SOLAR PLEXUS
by James Blish
Brant Kittinger
did not hear the alarm begin to ring. Indeed, it was only after a soft blow had
jarred his free-floating observatory that he looked up in sudden awareness from
the interferometer. Then the sound of the warning bell reached his
consciousness.
Brant was an astronomer, not a spaceman,
but he knew that the hell could mean nothing but the arrival of another ship in
the vicinity. There would be no point in ringing a bell for a meteor—the thing
could be through and past you during the first cycle of the clapper. Only an approaching
ship would be likely to trip the detector, and it would have to be close.
A second dull jolt told him how close it
was. The rasp of metal which followed, as the other ship slid along the side of
his own, drove the fog of tensors completely from his brain. He dropped his
pencil and straightened up.
His first thought was that his year in
the orbit around the new trans-Plutonian planet was up, and that the Institute's
tug had arrived to tow him home, telescope and all. A glance at the clock
reassured him at first, then puzzled him still
further. He still had the better part of four months.
No commercial vessel, of course, could
have wandered this far from the inner planets; and the UN's police cruisers
didn't travel far outside the commercial lanes. Besides, it would have been
impossible for anyone to find Brant's orbital observatory by accident.
He settled his glasses more firmly on
his nose, clambered awkwardly backwards out of the prime focus chamber and
down the wall net to the control desk on the observation floor. A quick glance
over the boards revealed that there was a magnetic field of some strength nearby,
one that didn't belong to the invisible gas giant revolving half a million
miles away.
The strange ship was locked to him
magnetically; it was an old ship, then, for that method of grappling had been
discarded years ago as too hard on delicate instruments. And the strength of
the field meant a big ship.
Too big. The only ship of that period that could mount
generators that size, as far as Brant could remember, was the Cybernetics
Foundation's Astrid. Brant could remember well the Foundation's regretful
announcement that Murray Bennett had destroyed both himself
and the Astrid rather than turn the ship in to some UN inspection team.
It had happened only eight years ago. Some scandal or other
...
Well, who then?
He turned the radio on. Nothing came out
of it. It was a simple transistor set tuned to the Institute's frequency, and
since the ship outside plainly did not belong to the Institute, he had expected
nothing else. Of course he had a photophone also, but
it had been designed for communications over a reasonable distance, not for
cheek-to-cheek whispers.
As an afterthought, he turned off the
persistent alarm bell. At once another sound came through: a delicate, rhythmic
tapping on the hull of the observatory. Someone wanted to get in.
He could think of no reason to refuse
entrance, except for a vague and utterly unreasonable wonder as to whether or
not the stranger was a friend. He had no enemies, and the notion that some
outlaw might have happened upon him out here was ridiculous. Nevertheless,
there was something about the anonymous, voiceless ship just outside which made
him uneasy.
The gentle tapping stopped, and then
began again, with an even, mechanical insistence. For a moment Brant wondered
whether or not he should try to tear free with the observatory's few
maneuvering rockets—but even should he win so uneven a struggle, he would throw
the observatory out of the orbit where the Institute expected to find it, and
he was not astronaut enough to get it back there again.
Tap, tap. Tap, tap.
"All right," he said
irritably. He pushed the button which set the airlock to cycling. The tapping
stopped. He left the outer door open more than long enough for anyone to enter
and push the button in the lock which reversed the process; but nothing
happened.
After what seemed to be a long wait, he
pushed his button again. The outer door closed, the pumps filled the chamber
with air, the inner door swung open. No ghost drifted out of it; there was
nobody in the lock at all.
Tap, tap. Tap, tap.
Absently he polished his glasses on his sleeve. If
they didn't want to come into the observatory, they must want him to come out
of it. That was possible: although the telescope had a Coude
focus which allowed him to work in the ship's air most of the time, it was
occasionally necessary for him to exhaust the dome, and for that purpose he had
a space suit. But be had never been outside the hull in it, and the thought
alarmed him. Brant was nobody's spaceman.
Be damned to them. He clapped his
glasses back into place and took one more look into the empty airlock. It was
still empty with the outer door now moving open very slowly...
.
A spaceman would have known that he was
already dead, but Brant's reactions were not quite as fast. His first move was
to try to jam the inner door shut by sheer muscle-power, but it would not stir.
Then he simply clung to the nearest stanchion, waiting for the air to rush out
of the observatory, and his life after it.
