AWAKEN, TERROR!
When
the first expedition descended to the bottom of the Atlantic in a perfected
high-pressure diving bell, their speculation ran wild as to the wonders they
would encounter in that unknown sea-bottom world.
But their wildest dreams did not prepare them
for uncovering first, the stones of an ancient civilization, and second, the
monstrous body of an inhuman creature that had been sealed beneath the waters
for countless eons.
Then, at the height of their excitement,
elation turned to horror. For they had brought back an
abomination so old that the memory of it had been lost to man's remotest
ancestors. Ships were disappearing, men and women were becoming enslaved
by invisible whips of mental mastery, and it began to look as if it might be
beyond the powers even of modern science to stop something that had so
successfully defied time and space.
Turn this book over for second complete novel
Peter Trant
His greatest scientific discovery could well
be mankind's lastl
Dr. Gordon
This scientist knew that something which
couldn't be proven was not necessarily untrue.
Luke Wallace
When he returned from the
deep he was not dead— but he wasn't exactly alive either.
Mary Davis
Science had claimed the boy
she loved, then robbed her of the man she married.
General Barghin
Though war was a thing of the past, the
general saved the world.
The Monster
To
him a million years was but a day—and he thought it the same for humans.
THE ATLANTIC ABOMINATION
by
JOHN BRUNNER
ACE BOOKS, INC.
23 West 47th Street, New York 36, N.Y.
the atlantic
abomination
Copyright ©, 1960, by Ace Books, Inc. All Rights Reserved
John
Brunner is the author of:
THRESHOLD
OF ETERNITY (D-335) THE 100TH MILLENNIUM (D-362) ECHO IN THE SKULL (D-385) THE
WORLD SWAPPERS (D-391) SLAVERS OF SPACE (D-421) THE SKYNAPPERS (D-457)
the martian
missile
Copyright ©, 1959, by David Grinnell
Printed in U.S.A.
PART ONE
THE MYSTERY
1
Their
lusts had known no limit until now. They had gorged themselves, surpassed their own
imaginings again and again, recklessly squandering what they had supposed to be
inexhaustible; they had been like children in a house filled with sweetmeats,
destroying what they could not consume. Until now.
Now
it was as though the planet itself was sick of their arrogance."
How
many times had the weaklings of this world fled cowering before the wrath of Ruagh and others of his kind? It was of no comfort to
recall and count such occasions. Now he, Ruagh—the
unquestioned master of thousands—was himself in flight, before the terrible and
not-to-be-withstood anger of blind nature. . . .
Far
behind were the marble towers and jewelled citadels
of Awan, the city they had raised
to honor him. Far behind in time now as well as space, for when he and his
retinue had set out on their panicky retreat, the sea had already broached the
white stone walls of the harbor and was hurling vessels against the nearest of
the buildings. There had been cracks and splits in the fabric of the temple, Ruagh's temple.
And
now here was Ruagh, for whom thousands had existed
only to serve and worship, reduced to the overlordship
of a starving and ragged band of refugees; his temple a palanquin, his high
priests a handful of moaning bearers.
It
was intolerable! Ruagh raged and fumed, wishing there
were some means of punishing the cause of his indignities.
Ahead
of the straggling procession a plain seemed to stretch endlessly. The sun beat
down out of the sky, glinting on the ceremonial gongs which their players were
too weak to beat but still carried, being also too weak to make the mental
effort involved in throwing them away. Ruagh too was
weakening, though he husbanded his strength, for he realized that once his iron
grip on his people failed, their hatred would boil to the surface and they
would turn on him and rend him.
The
plain was not endless, he knew. It was a level shelf, tilted slighdy so that it rose inland from the shore where he had
had his city of Awan built. Now
they had accomplished almost half the distance to their destination which was a
city built by another of Ruagh's kind, or rather by
his subjects. That city was set among mountains. Surely, although the
sea that beat at the walls of Awan had gone mad, the
mountains would stand fasti
Heat
was making the ground appear to shimmer in the distance. For an instant it
seemed to Ruagh that he was looking out on an ocean
instead of firm ground. If only his vision could pierce the barrier separating
them from their goall If only he could see, and not
merely hope, that safety lay ahead! The unbelievable, unprecedented behaviour of the seas had shaken his confidence in the
natural order of events.
Then
the shabby finery of his palanquin fell almost in a single instant to the
ground. Ruagh's ill-controlled fury boiled up like
lava from the pit of a volcano, blinding him to everything except the idiot
incompetence of his bearers. He lavished pain on all those around him, and
their suffering gave him back a little of his lost strength. That was the
nature of Ruagh's kind.
At
last he was sufficiently in control of himself again to summon his highest
priest and make him writhe for what had happened. But no answer came to his
imperious signaling. His rage blackened again. Doubtless, while he himself had
let his mind wander, the idiot weakling had dropped dead of fatigue along the
trail. He summoned the next in seniority, and was relieved to feel the man
respond at once.
But
the priest was a sorry sight. He limped as he hurried to the fallen palanquin,
and blood was oozing from a cut on his face. When he spoke, he did so with stammering
difficulty.
"Greatest
Lord! The
earth has gone mad!"
"What
do you mean?" Ruagh, the memory of fresh suffering
tingling, accompanied the question with a suggestion of pain. The man flinched
outwardly, and rushed on.
"Lord,
the earth shook and trembled, and a great cavity has opened in the plain across
our pathl"
Ruagh
looked. It was true. He had been so furious at his bearers letting his
conveyance fall that he had not seen. A crevasse many times deeper than the
height of a man had yawned in the plain. Even now, loose soil and rocks were
tumbling from its lip and vanishing below. Some of the fugitives were on the
far side, wailing to the sky. One foolhardy man had approached almost to the
edge of the crevasse and was attempting to see what fate had overtaken those
who had been swallowed up.
And
that, Ruagh presumed, was what had happened to his
highest priest.
Now,
for the first time in his life, he was coming to know fear; now the arbitrary behaviour of the planet was forcing him to the state where
he so often drove his subjects. Fear of the fear was what drove him to madness.
"Make a bridge for
me!" he commanded.
The
surviving priest looked about him incredulously; he saw the plain, covered with
low-growing scrub and an occasional thorny bush, but without trees. "But,
Lord!" he protested. "What is there here out of which we may make a
bridge?"
"Of your bodies!" Ruagh ordered.
"And be swift!"
The crossing killed nearly half the
survivors. Though they found the strength to hand together while Raugh's palanquin was manhandled over the gulf, they had
not the strength to haul the weight of their own bodies back. By twos and
threes, screaming, they joined their companions in the crevasse. Rock and soil
fell to cover their corpses.
Others
dropped as Ruagh flayed the procession onwards,
depleting his own strength in the desperation that had overcome his better
judgment. Only when night fell did he let the survivors rest and drink. They
could not eat for they had already used up the few supplies they had brought.
Even
then, Ruagh chafed, although he knew he was wholly at
the mercy of his bearers and companions. He did not exact the full ritual of
the sunset worship because that too was a drain on their bodily resources. He
compelled himself to be patient while they sluiced their parched throats, fell
asleep in the act, and woke again to requench a
thirst that haunted them even in their dreams. Stars looked down after the sun
had set, and Ruagh focused his attention on them to
quell his terror. He had known some of them—even, one might say, many of
them—and where yesterday he would have regarded their broods of planets as far
inferior to the richly stored paradise he and his kind were now enjoying, he
found himself aching for the placid predictability he had known under those
suns.
And
then the earth shook again. Not much; barely a tremor. The sleeping men around
him twitched in their sleep, and then were still. But even a tremor was more
than Ruagh could stand. Onward! To the safety of the
city in the mountains! He lashed his weary bearers to their blistered feet.
They came at last, in the light of dawn, to
the brow of a hill. Across the valley that lay beneath the hill, it was
possible to see their destination. Eagerly, and yet at the same time reluctant
lest his suspicions prove the truth, Ruagh had his
palanquin borne forward at a stumbling run. Where he would normally have
tortured his bearers for jogging him so, he noticed nothing.
There,
in the red morning glow, sparkled the colossal dome of the temple where his
cousin reigned. There were the varicolored palaces of his retinue, the broad
roads, the high and splendid towers. The relief was
blinding. For a long moment Ruagh stared and stared
his fill.
It was his last
opportunity.
Most
of his subjects had dropped
off to sleep already, glad
to take advantage of even a moment's halt. But those who had not saw before Ruagh did what was
happening. He looked only at the city; they looked beyond, to the great
mountain on whose flank the city was sited. They looked, and they saw. . . .
Gradually,
with the dignity of one of Ruagh's ritual ceremonies,
the crown of the mountain was splitting. A rock that looked no larger than the
head of a man at such a distance was breaking loose. Falling.
It struck the mountainside and bounced.
Faindy, the sound began to come to them, seconds
after the sight.
And
then the rock smashed through the dome of the temple, brought it crashing,
broke down the mighty wall, and came to rest in the vast square beyond. A second
rock shattered the glorious towers like ninepins, toppling them left and
right. After the avalanche, the wreck of the city lay
breathing dust beneath the rising sun.
Ruagh knew only a sense of desolation beyond
anything he had conceived possible. All hope was gone. . . .
He
could not bear to look at where the city had been; he stared down into the
valley, and saw something snaking out across its floor. Something
that had been in darkness and shadow until the angle of the sun was high enough
to reveal it. A processionl A train such as he
had driven out of Awan!
Heedless of future need, he drained the last
reserves of his bearers and made them carry him swiftly towards the other
party. The leaders of this group from the mountain city halted suspiciously and
fanned out, drawing knives and swords.
Ruagh
felt puzzled. He urged his bearers on, towards the other palanquin which bore
the ruler of the mountain city. And from this palanquin now came a command,
strongly uttered, with all the power that one who had
not had to flee across a barren plain could still employ.
"Backl
There is no place for you here!"
"Back!"
echoed Ruagh, and felt how feeble he was in comparison
with this other member of his race. "But back where? I have seen all
between here and the coast, and there is no refuge!"
"You
should have done as I did!" There was contempt in the words. "There
is no time to leave this world as we have left others. Indeed, until now none
would have been willing to prepare to leave it! But I was wise, and some few
others who foresaw this day. In the living rock I have built a refuge for
myself, where I can hope to sleep a million years if need be, where I can wait
out the fury of this maddened world."
"Take
me with you! By all that we have done together, take me with you!" Ruagh felt himself shaking.
"Fool! There is place
for one."
And now, too late, Ruagh faced the truth.
The
other went on, with a hint of cruel amusement, "Why do you not command
your subjects to make a refuge for you, as I commanded mine?"
The
picture of his worn-out band of survivors mocked Ruagh
in his imagination. Without conscious thought, he had flogged them one hist time to their feet, and bid them attack the members of
the other procession. Perhaps he thought of seizing the refuge built for his
fellow.
But
of the outcome there could be no doubt. And amid the carnage Ruagh was left alone, while the sound of mountains falling
echoed and re-echoed about him.
II
The
chill which ran along Peter
Trant's spine was not due to the chilly water; he was
efficiently insulated against his environment. It was due to awe.
For
it had just occurred to him that he was the first event here for thousands upon
thousands of years.
Nothing,
ordinarily, happened
here. There was the
never-ending rain of Globigerina on the seabed, forming the ooze whose depth
divided by its estimated rate of fall enabled man to put an age to the sea in
which Peter Trant now swam. Fish were rare, and those
existing were migrants from higher levels.
The sense of isolation shook him, and he
turned in the water and glanced back to the dim green sun shining overhead. It
was not the real sun, of course. Sunlight was a mile or more away, and in any
case it had been overcast when he and his companions started their long trip
down. It was the beacon of the bathynef which had
brought him here.
Well,
that was all right, then. The beacon was the brightest light ever devised by
man, fusing the hydrogen from the water surrounding it.
He
hung, floating, thinking of the fantastic achievements that had combined to
bring him here, and enabling him to move about as though he were in outer
space, in free fall. The bathynef was. perhaps the
least of these technical miracles, although the fact that it could hang itself
up on a fusion reaction more than a thousand fathoms below the surface was the
result of an almost incredible masterpiece of design. The magnetic bottle which
contained the beacon damped the escaping radiation to a level safe for the crew
of the vessel, applying principles derived from the observation of white dwarf
stars.
Here,
stars had never been seen—not for millenniums. This side of the great Atlantic
Ridge it was probable there had been land in other geological epochs. Under the
layer of globi-gerina ooze which had enabled scientists
to say that there had been ocean here for about a hundred thousand years, there
was granite. On the other side of the Atlantic Ridge, those fantastic submarine
mountains wider than the Andes and higher than the Himalayas, the ocean floor
was basalt. Basalt is igneous, rock born of the primal fires that shook the
new-born earth; granite is the rock on which the continents are founded.
Another
shiver of awe crept down Peter Trant's back. He began
to revise his opinion of the relative status of the miracles that had brought
him here. He had been thinking that the greatest of them was the Ostrovsky-Wong process by which he was enabled to stand the
pressure of the ocean deeps in a free-diving outfit less cumbersome than the
space-suit needed to endure interplanetary vacuum. But was it not almost more
astonishing that before men had been able to come and see for themselves, they should have been able to send tenuous
messengers, sonar probes, and discover what they were likely to see when they
followed in person?
