Hill to a building that had been bombed out and burying him in the
rubble. It will do no good. The rubble will be no protection from dogs or rats,
and I shall never get another muffler. I have gone through nearly all of
uncle's money.
I should not be sitting here.
I haven't checked the alleyways or the rest of the steps, and there might be a
dud or a delayed incendiary or something that I missed.
When I came here, I thought
of myself as the noble rescuer, the savior of the past. I am not doing very
well at the job. At least Enola is out of it. I wish there were some way I
could send St. Paul's to Bath for safekeeping. There were hardly any raids last
night. Bence-Jones said cats can survive anything. What if he was coming to get
me, to show me the way home? All the bombs were over Canning Town.
December 16—Enola has been back a week. Seeing her, standing on
the west steps where I found the cat, sleeping in Marble Arch and not safe at
all, was more than I could absorb. "I thought you were in Bath," I
said stupidly.
"My aunt said she'd take
Tom but not me as well. She's got a houseful of evacuation children, and what a
noisy lot. Where is your muffler?" she said. "It's dreadful cold up
here on the hill."
"I ..." I said,
unable to answer, "I lost it."
"You'll never get
another one," she said. "They're going to start rationing clothes.
And wool, too. You'll never get another one like that."
"I know," I said,
blinking at her.
"Good things just thrown
away," she said. "It's absolutely criminal, that's what it is."
I don't think I said anything
to that, just turned and walked away with my head down, looking for bombs and
dead animals.
December 20—Langby isn't a Nazi. He's a Communist. I
can hardly write this. A Communist.
One of the chars found The
Worker wedged behind a pillar and brought it down to the crypt as we were
coming off the first watch.
"Bloody
Communists," Bence-Jones said. "Helping Hitler, they are. Talking
against the king, stirring up trouble in the shelters. Traitors, that's what
they are."
"They love England same
as you," the char said. .
"They don't love nobody
but themselves, bloody selfish lot. I wouldn't be surprised to hear they were
ringing Hitler up on the telephone," Bence-Jones said. " "Ello,
Adolf, here's where to drop the bombs.'"
The kettle on the gas ring
whistled. The char stood up and poured the hot water into a chipped tea pot,
then sat back down. "Just because they speak their minds don't mean they'd
burn down old St. Paul's, does it now?"
"Of course not,"
Langby said, coming down the stairs. He sat down and pulled off his
boots, stretching his feet in their wool socks. "Who wouldn't burn down
St. Paul's?"
"The Communists,"
Bence-Jones said, looking straight at him, and I wondered if he suspected
Langby, too.
Langby never batted an eye.
"I wouldn't worry about them It I were you," he said. "It's the
jerries that are doing their bloody best to burn her down tonight. Six
incendiaries so far, and one almost went into that great hole over the
choir." He held out his cup to the char, and she poured him a cup of tea.
I wanted to kill him,
smashing him to dust and rubble on the floor of the crypt while Bence-Jones and
the char looked on in helpless surprise, shouting warnings to them and the rest
of the watch. "Do you know what the Communists did?" I wanted to shout.
"Do you? We have to stop him." I even stood up and started toward him
as he sat with his feet stretched out before him and his asbestos coat still
over his shoulders.
And then the thought of the
Gallery drenched in gold, the Communist coming out of the tube station with the
package so casually under his arm, made me sick with the same staggering
vertigo of guilt and helplessness, and I sat back down on the edge of my cot
and tried to think what to do.
They do not realize the
danger. Even Bence-Jones, for all his talk of traitors, thinks they are capable
only of talking against the king. They do not know, cannot know, what the
Communists will become. Stalin is an ally. Communists mean Russia. They have
never heard of Karinsky or the New Russia or any of the things that will make
"Communist" into a synonym for "monster." They will never
know it. By the time the Communists become what they became, there will be no
fire watch. Only I know what it means to hear the name "Communist"
uttered here, so carelessly, in St. Paul's.
A Communist. I should have
known. I should have known.
December 22—Double watches again. I have not had any
sleep, and I am getting very unsteady on my feet. I nearly pitched into the
chasm this morning, only saved myself by dropping to my knees. My endorphin
levels are fluctuating wildly, and I know I must' get some sleep soon or I will
become one of Langby's walking dead; but I am afraid to leave him alone on the
roofs, alone in the church with his Communist party leader, alone anywhere. I
have taken to watching him when he sleeps.
If I could just get hold of
an artificial, I think I could induce a trance, in spite of my poor condition.
But I cannot even go out to a pub. Langby is on the roofs constantly, waiting
for his chance. When Enola comes again, I must convince her to get the brandy
for me. There are only a few days left
December 28—Enola came this morning while I was on the
west porch, picking up the Christmas tree. It has been knocked over three
nights running by concussion. I righted the tree and was bending down to pick
up the scattered tinsel when Enola appeared suddenly out of the fog like some
cheerful saint. She stooped quickly and kissed me on the cheek. Then she
straightened up, her nose red from her perennial cold, and handed me a box
wrapped in colored paper.
"Merry Christmas,"
she said. "Go on then, open it. It's a gift."
My reflexes are almost
totally gone. I knew the box was far too shallow for a bottle of brandy.
Nevertheless, I believed she had remembered, had brought me my salvation.
"You darling," I said, and tore it open.
It was a muffler. Gray wool.
I stared at it for fully half a minute without realizing what it was.
"Where's the brandy?" I said.
She looked shocked. Her nose
got redder and her eyes started to blur. "You need this more. You haven't
any clothing coupons and you have to be outside all the time. It's been so
dreadful cold."
"I needed the
brandy," I said angrily.
"I was only trying to be
kind," she started, and I cut her off.
"Kind?" I said.
"I asked you for brandy. I don't recall ever saying I needed a
muffler." I shoved it back at her and began untangling a string of colored
lights that had shattered when the tree fell.
She got that same holy martyr
look Kivrin is so wonderful at. "I worry about you all the time up
here," she said in a rush. "They're trying for St. Paul's, you
know. And it's so close to the river. I didn't think you should be drinking. I
... it's a crime when they're trying so hard to kill us all that you won't take
care of yourself. It's like you're in it with them. I worry someday I'll come
up to St. Paul's and you won't be here."
"Well, and what exactly
am I supposed to do with a muffler? Hold it over my head when they drop the
bombs?"
She turned and ran,
disappearing into the gray fog before she had gone down two steps. I started
after her, still holding the string of broken lights, tripped over it, and fell
almost all the way to the bottom of the steps.
Langby picked me up.
"You're off watches," he said grimly.
"You can't do
that," I said.
"Oh, yes, I can. I don't
want any walking dead on the roofs with me."
I let him lead me down here
to the crypt, make me a cup of tea, put me to bed, all very solicitous. No
indication that this is what he has been waiting for. I will lie here till the
sirens go. Once I am on the roofs he will not be able to send me back without
seeming suspicious. Do you know what he said before he left, asbestos coat and
rubber boots, the dedicated fire watcher? "I want you to get some
sleep." As if I could sleep with Langby on the roofs. I would be burned
alive.
December 30-The sirens woke me, and old Bence-Jones
said, "That should have done you some good. You've slept the clock
round."
"What day is it?" I
said, going for my boots.
"The twenty-ninth,"
he said, and as I dived for the door, "No need to hurry. They're late
tonight. Maybe they won't come at all. That'd be a blessing, that would. The
tide's out."
I stopped by the door to the
stairs, holding onto the cool stone. "Is St. Paul's all right?"
"She's still
standing," he said. "Have a bad dream?"
"Yes," I said,
remembering the bad dreams of all the past weeks—the dead cat in my arms in St.
John's Wood, Langby with his parcel and his Worker under his arm, the
firewatch stone garishly lit by Christ's lantern. Then I remembered I had not
dreamed at all. I had slept the' kind of sleep I had prayed for, the kind of sleep
that would help me remember.
Then I remembered. Not St.
Paul's, burned to the ground by the Communists. A headline from the dailies.
"Marble Arch hit. Eighteen killed by blast." The date was not clear
except for the year. 1940. There were exactly two more days left in 1940. I
grabbed my coat and muffler and ran up the stairs and across the marble floor.
"Where the hell do you
think you're going?" Langby shouted to me. I couldn't see him.
"I have to save Enola," I said,
and my voice echoed in the dark sanctuary. "They're going to bomb Marble
Arch."
"You can't leave
now," he shouted after me, standing where the fire-watch stone would be.
"The tide's out. You dirty ..."
I didn't hear the rest of it.
I had already flung myself down the steps and into a taxi. It took almost all
the money I had, the money I had so carefully hoarded for the trip back to St.
John's Wood. Shelling started while we were still in Oxford Street, and the
driver refused to go any farther. He let me out into pitch blackness, and I saw
I would never make it in time.
Blast. Enola crumpled on the
stairway down to the tube, her open-toed shoes still on her feet, not a mark on
her. And when I try to lift her, jelly under the skin. I would have to wrap her
in the muffler she gave me, because I was too late. I had gone back a hundred
years to be too late to save her.
I ran the last blocks, guided
by the gun emplacement that had to be in Hyde Park, and skidded down the steps
into Marble Arch. The woman in the ticket booth took my last shilling for a
ticket to St. Paul's Station. I stuck it in my pocket and raced toward the
stairs.
"No running," she
said placidly. "To your left, please." The door to the right was
blocked off by wooden barricades, the metal gates beyond pulled to and chained.
The board with names on it for the stations was X-ed with tape, and a new sign
that read, "All trains," was nailed to the barricade, pointing left.
Enola was not on the stopped
escalators or sitting against the wall in the hallway. I came to the first
stairway and could not gpt through. A family had set out, just where I wanted
to step, 'a communal tea of bread and butter, a little pot of jam sealed with
waxed paper, and a kettle on a ring like the one Langby and I had rescued out
of the rubble, all of it spread on a cloth embroidered at the corners with
flowers. I stood staring down at the layered tea, spread like a waterfall down
the steps.
"I . . . Marble Arch
..." I said. Another twenty killed by flying tiles. "You shouldn't be
here."
"We've as much right as
anyone," the man said belligerently, "and who are you to tell us to
move on?"
A woman lifting saucers out of a cardboard box looked
up at me, frightened. The kettle began to whistle.
"It's you that should move on,"
the man said. "Go on then." He stood off to one side so I could pass.
I edged past the embroidered cloth apologetically.
"I'm sorry," I
said. "I'm looking for someone. On the platform."
"You'll never find her
in there, mate," the man said thumbing in that direction. I hurried past
him, nearly stepping on the teacloth, and rounded the corner into hell.
It was not hell. Shopgirls
folded coats and leaned back against them, cheerful or sullen or disagreeable,
but certainly not damned. Two boys scuffled for a shilling and lost it on the
tracks. They bent over the edge, debating whether to go after it, and the
station guard yelled to them to back away. A train rumbled through, full of
people. A mosquito landed on the guard's hand and he reached out to slap it and
missed. The boys laughed. And behind and before them, stretching in all
directions down the deadly tile curves of the tunnel like casualties, backed
into the entranceways and onto the stairs, were people. Hundreds and hundreds
of people.
I stumbled back into the
hall, knocking over a teacup. It spilled like a flood across the cloth.
"I told you, mate,"
the man said cheerfully. "It's Hell in there, ain't it? And worse
below."
"Hell," I said.
"Yes." I would never find her. I would never save her. I looked at
the woman mopping up the tea, and it came to me that I could not save her
either. Enola or the cat or any of them, lost here in the endless stairways and
cul-de-sacs of time. They were already dead a hundred years, past saving. The
past is beyond saving. Surely that was the lesson the history department sent
me all this way to learn. Well, fine, I've learned it. Can I go home now?
Of course not, dear boy. You
have foolishly spent all your money on taxicabs and brandy, and tonight is the
night the Germans burn the City. (Now it is too late, I remember it all.
Twenty-eight incendiaries on the roofs.) Langby must have his chance, and you
must learn the hardest lesson of all and the one you should have known from the
beginning. You cannot save St. Paul's.
I went back out onto the platform and stood behind the
yellow line until a train pulled up. I took my ticket out and held it in my
hand all the way to St. Paul's Station. When Igot there, smoke billowed toward
me like an easy spray of water. I could not see St. Paul's.
"The tide's out," a
woman said in a voice devoid of hope, and I went down in a snake pit of limp
cloth hoses. My hands came up covered with rank-smelling mud, and I understood
finally (and too late) the significance of the tide. There was no water to
fight the fires.
A policeman barred my way and
I stood helplessly before him with no idea what to say. "No civilians
allowed up there," he said. "St. Paul's is for it." The smoke
billowed like a thundercloud, alive with sparks, and the dome rose golden
above it.
"I'm fire watch," I
said, and his arm fell away, and then I was on the roofs.
My endorphin levels must have
been going up and down like an air raid siren. I do not have any short-term
from then on, just moments that do not fit together: the people in the church
when we brought Langby down, huddled in a corner playing cards, the whirlwind
of burning scraps of wood in the dome, the ambulance driver who wore open-toed
shoes like Enola and smeared salve on my burned hands. And in the center, the
one clear moment when I went after Langby on a rope and saved his life.
I stood by the dome, blinking
against the smoke. The City was on fire and it seemed as if St. Paul's would
ignite from the heat, would crumble from the noise alone. Bence-Jones was by
the northwest tower, hitting at an incendiary with a spade. Langby was too
close to the patched place where the bomb had gone through, looking toward me.
An Ncendiary clattered behind him. I turned to grab a shovel, and when I turned
back, he was gone.
"Langby!" I
shouted, and could not hear my own voice. He had fallen into the chasm and
nobody saw him or the incendiary. Except me. I do not remember how I got
across the roof. I think I called for a rope. I got a rope. I tied it around my
waist, gave the ends of it into the hands of the fire watch, and went over the
side. The fires lit the walls of the hole almost all the way to the bottom.
Below me I could see a pile of whitish rubble. He's under there, I thought, and
jumped free of the wall. The space was so narrow there was nowhere to throw the
rubble. I was afraid I would inadvertently stone him, and I tried to toss the
pieces of planking and plaster over my shoulder, but there was barely room to
turn. For one awful moment I thought he might not be there at all, that the
pieces of splintered wood would brush away to reveal empty pavement, as they
had in the crypt.
I was numbed by the indignity
of crawling over him. If he was dead I did not think I could bear the shame of
stepping on his helpless body. Then his hand came up like a ghost's and grabbed
my ankle, and within seconds I had whirled and had his head free.
He was the ghastly white that
no longer frightens me. "I put the bomb out," he said. I stared at
him, so overwhelmed with relief I could not speak. For one hysterical moment I
thought I would even laugh, I was so glad to see him. I finally realized what
it was I was supposed to say.
"Are you all
right?" I said.
"Yes," he said and
tried to raise himself on one elbow. "So much the worse for you."
He could not get up. He grunted
with pain when he tried to shift his weight to his right side and lay back, the
uneven rubble crunching sickeningly under him. I tried to lift him gently so I
could see where he was hurt. He must have fallen on something.
"It's no use," he
said, breathing hard. "I put it out."
I spared him a startled
glance, afraid that he was delirious, and went back to rolling him onto his
side.
"I know you were
counting on this one," he went on, not resisting me at all. "It was
bound to happen sooner or later with all these roofs. Only I went after it.
What'll you tell your friends?"
His asbestos coat was torn
down the back in a long gash. Under it his back was charred and smoking. He had
fallen on the incendiary. "Oh, my God," I said, trying frantically to
see how badly he was burned without touching him. I had no way of knowing how
deep the burns went, but they seemed to extend only in the narrow space where
the coat had torn. I tried to pull the bomb out from under him, but the casing
was as hot as a stove. It was not melting, though. My sand and Langby's body
had smothered it. I had no idea if it would start up again when it was exposed
to the air. I looked around, alittle wildly, for the bucket and stirrup pump
Langby must have dropped when he fell.
"Looking for a
weapon?" Langby said, so clearly it was hard to believe he was hurt at
all. "Why not just leave me here? A bit of overexposure and I'd be done
for by morning. Or would you rather do your dirty work in private?"
I stood up and yelled to the
men on the roof above us. One of them shone a pocket torch down at us, but its
light didn't reach.
"Is he dead?"
somebody shouted down to me.
"Send for an
ambulance," I said. "He's been burned."
I helped Langby up, trying to
support his back without touching the burn. He staggered a little and then
leaned against the wall, watching me as I tried to bury the incendiary, using a
piece of the planking as a scoop. The rope came down and I tied Langby to it.
He had not spoken since I helped him up. He let me tie the rope around his
waist, still looking steadily at me. "I should have let you smother in
the crypt," he said.
He stood leaning easily,
almost relaxed against the wood supports, his hands holding him up. I put his
hands on the slack rope and wrapped it once around them for the grip I knew he
didn't have. "I've been onto you since that day in the Gallery. I knew you
weren't afraid of heights. You came down here without any fear of heights when
you thought I'd ruined your precious plans. What was it? An attack of conscience?
Kneeling there like a baby, whining. `What have we done? What have we done?'
You made me sick. But you know what gave you away first? The cat. Everybody
knows cats hate water. Everybody but a dirty Nazi spy."
There was a tug on the rope.
"Come ahead," I said, and the rope tautened.
"That WVS tart? Was she
a spy, too? Supposed to meet you in Marble Arch? Telling me it was going to be
bombed. You're a rotten spy, Bartholomew. Your friends already blew it up in
September. It's open again."
The rope jerked suddenly and
began to lift Langby. He twisted his hands to get a better grip. His right
shoulder scraped the wall. I put up my hands and pushed him gently so that his
left side was to the wall. "You're making a big mistake, you know,"
he said. "You should have killed me. I'll tell."
I stood in the darkness,
waiting for the rope. Langby was unconscious when he reached the roof. I walked
past the fire watch to the dome and down to the crypt.
This morning the letter from
my uncle came and with it a ten-pound note.
December 31-Two of Dunworthy's flunkies met me in St.
John's Wood to tell me I was late for my exams. I did not even protest. I
shuffled obediently after them without even considering how unfair it was to
give an exam to one of the walking dead. I had not slept in—how long? Since
yesterday when I went to find Enola. I had not slept in a hundred years.
Dunworthy was at his desk,
blinking at me. One of the flunkies handed me a test paper and the other one
called time. I turned the paper over and left an oily smudge from the ointment
on my burns. I stared uncomprehendingly at them. I had grabbed at the incendiary
when I turned Langby over, but these burns were on the backs of my hands. The
answer came to me suddenly in Langby's unyielding voice. "They're rope
bums, you fool. Don't they teach you Nazi spies the proper way to come up a
rope?"
I looked down at the test. It
read, "Number of incendiaries that fell on St. Paul's. Number of land
mines. Number of high explosive bombs. Method most commonly used for extinguishing
incendiaries. Land mines. High explosive bombs. Number of volunteers on first
watch. Second watch. Casualties. Fatalities." The questions made no sense.
There was only a short space, long enough for the writing of a number, after
any of the questions. Method most commonly used for extinguishing
incendiaries. How would I ever fit what I knew into that narrow space? Where
were the questions about Enola and Langby and the cat?
I went up to Dunworthy's
desk. "St. Paul's almost burned down last night," I said. "What
kind of questions are these?"
"You should be answering
questions, Mr. Bartholomew, not asking them."
"There aren't any
questions about the people," I said. The outer casing of my anger began to
melt.
"Of course there
are," Dunworthy said, flipping to the second page of the test.
"Number of casualties, 1940. Blast, shrapnel, other."
"Other?" I said. At
any moment the roof would collapse on me in a shower of plaster dust and fury.
"Other? Langby put out a fire with his own body. Enola has a cold that
keeps getting worse. The cat ..." I snatched the paper back from him and
scrawled "one cat" in the narrow space next to "blast."
"Don't you care about them at all?"
"They're important from
a statistical point of view," he said, "but as individuals, they are
hardly relevant to the course of history."
My reflexes were shot. It was
amazing to me that Dunworthy's were almost as slow. I grazed the side of his
jaw and knocked his glasses off. "Of course they're relevant!" I
shouted "They are the history, not all these bloody numbers!"
The reflexes of the flunkies
were very fast. They did not let me start another swing at him before they had
me by both arms and were hauling me out of the room.
"They're back there in
the past with nobody to save them. They can't see their hands in front of their
faces and there are bombs falling down on them and you tell me they aren't important?
You call that being an historian?"
The flunkies dragged me out
the door and down the hall. "Langby saved St. Paul's. How much more
important can a person get? You're no historian! You're nothing but a . .
." I wanted to call him a terrible name, but the only curses I could
summon up were Langby's. "You're nothing but a dirty Nazi spy!" I
bellowed. "You're nothing but a lazy bourgeois tart!"
They dumped me on my hands
and knees outs4de the door and slammed it in my face. "I wouldn't be an
historian if you paid me!" I shouted and went to see the firewatch stone.
December 31—I am having to write this in bits and
pieces. My hands are in pretty bad shape, and Dunworthy's boys didn't help
matters much. Kivrin comes in periodically, wearing her St. Joan look, and
smears so much salve on my hands that I can't hold a pencil.
St. Paul's Station is not there, of course, so I got
out at Holborn and walked, thinking about my last meeting with Dean Matthews on
the morning after the burning of the City. This morning.
"I understand you saved Langby's
life," he said. "I also understand that between you, you saved St.
Paul's last night."
I showed him the letter from
my uncle and he stared at it as if he could not think what it was.
"Nothing stays saved forever," he said, and for a terrible moment I
thought he was going to tell me Langby had died. "We shall have to keep on
saving St. Paul's until Hitler decides to bomb the countryside."
The raids on London are
almost over, I wanted to tell him. He'll start bombing the countryside in a
matter of weeks. Canterbury, Bath, aiming always at the cathedrals. You and St.
Paul's will both outlast the war and live to dedicate the firewatch stone.
"I am hopeful,
though," he said. "I think the worst is over."
"Yes, sir." I
thought of the stone, its letters still readable after all this time. No, sir,
the worst is not over.
I managed to keep my bearings
almost to the top of Ludgate Hill. Then I lost my way completely, wandering
about like a man in a graveyard. I had not remembered that the rubble looked so
much like the white plaster dust Langby had tried to dig me out of. I could not
find the stone anywhere. In the end I nearly fell over it, jumping back as if I
had stepped on a grave.
It is all that's left. Hiroshima
is supposed to *ave had a handful of untouched trees at ground zero, Denver the
capitol steps. Neither of them says, "Remember the men and women of St.
Paul's Watch who by the grace of God saved this cathedral." The grace of
God.
Part of the stone is sheared
off. Historians argue there was another line that said, "for all
time," but I do not believe that, not if Dean Matthews had anything to do
with it. And none of the watch it was dedicated to would have believed it for a
minute. We saved St. Paul's every time we put out an incendiary, and only
until the next one fell. Keeping watch on the danger spots, putting out the
little fires with sand and stirrup pumps, the big ones with our bodies, in
order to keep the whole vast complex structure from burning down. Which sounds
to me like a course description for History Practicum 401. What a fine time to
discover what historians are for when I have tossed my chance for being one out
the windows as easily as they tossed the pinpoint bomb in! No, sir, the worst
is not over.
There are flash burns on the
stone, where legend says the Dean of St. Paul's was kneeling when the bomb went
off. Totally apocryphal, of course, since the front door is hardly an
appropriate place for prayers. It is more likely the shadow of a tourist who
wandered in to ask the whereabouts of the Windmill Theatre, or the imprint of a
girl bringing a volunteer his muffler. Or a cat.
Nothing is saved forever,
Dean Matthews; and I knew that when I walked in the west doors that first day,
blinking into the gloom, but it is pretty bad nevertheless. Standing here
knee-deep in rubble out of which I will not be able to dig any folding chairs
or friends, knowing that Langby died thinking I was a Nazi spy, knowing that
Enola came one day and I wasn't there. It's pretty bad.
But it is not as bad as it
could be. They are both dead, and Dean Matthews, too; but they died without
knowing what I knew all along, who sent me to my knees in the Whispering
Gallery, sick with grief and guilt: that in the end none of us saved St.
Paul's. And Langby cannot turn to me, stunned and sick at heart, and say,
"Who did this? Your friends the Nazis?" And I would have to say,
"No. The Communists." That would be the worst.
I have come back to the room
and let Kivrin smear more salve on my hands. She wants me to get some sleep. I
know I should pack and get gone. It will be humiliating to have them come and
throw me out, but I do not have the strength to fight her. She looks so much
like Enola.
January 1—I have apparently slept not only through
the night, but through the morning mail drop as well. When I woke up just now,
I found Kivrin sitting on the end of the bed holding an envelope. "Your
grades came," she said.
I put my arm over my eyes.
"They can be marvelously efficient when they want to, can't they?"
"Yes," Kivrin said.
"Well, let's see
it," I said, sitting up. "How long do I have before they come and
throw me out?"
She handed the flimsy
computer envelope to me. I tore it along the perforation. "Wait," she
said. "Before you open it, I want to say something." She put her hand
gently on my burns. "You're wrong about the history department. They're
very good."
It was not exactly what 1
expected her to say. "Good is not the word I'd use to describe Dunworthy,"
I said and yanked the inside slip free.
Kivrin's look did not change,
not even when I sat there with the printout on my knees where she could surely
see it. "Well," I said.
The slip was hand-signed by
the esteemed Dunworthy. I have taken a first. With honors.
January 2—Two things came in the mail today. One was
Kivrin's assignment. The history department thinks of everything—even to
keeping her here long enough to nursemaid me, even to coming up with a
prefabricated trial by fire to send their history majors through.
I think I wanted to believe
that was what they had done, Enola and Langby only hired actors, the cat a
clever android with its clockwork innards taken out for the final effect, not
so much because I wanted to believe Dunworthy was not good at all, but because
then I would not have this nagging pain at not knowing what had happened to
them.
"You said your practicum
was England in 1300?" I said, watching her as suspiciously as I had
watched Langby.
"1349," she said,
and her face went slack with memory. "The plague year."
"My God," I said.
"How could they do that? The plague's a ten."
"I have a natural
immunity," she said and looked at her hands.
Because I could not think of
anything to say, I opened the other piece of mail. It was a report on Enola.
Computer-printed, facts and dates and statistics, all the numbers the history
department so dearly loves, but it told me what I thought I would have to go
without knowing: that she had gotten over her cold and survived the Blitz.
Young Tom had been killed in the Baedaker raids on Bath, but Enola had lived
until 2006, the year before they blew up St. Paul's.
I don't know whether I
believe the report or not, but it does not matter. It is, like Langby's reading
aloud to the old man, a simple act of human kindness. They think of everything.
Not quite. They did not tell
me what happened to Langby. But I find as I write this that I already know: I
saved his life. It does not seem to matter that he might have died in hospital
next day; and I find, in spite of all the hard lessons the history department
has tried to teach me, I do not quite believe this one: that nothing is saved
forever. It seems to me that perhaps Langby is.
January 3—I went to see Dunworthy today. I don't
know what I intended to say—some pompous drivel about my willingness to serve
in the firewatch of history, standing guard against the falling incendiaries of
the human heart, silent and saintly.
But he blinked at me
nearsightedly across his desk, and it seemed to me that he was blinking at that
last bright image of St. Paul's in sunlight before it was gone forever and that
he knew better than anyone that the past cannot be saved, and I said instead,
"I'm sorry that I broke your glasses, sir."
"How did you like St.
Paul's?" he said, and like my first meeting with Enola, I felt I must be
somehow reading the signals all wrong, that he was not feeling loss, but
something quite different.
"I loved it, sir,"
I said.
"Yes," he said.
"So do I."
Dean Matthews is wrong. I
have fought with memory my whole practicum only to find that it is not the
enemy at all, and being an historian is not some saintly burden afser all.
Because Dunworthy is not blinking against the fatal sunlight of the last
morning, but into the gloom of that first afternoon, looking in the great west
doors of St. Paul's at what is, like Langby, like all of it, every moment, in
us, saved forever.
HER FURRY FACE
by Leigh Kennedy
"Her Furry Face"
was purchased by Shawna McCarthy, and appeared in the Mid-December 1983 issue
of IAsfm, with an
illustration by John Piebard. Although buried inconspicuously in the middle of
the magazine, "Her Furry Face" managed to attract attention anyway—it
quickly became one of the most controversial stories of the year, and remains
one of the most controversial stories the magazine has ever run. "Her
Furry Face" was another editorial gamble on Shawna's part—and another one
that paid off for "Her Furry Face" may well have been the best story
to appear in IAsfm that year, and was almost certainly the best story of
its length. Two other stories by Kennedy appeared in IAsfm that
year—"Belling Martha" and "Greek"—and both of them might
well have attracted similar attention in a year that didn't have
"Her Furry Face" in it.
Born in Denver, Colorado,
Leigh Kennedy spent some years in Austin as an honorary Texan, and now lives in
England. She sold her first story in 1978 and has since become a frequent
contributor to most of the major SF magazines and anthologies. Her first novel,
The Journal of Nicholas
the American, was published last year by the Atlantic Monthly Press and was
a Finalist for the 1986 Nebula award. Upcoming is a short-story collection, Faces,
which will also be published by the Atlantic Monthly Press.
Douglas was embarrassed when
he saw Annie and Vernon mating.
He'd seen hours of sex between
orangutans, but this time was different. He'd never seen Annie doing it.
He stood in the shade of the pecan tree for a moment, shocked, iced tea glasses
sweating in his hand, then he backed around the corner of the brick building.
He was confused. The cicadas seemed louder than usual, the sun hotter, and the
squeals of pleasure from the apes strange.
He walked back to the front
porch and sat down. His mind still saw the two giant mounds of red-orange fur
moving together like one being.
When the two orangs came back
around, Douglas thought he saw smugness in Vernon's face. Why not, he thought?
I guess I would be smug, too.
Annie flopped down on the
grassy front yard and crossed one leg over the other, her abdomen bulging high;
she gazed upward into the heavy white sky.
Vernon bounded toward Douglas.
He was young and red-chocolate colored. His face was still slim, without the
older orangutan jowls yet.
"Be polite," Douglas
warned him.
"Drink tea, please?"
Vernon signed rapidly, the fringe on his elbows waving. "Dry as
bone."
Douglas handed Vernon one of
the glasses of tea, though he'd brought it out for Annie. The handsome
nine-year-old downed it in a gulp. "Thank you," he signed. He touched
the edge of the porch and withdrew his long fingers. "Could fry egg,"
he signed, and instead of sitting, swung out hand overhand on the ropes
between the roof of the schoolhouse and the trees. It was a sparse and dry
substitute for the orang's native rain forest.
He's too young and crude for
Annie, Douglas thought.
"Annie," Douglas
called. "Your tea."
Annie rolled onto one side and
lay propped on an elbow, staring at him. She was lovely. Fifteen years old, her
fur was glossy and coppery, her small yellow eyes in the fleshy face expressive
and intelligent. She started to raise up toward him, but turned toward the
road.
The mail jeep was coming down
the highway.
In a blurred movement, she set
off at a four-point gallop down the half-mile drive toward the mailbox. Vernon
swung down from his tree and followed, making a small groan.
Reluctant to go out in the
sun, Douglas put down the tea and followed the apes down the drive. By the time
he got near them, Annie was sitting with mail sorted between her toes, holding
an opened letter in her hands. She looked up with an expression on her face
that he'd never seen—it could have been fear, but it wasn't.
She handed the letter to
Vernon, who pestered her for it. "Douglas," she signed, "they
want to buy my story."
Therese lay in the bathwater,
her knees sticking up high, her hair floating beside her face. Douglas sat on
the edge of the tub; as he talked to her he was conscious that he spoke a
double language—the one with his lips and the other with his hands.
"As soon as I called Ms.
Young, the magazine editor, and told her who Annie was, she got really excited.
She asked me why we didn't send a letter explaining it with the story, so I
told her that Annie didn't want anyone to know first."
"Did Annie decide
that?" Therese sounded skeptical, as she always seemed to when Douglas
talked about Annie.
"We talked about it and
she wanted it that way." Douglas felt that resistance from Therese. Why
she never understood, he didn't know, unless she did it to provoke him. She
acted as though she thought an ape was still just an ape, no matter what he or
she could do. "Anyway," he said, "she talked about doing a whole
publicity thing to the hilt—talk shows, autograph parties. You know. But Dr.
Morris thinks it would be better to keep things quiet."
"Why?" Therese sat
up; her legs went underwater and she soaped her arms.
"Because she'd be too
nervous. Annie, I mean. It might disrupt her education to become a celebrity.
Too bad. Even Dr. Morris knows that it would be great for fund-raising. But I
guess we'll let the press in some."
Therese began to shampoo her
hair. "I brought home that essay that Sandy wrote yesterday. The one I
told you about. If she were an orangutan instead of just a deaf kid, she could
probably get it published in Fortune." Therese smiled.
Douglas stood. He didn't like
the way Therese headed for the old argument—no matter what one of Therese's
deaf students did, if Annie could do it one-one-hundredth as well, it was more
spectacular. Douglas knew it was true, but why Therese was so bitter about it,
he didn't understand.
"That's great," he
said, trying to sound enthusiastic.
"Will you wash my
back?" she asked.
He crouched and absently
washed her. "I'll never forget Annie's face when she read that
letter."
"Thank you," Therese
said. She rinsed. "Do you have any plans for this evening?"
"I've got work to
do," he said, leaving the bathroom. "Would you like me to work in the
bedroom so you can watch television?"
After a long pause, she said,
"No, I'll read."
He hesitated in the doorway.
"Why don't you go to sleep early? You looked tired."
She shrugged. "Maybe I
am."
In the playroom at the school,
Douglas watched Annie closely. It was still morning, though late. In the
recliner across the room from him, she seemed a little sleepy. Staring out the
window, blinking, she marked her place in Pinkwater's Fat Men From Space with
a long brown finger.
He had been thinking about
Therese, who'd been silent and morose that morning. Annie was never morose,
though often quiet. He wondered if Annie were quiet today because she sensed
that Douglas was not happy. When he'd come to work, she'd given him an extra
hug.
He wondered if Annie could
have a crush on him, like many schoolgirls have on their teachers.
Remembering her mating with Vernon days before, he idly wandered into a fantasy
of touching her and gently, gently moving inside her.
The physical reaction to his
fantasy embarrassed him. God, what am I thinking? He shook himself out
of the reverie, averting his gaze for a few moments, until he'd gotten control
of himself again.
"Douglas," Annie
signed. She walked erect, towering, to him and sat down on the floor at his
feet. Her flesh folded onto her lap like dough.
"What?" he asked,
wondering suddenly if orangutans were telepathic.
"Why you say my story
children's?"
He looked blankly at her.
"Why not send Harper's?"
she asked, having to spell out the name of the magazine.
He repressed a laugh, knowing
it would upset her. "It's...it's the kind of story children would
like."
“Why?”
He sighed. "The level of
writing is ... young. Like you, sweetie." He stroked her head,
looking into the small intense eyes. "You'll get more sophisticated as you
grow."
"I smart as you,"
she signed. "You understand me always because I talk smart."
Douglas was dumbfounded by her
logic.
She tilted her head and
waited. When Douglas shrugged, she seemed to assume victory and returned to her
recliner.
Dr. Morris came in. "Here
we go," she said, handing him the paper and leaving again.
Douglas skimmed the page until
he came to an article about the "ape author." He scanned it. It
contained one of her flashpoints; this, and the fact that she was irritable
from being in estrus, made him consider hiding it. But that wouldn't be right.
"Annie," he said
softly.
She looked up.
"There's an article about
you."
"Me read," she
signed, putting her book on the floor. She came and crawled up on the sofa next
to him. He watched her eyes as they jerked across every word. He grew edgy. She
read on.
Suddenly she took off as if
from a diving board. He ran after her as she bolted out the door. The stuffed
dog which had always been a favorite toy was being shredded in those powerful
hands even before he knew she had it. Annie screamed as she pulled the toy
apart, running into the yard.
Terrified by her own
aggression, she ran up the tree with stuffing falling like snow behind her.
Douglas watched as the shade
filled with foam rubber and fake fur. The tree branches trembled. After a long
while, she stopped pummeling the tree and sat quietly.
She spoke to herself with her
long ape hand. "Not animal," she said, "not animal."
Douglas suddenly realized that
Therese was afraid of the apes.
She watched Annie warily as
the four of them strolled along the edge of the school acreage. Douglas knew
that Therese didn't appreciate the grace of Annie's muscular gait as he did;
the sign language that passed between them was as similar to the Amslan that
Therese used for her deaf children as British to Jamaican. Therese couldn't
appreciate Annie in creative conversation.
It wasn't good to be afraid of
the apes, no matter how educated they were.
He had invited her out, hoping
it would please her to be included in his world here. She had only visited
briefly twice before.
Vernon lagged behind them,
snapping pictures now and then with the expensive but hardy camera modified for
his hands. Vernon took several pictures of Annie and one of Douglas, but only
when Therese had separated from him to peer between the rushes at the edge of
the creek.
"Annie," Douglas
called, pointing ahead. "A cardinal. The red bird."
Annie lumbered forward. She
glanced back to see where Douglas pointed, then stood still, squatting. Douglas
walked beside her and they watched the bird.
It flew.
"Gone," Annie
signed.
"Wasn't it pretty,
though?" Douglas asked.
They ambled on. Annie stopped
often to investigate shiny bits of trash or large bugs. They didn't come this
far from the school much. Vernon whizzed past them, a dark auburn streak of
youthful energy.
Remembering Therese, Douglas
turned. She sat on a stump far behind. He was annoyed. He'd told her to wear
her jeans and a straw hat because there would be grass burrs and hot sun. But
there she sat, bareheaded, wearing shorts, miserably rubbing at her ankles.
He grunted impatiently. Annie,
looked up at him. "Not you," he said, stroking her fur. She patted
his butt.
"Go on," Douglas
said, turning back. When he came to Therese, he said, "What's the
problem?"
"No problem." She
stood and started forward without looking at him. "I was just
resting."
Annie had paused to poke at
something on the ground with a stick. Douglas quickened his step. Even though
his students were smart, they had orangutan appetites. He always worried that
they would eat something that would sicken them. "What is it?" he
called.