The outer door of the airlock continued
to open, placidly, and still there was no rush of air—only a kind of faint, unticketable inwash of odor, as
if Brant's air were mixing with someone else's. When both doors of the lock
finally stood wide apart from each other, Brant found himself looking down the
inside of a flexible, airtight tube, such as he had once seen used for the
transfer of a small freight-load from a ship to one of Earth's several space
stations. It connected the airlock of the observatory with that of the other
ship. At the other end of it, lights gleamed yellowly,
with the unmistakable, dismal sheen of incandescent overheads.
That was an old ship, all right.
Tap. Tap.
"Go to hell," he said aloud.
There was no answer.
Tap. Tap.
"Go to hell," he said. He
walked out into the tube, which flexed sinuously as his body pressed aside the
static air. In the airlock of the stranger, he paused and looked back. He was
not much surprised to see the outer door of his own airlock swinging smugly
shut against him. Then the airlock of the stranger began to cycle; he skipped
on into the ship barely in time.
There was a bare metal corridor ahead of
him. While he watched, the first light bulb over his head blinked out. Then the second. Then the third. As
the fourth one went out, the first came on again, so that now there was a slow ribbon
of darkness moving away from him down the corridor. Clearly, he was being asked
to follow the line of darkening bulbs down the corridor.
He had no choice, now that he had come
this far. He followed the blinking lights.
The trail led directly to the control
room of the ship. There was nobody there, either.
The whole place was oppressively silent.
He could hear the soft hum of generators—a louder noise than he ever heard on
board the observatory—but no ship should be this quiet. There should be muffled
human voices; the chittering of communications
systems, the impacts of soles on metal. Someone had to operate a proper
ship—not only its airlocks, but its motors—and its brains. The observatory was
only a barge, and needed no crew but Brant, but a real ship had to be manned.
He scanned the bare metal compartment,
noting the apparent age of the equipment. Most of it was manual, but there were
no hands to man it.
A ghost ship for true.
"All right," he said. His voice sounded flat and loud to him. "Come on out.
You wanted me here—why are you hiding?"
Immediately there was a noise in the
close, still air, a thin, electrical sigh. Then a
quiet voice said, "You're Brant Kittinger."
"Certainly," Brant said,
swiveling fruitlessly toward the apparent source of the voice. "You know
who I am. You couldn't have found me by accident. Will you come out? I've no
time to play games."
"I'm not playing games," the
voice said calmly. "And I can't come out, since I'm not hiding from you. I
can't see you; I needed to hear your voice before I could be sure of you."
“Why?”
"Because I can't
see inside the ship. I could find
your observation boat well enough, but until I heard you speak I couldn't be
sure that you were the one aboard it. Now I know."
"All right," Brant said suspiciously.
"I still don't see why you're hiding. Where are you?"
"Right here," said the voice. "All around you."
Brant looked all around himself. His
scalp began to creep.
"What kind of nonsense is
that?" he said.
"You aren't seeing what you're
looking at, Brant. You're looking directly at me, no matter where you look. I
am the ship."
"Oh," Brant said softly. "So that's it. You're one of
Murray Bennett's computer-driven ships. Are you the Astrid, after
all?"
"This is the Astrid," the
voice said. "But you miss my point. I am Murray Bennett, also."
Brant's jaw dropped open. "Where
are you?" he said after a time.
"Here," the voice said
impatiently. "I am the Astrid. I am also Murray Bennett. Bennett is
dead, so he can't very well come into the cabin and shake your hand. I am now
Murray Bennett; I remember you very well, Brant. I need your help, so I sought
you out. I'm not as much Murray Bennett as I'd like to be."
Brant sat down in the empty pilot's
seat.
"You're a computer," he said
shakily. "Isn't that so?"
"It is and it isn't. No computer
can duplicate the performance of a human brain. I tried to introduce real
human neural mechanisms into computers, specifically to fly ships, and was
outlawed for my trouble. I don't think I was treated fairly. It took enormous
surgical skill to make the hundreds and hundreds of nerve-to-circuit
connections that were needed—and before I was half through, the UN decided that
what I was doing was human vivisection. They outlawed me, and the Foundation
said I'd have to destroy myself; what could I do after that?
"I did destroy myself. I
transferred most of my own nervous system into the computers of the Astrid, working
at the end through drugged assistants under telepathic control, and finally
relying upon the computers to seal the last connections. No such surgery ever
existed before, but I brought it into existence. It worked. Now I'm the Astrid—and
still Murray Bennett too, though Bennett is dead."