He
turned with a wriggle like an eel and stared towards the mountains on the
opposite side from the bathynef. He could not see
them in the dim water, but they were there, all right. The few peaks of this
range which man could see were called a chain of islands, the Azores, St.
Paul's Rocks, not far from the equator, Tristan da
Cunha (that symbol of loneliness), Gough Island and the Bouvet Islands far to
the south. Only oceanographers and those few others who were accustomed to
thinking of the sea in depth as well as on its surface regarded the Ridge in
its true light.
As
he came nearer to the bathynef, he had to turn like
an acrobat, but the high resistance of the dense water made it dreamily easy.
He dodged into shadow beneath the vast buoyancy tanks and had to pause a while
to let his eyes adjust to the field of brightness surrounding the beacon,
which was now hidden from him. As soon as he was able to discern the still
darker oblong which was the entry to the lock, he hauled himself into it.
The
outer door closed behind him. The inner one opened instantly. The crew
compartment, of course, was full of water. Air at any pressure tolerable for
human breathing under normal circumstances would have meant doubling the
strength of the hull of the bathynef. To crew this
craft meant taking the Ostrovsky-Wong treatment and
staying in a suit during the trip. The controls, the engine, the beacon
generator and the rest didn't need air. They were embedded in a solid block of
plastic which made servicing abominably difficult but which solved the pressure
problem neatly.
He
edged past Mary Davis and tapped her shoulder as he did so. She turned her head
so that he could see her face through the front plate of her helmet, and he
gave her a broad grin and a wink. Her answering smile was forced.
The
third crewman, Luke Wallace, had been taking advantage of Peter's absence to
use up more than his share of the tiny space. Moving back into his allotted
area, he pantomimed throwing Peter back out of the lock.
"What
you want to come back for so soon?" he whispered over the headsets. In the
bathynef itself sound travelled well enough to speak
in an ordinary voice, but stray pickup by the throat mikes had got them into
the habit of whispering all the time. "Me and
Mary were getting along fine!"
"Don't
give me that!" said Peter, forcing himself to adapt to Luke's
irrepressible manner. "I know they've done some investigation into
possibilities in free fall, though it's only theoretical till they start
sending up mixed spaceship crews. But here!"
"What a chance we had for research, anywayl" said Luke.
Mary cut m impatiently. "Peter, you be
serious. Does the process workF'
"A
hundred per cent,"
Peter confirmed soberly. "I can't quite believe it, even after going
through God knows how many pressure-tank tests and the shallower descents we
made before. If they ever get around to giving prizes for oceanography, Ostrovsky and Wong had better share the first even though
they aren't oceanographers. I think they've revolutionized our whole damn
job."
Luke's
whisper cut in. "I'm still damn glad it was you who had to make the first
open-water trial, Petey. But I'd like to do the first
field-test, so to speak. How close are we to bottom? Or
rather, to side?"
"What?"
"Well,
we're in the East Atlantic Basin, aren't we? When did you see a basin without
sides?"
"Not
bad, Luke," Mary said with a grudging chuckle. "I'll check." She
pressed a control on the sonar panel, and a pattern of dots like dim stars
showed behind a quartz screen.
"I get eleven hundred
yards to the nearest at our level."
"Right. Let's paddle over. I want to go and grub about a bit, shift some ooze
and pick up a few samples of fauna if I can spot any."
"Well—" Mary
seemed hesitant, and Peter spoke up.
"I think it's an
excellent idea."
Mary nodded, and began to
let water into the reactor pile.
"Steady! Right, that's it. I've just got
the mountain wall in the light from the beacon." Luke was hanging on the
hull of the 'nef beside the lock, peering forward
into the green gloom. "I don't think I'll need a handlight
when you're so close, but I'll take it along in case I want to get to the bottom
of the ooze."
There was silence. Peter shifted in his
cramped space, and stared at Mary, thinking about the more-than-equality, the indistinguishability, which the technological wonders surrounding
them had imposed on the sexes. The throat mikes took the richness out of Mary's
voice; the suit took it from her shapely figure. He could catch only glimpses
of her face behind her helmet. She had large expressive eyes, flat and almost
Oriental cheekbones, a full soft-looking mouth. She was freckled in all shades
of brown from near-orange to near-black, and her hair was a lustrous light
brown. Amazing.
He
made sure that his mike was set for in-ship calling only. "Mary, can I ask
you a personal question?"
The
helmet turned toward him. He thought a smile twitched at her mouth, but it was
hard to be sure. "Just one. As
a reward."
"Reward? For what?"
Peter was as puzzled as he sounded.
"For being the first to go out. The fact that I got into oceanography at all
was due to hero-worship. So I suppose when I run across a small case of heroism
I suffer an attack of renewed adolescence." The second sentence seemed to
embarrass her, and to be added in mitigation of her remark about a reward in
spite of that.
"Well,
I'll be— As a matter of fact, that half answers my personal question. Mary,
you're a very attractive girl, you know. What in hell are you doing here,
instead of being back home having dinner with prosperous boy friends?"
There
was a long pause. "All right, I'll tell you," she said. She began to
giggle. "I warn you, you'll think it's very silly.
"It
goes way back to when I was fourteen and in school. I had a crush on an older
boy. He must have been about seventeen. I tried to throw myself at him. And
boy, did he know how to duckl Why not? I was a kid.
He was nearly a man.
"Only,
being the way fourteen-year-olds sometimes are, I wasn't convinced of that. I
made like I was older than my age, tried to look and talk and act
sophisticated. He laughed at me. No wonder. It must have been a real farce. But
in the end I really got mad. First at him and then at myself
for being a mousy little frump. WeH, I knew
what this boy was going to do when he graduated; he wanted to join the staff of
the Scripps Institute. He was friendly with one of the submarine geologists
who knew his father, and he even got permission to go along on a survey ship
one summer vacation. I said: rightl What's the Scripp's Institute? Institute for Oceanography. Never heard of it. But so help me, I'll learn
more about it than he ever willl"
A dry chuckle. "And dam it, I did. Oh, I got over the boy within a few months.
But I'd got interested by then, and I'd convinced myself I was going to be a
lonely spinster all my life, so I decided I'd have to have a career anyway and
this looked like a good one. When boys did start dating me and making passes
instead of ignoring my existence I nearly died of surprise. Truly! And here I
am."
Peter
was grinning, but keeping his face averted. He was on the verge of saying that
he did find it silly but perfectly logical, when there was an interruption. Not
more than a mutter. But it came from Luke, out in the deep water.
"Oh-oh!" It was like the calm but annoyed exclamation of a man who sees a cat or
a small child endangering a valuable ornament.
Mary
put her helmet plate hard against the quartz window, but the field of vision
from inside the 'nef was almost nil. For seeing
things instead of registering them on sonar, the crew had to go out of the
lock. "Luke!" she called. "You all
right?"
"Personally,
I'm fine, just as well as Peter was." Luke sounded calm, but the fact that
he said "Peter" and not "Pete" or "Petey"
was betraying. "Exertion is possible, but not for long periods. My
co-ordination is slipping a bit. There's a sort of cave I poked into, found a
few unlikely barnacles or something. I chipped a few of them off, and maybe I
hit too hard, or something. Half a ton of sludge has shifted across the mouth
of the cave."
"Can you get out?" Mary demanded
anxiously.
"I think so. The opening's wide enough,
and I can see the beacon clear as anything. The trick will be to swim straight
through without touching the sides of the hole. It's balanced like a juggling
act! Have to do it now—or never!"
The
last word was accompanied by a grunt, as though in the same moment he had lanced
towards the mouth of the cave.
Suddenly the 'nef shifted like a balloon in a
gale, outwards and away from the mountainside where Luke had been exploring. A vast grumbling noise at the edge of
hearing troubled their ears with the psychological disturbance of subsonics. A cloud of slow mud blanked the narrow windows
of the 'nef.
Mary
was better prepared for the shock than Peter, being at her control post,
securely seated, while he was stretched out and consequently floundering in the
resistant water that filled the cabin. But all the time he was trying to regain
his place, he was aware of what must have happened. The cave must have been on
a sloping outcrop of rock, with tons upon tons of ooze above it, undisturbed
for eons by anything except the gentle deep-ocean currents which rounded it
like weather-eroded hills, but ready to collapse and thunder into the abyss
like a slow-motion avalanche if triggered off.
He
was shouting, "Luke! Luke!" Then he realized he had set his mike for
in-ship transmission only. But it probably made no difference at all. Luke
couldn't hear their cries.
Ill
"Oh my god!" Mary was whispering. "Oh
my God!" She was awakening the reactor and controlling the tossing
of their craft as she spoke. It was probably a defense against expected tears.
Peter crammed his faceplate hard against the window and tried to see into the
murky water. There was nothing, except for a lump of something solid but not
very heavy tumbling through the edge of the light from the beacon. It moved
slowly, but it vanished forever towards the ooze of the Atlantic floor.
"I
think it's stopped," he said harshly, and then remembered to relapse into
whispering. "Have we been moved far?"
"Not very," Mary
managed to reply.
"Could you relocate
the spot we were at before?"
"Oh
God, I don't know." She made a gesture as
though to brush hair out of her eyes. Her hand fetched up short against the
hardness of her helmet. "I can try. You're going out?"
"Of course! If there's the remotest chance he's still in reach . . . He may only
have been trapped in sludge. Maybe he's still in the cave, unable to pick us up
or get his signals through." He was starting to operate the lock door.
Mary
stopped with her hand poised to open the reactor pipe. For a long moment she
remained still. Then she turned away shaking her head. "It's not worth the
risk. There may be another fall coming."
"Not
worth it? What do you mean? So long as there's any hope—"
Then
a sudden light dawned on him. Mary must be about twenty-seven. He knew for sure
Luke was thirty.
"Mary,
wasn't Luke at Scripps Institute before he came to us at Atlantic?"
Her answering
"yes" was barely breathed.
"Was it Luke who got
you down here? Like you said?"
Again,
fainter, "Yes."
"All right. It may not be worth it for you, he may not be the godlike ideal you
thought he was when you were fourteen, but he's a human being and a damn fine
oceanographer. I won't give him up till I've seen for myself! Now get the 'nef moving!"
He
passed through the lock and seized the handholds on the hull, staring ahead
towards the Ridge. The bathynef's speed was at most
two knots. He could barely feel the pressure difference caused by their slow
advance, but it was enough to make suspended mud deposit on his faceplate and
force him to scrape it off every minute or two.
Nonetheless,
the brilliance of the beacon sheared through the muddy fog, and he was able to
deduce that although the shock had been violent, the fall had been
comparatively small. Only a few hundred tons of ooze would have taken part in
the slithering redistribution of weight. Only! Peter
shuddered. The Ostrovsky-Wong process enabled the
human body to resist enormous pressures, but the weight of a hundred tons of
mud was another question altogether.
Almost without doubt, it
was hopeless.
"Bight. Steady!" he commanded Mary. "I can see the wall ahead."
He surveyed the gradually widening area that the beacon illuminated. "It
looks like we're coming back at the same spot, okay. There's a vague color
difference between the mud ahead and the rest, like it was reflecting more
light from an irregular surface."
"How
close do you think we can go?" Mary's voice showed restrained tension.
"As
close as your nerves will let you bring her," Peter answered grimly.
"Okay, hold it. I don't see where another fall could come from. The ooze
has slipped over a hundred square yards. I'll cast off now and survey the
surface without touching anything. If it seems to have settled I'll go over
with the sonar and see if I can get a reflection off Luke's helmet or oxygen
bottles."
There
was practically no risk of further slipping, he decided after carefully
circling the area of the disaster. Accordingly, he set the little sonar device
which normally served for communication so that it would receive its own
impulses, and began laboriously to quarter the surface of the shifted mud, back
and forth, back and forth. . . .
He was on the point of signalling
to Mary that he must give up, when a last thought struck him. Maybe the ooze
had slipped clear of the mouth of the cave where Luke had been trapped, slipped
all the way to a lower level. They could well be a little below the cave.
He
kicked himself round and jetted upwards, towards the rocks laid bare by the
movement of the ooze. In answer to a curt request, Mary made the 'nef imitate him. The beacon lit bare rock, without sign of
a cave mouth.
Rock?
He
was so intent on what he was searching for that it took him a long moment to
recognize the incongruity. Rock? Since when had rock of any kind distorted
itself into small level areas at slighdy different
angles to one another, each
area square?
Molten
rock, lava, pouring fast and cooling quickly, will crystallize into hexagons:
witness the famous Giant's Causeway and other such formations. But squares? Of identical sizes? Like flagstones under which the ground has
subsided?
In
that instant, Peter forgot his missing comrade, and knew after that Luke would
have forgiven him; would willingly have sacrificed his fife to reveal what
might otherwise have gone undetected for still more centuries. He plunged
forward and scraped at the thin film of mud still covering the incredible
surface of the stone.
Marble.
But not just marble. Slabs of marble carved with
grooves and inlaid with something harder than marble. The pattern of the inlay,
standing out black on the lighter background, was not accidental.
The
first one he managed to trace was similar to the Seal of Solomon, except that
instead of two triangles interlocked it consisted of two squares. The next was
something very like the caduceus, the serpent-twined staff of Mercury which is
the symbol of the medical profession. Except that Peter hoped nó such snakes had ever crawled on Earth. Their very curves seemed
unnatural, improbable.