"Dead cat," Vernon
signed back. He took a picture as Annie flipped the carcass with her stick.
Therese hurried forward.
"Oh, poor kitty..." she said, kneeling.
Annie had seemed too absorbed
in poking the cat to notice Therese approach; only a quick eye could follow her
leap. Douglas was stunned.
Both screamed. It was over.
Annie clung to Douglas's legs,
whimpering.
"Shit!" Therese
said. She lay on the ground, rolling from side to side, holding her left arm.
Blood dripped from between her fingers.
Douglas pushed Annie back.
"That was bad, very bad," he said. "Do you hear me?"
Annie sank down on' her rump
and covered her head. She hadn't gotten a child-scolding for a long time.
Vernon stood beside her, shaking his head, signing, "Not wise,
baboon-face."
"Stand up," Douglas
said to Therese. "I can't help you right now."
Therese was pale, but
dry-eyed. Clumsily, she stood and grew even paler. A hunk of flesh hung loosely
from above her elbow, meaty and bleeding. "Look."
"Go on. Walk back to the
house. We'll come right behind you." He tried to keep his voice calm,
holding a warning hand on Annie's shoulder.
Therese moaned, catching her
breath. "It hurts," she said, but stumbled on.
"We're coming,"
Douglas said sternly. "Just walk and—Annie, don't you dare step out of
line."
They walked silently, Therese
ahead, leaving drops of blood in the dirt. The drops got larger and closer
together. Once, Annie dipped her finger into a bloody spot and sniffed her
fingertip.
Why can't things just be easy
and peaceful, he wondered. Something always happens. Always. He should
have known better than to bring Therese around Annie. Apes didn't understand
that vulnerable quality that Therese was made of. He himself didn't understand
it, though at one time he'd probably been attracted to it. No—maybe he'd never
really seen it until it was too late. He'd only thought of Therese as
"sweet" until their lives were too tangled up to keep clear of it.
Why couldn't she be as tough
as Annie? Why did she always take everything so seriously?
They reached the building.
Douglas sent Annie and Vernon to their rooms and guided Therese to the
infirmary. He watched as Jim, their all-purpose nurse and veterinary assistant,
examined her arm. "I think you should probably have stitches."
He left the room to make
arrangements.
Therese looked at Douglas,
holding the gauze over her still-bleeding arm. "Why did she bite me?"
she asked. Douglas didn't answer. He couldn't think off how to say it. "Do
you have any idea?" she asked.
"You asked for it, all
your wimping around."
Douglas saw the anger rising
in her. He didn't want to argue now. He wished he'd never brought her. He'd
done it for her, and she ruined it. All ruined.
"Don't start," he
said simply, giving her a warning look. "But, Douglas, I didn't do anything."
"Don't start," he
repeated.
"I see now," she
said coldly. "Somehow it's my fault again."
Jim returned with his
supplies.
"Do you want me to
stay?" Douglas asked. He suddenly felt a pang of guilt, realizing that she
was actually hurt enough for all this attention.
"No," she said
softly.
And her eyes looked far, far
from him as he left her.
On the same day that the
largest donation ever came to the school, a television news team came out to
tape.
Douglas could tell that
everyone was excited. Even the chimps that lived on the north half of the
school hung on the fence and watched the TV van being unloaded. The reporter
decided upon the playroom as the best location for the taping, though she
didn't seem to relish sitting on the floor with the giant apes. People went over
scripts, strung cords, microphones, set up hot lights, and discussed angles and
sound while pointing at the high ceiling's jungle-gym design. All this to talk
to a few people and an orangutan.
They brought Annie's desk into
the playroom, contrary to Annie's wishes. Douglas explained that it was
temporary, that these people would go away after they talked a little. Douglas
and Annie stayed outside as long as possible and played Tarzan around the big
tree. He tickled her. She grabbed him as he swung from a limb.
"Kagoda?" she signed, squeezing him with one arm.
"Kagoda!" he
shouted, laughing.
They relaxed on the grass.
Douglas was hot. He felt flushed all over. "Douglas," Annie signed,
"they read story?" "Not yet. It isn't published yet."
"Why come talk?" she
asked.
"Because you wrote it and
sold it and people like to interview famous authors." He groomed her
shoulder. "Time to go in," he said, seeing a wave from inside.
Annie picked him up in a big
hug and carried him in.
"Here it is!"
Douglas called to Therese and turned on the video recorder.
First, a long shot of the
school from the dusty drive, looking only functional and square, without
personality. The reporter's voice said, "Here, just southeast of town, is
a special school with unusual young students. The students here have little
prospect for employment when they graduate, but millions of dollars each year
fund this institution."
A shot of Annie at her
typewriter, picking at the keyboard with her long fingers; a sheet of paper is
slowly covered with large block letters.
"This is Annie, a
fifteen-year-old orangutan, who has been a student with the school for five
years. She graduated with honors from another `ape school' in Georgia before
coming here. And now Annie has become a writer. Recently, she sold a story to a
children's magazine. The editor who bought the story didn't know that Annie was
an orangutan until after she had selected the story for publication."
Annie looked at the camera
uncertainly.
"Annie can read and
write, and understand spoken English, but she cannot speak. She uses a sign
language similar to the one hearing-impaired use." Change in tone from
narrative to interrogative. "Annie, how did you start writing?"
Douglas watched himself on the
small screen watching Annie sign, "Teacher told me write." He saw
himself grin, eyes shift slightly toward the camera, but generally watching
Annie. His name and "Orangutan Teacher" appeared on the screen. The
scene made him uneasy.
"What made you send in
Annie's story for publication?" the reporter asked.
Douglas signed to Annie, she
came to him for a hug, and turned a winsome face to the camera. "Our
administrator, Dr. Morris, and I both read it. I commented that I thought it
was as good as any kid's story, so Dr. Morris said, 'Send it in.' The editor
liked it." Annie made a "pee" sign to Douglas.
Then, a shot of Dr. Morris in
her office, a chimp on her lap, clapping her brown hands.
"Dr. Morris, your school
was established five years ago by grants and government funding. What is your
purpose here?"
"Well, in the last few
decades, apes—mostly chimpanzees like Rose here—have been taught sign language
experimentally. Mainly to prove that apes could indeed use language."
Rosie put the tip of her finger through the gold hoop in Dr. Morris's ear. Dr.
Morris took her hand away gently. "We were established with the idea of educating
apes, a comparable education to the primary grades." She looked at the
chimp. "Or however far they will advance."
"Your school has two
orangutans and six chimpanzees. Are there differences in their learning?"
the reporter asked.
Dr. Morris nodded
emphatically. "Chimpanzees are very clever, but the orang has a different
brain structure which allows for more abstract reasoning. Chimps learn many
things quickly, orangs are slower. But the orangutan has the ability to learn
in greater depth."
Shot of Vernon swinging in the
ropes in front of the school.
Assuming that Vernon is Annie,
the reporter said, "Her teacher felt from the start that Annie was an
especially promising student. The basic sentences that she types out on her
typewriter are simple but original entertainment."
Another shot of Annie at the
typewriter.
"If you think this is
just monkey business, you'd better think again. Tolstoy, watch out!"
Depressed by the lightness,
brevity, and the stupid "monkey-business" remark, Douglas
turned off the television.
He sat for a long time.
Whenever Therese had gone to bed, she had left him silently. After a half hour
of staring at the blank screen, he rewound his video recorder and ran it soundlessly
until Annie's face appeared.
And then froze it. He could
almost feel again the softness of her halo of red hair against his chin.
He couldn't sleep.
Therese had rumpled her way
out of the sheet and lay on her side, her back to him. He looked at the shape
of her shoulder and back, downward to the dip of the waist, up the curve of her
hip. Her buttocks were round ovals, one atop the other. Her skin was sleek and
shiny in the filtered streetlight coming through the window. She smelled
slightly of shampoo and even more slightly of female.
What he felt for her anyone
would call "love," when he thought of her generally. And yet, he
found himself helplessly angry with her most of the time. When he thought he
could amuse her, it would end with her feelings being hurt for some obscure
reason. He heard cruel words come barging out of an otherwise gentle mouth. She
took everything seriously; mishaps and misunderstandings occurred beyond his
control, beyond his repair.
Under this satiny skin, she
was troubled and tense. A lot of sensitivity and fear. He had stopped trying to
gain access to what had been the happier parts of her person, not understanding
where they had gone. He had stopped wanting to love her, but he didn't not want
to love her, either. It just didn't seem to matter.
Sometimes, he thought, it
would be easier to have someone like Annie for a wife.
Annie.
He loved her furry face. He
loved the unconditional joy in her face when she saw him. It was always there.
She was bright and warm and unafraid. She didn't read things into what he said,
but listened and talked with him. They were so natural together. Annie was so
filled with vitality.
Douglas withdrew his hand from
Therese, whose skin seemed a bare blister of dissatisfaction.
He lay on the floor of the
apes' playroom with the fan blowing across his chest. He held Annie's report on
Lawrence's Sons and Lovers by diagonal corners to keep it from flapping.
Annie lazily swung from bars
criss-crossing the ceiling.
"Paul wasn't happy at
work because the boss looked over his shoulder at his handwriting," she had
written. "But he was happy again later. His brother died and his mother
was sad. Paul got sick. He was better and visited his friends again. His mother
died and his friends didn't tickle him anymore."
Douglas looked over the top of
the paper at Annie. True, it was the first time she'd read an "adult"
novel, but he'd expected something better than this. He considered asking her
if Vernon had written the report for her, but thought better of it.
"Annie," he said,
sitting up. "What do you think this book is really about?"
She swung down and landed on
the sofa. "About man," she said.
Douglas waited. There was no
more. "But what about it? Why this man instead of another? What was
special about him?"
Annie rubbed her hands
together, answerless.
"What about his
mother?"
"She help him,"
Annie answered in a flurry of dark fingers. "Especially when he
paint."
Douglas frowned. He looked at
the page again, disappointed.
"What I do?" Annie
asked, worried.
He tried to brighten up.
"You did just fine. It was a hard book."
"Annie smart," the
orang signed. "Annie smart."
Douglas nodded. "I
know."
Annie rose, then stood on her
legs, looking like a two-story fuzzy building, teetering from side to side.
"Annie smart. Writer. Smart," she signed. "Write book.
Bestseller."
Douglas made a mistake. He
laughed. Not as simple as a human laughing at another, this was an act of
aggression. His bared teeth and uncontrolled guff-guff struck out at Annie. He
tried to stop.
She made a gulping sound and
galloped out of the room. "Wait, Annie!" He chased after her.
By the time he got outside she
was far ahead. He stopped running when his chest hurt and trotted slowly
through the weeds toward her. She sat forlornly far away and watched him come.
When he was near, she signed
"hug" three times.
Douglas collapsed, panting,
his throat raw. "Annie, I'm sorry," he said. "I didn't mean
it." He put his arms around her. She held onto him.
"I love you, Annie. I
love you so much I don't want ever to hurt you. Ever, ever, ever. I want to be
with you all the time. Yes, you're smart and talented and good." He kissed
her tough face.
Whether forgotten or forgiven,
the hurt of his laughter was gone from her eyes. She held him tighter, making a
soft sound in her throat, a sound for him.
They lay together in the crackling
yellow weeds, clinging. Douglas felt his love physically growing for her. More
passionately than ever before in his life, he wanted to make love to her. He
touched her. He felt that she understood what she wanted, that her breath on
his neck was anticipation. A consummation as he'd never imagined, the joining
of their species in language and body. Not dumb animal-banging but mutual love
. . . He climbed over her and hugged her back.
Annie went rigid when he
entered her.
Slowly, she rolled away from
him, but he held onto her. "No." A horrible grimace came across her
face that raised the hairs on the back of Douglas's neck. "Not you,"
she said. She's going to kill me, he thought.
His passion declined; Annie
disentangled herself and walked away.
He sat for a moment, stunned
at what he'd done, stunned at what had happened, wondering what he would do the
rest of his life with the memory of it. Then he zipped up his pants.
Staring at his dinner plate,
he thought, it's just the same as if I had been rejected by a woman. I'm not
the kind that goes for bestiality. I'm not some farm boy who can't find someplace
to put it.
His hands could still remember
the matted feel of her fur; tucked in his groin was the memory of being in an
alien place. It had made him throw up out in the field that afternoon, and
after that he'd come straight home. He hadn't even said good-night to the
orangs.
"What's the matter?"
Therese asked.
He shrugged.
She half-rose out of her chair
to kiss him on the temple. "You don't have a fever, do you?"
"No."
"Can I do something to
make you feel better?" Her hand slid along his thigh.
He stood up. "Stop
it."
She sat still. "Are you
in love with another woman?"
Why can't she just leave me
alone? "No. I have a lot\on my mind. There's a lot going on."
"It never was like this,
even when you were working on your thesis."
"Therese," he said,
with what he felt was undeserved patience, "just leave me alone. It
doesn't help with you at me all the time."
"But I'm scared, I don't
know what to do. You act like you don't want me around."
"All you do is criticize
me." He stood and took his dishes to the sink.
Slowly, she trailed after him,
carrying her plate. "I'm just trying to understand. It's my life,
too."
He said nothing and she walked
away as if someone had told her not to leave footsteps.
In the bathroom, he stripped
and stood under the shower a long time. He imagined that Annie's smell clung to
him. He felt that Therese could smell it on him.
What have I done, what have I
done .. .
And when he came out of the
shower, Therese was gone.
He had considered calling in
sick, but he knew that it would be just as miserable to stay around the house
and think about Annie, think about Therese, and worse, to think about himself.
He dressed for work but couldn't
eat breakfast. Realizing that his pain showed, he straightened his shoulders
but found them drooping again as he got out of the car at work.
With some fear, he came
through the office. The secretary greeted him with rolled eyes. "Someone's
given out our number again," she said as the phone buzzed. Another line
was on hold. "This morning there was a man standing at the window watching
me until Gramps kicked him off the property."
Douglas shook his head in
sympathy with her and approached the orang's door. He felt nauseated again.
Vernon sat at the typewriter,
most likely composing captions for his photo album. He didn't get up to greet
Douglas but gave him an evaluative stare.
Douglas patted his shoulder.
"Working?" he asked. "Like dog," Vernon said and resumed
typing.
Annie sat outside on the back
porch. Douglas opened the door and stood beside her. She looked up at him,
but—like Vernon—made no move toward the customary hug. The morning was still
cool, the shadow of the building still long in front of them. Douglas sat down.
"Annie," he said
softly. "I'm sorry. I'll never do it again. You see, I felt . . ." He
stopped. It wasn't any easier than it had been to talk to Oona, or Wendy, or
Shelley, or Therese.... He realized that he didn't understand her any more than
he'd understood them. Why had she rejected him? What was she thinking? What
would happen from now on? Would they be friends again?
"Oh, hell," he said.
He stood. "It won't happen again."
Annie gazed away into the
trees.
He felt strained all over,
especially in his throat. He stood by her for a long time.
"I don't want write
stories," she signed.
Douglas stared at her.
"Why?"
"Don't want." She
seemed to shrug.
Douglas wondered what had
happened to the confident ape who'd planned to write a bestseller the day
before. "Is that because of me?"
She didn't answer.
"I don't
understand," he said. "Do you want to write it down for me? Could you
explain it that way?"
"No," she signed,
"can't explain. Don't want."
He signed. "What do you
want?"
"Sit tree. Eat bananas,
chocolate. Drink brandy." She looked at him seriously. "Sit tree.
Day, day, day, week, month, year."
Christ almighty, he thought,
she's having a goddamned existential crisis. All the years of education. All
the accomplishments. All the hopes of an entire field of primatology. All shot
to hell because of a moody ape. It can't just be me. This would have happened
sooner or later, but maybe ... He thought of all the effort he would have to
make to repair their relationship. It made him tired.
"Annie, why don't we just
ease up a little on your work. You can rest. Today. You can go sit in the tree
all of today and I'll bring you a glass of wine."
She shrugged again.
Oh, I've botched it, he
thought. What an idiot. He felt a pain coming back, a pain like poison, without
a focal point but shooting through his heart and hands, making him dizzy and
short of breath.
At least she doesn't hate me,
he thought, squatting to touch her hand.
She bared her teeth.
Douglas froze. She slid away
from him and headed for the trees.
He sat alone at home and
watched the newscast. In a small midwestern town they burned the issues of the
magazine with Annie's story in it.
A heavy woman in a windbreaker
was interviewed with the bonfire in the background. "I don't want my
children reading things that weren't even written by humans. I have human
children and this godless ape is not going to tell its stories to them."
A quick interview with Dr.
Morris, who looked even more tired and introverted than usual. "The story
is a very innocent tale, told by an innocent personality. Annie is not a beast.
I really don't think she has any ability for, or intention of, corruption
..."
He turned the television off.
He picked up the phone and dialed one of Therese's friends. "Jan, have you
heard from Therese yet?"
"No, sure haven't."
"Well, let me know,
okay?"
"Sure."
He thought vaguely about
trying to catch her at work, but he left earlier in the morning and came home
later in the evening than she did.
Looking at her picture on the
wall, he thought of when they had first met, first lived together. There had
been a time when he'd loved her so much he'd been bursting with it. Now he felt
empty, but curious about where she was. He didn't want her to hate him, but he
still didn't know if he could talk to her about what had happened. The idea
that she would sit and listen to him didn't seem realistic.
Even Annie wouldn't listen to
him anymore.
He was alone. He'd done a big,
dumb, terrible thing and wished he hadn't. It would have been different if
Annie had reciprocated, if somehow they could have become lovers. Then it would
have been them against the world, a new kind of relationship. The first
intelligent interspecial love affair.. .
But Annie didn't seem any
different than Therese, after all. Annie was no child. She'd given him all
those signals, flirting, then not carrying through. Acting like he'd raped her
or something. She didn't really have any more interest in him than Dr. Morris
would in Vernon. I couldn't have misunderstood, could I? he wondered.
He was alone. And without
Annie's consent, he was just a jerk who'd screwed an ape.
"I made a mistake,"
he said aloud to Therese's picture. "So let's forget it."
But even he couldn't forget.
"Dr. Morris wants to see
you," the secretary said as he came in.
"Okay." He changed
course for the administrative office. He whistled. In the past few days, Annie
had been cool, but he felt that everything would settle down eventually. He
felt better. Wondering what horrors or marvels Dr. Morris had to share with
him, he knocked at her door and peered through the glass window. Probably
another magazine burning, he thought.
She signaled him to come in.
"Hello, Douglas."
Annie, he thought, something's happened.
He stood until she motioned
him to sit down. She looked at his face several seconds. "This is
difficult for me," she said.
She's discovered me, he
thought. But he put that aside, figuring it was a paranoia that made him worry.
There's no way. No way. I have to calm down or I'll show it.
She held up a photograph.
There it was—a dispassionate
and cold document of that one moment in his life. She held it up to him like an
accusation. It shocked him as if it hadn't been himself.
Defiance forced him to stare
at the picture instead of looking for compassion in Dr. Morris's eyes. He knew
exactly where the picture had come from.
Vernon and his new telephoto
lens.
He imagined the image of his
act rising up in a tray of chemicals. Slowly, he looked away from it. Dr.
Morris could not know how he had changed since that moment. He could make no
protest or denial.
"I have no choice,"
Dr. Morris said flatly. "I'd always thought that even if you weren't good
with people, at least you worked well with the apes. Thank God, Henry, who does
Vernon's darkroom work, has promised not to say anything."
Douglas was rising from the
chair. He wanted to tear the picture out of her hands because she still held it
up to him. He didn't want to see it. He wanted her to ask him if he had
changed, that it would never happen again, that he understood he'd been wrong.
But her eyes were flat and
shuttered against him. "We'll send your things," she said.
He paused at his car and saw
two big red shapes—one coppery orange, one chocolate red—sitting in the trees.
Vernon bellowed out a groan that ended with an alien burbling. It was a wild
sound full of the jungle and steaming rain.
Douglas watched Annie scratch
herself and looked toward chimps walking the land beyond their boundary fence.
As she started to turn her gaze his direction he ducked into his car.
Angrily driving away, Douglas
thought, why should an ape understand me any better than a human?
HARDFOUGHT
by Greg Bear
"Hardfought" was
purchased by Shawna McCarthy toward the beginning of her regime and appeared in
the February 1983 issue of IAsfm,
with illustrations by H.R. Van Dongen. It was the first IAsfm story to
carry a "warning label"—usually a notice that the story contains
explicit sexual material and/or "hard" language; in the case of
"Hardfought," it was not so much used for that as to warn people
that what they were about to read was wildly unlike anything that had ever
appeared in IAsfm before—vaultingly ambitious, stunningly complex, and
staggering in scope. The purchase of "Hardfought" was a real
gamble on McCarthy's part—and one that paid off handsomely. "Hardfought"
became one of the most critically acclaimed stories of the year, hailed
everywhere as a "breakthrough" novella, a step forward in the
evolution of the genre. It went on to win a Nebula Award that year, as did
Bear's "Blood Music," from our sister publication, Analog.
Bear has not appeared subsequently in IAsfm, alas, but we intend to Keep
After Him.
Born in San Diego,
California, Greg Bear made his first sale at the age of fifteen to Robert
Lowndes' Famous Science Fiction, and has subsequently established himself as
one of the top young professionals in the genre. His books include the novels Hegira, Psychlone, Beyond
Heaven's River, Strength of Stones, The Infinity Concerto, and the
collection The Wind From a Burning Woman. His most recent books are the
novels Blood Music, an expanded version of his Nebula winning story, Eon,
The Serpent Mage, and The Forge of God.
Humans called it the Medusa.
Its long twisted ribbons of gas strayed across fifty parsecs, glowing blue,
yellow, and carmine. Its central core was a ghoulish green flecked with watery
black. Half a dozen protostars circled the core, and as many more dim
conglomerates pooled in dimples in the nebula's magnetic field. The Medusa was
a huge womb of stars —and disputed territory.
Whenever Prufrax looked at it
in displays or through the ship's ports, it seemed malevolent, like a zealous
mother displaying an ominous face to protect her children. Prufrax had never
had a mother, but she had seen them in some of the fibs.
At five, Prufrax was old
enough to know the Mellangee's mission and her role in it. She had already been
through four ship-years of indoctrination. Until her first battle she would be
educated in both the Know and the Tell. She would be exercised and trained in
the Mocks; in sleep she would dream of penetrating the huge red-and-white
Senexi seedships and finding the brood mind. "Zap, Zap," she went
with her lips, silent so the tellman wouldn't think her thoughts were straying.
The tellman peered at her from
his position in the center of the spherical classroom. Her mates stared
straight at the center, all focusing somewhere around the tellman's spiderlike
teaching desk, waiting for the trouble, some fidgeting. "How many branch
individuals in the Senexi brood mind?" he asked. He looked around the classroom.
Peered face by face. Focused on her again. "Pru?"
"Five," she said.
Her arms ached. She had been pumped full of moans the wake before. She was
already three meters tall, in elfstate, with her long, thin limbs not nearly
adequately fleshed out and her fingers still crisscrossed with the surgery done
to adapt them to the gloves.
"What will you find in
the brood mind?" the tellman pursued, his impassive face stretched across
a hammerhead as wide as his shoulders. Some of the ferns thought tellmen were
attractive. Not many—and Pru was not one of them.
"Yoke," she said.
"What is in the
brood-mind yoke?"
"Fibs."
"More specifically? And
it really isn't all fib, you know."
"Info. Senexi data."
"What will you do?"
"Zap," she said,
smiling.
"Why, Pru?"
"Yoke has team
gens-memory. Zap yoke, spill the life of the team's five branch inds."
"Zap the brood,
Pru?"
"No," she said
solemnly. That was a new instruction, only in effect since her class's
inception. "Hold the brood for the supreme overs." The tellmen did
not say what would be done with the Senexi broods. That was not her concern.
"Fine," said the
tellman. "You tell well, for someone who's always half-journeying."
She was already five, soon
six. Old. Some saw Senexi by the time they were four.
"Zap, Zap," she went
with her lips.
Aryz skidded through the thin
layer of liquid ammonia on his broadest pod, considering his new assignment. He
knew the Medusa by another name, one that conveyed all the time and effort the
Senexi had invested in it. The protostar nebula held few mysteries for him. He
and his four branch-mates, who along with the all-important brood mind made up
one of the six teams aboard the seedship, had patrolled the nebula for
ninety-three orbits, each orbit—including the timeless periods outside status
geometry—taking some one hundred and thirty human years. They had woven in and
out of the tendrils of gas, charting the infalling masses and exploring the
rocky accretion disks of stars entering the main sequence. With each measure
and update, the brood minds refined their view of the nebula as it would be a
hundred generations hence when the Senexi plan would finally mature.
The Senexi were nearly as old
as the galaxy. They had achieved spaceflight during the time of the starglobe
when the galaxy had been a sphere. They had not been a quick or brilliant race.
Each great achievement had taken thousands of generations, and not just because
of their intellectual handicaps. In those times elements heavier than helium
had been rare, round only around stars that had greedily absorbed huge amounts
of primeval hydrogen, burned fierce and blue, and exploded early, permeating
the ill-defined galactic arms with carbon and nitrogen, lithium and oxygen.
Elements heavier than iron had been almost nonexistent. The biologies of cold
gas-giant worlds had developed with a much smaller palette of chemical
combinations in producing the offspring of the primary Population II stars.
Aryz, even with the limited
perspective of a branch ind, was aware that, on the whole, the humans opposing
the seed-ship were more adaptable, more vital. But they were not more
experienced. The Senexi with their billions of years had often matched them.
And Aryz's perspective was expanding with each day of his new assignment.
In the early generations of
the struggle, Senexi mental stasis and cultural inflexibility had made them
avoid contact with the Population I species. They had never begun a program of
extermination of the younger, newly life-forming worlds; the task would have
been monumental and probably useless. So when spacefaring cultures developed,
the Senexi had retreated, falling back into the redoubts of old stars even
before engaging with the new kinds. They had retreated for three generations,
about thirty thousand human years, raising their broods on cold nestworlds
around red dwarfs, conserving, holding back for the inevitable conflicts.
As the Senexi had anticipated,
the younger Population I races had found need of even the aging groves of the
galaxy's first stars. They had moved in savagely, voraciously, with all the
strength and mutability of organisms evolved from a richer soup of elements.
Biology had, in some ways, evolved in its own right and superseded the Senexi.
Aryz raised the upper globe of
his body, with its five silicate eyes arranged in a cross along the forward
surface. He had memory of those times, and times long before, though his twain
hadn't existed then. The brood mind carried memories selected from the total
store of nearly twelve billion years' experience, an awesome amount of
knowledge, even to a Senexi. He pushed himself forward with his rear pods.
Through the brood mind Aryz
could share the memories of a hundred thousand past generations, yet the brood
mind itself was younger than its branch individuals. For a time in their youth,
in their liquid-dwelling larval form, the branch inds carried their own sacs of
data, each a fragment of the total necessary for complete memory. The branch
inds swam through ammonia seas and wafted through thick warm gaseous zones,
protoplasmic blobs three to four meters in diameter developing their personalities
under the weight of the past; and not even a complete past. No
wonder they were inflexible Aryz thought. Most branch inds were aware enough to
see that—especially when they were allowed to compare histories with the
Population I species, as he was doing--but there was nothing to be done. They
were content Oa s they were. To change would be unspeakably repugnant. Extinction
was preferable . . . almost.
But now they were pressed
hard. The brood mind had to m a number of experiments. Aryz's team had been selected
from the seedship's contingent to oversee the experiments, and Aryz had been
chosen as the chief investigator. Two orbits past, they had captured six human
embryos in a breeding device, as well as a highly coveted memory storage center.
Most Senexi engagements had been with humans for the past three or four
generations. Just as the Senexi dominated Population II species, humans were
ascendant among their kind.
Experiments with the human
embryos had already been conducted. Some had been allowed to develop normally; others
had been tampered with, for reasons Aryz was not aware of. The tamperings had
not been very successful.
The newer experiments, Aryz suspected,
were going to take a different direction, and the seedship's actions now focused
on him; he believed he would be given complete authority over the human
shapes. Most branch inds would have dissipated under such a burden, but not
Aryz. He found the human shapes rather interesting, in their own horrible way.
They might, after all, be the key to Senexi survival.
The moans were toughening her
elfstate. She lay in pain for a wake, not daring to close her eyes; her mind
was changing and she feared sleep would be the end of her. Her nightmares were
not easily separated from life; some, in fact, were sharper.
Too often in sleep she found
herself in a Senexi trap, struggling uselessly, being pulled in deeper, her
hatred wasted against such power.
When she came out of the
rigor, Prufrax was given leave by the subordinate tellman. She took to the
Mellangee's greenroads, walking stiffly in the shallow gravity. Her hands
itched. Her mind seemed almost empty after the turmoil of the past few wakes.
She had never felt so calm and clear. She hated the Senexi double now; once for
their innate evil, twice for what they had made her overs put her through to be
able to fight them. She was growing more mature wake by wake. Fight-budding,
the tellman called it, hate coming out like blooms, synthesizing the sunlight
of his teaching into pure fight.
The greenroads rose
temporarily beyond the labyrinth shields and armor of the ship. Simple
transparent plastic-and-steel geodesic surfaces formed a lacework over the
gardens, admitting radiation necessary to the vegetation growing along the
paths.
Prufrax looked down on the
greens to each side of the paths without much comprehension. They were
beautiful. Yes, one should say that, think that, but what did it mean?
Pleasing? She wasn't sure what being pleased meant, outside of thinking Zap.
She sniffed a flower that, the signs explained, bloomed only in the light of
young stars not yet fusing. They were near such a star now, and the greenroads
were shiny black and electric green with the blossoms. Lamps had been set out
for other plants unsuited to such darkened conditions. Some technic allowed
suns to appear in selected plastic panels when viewed from certain angles.
Clever, the technicals.
She much preferred the looks
of a technical to a tellman, but she was common in that. She wished a technical
were on the greenroads with her. The moans had the effect of makingher
receptive—what she saw, looking in mirrors, was a certain shine in her
eyes—but there was no chance of a breeding liaison. She was quite
unreproductive in this moment of elf-state.
She looked up and saw a figure
at least a hundred meters away, sitting on an allowed patch near the path. She
walked casually, as gracefully as possible with the stiffness. Not a technical,
she saw soon, but she was not disappointed. Too calm.
"Over," he said as
she approached.
"Under," she
replied. But not by much—he was probably six or seven ship-years old and not
easily classifiable.
"Such a fine
elfstate," he commented. His hair was black. He was shorter than she, but
something in his build reminded her of the glovers. He motioned for her to sit,
and she did so with a whuff, massaging her knees.
"Moans?" he asked.
"Bad stretch," she said.
"You're a glover."
He was looking at the fading scars on her hands.
"Can't tell what you
are," she said.
"Noncombat," he
said. "Tuner of the mandates."
She knew very little about the
mandates, except that law decreed every ship carry one, and few of the crew
were ever allowed to peep. "Noncombat, hm?" She mused. She didn't
despise him for that; one never felt strongs negatives for a crew member.
"Been working on ours
this wake," he said. "Too hard, I guess. Told to talk."
Overzealousness in work was considered an erotic trait aboard the Mellangee.
Still, she didn't feel too receptive toward him.
"Glovers walk after a
rough growing," she said.
He nodded. "My name's
Clevo."
"Prufrax."
"Combat soon?"
"Hoping. Waiting
forever."
"I know. Just been
allowed access to the mandate for a half-dozen wakes. All new to me. Very
happy."
"Can you talk about
it?" she asked. Information about the ship not accessible in certain rates
was excellent barter. "Not sure," he said, frowning. "I've been
told caution."
"Well, I'm
listening."
He could come from glover
stock, she thought, but probably not from technical. He wasn't very muscular,
but he wasn't as tall as a glover, or as thin, either.
"If you'll tell me about
gloves."
With a smile she held up her
hands and wriggled the short, stumpy fingers. "Sure."
The brood mind floated
weightless in its tank, held in place by buffered carbon rods. Metal was at a
premium aboard the Senexi ships, more out of tradition than actual material
limitations.
Aryz floated before the brood mind,
all these thoughts coursing through his tissues. He had no central nervous system,
no truly differentiated organs except those that dealt with the outside
world—limbs, eyes, perinea. The brood mind, however, was all central nervous
system, a thinly buffered sac of viscous fluids about ten meters wide.
"Have you investigated
the human memory device yet?" the brood mind asked.
"I have."
"Is communication with
the human shapes possible for us?"
"We have already created
interfaces for dealing with their machines. Yes, it seems likely we can
communicate."
"Does it strike you that
in our long war with humans, we have made no attempt to communicate
before?"
This was a complicated
question. It called for several qualities that Aryz, as a branch ind, wasn't
supposed to have. Inquisitiveness, for one. Branch inds did not ask questions.
They exhibited initiative only as offshoots of the brood mind.
He found, much to his dismay,
that the question had occurred to him. "We have never captured a human
memory store before," he said, by way of incomplete answer. "We could
not have communicated without such an extensive source of information."
"Yet, as you say, even in
the past we have been able to use human machines."
"The problem is vastly
more complex."
The brood mind paused.
"Do you think the teams have been prohibited from communicating with
humans?"
Aryz felt the closest thing to
anguish possible for a branch ind. Was he being considered unworthy? Accused of
conduct inappropriate to a branch ind? His loyalty the brood mind was
unshakeable. "Yes."
"And what might our
reasons be?"
"Avoidance of
pollution."
"Correct. We can no more
communicate with them and remain untainted than we can walk on their worlds,
breathe their atmosphere.” Again, silence. Aryz lapsed into a mode of
inactivity. When the brood mind readdressed him, he was instantly aware.
"Do you know how you are
different?" it asked.
"I am not . . ."
Again, hesitation. Lying to the brood mind was impossible for him. He signalled
his distress.
"You are useful to the
team," the brood mind said. Aryz calmed instantly. His thoughts became
sluggish, receptive. There was a possibility of redemption. But how was he
different? "You are to attempt communication with the shapes yourself. You
will not engage in any discourse with your fellows while you are so
involved." He was banned. "And after completion of this mission and
transfer of certain facts to me, you will dissipate."
Aryz struggled with the
complexity of the orders. "How am I different, worthy of such a
commission?"
The surface of the brood mind
was as still as an undisturbed pool. The indistinct black smudges that marked
its radiating organs circulated slowly within the interior, then returned, one
above the other, to focus on him. "You will grow a new branch ind. It will
not have your flaws, but, then again, it will not be useful to me should such a
situation come a second time. Your dissipation will be a relief, but it will be
regretted."
"How am I
different?"
"I think you know
already," the brood mind said. "When the time comes, you will feed
the new branch ind all your memories but those of human contact. If you do not
survive to that stage of its growth, you will pick your fellow who will perform
that function for you."
A small pinkish spot appeared
on the back of Aryz's globe. He floated forward and placed his largest perineum
against the brood mind's cool surface. The key and command were passed, and his
body became capable of reproduction. Then the signal of dismissal was given. He
left the chamber.
Flowing through the thin
stream of liquid ammonia lining the corridor, he felt ambiguously stimulated.
His was a position of privilege and anathema. He had been blessed—and
condemned. Had any other branch ind experienced such a thing?
Then he knew the brood mind
was correct. He was different from his fellows. None of them would have asked
such questions. None of them could have survived the suggestion of
communicating with human shapes. If this task hadn't been given to him, he
would have had to dissipate anyway.
The pink spot grew larger,
then began to make grayish flakes. It broke through the skin, and casually,
almost without thinking, Aryz scraped it off against a bulkhead. It clung, made
a radio-frequency emanation something like a sigh, and began absorbing
nutrients from the ammonia.
Aryz went to inspect the
shapes.
She was intrigued by Clevo,
but the kind of interest she felt was new to her. She was not particularly
receptive. Rather, she felt a mental gnawing as if she were hungry or had been
injected with some kind of brain moans. What Clevo told her about the mandates
opened up a topic she had never considered before. How did all things come to
be—and how did she figure in them?
The mandates were quite small,
Clevo explained, each little more than a cubic meter in volume. Within them
was the entire history and culture of the human species, as accurate as
possible, culled from all existing sources. The mandate in each ship was
updated whenever the ship returned to a contact station.
Clevo had been assigned small
tasks—checking data and adding ship records—that had allowed him to sample bits
of the mandate. "It's mandated that we have records," he explained,
"and what we have, you see, is man-data." He smiled. "That's a
joke," he said. "Sort of."
Prufrax nodded solemnly.
"So where do we come from?" "Earth, of course," Clevo said.
"Everyone knows that." "I mean, where do we come from—you and I,
the crew." "Breeding division. Why ask? You know."
"Yes." She frowned,
concentrating. "I mean, we don't come from the same place as the Senexi.
The same way." "No, that's foolishness."
She saw that it was
foolishness—the Senexi were different all around. What was she struggling to
ask? "Is their fib like our own?"
"Fib? History's not a
fib. Not most of it, anyway. Fibs are for unreal. History is over fib."
She knew, in a vague way, that
fibs were unreal. She didn't like to have their comfort demeaned, though.
"Fibs are fun," she said. "They teach Zap."
"I suppose," Clevo
said dubiously. "Being noncombat, I don't see Zap fibs."
Fibs without Zap were almost
unthinkable to her. "Such dull," she said.
"Well, of course you'd
say that. I might find Zap fibs dull —think of that?"
"We're different,"
she said. "Like Senexi are different."
Clevo's jaw hung open.
"No way. We're crew. We're human. Senexi are ..." He shook his head
as if fed bitters.
"No, I mean ..." She
paused, uncertain whether she was entering unallowed territory. "You and
I, we're fed different, given different moans. But in a big way we're different
from Senexi. They aren't made, nor act, as you and I. But ..." Again it
was difficult to express. She was irritated. "I don't want to talk to you
anymore."
A tellman walked down the
path, not familiar to Prufrax. He held out his hand for Clevo, and Clevo
grasped it. "It's amazing," the tellman said, "how you two
gravitate to each other. Go, elfstate," he addressed Prufrax. "You're
on the wrong greenroad."