Brant locked his hands together
carefully on the edge of the dead control board. "What good did that do
you?" he said.
"It proved my point. I was trying
to build an almost living spaceship. I had to build part of myself into it to
do it—since they made me an outlaw to stop my using any other human being as a
source of parts. But here is the Astrid, Brant, as almost alive as I
could ask. I'm as immune to a dead spaceship—a UN cruiser, for instance—as you
would be to an infuriated wheelbarrow. My reflexes are human-fast. I feel
things directly, not through instruments. I fly myself: I am what I sought—the
ship that almost thinks for itself."
"You keep saying 'almost,' "
Brant said.
"That's why I came to you,"
the voice said. "I don't have enough of Murray Bennett here to know what I
should do next. You knew me well. Was I out to try to use human brains more and
more, and computer-mechanisms less and less? It seems
to me that I was. I can pick up the brains easily enough, just as I picked you
up. The solar system is full of people isolated on little research boats who
could be plucked off them and incorporated into efficient machines like the Astrid.
But I don't know. I seem to have lost my creativity. I have a base where I
have some other ships with beautiful computers in them, and with a few people
to use as research animals I could make even better ships of them than the Astrid
is. But is that what I want to do? Is that what I set out to do? I no
longer know, Brant. Advise me."
The machine with the human nerves would
have been touching had it not been so much like Bennett had been. The
combination of the two was flatly horrible.
"You've made a bad job of yourself,
Murray," he said. "You've let me inside your brain without taking any
real thought of the danger. What's to prevent me from stationing myself at
your old manual controls and flying you to the nearest UN post?"
"You can't fly a ship."
"How do you know?"
"By simple
computation. And there are other
reasons. What's to prevent me from making you cut your own throat? The answer's
the same. You're in control of your body; I'm in control of mine. My body is
the Astrid. The controls are useless, unless I actuate them. The nerves
through which I do so are sheathed in excellent steel. The only way in which
you could destroy my control would be to break something necessary to the
running of the ship. That, in a sense, would kill me, as destroying your heart
or your lungs would kill you. But that would be pointless, for then you could
no more navigate the ship than I. And if you made repairs, I would be—well,
resurrected."
The voice fell silent a moment. Then it
added, matter-of-factly, "Of course, I can protect myself."
Brant made no reply. His eyes were
narrowed to the squint he more usually directed at a problem in Milne
transformations.
"I never sleep," the voice
went on, "but much of my navigating and piloting is done by an autopilot
without requiring my conscious attention. It is the same old Nelson autopilot
which was originally on board the Astrid, though, so it has to be
monitored. If you touch the controls while the autopilot is running, it
switches itself off and I resume direction myself."
Brant was surprised and instinctively
repelled by the steady flow of information. It was a forcible reminder of how
much of the computer there was in the intelligence that called itself Murray
Bennett. It was answering a question with the almost mindless wealth of detail
of a public-library selector—and there was no "Enough" button for
Brant to push.
"Are you going to answer my
question?" the voice said suddenly.
"Yes, Brant said.
"I advise you to turn yourself in. The Astrid proves your
point—and also proves that your research was a blind alley. There's no point in
your proceeding to make more Astrids; you're
aware yourself that you're incapable of improving on the model now."
"That's contrary to what I have
recorded," the voice said. "My ultimate purpose as a man was to build
machines like this. I can't accept your answer: it conflicts with my primary
directive. Please follow the lights to your quarters."
"What
are you going to do with me?"
"Take
you to the base."
"What for?" Brant said.
"As a stock of parts," said
the voice. "Please follow the lights, or I'll have to use force."
Brant followed the lights. As he entered
the cabin to which they led him, a disheveled figure arose from one of the two
cots. He started back in alarm. The figure chuckled wryly and displayed a
frayed bit of gold braid on its sleeve.
"I'm not as terrifying as I
look," he said. "Lt. Powell of the UN scout Iapetus, at your service."
"I'm Brant Kittinger,
Planetary Institute astrophysicist. You're just the faintest bit battered, all
right. Did you tangle with Bennett?"
"Is that his name?" The UN
patrolman nodded glumly. "Yes. There's some
whoppers of guns mounted on this old tub. I challenged it, and it cut my ship
to pieces before I could lift a hand. I barely got into my suit in time—and I'm
beginning to wish I hadn't."