"Mary!
I've found something fantastic! Unbelievable! You can float the 'nef over, but gently! I want some pictures, good ones, and
lots of them."
It was not cynicism, but scientific
enthusiasm which re-
minded him at this point that without Luke there would be
plenty of oxygen for the return to the surface. If only there
were some means of communicating with the mother ship I
But radio was impossible, of course, and they had avoided
tethering the 'nef on a phone cable because that
hindered its
unique power to range along the bottom in search of inter-
esting fauna. /
Feverishly
he worked at clearing the thin slimy ooze. He frustrated himself with the vigor
of his work, for if he scrubbed too hard he fogged the water near the—the
pavement, he was already calling it. He had to find a smooth rhythm which would
disperse the fine particles in the water long enough for the nef's camera to capture the mysterious symbols.
There
were some that were quite familiar, the concentric circles, isosceles triangles
arranged in a star pattern, and straightforward groups of intersecting lines.
There were some that were tantalizingly reminiscent, like the caduceus. There
were forked symbols like the Chinese ideogram for "Man," and a thing
like a three-legged swastika which reminded him of the coat of arms of the Isle
of Man. And there were things he could not compare to anything he had ever seen
before, which, in one or two cases, gave him a peculiar sense of disquiet.
"Peter!"
Mary warned him, seemingly against her will. "I think we'll have to start
the ascent soon. I'd prefer not to have to bleed oxygen off the beacon to get
us home—we'd have to be decontaminated of fission products, you know. I think
this will still be here when we come back. Suppose you survey the area and see
if there's anything else of interest."
He
circled the area lit by the beacon, prodding several times at what might
conceivably have been relics of masonary showing
under the mud, but which he dared not try to scrape clean for fear they might
be holding back another avalanche of ooze. Finally, he returned to the ship.
Mary was waiting silently for him. When he
was safely in the cabin, she at once set in train the device that fed the water
from the buoyancy tank into the beacon's magnetic bottle. The raging power
instantly dissociated the elements into gases. Charged with this gas, the tank
began to lift them the slow, slow way to the surface.
Peter
settled in his place, thinking what the pictures would show when they applied
the necessary correction factors to them and could screen them in full color.
"Mary,"
he said, awed by his own reasoning, "you realize we've stumbled across
something that's obviously far older than Atlantis is supposed to be; older
than any known human civilization?"
She nodded. "If they were builders
before—before we were," she said, "what could they have been?"
"Who,"
Peter corrected. "Not 'what.' If they were builders, then they were our
cousins, whatever shape they had."
He
paused, and then added awkwardly, "You know, I think Luke is going to have
a finer memorial than any man ever had."
For
just a second he didn't realize what he was seeing. Then, just in time, he made
the appropriate movements with his arms. Sobbing blindly, Mary fell into them,
and under thousands of feet of ocean and hampered by the suits which kept them
alive, he tried to comfort her grief.
In the very great depths, in the vastness of
the Eastern Atlantic Basin, there was the second event in millenniums.
Awareness. Inquiry. Hope. Amazed delight.
Why,
the planet was teeming with lifel A
richness! Such a richness had never been known before,
anywhere.
And the awareness knew.
IV
Color-corrected
according to the Land
principle, the pictures of the unbelievable submerged flagstones shone out
vividly on the screen, filling the hastily darkened messroom
of the Alexander Bache. Now it could be seen that their pink, yellow,
mottled white hues almost glowed under their layer of mud.
Peter
stared at them dazedly. This was burial in a hundred thousand years of
globigerina ooze, which had doubtless mummified them as efficiently as the
peaty water of the bog had embalmed the body of Tollund
Man, dead only for centuries. Allow that this hard stone was ten times more
durable than human skin and bone, and it was credible.
There
were six other people in the room besides himself and
Mary. Of the ship's permanent crew, there was Captain Hartlund,
First Officer Ellington, and Engineer Officer Piatt. Even though their jobs
demanded that they be much more than seamen only—Piatt, for instance, having to
service the bathynef, was no mean atomic physicist
and could carbon datings with his eyes shut—they were
laymen when it came to this sort of problem. Correction: to this problem. It
was without precedent. Unique.
Of
the Atlantic Research Foundation's scientists aboard the Alexander Bache this trip, Dick Loescher
was a novice studying submarine geology, and Eloise Vanderplank
was a bioecologist studying the interdependence of
fish populations and plankton.
Therefore
it was to the last member of the group that Peter looked when at last he
managed to drag his eyes away from the screen at the end of the table. The
Chief: Dr. Gordon.
Gordon was a plump and placid man, possessed
usually of a sharp tongue equal to every occasion, respected in his field as a
sober and experienced oceanologist. Years of patient
work on laborious research programs had enabled him to provide mortar for the
bricks of a score of brilliant but tottering theories, and he was liked for
that reason both by the proposers of such theories and by those under him who
were unwilling to assume what Gordon was still dedicatedly trying to place
beyond doubt.
Peter
was shocked to see that Gordon, the unshakable, was leaning forward on his
elbows, his gaze fixed on the screen, and murmuring to himself almost as though
in prayer.
Peter
glanced at Mary on the other side of the table. She looked cool and lovely in a
plain white shirt and skirt, but red puffings of her
eyelids betrayed what she had done when the 'nef was
hauled alongside. While the pictures were being developed and Peter was telling
the story of Luke's disappearance, she had hidden herself in her cabin and
wept the grief out of her.
Was
it for the real Luke, the Luke of today, that she had
cried? Or was it for the Luke she had idolized so long ago? The
latter, perhaps. Peter had known Luke and liked him well enough, but
although he was good at his job he was hardly a remarkable enough person to
spark such admiration.
He
caught Mary's eye now and nodded towards Gordon. An answering nod made him
clear his throat and turn in his chair.
"Uh, Dr. Gordon!.
Have you formed any theory about the origin of these remains yet?" This,
to someone who often spent months or years testing a theory before pronouncing
it fit for use, was a bad question, and Peter hastened to qualify it. "I
mean, insofar as we have data to draw tentative—"
"Theory, my dear Peter? Theory? Who can talk of theories in a moment such as the one we experience now?
When, for this rare and precious time only, one can speak with immediate and
perfect certainty! Theories, for God's sake, when we know, you know,
everyone knowsl"
He blew a harrumphing blast and pocketed his
handkerchief before returning to his rapt contemplation of the screen.
The
other people in the room exchanged glances. Because Eliose
Vanderplank was the next senior member of the staff,
was not a specialist in this field, and had worked with Gordon more often than
the rest of them, the lot fell to her. She rested one tanned, bony arm on the
table and demanded in her high voice, "Know what, Chief?"
"Oh,
really, Eloisel" Gordon sat bolt upright.
"We find buildings, or traces of building, on the ocean floor, in the Eastern Adantic
Basin which is known to be floored with granite and therefore once part of a landmàss, and you ask a question like that. Really,
Eloise, even if you do specialize in fish populations, I'd have thought
something of the general knowledge of the field would have rubbed off. From me, if no one else."
Peter's
heart suddenly sank. Was this Gordon's "secret
vice?" Had they uncovered the true reason behind his patient océanographie work, his gathering of data, his patching of
promising but leaky hypotheses?
Mary
must have seen the truth quicker. She shoved back her chair with a grunt.
"Dr. Gordon, if you're talking about Atlantis you must be crazy!"
The
company grinned and relaxed. Peter heard the faintest whisper of, "Good
girl!" He thought it came from Eloise.
But
the effect on Gordon was appalling. He grew red in the face. He snorted. He
slapped the table loudly. At last he found his voice again. "That is
unforgivable! At least grant me that I did not mention Atlantis first. I
wouldn't, for I know as well as you, and maybe better because I was studying
this when you were in your cradle, that Plato's Adantis
is supposed to have submerged far more recendy than
this landmass above which we float. But Atlantis is a good enough name,
hallowed by usage and sanctioned by tradition.
"Why,
it's been clear—clear to me, anyway—from the
circumstantial evidence that some real disaster overwhelmed some real and great
civilization, ever since I began in school. I oughtn't to have to tell you! A
single theme, a single cataclysmic event has been distorted in passage from
mouth to mouth and generation to generation. Primitive, degenerate peoples have
attached truth they could no longer understand to petty local events: Noah's
flood, Deucalion's flood.
"And
now we find evidence which no one can dispute, however bitterly they may wish
to. Not of Plato's Atlantis, perhaps. But certainly of a
great civilization, perhaps as great as ours in a different way. Had
they been so technically accomplished, they would probably have survived the
upheaval that brought about their doom. But there are other fields of knowledge
than engineering." He made the.word sound like
an insult, and Engineer Officer Piatt started to voice a protest but thought
better of it and subsided, fuming.
Mary
sat with downcast eyes. Peter found her foot under the table and pressed it
with the side of his own, wishing he could reach her hand instead. Into the
silence that followed, Captain Hartlund's voice
drifted coolly.
"I
must say, Chief, you seem to be getting a hell of a lot out of a few isolated
flagstones with hieroglyphs on them— which may only be ornament, after
all." He removed the empty pipe that jutted from his mouth and jabbed it
at the screen.
"I'm
not a trained scientist, but I've worked aboard the Bache and her predecessors long enough for some of it to have rubbed off, as
you put it. There isn't any doubt that here under our feet there's an
epoch-making discovery—literafly. A hundred thousand
years back there weren't supposed to be people on earth who lived in anything
much better than skin tents, or even caves. But what have we actually got? An
inexhaustible treasure-trove, or something as
tantalizing and mysterious as the Easter Island statues were until they got
pushed into a pattern? Peter said he couldn't see anything else except what
might be traces of masonry construction. I figure there's a chance we may only
have come across a sort of—well, a super Stonehenge, for instance; a unique
masterpiece produced by an otherwise primitive society for some practical or
mystical purpose it'll take anthropologists and paleontologists
years to unravel."
The
air cleared. Hartlund's forceful good sense impressed
even Gordon, although he seemed deflated.
"Very
well," he said with a good grace. "I had considered radioing an
immediate report and facsimiles of the pictures Peter and Mary brought back. It
occurs to me that newspaper reporters may seize on Atlantis, by which of
course I mean the fabulous Atlantis of Plato and Ignatius Donnelly, and obscure
the much more important possibilities we may later uncover."
He
sighed, and for a moment was far away again. "But if it is not what you envisage, not a mere submarine Easter Island, then what vistas
open up before usl The key to the future, yielded up
by the past. Hopes of forgotten lore, of—"
Eloise
coughed, and the Chief broke off. "I'm sorry. As to practical proposals
for immediate action . . .?"
V
The
best of the meeting passed
in a normal atmosphere, and when it was over Peter followed Hartlund
out on deck. It was nearing sunset, but the air was still and warm.
"Thanks
for putting a stop to that nasty little situation," he said.
The
captain, tamping shag tobacco into his pipe, smiled without raising his
wood-brown face to look at Peter. "We all have our shortcomings," he
said. "I'd begun to think I'd never find out what the Chief's was."
"But to hear him
actually blather about forgotten secret lore!" Peter spread his hands in amazement, and
then gave up. He switched the subject.
"How long before we start the 'nef down again?"
"Depends
on how long it takes Fred Piatt to give his okay. And on
whether the Chief insists on running shallow tests on Dick and Eloise's Ostrovsky-Wong process before going all the way down.
How long is it you have to allow between dives?"
"Forty-eight hours minimum in sea-level
air, and they think six dives below a mile is enough on any one trip. But they
don't know, of course. It may prove possible to cut down the rest periods!
They're playing safe."
'Scusel" said Piatt from behind them, and they stepped
apart to let him through. He was carrying the servicing and fault-detection
kits for the 'nef, and one of the two apprentice
engineers was hot on his heels.
"Handled
like a dream all the way for us, Fred!" Peter shot at the engineer
officer's back. Piatt flung his reply over his shoulder.
"Great! Now let's see
if it works like a piece of machinery!"
He
and his assistant were overside a moment later, swarming
out along the line to the 'nef, hand over hand. Hartlund chuckled. "No doubts, no delays," he
commented. "Wish there was more than one of those damned 'nefs. The 'scaphes aren't bad in
their way, but what can you really do without atomics?"
"Well,
there is more than one, you know," Peter corrected, and Hartlund blew smoke.
"Yes,
of course. The Russkis have one, don't they? The Vladimir Ostrovsky,
isn't it?"
"Pavel Ostrovsky," Peter answered. "I'd really like to see
that 'nef. Better yet, make a trip in her. Some of
the data they'd already hauled in before we got this thing of ours over its
teething troubles made me crazy jealous!"
He
laughed. "Mark you, the luck seems to be on our side at the moment."
"Where are they working mostly?"
"The Pacific deeps. That was the main reason they allotted that one out there to us, I
gather. The military who were still in on the project approved its going to Adantic because the Russian 'nef
couldn't kidnap ours if it was in another ocean, and it was all right with us
because we wanted 'nef data on the Adantic more than we wanted to duplicate the work the Russkiswere doing."
Watching the 'nef go under again next morning
with Eloise and Dick Loescher on board, Peter felt
like kicking himself. If he hadn't wasted so much time on that damned pavement, he could have
done most of the work these two were intended to do on the first trip, and had
the greater satisfaction of getting an overall picture of the discovery. That
would have averted the unpleasant scene with the Chief yesterday.