She never saw the young
researcher again. With glover training under way, the itches he aroused soon
faded, and Zap resumed its overplace.
The Senexi had ways of knowing
humans were near. As information came in about fleets and individual cruisers
less than one percent nebula diameter distant, the seedship seemed warmer, less
hospitable. Everything was UV with anxiety, and the new branch ind on the wall
had to be shielded by a special silicate cup to prevent distortion. The brood
mind grew a corniculum automatically, though the toughened outer membrane would
be of little help if the seedship was breached.
Aryz had buried his personal
confusion under a load of work. He had penetrated the human memory store deeply
enough to find instructions on its use. It called itself a mandate and
even the simple preliminary directions were difficult for Aryz. It was like
swimming in another family's private sea, though of course infinitely more
alien; how could he connect with experiences never had, problems and needs
never encountered by his kind?
He observed the new branch ind
once or twice each watch period. Never before had he seen an induced
replacement. The normal process was for two brood minds to exchange plasm and
form new team buds, then to exchange and nurture the buds. The buds were later
cast free to swim as individual larvae. While the larvae swam through the
liquid and gas atmosphere of a Senexi world often for thousands, even tens of
thousands of kilometers, inevitably they returned to gather with the other buds
of their team. Replacements were selected from a separately created pool of
"generic" buds only if one or more originals had been destroyed
during their wanderings. The destruction of a complete team meant reproductive
failure.
In a mature team, only when a
branch ind was destroyed did the brood mind induce a replacement. In essence,
then, Aryz was already considered dead.
Yet he was still useful. That
amused him, if the Senexi emotion could be called amusement. Restricting
himself from his fellows was difficult, but he filled the time by immersing
himself, through the interface, in the mandate.
The humans were also connected
with the mandate through their surrogate parent, and in this manner they were
quiescent.
He reported infrequently to
the broodmind. Until he had established communication, there was little to
report.
And throughout his turmoil,
like the others he could sense a fight was coming. It could determine the
success or failure of all their work in the nebula. In the grand scheme,
failure here might not be crucial. But the Senexi had taken the long view too
often in the past.
And he knew himself well
enough to doubt he would fail. He could feel an affinity for the humans
already. Peering at them through the thick glass wall in their isolated
chamber, his skin paling at the thought of their heat, their poisonous chemistry.
A diseased affinity. He hated himself for it. And reveled in it. It was what
made him particularly useful to the team. If he was defective, and this was the
only way he could serve, then so be it.
The other branch inds observed
his passings from a distance, making no judgments. Aryz was dead, though he
worked and moved. His sacrifice had been fearful. Yet he would not be a hero.
His kind could never be emulated.
It was a horrible time, a
horrible conflict.
She floated in language, learned
it in a trice; there were no distractions. She floated in history and picked up
as much as she could, for the source seemed inexhaustible. She tried to
distinguish between eyes-open—the barren, pale gray-brown chamber with the
thick green wall, beyond which floated a murky roundness—and eyes-shut, when
she dropped back into language and history with no fixed foundation.
Eyes-open, she saw the Mam
with its comforting limbs and its soft voice, its tubes and extrusions of food
and its hissings and removal of waste. Through Mam's wires she learned. Mam
also tended another like herself, and another unlike either of them, more like
the shape beyond the green wall.
She was very young, and it was
all a mystery.
At least she knew her name.
And what she was supposed to do. She took small comfort in that.
They fitted Prufrax with her
gloves, and she went into the practice chamber, dragged by her gloves almost,
for she hadn't yet knitted the plug-in nerves in her right index digit and her
pace control was uncertain.
There, for six wakes straight,
she flew with the other glovers back and forth across the dark spaces like
elfstate comets. Constellations and nebula aspects flashed at random on the
distant walls, and she oriented to them like a night-flying bird. Her
glovemates were Ornin, an especially slender male, and Ban, a red-haired
female, and the special-projects sisters Ya, Trice, and Damu, new from the
breeding division.
When she let the gloves have
their way, she was freer than she had ever felt before. Control was somewhere
uncentered, behind her eyes and beyond her fingers, as if she were drawn on a
beautiful silver wire where it was best to go. Doing what was best to do. She
barely saw the field that flowed from the grip of the thick, solid gloves or
felt its caressing, life-sustaining influence. Truly, she hardly saw or felt
anything but situations, targets, opportunities, the success or failure of the
Zap. Failure was an acute pain. She was never reprimanded for failure; the
reprimand was in her blood, and she felt as if she wanted to die. But then the
opportunity would improve, the Zap would succeed, and everything around
her—stars, Senexi seedship, the Mellangee, everything—seemed part of a
beautiful dream all her own.
She was intense in the Mocks.
Their initial practice over,
the entry play began.
One by one, the
special-projects sisters took their hyperbolic formation. Their glove fields
threw out extensions, and they combined force. In they went, the mock Senexi
seedship brilliant red and white and UV and radio and hateful before them.
Their tails swept through the seedship's outer shields and swirled like long
silky hair laid on water; they absorbed fantastic energies, grew bright like
violent little stars against the seedship outline. They were engaged in the
drawing of the shields, and sure as topology, the spirals of force had to have
a dimple on the opposite side that would iris wide enough to let in glovers.
The sisters twisted the forces and Prufrax could see the dimple stretching out
under them.
The exercise ended. The
elfstate glovers were cast into sudden dark. Prufrax came out of the mock
unprepared, her mind still bent on the Zap. The lack of orientation drove her
as mad as a moth suddenly flipped from night to day. She careened until gently
mitted and Channeled. She flowed down a tube, the field slowly neutralizing,
and came to a halt still gloved, her body jerking and tingling.
"What the breed
happened?" she screamed, her hands beginning to hurt.
"Energy conserve," a
mechanical voice answered, Behind Prufrax the other elfstate glovers lined up
in the catch tube, all but the special-projects sisters. Ya, Trice, and Damu
had been taken out of the exercise early and replaced by simulations. There was
no way their functions could be mocked. They entered the tube ungloved and
helped their comrades adjust to the overness of the real.
As they left the mock chamber,
another batch of glovers, even younger and fresher in elfstate, passed them. Ya
held her hands up, and they saluted in return. "Breed more every
day," Prufrax grumbled. She worried about having so many crew she'd never
be able to conduct a satisfactory Zap herself. Where would the honor of being a
glover go if everyone was a glover?
She wriggled into her cramped
bunk, feeling exhilarated and irritated. She replayed the mocks and added in
the missing Zap, then stared gloomily at her small narrow feet.
Out there the Senexi waited.
Perhaps they were in the same state as she—ready to fight, testy at being
reined in. She pondered her ignorance, her inability to judge whether such
things were even possible among the enemy. She thought of the researcher,
Clevo. "Blank," she murmured. "Blank, blank." Such thoughts
were unnecessary, and humanizing Senexi was unworthy of a glover.
Aryz looked at the instrument,
stretched a pod into it, and willed. Vocal human language came out the other
end, thin and squeaky in the helium atmosphere. The sound disgusted and
thrilled him. He removed the instrument from the gelatinous strands of the
engineering wall and pushed it into his interior through a stretched permeum.
He took a thick draft of ammonia and slid to the human-shapes chamber again.
He pushed through the narrow
port into the observation room. Adjusting his eyes to the heat and bright light
beyond the transparent wall, he saw the round mutated shape first—the result of
their unsuccessful experiments. He swung his sphere around and looked at the
others.
For a time he couldn't decide
which was uglier—the mutated shape or the normals. Then he thought of what it
would be like to have humans tamper with Senexi and try to make them into human
forms. . . . He looked at the round human and shrank as if from sudden heat.
Aryz had had nothing to do with the experiments. For that, at least, he was
grateful.
Aryz placed the tip of the
vocalizer against a sound-transmitting plate and spoke.
"Hello," came the
sound within the chamber. The mutated shape looked up. It lay on the floor,
great bloated stomach backed by four almost useless pods. It usually made
high-pitched sounds continuously. Now it stopped and listened, straining on the
tube that connected it to the breed-supervising device.
"Hello," replied the
male. It sat on a ledge across the chamber, having unhooked itself.
The machine that served as
surrogate parent and instructor stood in one corner, an awkward parody of a
human, with limbs too long and head too small. Aryz could see the unwillingness
of the designing engineers to examine human anatomy too closely.
"I am called—" Aryz
said, his name emerging as a meaningless stretch of white noise. He would have
to do better than that. He compressed and adapted the frequencies. "I am
called Aryz."
"Hello," the young
female said.
"What are your
names?" He knew them well enough, having listened many times to their
conversations.
"Prufrax," the
female said. "I'm a glover."
The human shapes contained
very little genetic memory. As a kind of brood marker, Aryz supposed, they had
been equipped with their name, occupation, and the rudiments of environmental
knowledge.
"I'm a teacher,
Prufrax," Aryz said.
"I don't understand
you," the female replied.
"You teach me, I teach
you."
"We have the Mam,"
the male said, pointing to the machine. "She teaches us." The Mam, as
they called it, was hooked into the mandate.
"Do you know where you
are?" Aryz asked.
"Where we live,"
Prufrax said. "Eyes-open."
"Don't talk to it,"
the male said. "Mam talks to us," Aryz consulted the mandate for some
understanding of the name they had given to the breed-supervising machine. Mam,
it explained, was probably a natural expression for womb-carrying parent. Aryz
severed the machine's power.
"Mam is no longer
functional," he said. He would have the engineering wall put together
another less identifiable machine to link them to the mandate and to their
nutrition. He wanted them to associate comfort and completeness with nothing
but himself.
The machine slumped, and the
female shape pulled herself free of the hookup. She started to cry, a reaction
quite mysterious to Aryz. His link with the mandate had not been intimate
enough to answer questions about the wailing and moisture from the eyes. After
a time the male and female lay down and became dormant.
The mutated shape made more
soft sounds and tried to approach the transparent wall. It held up its thin
arms as if beseeching. The others would have nothing to do with it; now it
wished to go with him. Perhaps the biologists had partially succeeded in their
attempt at transformation; perhaps it was more Senexi than human.
Aryz quickly backed out
through the port, into the cool and security of the corridor beyond.
It was an endless orbital
dance, this detection and matching of course, moving away and swinging back,
deceiving and revealing, between the Mellangee and the Senexi seedship.
Filled with her skill and
knowledge, Prufrax waited, feeling like a ripe fruit about to fall from the
tree. At this point in their training, just before the application, elfstates
were most receptive. She was allowed to take a lover, and they were assigned
small separate quarters near the outer greenroads.
The contact was satisfactory,
as far as it went. Her mate was an older glover named Kumnax, and as they lay
back in the cubicle, soothed by air-dance fibs, he told her stories about past
battles, special tactics, how to survive.
"Survive?" she
asked, puzzled.
"Of course." His
long brown face was intent on the view of the greenroads through the cubicle's
small window.
"I don't
understand," she said.
"Most glovers don't make
it," he said patiently.
"I will."
He turned to her. "You're
six," he said. "You're very young. I'm ten. I've seen. You're about
to be applied for the first time, you're full of confidence. But most glovers
won't make it. They breed thousands of us. We're expendable. We're based on the
best glovers of the past but even the best don't survive."
"I will," Prufrax
repeated, her jaw set.
"You always say
that," he murmured.
Prufrax stared at him for a
moment.
"Last time I knew
you," he said, "you kept saying that. And here you are, fresh
again."
"What last time?"
"Master Kumnax," a
mechanical voice interrupted.
He stood, looking down at her.
"We glovers always have big mouths. They don't like us knowing, but once
we know, what can they do about it?"
"You are in
violation," the voice said. "Please report to S." "But now,
if you last, you'll know more than the tellman tells."
"I don't
understand," Prufrax said slowly, precisely, looking him straight in the
eye.
"I've paid my debt,"
Kumnax said. "We glovers stick. Now I'm going to go get my
punishment." He left the cubicle. Prufrax didn't see him again before her
first application.
The seedship buried itself in
a heating protostar, raising shields against the infalling ice and stone. The
nebula had congealed out of a particularly rich cluster of exploded fourth-and
fifth-generation stars, thick with planets, the detritus of which now fell on
Aryz's ship like hail.
Aryz had never been so
isolated. No other branch ind addressed him; he never even saw them now. He
made his reports to the brood mind, but even there the reception was warmer and
warmer, until he could barely endure to communicate. Consequently—and he
realized this was part of the plan —he came closer to his charges, the human
shapes.
The brood mind was interested
in one question: how successfully could they be planted aboard a human ship?
Would they be accepted until they could carry out their sabotage, or would they
be detected? Already Senexi instructions were being coded into their teachings.
"I think they will be
accepted in the confusion of an engagement," Aryz answered. He had long
since guessed the general outlines of the brood mind's plans. Communication
with the human shapes was for one purpose only, to use them as decoys,
insurgents. They were weapons. Knowledge of human activity and behavior was not
an end in itself; seeing what was happening to him, Aryz fully understood why
the brood mind wanted such study to proceed no further.
He would lose them soon, he
thought, and his work would be over. He would be much too human-tainted. He
would end, and his replacement would start a new existence, very little
different from Aryz's—but, he reasoned, adjusted. The replacement would not
have Aryz's peculiarity.
He approached his last meeting
with the brood mind, preparing himself for his final work, for the ending. In
the cold liquid-filled chamber, the great red-and-white sac waited, the center
of his team, his existence. He adored it. There was no way he could criticize
its action.
Yet--
"We are being
sought," the brood mind radiated. "Are the shapes ready?"
"Yes," Aryz said.
"The new teaching is firm. They believe they are fully human." And,
except for the new teaching, they were. "They defy sometimes." He
said nothing about the mutated shape. It would not be used. If they won this
encounter, it would probably be placed with Aryz's body in a fusion torch for
complete purging.
"Then prepare them,"
the brood mind said. "They will be delivered to the vector for positioning
and transfer."
Darkness and waiting. Prufrax
nested in her delivery tube like a freshly chambered round. Through her gloves
she caught distant communications murmurs that resembled voices down hollow
pipes. The Mellangee was coming to full readiness.
Huge as her ship was, Prufrax
knew that it would be dwarfed by the seedship. She could recall some hazy
details about the seedship's structure, but most of that information was stored
securely away from interference by her conscious mind.
More information would be fed
to her just before the launch, but she knew the general procedure. The seedship
was deep in a protostar, hiding behind the distortion of geometry and the
complete hash of electromagnetic energy. The Mellangee would approach, collide
if need be. Penetrate. Release. Find. Zap. Her fingers ached. Sometime before
the launch she would also be fed her final moans—the temaers—and she would be
primed to leave elfstate. She would be a mature glover. She would be a woman.
If she returned
will return.
Her fingers ached worse.
The tempers came, moans tiding
in, then the battle data. As it passed into her subconscious, she caught a
flash of
Rocks and ice, a thick cloud
of dust and gas glowing red but seeming dark, no stars, no constellation guides
this time. The beacon came on. That would be her only way to orient once the
gloves stopped inertial and locked onto the target.
The seedship
was like
a shadow within a shadow
twenty-two kilometers across,
yet
carrying
only six
teams
LAUNCH she flies!
Data: The Mellangee has buried herself in
the seedship, plowed deep into the interior like a carnivore's muzzle looking
for vitals
Instruction a swarm of seeks is dashing through the
seed-ship, looking for the brood minds, for the brood chambers, for branch
inds. The glovers will follow.
Prufrax sees herself clearly
now. She is the great avenging comet, bringer of omen and doom, like a knife
moving through the glass and ice and thin, cold helium as if they weren't
there, the chambered round fired and tearing at hundreds of kilometers an hour
through the Senexi vessel, following the seeks.
The seedship cannot withdraw
into higher geometries now. It is pinned by the Mellangee. It is hers.
Information floods her,
pleases her immensely. She swoops down orange-and-gray corridors, buffeting
against the walls like a ricocheting bullet. Almost immediately she comes
across a branch ind, sliding through the ammonia film against the outrushing
wind, trying to reach an armored cubicle. Her first Zap is too easy, not
satisfying, nothing like what she thought. In her wake the branch ind becomes
scattered globules of plasma. She plunges deeper.
Aryz delivers his human
charges to the vectors that will launch them. They are equipped with
simulations of the human weapons, their hands encased in the hideous gray
gloves.
The seedship is in deadly
peril; the battle has almost been lost at one stroke. The seedship cannot
remain whole. It must self-destruct, taking the human ship with it, leaving
only a fragment with as many teams as can escape.
The vectors launch the human
shapes. Aryz tries to determine which part of the ship will be elected to
survive; he must not be there. His job is over, and he must die.
The glovers fan out through
the seedship's central hollow, demolishing the great cold drive engines,
bypassing the shielded fusion flare and the reprocessing plant, destroying
machinery built before their Earth was formed.
The special-projects sisters
take the lead. Suddenly they are confused. They have found a brood mind, but it
is not heavily protected. They surround it, prepare for the Zap--
It is sacrificing itself,
drawing them into an easy kill and away from another portion of the seedship.
Power is concentrating elsewhere. Sensing that, they kill quickly and move on.
Aryz's brood mind prepares for
escape. It begins to wrap itself in flux bind as it moves through the ship
toward the frozen fragment. Already three of its five branch inds are dead; it
can feel other brood minds dying. Aryz's bud replacement has been killed as
well.
Following Aryz's training, the
human shapes rush into corridors away from the main action. The
special-projects sisters encounter the decoy male, allow it to fly with them
... until it aims its weapons. One Zap almost takes out Trice. The others fire
on the shape immediately. He goes to his death weeping, confused from the very
moment of his launch.
The fragment in which the
brood mind will take refuge encompasses the chamber where the humans had been
nurtured, where the mandate is still stored. All the other brood minds are
dead, Aryz realizes; the humans have swept down on them so quickly. What shall
he do?
Somewhere, far off, he feels
the distressed pulse of another branch ind dying. He probes the remains of the
seedship. He is the last. He cannot dissipate now; he must ensure the brood
mind's survival.
Prufrax, darting through the
crumbling seedship, searching for more opportunities, comes across an injured
glover. She calls for a mediseek and pushes on.
The brood mind settles into
the fragment. Its support system is damaged; it is entering the time-isolated
state, the flux bind, more rapidly than it should. The seals of foamed electric
ice cannot quite close off the fragment before Ya, Trice, and Damu slip in.
They frantically call for bind cutters and preservers; they have instructions
to capture the last brood mind, if possible.
But a trap falls upon Ya, and
snarling fields tear her from her gloves. She is flung down a dark
distintegrating shaft, red cracks opening all around as the seedship's
integrity fails. She trails silver dust and freezes, hits a barricade,
shatters.
The ice seals continue to
close. Trice is caught between them and pushes out frantically, blundering into
the region of the intensifying flux bind. Her gloves break into hard bits, and
she is melded into an ice wall like an insect trapped on the surface of a
winter lake.
Damu sees that the brood mind
is entering the final phase of flux bind. After that they will not be able to
touch it. She begins a desperate Zap.
and is too late.
Aryz directs the subsidiary
energy of the flux against her. Her Zap deflects from the bind region, she is
caught in an interference pattern and vibrates until her tiniest particles stop
their knotted whirlpool spins and she simply becomes space and searing light.
The brood mind, however, has
been damaged. It is losing information from one portion of its anatomy.
Desperate for storage, it looks for places to hold the information before the
flux bind's last wave.
Aryz directs an interface onto
the brood mind's surface. The silvery pools of time binding flicker around them
both. The brood mind's damaged sections transfer their data into the last
available storage device—the human mandate.
Now it contains both human and
Senexi information.
The silvery pools unite, and Aryz
backs away. No longer can he sense the brood mind. It is out of reach but not
yet safe. He must propel the fragment from the remains of the seedship. Then he
must wrap the fragment in its own flux bind, cocoon it in physics to protect it
from the last ravages of the humans.
Aryz carefully navigates his
way through the few remaining corridors. The helium atmosphere has almost
completely dissipated, even there. He strains to remember all the procedures.
Soon the seedship will explode, destroying the human ship. By then they must be
gone.
Angry red, Prufrax follows his
barely sensed form, watching him behind barricades of ice, approaching the
moment of a most satisfying Zap. She gives her gloves their way and finds a
shape behind her, wearing gloves that are not gloves, not like her own, but
capable of grasping her in tensed fields, blocking the Zap, dragging them
together. The fragment separates, heat pours in from the protostar cloud. They
are swirled in their vortex of power, twin locked comets—one red, one sullen
gray.
"Who are you?"
Prufrax screams as they close in on each other in the fields. Their
environments meld. They grapple. In the confusion, the darkening, they are
drawn out of the cloud with the fragment, and she sees the other's face.
Her own.
The seedship self-destructs.
The fragment is propelled from the protostar, above the plane of what will
become planets in their orbits, away from the crippled and dying Mellangee.
Desperate, Prufrax uses all
her strength to drill into the fragment. Helium blows past them, and bits of
dead branch inds.
Aryz catches the pair
immediately in the shapes chamber, rearranging the fragment's structure to
enclose them with the mutant shape and mandate. For the moment he has time
enough to concentrate on them. They are dangerous. They are almost equal to
each other, but his shape is weakening faster than the true glover. They float,
bouncing from wall to wall in the chamber, forcing the mutant to crawl into a
corner and howl with fear.
There may be value in saving
the one and capturing the other. Involved as they are, the two can be carefully
dissected from their fields and induced into a crude kind of sleep before the
glover has a chance to free her weapons. He can dispose of the gloves—fake and
real—and hook them both to the Mam, reattach the mutant shape as well. Perhaps
something can be learned from the failure of the experiment.
The dissection and capture
occur faster than the planning. His movement slows under the spreading flux
bind. His last action, after attaching the humans to the Mam, is to make sure
the brood mind's flux bind is properly nested within that of the ship.
The fragment drops into
simpler geometries.
It is as if they never
existed.
The battle was over. There
were no victors. Aryz became aware of the passage of time, shook away the
sluggishness, and crawled through painfully dry corridors to set the environmental
equipment going again. Throughout the fragment, machines struggled back to
activity.
How many generations? The
constellations were unrecognizable. He made star traces and found familiar
spectra and types, but advanced in age. There had been a malfunction in the
overall flux bind. He couldn't find the nebula where the battle had occurred.
In its place were comfortably middle-aged stars surrounded by young planets.
Aryz came down from the
makeshift observatory. He slid through the fragment, established the limits of
his new home, and found the solid mirror surface of the brood mind's cocoon. It
was still locked in flux bind, and he knew of no way to free it. In time the
bind would probably wear off—but that might require life spans. The seedship
was gone. They had lost the brood chamber, and with it the stock.
He was the last branch ind of
his team. Not that it mattered now; there was nothing he could initiate without
a brood mind. If the flux bind was permanent, then he might as well be dead.
He closed his thoughts around
him and was almost completely submerged when he sensed an alarm from the
shapes chamber. The interface with the mandate had turned itself off; the new
version of the Mam was malfunctioning. He tried to repair the equipment, but
without the engineer's wall he was almost helpless. The best he could do was
rig a temporary nutrition supply through the old human-form Mam. When he was
done, he looked at the captive and the two shapes, then at the legless, armless
Mam that served as their link to the interface and life itself.
She had spent her whole life
in a room barely eight by ten meters, and not much taller than her own height.
With her had been Grayd and the silent round creature whose name—if it had
any—they had never learned. For a time there had been Mam, then another kind of
Mam not nearly as satisfactory. She was hardly aware that her entire existence
had been miserable, cramped, in one way or another incomplete.
Separated from them by a
transparent partition, another round shape had periodically made itself known
by voice or gesture.
Grayd had kept her sane. They
had engaged in conspiracy. Removing themselves from the interface—what she
called "eyes-shut"—they had held onto each other, tried to make sense
out of what they knew instinctively, what was fed them through the interface,
and what the being beyond the partition told them.
First, they knew their names,
and they knew that they were glovers. They knew that glovers were fighters.
When Aryz passed instruction through the interface on how to fight, they had
accepted it eagerly but uneasily. It didn't seem to jibe with instructions
locked deep within their instincts.
Five years under such
conditions had made her introspective. She expected nothing, sought little
beyond experience in the eyes-shut. Eyes-open with Grayd seemed scarcely more
than a dream. They usually managed to ignore the peculiar round creature in the
chamber with them; it spent nearly all its time hooked to the mandate and the
Mam.
Of one thing only was she
completely sure. Her name was Prufrax. She said it in eyes-open and eyes-shut,
her only certainty.
Not long before the battle,
she had been in a condition resembling dreamless sleep, like a robot being
given instructions. The part of Prufrax that had taken on personality during
eyes-shut and eyes-open for five years had been superseded by the fight instructions
Aryz had programmed. She had flown as glovers must fly (though the gloves
didn't seem quite right).
She had fought, grappling (she
thought), with herself, but who could be certain of anything?
She had long since decided
that reality was not to be sought too avidly. After the battle she fell back
into the mandate—into eyes-shut—all too willingly.
But a change had come to
eyes-shut, too. Before the battle, the information had been selected. Now she
could wander through the mandate at will. She seemed to smell the new
information, completely unfamiliar, like a whiff of ocean. She hardly knew
where to begin. She stumbled across:
—that all vessels carry one,
no matter what their size or class, just as every individual carries the map of
a species. The mandate shall contain all the information of our kind,
including accurate, and uncensored history, for if we have learned anything, it
is that censored and untrue accounts distort the eyes of the leaders. Unders
are told lies. Leaders must seek and be provided with accounts as accurate as
possible, or we will be weakened and fall.
What wonderful dreams the
leaders must have had. And they possessed some intrinsic gift called truth,
through the use of the mandate. Prufrax could hardly believe that. As she made
her tentative explorations through the new fields of eyes-shut, she began to
link the word mandate with what she experienced. That was where she was.
And she was alone. Once, she
had explored with Grayd. Now there was no sign of Grayd.
She learned quickly. Soon she
walked along a beach on Earth, then a beach on a world called Myriadne, and
other beaches, fading in and out. By running through the entries rapidly, she
came up with a blurred eidos and so learned what a beach was in the abstract.
It was a boundary between one kind of eyes-shut and another, between water and
land, neither of which had any corollary in eyes-open.
Some beaches had sand. Some
had clouds—the eidos of clouds was quite attractive. And one had herself
running scared, screaming.
She called out, but the figure
vanished. Prufrax stood on a beach under a greenish-yellow star, on a world
called Kyrene, feeling lonelier than ever.
She explored further, hoping
to find Grayd, if not the figure that looked like herself. Grayd wouldn't flee
from her. Grayd would…
The round thing confronted
her, its helpless limbs twitching. Now it was her turn to run, terrified.
Never before had she met the round creature in eyes-shut. It was mobile; it had
a purpose. Over land, clouds, trees, rocks, wind, air, equations, and an edge
of physics she fled. The farther she went, the more distant from the round one
with hands and small head, the less afraid she was.
She never found Grayd.
The memory of the battle was
fresh and painful. She remembered the ache of her hands, clumsily removed from
the gloves. Her environment had collapsed and been replaced by something
indistinct. Prufrax had fallen into a deep slumber and had dreamed.
The dreams were totally
unfamiliar to her. If there was a left-turning in her arc of sleep, she dreamed
of philosophies and languages and other things she couldn't relate to. A
right-turning led to histories and sciences so incomprehensible as to be
nightmares.
It was a most unpleasant
sleep, and she was not at all sorry to find she wasn't really asleep.
The crucial moment came when
she discovered how to slow her turnings and the changes of dream subject. She
entered a pleasant place of which she had no knowledge but which did not seem
threatening. There was a vast expanse of water, but it didn't terrify her. She
couldn't even identify it as water until she scooped up a handful. Beyond the
water was a floor of shifting particles. Above both was an open expanse, not
black but obviously space, drawing her eyes into intense pale blue-green. And
there was that figure she had encountered in the seedship. Herself. The figure
pursued. She fled.
Right over the boundary into
Senexi information. She knew then that what she was seeing couldn't possibly
come from within herself. She was receiving data from another source. Perhaps
she had been taken captive. It was possible she was now being forcibly
debriefed. The tellman had discussed such possibilities, but none of the
glovers had been taught how to defend themselves in specific situations.
Instead it had been stated—in terms that brooked no second thought—that
self-destruction was the only answer. So she tried to kill herself.
She sat in the freezing cold
of a red-and-white room, her feet meeting but not touching a fluid covering on
the floor. The information didn't fit her senses; it seemed blurred,
inappropriate. Unlike the other data, this didn't allow participation or
motion. Everything was locked solid.
She couldn't find an effective
means of killing herself. She resolved to close her eyes and simply will
herself into dissolution. But closing her eyes only moved her into a deeper or
shallower level of deception—other categories, subjects, visions. She couldn't
sleep, wasn't tired, couldn't die.
Like a leaf on a stream, she
drifted. Her thoughts untangled, and she imagined herself floating on the
water called ocean. She kept her eyes open. It was quite by accident that she
encountered:
Instruction. Welcome to the
introductory use of the mandate. As a noncombat processor, your duties are to
maintain and, if necessary, protect or destroy the mandate. The mandate is your
immediate over. If it requires maintenance, you will oblige. Once linked with
the mandate, as you are now, you may explore any aspect of the information by
requesting delivery. To request delivery, indicate the core of your subject
Prufrax! she shouted silently.
What is Prufrax?
A voice with different tone
immediately took over.
Ah, now that's quite a story.
I was her biographer, the organizer of her life tapes (ref. GEORGE MACKNAX),
AND KNEW HER WELL IN THE LAST YEARS OF HER LIFE. SHE WAS BORN IN THE FERMENT
26468. HERE ARE SELECTED LIFE TAPES. CHOOSE EMPHASIS. ANALYSES FOLLOW.
Hey! Who are you? There's
someone here with me... .
—Shh! Listen. Look at her. Who
is she? They looked, listened to the information.
—Why, she's me ... sort of.
She's us.
She stood two and a half
meters tall. Her hair was black and thick, though cut short; her limbs well
muscled though drawn out by the training and hormonal treatments. She was seventeen
years old, one of the few birds born in the solar system, and for the time
being she had a chip on her shoulder. Everywhere she went, the birds asked
about her mother, Jayax. "You better than her?"
Of course not! Who could be?
But she was good; the instructors said so. She was just about through
training, and whether she graduated to hawk or remained bird she would do her
job well. Asking Prufrax about her mother was likely to make her set her mouth
tight and glare.
On Mercior, the Grounds took
up four thousand hectares and had its own port. The Grounds was divided into
Land, Space, and Thought, and training in each area was mandatory for fledges,
those birds embarking on hawk training. Prufrax was fledge three. She had
passed Land—though she loathed downbound fighting—and was two years into Space.
The tough part, everyone said, was not passing Space, but lasting through four
years of Thought after the action in nearorbit and planetary.
Since she had been a little
girl, no more than five--Five! Five what?
and had seen her mother's
ships and fightsuits and fibs, she had known she would never be happy until she
had ventured far out and put a seedship in her sights, had convinced a Senexi
of the overness of end‑-
The Zap! She's talking the
Zap!
—What's that?
—You're me, you should know.
—I'm not you, and we're not
her.
The Zap, said the mandate, and
the data shifted.
"Tomorrow you receive
your first implants. These will allow you to coordinate with the zero-angle phase
engines and find your targets much more rapidly than you ever could with simple
biologic. Are there any questions?"
"Yes, sir." Prufrax
stood at the top of the spherical classroom, causing the hawk instructor to
swivel his platform. "I'm having problems with the zero-angle phase maths.
Reduction of the momenta of the real."
Other fledge threes piped up
that they, too, had had trouble with those maths. The hawk instructor sighed.
"We don't want to install cheaters in all of you. It's bad enough needing
implants to supplement biologic. Individual learning is much more desirable.
Do you request cheaters?" That was a challenge. They all responded
negatively, but Prufrax had a secret smile. She knew the subject. She just took
delight in having the maths explained again. She could reinforce an already
thorough understanding. Others not so well versed would benefit. She wasn't
wasting time. She was in the pleasure of her weapon—the weapon she would be
using against the Senexi.
"Zero-angle phase is the
temporary reduction of the momenta of the real." Equations and plexes
appeared before each student as the instructor went on. "Nested unreals
can conflict if a barrier is placed between the participator princip and the
assumption of the real. The effectiveness of the participator can be determined
by a convenience model we call the angle of phase. Zero-angle phase is achieved
by an opaque probability field according to modified Fourier of the separation
of real waves. This can also be caused by the reflection of the beam —an
effective counter to zero-angle phase, since the beam is always compoundable
and the compound is always time-reversed. Here are the true gedanks—"
—Zero-angle phase. She's
learning the Zap.
—She hates them a lot, doesn't
she?
—The Senexi? They're Senexi.
—I think ... eyes-open is the
world of the Senexi. What does that mean?
—That we're prisoners. You
were caught before me. —Oh.
The news came as she was in
recovery from the implant. Seedships had violated human space again, dropping
cuckoos on thirty-five worlds. The worlds had been young colonies, and the
cuckoos had wiped out all life, then tried to reseed with Senexi forms. The
overs had reacted by sterilizing the planets' surfaces. No victory, loss to
both sides. It was as if the Senexi were so malevolent they didn't care about
success, only about destruction.
She hated them. She could
imagine nothing worse.
Prufrax was twenty-three. In a
year she would be qualified to hawk on a cruiser/raider. She would demonstrate
her hatred.
Aryz felt himself slipping
into endthought, the mind set that always preceded a branch find's
self-destruction. What was there for him to do? The fragment had survived, but
atwhat cost, to what purpose? Nothing had been accomplished. The nebula had
been lost, or he supposed it had. He would likely never know the actual
outcome.
He felt a vague irritation at
the lack of a spectrum of responses. Without a purpose, a branch find was
nothing more than excess plasm.
He looked in on the captive
and the shapes, all hooked to the mandate, and wondered what he would do with
them. How would humans react to the situation he was in? More vigorously,
probably. They would fight on. They always had. Even without leaders, with no
discernible purpose, even in defeat. What gave them such stamina? Were they
superior, more deserving? If they were better, then was it right for the Senexi
to oppose their triumph?
Aryz drew himself tall and
rigid with confusion. He had studied them too long. They had truly infected
him. But here at least was a hint of purpose. A question needed to be answered.
He made preparations. There
were signs the brood mind's flux bind was not permanent, was in fact unwinding
quite rapidly. When it emerged, Aryz would present it with a judgment, an
answer.
He realized, none too clearly,
that by Senexi standards he was now a raving lunatic.
He would hook himself into the
mandate, improve the somewhat isolating interface he had used previously to
search for selected answers. He, the captive, and the shapes would be immersed
in human history together. They would be like young suckling on a Population I
mother-animal—just the opposite of the Senexi process, where young fed
nourishment and information into the brood mind.
The mandate would nourish, or
poison. Or both.
—Did she love?
—What—you mean, did she
receive?
—No, did she—we—I—give?
—I don't know what you mean.
—I wonder if she would know
what I mean... .
Love, said the mandate, and
the data proceeded.
Prufrax was twenty-nine. She
had been assigned to a cruiser in a new program where superior but untested
fighters were put into thick action with no preliminary.
The Cruiser was a million-ton
raider, with a hawk contingent of fifty-three and eighty regular crew. She
would be used in a secondwave attack, following the initial hardfought.
She was scared. That was good;
fright improved basic biologic, if properly managed. The cruiser would make a
raid into Senexi space and retaliate for past cuckoo-seeding programs. They
would come up against thornships and seedships, probably.
The fighting was going to be
fierce.
The raider made its final
denial of the overness of the real and pipsqueezed into an arduous, nasty
sponge space. It drew itself together again and emerged far above the galactic
plane.
Prufrax sat in the hawks
wardroom and looked at the simulated rotating snowball of stars. Red-coded
numerals flashed along the borders of known Senexi territory, signifying where
they had first come to power when the terrestrial sun had been a mist-wrapped
youngster. A green arrow showed the position of the raider.
She drank sponge-space
supplements with the others but felt isolated because of her firstness, her
fear. Everyone seemed so calm. Most were fours or fives—on their fourth or
fifth battle call. There were ten ones and an upper scatter of experienced
hawks with nine to twenty-five battles behind them. There were no thirties.
Thirties were rare in combat; the few that survived so many engagements were
plucked off active and retired to PR service under the polinstructors. They
often ended up in fibs, acting poorly, looking unhappy.
Still, when she had been more
naive, Prufrax's heron had been a man-and-woman thirty team she had watched in
fib after fib—Kumnax and Arol..They had been better actors than most.
Day in, day out, they drilled
in their fightsuits. While the crew bustled, hawks were put through implant
learning, what slang was already calling the Know, as opposed to the Tell, of
classroom teaching. Getting background, just enough to tickle her curiosity, not
enough to stimulate morbid interest.
—There it is again. Feel?
—I know it. Yes. The round
one, part of eyes-open .. .
—Senexi?—No, brother without
name.
—Your . . . brother?
—No . . . I don't know.
Still, there were items of
information she had never received before, items privileged only to the
fighters, to assist them in their work. Older hawks talked about the past, when
data had been freely available. Stories circulated in the wardroom about the
Senexi, and she managed to piece together something of their origins and
growth.
Senexi worlds, according to a
twenty, had originally been large, cold masses of gas circling bright young
suns nearly metal-free. Their gas-giant planets had orbited the suns at
hundreds of millions of kilometers and had been dusted by the shrouds of
neighboring dead stars; the essential elements carbon, nitrogen, silicon, and
fluorine had gathered in sufficient quantities on some of the planets to allow
Population II biology.
In cold ammonia seas, lipids
had combined in complex chains. A primal kind of life had arisen and
flourished. Across millions of years, early Senexi forms had evolved. Compared
with evolution on Earth, the process at first had moved quite rapidly. The mechanisms
of procreation and evolution had been complex in action, simple in chemistry.
There had been no competition
between life forms of different genetic bases. On Earth, much time had been
spent selecting between the plethora of possible ways to pass on genetic
knowledge.
And among the early Senexi,
outside of predation there had been no death. Death had come about much later,
self-imposed for social reasons. Huge colonies of protoplasmic individuals
had gradually resolved into the team-forms now familiar.