"I don't blame you. You know what
he plans to use us for, I judge."
"Yes," the pilot said.
"He seems to take pleasure in bragging about his achievements—God knows
they're, amazing enough, if even half of what he says is true."
"It's all true," Brant said.
"He's essentially a machine, you know, and as such I doubt that he can
lie."
Powell looked startled. "That makes
it worse. I've been trying to figure a way out—"
Brant raised one hand sharply, and with
the other he patted his pockets in search of a pencil. "If you've found
anything, write it down, don't talk about it. I think he can hear us. Is that
so, Bennett?"
"Yes," said the voice in the
air. Powell jumped. "My hearing extends throughout the ship."
There was silence again. Powell, grim as
death, scribbled on a tattered UN trip ticket.
Doesn't matter. Can't think of a thing.
Where's the main computer? Brant wrote. There's where personality residues
must lie.
Down below. Not
a chance without blaster. Must be eight inches
of steel around it. Control nerves the same.
They sat hopelessly on the lower cot. Brant chewed on
the pencil. "How far is his home base from here?" he asked at length.
"Where's
here?"
"In the orbit of
the new planet."
Powell whistled. "In that case, his
base can't be more than three days away. I came on board from just off Titan,
and he hasn't touched his base since, so his fuel won't last much longer. I
know this type of ship well enough. And from what I've seen of the drivers,
they haven't been altered."
"Umm," Brant said. "That
checks. If Bennett in person never got around to altering the drive, this
ersatz Bennett we have here will never get around to it, either." He found
it easier to ignore the listening presence while talking; to monitor his speech
constantly with Bennett in mind was too hard on the nerves. "That gives us
three days to get out, then. Or less."
For at least twenty minutes Brant said
nothing more, while the UN pilot squirmed and watched his face hope-fully.
Finally the astronomer picked up the piece of paper again.
Can you pilot this ship? he wrote.
The pilot nodded and scribbled: Why?
Without replying, Brant lay back on the
bunk, swiveled himself around so that his head was toward the center of the
cabin, doubled up his knees, and let fly with both feet. They crashed hard
against the hull, the magnetic studs in his shoes leaving bright scars on the
metal. The impact sent him sailing like an ungainly fish across the cabin.
"What was that for?" Powell
and the voice in the air asked simultaneously. Their captor's tone was faintly
curious, but not alarmed.
Brant had his answer already prepared.
"It's part of a question I want to ask," he
said. He brought up against the far wall and struggled to get his feet back to
the deck. "Can you tell me what I did then, Bennett?"
"Why, not
specifically. As I told you, I
can't see inside the ship. But I get a tactual jar from the nerves of the
controls, the lights, the floors, the ventilation system, and so on, and also a
ringing sound from the audios. These things tell me that you either stamped on
the floor or pounded on the wall. From the intensity of the impressions, I
compute that you stamped."
"You hear and you feel, eh?"
"That's correct," the voice
said. "Also I can pick up your body heat from the receptors in the ship's
temperature control system—a form of seeing, but without any definition."
Very quietly, Brant retrieved the worn
trip ticket and wrote on it: Follow me.
He went out into the corridor and
started down it toward the control room, Powell at his heels. The living ship
remained silent only for a moment.
"Return to your cabin," the
voice said.
Brant walked a little faster. How would
Bennett's vicious brainchild enforce his orders?
"I said, go back to the
cabin," the voice said. Its tone was now loud and harsh, and without a
trace of feeling; for the first time, Brant was able to tell that it came from
a voder, rather than from a tape-vocabulary of
Bennett's own voice. Brant gritted his teeth and marched forward.
"I don't want to have to spoil
you," the voice said. "For the last time—"
An instant later Brant received a
powerful blow in the small of his back. It felled him like a tree, and sent him
skimming along the corridor deck like a flat stone. A bare fraction of a second
later there was a hiss and a flash, and the air was abruptly hot and choking
with the sharp odor of ozone.
"Close," Powell's voice said
calmly. "Some of these rivet-heads in the walls evidently are high-tension
electrodes. Lucky I saw the nimbus collecting on that one. Crawl, and make it
snappy."
Crawling in a gravity-free corridor was
a good deal more difficult to manage than walking. Determinedly, Brant squirmed
into the control room, calling into play every trick he had ever learned in
space to stick to the floor. He could hear Powell wriggling along behind him.