As
to getting a general picture of what lay a thousand fathoms under them, that
was work for which it was reasonable to send a geologist and an expert on fish
economy. They could look about, take photographs, report
the evidence of their eyes. On the next trip after this, he and Mary could begin
to interpret the data.
To
occupy his time during the thirty-six hours this descent was scheduled to last,
Peter prepared a report on the flagstones to accompany the picture. He had
polished it five times in order to kill a couple of extra hours before he
finally surrendered and took it to the Chief. Gordon received it with an abstracted
nod, studied it, seemed to wish to comment but said nothing.
Peter hesitated, and then
turned to go.
"Just
a moment, Peter," Gordon said almost inaudibly. "I should like to ask
a question. I know already what Mary Davis thinks about my attitude towards
this discovery. May I have your views?"
He
squared his shoulders as though tensing to receive a blow.
"I've
learned from you, Chief," said Peter carefully, "not to formulate
conclusions without gathering all the evidence available. There's more evidence,
probably, than what I got on my trip. Till it's all in, or at least till we
know the nature of what's left, I'd rather reserve my opinion."
"Very
sound, very sound," muttered Gordon. It was a typical, almost automatic,
comment. But this time his heart was not in it. "Oh, one
more thing. Hartlund reminded me that we ought
to hold an investigation into Luke Wallace's death. Well, that's hard. But I
think it will suffice if you swear to a written statement. Mary will have to do
the same, of course."
Peter
left the office and sauntered out on deck, thoughtful. Through his mind was
running the memory of the story Mary had told him just before Luke's death, the
story of how she came to be in oceanography. It was curious. Prior to hearing
it, he had had a blind spot towards Mary. She was too attractive to be
overlooked, but although she was plainly not attached to anyone on board, nor
did she speak of anyone ashore, and although their work brought them together
continually, he had never thought of her as Mary Davis. As a
woman.
Partly,
he now realized as he thought back, it was because he had made a subconscious
assumption that lady scientists who were beautiful must be lacking in some
essential thing which would make paying attention to them worthwhile. He had
found such a lack so often—even in girls who seemed at first contact vivacious,
intelligent, interesting to be with— that he had taken to saving himself the
money and trouble involved in finding out its nature.
But the story she had told him while waiting
for Luke had suddenly made her human in his eyes.
A
door opened. It was dark, but Mary wore her plain white shirt and skirt and it
made her instantly recognizable. She stood out of the darkness near the bows
like a vague white statue, leaning on the rail and looking at the traces of
phosphorescence in the sea.
Peter
walked quiedy toward her and leaned on the rail at
her side. She acknowledged his presence with a turn of her head, and went back
to staring at the water.
He
didn't say anything. He let his hand first brush and then close
around hers, and she returned his mquiring pressure
with a squeeze. At length she spoke.
"It was great of you
to go out looking for Luke that way."
"What
the hell did you expect me to do?" said Peter. "Sit in the 'nef and bobble off back to the surface singing songs?"
She
managed a courtesy laugh. It sounded forced. "No. I —well, I guess I might
as well say it. I didn't try very hard to persuade you not to, because I was
trying like hell not to push for the lock and go hunting myself."
"I
understand," said Peter as gently as he could. "Coming on top of
having told me that story, when the whole thing was fresh in your mind. . .
."
She
nodded. She was still gazing at the water. "That made it worse, of
course."
"That story you told
me," Peter ventured. "You tell it often?"
"Almost never. I told it to the Chief one time, when he was ribbing me about a student
who was panting at my heels. He said I had no business in Adantic, that I ought to be
in a Park Avenue apartment. No, not often."
"And
... to Luke?"
"No."
The word was dry and isolated, as though cut off. "No. And now" I
never canl" Abrupdy
she had turned towards him, and sobs were shaking her while he comforted her
as he had done in the 'nef when they left the site of
Luke's disaster. It felt better to be doing it in the open air.
Peter
said gendy, "You really carried a torch for that
guy, didn't you? Hidden under a bushel, too."
She
pulled away from him, her face suddenly still, her eyes searching his face.
"You said you understood," she breathed. "Only you don't. You
don't at alll"
While Peter was still standing with his mouth
half open and hunting for a reply, the mess call sounded. Mary seized it as a
cue to turn on her heel and walk away.
That incomprehensible episode was stuck in
his mind next noon, getting between him and the paper on which he was trying to
compose the statement about Luke which the Chief had asked him for. He had
firmly dismissed it for the tenth time and was renewing his attack when there
was a sudden flurry of activity. Eloise and Dick weren't due back for hours
yet. He got up and went out, bumping into First Officer Ellington almost before
he had left the doorway.
"Hey! What
gives?"
"The
'nef's surfacing," Ellington answered. "I
got it on sonar a couple of minutes back. They're ahead of schedule, and that
means trouble, most likely. Or something epoch-making in the
way of discoveries, which they couldn't sit on any longer. Excuse
me."
Ellington
was right. On both counts. How right, he did not leam for some time.
There
seemed to be nothing wrong with the 'nef as it progressed
to the surface. The launch went skimming toward its point of arrival, Piatt
driving with all his test and repair equipment beside him. But as it could be
seen that the 'nef was under perfect control, he
slowed and ran a puzzled circle before closing in. The trouble must be with
Dick or Eloise, not the mechanism.
But
two suited figures duly broke surface beside the 'nef,
which was normal.
And a third followed them.
The third looked like—Luke.
No. Correction.
It was Luke!
VI
The
word went round the entire
survey ship before Piatt had brought the launch to a rocking halt beside the
three explorers. Everyone, barring the apprentice engineer who had to stand by
in the engine room and the radio officer, burst out on the deck, eager to
confirm the impossible with their own eyes.
Its
effect on Dr. Gordon was tremendous. He came trotting from his office with a stylo still in his hands, his face red with excitement and
beaded with new sweat. He clutched the afterrail as though strangling an enemy, and his hps moved silently.
Peter
found his powers of mind temporarily suspended. He could not even form
ridiculous theories to account for Luke's return. Damn it, if Eloise and Dick
had chanced across his body
that would have been
acceptable, although it would have made needles in haystacks simple by
comparison. But Luke was alive; he clambered over the gunwale of the launch
without assistance, and removed his own helmet, squatting in the stemsheets.
Without
oxygen. .. .
He couldn't have any oxygen leftl
His reserve had been identical with Peter's own; sufficient for about six hours
altogether, contained in two cylinders. At three-hour intervals one exchanged
an exhausted cylinder for a fresh one stored in the 'nef.
Consequendy Luke must have suffocated within a few
hours—four, perhaps—of the 'nefs departure for the
surface.
Peter
looked about him at the other people on deck. They were all talking except
Mary, of course, and also except the Chief. He had not moved from his rigid
stance, hands grasping the rail.
Now the launch was coming alongside; Piatt
had secured the 'nef s painter to the mooring line
almost without slowing in his haste to get his strange passenger aboard. He
came up first into a chorus of questions, but ignored them and turned to help
Luke.
Peter
had expected Mary to rush forward and throw herself round his neck. Only she
did not; she had not even joined the group helping him up the ladder. She was
just staring at him. Assuredly, Peter reflected, she had been right to tell him
he didn't understand her.
Eloise
and Dick followed, to be plagued with loud questions by those who had not got
answers out of Luke. He wasn't giving any, in fact, except a shake of the head.
But
before Eloise and Dick could sort out the inquiries and reply to them, the
Chief had thrust his way between Ellington and Hartlund
and was dominating the scene, as if he had a power to dominate that he could
turn on at will.
"Enough!"
he said sharply. "Hartlund, your head's screwed
on properly. Get Luke to sick bay and have him checked head to toe. I'll be
down in a minute. Dick, Eloise, you two come to my cabin and report on what
happened. All right, the rest of you. We'll get at the answers quicker if you
stop bothering us. Break it up!"
Obediently,
they dispersed, glancing back reluctantly. As Peter moved off, he looked for
Mary, and found she was nowhere to be seen.
It was seventeen hundred when the hear-this announced there would be a staff conference in
the messroom immediately. Peter
was already in the messroom, having a beer with First
Officer Ellington and hypothesizing about what was being said by Dick, Eloise
and Piatt in the Chief s office. They had been there without
interruption since the Chief returned from interviewing Luke.
In a
couple of minutes the company was complete. Gordon was at the head of the
table. No sign of Luke. Everyone looked for him, sighed, and composed himself or herself to listen.
Gordon
was smiling. Almost beaming. But there was a hint of
self-satisfaction in the smile which Peter disliked.
"All
right!" the Chief began. "Eloise, let's deal with the first things
first. What happened? Tell us as you told me." _ Eloise seemed withdrawn,
far away. There was a continual puzzlement in her high voice. "The descent
had been per-fecdy normal, of course," she said.
"And we had very litde trouble locating the site
of these flagstones Peter found. They gave a real shout on the sonar because
they were almost clear of ooze. We'd better beacon the place, though, next
time—I'm sorry.
"You were quite right about what you
thought were walls, Peter. We were afraid of starting an avalanche if we
weren't careful, so we thought we'd forestall it, and we set off a couple of
four-ounce charges in the water near the site. Nothing happened, except that
some of the ooze was cleared by the shock wave, so we judged it was safe and
started following the line of the walls.
"They
outline a gigantic square; a sort of piazza, which may well
be a hundred yards on a side. What's more, it continues downwards. There's a sort of enormous step higher than I
am, on the downhill side. Since you left, presumably the loose ooze which
slipped has settled or washed away a bit. Anyway, when we got there the edge of
this 'step' was showing above the pile of mud.
"Well,
that's as far as we got. Dick was outside clearing the base of a wall, when
something that gave a sonar pulse came towards us. From the deep side, more or less on our level. I called
Dick back. It was big, and if it was big it was probably also hungry, because
down there the fish population eat each other more
often than not. Anyway, it came into view. It was Luke."
Dick
picked up the story in response to a cue from Gordon. "Well, I went out to
him, not believing my eyes, and tried to talk, but he showed me that his sonar
was full of mud and not working. I brought him inboard, and changed his oxygen
cylinders right away,-and we tried to get sense out of him by giving him the
spare sonar set, but that didn't help either, so we judged his mike must be
out, as well.
"We
decided this whole thing was so incredible that we must head back at once. So
we did. On the way, we managed to exchange messages with Luke by writing, but
he was rather weak, and couldn't write very clearly. All we got was that he had
been trapped under the mud fall and lost all track of time. He seems to have
been unconscious. When he finally recovered and managed to work free, there was
no sign of the 'nef. He waited, hoping it would come
back, but just before our arrival, he'd got lightheaded and decided to swim
off. Catching sight of the beacon brought him back to sanity."
"And
he is sane," said Gordon. "We've examined him with all the facilities
we have. He's not only sane, but he's in good health aside from bruises and
weakness due to hunger. By thé time he's rested up—he's asleep, so I haven't
asked him to speak for himself at this conference—hell likely be in perfect shape again."
Peter
leaned forward. "Chief, something important. Can
I ask Fred Piatt a question?"
Annoyed at being
interrupted, Gordon grunted consent.
"Fred,
did you check Luke's discarded oxygen tanks? How much reserve did he have left
when Dick changed them?"
"The
meters said two hours," Piatt answered, and there was a murmur of
incredulity. "So I checked them on the master gauge. Same result. Pressure
was worth two hours."
"In
which case," said Peter as calmly as he could, "either he found a
means of recharging them six thousand feet under the Atlantic—or we have a
resurrected corpse aboard."
"Good,
Peter! Good!" burst out Gordon, slamming his hand delightedly on the
table. "It's fine to hear you reasoning sensibly like that."
Peter blinked. "It's inescapable,"
he began, but the Chief cut him short.
"Yes,
of course it's inescapable. I said it was even before
this happened. Luke is back, and well, from a situation that ought to have
killed him. It's not accidental. Can't be. And he
himself says he doesn't remember finding what I suppose is just conceivable; an
oxygen generator left behind by the builders of the city and still in working
order. Yes, I agree that is ridiculous, but it's just not out of the question.
Dismissing that, though, we are left with the likely truth."
"Which is?"
grunted Hartlund needlessly.
"That something—or rather someone—down there helped Luke and either resuscitated him or kept him alive."
VH
Kept him alive.
For
Peter the words had an ominous ring, and a picture came unbidden to his mind. A
picture of a coelacanth, caught when "old fourlegs"
was still regarded as a fantastic impossibility in the living state, moving despondendy in the tank where his captors had placed him,
dying by inches because they did not know and he could not say that sunlight
was unbearable to him.
And
after it came impressions of specimens in an aquarium. Because if this were true, and something intelligent did move and live down there, it could only be alien to man.
A
babble of excited talk, half contradictory, half in agreement with the logic
of Gordon's remarks, was running round the table. The Chief let it continue for
a moment, then snapped its thread.
"All right. Unless someone really has a valid counterexplanation, I want discussion of further
activities. We are limited by supplies and the capacity of our equipment. I
want to know what really is down there. On the other hand, it looks beyond
doubt that it's far too big for us few to handle with what we've got." A
hand went up. "Ellington?"
"Chief, I'd like to
hear what Luke has to say."