Soon information was
transferred through the budding of branch inds; cultures quickly developed to
protect the integrity of larvae, to allow them to regroup and form a new brood
mind. Technologies had been limited to the rare heavy materials available, but
the Senexi had expanded for a time with very little technology. They were well
adapted to their environment, with few predators and no need to hunt,
absorbing stray nutrients from the atmosphere and from layers of liquid
ammonia. With perceptions attuned to the radio and microwave frequencies, they
had before long turned groups of branch inds into radio telescope chains,
piercing the heavy atmosphere and probing the universe in great detail,
especially the very active center of the young galaxy. Huge jets of matter,
streaming from other galaxies and emitting high-energy radiation, had provided
laboratories for their vicarious observations. Physics was a primitive science
to them.
Since little or no knowledge
was lost in breeding cycles, cultural growth was rapid at times; since the dead
weight of knowledge was often heavy, cultural growth often slowed to a crawl.
Using water as a building
material, developing techniques that humans still understood imperfectly, they
prepared for travel away from their birthworlds.
Prufrax wondered, as she
listened to the older hawks, how humans had come to know all this. Had Senexi
been captured and questioned? Was it all theory? Did anyone really know—anyone
she could ask?
—She's weak.
—Why weak?
—Some knowledge is best for
glovers to ignore. Some questions are best left to the supreme overs.
—Have you thought that in
here, you can answer her questions, our questions?
—No. No. Learn about
me—us—first.
In the hour before engagement,
Prufrax tried to find a place alone. On the raider, this wasn't difficult. The
ship's size was overwhelming for the number of hawks and crew aboard. There
were many areas where she could put on an environs and walk or drift in
silence, surrounded by the dark shapes of equipment wrapped in plexerv.
She pulled herself through the
cold Gless tunnels, feeling slightly awed by the loneness, the quiet. One
tunnel angled outboard, toward the hull of the cruiser. She hesitated, peering
into its length with her environs beacon, when a beep warned her she was near
another crew member. She was startled to think someone else might be as curious
as she. She scooted expertly up the tunnel, spreading her arms and tucking her
legs as she would in a fightsuit.
The tunnel was filled with a
faint milky green mist, absorbing her environs beam. It couldn't be much more
than a couple of hundred meters long, however, and it was quite straight. The
signal beeped louder.
Ahead she could make out a
dismantled weapons blister. That explained the fog: a plexery aerosol diffused
in the low pressure. Sitting in the blister was a man, his environs glowing a
pale violet. He had deopaqued a section of the blister and was staring out at
the stars. He swiveled as she approached and looked her over dispassionately.
He seemed to be a hawk—he had fightform, tall, thin with brown hair above
hull-white skin, large eyes with pupils so dark she might have been looking
through his head into space beyond.
"Under," she said as
their environs met and merged.
"Over. What are you doing
here?"
"I was about to ask you
the same."
"You should be getting
ready for the fight," he admonished.
"I am. I need to be alone
for a while."
"Yes." He turned
back to the stars. "I used to do that, too." "You don't fight
now?"
He shook his head.
"Retired. I'm a researcher."
She tried not to look
impressed. Crossing rates was almost impossible. A bitalent was unusual in the
service.
"What kind of
research?" she asked.
"I'm here to correlate
enemy finds."
"Won't find much of anything,
after we've done with the zero phase."
It would have been polite for
him to say, "Power to that," or offer some other encouragement. He
said nothing. "Why would you want to research them?"
"To fight an enemy
properly, you have to know what they are. Ignorance is defeat."
"You research
tactics?"
"Not exactly."
"What, then?"
"You'll be in tough
hardfought this wake. Make you a proposition. You fight well, observe, come to
me, and tell me what you see. Then I'll answer your questions."
"Brief you before my
immediate overs?"
"I have the
authority," he said. No one had ever lied to her; she didn't even suspect
he would. "You're eager?"
"Very."
"You'll be doing
what?"
"Engaging Senexi
fighters, then hunting down branch inds and brood minds."
"How many fighters going
in?"
"Twelve."
"Big target, eh?"
She nodded.
"While you're there, ask
yourself—what are they fighting for? Understand?"
"Ask, what are they
fighting for. Just that. Then come back to me."
"What's your name?"
"Not important," he
said. "Now go."
She returned to the prep
center as the sponge-space warning tones began. Overhawks went among the
fighters in the lineup, checking gear and giveaway body points for mental
orientation. Prufrax submitted to the molded sensor mask being slipped over her
face. "Ready!" the overhawk said. "Hardfought!" He clapped
her on the shoulder. "Good luck."
"Thank you, sir."
She bent down and slid into her fightsuit. Along the launch line, eleven other
hawks did the same. The overs and other crew left the chamber, and twelve red
beams delineated the launch tube. The fightsuits automatically lifted and
aligned on their individual beams. Fields swirled around them like silvery
tissue in moving water, then settled and hardened into cold-scintillating
walls, pulsing as the launch energy built up.
The tactic came to her. The
ship's sensors became part of her information net. She saw the Senexi
thornship—twelve kilometers in diameter, cuckoos lacing its outer hull like maggots
on red fruit, snakes waiting to,take them on.
She was terrified and
exultant, so worked up that her body temperature was climbing. The fightsuit
adjusted her balance.
At the count of ten and nine,
she switched from biologic to cyber. The implant—after absorbing much of her
thought processes for weeks—became Prufrax.
For a time there seemed to be
two of her. Biologic continued, and in that region she could even relax a bit,
as if watching a fib.
With almost dreamlike
slowness, in the electronic time ofcyber, her fightsuit followed the beam. She
saw the stars and oriented herself to the cruiser's beacon, using both for
reference, plunging in the sword-flower formation to assault the thornship.
The cuckoos retreated in the vast red hull like worms withdrawing into an
apple. Then hundreds of tiny black pinpoints appeared in the quadrant closest
to the sword flower.
Snakes shot out, each piloted
by a Senexi branch ind. "Hardfought!" she told herself in biologic
before that portion gave over completely to cyber.
—Why were we flung out of dark
through ice and fire, a shower of sparks? a puzzle;
—Perhaps to build hell.
—We strike here, there;
—Set brief glows, fall through
and cross round again.
—By our dimming, we see what Beatitude
we have. In the circle, kindling together, we form an exhausted Empyrean. We feel
the rush of igniting winds but still grow dull and wan.
—New rage flames, new light,
dropping like sun through muddy ice and night and fall
—Close, spinning blue and
bright.
—In time they, too, Tire.
Redden.
—We join, compare pasts cool
in huddled paths, turn gray.
—And again.
—We are a companion flow of
ash, in the slurry, out and down.
—We sleep.
—Rivers form above and below.
Above, iron snakes twist, clang and slice, chime, helium eyes watching, seeing
Snowflake hawks, signaling adamant muscles and energy teeth. What hunger
compels our venom spit?
—It flies, strikes the crystal
flight, making mist gray-green with ammonia rain.
—Sleeping we glide, and to
each side unseen shores wait with the moans of an unseen tide.
—She wrote that. We. One of
her—our—poems. —Poem?
—A kind of fib, I think.
—I don't see what it says.
—Sure you do! She's talking
hardfought.
—Do you understand it?
—Not at all .. .
She lay back in the bunk, legs
crossed, eyes closed, feeling the receding dominance of the implant—the
overness of cyber—and the almost pleasant ache in her back. She had survived
her first. The thornship had retired, severely damaged, its surface seared and
scored so heavily it would never release cuckoos again.
It would become a hulk, a
decoy. Out of action. Satisfaction/out of action/Satisfaction ...
Still, with eight of the
twelve fighters lost, she didn't quitefeel the exuberance of the rhyme. The
snakes had fought very well. Bravely, she might say. They lured, sacrificed,
cooperated, demonstrating teamwork as fine as that in her own group. Strategy
was what made the cruiser's raid successful. A superior approach, an excellent
tactic. And perhaps even surprise, though the final analysis hadn't been posted
yet.
Without those advantages, they
might have all died.
She opened her eyes and stared
at the pattern of blinking lights in the ceiling panel, lights with their
secret codes that repeated every second, so that whenever she looked at them,
the implant deep inside was debriefed, reinstructed. Only when she fought would
she know what she was now seeing.
She returned to the tunnel as
quickly as she was able. She floated up toward the blister and found him there,
surrounded by packs of information from the last hardfought. She waited until
he turned his attention to her.
"Well?" he said.
"I asked myself what they
are fighting for. And I'm very angry."
"Why?"
"Because I don't know. I
can't know. They're Senexi." "Did they fight well?"
"We lost eight.
Eight." She cleared her throat.
"Did they fight
well?" he repeated, an edge to his voice. "Better than I was ever
told they could."
"Did they die?"
"Enough of them."
"How many did you
kill?"
"I don't know." But
she did. Eight.
"You killed eight,"
he said, pointing to the packs. "I'm analyzing the battle now."
"You're behind what we
read, what gets posted?" she asked.
"Partly," he said.
"You're a good hawk."
"I knew I would be,"
she said, her tone quiet, simple. "Since they fought bravely—"
"How can Senexi be
brave?" she asked sharply.
"Since," he
repeated, "they fought bravely, why?" "They want to live, to do
their . . . work. Just like me." "No," he said. She was
confused, moving between extremes in her mind, first resisting, then giving in
too much. "They're Senexi. They're not like us."
"What's your name?"
she asked, dodging the issue. "Clevo."
Her glory hadn't even begun
yet, and already she was well into her fall.
Aryz made his connection and
felt the brood mind's emergency cache of knowledge in the mandate grow up
around him like ice crystals on glass. He stood in a static scene. The
transition from living memory to human machine memory had resulted in either a
coding of data or a reduction of detail; either way, the memory was cold, not
dynamic. It would have to be compared, recorrelated, if that would ever be
possible.
How much human data had had to
be dumped to make space for this?
He cautiously advanced into
the human memory, calling up topics almost at random.
He backed away from
sociological data, trying to remain within physics and mathematics. There he
could make conversions to fit his understanding without too much strain.
Then something unexpected
happened. He felt the brush of another mind, a gentle inquiry from a source
made even stranger by the hint of familiarity. It made what passed for a Senexi
greeting, but not in the proper form, using what one branch ind of a team would
radiate to a fellow; a gross breach, since it was obviously not from his team or
even from his family. Aryz tried to withdraw. How was it possible for minds to
meet in the mandate? As he retreated, he pushed into a broad region of
incomprehensible data. It had none of the characteristics of the other human
regions he had examined.
—This is for machines, the
other said. —Not all cultural data are limited to biologic. You are in the area
where programs and cyber designs are stored. They are really accessible only to
a machine hooked into the mandate.
—What is your family? Aryz
asked, the first step-question in the sequence Senexi used for urgent identity
requests.
—I have no family. I am not a
branch ind. No access to active brood minds. I have learned from the mandate.
—Then what are you?
—I don't know, exactly. Not
unlike you.
It was the mind of the mutated
shape, the one that had remained in the chamber, beseeching when he approached
the transparent barrier.
—I must go now, the shape
said. Aryz was alone again in the incomprehensible jumble. He moved slowly,
carefully, into the Senexi sector, calling up subjects familiar to him. If he
could encounter one shape, doubtless he could encounter the others—perhaps even
the captive.
The idea was dreadful—and
fascinating. So far as he knew, such intimacy between Senexi and human had
never happened before. Yet there was something very Senexi-like in the method,
as if branch inds attached to the brood mind were to brush mentalities while
searching in the ageless memories.
The dread subsided. There was
little worse that could happen to him, with his fellows dead, his brood mind in
flux bind, his purpose uncertain.
What Aryz was feeling, for the
first time, was a small measure of freedom.
The story of the original
Prufrax continued.
In the early stages she
visited Clevo with a barely concealed anger. His method was aggravating, his
goals never precisely spelled out. What did he want with her, if anything?
And she with him? Their
meetings were clandestine, though not precisely forbidden. She was a hawk one
now with considerable personal liberty between exercises and engagements.
There were no monitors in the closed-off reaches of the cruiser, and they could
do whatever they wished. The two met in areas close to the ship's hull, usually
in weapons blisters that could be opened to reveal the stars; there they
talked.
Prufrax was not accustomed to
prolonged conversation. Hawks were neither raised to be voluble, nor selected
for their curiosity. Yet the exhawk Clevo talked a great deal and was the most
curious person she had met, herself included, and she regarded herself as
uncharacteristically curious.
Often he was infuriating,
especially when he played the "leading game," as she called it.
Leading her from one question to the next, like an instructor, but without the
trappings or any clarity of purpose. "What do you think of your
mother?"
"Does that matter?"
"Not to me."
"Then why ask?"
"Because you
matter."
Prufrax shrugged. "She
was a fine mother. She bore me with a well-chosen heritage. She raised me as a
hawk candidate. She told me her stories."
"Any hawk I know would
envy you for listening at Jayax's knee."
"I was hardly at her
knee."
"A speech tactic."
"Yes, well, she was
important to me."
"She was a preferred
single?"
"Yes."
"So you have no
father?"
"She selected without
reference to individuals."
"Then you are really not
that much different from a Senexi."
She bristled and started to
push away. "There! You insult me again."
"Not at all. I've been
asking one question all this time, and you haven't even heard. How well do you
know the enemy?"
"Well enough to destroy
them." She couldn't believe that was the only question he'd been asking.
His speech tactics were very odd.
"Yes, to win battles,
perhaps. But who will win the war?"
"It'll be a long
war," she said softly, floating a few meters from him. He rotated in the
blister, blocking out a blurred string of stars. The cruiser was preparing to
shift out of status geometry again. "They fight well."
"They fight with
conviction. Do you believe them to be evil?"
"They destroy us."
"We destroy them."
"So the question,"
she said, smiling at her cleverness, "is who began to destroy?"
"Not at all," Clevo
said. "I suspect there's no longer a clear answer to that. We are the new,
they are the old. The old must be superseded."
"That's the only way
we're different? They're old, we're not so old? I don't understand."
"Nor do I,
entirely.""Well, finally!"
"The Senexi," Clevo
continued, unperturbed, "long ago needed only gas-giant planets like their
homeworlds. They lived in peace for billions of years before our world was
formed. But as they moved from star to star, they learned uses for other types
of worlds. We were most interested in rocky Earth-like planets. Gradually we
found uses for gas giants, too. By the time we met, each of us encroached on
the other's territory. Their technology is so improbable, so unlike ours, that
when we first encountered them we thought they must come from another
geometry."
"Where did you learn all
this?" Prufrax squinted at him suspiciously.
"I'm no longer a
hawk," he said, "but I was too valuable just to discard. My
experience was too broad, my abilities too useful. So I was placed in research.
It seems a safe place for me. Little contact with my comrades." He looked
directly at her. "We must try to know our enemy, at least a little."
"That's dangerous,"
Prufrax said, almost instinctively.
"Yes, it is. What you
know, you cannot hate."
"We must hate," she
said. "It makes us strong. Senexi hate."
"They might," he
said. "But, sometime, wouldn't you like to . . . sit down and talk with
one, after a battle? Talk with a fighter? Learn its tactic, how it bested you
in one move, compare—"
"No!" Prufrax
shoved off rapidly down the tube. "We're shifting now. We have to get
ready."
—She's smart. She's leaving
him. He's crazy.
—Why do you think that?
—He would stop the fight, end
the Zap.
—But he was a hawk.
—And hawks became glovers, I
guess. But glovers go wrong, too. Like you.
—Did you know they used you?
How you were used? —That's all blurred now.
—She's doomed if she stays around
him. Who's that? –Someone is listening with us.
The next battle was bad enough
to fall into the hellfought. Prufrax was in her fightsuit, legs drawn up as if
about to kick off. The cruiser exited sponge space and plunged into combat
before sponge space supplements could reach full effectiveness. She was dizzy,
disoriented. The overhawks could only hope that a switch from biologic to cyber
would cure the problem.
She didn't know what they were
attacking. Tactic was flooding the implant, but she was only receiving the wash
of that; she hadn't merged yet. She sensed that things were confused. That
bothered her. Overs did not feel confusion.
The cruiser was taking damage.
She could sense at least that, and she wanted to scream in frustration. Then
she was ordered to merge with the implant. Biologic became cyber. She was in
the Know.
The cruiser had reintegrated
above a gas-giant planet. They were seventy-nine thousand kilometers from the
upper atmosphere. The damage had come from ice mines—chunks of Senexi-treated
water ice, altered to stay in sponge space until a human vessel integrated near
by. Then they emerged, packed with momentum and all the residual instability of
an unsuccessful return to status geometry. Unsuccessful for a ship, that
is—very successful for a weapon.
The ice mines had given up the
overness of the real within range of the cruiser and had blasted out whole
sections of the hull. The launch lanes had not been damaged. The fighters lined
up on their beams and were peppered out into space, spreading in the famous
sword flower.
The planet was a cold nest.
Over didn't know what the atmosphere contained, but Senexi activity had been
high in the star system, concentrating on this world. Over had decided to take
a chance. Fighters headed for the atmosphere. The cruiser began planting
singularity eggs. The eggs went ahead of the fighters, great black grainy
ovoids that seemed to leave a trail of shadow—the wake of a birthing disruption
in status geometry that could turn a gas giant into a short-lived sun.
Their time was limited. The
fighters would group on entry sleds and descend to the liquid water regions
where Senexi commonly kept their upwelling power plants. The fighters would
first destroy any plants, loop into the liquid ammoniaregions to search for
hidden cuckoos, then see what was so important about the world.
She and five other fighters
mounted the sled. Growing closer, the hazy clear regions of the atmosphere
sparked with Senexi sensors. Spiderweb beams shot from the six sleds to down the
sensors. Buffet began. Scream, heat, then a second flower from the sled at a
depth of two hundred kilometers. The sled slowed and held station. It would be
their only way back. The fightsuits couldn't pull out of such a large gravity
well.
She descended deeper. The
pale, bloated beacon of the red star was drooping below the second cloudtops,
limning the strata in orange and purple. At the liquid ammonia level she was
instructed to key in permanent memory of all she was seeing. She wasn't
"seeing" much, but other sensors were recording a great deal, all of
it duly processed in her implant. "There's life here," she told
herself. Indigenous life. Just another example of Senexi disregard for basic
decency: they were interfering with a world developing its own complex biology.
The temperature rose to
ammonia vapor levels, then to liquid water. The pressure on the fightsuit was
enormous, and she was draining her stores much more rapidly than expected. At
this level the atmosphere was particularly thick with organics.
Senexi snakes rose from below,
passed them in altitude, then doubled back to engage. Prufrax was designated
the deep diver; the others from her sled would stay at this level in her
defense. As she fell, another sled group moved in behind her to double the
cover.
She searched for the
characteristic radiation curve of an upwelling plant. At the lower boundary of
the liquid water level, below which her suit could not safely descend, she
found it.
The Senexi were tapping the
gas giant's convection from greater depths than usual. Above the plant, almost
indetectable, was another object with an uncharacteristic curve. They were
separated by ten kilometers. The power plant was feeding its higher companion
with tight energy beams.
She slowed. Two other fighters,
disengaged from the brief skirmish above, took positions as backups a few dozen
kilometers higher than she. Her implant searched for an appropriate tactic.
She would avoid the zero-angle phase for the moment, go in for reconnaissance.
She could feel sound pouring from the plant and its companion—rhythmic, not
waste noise, but deliberate. And homing in on that sound were waves of large
vermiform organisms, like chains of gas-filled sausage. They were dozens of
meters long, two meters at their greatest thickness, shaped vaguely like the
Senexi snake fighters. The vermiforms were native, and they were being lured
into the uppermost floating structure. None were merging. Her backups spread
apart, descended, and drew up along her flanks.
She made her decision almost
immediately. She could see a pattern in the approach of the natives. If she
fell into the pattern, she might be able to enter the structure unnoticed.
—It's a grinder. She doesn't
recognize it.
What's a grinder?
She should make the Zap! It's
an ugly thing; Senexi use them all the time. Net a planet with grinders, like a
cuckoo, but for larger operations.
The creatures were being
passed through separator fields. Their organics fell from the bottom of the
construct, raw material for new growth—Senexi growth. Their heavier elements
were stored for later harvest.
With Prufrax in their midst,
the vermiforms flew into the separator. The interior was hundreds of meters
wide, lead-white walls with flat gray machinery floating in a dust haze, full
of hollow noise, the distant bleats of vermiforms being slaughtered. Prufrax
tried to retreat, but she was caught in a selector field. Her suit bucked and
she was whirled violently, then thrown into a repository for examination. She
had been screened from the separator; her plan to record, then destroy, the
structure had been foiled by an automatic filter.
"Information
sufficient." Command logic programmed into the implant before launch was
now taking over. "Zero-angle phase both plant and adjunct." She was
drifting in the repository, still slightly stunned. Something was fading.
Cyber was hissing in and out; the over logic-commands were being scrambled. Her
implant was malfunctioning and was returning control to biologic. The selector
fields had played havoc with all cyber functions, down to the processors in her
weapons.
Cautiously she examined the
down systems one by one, determining what she could and could not do. This took
as much as thirty seconds—an astronomical time on the implant's scale.
She still could use the phase
weapon. If she was judicious and didn't waste her power, she could cut her way
out of the repository, maneuver and work with her escorts to destroy both the
plant and the separator. By the time they returned to the sleds, her implant
might have rerouted itself and made sufficient repairs to handle defense. She
had no way of knowing what was waiting for her if—when—she escaped, but that
was the least of her concerns for the moment.
She tightened the setting of
the phase beam and swung her fightsuit around, knocking a cluster of junk ice
and silty phosphorescent dust. She activated the beam. When she had a hole
large enough to pass through, she edged the suit forward, beamed through more
walls and obstacles, and kicked herself out of the repository into free fall.
She swiveled and laid down a pattern of wide-angle beams, at the same time
relaying a message on her situation to the escorts.
The escorts were not in sight.
The separator was beginning to break up, spraying debris through the almost
opaque atmosphere. The rhythmic sound ceased, and the crowds of vermiforms
began to disperse.
She stopped her fall and
thrust herself several kilometers higher—directly into a formation of Senexi
snakes. She had barely enough power to reach the sled, much less fight and turn
her beams on the upwelling plant.
Her cyber was still down.
The sled signal was weak. She
had no time to calculate its direction from the inertial guidance cyber.
Besides, all cyber was unreliable after passing through the separator.
Why do they fight so well?
Clevo's question clogged her thoughts. Cursing, she tried to blank and keep all
her faculties available for running the fightsuit. When evenly matched, you
cannot win against your enemies unless you understand them. And if you truly
understand, why are you fighting and not talking? Clevo had never told her
that—not in so many words. But it was part of a string of logic all her own.
Be more than an automaton with
a narrow range of choices. Never underestimate the enemy. Those were old
Grounds dicta, not entirely
lost in the new training, but only emphasized by Clevo.
If they fight as well as you,
perhaps in some ways they fight-think like you do. Use that.
Isolated, with her power
draining rapidly, she had no choice. They might disregard her if she posed no
danger. She cut her thrust and went into a diving spin. Clearly she was on her
way to a high-pressure grave. They would sense her power levels, perhaps even
pick up the lack of field activity if she let her shields drop. She dropped the
shields. If they let her fall and didn't try to complete the kill—if they
concentrated on active fighters above—she had enough power to drop into the
water vapor regions, far below the plant, and silently ride a thermal into
range. With luck, she could get close enough to lay a web of zero-angle phase
and take out the plant.
She had minutes in which to
agonize over her plan. Falling, buffeted by winds that could knock her
kilometers out of range, she spun like a vagrant flake of snow.
She couldn't even expend the
energy to learn if they were scanning her, checking out her potential.
Perhaps she underestimated
them. Perhaps they would be that much more thorough and take her out just to be
sure. Perhaps they had unwritten rules of conduct like the ones she was using,
taking hunches into account. Hunches were discouraged in Grounds training—much
less reliable than cyber.
She fell. Temperature
increased. Pressure on her suit began to constrict her air supply. She used
fighter trancing to cut back on her breathing.
Fell.
And broke the trance. Pushed
through the dense smoke of exhaustion. Planned the beam web. Counted her
reserves. Nudged into an updraft beneath the plant. The thermal earned her, a
silent piece of paper in a storm, drifting back and forth beneath the
objective. The huge field intakes pulsed above, lightning outlining their
invisible extension. She held back on the beam.
Nearly faded out. Her suit
interior was almost unbearably hot.
She was only vaguely aware of
laying down the pattern. The beams vanished in the murk. The thermal pushed her
through a layer of haze, and she saw the plant, riding highabove clear atmosphere
turbulence. The zero-angle phase had pushed through the field intakes, into
their source nodes and the plant body, surrounding it with bright blue
Tcherenkov. First, the surface began to break up, then the middle layers, and
finally key supports. Chunks vibrated away with the internal fury of their
molecular, then atomic, then particle disruption. Paraphrasing Grounds
description of beam action, the plant became less and less convinced of its
reality. "Matter dreams," an instructor had said a decade before.
"Dreams it is real, maintains the dream by shifting rules with constant results.
Disturb the dreams, the shifting of the rules results in inconstant results.
Things cannot hold."
She slid away from the
updraft, found another, wondered idly how far she would be lifted. Curiosity at
the last. Let's just see, she told herself; a final experiment.
Now she was cold. The implant
was flickering, showing signs of reorganization. She didn't use it. No sense
expanding the amount of time until death. No sense at all.
The sled, maneuvered by one
remaining fighter, glided up beneath her almost unnoticed.
Aryz waited in the stillness
of a Senexi memory, his thinking temporarily reduced to a faint susurrus. What
he waited for was not clear.
Come.
The form of address was wrong,
but he recognized the voice. His thoughts stirred, and he followed the nebulous
presence out of Senexi territory.
—Know your enemy.
Prufrax . . . the name of one
of the human shapes sent out against their own kind. He could sense her
presence in the mandate, locked into a memory store. He touched on the store
and caught the essentials—the grinder, the updraft plant, the fight from
Prufrax's viewpoint.
Know how your enemy knows you.
He sensed a second presence,
similar to that of Prufax. It took him some time to realize that the human
captive was another form of the shape, a reproduction of the .. .
Both were reproductions of the
female whose image was in the memory store. Aryz was not impressed by
threes—Senexi
mysticism, what had ever
existed of it, had been preoccupied with fives and sixes—but the coincidence
was striking. —Know how your enemy sees you.
He saw the grinder processing
organics—the vermiform natives—in preparation for a widespread seeding of
deuterium gatherers. The operation had evidently been conducted for some time;
the vermiform populations were greatly reduced from their usual numbers.
Vermiforms were a common type-species on gas giants of the sort depicted. The
mutated shape nudged him into a particular channel of the memory, that which
carried the original Prufrax's emotions. She had reacted with disgust to the Senexi
procedure. It was a reaction not unlike what Aryz might feel when coming across
something forbidden in Senexi behaviour. Yet eradication was perfectly
natural, analogous to the human cleansing of food before eating.
—It's in the memory. The
vermiforms are intelligent. They have their own kind of civilization. Human
action on this world prevented their complete extinction by the Senexi.
—So what matter they were
intelligent? Aryz responded. They did not behave or think like Senexi, or like
any species Senexi find compatible. They were therefore not desirable. Like
humans.
—You would make humans
extinct?
—We would protect ourselves
from them.
—Who damages the other most?
Aryz didn't respond. The line
of questioning was incomprehensible. Instead he flowed into the memory of
Prufrax, propelled by another aspect of complete freedom, confusion.
The implant was replaced.
Prufrax's damaged limbs and skin were repaired or regenerated quickly, and
within four wakes, under intense treatment usually reserved only for overs, she
regained all her reflexes and speed. She requested liberty of the cruiser while
it returned for repairs. Her request was granted.
She first sought Clevo in the
designated research area. He wasn't there, but a message was, passed on to her
by a smiling young crew member. She read it quickly:
"You're free and out of
action. Study for a while, thencome find me. The old place hasn't been damaged.
It's less private, but still good. Study! I've marked highlights."
She frowned at the message,
then handed it to the crew member, who duly erased it and returned to his
duties. She wanted to talk with Clevo, not study.
But she followed his
instructions. She searched out high-lighted entries in the ship's memory store.
It was not nearly as dull as she had expected. In fact, by following the
highlights, she felt she was learning more about Clevo and about the questions
he asked.
Old literature was not nearly
as graphic as fibs, but it was different enough to involve her for a time. She
tried to create imitations of what she read but erased them. Nonfib stories
were harder than she suspected. She read about punishment, duty; she read about
places called heaven and hell, from a writer who had died tens of thousands of
years before. With ed supplement guidance, she was able to comprehend most of
what she read. Plugging the store into her implant, she was able to absorb
hundreds of volumes in an hour.
Some of the stores were losing
definition. They hadn't been used in decades, perhaps centuries.
Halfway through, she grew
impatient. She left the research area. Operating on another hunch, she didn't
go to the blister as directed, but straight to memory central, two decks
inboard the research area. She saw Clevo there, plugged into a data pillar,
deep in some aspect of ship history. He noticed her approach, unplugged, and
swiveled on his chair. "Congratulations," he said,
smiling at her.
"Hardfought," she
acknowledged, smiling.
"Better than that,
perhaps," he said.
She looked at him quizzically.
"What do you mean, better?"
"I've been doing some
illicit tapping on over channels." "So?"
—He is dangerous!
"For what?"
"You may have a valuable
genetic assortment. Overs think you behaved remarkably well under impossible
conditions." "Did I?"
He nodded. "Your type may
be preserved."
"Which means?"
"There's a program being
planned. They want to take the best fighters and reproduce them—clone them—to
make uniform top-grade squadrons. It was rumored in my time—you haven't
heard?"
She shook her head.
"It's not new. It's been
done, off and on, for tens of thousands of years. This time they believe they
can make it work."
"You were a fighter,
once," she said. "Did they preserve your type?"
Clevo nodded. "I had
something that interested them, but not, I think, as a fighter."
Prufrax looked down at her
stubby-fingered hands. "It was grim," she said. "You know what
we found?"
"An extermination
plant."
"You want me to
understand them better. Well, I can't. I refuse. How could they do such
things?" She looked disgusted and answered her own question. "Because
they're Senexi."
"Humans," Clevo
said, "have done much the same, sometimes worse."
"No!"
—No!
"Yes," he said
firmly. He sighed. "We've wiped Senexi
worlds, and we've even wiped
worlds with intelligent species
like our own. Nobody is
innocent. Not in this universe." "We were never taught that."
"It wouldn't have made
you a better hawk. But it might make a better human of you to know. Greater
depth of character. Do you want to be more aware?"
"You mean, study
more?"
He nodded.
"What makes you think you
can teach me?"
"Because you thought
about what I asked you. About how Senexi thought. And you survived where some
other hawk might not have. The overs think it's in your genes. It might be. But
it's also in your head."
"Why not tell the
overs?"
"I have," he said.
He shrugged.
"They wouldn't want me to
learn from you?"
"I don't know,"
Clevo said. "I suppose they're aware you're talking to me. They could stop
it if they wanted." "And if I learn from you?"
"Not from me, actually.
From the past. From history, what other people have thought. I'm really not any
more capable than you . . . but I know history, small portions of it. I won't
teach you so much as guide."
"I did use your
questions," Prufrax said. "But will I ever need to use them—think
that way—again?"
Clevo nodded. "Of
course."
You're quiet.
—She's giving in to him.
She gave in a long time ago.
—She should be afraid.
—Were you—we—ever really
afraid of a challenge?
No.
—Not Senexi, not forbidden
knowledge.
Clevo first led her through
the history of past wars, judging that was appropriate considering her
occupation. She was attentive enough, though her mind wandered; sometimes he
was didactic, but she found she didn't mind that much.
She saw that in all wars, the
first stage was to dehumanize the enemy, reduce the enemy to a lower level so
that he might be killed without compunction. When the enemy was not human to
begin with, the task was easier. As wars progressed, this tactic frequently led
to an underestimation of the enemy, with disastrous consequences. "We
aren't exactly underestimating the Senexi," Clevo said. "The overs
are too smart for that. But we refuse to understand them, and that could make
the war last indefinitely."
"Then why don't the overs
see that?"
"Because we're being
locked into a pattern. We've been fighting for so long, we've begun to lose
ourselves. And itN getting worse." He assumed his didactic tone, and she
knew he was reciting something he'd formulated years before and repeated to
himself a thousand times. "There is no war so important that, to win it,
we must destroy our minds."
She didn't agree with that;
losing the war with the Senexi would mean extinction, as she understood things.
Most often they met in the
single unused weapons blister that had not been damaged. They met when the ship
was basking in the real between sponge-space jaunts. He brought memory stores
with him in portable modules, and they read, listened, experienced together.
She never placed a great deal of importance in the things she learned; her
interest was focused on Clevo. Still, she learned.
The rest of her time she spent
training. She was aware of a growing isolation from the hawks, which she
attributed to her uncertain rank status. Was her genotype going to be preserved
or not? The decision hadn't been made. The more she learned, the less she
wanted to be singled out for honor. Attracting that sort of attention might be
dangerous, she thought. Dangerous to whom, or what, she could not say.
Clevo showed her how hero
images had been used to indoctrinate birds and hawks in a standard of behavior
that was ideal, not realistic. The results were not always good; some tragic
blunders had been made by fighters trying to be more than anyone possibly could
or refusing to be flexible.
The war was certainly not a
fib. Yet more and more the overs seemed to be treating it as one. Unable to
bring about strategic victories against the Senexi, the overs had settled in
for a long war of attrition and were apparently bent on adapting all human
societies to the effort.
"There are overs we never
hear of, who make decisions that shape our entire lives. Soon they'll determine
whether or not we're even born, if they don't already."
"That sounds
paranoid," she said, trying out a new word and concept she had only
recently learned.
"Maybe so."
"Besides, it's been like
that for ages—not knowing all our overs."
"But it's getting
worse," Clevo said. He showed her the projections he had made. In time, if
trends continued unchanged, fighters and all other combatants would be treated
more and more mechanically, until they became the machines the overs wished
them to be.
—No.
—Quiet. How does he feel
toward her?
It was inevitable that as she
learned under his tutelage, he began to feel responsible for her changes. She
was an excellent fighter. He could never be sure that what he was doing might
reduce her effectiveness. And yet he had fought well—despite similar
changes—until his billet switch. It had been the overs who had decided he would
be more effective, less disruptive, elsewhere.
Bitterness over that decision
was part of his motive. The overs had done a foolish thing, putting a fighter
into research. Fighters were tenacious. If the truth were to be hidden, then
fighters would be the ones likely to ferret it out. And pass it on. There was a
code among fighters, seldom revealed to their immediate overs, much less to the
supreme overs parsecs distant in their strategospheres. What one fighter
learned that could be of help to another had to be passed on, even under
penalty. Clevo was simply following that unwritten rule.
Passing on the fact that, at
one time, things had been different. That war changed people, governments,
societies, and that societies could effect an enormous change on their constituents,
especially now—change in their lives, their thinking. Things could become even
more structured. Freedom of fight was a drug, an illusion‑
No! used to perpetuate a state
of hatred.
"Then why do they keep
all the data in stores?" she asked. "I mean, you study the data,
everything becomes obvious."
"There are still
important people who think we may want to find our way back someday. They're
afraid we'll lose our roots, but—" His face suddenly became peaceful. She
reached out to touch him, and he jerked slightly, turning toward her in the
blister. "What is it?" she asked.
"It's not organized.
We're going to lose the information. Ship overs are going to restrict access
more and more. Eventually it'll decay, like some already has in these stores.
I've been planning for some time to put it all in a single unit—"
—He built the mandate!
"and have the overs place
one on every ship, with researchers to tend it. Formalize the loose scheme
still in effect, but dying. Right now I'm working on the fringes. At least I'm
allowed to work. But soon I'll have enough evidence that they won't be able to
argue. Evidence of what happens to societies that try to obscure their histories.
They go quite mad. The overs are still rational enough to listen; maybe I'll
push it through." He looked out the transparent blister. The stars were
smudging to one side as the cruiser began probing for entrances to sponge
space. "We'd better get back."
"Where are you going to
be when we return? We'll all be transferred."
"That's some time
removed. Why do you want to know?" "I'd like to learn more."
He smiled. "That's not
your only reason."
"I don't need someone to
tell me what my reasons are," she said testily.
"We're so
reluctant," he said. She looked at him sharply, irritated and puzzled.
"I mean," he continued, "we're hawks. Comrades. Hawks couple
like that." He snapped his fingers. "But you and I sneak around it
all the time."
Prufrax kept her face blank.
"Aren't you receptive toward me?" he
asked, his tone almost teasing.
"It's just that that's
not all," she said, her tone softening. "Indeed," he said in a
barely audible whisper.
In the distance they heard the
alarms.
—It was never any different.
—What?
—Things were never any
different before me.
—Don't be silly. It's all
here.
—If Clevo made the mandate,
then he put it here. It isn't true.
—Why are you upset?
—I don't like hearing that
everything I believe is a . . . fib.
—I've never known the difference,
I suppose. Eyes-open was never all that real to me. This isn't real, you aren't
... this is eyes-shut. So why be upset? You and I . . . we aren't even whole
people. I feel you. You wish the Zap, you fight, not much else. I'm just a
shadow, even compared to you. But she is whole. She loves him. She's less a
victim than either of us. So something has to have changed.
—You're saying things have
gotten worse.
—If the mandate is a lie,
that's all I am. You refuse to accept. I have to accept, or I'm even less than
a shadow. —I don't refuse to accept. It's just hard.
—You started it. You thought
about love.
—You did!
—Do you know what love is?
—Reception.
They first made love in the
weapons blister. It came as no surprise; if anything, they approached it so
cautiously they were clumsy. She had become more and more receptive, and he had
dropped his guard. It had been quick, almost frantic, far from the orchestrated
and drawn-out ballet the hawks prided themselves for. There was no pretense. No
need to play the roles of artists back once more into the past, through the dim
gray millennia of repeating ages. History began to manifest again, differences
in the record.