"He doesn't know what I'm up
to," Brant said aloud. "Do you, Bennett?"
"No," the voice in the air said. "But I
know of nothing you can do that's dangerous while you're lying on your belly.
When you get up, I'll destroy you, Brant."
"Hmmm," Brant said. He
adjusted his glasses, which he had nearly lost during his brief, skipping carom
along the deck. The voice had summarized the situation with deadly precision.
He pulled the now nearly pulped trip ticket out of his shirt pocket, wrote on
it, and shoved it across the deck to Powell.
How can we reach the autopilot? Got to smash it.
Powell propped himself up on one elbow
and studied the scrap of paper, frowning. Down below, beneath the deck, there
was an abrupt sound of power, and Brant felt the cold metal on which he was lying sink beneath him. Bennett was changing course, trying
to throw them within range of his defenses. Both men began to slide sidewise.
Powell did not appear to be worried;
evidently he knew just how long it took to turn a ship of this size and period.
He pushed the piece of paper back. On the last free space on it, in cramped
letters, was: Throw something at it.
"Ah," said Brant. Still sliding, he drew off one of his
heavy shoes and hefted it critically. It would do. With a sudden convulsion of
motion he hurled it.
Fat, crackling sparks crisscrossed the
room; the noise was ear-splitting. While Bennett could have had no idea what
Brant was doing, he evidently had sensed the sudden stir of movement and had
triggered the high-tension current out of general caution. But he was too late.
The flying shoe plowed heel-foremost into the autopilot with a rending smash.
There was an unfocused blare of sound
from the voder more like the noise of a siren than
like a human cry. The Astrid rolled wildly, once. Then there was silence.
"All right," said Brant,
getting to his knees. "Try the controls, Powell."
The UN pilot arose cautiously. No sparks
flew. When he touched the boards, the ship responded with an immediate purr of
power.
"She runs," he said.
"Now, how the hell did you know what to do?"
"It wasn't difficult," Brant
said complacently, retrieving his shoe. "But we're not out of the woods
yet. We have to get to the stores fast and find a couple of torches. I want to
cut through every nerve-channel we can find. Are you with me?"
"Sure."
The job was more quickly done than Brant
had dared to hope. Evidently the living ship had never thought of lightening
itself by jettisoning all the equipment its human crew had once needed. While
Brant and Powell cut their way enthusiastically through the jungle of efferent
nerve-trunks running from the central computer, the astronomer said:
"He gave us too much information.
He told me that he had connected the artificial nerves of the ship, the control
nerves, to the nerve-ends running from the parts of his own brain that he had
used. And he said that he'd had to make hundreds of such connections.
That's the trouble with allowing a computer to act as an independent agent—it
doesn't know enough about interpersonal relationships to control its tongue....
There we are. He'll be coming to before long, but I don't think he'll be able
to interfere with us now."
He set down his torch with a sigh.
"I was saying? Oh, yes. About those nerve connections: if he had separated
out the pain-carrying nerves from the other sensory nerves, he would have had
to have made thousands of connections, not hundreds. Had it really been
the living human being, Bennett, who had given me that cue, I would have
discounted it, because he might have been using understatement. But since it
was Bennett's double, a computer, I assumed that the figure was of the right
order of magnitude. Computers don't understate.
"Besides, I didn't think Bennett
could have made thousands of connections, especially not working telepathically
through a proxy. There's a limit even to the most marvelous neurosurgery.
Bennett had just made general connections, and had relied on the segments from
his own brain which he had incorporated to sort out the impulses as they came
in—as any human brain could do under like circumstances. That was one of the
advantages of using parts from a human brain in the first place."
"And when you kicked the
wall—" Powell said.
"Yes, you see the crux of the problem already.
When I kicked the wall, I wanted to make sure that he could feel the
impact of my shoes. If he could, then I could be sure that he hadn't eliminated
the sensory nerves when he installed the motor nerves. And if he hadn't, then
there were bound to be pain axons present, too."
"But what has the autopilot to do
with it?" Powell asked plaintively.
"The autopilot,"
Brant said, grinning, "is a center of
his nerve-mesh, an important one. He should have protected it as heavily as he
protected the main computer. When I smashed it, it was like ramming a fist into
a man's solar plexus. It hurt him."
Powell grinned too. "K.O.," he
said.