"Impossible.
We're going to let him sleep the clock round. I've had the bones of his story,
and Eloise gave them to you, and so did Dick. We can only hope sleep will clear
his mind. On his own admission, he'd become delirious by the time he was found.
If not, we'll have to hunt for ourselves. Piatt?"
The
engineer officer was frowning. "I wish I could see for myself what's under
us. All I can do is make suggestions. I vote we undertake one more dive, with
every bit of equipment I can secure to the 'nef. I'm
divided between sending two as crew, for the sake of the longer time they could
stay under, or three, allowing two to be working outside."
"It'll
have to be two. Dick and Eloise have to rest for forty-eight hours, and Luke
isn't going to be fit. Or even if he is, I won't let him dive again till he's
had a proper hospital examination. That leaves Mary and Peter. By the way,
where is Mary?" The Chief glanced round.
"Keeping guard on
Luke," said Peter.
"All right. Yes, for a full-scale exploration we'd need the Russian 'nef as well as our own, and I'm pretty sure they will agree
to come. And for lack of anything better we must invite the French to loan a
couple of their 'scaphes. Too, the British have been
trying out a new ultradeep TV drogue, which will go
down deeper than a 'nef has been taken so far."
"And
which won't show much except ooze," said Dick Loescher
baldly. "Chief, to get at all there is down there, we'll have to invent
whole new fleets of gadgets. Hell, burrowing into four thousand feet of mud above water would be a probleml"
"Agreed. But for the first time," Gordon pointed out, "we have
something as spectacular as the space research program can offer. More sol I've
been wondering, actually, if they will find traces of this civilization on the
moon. Perhaps, if they got so far as they seem to have done. And besides, in
view of what happened to Luke, do you think we'll have to do it all
ourselves?"
"You
think there may be a friendly, intelligent race down there?" Hartlund put it into words.
"If
we accept the only reasonable explanation for Luke's escape," shrugged
Gordon, "there must be."
As they neared their goal, while Mary hunted
for the distinctive sonar echo that would guide them in, Peter stared through
the exiguous windows. He wondered if he would see anything, if Luke had seen
anything. Luke was still asleep when the 'nef had
started down.
They
had long ago left the levels at which the sea teemed in a manner befitting its
role as the cradle of life. Not that even the deeps were barren. They were just
quite thinly populated, and one of the few disadvantages of the beacon was that
the marked local rise in warmth it communicated to the water seemed to make
fish steer away from it. Or maybe the magnetic bottle produced ultrasonics they could sense, thus frightening them. They
were still arguing the point.
"Homing
in," said Mary suddenly. "Gotcha!" she added— Peter presumed—to
the city-site beyond the port. He acknowledged her words and went to the lock
to supervise the fine manoeuvring of the last few
hundred feet.
This time they moored the 'nef so that if it were necessary they could both, leave the
cabin for a short while. But they were under strict orders not to take risks
when doing so. The first task was to find a suitable site for the sonar beacon
they would activate when they left.
Peter
went out first, and began by surveying the same area Dick and Eloise had
covered. They seemed to have done most of what was possible. Short of some
gadget like a super vacuum cleaner, there was no means of laying bare the walls
around the plaza further than had been done already.
His
mind busy with atomic-powered suction devices, he returned to the 'nef and collected sample bags, boxes and nets. Meantime,
Mary was "photographing" by sonar-scanning the exact nature of the
ground about them.
The
first six-hour shift passed in careful, patient consolidation of what had been
done previously. The next would be spent differendy,
Peter decided.
"Let's
face it," he said, "we've done what we can here. The rest is for
later. I propose we cast off and move down the mountainside, to see if we can
locate a similar site to this, one where we might set off a slipping in the
accumulated ooze and let gravity shift it for us. It won't be funny if the
really interesting stuff turns out to be in the valley at the bottom, but by
the time we get there a few more tons on top of the natural load won't bother
us."
Mary
agreed without argument, and with Peter clinging to the hull they descended by
stages of a hundred feet at a time. Each time, taking it in turns, they swam
away from the 'nef and surveyed the mountainside, but
each time the sonar told (hem that ooze lay thick over the rock, and over any
more remains that might be in the area.
They
had descended nearly a thousand feet when they drew blank for the last time in
this direction. They were moving and breathing comfortably and freely; Mary
made a note of the indicated depth in confirmation of the success of the Ostrovsky-Wong treatment.
"No
show," Peter shrugged. "Okay. We'll try going sideways."
They
went back to the original site, and began to move out from it horizontally
instead of vertically. At their arbitrary limit of a thousand foot range, they
found something new; the broken-off stump of a round tower, around which ooze
was piled. But the vast hollow shaft of the tower was clogged full with mud,
and nothing else in the area was detectable.
Nonetheless, they passed more than three
hours in mapping its shape with sonar, as far as they could, in measuring it
and in chipping off odd pieces for study and analysis. It was very hard, but it
did not seem to be stone. Peter wondered what cataclysm had snapped it off.
Perhaps half a mountain had fallen on it. It was hard to see what else, short
of a heavy bomb, could have managed the job.
They
retraced their steps and worked once more in the opposite direction. Here and
there objects registered on the sonar, but most of them they disregarded, being
too near the surface of the mud, and therefore having been embedded quite
recently.
"Well,
that leaves up,"
said Peter when they had
reached the end, once more, of a thousand-foot sweep. "Do we set the
beacon going to save coming down again, or not yet?"
"Not
yet. I prefer to be able to talk. Besides, at this short range it would quite
probably foul our own probes with harmonics."
"Right. Let's go straight to the head of the slip which buried Luke. It might
have faulted at the outcrop of some wall-foundation, or at another 'step' like
the one we've seen."
Ruagh and
his kind had powers.
Once they had been able to look after themselves; to forage and feed
themselves. They did not need to eat often, but when they did, they ate vastly.
But because they had powers, they could compel others to labor for them, to
feed them. It had been a long time since they had descended to shift for
themselves. Even before they had come to Earth, it had been long.
And once on Earth—that fantastic, seemingly
inexhaustible paradise—they had grown careless, even gluttonous. They had
eaten for the pleasure of eating, and they had grown beyond the limit at which
they could possibly have gathered for themselves the amount they consumed at a
single meal.
Thus it was with Ruagh. Thus it was that, although he set out when his
fellows abandoned him to try and find stragglers from the others city whom he could compel to find food for him, he weakened
before he had gone halfway. Besides, it was centuries since he had had to carry
his own weight more than a few yards ...
His dying was unspectacular. He became still.
The bacteria which cause earthly things to putrefy invaded his alien flesh and
found it unwholesome. So, for a long time, he did not change visibly. That was
why the men who still roamed that country, some of whom had been subjects of Ruagh's kind and could voice a warning, gave him a wide
berth.
Eventually, though, the symbiotic bacteria in
his own body began to decay him. When at last the sea burst into that valley,
the body was full of gases of decomposition, and floated on the stormily rising
waters like an obscene rubber toy. He drifted so for a little while.
Then a gust hurled him against the broken
shards of a tower in the city he had been laboring to reach. Gases whined out
of a rent in his hide. Water-filled, he sank.
In the water, the bacteria which had reduced
him to a hollow ceased their work, and their terrestrial cousins could not
complete it. Slowly the ooze gave him burial.
There was something here, all rightl Peter's heart jumped. The mud had indeed slipped at
the site of another wall. It looked curved, maybe the base of another round
tower. And in the heap of mud that had not slipped and fallen, there was
something embedded. Something large, a litde
shiny, quite smooth, slighdy yielding to pressure.
And enormous.
It
was so enormous that he had laid the whole thing bare from end to end and still
not realized what it was, when a choking cry came to him from Mary.
Automatically he spun in the water and plunged towards the/nef.
"No, Peter! I'm all
right! But look!"
He turned, looked, and was
suddenly afraid.
Thirty or more feet long,
with legs, swollen belly, a head whose dull and
mud-crusted eyes seemed to fix them with a stare, it was an animal.
But such an animal as only
nightmares breed. . . .
VIII
There was a vast silence, as vast as the ocean around.
At
last Mary broke in, her voice shaking. "You know, I'd just figured out
another explanation for Luke's survival. I was going to suggest it could be an
unexpected result of the Ostrovsky-Wong process. I
was rehearsing the scom I meant to pour on the Chief's
theories. And now—"
"And
now we find a life-form absolutely and utterly different from anything known
before." Peter put grimness into the words. "It's so different I'm even prepared to accept it could be intelligent."
"I'm glad it's
dead," Mary whispered.
"So
am I__ Think the 'nef will lift it?"
She
took a moment to understand him. "Are you out of your mind? You want to
take that thing to the surface? We can't dig it out of the mud by ourselves,
for heaven's sake! And even if we did, if it's built for this kind of pressure
it will just break to pieces on the way up."
"I'm
not so sure," Peter murmured. He plunged back towards the dead beast, and
began to survey it cautiously, scraping away ooze by the shovelful from around
its legs. Under its bloated belly he discovered a triangular rent, where a flap
of the tough hide had been ripped on a sharp rock or stone. He went almost
headfirst into the mud while struggling to see more clearly.
At
length he pushed himself away, grunting. "No, you are wrong. There's nothing
left of this thing but its hide and its skeleton, and the hide is so impervious
it makes a rhino's look like papier-mach6. There's just the hole in the belly
where the water leaked in. Aside from that, it's still sound, and the interior
is full of water, not mud. If I'm any judge, we could lash a cable round it and
drag it clear without trouble. As for it bursting on the way to the surface it
won't. At the speed the 'nef rises, the pressure can
equalize quite happily through the hole in the belly."
"Peter,
even if it's possible I still don't think we dare! Supposing—supposing this is
a sort of graveyard for the things? Would we like it if someone came grubbing up corpses in one of our cemeteries?"
"Don't
be anthropocentric!" Peter snapped. "What gives you the idea they'd
bury their dead deliberately? In any case, this thing was under so much ooze
before the avalanche it must have been here for centuries. This is our last
dive before heading for home, remember. We could save a thousand unnecessary problems
by taking it along to where we can study it properly."
"Oh, very well. I give in. I suppose there isn't much they could do to us inside the 'nef. Go on, tie it up."
A
few minutes later the 'nef was straining and tugging
at the body, with two quarter-inch hawsers taut and singing like violin
strings. Peter and Mary watched in puzzlement, asking themselves whether the
little mud in which it was still embedded could possibly suck at the beast so
powerfully. But it was not the fault of the mud. The corpse was shifting, very
slowly, moving out over the ooze like a tractor over snow.
"It's not full of
mud!" exclaimed Peter. "It couldn't be."
Mary
gave him a wry glance. "No. Haven't you realized? That thing's heavy, Peter. It weighs tons!"
Peter's
hands closed convulsively on a bar before him. He had sudden idiotic visions of
the dead weight of the body dragging them down into the ultimate depths, while
he sawed frantically at the hawsers and tried to- cut the 'nef
free.
Then the balance turned, as the raging power
of the atomic beacon atomized the water in the buoyancy tanks past a critical
point. The nightmarish corpse rose from its muddy grave and swung slowly to a
point below them and out of their view. The 'nef continued steadily to rise.
First: remnants of a lost
civilization.
Second: a man alive when he
should have been dead.
Third:
the body of a creature that resembled, literally, nothing on earth or under the
sea; with an articulated skeleton harder and denser than granite, and a flexible
hide so tough it blunted their biggest wire-cutting shears before they managed
to cut a sample of it.
What
kind of insane world had the bathynef brought man
"into?
A
kind of awe-struck hush seemed to have settled over the Alexander Bache. Since they had hauled the beast's corpse
alongside with the anchor winch and rigged an improvised crane to dump it on
the afterdeck, the staff and crew both had been going about with faraway,
mystified expressions, talking little, and then only about the things beneath
the sea.
Even
the Chief, although he was fascinated by the strange animal Peter and Mary had
found, was subdued. The reason was probably to be found in what he had said to
the discoverers in the privacy of his office directly after their return.
"I
don't know what to make of this," he had muttered. "And nobody else
will, either, for a hell of a long time. Was it creatures like this one that
built the city down there? And if it was, how did they vanish so completely in
such a short space of time, geologically speaking? And why haven't we found
relatives of theirs? Damnation, a hundred thousand years isn't much more than
yesterday as the earth counts timel There's never been a trip like this, not in history; never a
single voyage that's brought back so many unanswerable questions!"
It had almost been possible to see, behind
his brow, the illusions dissolving into puffs of smoke. For a few crazy days he
had been able to give full rein to his long-hidden dreams of sunken
civilizations whose forgotten lore had once been the common property of mankind
and now would be brought to light again; now the nightmare beast had stamped
its many feet on his hopes and left him shaken and depressed.
They
had more than enough to be going on with, anyway. A message had been radioed to
their base at Atlantic Foundation, not describing their discoveries but
indicating their tremendous importance. Tomorrow morning, the 'nef would be made ready for towing and diey
would turn for home. Everyone would have preferred to leave at once, but Fred
Piatt and his two apprentice engineers were too busy to see to the 'nef at the moment. They had to build cradles and weld
anchor posts to the framework of the hull to secure the corpse on the
afterdeck. If they hit even slighdy rough weather with
so much loose weight aboard they
would be in for serious trouble.