On the way back to Mercior,
four skirmishes were fought. Prufrax did well in each. She carried something
special with her, a thought she didn't even tell Clevo, and she carried the
same thought with her through their last days at the Grounds.
Taking advantage of hawk
liberty, she opted for a posthardfought residence just outside the Grounds, in
the relatively uncrowded Daughter of Cities zone. She wouldn't be returning to
fight until several issues had been decided—her status most important among them.
Clevo began making his appeal
to the middle overs. He was given Grounds duty to finish his proposals. They
could stay together for the time being.
The residence was sixteen
square meters in area, not elegant—natural, as rentOpts described it.
On the last day she lay in the
crook of Clevo's arm. They had done a few hours of nature sleep. He hadn't come
out yet, and she looked up at his face, reached up with a hand to feel his arm.
It was different from the arms
of others she had been receptive toward. It was unique. The thought amused
her. There had never been a reception like theirs. This was the beginning. And
if both were to be duplicated, this love, this reception, would be repeated an
infinite number of times. Clevo meeting Prufrax, teaching her, opening her
eyes.
Somehow, even though
repetition contributed to the death of history, she was pleased. This was the
secret thought she carried into fight. Each time she would survive, wherever
she was, however many duplications down the line. She would receive Clevo, and
he would teach her. If not now—if one or the other died—then in the future. The
death of history might be a good thing. Love could go on forever.
She had lost even a
rudimentary apprehension of death, even with present pleasure to live for. Her
functions had sharpened. She would please him by doing all the things he
could not. And if he was to
enter that state she frequently found him in, that state of introspection, of
reliving his own battles and of envying her activity, then that wasn't bad. All
they did to each other was good.
—Was good
—Was
She slipped from his arm and
left the narrow sleeping quarter, pushing through the smoke-colored air curtain
to the lounge. Two hawks and an over she had never seen before .were
sitting there. They looked up at her.
"Under," Prufrax
said.
"Over," the woman
returned. She was dressed in tan and green, Grounds colors, not ship.
"May I assist?"
"Yes."
"My duty, then?"
The over beckoned her closer.
"You have been receiving a researcher."
"Yes," Prufrax said.
The meetings could not have been a secret on the ship, and certainly not their
quartering near the Grounds. "Has that been against duty?"
"No." The over eyed
Prufrax sharply, observing her perfected fightform, the easy grace with which
she stood, naked, in the middle of the small compartment. "But a decision
has been reached. Your status is decided now."
She felt a shiver.
"Prufrax," said the
elder hawk. She recognized him from fibs, and his companion: Kumnax and Arol.
Once her heroes. "You have been accorded an honor, just as your partner
has. You have a valuable genetic assortment—"
She barely heard the rest.
They told her she would return to fight, until they deemed she had had enough
experience and background to be brought into the polinstruc division. Then her
fighting would be over. She would serve better as an example, a hero.
Heroes never partnered out of
function. Hawk heroes could not even partner with exhawks.
Clevo emerged from the air
curtain. "Duty," the over said. "The residence is disbanded.
Both of you will have separate quarters, separate duties."
They left. Prufrax held out
her hand, but Clevo didn't take it. "No use," he said.
Suddenly she was filled with
anger. "You'll give it up? Did I expect too much? How strongly?"
"Perhaps even more
strongly than you," he said. "I knew the order was coming down. And
still I didn't leave. That may hurt my chances with the supreme overs."
"Then at least I'm worth
more than your breeding history?" "Now you are history. History the
way they make it." "I feel like I'm dying," she said, amazement
in her voice.
"What is that, Clevo?
What did you do to me?"
"I'm in pain, too,"
he said.
"You're hurt?"
"I'm confused."
"I don't believe
that," she said, her anger rising again. "You knew, and you didn't do
anything?"
"That would have been
counter to duty. We'll be worse off if we fight it."
"So what good is your
great, exalted history?"
"History is what you
have," Clevo said. "I only record." —Why did they separate them?
—I don't know. You didn't like
him, anyway.
—Yes, but now.. .
—I don't understand.
—We don't. Look what happens
to her. They took what was best out of her. Prufrax went into battle eighteen
more times before dying as heroes often do, dying in the midst of what she did
best. The question of what made her better before the separation—for she
definitely was not as fine a fighter after—' has not been settled. Answers fall
into an extinct classification of knowledge, and there are few left to interpret,
none accessible to this device.
—So she went out and fought
and died. They never even made fibs about her. This killed her?
—I don't think so. She fought
well enough. She died like other hawks died.
—And she might have lived
otherwise.
—How can I know that, any more
than you? —They—we—met again, you know. I met a Clevo once, on my ship. They
didn't let me stay with him long.
—How did you react to him?
—There was so little time, I
don't know.
—Let's ask... .
In thousands of duty stations,
it was inevitable that some of Prufrax's visions would come true, that they
should meet now and then. Clevos were numerous, as were Prufraxes. Every ship
carried complements of several of each. Though Prufrax was never quite as
successful as the original, she was a fine type. She‑
—She was never quite as
successful. They took away her edge. They didn't even know it!
—They must have known.
—Then they didn't want to win!
—We don't know that. Maybe
there were more important considerations.
—Yes, like killing history.
Aryz shuddered in his warming
body, dizzy as if about to bud, then regained control. He had been pulled from
the mandate, called to his own duty.
He examined the shapes and the
human captive. There was something different about them. How long had they been
immersed in the mandate? He checked quickly, frantically, before answering the
call. The reconstructed Mam had malfunctioned. None of them had been nourished.
They were thin, pale, cooling.
Even the bloated mutant shape
was dying; lost, like the others, in the mandate.
He turned his attention way.
Everything was confusion. Was he human or Senexi now? Had he fallen so low as
to understand them? He went to the origin of the call, the ruins of the
temporary brood chamber. The corridors were caked with ammonia ice, burning his
pod as he slipped over them. The brood mind had come out of flux bind. The
emergency support systems hadn't worked well; the brood mind was damaged.
"Where have you
been?" it asked.
"I assumed I would not be
needed until your return from the flux bind."
"You have not been
watching!"
"Was there any need? We
are so advanced in time, all our actions are obsolete. The nebula is collapsed,
the issue is decided."
"We do not know that. We
are being pursued."
Aryz turned to the sensor
wall—what was left of it—and saw that they were, indeed, being pursued. He had
been lax.
"It is not your
fault," the brood mind said. "You have been set a task that tainted
you and ruined your function. You will dissipate."
Aryz hesitated. He had become
so different, so tainted, that he actually hesitated at a direct command from
the brood mind. But it was damaged. Without him, without what he had learned,
what could it do? It wasn't reasoning correctly.
"There are facts you must
know, important facts—"
Aryz felt a wave of revulsion,
uncomprehending fear, and something not unlike human anger radiate from the
brood mind. Whatever he had learned and however he had changed, he could not
withstand that wave.
Willingly, and yet against his
will—it didn't matter—he felt himself liquefying. His pod slumped beneath him,
and he fell over, landing on a pool of frozen ammonia. It burned, but he did
not attempt to lift himself. Before he ended, he saw with surprising clarity
what it was to be a branch ind, or a brood mind, or a human. Such a valuable
insight, and it leaked out of his permea and froze on the ammonia.
The brood mind regained what
control it could of the fragment. But there were no defenses worthy of the
name. Calm, preparing for its own dissipation, it waited for the pursuit to
conclude.
The Main set off an alarm. The
interface with the mandate was severed. Weak, barely able to crawl, the humans
looked at each other in horror and slid to opposite corners of the chamber.
They were confused: Which of
them was the captive, which the decoy shape? It didn't seem important. They
were both bone-thin, filthy with their own excrement. They turned with one
motion to stare at the bloated mutant. It sat in its corner, tiny head
incongruous on the huge thorax, tiny arms and legs barely functional even when
healthy. It smiled wanly at them.
"We felt you," one
of the Prufraxes said. "You were with us in there." Her voice was a
soft croak.
"That was my place,"
it replied. "My only place." "What function, what name?"
"I'm ... I know that. I'm
a researcher. In there, I knew myself in there."
They squinted at the shape.
The head. Something familiar, even now. "You're a Clevo ..."
There was noise all around
them, cutting off the shape's weak words. As they watched, their chamber was
sectioned like an orange, and the wedges peeled open. The illumination ceased.
Cold enveloped them.
A naked human female,
surrounded by tiny versions of herself, like an angel circled by fairy kin,
floated into the chamber. She was thin as a snake. She wore nothing but silver
rings on her wrists and a thin torque around her waist. She glowed blue-green
in the dark.
The two Prufraxes moved their
lips weakly but made no sound in the near vacuum. Who are you?
She surveyed them without
expression, then held out her arms as if to fly. She wore no gloves, but she
was of their type.
As she had done countless
times before on finding such Senexi experiments—though this seemed older than
most—she lifted one arm higher. The blue-green intensified, spread in waves to
the mangled walls, surrounded the freezing, dying shapes. Perfect, angelic, she
left the debris behind to cast its fitful glow and fade.
They destroyed every portion
of the fragment but one. They left the mandate behind unharmed.
Then they continued, millions
of them thick like mist, working the spaces between the stars, their only
master the overness of the real.
They needed no other masters.
They would never malfunction.
The mandate drifted in the
dark and cold, its memory going on, but its only life the rapidly fading tracks
where minds had once passed through it. The trails writhed briefly, almost as
if alive, but only following the quantum rules ofdiminished energy states.
Briefly, a small memory was illuminated.
Prufrax's last poem explained
the mandate reflexively.
How the fires grow!
Peace passes
All memory lost.
Somehow we always miss that
single door,
Dooming ourselves to circle.
Ashes to stars, lies to souls,
Let's spin 'round the sinks
and holes.
Kill the good, eat the young.
Forever and more
You and I are never done.
The track faded into nothing.
Around the mandate, the universe grew old very quickly.
PRESS
ENTERn
by
John Varley
Press Entern was purchased by Shawna McCarthy and appeared in the May
1984 issue of IAsfm, with an arresting cover by Hisaki Yasuda and interior
illustrations by Laura Lakey. The response to Press Entern was immediate and wildly enthusiastic. Press Entern simply ran away with the awards in its category that year,
sweeping both the Nebula and the Hugo Award, and was picked up by all three SF
"Best of the Year" anthology series. And it remains one of the most
popular stories that IAsfm has ever published.
John Varley appeared on the SF scene in 1975, and by the
end of 1976—in what was a meteoric rise to prominence even for a field known
for meteoric rises—was already being recognized as one of the hottest new
writers of the seventies. His books include the novels Ophiuchi Hotline, Titan,
Wizard and Demon, and the collections The Persistence of Vision, The Barbie
Murders, and Picnic on Nearside. His most recent book is the collection Blue
Champagne. In addition to the awards he earned for Press Enter., he has also
won another Nebula and Hugo for his short fiction.
"This is a recording. Please do not
hang up until-"
I slammed the phone down so
hard it fell onto the floor. Then I stood there, dripping wet and shaking with
anger. Eventually, the phone started to make that buzzing noise they make when
a receiver is off the hook. It's twenty times as loud as any sound a phone can
normally make, and I always wondered why. As though it was such a terrible
disaster: "Emergency! Your telephone is off the hook!!!"
Phone answering machines are
one of the small annoyances of life. Confess, do you really like talking to a
machine? But what had just happened to me was more than a petty irritation. I
had just been called by an automatic dialing machine.
They're fairly new. I'd been
getting about two or three such calls a month. Most of them come from insurance
companies. They give you a two-minute spiel and then a number to call if you
are interested. (I called back, once, to give them a piece of my mind, and was
put on hold, complete with Muzak.) They use lists. I don't know where they get
them.
I went back to the bathroom,
wiped water droplets from the plastic cover of the library book, and carefully
lowered myself back into the water. It was too cool. I ran more hot water and
was just getting my blood pressure back to normal when the phone rang again.
So I sat there through
fifteen rings, trying to ignore it.
Did you ever try to read with
the phone ringing?
On the sixteenth ring I got
up. I dried off, put on a robe, walked slowly and deliberately into the living
room. I stared at the phone for a while.
On the fiftieth ring I picked
it up.
"This is a recording.
Please do not hang up until the message has been completed. This call
originates from the house of your next-door neighbor, Charles Kluge. It will
repeat every ten minutes. Mister Kluge knows he has not been the best of
neighbors, and apologizes in advance for the inconvenience. He requests that
you go immediately to his house. The key is under the mat. Go inside and do
what needs to be done. There will be a reward for your services. Thank
you."
Click. Dial tone.
I'm not a hasty man. Ten
minutes later, when the phone rang again. I was still sitting there thinking it
over. I picked up the receiver and listened carefully.
It was the same message. As
before, it was not Kluge's voice. It was something synthesized, with all the
human warmth of a Speak'n'Spell.
I heard it out again, and
cradled the receiver when it was done.
I thought about calling the
police. Charles Kluge had lived next door to me for ten years. In that time I
may have had a dozen conversations with him, none lasting longer than a minute.
I owed him nothing.
I thought about ignoring it.
I was still thinking about that when the phone rang again. I glanced at my
watch. Ten minutes. I lifted the receiver and put it right back down.
I could disconnect the phone.
It wouldn't change my life radically.
But in the end I got dressed
and went out the front door, turned left, and walked toward Kluge's property.
My neighbor across the
street, Hal Lanier, was out mowing the lawn. He waved to me, and I waved back.
It was about seven in the evening of a wonderful August day. The shadows were
long. There was the smell of cut grass in the air. I've always liked that
smell. About time to cut my own lawn, I thought.
It was a thought Kluge had
never entertained. His lawn was brown and knee-high and choked with weeds.
I rang the bell. When nobody
came I knocked. Then I sighed, looked under the mat, and used the key I found
there to open the door.
"Kluge?" I called
out as I stuck my head in.
I went along the short
hallway, tentatively, as people do when unsure of their welcome. The drapes
were drawn, as always, so it was dark in there, but in what had once been the
living room ten television screens gave more than enough light for me to see
Kluge. He sat in a chair in front of a table, with his face pressed into a
computer keyboard and the side of his head blown away.
Hal Lanier operates a
computer for the L.A.P.D., so I told him what I had found and he called the
police. We waited together for the first car to arrive. Hal kept asking if I'd
touched anything, and I kept telling him no, except for the front door knob.
An ambulance arrived without
the siren. Soon there were police all over, and neighbors standing out in their
yards or talking in front of Kluge's house. Crews from some of the television stations
arrived in time to get pictures of the body, wrapped in a plastic sheet, being
carried out. Men and women came and went. I assumed they were doing all the
standard police things, taking fingerprints, collecting evidence. I would have
gone home, but had been told to stick around.
Finally I was brought in to
see Detective Osborne, who was in charge of the case. I was led into Kluge's
living room. All the television screens were still turned on. I shook hands
with Osborne. He looked me over before he said anything. He was a short guy,
balding. He seemed very tired until he looked at me. Then, though nothing
really changed in his face, he didn't look tired at all.
"You're Victor
Apfel?" he asked. I told him I was. He gestured at the room. "Mister
Apfel, can you tell if anything has been taken from this room?"
I took another look around,
approaching it as a puzzle.
There was a fireplace and
there were curtains over the windows. There was a rug on the floor. Other than
those items, there was nothing else you would expect to find in a living room.
All the walls were lined with
tables, leaving a narrow aisle down the middle. On the tables were monitor
screens, keyboards, disc drives-all the glossy bric-a-brac of the new age.
They were interconnected by thick cables and cords. Beneath the tables were
still more computers, and boxes full of electronic items. Above the tables
were shelves that reached the ceiling and were stuffed with boxes of tapes,
discs, cartridges… there was a word for it which I couldn't recall just then.
It was software.
"There's no furniture,
is there? Other than that…"
He was looking confused.
"You mean there was
furniture here before?"
"How would I know?"
Then I realized what the misunderstanding was. "Oh. You thought I'd been
here before. The first time I ever set foot in this room was about an hour
ago."
He frowned, and I didn't like
that much.
"The medical examiner
says the guy had been dead about three hours. How come you came over when you
did, Victor?"
I didn't like him using my
first name, but didn't see what I could do about it. And I knew I had to tell
him about the phone call.
He looked dubious. But there
was one easy way to check it out, and we did that. Hal and Osborne and I and
several others trooped over to my house. My phone was ringing as we entered.
Osborne picked it up and
listened. He got a very sour expression on his face. As the night wore on, it
just got worse and worse.
We waited ten minutes for the
phone to ring again. Osborne spent the time examining everything in my living
room. I was glad when the phone rang again. They made a recording of the
message, and we went back to Kluge's house.
Osborne went into the back
yard to see Kluge's forest of antennas. He looked impressed.
"Mrs. Madison down the
street thinks he was trying to contact Martians," Hal said, with a laugh.
"Me, I just thought he was stealing HBO." There were three parabolic
dishes. There were six tall masts, and some of those things you see on
telephone company buildings for transmitting microwaves.
Osborne took me to the living
room again. He asked me to describe what I had seen. I didn't know what good
that would do, but I tried.
"He was sitting in that
chair, which was here in front of this table. I saw the gun on the floor. His
hand was hanging down toward it.''
"You think it was
suicide?"
"Yes, I guess I did
think that." I waited for him to comment but he didn't. "Is that what
you think?"
He sighed. "There wasn't
any note."
"They don't always leave
notes," Hal pointed out.
"No, but they do often
enough that my nose starts to twitch when they don't." He shrugged.
"It's probably nothing."
"That phone call,"
I said. "That might be a kind of suicide note."
Osborne nodded. "Was
there anything else you noticed?"
I went to the table and
looked at the keyboard. It was made by Texas Instruments, model TI-99/4A. There
was a large bloodstain on the right side of it, where his head had been
resting.
"Just that he was
sitting in front of this machine." I touched a key, and the monitor screen
behind the keyboard immediately filled with words. I quickly drew my hand back,
then stared at the message there.
PROGRAM NAME: GOODBYE REAL
WORLD
DATE: 8/20
CONTENTS: LAST WILL AND
TESTAMENT; MISC.
FEATURES
PROGRAMMER: "CHARLES
KLUGE"
TO RUN PRESS ENTERn
The black square at the end
flashed on and off. Later I learned it was called a cursor.
Everyone gathered around.
Hal, the computer expert, explained how many computers went blank after ten
minutes of no activity, so the words wouldn't be burned into the television
screen. This one had been green until I touched it, then displayed black
letters on a blue background.
"Has this console been
checked for prints?" Osborne asked.
Nobody seemed to know, so
Osborne took a pencil and used the eraser to press the ENTER key.
The screen cleared, stayed
blue for a moment, then filled with little ovoid shapes that started at the top
of the screen and descended like rain. There were hundreds of them in many
colors.
"Those are pills,"
one of the cops said, in amazement. "Look, that's gotta be a Quaalude.
There's a Nembutal." Other cops pointed out other pills. I recognized the
distinctive red stripe around the center of a white capsule that had to be a
Dilantin. I had been taking them every day for years.
Finally the pills stopped
falling, and the damn thing started to play music at us. "Nearer My God To
Thee," in three-part harmony.
A few people laughed. I don't
think any of us thought it was funny-it was creepy as hell listening to that
eerie dirge- but it sounded like it had been scored for penny whistle,
calliope, and kazoo. What could you do but laugh?
As the music played, a little
figure composed entirely of squares entered from the left of the screen and
jerked spasti-cally toward the center. It was like one of those human figures
from a video game, but not as detailed. You had to use your imagination to
believe it was a man.
A shape appeared in the
middle of the screen. The "man" stopped in front of it. He bent in
the middle, and something that might have been a chair appeared under him.
"What's that supposed to
be?"
"A computer. Isn't
it?"
It must have been, because
the little man extended his arms, which jerked up and down like Liberace at the
piano. He was typing. The words appeared above him.
SOMEWHERE ALONG THE LINE I
MISSED SOMETHING. I SIT HERE, NIGHT AND DAY, A SPIDER IN THE CENTER OF A
COAXIAL WEB, MASTER OF ALL I SURVEY… AND IT IS NOT ENOUGH. THERE MUST BE MORE.
ENTER YOUR NAME HEREn
"Jesus Christ," Hal
said. "I don't believe it. An interactive suicide note."
"Come on, we've got to
see the rest of this."
I was nearest the keyboard,
so I leaned over and typed my name. But when I looked up, what I had typed was
VICT9R.
"How do you back this
up?" I asked.
"Just enter it,"
Osborne said. He reached around me and pressed enter.
DO YOU EVER GET THAT FEELING,
VICT9R? YOU HAVE WORKED ALL YOUR LIFE TO BE THE BEST THERE IS AT WHAT YOU DO,
AND ONE DAY YOU WAKE UP TO WONDER WHY YOU ARE DOING IT? THAT IS WHAT HAPPENED
TO ME.
DO YOU WANT TO HEAR MORE,
VICT9R? Y/NnB
The message rambled from that
point. Kluge seemed to be aware of it, apologetic about it, because at the end
of each forty-or fifty-word paragraph the reader was given the Y/N option.
I kept glancing from the
screen to the keyboard, remembering Kluge slumped across it. I thought about
him sitting here alone, writing this.
He said he was despondent. He
didn't feel like he could go on. He was taking too many pills (more of them
rained down the screen at this point), and he had no further goal. He had done
everything he set out to do. We didn't understand what he meant by that. He
said he no longer existed. We thought that was a figure of speech.
ARE YOU A COP, VICT9R? IF YOU
ARE NOT, A COP WILL BE HERE SOON. SO TO YOU OR THE COP: I WAS NOT SELLING
NARCOTICS. THE DRUGS IN MY BEDROOM WERE FOR MY OWN PERSONAL USE. I USED A LOT
OF THEM. AND NOW I WILL NOT NEED THEM ANYMORE.
PRESS ENTERn
Osborne did, and a printer
across the room began to chatter, scaring the hell out of all of us. I could
see the carriage zipping back and forth, printing in both directions, when Hal
pointed at the screen and shouted.
"Look! Look at
that!"
The compugraphic man was
standing again. He faced us. He had something that had to be a gun in his hand,
which he now pointed at his head.
"Don't do it!" Hal
yelled.
The little man didn't listen.
There was a denatured gunshot sound, and the little man fell on his back. A
line of red dripped down the screen. Then the green background turned to blue,
the printer shut off, and there was nothing left but the little black corpse
lying on its back and the word **DONE** at the bottom of the screen.
I took a deep breath, and
glanced at Osborne. It would be an understatement to say he did not look happy.
"What's this about drugs
in the bedroom?" he said.
We watched Osborne pulling
out drawers in dressers and bedside tables. He didn't find anything. He looked
under the bed, and in the closet. Like all the other rooms in the house, this
one was full of computers. Holes had been knocked in walls for the thick
sheaves of cables.
I had been standing near a
big cardboard drum, one of several in the room. It was about thirty gallon
capacity, the kind you ship things in. The lid was loose, so I lifted it. I
sort of wished I hadn't.
"Osborne," I said.
"You'd better look at this."
The drum was lined with a
heavy-duty garbage bag. And it was two-thirds full of Quaaludes.
They pried the lids off the
rest of the drums. We found drums of amphetamines, of Nembutals, of Valium. All
sorts of things.
With the discovery of the
drugs a lot more police returned to the scene. With them came the television
camera crews.
In all the activity no one
seemed concerned about me, so I slipped back to my own house and locked the
door. From time to time I peeked out the curtains. I saw reporters interviewing
the neighbors. Hal was there, and seemed to be having a good time. Twice crews
knocked on my door, but I didn't answer. Eventually they went away.
I ran a hot bath and soaked
in it for about an hour. Then I turned the heat up as high as it would go and
got in bed, under the blankets.
I shivered all night.
* # *
Osborne came over about nine
the next morning. I let him in, Hai followed, looking very unhappy. I realized
they had been up all night. I poured coffee for them.
"You'd better read this
first," Osborne said, and handed me the sheet of computer printout. I
unfolded it, got out my glasses, and started to read.
It was in that awful
dot-matrix printing. My policy is to throw any such trash into the fireplace,
un-read, but I made an exception this time.
It was Kluge's will. Some
probate court was going to have a lot of fun with it.
He stated again that he
didn't exist, so he could have no relatives. He had decided to give all his
worldly property to somebody who deserved it.
But who was deserving? Kluge
wondered. Well, not Mr. and Mrs. Perkins, four houses down the street. They
were child abusers. He cited court records in Buffalo and Miami, and a pending
case locally.
Mrs. Radnor and Mrs.
Polonski, who lived across the street from each other five houses down, were
gossips.
The Andersons' oldest son was
a car thief.
Marian Flores cheated on her
high school algebra tests.
There was a guy nearby who
was diddling the city on a freeway construction project. There was one wife in
the neighborhood who made out with door-to-door salesmen, and two having
affairs with men other than their husbands. There was a teenage boy who got his
girlfriend pregnant, dropped her, and bragged about it to his friends.
There were no fewer than
nineteen couples in the immediate area who had not reported income to the IRS,
or who had padded their deductions.
Kluge's neighbors in back had
a dog that barked all night.
Well, I could vouch for the
dog. He'd kept me awake often enough. But the rest of it was crazy! For one
thing, where did a guy with two hundred gallons of illegal narcotics get the
right to judge his neighbors so harshly? I mean, the child abusers were one
thing, but was it right to tar a whole family because their son stole cars? And
for another… how did he know some of this stuff?
But there was more.
Specifically, four philandering husbands. One was Harold "Hal"
Lanier, who for three years had been seeing a woman named Toni Jones, a
co-worker at the L.A.P.D. Data Processing facility. She was pressuring him for
a divorce; he was "waiting for the right time to tell his wife."
I glanced up at Hal. His red
face was all the confirmation I needed.
Then it hit me. What had
Kluge found out about me?
I hurried down the page,
searching for my name. I found it in the last paragraph.
"… for thirty years Mr.
Apfel has been paying for a mistake he did not even make. I won't go so far as
to nominate him for sainthood, but by default-if for no other reason-I hereby
leave all deed and title to my real property and the structure thereon to
Victor Apfel."
I looked at Osborne, and
those tired eyes were weighing me.
"But I don't want
it!"
"Do you think this is the
reward Kluge mentioned in the phone call?"
"It must be," I
said. "What else could it be?"
Osborne sighed, and sat back
in his chair. "At least he didn't try to leave you the drugs. Are you
still saying you didn't know the guy?"
"Are you accusing me of
something?"
He spread his hands.
"Mister Apfel, I'm simply asking a question. You're never one hundred
percent sure in a suicide. Maybe it was a murder. If it was, you can see that,
so far, you're the only one we know of that's gained by it."
"He was almost a
stranger to me."
He nodded, tapping his copy
of the computer printout. I looked back at my own, wishing it would go away.
"What's this… mistake
you didn't make?"
I was afraid that would be
the next question.
"I was a prisoner of war
in North Korea," I said.
Osborne chewed that over for
a while.
"They brainwash
you?"
"Yes." I hit the
arm of my chair, and suddenly had to be up and moving. The room was getting
cold. "No. I don't… there's been a lot of confusion about that word. Did
they 'brainwash' me? Yes. Did they succeed? Did I offer a confession of my war
crimes and denounce the U.S. Government? No."
Once more, I felt myself
being inspected by those deceptively tired eyes.
"You still seem to have…
strong feelings about it."
'"It's not something you
forget."
"Is there anything you
want to say about it?"
"It's just that it was
all so… no. No, I have nothing further to say. Not to you, not to
anybody."
"I'm going to have to
ask you more questions about Kluge's death."
"I think I'll have my
lawyer present for those." Christ. Now I am going to have to get a lawyer.
I didn't know where to begin.
Osborne just nodded again. He
got up and went to the door.
"I was ready to write
this one down as a suicide," he said. "The only thing that bothered
me was there was no note. Now we've got a note." He gestured in the
direction of Kluge's house, and started to look angry.
"This guy not only
writes a note, he programs the fucking thing into his computer, complete with
special effects straight out of Pac-Man.
"Now, I know people do
crazy things. I've seen enough of them. But when I heard the computer playing a
hymn, that's when I knew this was murder. Tell you trie truth, Mr. Apfel, I
don't think you did it. There must be two dozen motives for murder in that
printout. Maybe he was blackmailing people around here. Maybe that's how he
bought all those machines. And people with that amount of drugs usually die
violently. I've got a lot of work to do on this one, and I'll find who did
it." He mumbled something about not leaving town, and that he'd see me
later, and left.
"Vic…" Hal said. I
looked at him.
"About that
printout," he finally said. "I'd appreciate it… well, they said
they'd keep it confidential. If you know what I mean." He had eyes like a
basset hound. I'd never noticed that before.
"Hal, if you'll just go
home, you have nothing to worry about from me."
He nodded, and scuttled for
the door.
"I don't think any of
that will get out," he said.
It all did, of course.
It probably would have even
without the letters that began arriving a few days after Kluge's death, all
postmarked Trenton, New Jersey, all computer-generated from a machine no one
was ever able to trace. The letters detailed the matters Kluge had mentioned in
his will.
I didn't know about any of
that at the time. I spent the rest of the day after Hal's departure lying in my
bed, under the electric blanket. I couldn't get my feet warm. I got up only to
soak in the tub or to make a sandwich.
Reporters knocked on the door
but I didn't answer. On the second day I called a criminal lawyer-Martin
Abrams, the first in the book-and retained him. He told me they'd probably call
me down to the police station for questioning. I told him I wouldn't go, popped
two Dilantin, and sprinted for the bed.
A couple of times I heard
sirens in the neighborhood. Once I heard a shouted argument down the street. I
resisted the temptation to look. I'll admit I was a little curious, but you
know what happened to the cat.
I kept waiting for Osborne to
return, but he didn't. The days turned into a week. Only two things of interest
happened in that time.
The first was a knock on my
door. This was two days after Kluge's death. I looked through the curtains and
saw a silver Ferrari parked at the curb. I couldn't see who was on the porch,
so I asked who it was.
"My name's Lisa
Foo," she said. "You asked me to drop by."
"I certainly don't
remember it."
"Isn't this Charles
Kluge's house?"
"That's next door."
"Oh. Sorry."
I decided I ought to warn her
Kluge was dead, so I opened the door. She turned around and smiled at me. It
was blinding.
Where does one start in
describing Lisa Foo? Remember when newspapers used to run editorial cartoons of
Hirohito and Tojo, when the Times used the word "Jap" without
embarrassment? Little guys with faces wide as footballs, ears like jug handles,
thick glasses, two big rabbity teeth, and pencil-thin moustaches…
Leaving out only the
moustache, she was a dead ringer for a cartoon Tojo. She had the glasses, and
the ears, and the teeth. But her teeth had braces, like piano keys wrapped in
barbed wire. And she was five-eight or five-nine and couldn't have weighed more
than a hundred and ten. I'd have said a hundred, but added five pounds each for
her breasts, so improbably large on her scrawny frame that all I could read of
the message on her T-shirt was "POCK LIVE." It was only when she
turned sideways that I saw the esses before and after.
She thrust out a slender
hand.
"Looks like I'm going to
be your neighbor for a while," she said. "At least until we get that
dragon's lair next door straightened out." If she had an accent, it was
San Fernando Valley.
"That's nice."
"Did you know him?
Kluge, I mean. Or at least that's what he called himself.''
"You don't think that
was his name?"
"I doubt it. 'Kluge'
means clever in German. And it's hacker slang for being tricky. And he sure was
a tricky bugger. Definitely some glitches in the wetware." She tapped the
side of her head meaningfully. "Viruses and phantoms and demons jumping
out every time they try to key in. Software rot, bit buckets overflowing onto
the floor…"
She babbled on in that vein
for a time. It might as well have been Swahili.
"Did you say there were
demons in his computers?"
"That's right."
"Sounds like they need
an exorcist."
She jerked her thumb at her
chest and showed me another half-acre of teeth.
"That's me. Listen, I
gotta go. Drop in and see me anytime."
The second interesting event
of the week happened the next day. My bank statement arrived. There were three
deposits listed. The first was the regular check from the V.A., for $487.00.
The second was for $392.54, interest on the money my parents had left me fifteen
years ago.
The third deposit had come in
on the twentieth, the day Charles Kluge died. It was for $700,083.04.
A few days later Hall Lanier
dropped by.
"Boy, what a week,"
he said. Then he flopped down on the couch and told me all about it.
There had been a second death
on the block. The letters had stirred up a lot of trouble, especially with the
police going house to house questioning everyone. Some people had confessed to
things when they were sure the cops were closing in on them. The woman who
used to entertain salesmen while her husband was at work had admitted her
infidelity, and the guy had shot her. He was in the County Jail. That was the
worst incident, but there had been others, from fistfights to rocks thrown
through windows. According to Hal, the IRS was thinking of setting up a branch
office in the neighborhood, so many people were being audited.
I thought about the seven
hundred thousand and eighty-three dollars.
And four cents.
I didn't say anything, but my
feet were getting cold.
"I suppose you want to
know about me and Betty," he said, at last. I didn't. I didn't want to
hear any of this, but I tried for a sympathetic expression.
"That's all over,"
he said, with a satisfied sigh. "Between me and Toni, I mean. I told Betty
all about it. It was real bad for a few days, but I think our marriage is
stronger for it now." He was quiet for a moment, basking in the warmth of
it all. I had kept a straight face under worse provocation, so I trust I did
well enough then.
He wanted to tell me all
they'd learned about Kluge, and he wanted to invite me over for dinner, but I
begged off on both, telling him my war wounds were giving me hell. I just about
had him to the door when Osborne knocked on it. There was nothing to do but let
him in. Hal stuck around, too.
I offered Osborne coffee,
which he gratefully accepted. He looked different. I wasn't sure what it was at
first. Same old tired expression… no, it wasn't. Most of that weary look had
been either an act or a cop's built-in cynicism. Today it was genuine. The
tiredness had moved from his face to his shoulders, to his hands, to the way he
walked and the way he slumped in the chair. There was a sour aura of defeat
around him.
"Am I still a
suspect?" I asked.
"You mean should you
call your lawyer? I'd say don't bother. I checked you out pretty good. That
will ain't gonna hold up, so your motive is pretty half-assed. Way I figure it,
every coke dealer in the Marina had a better reason to snuff Kluge than
you." He sighed. "I got a couple questions. You can answer them or
not."
"Give it a try."
"You remember any
unusual visitors he had? People coming and going at night?"
"The only visitors I
ever recall were deliveries. Post office. Federal Express, freight companies…
that sort of thing. I suppose the drugs could have come in any of those
shipments."
"That's what we figure,
too. There's no way he was dealing nickel and dime bags. He must have been a
middle man. Ship it in, ship it out." He brooded about that for a while,
and sipped his coffee.
"So are you making any
progress?" I asked.
"You want to know the
truth? The case is going in the toilet. We've got too many motives, and not a
one of them that works. As far as we can tell, nobody on the block had the
slightest idea Kluge had all that information. We've checked bank accounts and
we can't find evidence of blackmail. So the neighbors are pretty much out of
the picture. Though if he were alive, most people around here would like to
kill him now.''
"Damn straight,"
Hal said.
Osborne slapped his thigh.
"If the bastard was alive, I'd kill him," he said. "But I'm
beginning to think he never was alive."
"I don't
understand."
"If I hadn't seen the
goddam body…" He sat up a little straighter. "He said he didn't
exist. Well, he practically didn't. The power company never heard of him. He's
hooked up to their lines and a meter reader came by every month, but they never
billed him for a single kilowatt. Same with the phone company. He had a whole
exchange in that house that was made by the phone company, and delivered by
them, and installed by them, but they have no record of him. We talked to the
guy who hooked it all up. He turned in his records, and the computer swallowed
them. Kluge didn't have a bank account anywhere in California, and apparently he
didn't need one. We've tracked down a hundred companies that sold things to
him, shipped them out, and then either marked his account paid or forgot they
ever sold him anything. Some of them have check numbers and account numbers in
their books, for accounts or even banks that don't exist."
He leaned back in his chair,
simmering at the perfidy of it all.
"The only guy we've
found who ever heard of him was the guy who delivered his groceries once a
month. Little store down on Sepulveda. They don't have a computer, just paper
receipts. He paid by check. Wells Fargo accepted them and the checks never
bounced. But Wells Fargo never heard of him."
I thought it over. He seemed
to expect something of me at this point, so I made a stab at it.
"He was doing all this by
computers?"
"That's right. Now, the
grocery store scam I understand, almost. But more often than not, Kluge got
right into the basic programming of the computers and wiped himself out. The
power company was never paid, by check or any other way, because as far as they
were concerned, they weren't selling him anything.
"No government agency
has ever heard of him. We've checked him with everybody from the post office to
the CIA."
"Kluge was probably an
alias, right?" I offered.
"Yeah. But the FBI
doesn't have his fingerprints. We"ll find out who he was, eventually. But
it doesn't get us any closer to whether or not he was murdered."
He admitted there was
pressure to simply close the felony part of the case, label it suicide, and
forget it. But Osborne would not believe it. Naturally, the civil side would go
on for some time, as they attempted to track down all Kluge's deceptions.
"It's all up to the
dragon lady," Osborne said. Hal snorted.
"Fat chance," Hal
said, and muttered something about boat people.
"That girl? She's still
over there? Who is she?"
"She's some sort of
giant brain from Cal Tech. We called out there and told them we were having
problems, and she's what they sent." It was clear from Osborne's face what
he thought of any help she might provide.
I finally managed to get rid
of them. As they went down the walk I looked over at Kluge's house. Sure enough
Lisa Foo's silver Ferrari was sitting in his driveway.
I had no business going over
there. I knew that better than anyone.
So I set about preparing my
evening meal. I made a tuna casserole-which is not as bland as it sounds, the
way I make it-put it in the oven and went out to the garden to pick the makings
for a salad. I was slicing cherry tomatoes and thinking about chilling a
bottle of wine when it occurred to me that I had enough for two.
Since I never do anything
hastily, I sat down and thought it over for a while. What finally decided me
was my feet. For the first time in a week, they were warm. So I went to Kluge's
house.
The front door was standing
open. There was no screen. Funny how disturbing that can look, the dwelling
wide open and unguarded. I stood on the porch and leaned in, but all I could
see was the hallway.