"My God!" Peter said suddenly, an hour after he came back aboard. "We forgot
to trigger the beacon we planted!"
He
dashed in search of the Chief and made frantic apologies. Absendy,
the Chief brushed them aside. "Tell Fred to sink another one," he
suggested, and walked away.
The
problem wasn't that simple. Piatt frowned over it and promised to work out an
answer, and came up with a jury-rigged adaptation of one of their robot
fish-spies, equipped with a sonar homing device which was cued to operate when
it reached the precise level of the city-site and would then circle for up to a
hundred days within a few hundred feet of its point of arrival.
The work on that, too, would delay their
departure.
Preparing
reports, developing photographs, going back to look at the creature's body
again, Peter found that he had been back aboard for several hours when it
occurred to him that he had not seen Luke around. Perhaps a. familiar footfall
had alerted him; a moment after he had the thought there was a knock at his
cabin door. "Yup?" he grunted, not looking round.
The
door slid back. It was Luke, in dressing gown and pajamas, heavy-eyed with
sleep and seeming uncertain of himself.
"Why,
Lukel How are you?" Peter demanded, getting up
from his chair with a start.
Luke's
eyes wandered as though slightly out of focus. He shrugged. "I'm
great," he said around a vast yawn. "I've slept till I don't think
I'll want to see a bunk for weeks."
"You
even slept through all the commotion when we came back?" Peter could
hardly believe it. The sound of the body being dumped on deck should have woken
a dead man—
And
chills ran down his back when he realized belatedly that that was precisely
what Luke should have been.
"I
must have," Luke agreed. "I woke up only a few minutes back. I wanted
to rest up as much as I could before your return, you see."
"So
you haven't seen what we got this time?" Peter was halfway out of the
cabin as he spoke, tugging at Luke's sleeve. "This will really shake you.
It looks like it'll displace you as the number one mysteryl
You—uh—do you remember any more than we were told
before we went away?" He paused and looked around.
An
expression of mental pain showed on Luke's mobile face for an instant. Then he
was shaking his head worriedly. "I was unconscious. More
than unconscious. My guess is that I was kicked into some kind of
suspended animation by the shock of being buried. Maybe the Ostrovsky-Wong
process caused it."
"Well,
we'll find out sooner or later. Right now—" Almost dragging his companion,
Peter made for the deck. He had said the sight would shake Luke. He had not
been prepared for the effect it actually had. Rounding the deckhouse and
coming literally face to face with the monster,
Luke stopped dead in his tracks and went
white. He was frozen for ten heartbeats, and then his lips began to work as
though he were about to burst out crying.
"Steady
there!" said Peter, taking his arm for fear he might faint. "Look,
it's pretty horrible, but it's stone dead, you know.
It's nothing but an empty shell with bones inside."
"Dead?" echoed Luke, as though disbelieving. He took a tentative step forward, his hands
clasped together tightly.
"Of course. Think it would sit there calmly and let Fred chain it down if it
weren't?" He indicated the engineer, his face hidden by a welding mask,
who was anchoring a section of I-beam to act as purchase for a chain around the
body.
Cautiously,
keeping his distance, Luke began to walk around the corpse, studying it. Now
and again he nodded, and by the time he returned to his starting point he
seemed to have recovered himself. He licked his lips.
"Yes,
of course. Stupid of me. I don't know why it surprised
me like that." He wiped his face absently with the sleeve of his dressing
gown.
Peter
looked at the glistening brown-black hide, on which the sun made bright
patches. "Lord knows what it is," he said. "The biologists are
going to go crazy over this. I wish we weren't going to have to wait so long to
see what they say. Still, I suppose five days isn't eternity."
"Five
days?" Luke's voice was sharp and shrill. "What do you mean, five
days? We're five days from home, at least!"
Peter
felt astonished. "Why, of course! We're pulling away early tomorrow, you
know—"
"No, I didn't know. And we're not going to leave tomorrow." Luke's eyes were feverish. "Whose
idea was this, anyway? I bet it was that fool Gordon's! I'm going to give him
& piece of my mind—"
He had whirled and vanished before Peter
could recover. Before he caught up again, Luke had slammed aside the door of
the Chief's office and was demanding in a hysterical voice, "What the
hell's the idea of leaving before I've had another dive?"
The
Chief backed away, hands outstretched as though to fend off an attacker. Peter
yelled for assistance. Ellington materialized out of the messroom
with a beer glass still in his hand just as Luke's self-control snapped and he
started to scream.
Between
them, they got him to his cabin and dosed him with sedatives. But in spite of
everything they pumped into him, and although his eyes were shut and he did not
move, he muttered without ceasing about making another dive, and his face
contorted, occasionally with pain.
Again, Mary kept watch at
his side.
It
was just after three in the morning when the hear-fhis
came alive with a squawk. Ellington, who was keeping the watch, demanded to
know whether Fred Piatt was working on the 'nef.
Peter, who had been sleeping with difficulty, decided to go out and see what
was happening.
Cast
loose from its mooring line, the 'nef was by then a
quarter submerged, and from the confused shouting he could tell that everyone
else was too startled to think straight.
On a
terrified suspicion he ran back to Luke's cabin. He found Mary slumped on a
chair beside the rumpled bunk, with a livid bruise across her left temple.
Of Luke himself
there was no sign.
IX
"He
hit me with the water
bottle," said Mary dispiritedly. Eloise was dabbing the bruise on her
temple with lotion. All about them on the brightiy
fit deck crew and staff milled in their night clothes, fantastic under the
stars.
"But where did he get the
strength?" Gordon snapped. "After the sedatives we gave him, he
shouldn't have been able to stir for at least twelve hours."
"He
was feverish and delirious all the time," Mary said. "About twelve,
he opened his eyes and asked for water. I gave him some and asked how he was.
He said the pain was awful, but he couldn't tell me what pain it was. He said
it was in his head. I asked if he wanted veganin or
anything, and he said no, that wouldn't be any good. Then he went to sleep
again for another hour or two, and I dozed. I was awakened by him sitting up
and picking up the water bottle, but I was too dazed to move before he hit
me."
"Ellington,
what the hell were you doing all this time?" Gordon wheeled on the First
Officer, who spread his hands.
"What
reason had I to expect trouble?" said Ellington defensively. "I knew
you wanted to make an early start, so when I saw someone going down the line to
the 'nef I naturally assumed it was Fred up early
and deciding to use the time to get the damned thing ready for towing. I sang
out on the hear-this as soon as I saw the line cast loose, but I thought Luke
was still under sedation and who else would want to take the nef?"
Piatt
snorted. "Didn't he light the beacon? He'd gone under before I came on
deck."
"No! If I'd seen the beacon go on I'd
have known something was adrift, wouldn't I?" Ellington was almost
shouting. "He didn't light up until the tanks were well under."
"All
right, Ellington," Gordon interrupted in a weary tone. "We won't get
ahead any faster by yelling at each other. How about the reserves, Fred? You
hadn't serviced the 'nef,
had you?"
"No,
but we've pretty well established it's foolproof, and although the oxygen is
low he'd have plenty for just himself if he's only going to make a straight
trip down and back. I doubt if he'd have long to stay at the bottom. Question
is, what does he mean to do? He's a crazy man, and you
just can't figurel"
Peter
glanced at Mary. She was biting her.lip, and it was not due to the pain of her
bruise, which had now been dressed. What the hell kind of mixed-up thoughts did
Luke inspire in her attractive head? Peter wished achingly he
could have the answer to that maddening problem, if not to the others.
He said,
to distract himself, "What do we do now?"
Eloise
gave an unfeminine snort. "Sixty-four dollar questions while you
wait," she said acidly. "What the hell can we do? Care to swim down after the 'nef and
haul it back?"
"Shut
up, Eloise!" Gordon ordered. "Ellington, warm the radio and see if
you can raise a Navy station. Find out if there's a fast submarine anywhere
within range of us. It'll take Luke about three hours to get down to two
thousand feet. If there's a sub nearby there's a chance of catching him with a
grab or a net or something."
Ellington
nodded and made for the radio cabin. Dick Loescher
made as though to catch at his arm, changed his mind, and spoke to Gordon.
"Nets aren't standard equipment on naval subs!" he exclaimed.
"And if they go after the 'nef with a grapple,
won't Luke just cast loose and try to continue down under his own power?"
"As
Fred said, we're dealing with a crazy man and we can't figure him," Gordon
responded somberly. "The bathy-nef is far too
big for our own tackle to hold, or I'd have suggested trawling for it at once.
But the whole problem's too big for us, period. I wish we hadn't been so
cautious about publishing reports. Now there's fifteen millions worth of unique
engineering in the hands of a crazy idiot on its way to the bottom of the sea.
By the time we catch up with it again —if we do—it'll have been made obsolete.
Hell and damnation!"
Into the dead silence which
followed this outburst came
Ellington's voice, very faint, saying,
"Survey ship Alexander
Bache, P-one-T-one-zero!"
"Maybe
he'll be satisfied," suggested Hartlund
dubiously. "I mean, maybe he just had a temporary obsession. Hell go down and come back up
again, normally."
"Maybe,
but I doubt it," Gordon sighed. "Did anyone get the impression that
Luke thought he ought to have died down there, and needed to go back and finish
the job? I'm no psychologist," he added. "Just an
idea."
Mary
shook her head. "It was the pain that seemed to be driving him."
"Well,
there is the chance hell come back up. Hardund, do you
know of any naval survey ships working this area? We can't sit around and wait
for him, but we could get someone else to quarter the area until it's beyond
doubt he's lost,"
"I'll
check," nodded Hardund, and thrust his pipe
between his teeth before starting towards the bridge.
Ellington
came back from the radio cabin. "Best I can do for you, Chief," he
said despondently, "is a British sub, one of their latest. It's undergoing
trials about thirty-six miles from here. It's a pure-reactor job, and they're
having trouble with sustained high-speed running, but they're going to do their
best for us. If nothing goes wrong, we can expect them in forty minutes."
"What?" said several people simultaneously.
"That's
what they said. Forty minutes. Apparendy when tfiis thing is working properly it's a wowser.
They wouldn't say what its top speed is, but it must be seventy knots at least.
Trouble is it's still crawling with bugs, they
said."
"Let's
hope none of them bite on the way here. That's the first real glimmer of
hope." Gordon relaxed visibly.
"Look!" said Hartlund,
and pointed to a Vee of phosphorescence on the dark water.
"That was never a sub!" Peter
objected, straining to make out the vague silhouette.
"Of course not. That'll be the mother ship. Probably a converted torpedo boat, if this
thing is really as fast as they told us. Yes. Look, there she blows!"
The
whaling term was appropriate. The bluntly round snout that was breaking water a
half mile distant did look like a vast sea animal, although the effect was
spoiled by the stub wings which were its control surfaces. Four
of them at right angles. Curved back. No
conning tower, just a fish-shaped hull with fins.
The
mother ship swung to within hailing distance, and a British voice rang out
through a loud-hailer.
"Hello
Alexander Bache! I hope you're all properly disinterested
scientists aboard. Nobody except us is supposed to see our baby this close.
Tell us what you want done and well try and do
it."
Hartlund checked his watch. "Thirty-six miles in
thirty-eight minutes," he whispered. "Maybe they'll catch him!"
The
Chief was answering through their own loud-hailer, giving only the essentials.
"How
fast does this thing of yours dive?" the British officer inquired.
"It
doesn't dive. It just sinks, and sinks more slowly the deeper it gets. It's
been going down for an hour, and is probably beyond a thousand feet, but
slowing down gradually."
"Okay!
I may say we've had nearly three quarters of an hour's perfect operation on the
way here. This means something is likely to blow up any moment now. But cross
your fingers."
There
was a breathless pause. Peter heard a stir along the deck and turned his head
to see that Mary had come out, a white bandage on her bruised temple.
A
light showed on the back of the submarine. Very dimly they heard chains
clanking.
"Just rigging something that will hook
on to your bathynef if they can locate it," the
officer reported. "Only makeshift, I'm afraid, but if there's..anything to hitch on to, it'll do."
"Make
it good and long," the Chief warned. "The 'nef
has an atomic beacon on top. You'll need to keep as least fifteen feet clear."
"We're allowing ninety fathoms," said the officer calmly. The
fight went out. Another pause. And then— "Good
God!" said Hardund, and nearly let fall his
pipe. The submarine had put its nose down in the water so sharply that its
tail, with the reactor pipe, blew a two-hundred-foot fountain of
more-than-boiling water towards the sky. And the deck rocked beneath them as it
was gone.
Peter and Mary sat long hours in silence on
the deck, and stared at the water or dozed fitfully. Without the 'nef, there was nothing to do prior to turning for home,
except to cover the monstrous body on the afterdeck. Piatt attended to that,
using canvas awnings.
Two
of the officers from the submarine's mother ship came over in a motor-dinghy at
breakfast time and inspected the body at Gordon's invitation. Hardund and the Chief were asked to lunch in return and
warned that they wouldn't be permitted to see over the vessel because it was
classified.
There was no news.
It
was approaching dark when the submarine came back in sonar range, and the
indistinct reports it made held no hope. Nothing had gone wrong with the sub.
They had tracked the 'nef and tried to communicate
with Luke, without success. Then they had tied a slip knot in their chain—
"What?"
said the staff of the survey ship when they heard that.
The British officer coughed and looked blandly surprised.
"Yes, why not? Good practice for the pilot, you know. Why else do you think we put
ninety fathoms of chain on?"
"Like a needle and thread?" said Hardund incredulously.
"Precisely. Then they lassoed the bathynef
and got a good hold before starting to drag it upwards. Only this man of yours
got out a cutting torch from somewhere and severed the chain."
"Oh, Jesus!" said
Gordon quietly.
"Naturally,
that made it difficult to tie another knot. But they managed it all right, and
caught him a second time, and he cut the chain again. We didn't have anyone
aboard who'd been through the Ostrovsky-Wong process,
so we couldn't get anyone outside except in a rubber suit* and he was armed
with this torch. They said it was a fearsome kind of weapon. Had
a flame as long as a man's arm."
"It does," said
Piatt, listening intently. "At that depth."
"Anyway,
they went after him regardless, but he chased them all round, hanging on to the
'nef with a line, and in the end the commander called
them back, deciding it was not worth the candle." The officer shrugged and
looked apologetic. "I'm dreadfully sorry we couldn't do more."
There
was nothing more to be done—for some considerable time to come. Having lost the
'nef, they would have to wait either until the
Russian one was brought from the Pacific or until the next one was built.
Unless the Russians had one on the stocks, the "next" one was still
on the drawing boards. The sunken city could hardly have been more effectively
closed to them if it had been behind locked doors.
A
fishery protection vessel of the Royal Navy turned up unannounced just before
they pulled dampers to leave the site. It had been asked to stand by at the
request of the commander of the submarine, and watch for the 'nef if it returned to the surface. Within another hour the
USS Gond-wana also closed in, dispatched hastily by the Submarine Mapping Department
from her usual station on the other side of the Mid-Atlantic Ridge.
As
the Alexander Bache headed away, the two ships began their
patrolling, one on the surface, one a few feet beneath.
"Do you think hell
come back a second time?" Mary asked Peter as they gazed at the dwindling
watchers.
Peter shrugged. "It's
in the lap of the gods," he said.
"I—oh
well, 111 say it. I don't care so
much this time. You must have thought my behavior awfully peculiar, Peter, and
I owe you an apology for snapping at you when you were trying to be helpful and
kind. You see, I didn't tell you the whole story about me and Luke. Would you
like me to finish it?"
The
breeze, as the ship picked up speed, blew her hair around her face. Peter
looked at her, wondering whether she needed to tell him, wanted to, or just
felt she owed it to him.
At length he said,
"Yes. I'd like to hear."
She
stared fixedly at the sea again, and seemed to be sorting out words in her
mind. "It was like this. When I had this obsession about Luke, I told
myself there was nothing I wouldn't do. I almost had a breakdown over him. I
was a very nervy child, unstable, emotional, the lot.
"And
then—it was the last day before he moved over to Scripps to do a preliminary
course there—I had my chance. He'd been celebrating, and I was half out of my
mind with juvenile self-abnegation, and I'd come to bring him some sort of
parting gift. There was no one else in the house . . ."
She
shrugged. "Well, I got my chance, like I said, and I suppose you could say
I took it. I'd told myself there was nothing I wouldn't do for him, so I did
it."
She
sounded very calm, as though she were talking about someone else. In a way,
Peter realized, she was.
"You
can imagine the results. Me, not quite fifteen, crazy-mad
with delight about as much as I was shaken by the shock. The two
together might have torn me to bits. What did the job, though, was discovering
that to Luke it was just another interlude on the way to where he wanted to go.
"It
took me months to put myself together again, and when I did, the only way I
could do it was by using Luke, my idealized image of Luke, as a center post. So
here I am in oceanography, like I told you. It was pretty much of a shock when
Luke joined Atlantic from Scripps, and I had to accept this flippant, shallow
guy as the reality. Oh, I liked him well enough on the surface, but underneath
I couldn't forgive him for being what he was, and for
not being able to realize how much he had meant to me for so many years. . .
."
She turned .to face him, a
little defiantly. "Clear?"
Peter nodded. "And now?"
"Now
I figure it's about time I started looking for a real man and not a dream to
build my life around."
Peter held out his arms, and she came to them, smiling.
X
The
placid New England fall
moved quietly in on the land. But it was still warm enough to breakfast
outdoors, if one did not get up ridiculously early.
"And
who," asked Peter of the trees around the little lodge, "gets up
early on their honeymoon?"
"Queen
Victoria and Prince Albert," said Mary mysteriously, coming out of the
door on to the sun porch with a plate of pancakes.
"What?"
'S a
fact," she nodded, portioning out maple syrup. "I road
somewhere that they got up early on the first morning after their wedding, and
the lord chamberlain or some bigwig wrote disapprovingly in his diary that this
was no way to ensure an heir to the throne."
Their
eyes met across the table. For a moment they kept straight faces, but at length
they burst into helpless laughter.
"Poor Victoria!" Mary said when at last she could speak.
"Poor Albert, don't you mean?"
Peter contradicted. "Or maybe not. He always seemed like a straidaced
kind of prig to me. Say, these are delicious."
"What
did you expect?" Mary stretched her sweater-clad arms gracefully.
"Did you go down for the mail yet?"
"No.
And I don't much feel like going, either. It's a long walk down to the highway,
you know."
"I
do know. And that's what I thought you'd say. So I went before you woke
up." Like a conjurer with a rabbit, she produced envelopes she had been
sitting on. Fanning them like a poker hand, she proffered them. "Pick a
card, any card, and 111 tell
your fortune, pretty gentieman. Only first you have
to cross my path with silver, or something.*'
"I
have my fortune," said Peter, grinning, and gave her outstretched hand a
squeeze. He glanced at the envelopes. "One, two, three
from the Foundation. Damnation, can't they leave us in peace even on our
honeymoon?"
"Maybe
they're private, from people who wrote in the office and snitched the
envelopes. Aren't you going to open them?"
When
he had done justice to the breakfast, he fit a cigaret
with a contented sigh, tipped back the chair, and ripped open the envelopes
while Mary cleared the dishes. He left the Foundation ones till last.
"Best
wishes from Hartlund and the crew of the Alexander Bache," he reported. "Mailed in Panama, when
they were done there meeting the Russians and taking them out to the site. With regrets that they missed the ceremony."
"Anything
from the Russians?" Mary called jokingly.
"You're
not kidding, honey. Right here under Hartlund's
signature there's a sort of scribble labeled 'Captain, bathynef
Pavel Ostrovsky.'"
"That's nice! What
else?"
"Invitation
from a cousin of mine to see him in Florida, and a note from—" He broke
off, and whisded under his breath. "You don't
say! Honey, here's the analysis of the hide of that monster we brought up. It's
made of carbon, silicon,
oxygen, and boron
of all things, in the
damnedest sort of arrangement. I wish I was a biochemist. And"—he turned
the page—"they've done up the bones, too. They've got chromium in them, so
help me, and cobalt and nickel and God knows what. But
wait till you get to this bitl The
chemists say these materials are basically different from the organic
substances found in any high life-form anywhere on Earth. Their tentative
conclusion is that they originated elsewhere . . ."
A
sudden chill seemed to blow through the trees. Mary came out with a dishtowel
in her hands and sat down opposite him, her face sober. "Martians, huh?"
she said. But her attempt to keep her tone light was a failure.
Suddenly
anxious to know what else was in the letters from the Foundation, Peter thrust
the first one at her and attacked the second. Casual news and
good wishes from Eloise Vander-plank. He threw it aside after the first
glance and took up the last remaining envelope.
The color drained from his face and he sat
for a very long time staring at the paper, so long that Mary had to touch lu's arm twice before bringing him
back to reality. He gave her the letter to read herself.
Over Dr. Gordon's
signature, it said:
You may have heard by now that the biologists
assign a nonterrestrial origin to the creature you
brought up from Atlántica
(that's the name we've
bestowed on the city, by the way). It won't be announced publicly yet; flying
saucers on top of what we already have would be too much.
What you will not have heard is that we have
found the hathynef. It was discovered accidentally
during the search for Ilia Gondwana, the Mapping Department sub we last saw at the site waiting for the 'nef to reappear.
I only have this at secondhand. I was in the
Pacific on the way back from my visit to the Russian hathynef expedition, which is
due at the site of operations in a few days. But it appears that the Gondwana went down to six or seven hundred feet after a suspicious sonar echo,
losing contact with the
British
ship, and failed to comeback.
Two days later and a hundred miles west, a Navy patrol plane spotted the
abandoned bathynef, which looked as though someone
had laid into its most delicate equipment with a sledge hammer. It will be
weeks, perhaps months, before it is again fit for use. There has been no sign
of the Gondwana for more than two weeks. This is being kept
quiet for obvious reasons. There may be no connection, But— '
And, of course, there was no sign of Luke Wallace.
I cannot, and do not want to, say anything
more to you than this: Hartlund told me you wanted a
trip in the Russian bathynef, and we are very short
of people who have had the Ostrovsky-Wong treatment.
The pattern emerging is an ugly one. Before we are finished, we shall need all
the help we can get. I don't know what has converted me to wild speculation instead
of my old methodical scepticism, but something has.
I'm worried.
Mary
folded the letter and handed it back. "That's the nearest thing to panic I
can imagine from the Chief," she said.
Peter nodded,
his eyes on his bride's face. "Well?"
She
sighed heavily and pushed back her chair. "Well," she echoed,
"we'd better get packed."
They had been out of touch with events
altogether for just over two weeks. On their return, they had spent a week answering
questions; decided to get married; made the arrangements and taken off for the
country. In that time, much had happened.
The Gondwana's disappearance had involved the Navy. The scientific data presented to
them had involved the First Soviet Pacific Bathygraphic
Expedition, which was the official name of the Pavel Ostrovsky and its mother ship. An appeal by Dr. Gordon
had involved the océanographie
institutes of every nation
that had an Atiantic seaboard and one that had not,
to wit, Monaco, which has a royalty-sponsored tradition of deepsea
exploration.
And
the extraterrestrial nature of the creature from Atlántica had involved the United Nations, whose banner
flew proudly above the inaccessible rocky islet that had suddenly been promoted
to the dignity of base for the new arrivals because a freak of nature had
endowed it with fresh water.
The
aircraft bringing Peter and Mary was a Navy seaplane flying out a brand-new
fifteen-ton underwater TV camera intended to carry the search far below the
level a bathynef could attain. It dropped them out of
sunlight and into sight of the scene of operations through an
overcast at five thousand feet.
Peter gasped, and caught at Mary's arm. "Look at thatl"
There were more than thirty vessels riding here. Dominating them was the
Russian bathynef's mother ship, gleaming white like a
cross between a luxury liner and a whaling ship —the latter, because of the
hinged bows and miniature dry dock where the bathynef
was carried. Her American cousin was still fitting out; they had decided to go
ahead during the summer using the inefficient system of towing so as not to
waste time.
Larger,
but less conspicuous because of her gray paint, was the aircraft carrier Cape Wrath. And there were others, from giant nuclear
submarines and the Russian cruiser escorting the survey ship, to the tiny but
ultramodern Mone-gasque floating biology laboratory.
They
put down, and as soon as the TV camera had been loaded aboard a lighter, Peter
and Mary were whisked in a fast launch across to the Russian mother ship. Its
facilities were about comparable with those of the Alexander Bache, Peter judged, but it was obvious why the HQ
had been established here and not there. Here they had more room.
Gordon
greeted them delightedly, showered them with thanks and apologies, introduced
them to Captain Vassiliev —the man who had added his
signature to the greeting card from Panama—and took them on a quick tour to
familiarize them with the set-up.
"The
Ostrovsky went down just before you arrived," he said. "Ostrovsky himself, and Wong, are both across on the island
where we've set up our base, processing relief crews from Woods Hole, Darwin
and the Chinese station at Tienling. But that's not a
quarter of it. People have come up with gadgets nobody knew existed except the
owners. That British sub is back again. Right now, it's
a thousand feet down with an insane new German invention tied to its snout; an
underwater crawler which they're going to dump in the mud at the bottom of the
submarine's range and which they hope will be able to crawl down the side of
the Ridge as far as the city. It's got a bulldozer blade on it. If this works,
we'll be able to shift the ooze ten times as fast as we can now."
He
bustled on. "Then there's this TV camera you flew in with. It has four
thousand fathoms of cable on it and if we can find a self-propelled drogue to
stand the pressure we can get right down across the valley floor. There may be
nothing to see but mud—or there may be anything."
Their
amazement grew as they really began to take in the extent of the effort being
invested here, until finally Mary could bear it no longer. "Chiefl" she said. "I'm not going to believe that
this is all due to scientific curiosity. I think somebody's'not
just worried, but frightened!"
Gordon
paused and fixed her with his eyes. "Frightened?" he said solemnly.
"Yes, you could say that.
"I
told you in my letter that there was no sign of the Gondwana. That was only a half-truth. She was reported two days ago by the liner Queen Alexandra, thirty hours out from New York for
Southampton and Cherbourg.
"But
we haven't found her again. And now we've lost thé Alexandra, with eighteen hundred passengers aboard...."
PART TWO THE TERROR
XI
At
first he had been very
weak. Naturally. He had prepared himself for this as
he would have prepared for a long trip between the stars, cutting down his
metabolism to near-zero, accumulating reserves, planning the trigger which
would awaken him when it was once more safe to walk the surface of this world.