"Miss Foo?" I
called. There was no answer.
The last time I'd been here I
had found a dead man. I hurried in.
Lisa Foo was sitting on a
piano bench before a computer console. She was in profile, her back very
straight, her brown legs in lotus position, her fingers poised at the keys as
words sprayed rapidly onto the screen in front of her. She looked up and
flashed her teeth at me.
"Somebody told me your
name was Victor Apfel," she said.
"Yes. Uh, the door was
open…"
"It's hot," she
said, reasonably, pinching the fabric of her shirt near her neck and lifting it
up and down like you do when you're sweaty. "What can I do for you?"
"Nothing, really."
I came into the dimness, and stumbled on something. It was a cardboard box, the
large flat kind used for delivering a jumbo pizza.
"I was just fixing
dinner, and it looks like there's plenty for two, so I was wondering if
you…" I trailed off, as I had just noticed something else. I had thought
she was wearing shorts. In fact, all she had on was the shirt and a pair of
pink bikini underpants. This did not seem to make her uneasy.
"… would you like to
join me for dinner?"
Her smile grew even broader.
"I'd love to," she
said. She effortlessly unwound her legs and bounced to her feet, then brushed
past me, trailing the smells of perspiration and sweet soap. "Be with you
in a minute."
I looked around the room
again but my mind kept coming back to her. She liked Pepsi with her pizza;
there were dozens of empty cans. There was a deep scar on her knee and upper
thigh. The ashtrays were empty… and the long muscles of her calves bunched
strongly as she walked. Kluge must have smoked, but Lisa didn't, and she had
fine, downy hairs in the small of her back just visible in the green computer
light. I heard water running in the bathroom sink, looked at a yellow notepad
covered with the kind of penmanship I hadn't seen in decades, and smelled soap
and remembered tawny brown skin and an easy stride.
She appeared in the hall, wearing
cut-off jeans, sandals, and a new T-shirt. The old one had advertised BURROUGHS
OFFICE SYSTEMS. This one featured Mickey Mouse and Snow White's Castle and
smelled of fresh bleached cotton. Mickey's ears were laid back on the upper
slopes of her incongruous breasts.
I followed her out the door.
Tinkerbell twinkled in pixie dust from the back of her shirt.
"I like this
kitchen," she said.
You don't really look at a
place until someone says something like that.
The kitchen was a time
capsule. It could have been lifted bodily from an issue of Life in the early
fifties. There was the hump-shouldered Frigidaire, of a vintage when that word
had been a generic term, like kleenex or coke. The counter tops were yellow
tile, the sort that's only found in bathrooms these days. There wasn't an ounce
of Formica in the place. Instead of a dishwasher I had a wire rack and a double
sink. There was no electric can opener, Cuisinart, trash compacter, or
microwave oven. The newest thing in the whole room was a fifteen-year-old
blender.
I'm good with my hands. I
like to repair things.
"This bread is
terrific," she said.
I had baked it myself. I
watched her mop her plate with a crust, and she asked if she might have
seconds.
I understand cleaning one's
plate with bread is bad manners. Not that I cared; I do it myself. And other
than that, her manners were impeccable. She polished off three helpings of my
casserole and when she was done the plate hardly needed washing. I had a sense
of ravenous appetite barely held in check.
She settled back in her chair
and I re-filled her glass with white wine.
"Are you sure you
wouldn't like some more peas?"
"I'd bust." She
patted her stomach contentedly. "Thank you so much, Mister Apfel. I
haven't had a home-cooked meal in ages."
"You can call me
Victor."
"I just love American
food."
"I didn't know there was
such a thing. I mean, not like Chinese or… you are American, aren't you?"
She just smiled. "What I mean-"
"I know what you meant,
Victor. I'm a citizen, but not native-born. Would you excuse me for a moment? I
know it's impolite to jump right up, but with these braces I find I have to
brush instantly after eating."
I could hear her as I cleared
the table. I ran water in the sink and started doing the dishes. Before long
she joined me, grabbed a dish towel, and began drying the things in the rack,
over my protests.
"You live alone
here?" she asked.
"Yes. Have ever since my
parents died."
"Ever married? If it's
none of my business, just say so."
"That's all right. No, I
never married."
"You do pretty good for
not having a woman around."
"I've had a lot of
practice. Can I ask you a question?"
"Shoot."
"Where are you from?
Taiwan?"
"I have a knack for
languages. Back home, I spoke pidgin American, but when I got here I cleaned up
my act. I also speak rotten French, illiterate Chinese in four or five varieties,
gutter Vietnamese, and enough Thai to holler, 'Me wanna see American Consul,
pretty-damn-quick, you!' "
I laughed. When she said it,
her accent was thick.
"I been here eight years
now. You figured out where home is?"
"Vietnam?" I
ventured.
"The sidewalks of
Saigon, fer shure. Or Ho Chi Minh's Shitty, as the pajama-heads re-named it,
may their dinks rot off and their butts be filled with jagged punjee-sticks.
Pardon my French."
She ducked her head in
embarrassment. What had started out light had turned hot very quickly. I sensed
a hurt at least as deep as my own, and we both backed off from it.
"I took you for a
Japanese," I said.
"Yeah, ain't it a
pisser? I'll tell you about it some day. Victor, is that a laundry room through
that door there? With an electric washer?"
"That's right."
"Would it be too much
trouble if I did a load?"
It was no trouble at all. She
had seven pairs of faded jeans, some with the legs cut away, and about two dozen
T-shirts. It could have been a load of boys' clothing except for the frilly
underwear.
We went into the back yard to
sit in the last rays of the setting sun, then she had to see my garden. I'm
quite proud of it. When I'm well, I spend four or five hours a day working out
there, year-round, usually in the morning hours. You can do that in southern
California. I have a small greenhouse I built myself.
She loved it, though it was
not in its best shape. I had spent most of the week in bed or in the tub. As a
result, weeds were sprouting here and there.
"We had a garden when I
was little," she said. "And I spent two years in a rice paddy."
"That must be a lot
different than this."
"Damn straight. Put me
off rice for years."
She discovered an infestation
of aphids, so we squatted down to pick them off. She had that double-jointed
Asian peasant's way of sitting that I remembered so well and could never
imitate. Her fingers were long and narrow, and soon the tips of them were green
from squashed bugs.
We talked about this and
that. I don't remember quite how it came up, but I told her I had fought in
Korea. I learned she was twenty-five. It turned out we had the same birthday,
so some months back I had been exactly twice her age.
The only time Kluge's name
came up was when she mentioned how she liked to cook. She hadn't been able to
at Kluge's house.
"He has a freezer in the
garage full of frozen dinners," she said. "He had one plate, one
fork, one spoon, and one glass. He's got the best microwave oven on the market.
And that's it, man. Ain't nothing else in his kitchen at all." She shook
her head, and executed an aphid. "He was one weird dude."
When her laundry was done it
was late evening, almost dark. She loaded it into my wicker basket and we took
it out to the clothesline. It got to be a game. I would shake out a T-shirt and
study the picture or message there. Sometimes I got it, and sometimes I didn't.
There were pictures of rock groups, a map of Los Angeles, Star Trek tie-ins… a
little of everything.
"What's the L5
Society?" I asked her.
"Guys that want to build
these great big farms in space. I asked 'em if they were gonna grow rice, and
they said they didn't think it was the best crop for zero gee, so I bought the
shirt."
"How many of these
things do you have?"
"Wow, it's gotta be four
or five hundred. I usually wear 'em two or three times and then put them
away."
I picked up another shirt,
and a bra fell out. It wasn't the kind of bra girls wore when I was growing up.
It was very sheer, though somehow functional at the same time.
"You like, Yank?"
Her accent was very thick. "You oughtta see my sister!"
I glanced at her, and her
face fell.
"I'm sorry,
Victor," she said. "You don't have to blush." She took the bra
from me and clipped it to the line.
She must have mis-read my
face. True, I had been embarrassed, but I was also pleased in some strange
way. It had been a long time since anybody had called me anything but Victor or
Mr. Apfel.
The next day's mail brought a
letter from a law firm in Chicago. It was about the seven hundred thousand
dollars. The money had come from a Delaware holding company which had been set
up in 1933 to provide for me in my old age. My mother and father were listed as
the founders. Certain long-term investments had matured, resulting in my recent
windfall. The amount in my bank was after taxes.
It was ridiculous on the face
of it. My parents had never had that kind of money. I didn't want it. I would
have given it back if I could find out who Kluge had stolen it from.
I decided that, if I wasn't
in jail this time next year, I'd give it all to some charity. Save the Whales,
maybe, or the L5 Society.
I spent the morning in the
garden. Later I walked to the market and bought some fresh ground beef and
pork. I was feeling good as I pulled my purchases home in my fold-up wire
basket. When I passed the silver Ferrari I smiled.
She hadn't come to get her
laundry. I took it off the line and folded it, then knocked on Kluge's door.
"It's me. Victor."
"Come on in, Yank."
She was where she had been
before, but decently dressed this time. She smiled at me, then hit her forehead
when she saw the laundry basket. She hurried to take it from me.
"I'm sorry, Victor. I
meant to get this-"
"Don't worry about
it," I said. "It was no trouble. And it gives me the chance to ask if
you'd like to dine with me again."
Something happened to her
face which she covered quickly. Perhaps she didn't like "American"
food as much as she professed to. Or maybe it was the cook.
"Sure, Victor, I'd love
to. Let me take care of this. And why don't you open those drapes? It's like a
tomb in here."
She hurried away. I glanced
at the screen she had been using. It was blank, but for one word:
intercourse-p. I assumed it was a typo.
I pulled the drapes open in
time to see Osborne's car park at the curb. Then Lisa was back, wearing a new
T-shirt. This one said A CHANGE OF HOBBIT, and had a picture of a squat,
hairy-footed creature. She glanced out the window and saw Osborne coming up the
walk.
"I say, Watson,"
she said. "It's Lestrade of the Yard. Do show him in."
That wasn't nice of her. He
gave me a suspicious glance as he entered. I burst out laughing. Lisa sat on
the piano bench, poker-faced. She slumped indolently, one arm resting near the
keyboard.
"Well, Apfel," Osborne
started. "We've finally found out who Kluge really was."
"Patrick William
Gavin," Lisa said.
Quite a time went by before
Osborne was able to close his mouth. Then he opened it right up again.
"How the hell did you
find that out?"
She lazily caressed the
keyboard beside her.
"Well, of course I got
it when it came into your office this morning. There's a little stoolie program
tucked away in your computer that whispers in my ear every time the name Kluge
is mentioned. But I didn't need that. I figured it out five days ago."
"Then why the… why
didn't you tell me?"
"You didn't ask
me."
They glared at each other for
a while. I had no idea what events had led up to this moment, but it was quite
clear they didn't like each other even a little bit. Lisa was on top just now,
and seemed to be enjoying it. Then she glanced at her screen, looked surprised,
and quickly tapped a key. The word that had been there vanished. She gave me an
inscrutable glance, then faced Osborne again.
"If you recall, you
brought me in because all your own guys were getting was a lot of crashes. This
system was brain-damaged when I got here, practically catatonic. Most of it was
down and your guys couldn't get it up." She had to grin at that.
"You decided I couldn't
do any worse than your guys were doing. So you asked me to try and break
Kluge's codes without frying the system. Well, I did it. All you had to do was
come by and interface and I would have downloaded N tons of wallpaper right in
your lap."
Osborne listened quietly.
Maybe he even knew he had made a mistake.
"What did you get? Can I
see it now?"
She nodded, and pressed a few
keys: Words started to fill her screen, and one close to Osborne. I got up and
read Lisa's terminal.
It was a brief bio of
Kluge/Gavin. He was about my age, but while I was getting shot at in a foreign
land, he was cutting a swath through the infant computer industry. He had been
there from the ground up, working at many of the top research facilities. It
surprised me that it had taken over a week to identify him.
"I compiled this
anecdotally," Lisa said, as we read. "The first thing you have to
realize about Gavin is that he exists nowhere in any computerized information
system. So I called people all over the country-interesting phone system he's
got, by the way; it generates a new number for each call, and you can't call
back or trace it-and started asking who the top people were in the fifties and
sixties. I got a lot of names. After that, it was a matter of finding out who
no longer existed in the files. He faked his death in 1967. I located one
account of it in a newspaper file. Everybody I talked to who had known him knew
of his death. There is a paper birth certificate in Florida. That's the only
other evidence I found of him. He was the only guy so many people in the field
knew who left no mark on the world. That seemed conclusive to me."
Osborne finished reading,
then looked up.
"All right, Ms. Foo.
What else have you found out?"
"I've broken some of his
codes. I had a piece of luck, getting into a basic rape-and-plunder program
he'd written to attack other people's programs, and I've managed to use it
against a few of his own. I've unlocked a file of passwords with notes on where
they came from. And I've learned a few of his tricks. But it's the tip of the
iceberg."
She waved a hand at the
silent metal brains in the room.
"What I haven't gotten
across to anyone is just what this is. This is the most devious electronic
weapon ever devised. It's armored like a battleship. It has to be; there's a
lot of very slick programs out there that grab an invader and hang on like a
terrier. If they ever got this far Kluge could deflect them. But usually they
never even knew they'd been burgled. Kluge'd come in like a cruise missile, low
and fast and twisty. And he'd route his attack through a dozen cut-offs.
"He had a lot of
advantages. Big systems these days are heavily protected. People use passwords
and very sophisticated codes. But Kluge helped invent most of them. You need a
damn good lock to keep out a locksmith. He helped install a lot of the major
systems. He left informants behind, hidden in the software. If the codes were
changed, the computer itself would send the information to a safe system that
Kluge could tap later. It's like you buy the biggest, meanest, best-trained
watchdog you can. And that night, the guy who trained the dog comes in, pats
him on the head, and robs you blind."
There was a lot more in that
vein. I'm afraid that when Lisa began talking about computers, ninety percent
of my head shut off.
"I'd like to know
something, Osborne," Lisa said.
"What would that be?"
"What is my status here?
Am I supposed to be solving your crime for you, or just trying to get this
system back to where a competent user can deal with it?"
Osborne thought it over.
"What worries me,"
she added, "is that I'm poking around in a lot of restricted data banks.
I'm worried about somebody knocking on the door and handcuffing me. You ought
to be worried, too. Some of these agencies wouldn't like a homicide cop
looking into their affairs."
Osborne bridled at that.
Maybe that's what she intended.
"What do I have to
do?" he snarled. "Beg you to stay?"
"No. I just want your
authorization. You don't have to put it in writing. Just say you're behind
me."
"Look. As far as L.A.
County and the State of California are concerned, this house doesn't exist.
There is no lot here. It doesn't appear in the assessor's records. This place
is in a legal limbo. If anybody can authorize you to use this stuff, it's me,
because I believe a murder was committed in it. So you just keep doing what
you've been doing."
"That's not much of a
commitment," she mused.
"It's all you're going
to get. Now, what else have you got?"
She turned to her keyboard
and typed for a while. Pretty soon a printer started, and Lisa leaned back. I
glanced at her screen. It said: osculate posterior-p. I remembered that osculate
meant kiss. Well, these people have their own language. Lisa looked up at me
and grinned.
"Not you," she
said, quietly. "Him."
I hadn't the faintest notion
of what she was talking about.
Osborne got his printout and
was ready to leave. Again, he couldn't resist turning at the door for final
orders.
"If you find anything to
indicate he didn't commit suicide, let me know."
"Okay. He didn't commit
suicide."
Osborne didn't understand for
a moment.
"I want proof."
"Well, I have it, but
you probably can't use it. He didn't write that ridiculous suicide note."
"How do you know
that?"
"I knew that my first
day here. I had the computer list the program. Then I compared it to Kluge's
style. No way he could have written it. It's tighter'n a bug's ass. Not a spare
line in it. Kluge didn't pick his alias for nothing. You know what it
means?"
"Clever," I said.
"Literally. But it
means… a Rube Goldberg device.
Something overly complex.
Something that works, but for the wrong reason. You 'kluge around' bugs in a
program. It's the hacker's vaseline."
"So?" Osborne
wanted to know.
"So Kluge's programs
were really crocked. They were full of bells and whistles he never bothered to
clean out. He was a genius, and his programs worked, but you wonder why they
did. Routines so bletcherous they'd make your skin crawl. Real crufty
bagbiters. But good programming's so rare, even his diddles were better than
most people's super-moby hacks."
I suspect Osborne understood
about as much of that as I did.
"So you base your
opinion on his programming style."
"Yeah. Unfortunately,
it's gonna be ten years or so before that's admissible in court, like
graphology or fingerprints. But if you know anything about programming you can
look at it and see it. Somebody else wrote that suicide note-somebody damn
good, by the way. That program called up his last will and testament as a
sub-routine. And he definitely did write that. It's got his fingerprints all
over it. He spent the last five years spying on the neighbors as a hobby. He
tapped into military records, school records, work records, tax files and bank
accounts. And he turned every telephone for three blocks into a listening
device. He was one hell of a snoop."
"Did he mention anywhere
why he did that?" Osborne asked.
"I think he was more
than half crazy. Possibly he was suicidal. He sure wasn't doing himself any
good with all those pills he took. But he was preparing himself for death, and
Victor was the only one he found worthy of leaving it all to. I'd have believed
he committed suicide if not for that note. But he didn't write it. I'll swear
to that."
We eventually got rid of him,
and I went home to fix the dinner. Lisa joined me when it was ready. Once more
she had a huge appetite.
I fixed lemonade and we sat
on my small patio and watched evening gather around us.
I woke up in the middle of
the night, sweating. I sat up, thinking it out, and I didn't like my
conclusions. So I put on my robe and slippers and went over to Kluge's.
The front door was open
again. I knocked anyway. Lisa stuck her head around the corner.
"Victor? Is something
wrong?"
"I'm not sure," I
said. "May I come in?"
She gestured, and I followed
her into the living room. An open can of Pepsi sat beside her console. Her eyes
were red as she sat on her bench.
"What's up?" she
said, and yawned.
"You should be asleep,
for one thing," I said.
She shrugged, and nodded.
"Yeah. I can't seem to
get in the right phase. Just now I'm in day mode. But Victor, I'm used to
working odd hours, and long hours, and you didn't come over here to lecture me
about that, did you?"
"No. You say Kluge was
murdered."
"He didn't write his
suicide note. That seems to leave murder.''
"I was wondering why
someone would kill him. He never left the house, so it was for something he did
here with his computers. And now you're… well, I don't know what you're doing,
frankly, but you seem to be poking into the same things. Isn't there a danger
the same people will come after you?"
"People?" She
raised an eyebrow.
I felt helpless. My fears
were not well-formed enough to make sense.
"I don't know… you
mentioned agencies…"
"You notice how
impressed Osborne was with that? You think there's some kind of conspiracy
Kluge tumbled to, or you think the CIA killed him because he found out too much
about something, or-"
"I don't know, Lisa. But
I'm worried the same thing could happen to you." ¦
Surprisingly, she smiled at
me.
"Thank you so much,
Victor. I wasn't going to admit it to Osborne, but I've been worried about
that, too."
"Well, what are you
going to do?"
"I want to stay here and
keep working. So I gave some thought to what I could do to protect myself. I
decided there wasn't anything."
"Surely there's
something."
"Well, I got a gun, if
that's what you mean. But think about it. Kluge was offed in the middle of the
day. Nobody saw anybody enter or leave the house. So I asked myself, who can
walk into a house in broad daylight, shoot Kluge, program that suicide note,
and walk away, leaving no traces he'd ever been there?"
"Somebody very
good."
"Goddam good. So good
there's not much chance one little gook's gonna be able to stop him if he
decides to waste her."
She shocked me, both by her
words and by her apparent lack of concern for her own fate. But she had said
she was worried.
"Then you have to stop
this. Get out of here."
"I won't be pushed
around that way," she said. There was a tone of finality to it. I thought
of things I might say, and rejected them all.
"You could at least…
lock your front door," I concluded, lamely.
She laughed, and kissed my
cheek.
"I'll do that, Yank. And
I appreciate your concern. I really do."
I watched her close the door
behind me, listened to her lock it, then trudged through the moonlight toward
my house. Halfway there I stopped. I could suggest she stay in my spare
bedroom. I could offer to stay with her at Kluge's.
No, I decided. She would
probably take that the wrong way.
I was back in bed before I
realized, with a touch of chagrin and more than a little disgust at myself,
that she had every reason to take it the wrong way.
And me exactly twice her age.
I spent the morning in the
garden, planning the evening's menu. I have always liked to cook, but dinner
with Lisa had rapidly become the high point of my day. Not only that, I was
already taking it for granted. So it hit me hard, around noon, when I looked
out the front and saw her car gone.
I hurried to Kluge's front
door. It was standing open. I made a quick search of the house. I found nothing
until the master bedroom, where her clothes were stacked neatly on the floor.
Shivering, I pounded on the
Laniers' front door. Betty answered, and immediately saw my agitation.
"The girl at Kluge's
house," I said. "I'm afraid something's wrong. Maybe we'd better
call the police."
"What happened?"
Betty asked, looking over my shoulder. "Did she call you? I see she's not
back yet."
"Back?"
"I saw her drive away
about an hour ago. That's quite a car she has."
Feeling like a fool, I tried
to make nothing of it, but I caught a look in Betty's eye. I think she'd have
liked to pat me on the head. It made me furious.
But she'd left her clothes,
so surely she was coming back.
I kept telling myself that,
then went to run a bath, as hot as I could stand it.
When I answered the door she
was standing there with a grocery bag in each arm and her usual blinding smile
on her face.
"I wanted to do this
yesterday but I forgot until you came over, and I know I should have asked
first, but then I wanted to surprise you, so I just went to get one or two
items you didn't have in your garden and a couple of things that weren't in
your spice rack…"
She kept talking as we
unloaded the bags in the kitchen. I said nothing. She was wearing a new
T-shirt. There was a big V, and under it a picture of a screw, followed by a
hyphen and a small case "p." I thought it over as she babbled on. V,
screw-p. I was determined not to ask what it meant.
"Do you like Vietnamese
cooking?"
I looked at her, and finally
realized she was very nervous.
"I don't know," I
said. "I've never had it. But I like Chinese, and Japanese, and Indian. I
like to try new things." The last part was a lie, but not as bad as it
might have been. I do try new recipes, and my tastes in food are catholic. I
didn't expect to have much trouble with southeast Asian cuisine.
"Well, when I get
through you still won't know," she laughed. "My momma was
half-Chinese. So what you're gonna get here is a mongrel meal." She
glanced up, saw my face, and laughed.
"I forgot. You've been
to Asia. No, Yank, I ain't gonna serve any dog meat."
* * *
There was only one
intolerable thing, and that was the chopsticks. I used them for as long as I
could, then put them aside and got a fork.
"I'm sorry," I
said. "Chopsticks happen to be a problem for me."
"You use them very
well."
"I had plenty of time to
learn how."
It was very good, and I told
her so. Each dish was a revelation, not quite like anything I had ever had.
Toward the end, I broke down halfway.
"Does the V stand for
victory?" I asked.
"Maybe."
"Beethoven? Churchill?
World War Two?"
She just smiled.
"Think of it as a
challenge, Yank."
"Do I frighten you,
Victor?"
"You did at first."
"It's my face, isn't
it?"
"It's a generalized
phobia of Orientals. I suppose I'm a racist. Not because I want to be."
She nodded slowly, there in
the dark. We were on the patio again, but the sun had gone down a long time
ago. I can't recall what we had talked about for all those hours. It had kept
us busy, anyway.
"I have the same
problem," she said.
"Fear of
Orientals?" I had meant it as a joke.
"Of Cambodians."
She let me take that in for a while, then went on. "When Saigon fell, I
fled to Cambodia. It took me two years with stops when the Khmer Rouge put me
in labor camps. I'm lucky to be alive, really."
"I thought they called
it Kampuchea now."
She spat. I'm not even sure
she was aware she had done it.
"It's the People's
Republic of Syphilitic Dogs. The North Koreans treated you very badly, didn't
they, Victor?"
"That's right."
"Koreans are pus
suckers." I must have looked surprised, because she chuckled.
"You Americans feel so
guilty about racism. As if you had invented it and nobody else--except maybe
the South Africans and the Nazis-had ever practiced it as heinously as you.
And you can't tell one yellow face from another, so you think of the yellow
races as one homogeneous block. When in fact Orientals are among the most
racist peoples on the earth. The Vietnamese have hated the Cambodians for a
thousand years. The Chinese hate the Japanese. The Koreans hate everybody. And
everybody hates the 'ethnic Chinese.' The Chinese are the Jews of the
east."
"I've heard that."
She nodded, lost in her own
thoughts.
"And I hate all
Cambodians," she said, at last. "Like you, I don't wish to. Most of
the people who suffered in the camps were Cambodians. It was the genocidal
leaders, the Pol Pot scum, who I should hate." She looked at me. "But
sometimes we don't get a lot of choice about things like that, do we,
Yank?"
The next day I visited her at
noon. It had cooled down, but was still warm in her dark den. She had not
changed her shirt.
She told me a few things
about computers. When she let me try some things on the keyboard I quickly got
lost. We decided I needn't plan on a career as a computer programmer.
One of the things she showed
me was called a telephone modem, whereby she could reach other computers all
over the world. She "interfaced" with someone at Stanford who she had
never met, and who she knew only as "Bubble Sorter." They typed
things back and forth at each other.
At the end, Bubble Sorter
wrote "bye-p." Lisa typed T.
"What's T?" I
asked.
"True. Means yes, but
yes would be too straightforward for a hacker.''
"You told me what a byte
is. What's a byep?"
She looked up at me
seriously.
"It's a question. Add p
to a word, and make it a question. So bye-p means Bubble Sorter was asking if I
wanted to log out. Sign off."
I thought that over.
"So how would you translate
'osculate posterior-p'?"
" 'You wanna kiss my
ass?' But remember, that was for Osborne."
I looked at her T-shirt
again, then up to her eyes, which were quite serious and serene. She waited,
hands folded in her lap.
Intercourse-p.
"Yes," I said.
"I would."
She put her glasses on the
table and pulled her shirt over her head.
We made love in Kluge's big
waterbed.
I had a certain amount of
performance anxiety-it had been a long, long time. After that, I was so caught
up in the touch and smell and taste of her that I went a little crazy. She
didn't seem to mind.
At last we were done, and
bathed in sweat. She rolled over, stood, and went to the window. She opened it,
and a breath of air blew over me. Then she put one knee on the bed, leaned over
me, and got a pack of cigarettes from the bedside table. She lit one.
"I hope you're not
allergic to smoke," she said.
"No. My father smoked.
But I didn't know you did."
"Only afterwards,"
she said, with a quick smile. She took a deep drag. "Everybody in Saigon
smoked, I think." She stretched out on her back beside me and we lay like
that, soaking wet, holding hands. She opened her legs so one of her bare feet
touched mine. It seemed enough contact. I watched the smoke rise from her right
hand.
"I haven't felt warm in
thirty years," I said. "I've been hot, but I've never been warm. I
feel warm now."
"Tell me about it,"
she said.
So I did, as much as I could,
wondering if it would work this time. At thirty years remove, my story does not
sound so horrible. We've seen so much in that time. There were people in jails
at that very moment, enduring conditions as bad as any I encountered. The
paraphernalia of oppression is still pretty much the same. Nothing physical
happened to me that would account for thirty years lived as a recluse.
"I was badly
injured," I told her. "My skull was fractured, I still have…
problems from that. Korea can get very cold, and I was never warm enough. But
it was the other stuff. What they call brainwashing now.
"We didn't know what it
was. We couldn't understand that even after a man had told them all he knew
they'd keep on at us. Keeping us awake. Disorienting us. Some guys signed
confessions, made up all sorts of stuff, but even that wasn't enough. They'd
just keep on at you.
"I never did figure it
out. I guess I couldn't understand an evil that big. But when they were sending
us back and some of the prisoners wouldn't go… they really didn't want to go,
they really believed…"
I had to pause there. Lisa
sat up, moved quietly to the end of the bed, and began massaging my feet.
"We got a taste of what
the Vietnam guys got, later. Only for us it was reversed. The GJ.'s were
heroes, and the prisoners were…"
"You didn't break,"
she said. It wasn't a question.
"No, I didn't."
"That would be
worse."
I looked at her. She had my
foot pressed against her flat belly, holding me by the heel while her other
hand massaged my toes.
"The country was
shocked," I said. "They didn't understand what brainwashing was. I
tried telling people how it was. I thought they were looking at me funny. After
a while, I stopped talking about it. And I didn't have anything else to talk
about.
"A few years back the
Army changed its policy. Now they don't expect you to withstand psychological
conditioning. It's understood you can say anything or sign anything."
She just looked at me, kept
massaging my foot, and nodded slowly. Finally she spoke.
"Cambodia was hot,"
she said. "I kept telling myself when I finally got to the U.S. I'd live
in Maine or someplace, where it snowed. And I did go to Cambridge, but I found
out I didn't like snow."
She told me about it. The last
I heard, a million people had died over there. It was a whole country frothing
at the mouth and snapping at anything that moved. Or like one of those sharks
you read about that, when its guts are ripped out, bends in a circle and starts
devouring itself.
She told me about being
forced to build a pyramid of severed heads. Twenty of them working all day in
the hot sun finally got it ten feet high before it collapsed. If any of them
stopped working, their own heads were added to the pile.
"It didn't mean anything
to me. It was just another job. I was pretty crazy by then. I didn't start to
come out of it until I got across the Thai border."
That she had survived it at
all seemed a miracle. She had gone through more horror than I could imagine.
And she had come through it in much better shape. It made me feel small. When I
was her age, I was well on my way to building the prison I have lived in ever
since. I told her that.
"Part of it is
preparation," she said, wryly. "What you expect out of life, what
your life has been so far. You said it yourself. Korea was new to you. I'm not
saying I was ready for Cambodia, but my life up to that point hadn't been what
you'd call sheltered. I hope you haven't been thinking I made a living in the
streets by selling apples."
She kept rubbing my feet,
staring off into scenes I could not see.
"How old were you when
your mother died?"
"She was killed during
Tet, 1968. I was ten."
"By the Viet Cong?"
"Who knows? Lot of
bullets flying, lot of grenades being thrown."
She sighed, dropped my foot,
and sat there, a scrawny Buddha without a robe.
"You ready to do it
again, Yank?"
"I don't think I can,
Lisa. I'm an old man."
She moved over me and lowered
herself with her chin just below my sternum, settling her breasts in the most
delicious place possible.
"We'll see," she
said, and giggled. "There's an alternative sex act I'm pretty good at,
and I'm pretty sure it would make you a young man again. But I haven't been
able to do it for about a year on account of these." She tapped her
braces. "It'd be sort of like sticking it in a buzz saw. So now I do this
instead. I call it 'touring the silicone valley.' " She started moving her
body up and down, just a few inches at a time. She blinked innocently a couple
times, then laughed.
"At last, I can see
you," she said. "I'm awfully myopic."
I let her do that for a
while, then lifted my head.
"Did you say
silicone?"
"Uh-huh. You didn't
think they were real, did you?"
I confessed that I had.
"I don't think I've ever
been so happy with anything I ever bought. Not even the car."
"Why did you?"
"Does it bother
you?"
It didn't, and I told her so.
But I couldn't conceal my curiosity.
"Because it was safe to.
In Saigon I was always angry that I never developed. I could have made a good
living as a prostitute, but I was always too tall, too skinny, and too ugly.
Then in Cambodia I was lucky. I managed to pass for a boy some of the time. If
not for that I'd have been raped a lot more than I was. And in Thailand I knew
I'd get to the West one way or another, and when I got there, I'd get the best
car there was, eat anything I wanted any time I wanted to, and purchase the
best tits money could buy. You can't imagine what the West looks like from the
camps. A place where you can buy tits!"
She looked down between them,
then back at my face.
"Looks like it was a
good investment," she said.
"They do seem to work
okay," I had to admit.
We agreed that she would
spend the nights at my house. There were certain things she had to do at
Kluge's, involving equipment that had to be physically loaded, but many things
she could do with a remote terminal and an armload of software. So we selected
one of Kluge's best computers and about a dozen peripherals and installed her
at a cafeteria table in my bedroom.
I guess we both knew it
wasn't much protection if the people who got Kluge decided to get her. But I
know I felt better about it, and I think she did, too.
The second day she was there
a delivery van pulled up outside, and two guys started unloading a king-size
waterbed. She laughed and laughed when she saw my face.
"Listen, you're not
using Kluge's computers to-"
"Relax, Yank. How'd you
think I could afford a Ferrari?"
"I've been
curious."
"If you're really good
at writing software you can make a lot of money. I own my own company. But
every hacker picks up tricks here and there. I used to run a few Kluge scams,
myself."
"But not anymore?"
She shrugged. "Once a
thief, always a thief, Victor. I told you I couldn't make ends meet selling my
bod."
Lisa didn't need much sleep.
We got up at seven, and I
made breakfast every morning. Then we would spend an hour or two working in the
garden.
She would go to Kluge's and
I'd bring her a sandwich at noon, then drop in on her several times during the
day. That was for my own peace of mind; I never stayed more than a minute.
Sometime during the afternoon I would shop or do household chores, then at
seven one of us would cook dinner. We alternated. I taught her
"American" cooking, and she taught me a little of everything. She
complained about the lack of vital ingredients in American markets. No dogs, of
course, but she claimed to know great ways of preparing monkey, snake, and rat.
I never knew how hard she was pulling my leg, and didn't ask.
After dinner she stayed at my
house. We would talk, make love, bathe.
She loved my tub. It is about
the only alteration I have made in the house, and my only real luxury. I put it
in- having to expand the bathroom to do so-in 1975, and never regretted it. We
would soak for twenty minutes or an hour, turning the jets and bubblers on and
off, washing each other; giggling like kids. Once we used bubble bath and made
a mountain of suds four feet high, then destroyed it, splashing water all over
the place. Most nights she let me wash her long black hair.
She didn't have any bad habits-or
at least none that clashed with mine. She was neat and clean, changing her
clothes twice a day and never so much as leaving a dirty glass on the sink. She
never left a mess in the bathroom. Two glasses of wine was her limit.
I felt like Lazarus.
Osborne came by three times
in the next two weeks. Lisa met him at Kluge's and gave him what she had
learned. It was getting to be quite a list.
"Kluge once had an
account in a New York bank with nine trillion dollars in it," she told me
after one of Osborne's visits. "I think he did it just to see if he could.
He left it in for one day, took the interest and fed it to a bank in the
Bahamas, then destroyed the principal. Which never existed anyway."
In return, Osborne told her
what was new on the murder investigation-which was nothing-and on the status of
Kluge's property, which was chaotic. Various agencies had sent people out to
look the place over. Some FBI men came, wanting to take over the investigation.
Lisa, when talking about computers, had the power to cloud men's minds. She
did it first by explaining exactly what she was doing, in terms so abstruse
that no one could understand her. Sometimes that was enough. If it wasn't, if
they started to get tough, she just moved out of the driver's seat and let them
try to handle Kluge's contraption. She let them watch in horror as dragons
leaped out of nowhere and ate up all the data on a disc, then printed "You
Stupid Putz!" on the screen.
"I'm cheating
them," she confessed to me. "I'm giving them stuff I know they're
gonna step in, because I already stepped in it myself. I've lost about forty
percent of the data Kluge had stored away. But the others lose a hundred percent.
You ought to see their faces when Kluge drops a logic bomb into their work.
That second guy threw a three thousand dollar printer clear across the room.
Then tried to bribe me to be quiet about it."
When some federal agency sent
out an expert from Stanford, and he seemed perfectly content to destroy
everything in sight in the firm belief that he was bound to get it right sooner
or later, Lisa showed him how Kluge entered the IRS main computer in Washington
and neglected to mention how Kluge had gotten out. The guy tangled with some
watchdog program. During his struggles, it seemed he had erased all the tax
records from the letter S down into the W's. Lisa let him think that for half
an hour.
"I thought he was having
a heart attack," she told me. "All the blood drained out of his face
and he couldn't talk. So I showed him where I had-with my usual foresight-
arranged for that data to be recorded, told him how to put it back where he
found it, and how to pacify the watchdog. He couldn't get out of that house
fast enough. Pretty soon he's gonna realize you can't destroy that much
information with anything short of dynamite because of the backups and the
limits of how much can be running at any one time. But I don't think he'll be
back."
"It sounds like a very
fancy video game," I said.
"It is, in a way. But
it's more like Dungeons and Dragons. It's an endless series of closed rooms
with dangers on the other side. You don't dare take it a step at a time. You
take it a hundredth of a step at a time. Your questions are like, 'Now this
isn't a question, but if it entered my mind to ask
this question-which I'm not
about to do-concerning what might happen if I looked at this door here-and I'm
not touching it, I'm not even in the next room-what do you suppose you might
do?' And the program crunches on that, decides if you fulfilled the conditions
for getting a great big cream pie in the face, then either throws it or allows
as how it might just move from step A to step A Prime. Then you say, 'Well,
maybe I am looking at that door.' And sometimes the program says 'You looked,
you looked, you dirty crook!' And the fireworks start."
Silly as all that sounds, it
was very close to the best explanation she was ever able to give me about what
she was doing.
"Are you telling
everything, Lisa?" I asked her.
"Well, not everything. I
didn't mention the four cents."
Four cents? Oh my god.
"Lisa, I didn't want
that, I didn't ask for it, I wish he'd never-"
"Calm down, Yank. It's
going to be all right."
"He kept records of all
that, didn't he?"
"That's what I spend
most of my time doing. Decoding his records."
"How long have you
known?"
"About the seven hundred
thousand dollars? It was in the first disc I cracked."
"I just want to give it
back."
She thought that over, and
shook her head.
"Victor, it'd be more
dangerous to get rid of it now than it would be to keep it. It was imaginary
money at first. But now it's got a history. The IRS thinks it knows where it
came from. The taxes are paid on it. The State of Delaware is convinced that a
legally chartered corporation disbursed it. An Illinois law firm has been paid
for handling it. Your bank has been paying you interest on it. I'm not saying
it would be impossible to go back and wipe all that out, but I wouldn't like to
try. I'm good, but I don't have Kluge's touch."
"How could he do all
that? You say it was imaginary money. That's not the way I thought money
worked. He could just pull it out of thin air?''
Lisa patted the top of her
computer console, and smiled at me.
"This is money,
Yank," she said, and her eyes glittered.
* * *
At night she worked by
candlelight so she wouldn't disturb me. That turned out to be my downfall. She
typed by touch, and needed the candle only to locate software.
So that's how I'd go to sleep
every night, looking at her slender body bathed in the glow of the candle. I
was always reminded of melting butter dripping down a roasted ear of corn.
Golden light on golden skin.
Ugly, she had called herself.
Skinny. It was true she was thin. I could see her ribs when she sat with her
back impossibly straight, her tummy sucked in, her chin up. She worked in the
nude these days, sitting in lotus position. For long periods she would not
move, her hands lying on her thighs, then she would poise, as if to pound the
keys. But her touch was light, almost silent. It looked more like yoga than programming.
She said she went into a meditative state for her best work.
I had expected a bony
angularity, all sharp elbows and knees. She wasn't like that. I had guessed her
weight ten pounds too low, and still didn't know where she put it. But she was
soft and rounded, and strong beneath.
No one was ever going to call
her face glamorous. Few would even go so far as to call her pretty. The braces
did that, I think. They caught the eye and held it, drawing attention to that
unsightly jumble.
But her skin was wonderful.
She had scars. Not as many as I had Expected. She seemed to heal quickly, and
well.
I thought she was beautiful.
I had just completed my
nightly survey when my eye was caught by the candle. I looked at it, then tried
to look away.
Candles do that sometimes. I
don't know why. In still air, with the flame perfectly vertical, they begin to
flicker. The flame leaps up then squats down, up and down, up and down,
brighter and brighter in regular rhythm, two or three beats to the second-
-and I tried to call out to
her, wishing the candle would stop its regular flickering, but already I
couldn't speak-
-I could only gasp, and I
tried once more, as hard as I could, to yell, to scream, to tell her not to
worry, and felt the nausea building…
* * *
I tasted blood. I took an
experimental breath, did not find the smells of vomit, urine, feces. The
overhead lights were on.
Lisa was on her hands and
knees leaning over me, her face very close. A tear dropped on my forehead. I
was on the carpet, on my back.
"Victor, can you hear
me?"
I nodded. There was a spoon
in my mouth. I spat it out.
"What happened? Are you
going to be all right?"
I nodded again, and struggled
to speak.
"You just lie there. The
ambulance is on its way."
"No. Don't need
it."
"Well, it's on its way.
You just take it easy and-"
"Help me up."
"Not yet. You're not
ready."
She was right. I tried to sit
up, and fell back quickly. I took deep breaths for a while. Then the doorbell
rang.
She stood up and started to
the door. I just managed to get my hand around her ankle. Then she was leaning
over me again, her eyes as wide as they would go.
"What is it? What's
wrong now?"
"Get some clothes
on," I told her. She looked down at herself, surprised.
"Oh. Right."
She got rid of the ambulance
crew. Lisa was a lot calmer after she made coffee and we were sitting at the
kitchen table. It was one o'clock, and I was still pretty rocky. But it hadn't
been a bad one.
I went to the bathroom and
got the bottle of Dilantin I'd hidden when she moved in. I let her see me take
one.
"I forgot to do this
today," I told her.
"It's because you hid
them. That was stupid."
"I know." There
must have been something else I could have said. It didn't please me to see her
look hurt. But she was hurt because I wasn't defending myself against her attack,
and that was a bit too complicated for me to dope out just after a grand mal.
"You can move out if you
want to," I said. I was in rare form.
So was she. She reached
across the table and shook me by the shoulders. She glared at me.
"I won't take a lot more
of that kind of shit," she said, and I nodded, and began to cry.
She let me do it. I think
that was probably best. She could have babied me, but I do a pretty good job of
that myself.
"How long has this been
going on?" she finally said. "Is that why you've stayed in your house
for thirty years?''
I shrugged. "I guess
it's part of it. When I got back they operated, but it just made it
worse."
"Okay. I'm mad at you
because you didn't tell me about it, so I didn't know what to do. I want to
stay, but you'll have to tell me how. Then I won't be mad anymore."
I could have blown the whole
thing right there. I'm amazed I didn't. Through the years I'd developed very
good methods for doing things like that. But I pulled through when I saw her
face. She really did want to stay. I didn't know why, but it was enough.
"The spoon was a
mistake," I said. "If there's time, and if you can do it without
risking your fingers, you could jam a piece of cloth in there. Part of a sheet,
or something. But nothing hard." I explored my mouth with a finger.
"I think I broke a tooth."
"Serves you right,"
she said. I looked at her, and smiled, then we were both laughing. She came
around the table and kissed me, then sat on my knee.
"The biggest danger is
drowning. During the first part of the seizure, all my muscles go rigid. That
doesn't last long. Then they all start contracting and relaxing at random. It's
very strong."
"I know. I watched, and
I tried to hold you."
"Don't do that. Get me
on my side. Stay behind me, and watch out for flailing arms. Get a pillow under
my head if you can. Keep me away from things I could injure myself on." I
looked her square in the eye. "I want to emphasize this. Just try to do
all those things. If I'm getting too violent, it's better you stand off to the
side. Better for both of us. If I knock you out, you won't be able to help me
if I start strangling on vomit."
I kept looking at her eyes.
She must have read my mind, because she smiled slightly.
"Sorry, Yank, I am not
freaked out. I mean, like, it's totally gross, you know, and it barfs me out to
the max, you could-"
"-gag me with a spoon, I
know. Okay, right, I know I was dumb. And that's about it. I might bite my
tongue or the inside of my cheek. Don't worry about it. There is one more
thing."
She waited, and I wondered
how much to tell her. There wasn't a lot she could do, but if I died on her I
didn't want her to feel it was her fault.
"Sometimes I have to go
to the hospital. Sometimes one seizure will follow another. If that keeps up
for too long, I won't breathe, and my brain will die of oxygen
starvation."
"That only takes about
five minutes," she said, alarmed.
"I know. It's only a
problem if I start having them frequently, so we could plan for it if I do.
But if I don't come out of one, start having another right on the heels of the
first, or if you can't detect any breathing for three or four minutes, you'd
better call an ambulance."
"Three or four minutes?
You'd be dead before they got here."
"It's that or live in a
hospital. I don't like hospitals."
"Neither do I."
The next day she took me for
a ride in her Ferrari. I was nervous about it, wondering if she was going to do
crazy things. If anything, she was too slow. People behind her kept honking. I
could tell she hadn't been driving long from the exaggerated attention she put
into every movement.
"A Ferrari is wasted on
me, I'm afraid," she confessed at one point. "I never drive it faster
than fifty-five."
We went to an interior
decorator in Beverly Hills and she bought a low-watt gooseneck lamp at an
outrageous price.
I had a hard time getting to
sleep that night. I suppose I was afraid of having another seizure, though
Lisa's new lamp wasn't going to set it off.
Funny about seizures. When I
first started having them, everyone called them fits. Then, gradually, it was
seizures, until fits began to sound dirty.
I guess it's a sign of
growing old, when the language changes on you.
There were rafts of new
words. A lot of them were for things that didn't even exist when I was growing
up. Like software. I always visualized a limp wrench.
"What got you interested
in computers, Lisa?" I asked her.
She didn't move. Her
concentration when sitting at the machine was pretty damn good. I rolled onto
my back and tried to sleep.
"It's where the power
is, Yank." I looked up. She had turned to face me.
"Did you pick it all up
since you got to America?"
"I had a head start. I
didn't tell you about my Captain, did I?"
"I don't think you
did."
"He was strange. I knew
that. I was about fourteen. He was an American, and he took an interest in me.
He got me a nice apartment in Saigon. And he put me in school."
She was studying me, looking
for a reaction. I didn't give her one.
"He was surely a
pedophile, and probably had homosexual tendencies, since I looked so much like
a skinny little boy."
Again the wait. This time she
smiled.
"He was good to me. I
learned to read well. From there on, anything is possible."
"I didn't actually ask
you about your Captain. I asked why you got interested in computers."
"That's right. You
did."
"Is it just a
living?"
"It started that way.
It's the future, Victor."
"God knows I've read
that enough times."
"It's true. It's already
here. It's power, if you know how to use it. You've seen what Kluge was able to
do. You can make money with one of these things. I don't mean earn it, I mean
make it, like if you had a printing press. Remember Osborne mentioned that
Kluge's house didn't exist? Did you think what that means?"
"That he wiped it out of
the memory banks."
"That was the first
step. But the lot exists in the county plat books, wouldn't you think? I mean,
this country hasn't entirely given up paper.''
"So the county really
does have a record of that house."
"No. That page was torn
out of the records."
"I don't get it. Kluge
never left the house."
"Oldest way in the
world, friend. Kluge looked through the L.A.P.D. files until he found a guy
known as Sammy. He sent him a cashier's check for a thousand dollars, along
with a letter saying he could earn twice that if he'd go to the hall of records
and do something. Sammy didn't bite, and neither did McGee, or Molly Unger. But
Little Billy Phipps did, and he got a check just like the letter said, and he
and Kluge had a wonderful business relationship for many years. Little Billy
drives a new Cadillac now, and hasn't the faintest notion who Kluge was or
where he lived. It didn't matter to Kluge how much he spent. He just pulled it
out of thin air."
I thought that over for a
while. I guess it's true that with enough money you can do just about anything,
and Kluge had all the money in the world.
"Did you tell Osborne
about Little Billy?"
"I erased that disc,
just like I erased your seven hundred thousand. You never know when you might
need somebody like Little Billy."
"You're not afraid of
getting into trouble over it?"
"Life is risk, Victor.
I'm keeping the best stuff for myself. Not because I intend to use it, but because
if I ever needed it badly and didn't have it, I'd feel like such a fool."
She cocked her head and
narrowed her eyes, which made them practically disappear.
"Tell me something,
Yank. Kluge picked you out of all your neighbors because you'd been a Boy Scout
for thirty years. How do you react to what I'm doing?"
"You're cheerfully
amoral, and you're a survivor, and you're basically decent. And I pity anybody
who gets in your way."
She grinned, stretched, and
stood up.
" 'Cheerfully amoral.' I
like that." She sat beside me, making a great sloshing in the bed.
"You want to be amoral again?"
"In a little bit."
She started rubbing my chest. "So you got into computers because they were
the wave of the future. Don't you ever worry about them… I don't know, I guess
it sounds corny… do you think they'll take over?"
"Everybody thinks that
until they start to use them," she said. "You've got to realize just
how stupid they are. Without programming they are good for nothing, literally.
Now, what I do believe is that the people who run the computers will take over.
They already have. That's why I study them."
"I guess that's not what
I meant. Maybe I can't say it right."
She frowned. "Kluge was
looking into something. He'd been eavesdropping in artificial intelligence labs,
and reading a lot of neurological research. I think he was trying to find a
common thread."
"Between human brains
and computers?"
"Not quite. He was
thinking of computers and neurons. Brain cells." She pointed to her
computer. "That thing, or any other computer, is light-years away from
being a human brain. It can't generalize, or infer, or categorize, or invent.
With good programming it can appear to do some of those things, but it's an
illusion.
"There's an old
speculation about what would happen if we finally built a computer with as many
transistors as the human brain has neurons. Would there be a self-awareness? I
think that's baloney. A transistor isn't a neuron, and a quintil-lion of them
aren't any better than a dozen.
"So Kluge-who seems to
have felt the same way-started looking into the possible similarities between a
neuron and an 8-bit computer. That's why he had all that consumer junk sitting
around his house, those Trash-80's and Atari's and TI's and Sinclair's, for chrissake.
He was used to much more powerful instruments. He ate up the home units like
candy."
"What did he find
out?"
"Nothing, it looks like.
An 8-bit unit is more complex than a neuron, and no computer is in the same
galaxy as an organic brain. But see, the words get tricky. I said an Atari is
more complex than a neuron, but it's hard to really compare them. It's like
comparing a direction with a distance, or a color with a mass. The units are
different. Except for one similarity."
"What's that?"
"The connections. Again,
it's different, but the concept of networking is the same. A neuron is
connected to a lot of others. There are trillions of them, and the way messages
pulse through them determines what we are and what we think and what we
remember. And with that computer I can reach a million others. It's bigger than
the human brain, really, because the information in that network is more than
all humanity could cope with in a million years. It reaches from Pioneer Ten,
out beyond the orbit of Pluto, right into every living room that has a
telephone in it. With that com-puter you can tap tons of data that has been
collected but nobody's even had the time to look at.
"That's what Kluge was
interested in. The old 'critical mass computer' idea, the computer that becomes
aware, but with a new angle. Maybe it wouldn't be the size of the computer, but
the number of computers. There used to be thousands of them. Now there's
millions. They're putting them in cars. In wristwatches. Every home has
several, from the simple timer on a microwave oven up to a video game or home
terminal. Kluge was trying to find out if critical mass could be reached that
way."
"What did he
think?"
"I don't know. He was
just getting started." She glanced down at me. "But you know what, Yank?
I think you've reached critical mass while I wasn't looking."
"I think you're
right." I reached for her.
Lisa liked to cuddle. I
didn't, at first, after fifty years of sleeping alone. But I got to like it
pretty quickly.
That's what we were doing when
we resumed the conversation we had been having. We just lay in each other's
arms and talked about things. Nobody had mentioned love yet, but I knew I loved
her. I didn't know what to do about it, but I would think of something.
"Critical mass," I
said. She nuzzled my neck, and yawned.
"What about it?"
"What would it be like?
It seems like it would be such a vast intelligence. So quick, so omniscient.
God-like."
"Could be."
"Wouldn't it… run our
lives? I guess I'm asking the same questions I started off with. Would it take
over?"
She thought about it for a
long time.
"I wonder if there would
be anything to take over. I mean, why should it care? How could we figure what
its concerns would be? Would it want to be worshipped, for instance? I doubt
it. Would it want to 'rationalize all human behavior, to eliminate all
emotion,' as I'm sure some sci-fi film computer must have told some damsel in
distress in the 'fifties.
"You can use a word like
awareness, but what does it mean? An amoeba must be aware. Plants probably are.
There may be a level of awareness in a neuron. Even in an integrated circuit
chip. We don't even know what our own aware-ness really is. We've never been
able to shine a light on it, dissect it, figure out where it comes from or
where it goes when we're dead. To apply human values to a thing like this
hypothetical computer-net consciousness would be pretty stupid. But I don't
see how it could interact with human awareness at all. It might not even
notice us, any more than we notice cells in our bodies, or neutrinos passing
through us, or the vibrations of the atoms in the air around us."
So she had to explain what a
neutrino was. One thing I always provided her with was an ignorant audience.
And after that, I pretty much forgot about our mythical hyper-computer.
"What about your
Captain?" I asked, much later.
"Do you really want to
know, Yank?" she mumbled, sleepily.
"I'm not afraid to
know."
She sat up and reached for
her cigarettes. I had come to know she sometimes smoked them in times of stress.
She had told me she smoked after making love, but that first time had been the
only time. The lighter flared in the dark. I heard her exhale.
"My Major, actually. He
got a promotion. Do you want to know his name?"
"Lisa, I don't want to
know any of it if you don't want to tell it. But if you do, what I want to know
is did he stand by you."
"He didn't marry me, if
that's what you mean. When he knew he had to go, he said he would, but I talked
him out of it. Maybe it was the most noble thing I ever did. Maybe it was the
most stupid.
"It's no accident I look
Japanese. My grandmother was raped in '42 by a Jap soldier of the occupation.
She was Chinese, living in Hanoi. My mother was born there. They went south
after Dien Bien Phu. My grandmother died. My mother had it hard. Being Chinese
was tough enough, but being half Chinese and half Japanese was worse. My father
was half French and half Annamese. Another bad combination. I never knew him.
But I'm sort of a capsule history of Vietnam."
The end of her cigarette
glowed brighter once more.
"I've got one
grandfather's face and the other grandfather's height. With tits by Goodyear.
About all I missed was some American genes, but I was working on that for my
children.
"When Saigon was falling
I tried to get to the American Embassy. Didn't make it. You know the rest,
until I got to Thailand, and when I finally got Americans to notice me, it
turned out my Major was still looking for me. He sponsored me over here, and I
made it in time to watch him die of cancer. Two months I had with him, all of
it in the hospital."
"My god." I had a
horrible thought. "That wasn't the war, too, was it? I mean, the story of
your life-"
"-is the rape of Asia.
No, Victor. Not that war, anyway. But he was one of those guys who got to see
atom bombs up close, out in Nevada. He was too Regular Army to complain about
it. but I think he knew that's what killed him."
"Did you love him?"
"What do you want me to
say? He got me out of hell."
Again the cigarette flared,
and I saw her stub it out.
"No," she said.
"I didn't love him. He knew that. I've never loved anybody. He was very
dear, very special to me. I would have done almost anything for him. He was
fatherly to me." I felt her looking at me in the dark. "Aren't you
going to ask how old he was?"
"Fiftyish," I said.
"On the nose. Can I ask
you something?"
"I guess it's your
turn."
"How many girls have you
had since you got back from Korea?"
I held up my hand and
pretended to count on my fingers.
"One," I said, at
last.
"How many before you
went?"
"One. We broke up before
I left for the war."
"How many in
Korea?"
"Nine. All at Madame
Park's jolly little whorehouse in Pusan."
"So you've made love to
one white and ten Asians. I bet none of the others were as tall as me."
"Korean girls have
fatter cheeks, too. But they all had your eyes."
She nuzzled against my chest,
took a deep breath, and sighed.
"We're a hell of a pair,
aren't we?"
I hugged her, and her breath
came again, hot on my chest.
I wondered how I'd lived so
long without such a simple miracle as that.
"Yes. I think we really
are."
Osborne came by again about a
week later. He seemed subdued. He listened to the things Lisa had decided to
give him without much interest. He took the printout she handed him, and
promised to turn it over to the departments that handled those things. But he
didn't get up to leave.
"I thought I ought to
tell you, Apfel," he said, at last. "The Gavin case has been
closed."
I had to think a moment to
remember Kluge's real name had been Gavin.
"The coroner ruled
suicide a long time ago. I was able to keep the case open quite a while on the
strength of my suspicions." He nodded toward Lisa. "And on what she
said about the suicide note. But there was just no evidence at all."
"It probably happened
quickly," Lisa said. "Somebody caught him, tracked him back-it can be
done; Kluge was lucky for a long time-and did him the same day."
"You don't think it was
suicide?" I asked Osborne.
"No. But whoever did it
is home free unless something new turns up."
"I'll tell you if it
does," Lisa said.
"That's something
else," Osborne said. "I can't authorize you to work over there any
more. The county's taken possession of house and contents."
"Don't worry about
it," Lisa said, softly.
There was a short silence as
she leaned over to shake a cigarette from the pack on the coffee table. She lit
it, exhaled, and leaned back beside me, giving Osborne her most inscrutable
look. He sighed.
"I'd hate to play poker
with you, lady," he said. "What do you mean, 'Don't worry about
it'?"
"I bought the house four
days ago. And its contents. If anything turns up that would help you re-open
the murder investigation, I will let you know."
Osborne was too defeated to
get angry. He studied her quietly for a while.
"I'd like to know how
you swung that."
"I did nothing illegal.
You're free to check it out. I paid good cash money for it. The house came onto
the market. I got a good price at the Sheriffs sale."
"How'd you like it if I
put my best men on the transaction? See if they can dig up some funny money?
Maybe fraud. How about I get the F.B.I, in to look it all over?"
She gave him a cool look.
"You're welcome to.
Frankly, Detective Osborne, I could have stolen that house, Griffith Park, and
the Harbor Freeway and I don't think you could have caught me."
"So where does that
leave me?"
"Just where you were.
With a closed case, and a promise from me."
"I don't like you having
all that stuff, if it can do the things you say it can do."
"I didn't expect you
would. But that's not your department, is it? The county owned it for a while,
through simple confiscation. They didn't know what they had, and they let it
go-"
"Maybe I can get the
Fraud detail out here to confiscate your software. There's criminal evidence on
it."
"You could try
that," she agreed.
They stared at each other for
a while. Lisa won. Osborne rubbed his eyes and nodded. Then he heaved himself
to his feet and slumped to the door.
Lisa stubbed out her
cigarette. We listened to him going down the walk.
"I'm surprised he gave
up so easy," I said. "Or did he? Do you think he'll try a raid?"
"It's not likely. He
knows the score."
"Maybe you could tell it
to me."
"For one thing, it's not
his department, and he knows it."
"Why did you buy the
house?"
"You ought to ask
how."
I looked at her closely.
There was a gleam of amusement behind the poker face.
"Lisa. What did you
do?"
"That's what Osborne
asked himself. He got the right answer, because he understands Kluge's
machines. And he knows how things get done. It was no accident that house going
on the market, and no accident I was the only bidder. I used one of Kluge's pet
councilmen."
"You bribed him?"
She laughed, and kissed me.
"I think I finally
managed to shock you, Yank. That's gotta be the biggest difference between me and
a native-born American. Average citizens don't spend much on bribes over here.
In Saigon, everybody bribes."
"Did you bribe
him?"
"Nothing so indelicate.
One has to go in the back door over here. Several entirely legal campaign
contributions appeared in the accounts of a State Senator, who mentioned a
certain situation to someone, who happened to be in the position to do legally
what I happened to want done." She looked at me askance. "Of course I
bribed him, Victor. You'd be amazed to know how cheaply. Does that bother
you?"
"Yes," I admitted.
"I don't like bribery."
"I'm indifferent to it.
It happens, like gravity. It may not be admirable, but it gets things
done."
"I assume you covered
yourself."
"Reasonably well. You're
never entirely covered with a bribe, because of the human element. The
councilman might geek if they got him in front of a grand jury. But they won't,
because Osborne won't pursue it. That's the second reason he walked out of here
without a fight. He knows how the world wobbles, he knows what kind of force I
now possess, and he knows he can't fight it."
There was a long silence
after that. I had a lot to think about, and I didn't feel good about most of
it. At one point Lisa reached for the pack of cigarettes, then changed her mind.
She waited for me to work it out.
"It is a terrific force,
isn't it," I finally said.
"It's frightening,"
she agreed. "Don't think it doesn't scare me. Don't think I haven't had
fantasies of being super-woman. Power is an awful temptation, and it's not easy
to reject. There's so much I could do."
"Will you?"
"I'm not talking about
stealing things, or getting rich."
"I didn't think you
were."
"This is political
power. But I don't know how to wield it… it sounds corny, but to use it for
good. I've seen so much evil come from good intentions. I don't think I'm wise
enough to do any good. And the chances of getting torn up like Kluge did are
large. But I'm not wise enough to walk away from it.
I'm still a street urchin
from Saigon, Yank. I'm smart enough not to use it unless I have to. But I can't
give it away, and I can't destroy it. Is that stupid?"
I didn't have a good answer
for that one. But I had a bad feeling.
My doubts had another week to
work on me. I didn't come to any great moral conclusions. Lisa knew of some
crimes, and she wasn't reporting them to the authorities. That didn't bother me
much. She had at her fingertips the means to commit more crimes, and that
bothered me a lot. Yet I really didn't think she planned to do anything. She
was smart enough to use the things she had only in a defensive way- but with
Lisa that could cover a lot of ground.
When she didn't show up for
dinner one evening, I went over to Kluge's and found her busy in the living
room. A nine-foot section of shelving had been cleared. The discs and tapes
were stacked on a table. She had a big plastic garbage can and a magnet the
size of a softball. I watched her wave a tape near the magnet, then toss it in
the garbage can, which was almost full. She glanced up, did the same operation
with a handful of discs, then took off her glasses and wiped her eyes.
"Feel any better now,
Victor?" she asked.
"What do you mean? I
feel fine."
"No you don't. And I
haven't felt right, either. It hurts me to do it, but I have to. You want to go
get the other trash can?''
I did, and helped her pull
more software from the shelves.
"You're not going to
wipe it all, are you?"
"No. I'm wiping records,
and… something else."
"Are you going to tell
me what?"
"There are things it's
better not to know," she said, darkly.
I finally managed to convince
her to talk over dinner. She had said little, just eating and shaking her head.
But she gave in.
"Rather dreary,
actually," she said. "I've been probing around some delicate places
the last couple days. These are places Kluge visited at will, but they scare
the hell out of me. Dirty places. Places where they know things I thought I'd
like to find out."
She shivered, and seemed
reluctant to go on. "Are you talking about military computers? The
CIA?"
"The CIA is where it
starts. It's the easiest. I've looked around at NOR AD-that's the guys who get
to fight the next war. It makes me shiver to see how easy Kluge got in there.
He cobbled up a way to start World War Three, just as an exercise. That's one
of the things we just erased. The last two days I was nibbling around the edges
of the big boys. The Defense Intelligence Agency and the National Security…
something. DIA and NSA. Each of them is bigger than the CIA. Something knew I
was there. Some watchdog program. As soon as I realized that I got out quick,
and I've spent the last five hours being sure it didn't follow me. And now I'm
sure, and I've destroyed all that, too."
"You think they're the
ones who killed Kluge?"
"They're surely the best
candidates. He had tons of their stuff. I know he helped design the biggest
installations at NSA, and he'd been poking around in there for years. One false
step is all it would take."
"Did you get it all? I
mean, are you sure?"
"I'm sure they didn't
track me. I'm not sure I've destroyed all the records. I'm going back now to
take a last look."
"I'll go with you."
We worked until well after
midnight. Lisa would review a tape or a disc, and if she was in any doubt, toss
it to me for the magnetic treatment. At one point, simply because she was
unsure, she took the magnet and passed it in front of an entire shelf of
software.
It was amazing to think about
it. With that one wipe she had randomized billions of bits of information. Some
of it might not exist anywhere else in the world. I found myself confronted by
even harder questions. Did she have the right to do it? Didn't knowledge exist
for everyone? But I confess I had little trouble quelling my protests. Mostly I
was happy to see it go. The old reactionary in me found it easier to believe
There Are Things We Are Not Meant To Know.
We were almost through when
her monitor screen began to malfunction. It actually gave off a few hisses and
pops, so Lisa stood back from it for a moment, then the screen started to
flicker. I stared at it for a while. It seemed to me there was an image trying
to form in the screen. Something three-dimen-sional. Just as I was starting to
get a picture of it I happened to glance at Lisa, and she was looking at me.
Her face was flickering. She came to me and put her hands over my eyes.
"Victor, you shouldn't
look at that."
"It's okay," I told
her. And when I said it, it was, but as soon as I had the words out I knew it
wasn't. And that is the last thing I remembered for a long time.
I'm told it was a very bad
two weeks. I remember very little of it. I was kept under high dosage of drugs,
and my few lucid periods were always followed by a fresh seizure.
The first thing I recall
clearly was looking up at Doctor Stuart's face. I was in a hospital bed. I
later learned it was in Cedars-Sinai, not the Veteran's Hospital. Lisa had paid
for a private room.
Stuart put me through the
usual questions. I was able to answer them, though I was very tired. When he
was satisfied as to my condition he finally began to answer some of my
questions. I learned how long I had been there, and how it had happened.
"You went into
consecutive seizures," he confirmed. "I don't know why, frankly. You
haven't been prone to them for a decade. I was thinking you were well under
control. But nothing is ever really stable, I guess."
"So Lisa got me here in
time."
"She did more than that.
She didn't want to level with me at first. It seems that after the first
seizure she witnessed she read everything she could find. From that day, she
had a syringe and a solution of Valium handy. When she saw you couldn't breathe
she injected you with 100 milligrams, and there's no doubt it saved your life."
Stuart and I had known each
other a long time. He knew I had no prescription for Valium, though we had
talked about it the last time I was hospitalized. Since I lived alone, there
would be no one to inject me if I got in trouble.
He was more interested in results
than anything else, and what Lisa did had the desired result. I was still
alive.
He wouldn't let me have any
visitors that day. I protested, but soon was asleep. The next day she came. She
wore a new T-shirt. This one had a picture of a robot wearing a gown and
mortarboard, and said "Class of 11111000000." It turns out that was
1984 in binary notation.
She had a big smile and said
"Hi, Yank!" and as she sat on the bed I started to shake. She looked
alarmed and asked if she should call the doctor.
"It's not that," I
managed to say. "I'd like it if you just held me."
She took off her shoes and
got under the covers with me. She held me tightly. At some point a nurse came
in and tried to shoo her out. Lisa gave her profanities in Vietnamese, Chinese,
and a few startling ones in English, and the nurse left. I saw Doctor Stuart
glance in later.
I felt much better when I
finally stopped crying. Lisa's eyes were wet, too.
"I've been here every
day," she said. "You look awful, Victor."
"I feel a lot
better."
"Well, you look better
than you did. But your doctor says you'd better stick around another couple of
days, just to make sure."
"I think he's
right."
"I'm planning a big
dinner for when you get back. You think we should invite the neighbors?"
I didn't say anything for a
while. There were so many things we hadn't faced. Just how long could it go on
between us? How long before I got sour about being so useless? How long before
she got tired of being with an old man? I don't know just when I had started to
think of Lisa as a permanent part of my life. And I wondered how I could have
thought that.
"Do you want to spend
more years waiting in hospitals for a man to die?''
"What do you want,
Victor? I'll marry you if you want me to. Or I'll live with you in sin. I
prefer sin, myself, but if it'll make you happy-"
"I don't know why you
want to saddle yourself with an epileptic old fart."
"Because I love
you."
It was the first time she had
said it. I could have gone on questioning-bringing up her Major again, for instance-but
I had no urge to. I'm very glad I didn't. So I changed the subject.
"Did you get the job
finished?"
She knew which job I was
talking about. She lowered her voice and put her mouth close to my ear.
"Let's don't be specific
about it here, Victor. I don't trust any place I haven't swept for bugs. But,
to put your mind at ease, I did finish, and it's been a quiet couple of weeks.
No one is any wiser, and I'll never meddle in things like that again."
I felt a lot better, I was
also exhausted. I tried to conceal my yawns, but she sensed it was time to go.
She gave me one more kiss, promising many more to come, and left me.
It was the last time I ever
saw her.
At about ten o'clock that
evening Lisa went into Kluge's kitchen with a screwdriver and some other tools
and got to work on the microwave oven.
The manufacturers of those
appliances are very careful to insure they can't be turned on with the door
open, as they emit lethal radiation. But with simple tools and a good brain it
is possible to circumvent the safety interlocks. Lisa had no trouble with them.
About ten minutes after she entered the kitchen she put her head in the oven
and turned it on.
It is impossible to say how
long she held her head in there. It was long enough to turn her eyeballs to the
consistency of boiled eggs. At some point she lost voluntary muscle control and
fell to the floor, pulling the microwave down with her. It shorted out, and a
fire started.
The fire set off the
sophisticated burglar alarm she had installed a month before. Betty Lanier saw
the flames and called the fire department as Hal ran across the street and into
the burning kitchen. He dragged what was left of Lisa out onto the grass. When
he saw what the fire had done to her upper body, and in particular her breasts,
he threw up.
She was rushed to the
hospital. The doctors there amputated one arm and cut away the frightful
masses of vulcanized silicone, pulled all her teeth, and didn't know what to do
about the eyes. They put her on a respirator.
It was an orderly who first
noticed the blackened and bloody T-shirt they had cut from her. Some of the
message was unreadable, but it began, "I can't go on this way anymore…"
* * *
There is no other way I could
have told all that. I discovered it piecemeal, starting with the disturbed
look on Doctor Stuart's face when Lisa didn't show up the next day. He wouldn't
tell me anything, and I had another seizure shortly after.
The next week is a blur. I
remember being released from the hospital, but I don't remember the trip home.
Betty was very good to me. They gave me a tranquilizer called Tranxene, and it
was even better. I ate them like candy. I wandered in a drugged haze, eating
only when Betty insisted, sleeping sitting up in my chair, coming awake not knowing
where or who I was. I returned to the prison camp many times. Once I recall
helping Lisa stack severed heads.
When I saw myself in the
mirror, there was a vague smile on my face. It was Tranxene, caressing my
frontal lobes. I knew that if I was to live much longer, me and Tranxene would
have to become very good friends.
I eventually became capable
of something that passed for rational thought. I was helped along somewhat by a
visit from Osborne. I was trying, at that time, to find reasons to live, and
wondered if he had any.
"I'm very sorry,"
he started off. I said nothing. "This is on my own time," he went on.
"The department doesn't know I'm here."
"Was it suicide?" I
asked him.
"I brought along a copy
of the… the note. She ordered it from a shirt company in Westwood, three days
before the… accident."
He handed it to me, and I
read it. I was mentioned, though not by name. I was "the man I love."
She said she couldn't cope with my problems. It was a short note. You can't get
too much on a T-shirt. I read it through five times, then handed it back to
him.
"She told you Kluge
didn't write his note. I tell you she didn't write this."
He nodded reluctantly. I felt
a vast calm, with a howling nightmare just below it. Praise Tranxene.
"Can you back that
up?"
She saw me in the hospital
shortly before it all happened. She was full of life and hope. You say she
ordered the shirt three days before. I would have felt that. And that note is
pathetic. Lisa was never pathetic."
He nodded again. '
"Some things I want to
tell you. There were no signs of a struggle. Mrs. Lanier is sure no one came in
the front. The crime lab went over the whole place and we're sure no one was in
there with her. I'd stake my life on the fact that no one entered or left that
house. Now, / don't believe it was suicide, either, but do you have any
suggestions?"
"The NSA," I said.
I explained about the last
things she had done while I was still there. I told him of her fear of the
government spy agencies. That was all I had.
"Well, I guess they're
the ones who could do a thing like that, if anyone could. But I'll tell you, I
have a hard time swallowing it. I don't know why, for one thing. Maybe you
believe those people kill like you and I'd swat a fly." His look make it
into a question.
"I don't know what I
believe."
"I'm not saying they
wouldn't kill for national security, or some such shit. But they'd have taken
the computers, too. They wouldn't have left her alone, they wouldn't even have
let her near that stuff after they killed Kluge."
"What you're saying
makes sense."
He muttered on about it for
quite some time. Eventually I offered him some wine. He accepted thankfully. I
considered joining him-it would be a quick way to die-but did not. He drank the
whole bottle, and was comfortably drunk when he suggested we go next door and
look it over one more time. I was planning on visiting Lisa the next day, and
knew I had to start somewhere building myself up for that, so I agreed to go
with him.
We inspected the kitchen. The
fire had blackened the counters and melted some linoleum, but not much else.
Water had made a mess of the place. There was a brown stain on the floor which
I was able to look at with no emotion.
So we went back to the living
room, and one of the computers was turned on. There was a short message on the
screen.
IF YOU WISH TO KNOW MORE
PRESS ENTERn
"Don't do it," I
told him. But he did. He stood, blinking solemnly, as the words wiped
themselves out and a new message appeared.
YOU LOOKED
The screen started to flicker
and I was in my car, in darkness, with a pill in my mouth and another in my
hand. I spat out the pill, and sat for a moment, listening to the old engine
ticking over. In my other hand was the plastic pill bottle. I felt very tired,
but opened the car door and shut off the engine. I felt my way to the garage
door and opened it. The air outside was fresh and sweet. I looked down at the
pill bottle and hurried into the bathroom.
When I got through what had
to be done there were a dozen pills floating in the toilet that hadn't even
dissolved. There were the wasted shells of many more, and a lot of other stuff
I won't bother to describe. I counted the pills in the bottle, remembered how
many there had been, and wondered if I would make it.
I went over to Kluge's house
and could not find Osborae. I was getting tired, but I made it back to my house
and stretched out on the couch to see if I would live or die.
The next day I found the
story in the paper. Osborne had gone home and blown out the back of his head
with his revolver. It was not a big story. It happens to cops all the time. He
didn't leave a note.
I got on the bus and rode out
to the hospital and spent three hours trying to get in to see Lisa. I wasn't
able to do it. I was not a relative and the doctors were quite firm about her
having no visitors. When I got angry they were as gentle as possible. It was
then I learned the extent of her injuries. Hal had kept the worst from me. None
of it would have mattered, but the doctors swore there was nothing left in her
head. So I went home.
She died two days later.
She had left a will, to my
surprise. I got the house and contents. I picked up the phone as soon as I
learned of it, and called a garbage company. While they were on the way I went
for the last time into Kluge's house.
The same computer was still
on, and it gave the same message.
PRESS ENTERn
I cautiously located the
power switch, and turned it off. I had the garbage people strip the place to
the bare walls.
I went over my own house very
carefully, looking for anything that was even the first cousin to a computer. I
threw out the radio. I sold the car, and the refrigerator, and the stove, and
the blender, and the electric clock. I drained the waterbed and threw out the
heater.
Then I bought the best
propane stove on the market, and hunted a long time before I found an old
icebox. I had the garage stacked to the ceiling with firewood. I had the chimney
cleaned. It would be getting cold soon.
One day I took the bus to
Pasadena and established the Lisa Foo Memorial Scholarship fund for Vietnamese
refugees and their children. I endowed it with seven hundred thousand
eighty-three dollars and four cents. I told them it could be used for any field
of study except computer science. I could tell they thought me eccentric.
And I really thought I was
safe, until the phone rang.
I thought it over for a long
time before answering it. In the end, I knew it would just keep on going until
I did. So I picked it up.
For a few seconds there was a
dial tone, but I was not fooled. I kept holding it to my ear, and finally the
tone turned off. There was just silence. I listened intently. I heard some of
those far-off musical tones that live in phone wires. Echoes of conversations
taking place a thousand miles away. And something infinitely more distant and
cool.
I do not know what they have
incubated out there at the NSA. I don't know if they did it on purpose, or if
it just happened, or if it even has anything to do with them, in the end. But I
know it's out there, because I heard its soul breathing on the wires. I spoke
very carefully.
"I do not wish to know
any more," I said. "I won't tell anyone anything. Kluge, Lisa, and
Osborne all committed suicide. I am just a lonely man, and I won't cause you
any trouble." There was a click, and a dial tone.
Getting the phone taken out
was easy. Getting them to remove all the wires was a little harder, since once
a place is wired they expect it to be wired forever. They grumbled, but when I
started pulling them out myself, they relented, though they warned me it was
going to cost.
The power company was harder.
They actually seemed to believe there was a regulation requiring each house to
be hooked up to the grid. They were willing to shut off my power-though hardly
pleased about it-but they just weren't going to take the wires away from my
house. I went up on the roof with an axe and demolished four feet of eaves as
they gaped at me. Then they coiled up their wires and went home.
I threw out all my lamps, all
things electrical. With hammer, chisel, and handsaw I went to work on the dry
wall just above the baseboards.
As I stripped the house of
wiring I wondered many times why I was doing it. Why was it worth it? I
couldn't have very many more years before a final seizure finished me off.
Those years were not going to be a lot of fun.
Lisa had been a survivor. She
would have known why I was doing this. She had once said I was a survivor, too.
I survived the camp. I survived the death of my mother and father and managed
to fashion a solitary life. Lisa survived the death of just about everything.
No survivor expects to live through it all. But while she was alive, she would
have worked to stay alive.
And that's what I did. I got
all the wires out of the walls, went over the house with a magnet to see if I
had missed any metal, then spent a week cleaning up, fixing the holes I had
knocked in the walls, ceiling, and attic. I was amused trying to picture the
real-estate agent selling this place after I was gone.
It's a great little house,
folks. No electricity…
Now I live quietly, as
before.
I work in my garden during
most of the daylight hours. I've expanded it considerably, and even have things
growing in the front yard now.
I live by candlelight, and
kerosene lamp. I grow most of what I eat.
It took a long time to taper
off the Tranxene and the Dilantin, but I did it, and now take the seizures as
they come. I've usually got bruises to show for it.
In the middle of a vast city
I have cut myself off. I am not part of the network growing faster than I can
conceive. I don't even know if it's dangerous, to ordinary people. It noticed
me, and Kluge, and Osborne. And Lisa. It brushed against our minds like I would
brush away a mosquito, never noticing I had crushed it. Only I survived.
But I wonder.
It would be very hard…
Lisa told me how it can get
in through the wiring. There's something called a carrier wave that can move
over wires carrying household current. That's why the electricity had to go-
I need water for my garden.
There's just not enough rain here in southern California, and I don't know how
else I could get the water.
Do you think it could come
through the pipes?
BLOODCHILD
by Octavia E. Butler
"Bloodchild" was
purchased by Shawna McCarthy, and appeared in the June 1984 issue of IAsfm, with a striking abstract cover
by Wayne Barlowe and dramatic interior illustrations by Nicholas Jainschigg.
"Bloodchild" was Butler's second sale to IAsfm; her first
IAsfm story, "Speech Sounds," had already won her a Hugo Award the
previous year, but "Bloodchild" was to prove even more popular, going
on to win both the Hugo and the Nebula Award. "Bloodchild" was
another controversial story. In my headnote for it in The Year's Best
Science Fiction I wrote: "Here's as powerful a story as you're likely
to see this (or any other) year," and although IAsfm lost a few
subscribers over it, it was more than worth it. Primarily known as' a prolific
and popular novelist, Butler rarely writes short fiction, but when she does,
it's worth the wait. As you are about to discover...
Octavia E. Butler sold her
first novel in 1976 and has subsequently emerged as one of the foremost writers
of her generation. Her critically acclaimed novels include Patternmaster, Mind of My Mind, Survivor,
Kindred and Wild Seed.
Her most recent novel was Clay's Ark. She is currently at work on a
new novel, tentatively entitled Exogenesis. Born in Pasadena, California,
she now lives and works in Los Angeles.
My last night of childhood
began with a visit home. T'Gatoi's sisters had given us two sterile eggs.
T'Gatoi gave one to my mother, brother, and sisters. She insisted that I eat
the other one alone. It didn't matter. There was still enough to leave everyone
feeling good. Almost everyone. My mother wouldn't take any. She sat, watching
everyone drifting and dreaming without her. Most of the time she watched me.
I lay against T'Gatoi's long,
velvet underside, sipping from my egg now and then, wondering why my mother
denied herself such a harmless pleasure. Less of her hair would be gray if she
indulged now and then. The eggs prolonged life, prolonged vigor. My father, who
had never refused one in his life, had lived more than twice as long as he should
have. And toward the end of his life, when he should have been slowing down, he
had married my mother and fathered four children.
But my mother seemed content
to age before she had to. I saw her turn away as several of T'Gatoi's limbs
secured me closer. T'Gatoi liked our body heat, and took advantage of it
whenever she could. When I was little and at home more, my mother used to try to
tell me how to behave with T'Gatoi how to be respectful and always obedient
because T'Gatoi was the Tlic government official in charge of the Preserve, and
thus the most important of her kind to deal directly with Terrans. It was an
honor, my mother said, that such a person had chosen to come into the family.
My mother was at her most formal and severe when she was lying.
I had no idea why she was
lying, or even what she was lying about. It was an honor to have T'Gatoi
in the family, but it was hardly a novelty. T'Gatoi was not interested in being
honored in the house she considered her second home. She simply came in,
climbed onto one of her special couches and called me over to keep her warm. It
was impossible to be formal with her while lying against her and hearing her
complain as usual that I was too skinny.
"You're better,"
she said this time, probing me with six or seven of her limbs. "You're
gaining weight finally. Thinness is dangerous." The probing changed
subtly, became a series of caresses.
"He's still too
thin," my mother said sharply.
T'Gatoi lifted her head and
perhaps a meter of her body off the couch as though she were sitting up. She
looked at my mother, and my mother, her face lined and old-looking, turned
away.
"Lien, I would like you
to have what's left of Gan's egg." "The eggs are for the
children," my mother said.
"They are for the
family. Please take it."
Unwillingly obedient, my
mother took it from me and put it to her mouth. There were only a few drops
left in the now-shrunken, elastic shell, but she squeezed them out, swallowed
them, and after a few moments some of the lines of tension began to smooth from
her face.
"It's good," she whispered.
"Sometimes I forget how good it is."
"You should take
more," T'Gatoi said. "Why are you in such a hurry to be old?"
My mother said nothing.
"I like being able to
come here," T'Gatoi said. "This place is a refuge because of you, yet
you won't take care of yourself."
T'Gatoi was hounded on the
outside. Her people wanted more of us made available. Only she and her
political faction stood between us and the hordes who did not understand why
there was a Preserve—why any Terran could not be courted, paid, drafted, in
some way made available to them. Or they did understand, but in their
desperation, they did not care. She parceled us out to the desperate and sold
us to the rich and powerful for their political support. Thus, we were necessities,
status symbols, and an independent people. She oversaw the joining of families,
putting an end to the final remnants of the earlier system of breaking up
Terran families to suit impatient Tlic. I had lived outside with her. I had
seen the desperate eagerness in the way some people looked at me. It was a
little frightening to know that only she stood between us and that desperation
that could so easily swallow us. My mother would look at her sometimes and say
to me, "Take care of her." And I would remember that she too had been
outside, had seen.
Now T'Gatoi used four of her
limbs to push me away from her onto the floor. "Go on, Gan," she
said. "Sit down there with your sisters and enjoy not being sober. You had
most of the egg. Lien, come warm me."
My mother hesitated for no
reason that I could see. One of my earliest memories is of my mother stretched
alongside T'Gatoi, talking about things I could not understand, picking me up
from the floor and laughing as she sat me on one of T'Gatoi's segments. She ate
her share of eggs then. I wondered when she had stopped, and why.
She lay down against T'Gatoi,
and the whole left row of T'Gatoi's limbs closed around her, holding her
loosely, but securely. I had always found it uncomfortable to lie that way but,
except for my older sister, no one else in the family liked it. They said it
made them feel caged.
T'Gatoi meant to cage my
mother. Once she had, she moved her tail slightly, then spoke. "Not enough
egg, Lien. You should have taken it when it was passed to you. You need it
badly now."
T'Gatoi's tail moved once
more, its whip motion so swift I wouldn't have seen it if I hadn't been
watching for it. Her sting drew only a single drop of blood from my mother's
bare leg.
My mother cried out—probably
in surprise. Being stung doesn't hurt. Then she sighed and I could see her body
relax. She moved languidly into a more comfortable position within the cage of
T'Gatoi's limbs. "Why did you do that?" she asked, sounding half
asleep.
"I could not watch you
sitting and suffering any longer." My mother managed to move her shoulders
in a small shrug. "Tomorrow," she said.
"Yes. Tomorrow you will
resume your suffering—if you must. But for now, just for now, lie here and warm
me and let me ease your way a little."
"He's still mine, you
know," my mother said suddenly. "Nothing can buy him from me."
Sober, she would not have permitted herself to refer to such things.
"Nothing." T'Gatoi
agreed, humoring her.
"Did you think I would
sell him for eggs? For long life? My son?"
"Not for anything,"
T'Gatoi said stroking my mother's shoulders, toying with her long, graying
hair.
I would like to have touched
my mother, shared that moment with her. She would take my hand if I touched
her now, freed by the egg and the sting, she would smile and perhaps say things
long held in. But tomorrow, she would remember all this as a humiliation. I did
not want to be part of a remembered humiliation. Best just to be still and
know she loved me under all the duty and pride and pain.
"Xuan Hoa, take off her
shoes," T'Gatoi said. "In a little while I'll sting her again and she
can sleep."
My older sister obeyed,
swaying drunkenly as she stood up. When she had finished, she sat down beside
me and took my hand. We had always been a unit, she and I.
My mother put the back of her
head against T'Gatoi's underside and tried from that impossible angle to look
up into the broad, round face. "You're going to sting me again?"
"Yes, Lien."
"I'll sleep until
tomorrow noon."
"Good. You need it. When
did you sleep last?"
My mother made a wordless
sound of annoyance. "I should have stepped on you when you were small
enough," she muttered.
It was an old joke between
them. They had grown up together, sort of, though T'Gatoi had not, in my
mother's lifetime, been small enough for any Terran to step on. She was nearly
three times my mother's present age, yet would still be young when my mother
died of age. But T'Gatoi and my mother had met as T'Gatoi was coming into a
period of rapid development—a kind of Tlic adolescence. My mother was only a
child, but for a while they developed at the same rate and had no better
friends than each other.
T'Gatoi had even introduced
my mother to the man who became my father. My parents, pleased with each other
in spite of their very different ages, married as T'Gatoi was going into her
family's business—politics. She and my mother saw each other less. But sometime
before my older sister was born, my mother promised T'Gatoi one of her children.
She would have to give one of us to someone, and she preferred T'Gatoi to some
stranger.
Years passed. T'Gatoi
traveled and increased her influence. The Preserve was hers by the time she
came back to my mother to collect what she probably saw as her just reward for
her hard work. My older sister took an instant liking to her and wanted to be
chosen, but my mother was just coming to term with me and T'Gatoi liked the
idea of choosing an infant and watching and taking part in all the phases of
development. I'm told I was first caged within T'Gatoi's many limbs only three
minutes after my birth. A few days later, I was given my first taste of egg. I
tell Terrans that when they ask whether I was ever afraid of her. And I tell it
to Tlic when T'Gatoi suggests a young Terran child for them and they, anxious
and ignorant, demand an adolescent. Even my brother who had somehow grown up to
fear and distrust the Tlic could probably have gone smoothly into one of their
families if he had been adopted early enough. Sometimes, I think for his sake
he should have been. I looked at him, stretched out on the floor across the
room, his eyes open, but glazed as he dreamed his egg dream. No matter what he
felt toward the Tlic, he always demanded his share of egg.
"Lien, can you stand
up?" T'Gatoi asked suddenly. "Stand?" my mother said. "I
thought I was going to sleep." "Later. Something sounds wrong
outside." The cage was abruptly gone.
"What?"
"Up, Lien!"
My mother recognized her tone
and got up just in time to avoid being dumped on the floor. T'Gatoi whipped her
three meters of body off her couch, toward the door, and out at full speed. She
had bones—ribs, a long spine, a skull, four sets of limbbones per segment. But
when she moved that way, twisting, hurling herself into controlled falls,
landing running, she seemed not only boneless, but aquatic—something swimming
through the air as though it were water. I loved watching her move.
I left my sister and started
to follow her out the door, though I wasn't very steady on my own feet. It
would have been better to sit and dream, better yet to find a girl and share a
waking dream with her. Back when the Tlic saw us as not much more than
convenient big warm-blooded animals, they would pen several of us together,
male and female, and feed us only eggs. That way they could be sure of getting
another generation of us no matter how we tried to hold out. We were lucky that
didn't go on long. A few generations of it and we would have been little
more than convenient big animals.
"Hold the door open,
Gan," T'Gatoi said. "And tell the family to stay back."
"What is it?" I
asked.
"N'Tlic."
I shrank back against the
door. "Here? Alone?"
"He was trying to reach
a call box, I suppose." She carried the man past me, unconscious, folded
like a coat over some of her limbs. He looked young—my brother's age
perhaps—and he was thinner than he should have been. What T'Gatoi would have
called dangerously thin.
"Gan, go to the call
box," she said. She put the man on the floor and began stripping off his
clothing.
I did not move.
After a moment, she looked up
at me, her sudden stillness a sign of deep impatience.
"Send Qui," I told
her. "I'll stay here. Maybe I can help."
She let her limbs begin to
move again, lifting the man and pulling his shirt over his head. "You
don't want to see this," she said. "It will be hard. I can't help
this man the way his Tlic could."
"I know. But send Qui.
He won't want to be of any help here. I'm at least willing to try."
She looked at my
brother—older, bigger, stronger, certainly more able to help her here. He was
sitting up now, braced against the wall, staring at the man on the floor with
undisguised fear and revulsion. Even she could see that he would be useless.
"Qui, go!" she
said.
He didn't argue. He stood up,
swayed briefly, then steadied, frightened sober.
"This man's name is Bram
Lomas," she told him, reading from the man's arm band. I fingered my own
arm band in sympathy. "He needs T'Khotgif Teh. Do you hear?"
"Bram Lomas, T'Khotgif
Teh," my brother said. "I'm going." He edged around Lomas and
ran out the door.
Lomas began to regain
consciousness. He only moaned at first and clutched spasmodically at a pair of
T'Gatoi's limbs. My younger sister, finally awake from her egg dream, came
close to look at him, until my mother pulled her back.
T'Gatoi removed the man's
shoes, then his pants, all the while leaving him two of her limbs to grip.
Except for the final few, all her limbs were equally dexterous. "I want no
argument from you this time, Gan," she said.
I straightened. "What
shall I do?"
"Go out and slaughter an
animal that is at least half your size."
"Slaughter? But I've
never—"
She knocked me across the
room. Her tail was an efficient weapon whether she exposed the sting or not.
I got up, feeling stupid for
having ignored her warning, and went into the kitchen. Maybe I could kill
something with a knife or an ax. My mother raised a few Terran animals for the
table and several thousand local ones for their fur. T'Gatoi would probably
prefer something local. An achti, perhaps. Some of those were the right size,
though they had about three times as many teeth as I did and a real love of
using them. My mother, Hoa, and Qui could kill them with knives. I had never
killed one at all, had never slaughtered any animal. I had spent most of my
time with T'Gatoi while my brother and' sisters were learning the family
business. T'Gatoi had been right. I should have been the one to go to the call
box. At least I could do that.
I went to the corner cabinet
where my mother kept her larger house and garden tools. At the back of the
cabinet there was a pipe that carried off waste water from the kitchen—except
that it didn't anymore. My father had rerouted the waste water before I was
born. Now the pipe could be turned so that one half slid around the other and a
rifle could be stored inside. This wasn't our only gun, but it was our most
easily accessible one. I would have to use it to shoot one of the biggest of
the achti. Then T'Gatoi would probably confiscate it. Firearms were illegal in
the Preserve. There had been incidents right after the Preserve was
established—Terrans shooting Tlic, shooting N'Tlic. This was before the
joining of families began, before everyone had a personal stake in keeping the
peace. No one had shot a Tlic in my lifetime or my mother's, but the law still
stood—for our protection, we were told. There were stories of whole Terran
families wiped out in reprisal back during the assassinations.
I went out to the cages and
shot the biggest achti I could find. It was a handsome breeding male and my
mother would not be pleased to see me bring it in. But it was the right size,
and I was in a hurry.
I put the achti's long, warm
body over my shoulder—glad that some of the weight I'd gained was muscle—and
took it to the kitchen. There, I put the gun back in its hiding place. If
T'Gatoi noticed the achti's wounds and demanded the gun, I would give it to
her. Otherwise, let it stay where my father wanted it.
I turned to take the achti to
her, then hesitated. For several seconds, I stood in front of the closed door wondering
why I was suddenly afraid. I knew what was going to happen. I hadn't seen it
before but T'Gatoi had shown me diagrams, and drawings. She had made sure I
knew the truth as soon as I was old enough to understand it.
Yet I did not want to go into
that room. I wasted a little time choosing a knife from the carved, wooden box
in which my mother kept them. T'Gatoi might want one, I told myself, for the
tough, heavily furred hide of the achti.
"Gan!" T'Gatoi
called, her voice harsh with urgency.
I swallowed. I had not
imagined a simple moving of the feet could be so difficult. I realized I was
trembling and that shamed me. Shame impelled me through the door.
I put the achti down near
T'Gatoi and saw that Lomas was unconscious again. She, Lomas, and I were alone
in the room, my mother and sisters probably sent out so they would not have to
watch. I envied them.
But my mother came back into
the room as T'Gatoi seized the achti. Ignoring the knife I offered her, she
extended claws from several of her limbs and slit the achti from throat to
anus. She looked at me, her yellow eyes intent. "Hold this man's
shoulders, Gan."
I stared at Lomas in panic,
realizing that I did not want to touch him, let alone hold him. This would not
be like shooting an animal. Not as quick, not as merciful, and, I hoped, not as
final, but there was nothing I wanted less than to be part of it.
My mother came forward. "Gan, you hold his right side," she said.
"I'll hold his left." And if he came to, he would throw her off
without realizing he had done it. She was a tiny woman. She often wondered
aloud how she had produced, as she said, such "huge" children.
"Never mind," I
told her, taking the man's shoulders. "I'll do it."
She hovered nearby.
"Don't worry," I
said. "I won't shame you. You don't have to stay and watch."
She looked at me uncertainly,
then touched my face in a rare caress. Finally, she went back to her bedroom.
T'Gatoi lowered her head in
relief. "Thank you, Gan," she said with courtesy more Terran than
Tlic. "That one . . . she is always finding new ways for me to make her
suffer."
Lomas began to groan and make
choked sounds. I had hoped he would stay unconscious. T'Gatoi put her face near
his so that he focused on her.
"I've stung you as much
as I dare for now," she told him. "When this is over, I'll sting you
to sleep and you won't hurt anymore."
"Please," the man
begged. "Wait . . .
"There's no more time,
Bram. I'll sting you as soon as it's over. When T'Khotgif arrives she'll give
you eggs to help you heal. It will be over soon."
"T'Khotgif!" the
man shouted, straining against my hands.
"Soon, Bram."
T'Gatoi glanced at me, then placed a claw against his abdomen slightly to the
right of the middle, just below the last rib. There was movement on the right
side—tiny, seemingly random pulsations moving his brown flesh, creating a
concavity here, a convexity there, over and over until I could see the rhythm
of it and knew where the next pulse would be.
Lomas's entire body stiffened
under T'Gatoi's claw, though she merely rested it against him she wound the
rear section of her body around his legs. He might break my grip, but he would
not break hers. He wept helplessly as she used his pants to tie his hands, then
pushed his hands above his head so that I could kneel on the cloth between them
and pin them in place. She rolled up his shirt and gave it to him to bite down
on.
And she opened him.
His body convulsed with the
first cut. He almost tore himself away from me. The sounds he made . . . I had
never heard such sounds come from anything human. T'Gatoi seemed to pay no
attention as she lengthened and deepened the cut, now and then pausing to lick
away blood. His blood vessels contracted, reacting to the chemistry of her
saliva, and the bleeding slowed.
I felt as though I were
helping her torture him, helping her consume him. I knew I would vomit soon,
didn't know why I hadn't already. I couldn't possibly last until she was
finished.
She found the first grub. It
was fat and deep red with his blood—both inside and out. It had already eaten
its own egg case, but apparently had not yet begun to eat its host. At this
stage, it would eat any flesh except its mother's. Let alone, it would have
gone on excreting the poisons that had both sickened and alerted Lomas.
Eventually it would have begun to eat. By the time it ate its way out of
Lomas's flesh, Lomas would be dead or dying—and unable to take revenge on the
thing that was killing him. There was always a grace period between the time
the host sickened and the time the grubs began to eat him.
T'Gatoi picked up the
writhing grub carefully, and looked at it, somehow ignoring the terrible groans
of the man. Abruptly, the man lost consciousness.
"Good," T'Gatoi
looked down at him. "I wish you Terrans could do that at will." She
felt nothing. And the thing she held...
It was limbless and boneless
at this stage, perhaps fifteen centimeters long and two thick, blind and slimy
with blood. It was like a large worm. T'Gatoi put it into the belly of the
achti, and it began at once to burrow. It would stay there and eat as long as
there was anything to eat.
Probing through Lomas' flesh,
she found two more, one of them smaller and more vigorous. "A male!"
she said happily. He would be dead before I would. He would be through his
metamorphosis and screwing everything that would hold still before his sisters
even had limbs. He was the only one to make a serious effort to bite T'Gatoi as
she placed him in the achti.
Paler worms oozed to
visibility in Lomas's flesh. I closed my eyes. It was worse than finding
something dead, rotting, and filled with tiny animal grubs. And it was far
worse than any drawing or diagram.
"Ah, there are
more," T'Gatoi said, plucking out two long, thick grubs. "You may
have to kill another animal, Gan. Everything lives inside you Terrans."
I had been told all my life
that this was a good and necessary thing Tlic and Terran did together—a kind
of birth. I had believed it until now. I knew birth was painful and bloody, no
matter what. But this was something else, something worse. And I wasn't ready
to see it. Maybe I never would be. Yet I couldn't not see it. Closing my
eyes didn't help.
T'Gatoi found a grub still
eating its egg case. The remains of the case were still wired into a blood
vessel by their own little tube or hook or whatever. That was the way the grubs
were anchored and the way they fed. They took only blood until they were ready
to emerge. Then they ate their stretched, elastic egg cases. Then they ate
their hosts.
T'Gatoi bit away the egg
case, licked away the blood. Did she like the taste? Did childhood habits die
hard—or not die at all?
The whole procedure was
wrong, alien. I wouldn't have thought anything about her could seem alien to
me.
"One more, I
think," she said. "Perhaps two. A good family. In a host animal
these days, we would be happy to find one or two alive." She glanced at
me. "Go outside, Gan, and empty your stomach. Go now while the man is
unconscious."
I staggered out, barely made
it. Beneath the tree just beyond the front door, I vomited until there was
nothing left to bring up. Finally, I stood shaking, tears streaming down my
face. I did not know why I was crying, but I could not stop. I went farther
from the house to avoid being seen. Every time I closed my eyes I saw red worms
crawling over redder human flesh.
There was a car coming toward
the house. Since Terrans were forbidden motorized vehicles except for certain
farm equipment, I knew this must be Lomas's Tlic with Qui and perhaps a Terran
doctor. I wiped my face on my shirt, struggled for control.
"Gan," Qui called
as the car stopped. "What happened?" He crawled out of the low,
round, Tlic-convenient car door. Another Terran crawled out the other side and
went into the house without speaking to me. The doctor. With his help and a few
eggs, Lomas might make it.
"T'Khotgif Teh?" I
said.
The Tlic driver surged out of
her car, reared up half her length before me. She was paler and smaller than
T'Gatoi probably born from the body of an animal. Tlic from Terran bodies were
always larger as well as more numerous.
"Six young," I told
her. "Maybe seven, all alive. At least one male."
"Lomas?" she said
harshly. I liked her for the question and the concern in her voice when she
asked it. The last coherent thing he had said was her name.
"He's alive," I
said.
She surged away to the house
without another word.
"She's been sick,"
my brother said, watching her go. "When I called, I could hear people
telling her she wasn't well enough to go out even for this."
I said nothing. I had
extended courtesy to the Tlic. Now I didn't want to talk to anyone. I hoped he
would go in—out of curiosity if nothing else.
"Finally found out more
than you wanted to know, eh?" I looked at him.
"Don't give me one of her
looks," he said. "You're not her. You're just her property."
One of her looks. Had I
picked up even an ability to imitate her expressions?
"What'd you do,
puke?" He sniffed the air. "So now you know what you're in for."
I walked away from him. He
and I had been close when we were kids. He would let me follow him around when
I was home and sometimes T'Gatoi would let me bring him along when she took me
into the city. But something had happened when he reached adolescence. I never
knew what. He began keeping out of T'Gatoi's way. Then he began running
away—until he realized there was no "away." Not in the Preserve.
Certainly not outside. After that he concentrated on getting his share of every
egg that came into the house, and on looking out for me in a way that made me
all but hate him—a way that clearly said, as long as I was all right, he was
safe from the Tlic.
"How was it,
really?" he demanded, following me. "I killed an achti. The young ate
it."
"You didn't run out of
the house and puke because they ate an achti."
"I had ... never seen a
person cut open before." That was true, and enough for him to know. I
couldn't talk about the other. Not with him.
"Oh," he said. He
glanced at me as though he wanted to say more, but he kept quiet.
We walked, not really headed
anywhere. Toward the back, toward the cages, toward the fields.
"Did he say
anything?" Qui asked. "Lomas, I mean." Who else would he mean?
"He said `T'Khotgif."'
Qui shuddered. "If she
had done that to me, she'd be the last person I'd call for."
"You'd call for her. Her
sting would ease your pain without killing the grubs in you."
"You think I'd care if
they died?'"
No. Of course he wouldn't.
Would I?
"Shit!" He drew a
deep breath. "I've seen what they do.
You think this thing with
Lomas was bad? It was nothing."
I didn't argue. He didn't
know what he was talking about. "I saw them eat a man," he said.
I turned to face him.
"You're lying!"
"I saw them eat a
man." He paused.
"It was when I was little. I had been to the Hartmund house and I was on
my way home. Halfway here, I saw a man and a Tlic and the man was N'Tlic. The
ground was hilly. I was able to hide from them and watch. The Tlic wouldn't
open the man because she had nothing to feed the grubs. The man couldn't go any
farther and there were no houses around. He was in so much pain he told her to
kill him. He begged her to kill him. Finally, she did. She cut his throat. One
swipe of one claw. I saw the grubs eat their way out, then burrow in again,
still eating."
His words made me see Lomas's
flesh again, parasitized, crawling. "Why didn't you tell me that?" I
whispered.
He looked startled, as though
he'd forgotten I was listening. "I don't know."
"You started to run away
not long after that, didn't you?" "Yeah. Stupid. Running inside the
Preserve. Running in a cage."
I shook my head, said what I
should have said to him long ago. "She wouldn't take you, Qui. You don't
have to worry." "She would . . . if anything happened to you."
"No. She'd take Xuan
Hoa. Hoa . . . wants it." She wouldn't if she had stayed to watch Lomas.
"They don't take
women," he said with contempt.
"They do
sometimes." I glanced at him. "Actually, they prefer women. You
should be around them when they talk among themselves. They say women have more
body fat to protect the grubs. But they usually take men to leave the women
free to bear their own young."
"To provide the next
generation of host animals," he said, switching from contempt to
bitterness.
"It's more than
that!" I countered. Was it?
"If it were going to
happen to me, I'd want to believe it was more, too."
"It is more!" I
felt like a kid. Stupid argument.
"Did you think so while
T'Gatoi was picking worms out of that guy's guts?"
"It's not supposed to
happen that way."
"Sure it is. You weren't
supposed to see it, that's all. And his Tlic was supposed to do it. She could
sting him unconscious and the operation wouldn't have been as painful. But
she'd still open him, pick out the grubs, and if she missed even one, it would
poison him and eat him from the inside out."
There was actually a time when
my mother told me to show respect for Qui because he was my older brother. I
walked away, hating him. In his way, he was gloating. He was safe and I wasn't.
I could have hit him, but I didn't think I would be able to stand it when he
refused to hit back, when he looked at me with contempt and pity.
He wouldn't let me get away.
Longer-legged, he swung ahead of me and made me feel as though I were following
him.
"I'm sorry," he
said.
I strode on, sick and
furious.
"Look, it probably won't
be that bad with you. T'Gatoi likes you. She'll be careful."
I turned back toward the
house, almost running from him. "Has she done it to you vet?" he
asked, keeping up easily.
"I mean, you're about
the right age for implantation. Has she—"
I hit him. I didn't know I
was going to do it, but I think I meant to kill him. If he hadn't been bigger
and stronger, I think I would have.
He tried to hold me off, but
in the end, had to defend himself. He only hit me a couple of times. That was
plenty. I don't remember going down, but when I came to, he was gone. It was
worth the pain to be rid of him.
I got up and walked slowly
toward the house. The back was dark. No one was in the kitchen. My mother and
sisters were sleeping in their bedrooms—or pretending to.
Once I was in the kitchen, I
could hear voices—Tlic and Terran from the next room. I couldn't make out what
they were saying—didn't want to make it out.
I sat down at my mother's
table, waiting for quiet. The table was smooth and worn, heavy and
well-crafted. My father had made it for her just before he died. I remembered
hanging around underfoot when he built it. He didn't mind. Now I sat leaning on
it, missing him. I could have talked to him. He had done it three times in his
long life. Three clutches of eggs, three times being opened and sewed up. How
had he done it? How did anyone do it?
I got up, took the rifle from
its hiding place, and sat down again with it. It needed cleaning, oiling.
All I did was load it.
"Gan?"
She made a lot of little
clicking sounds when she walked on bare floor, each limb clicking in succession
as it touched down. Waves of little clicks.
She came to the table, raised
the front half of her body above it, and surged onto it. Sometimes she moved so
smoothly she seemed to flow like water itself. She coiled her-self into a small
hill in the middle of the table and looked at me.
"That was bad," she
said softly. "You should not have seen it. It need not be that way."
"I know."
"T'Khotgif—Ch'Khotgif
now—she will die of her disease. She will not live to raise her children. But
her sister will provide for them, and for Bram Lomas." Sterile sister. One
fertile female in every lot. One to keep the family going. That sister owed
Lomas more than she could ever repay.
"He'll live then?"
"Yes."
"I wonder if he would do
it again."
"No one would ask him to
do that, again."
I looked into the yellow
eyes, wondering how much I saw and understood there, and how much I only
imagined. "No one ever asks us," I said. "You never asked
me."
She moved her head slightly.
"What's the matter with your face?"
"Nothing. Nothing
important." Human eyes probably wouldn't have noticed the swelling in the
darkness. The only light was from one of the moons, shining through a window
across the room.
"Did you use the rifle
to shoot the achti?"
"Yes."
"And do you mean to use
it to shoot me?"
I stared at her, outlined in
moonlight—coiled, graceful body. "What does Terran blood taste like to
you?"
She said nothing.
"What are you?" I
whispered. "What are we to you?"
She lay still, rested her
head on her topmost coil. "You know me as no other does," she said
softly. "You must decide."
"That's what happened to
my face," I told her.
"What?"
"Qui goaded me into
deciding to do something. It didn't turn out very well." I moved the gun
slightly, brought the barrel up diagonally under my own chin. "At least it
was a decision I made."
"As this will be."
"Ask me, Gatoi."
"For my children's
lives?"
She would say something like
that. She knew how to manipulate people, Terran and Tlic. But not this time.
"I don't want to be a
host animal," I said. "Not even yours."
It took her a long time to
answer. "We use almost no host animals these days," she said.
"You know that."
"You use us."
"We do. We wait long
years for you and teach you and join our families to yours." She moved
restlessly. "You know you aren't animals to us."
I stared at her, saying
nothing.
"The animals we once
used began killing most of our eggs after implantation long before your
ancestors arrived," she said softly. "You know these things, Gan.
Because your people arrived, we are relearning what it means to be a healthy,
thriving people. And your ancestors, fleeing from their homeworld, from their
own kind who would have killed or enslaved them—they survived because of us. We
saw them as people and gave them the Preserve when they still tried to kill us
as worms."
At the word "Worms"
I jumped. I couldn't help it, and she couldn't help noticing it.
"I see," she said
quietly. "Would you really rather die than bear my young, Gan?"
I didn't answer.
"Shall I go to Xuan
Hoa?"
"Yes!" Hoa wanted
it. Let her have it. She hadn't had to watch Lomas. She'd be proud . . . not
terrified.
T'Gatoi flowed off the table
onto the floor, startling me almost too much.
"I'll sleep in Hoa's
room tonight," she said. "And sometime tonight or in the morning,
I'll tell her."
This was going too fast. My
sister. Hoa had had almost as much to do with raising me as my mother. I was
still close to her—not like Qui. She could want T'Gatoi and still love me.
"Wait! Gatoi!"
She looked back, then raised
nearly half her length off the floor and turned it to face me. "These are
adult things, Gan. This is my life, my family!"
"But she's . . . my
sister."
"I have done what you
demanded. I have asked you!" "But—"
"It will be easier for
Hoa. She has always expected to carry other lives inside her."
Human lives. Human young who
would someday drink at her breasts, not at her veins.
I shook my head. "Don't
do it to her, Gatoi." I was not Qui. It seemed I could become him, though,
with no effort at all. I could make Xuan Hoa my shield. Would it be easier to
know that red worms were growing in her flesh instead of mine?
"Don't do it to
Hoa," 1 repeated.
She stared at me, utterly
still.
I looked away, then back at
her. "Do it to me."
I lowered the gun from my
throat and she leaned forward to take it.
"No," I told her.
"It's the law," she
said.
"Leave it for the
family. One of them might use it to save my life someday."
She grasped the rifle barrel,
but I wouldn't let go. I was pulled into a standing position over her.
"Leave it here!" I
repeated. "If we're not your animals, if these are adult things, accept
the risk. There is risk, Gatoi, in dealing with a partner."
It was clearly hard for her
to let go of the rifle. A shudder went through her and she made a hissing sound
of distress. It occurred to me that she was afraid. She was old enough to have
seen what guns could do to people. Now her young and this gun would be together
in the same house. She did not know about our other guns. In this dispute, they
did not matter.
"I will implant the
first egg tonight," she said as I put the gun away. "Do you hear,
Gan?"
Why else had I been given a
whole egg to eat while the rest of the family was left to share one? Why else
had my mother kept looking at me as though I were going away from her, going
where she could not follow? Did T'Gatoi imagine I hadn't known?
"I hear."
"Now!" I let her
push me out of the kitchen, then walked ahead of her toward my bedroom. The
sudden urgency in her voice sounded real. "You would have done it to Hoa
tonight!" I accused.
"I must to do it to
someone tonight."
I stopped in spite of her
urgency and stood in her way. "Don't you care who?"
She flowed around me and into
my bedroom. I found her waiting on the couch we shared. There was nothing in
Hoa's room that she could have used. She would have done it to Hoa on the
floor. The thought of her doing it to Hoa at all disturbed me in a different
way now, and I was suddenly angry.
Yet I undressed and lay down
beside her. I knew what to do, what to expect. I had been told all my life. I
felt the familiar sting, narcotic, mildly pleasant. Then the blind probing of
her ovipositor. The puncture was painless, easy. So easy going in. She
undulated slowly against me, her muscles forcing the egg from her body into
mine. I held on to a pair of her limbs until I remembered Lomas holding her
that way. Then I let go, moved inadvertently, and hurt her. She gave a low cry
of pain and I expected to be caged at once within her limbs. When I wasn't, I
held on to her again, feeling oddly ashamed.
"I'm sorry," I
whispered.
She rubbed my shoulders with
four of her limbs.
"So you care?" I
asked. "Do you care that it's me?"
She did not answer for some
time. Finally, "You were the one making choices tonight, Gan. I made mine
long ago." "Would you have gone to Hoa?"
"Yes. How could I put my
children into the care of one who hates them?"
"It wasn't . . .
hate."
"I know what it was."
"I was afraid."
Silence.
"I still am." I
could admit it to her here, now.
"But you came to me . .
. to save Hoa."
"Yes." I leaned my
forehead against her. She was cool velvet, deceptively soft. "And to keep
you for myself," I said. It was so. I didn't understand it, but it was so.
She made a soft hum of
contentment. "I couldn't believe I had made such a mistake with you,"
she said. "I chose you. I believed you had grown to choose me."
"I had, but . . .
"Lomas."
"Yes."
"I have never known a
Terran to see and take it well. Qui has seen one, hasn't he?"
"Yes."
"Tenarts should be
protected from seeing."
I didn't like the sound of
that—and I doubted that it was possible. "Not protected," I said.
"Shown. Shown when we're young kids, and shown more than once. Gatoi, no
Terran ever sees a birth that goes right. All we see is N'Tlic—pain and terror
and maybe death."
She looked down at me.
"It is a private thing. It has always been a private thing."
Her tone kept me from
insisting—that and the knowledge that if she changed her mind, I might be the
first public example. But I had planted the thought in her mind. Chances were
it would grow, and eventually she would experiment.
"You won't see it
again," she said. "I don't want you thinking anymore about shooting
me."
The small amount of fluid
that came into me with her egg relaxed me as completely as a sterile egg would
have, so that I could remember the rifle in my hands and my feelings of fear
and revulsion, anger and despair. I could remember the feelings without
reviving them. I could talk about them.
"I wouldn't have shot
you," I said. "Not you." She had been taken from my father's
flesh when he was my age.
"You could have,"
she insisted.
"Not you." She
stood between us and her own people, protecting, interweaving.
"Would you have
destroyed yourself?"
I moved carefully,
uncomfortably. "I could have done that. I nearly did. That's Qui's `away,'
I wonder if he knows." "What?"
I did not answer.
"You will live
now."
"Yes." Take care
of her, my mother used to say. Yes.
"I'm healthy and
young," she said. "I won't leave you as Lomas was left—alone, N'Tlic.
I'll take care of you."