Only he had not bargained
for what he found.
He
had come aware with the memories of the fall of his city as fresh in his mind
as though they had been yesterday's. It seemed that no more than hours had gone
by since he left that foolish one who had come pleading for help amid the wreck
of his hopes, while the earth shook and shivered.
He
was cautious as he reached out mentally into the great dark, prepared to return
himself to hibernation if the alarm had been false. It
was not.
Normally
he would not have been able to gain much information from a human mind. And
this mind, he noted, was altogether similar to those he had known before the
cataclysm. It was easier to whip these dull mentalities into speech. Their
languages had never conveyed subdeties, but they were
so easy to analyse and understand.
This
mind, though, was dulled by a great shock, perhaps unconscious. It offered no
hindrance to his inquiry. He was even able to drive it down still further,
inhibiting the processes responsible for heartbeats, breathing, digestion, in
order to lessen the "noise" he received.
He was under water, he gathered, and under
mud, and still
secure in his refuge, undiscovered by prying animals. Under
water. There was no problem. He had reserves available for just such an
eventuality, but the picture he received of the extent and depth of the ocean
above him implied that he could not rely on them to get him to land.
But
he must get to land. The myriads, the hordes of human beings crawling and
pullulating like bacteria across the face of the planet had never known the
lash of one of his kind. Instead of building to the glory of and for the
appreciation of higher beings, they served only themselves or each other. This
was insupportable. If he could get free, he could take to himself, bit by bit,
perhaps half the planet. They were so numerous he could not handle more. Then,
and only then, he could see whether any more of his kind had survived, and
magnanimously allow them to share what was left. If he was alone, then it would
be simple enough to thin the population out to manageable levels.
This
device the man had employed to bring him down here; it would be necessary to
utilize that. He gathered facts about it, very slowly because he was weak.
Possibly a full day had passed before he had enough facts to formulate a plan.
The device would be returning. Let it take back this man, and get rid of its
other occupants. Let there be a compulsion in the man's mind to bring it down
by himself. He cautiously opened that floodgate in his
mind behind which was stored his power to inflict pain, and judged his
available strength. Yes. One of these creatures was as many as he could handle
for the time being.
And
while he was awaiting the completion of the order, he would have to burrow out
of his hiding place, using up his entire surviving reserves. Which
meant that if the man failed to obey his command, he would die as that weakling
Ruagh had died. He debated, again measured the
pain-giving power he could call on, and decided that it was enough.
He hurt the man to prove it. Yes, that would suffice! He could not remember when
last he had lashed a human mind that had never before known such powers. Even infants in the womb had
learned it before birth in the day when his kind ruled the planet. But this one
was a stranger to the pain. He had no resistance.
He
overlaid the pain temporarily, implanted his commands, and began, satisfied, to
work his way out of his refuge.
The
thickness of the layer of mud startled him when he compared it with the
apparent rate of deposition. He had been in the refuge longer than he had ever
anticipated. But it was not until the device had duly returned to bring him to
the surface, and he had commanded the man to take it well away from the ship
that had launched it overhead, that he was able to get a sight of the stars and
know the real duration of his imprisonment.
Not
less than a hundred and ten thousand years, he judged. Even by the standards of
his race—to whom human beings were mere mayflies,
hatched at morning, dead at sunset—that was a long time.
Still, no matter. The first essential was to gather his strength. Then
to get servants and extend his dominion. He commanded the man to feed
him, and by lashing him now and again drove him to
select suitable articles of diet. There were molluscs
on the shore of a lonely, rocky islet, whose succulent flesh gave him a little
of the metals he needed. Their shells helped to provide silicon, and carbon he
could absorb in plenty. It would need more than a single servant to provide him
with all his requirements. Nonetheless, he had made a beginning. And he had
time to spare.
Patiently,
he looked for means of adding to his retinue. He found it, together with a
superior means of transport. His strength grew. Sooner than he had hoped, he
was in a position to conquer his first city. It was a floating city, a technological
achievement he would have thought beyond these short-lived grubs of Earth,
crude though it might be by his standards. But here he had enough to feed him,
and he could turn his mind to the question of making men aware of their
inferior status. Proper homage was the next thing to command.
Every
now and again other human-filled vessels passed as he consolidated himself. He
was not yet ready to trouble himself with them. He blinded them, and they
turned aside.
"This I find significant," the
Chinese statistician said in his dulcet tenor voice. He put his thumb on the
strange gap in the center of the North Adantic chart
he had prepared. "I do not know if it means anything important. Certainly
it is to be investigated."
He
sat down abrupdy, and a hum of conversation went up
around the room. The room was the operations center of the aircraft carrier,
the Cape Wrath, which had become the brain behind the entire
project. More than forty people were assembled. Some of them sat with
simultaneous translation phones on their heads, and two interpreters Were still completing their account of the Chinese's remarks
when Lampion spoke. He was the official UN representative. French by birth,
international by adoption, he had become accepted as neutral president of the
mixed bag of investigators.
"We
are extremely busy," he reminded the audience in his matter-of-fact
manner. "The list of items we have on the agenda is conclusive, I think. Nonetheless,
this is a major discovery; to find that for days past not one of our search
units has reported a single sighting in that area. It looks as if it has been
deliberately avoided. And yet we know that no less than four ships should have
sent in news from there. Yes, Dr. Gordon?"
"You
mentioned ships only," Gordon said, leaning forward. "How about
patrol planes?"
The
Chinese signalled that he would reply, received Lampion's
nod, and said, "Air surveys are included, Dr. Gordon. They too show the
curious hole in the network of reports."
"In
other words," Gordon suggested, "the Queen Alexandra and the Gondwana are probably slap in the middle, and something is deliberately
preventing the search parties that sight the missing vessels from informing
us."
There
was a chorus of objections, belated from those present who did not speak
English. Lampion stilled it with a wave of his hand.
"Let
us not race ahead of our knowledge," he said. "Let us merely send a
further expedition to see."
The thrumming of the engine shook the whole
fabric of the helicopter. Peter had found it hard to get used to at first, and the pilot had sympathetically asked if he felt
all right
"It's smoother underwaterl"
Peter had replied. "And it feels a hell of a sight safer there, too."
"Same
difference," the pilot shrugged. "Down there if something goes wrong,
the pressure mashes you flat. Up here, if something goes wrong, at least you
have a parachute. Matter of taste, most likely."
Peter
nodded. He had inveigled his way aboard the 'copter between dives of the
Russian 'nef—their own was still being refitted. The
work of clearing the site of Atlántica was
heart-breakingly slow, even with the German submarine
bulldozer shifting mud by the scores of tons. And so far the TV camera, hunting
on its robot drogue a thousand fathoms further down, had failed to reveal
anything but mud, mud and more inud, dotted with the
thinly scattered flora and fauna of the deeps.
"Right,"
the pilot said, and flipped a switch. He took his hands off the controls and
sat back in a relaxed fashion. Noticing Peter's look of alarm, he grinned.
"George
has taken over," he said. "He's quite a box of tricks; a whole lot
more than just an automatic pilot. He'll take us right into the middle of the
blank area, circle us round, and bring us out again dead on course without my
doing another hand's turn. He was secret until they turned him loose for our
benefit."
"So
we're just passengers!" Peter commented. "Like you said, it must be a
matter of taste."
They
were flying at about a thousand feet, a reading of 130 showing on the air-speed
indicator. There was almost nothing to be seen except sea. An occasional island
showed the course of the Mid-Adantic Ridge. A few
ships passed within their view, but it was dull today and visibility was poor.
Foul weather would be hindering their work soon. Indeed, there was a small
storm of rain a few miles to starboard, which they were skirting by courtesy of
their robot pilot's radar eyes.
He
found the trip restful, and was half dozing, dreaming of the few short days of
the honeymoon he had enjoyed with Mary, and making plans for picking up where
they had left off, when the pilot leaned forward and pointed.
"There. See?"
"Why,
it is the Alexandra!" Peter
exclaimed. "Of all the crazy things! To think a
ship that size could have, been lost in the main Atlantic traffic lanes for so
long . . ."
She
was enormous; she was the biggest liner on the Atlantic run, a thousand and
ninety feet long, a hundred and four thousand tons burden, nuclear engines, and
a speed of at least forty-five knots average port-to-port.
The
pilot snapped on the film cameras which would record what they saw, and
touched a button on the casing of the automatic pilot. "Course correction,"
he said briefly. "This is to let George know the ship ahead is the one we
want. Hell take us in and
bring us back right away now."
"Any
sign of the Gondwana?"
Peter was staring through
binoculars. The distance was closing rapidly.
"Not a thing. Probably been sunk." The pilot was casual.
"You
seem to have some preconceived ideas," Peter commented. "But what in
hell is going on down there?"
They
were close enough now to see movement on the liner's great promenade deck.
There were lines of people all round, in a sort of horseshoe formation. They
moved rhythmically, like grass as the wind blows across it. They seemed to be
shuffling back and forth. The distance closed further. They began to take on
individual features. Some of them were crew in company uniform. Others were
passengers in miscellaneous casual clothing. Now and then
one or two would walk forward together to face something dark, canopied under
an awning, in the middle of the horseshoe's open end.
Suddenly,
one of those called forward turned and tried to run. The lines broke. Men and
women surged forward, seized liim, dragged him to the
rail and flung him bodily down to the leaden sea.
A shout so loud that it overcame the droning of the 'copter engine rang
out, and they exclaimed together. Now they were circling in close enough to see faces through their
binoculars; haggard, drawn faces, eyes ringed with dark circles indicative of
sleeplessness. A group of stewards in soiled white jackets was beating on trays
as though they were gongs.
"Have they all gone
raving mad?" the pilot demanded.
"No
. . ." said Peter, his stomach churning in revulsion. "Can't you see
what that is under the awning? It's another of those creatures like the one we
dragged up from Atlántica
—only this one's alive. . .
."
And
at the moment he uttered the words, a blast of raw pain hit him, not in his
body, but in his mind. In an instant lie and the pilot both were slumped
unconscious.
Uncaring, unknowing, George
flew the 'copter on.
XII
"You're
going to be all
right," a comforting male voice was saying. Peter blinked his eyes open
and found himself looking at a square-jawed face under a peaked naval cap.
"What—" he said, struggling to sit
up. The man in the naval cap helped him, putting an arm behind his shoulders to
support him. Peter shook his head dizzily, and looked about him.
He was sitting on the deck of the aircraft
carrier. The 'copter was being shunted away on a trolley towards the elevators,
and a group of men and women were clustered, talking excitedly, around the
pilot. The pilot must have recovered more quickly. He was standing, although
he looked pale. '
"Something
blanked you out," the man was saying to Peter. "But you're perfectly
all right physically. Just a bit of shock is your trouble."
"Blanked
me out? Oh yes, I remember. When we were flying over .the Alexandra. We found her!" Peter seized the other's arm. "We found herl And that's not alii"
"Easy
now," the man said soothingly. "We know already. Your pilot told us
before you woke up. We're developing the pictures now. Your autopilot brought
the 'copter back and we landed you under remote control. Now what you need, I'd
say, is a drink and a "chance to relax for a bit. Suppose you come down to
the messroom. Can you walk all right, you
think?"
Peter
tested his limbs gingerly. He had the illusion that he ought to be unable to
move. His memory was full of a pain so excruciating it seemed he must have
broken every bone in his body. But the pain was only in memory, he could move
freely, and after a moment, normally.
"We
don't know what happened to you," his companion said, watching him.
"Whatever it was, it's a cinch to be the same as what kept the other
search parties from reporting the liner. What puzzles me is why the hell we
haven't lost anybody. If your 'copter hadn't been on auto, you'd most likely
have gone down in the sea."
Peter
frowned. "Maybe we weren't meant to see as much as we did," he suggested.
"I don't know what was going on. It looked like some crazy sort of
ceremony, though. Maybe the creature was distracted, didn't notice us till we'd
come in quite close. Then he hit us with all he'd got because he was
surprised." He shrugged. "I'm just guessing. Did anybody tell my wife
I was all right?"
"I'll
check." The other turned away to make inquiries of one of the group
surrounding die pilot. Peter went on testing his movements experimentally, his
mind dazed by the power of the blow that had been struck at it.
The
gray overcast seemed to lower at the sea. A chill wind was creaming the waves
into hesitant foam, and in spite of its phenomenally efficient stabilizers the
aircraft carrier was moving a little in the water. Over the broad gray landing
deck he could see across to the Russian mother ship. The 'nef
was being readied for another dive, and there was much hustle and activity.
Above, a giant floatplane was circling prior to touching down. A fast launch
pulled away from the side of one of the little survey vessels and headed
towards the Cape
Wrath. _
"Yes,
they told your wife you were all right." The words drew him back from his
contemplation of the scene. "She'll be coming aboard in a little while.
They didn't say what had happened. Figured it was better not
to worry her."
"Good,"
said Peter with relief. "Now I'd like that drink you suggested."
It
was puzzling that the aircraft had not plunged into the sea when its crew was
struck unconscious . . . Had it not been for his absorption in the ceremony he
had commanded, he would have treated it as he had treated other aircraft and
the many ships that had passed, by installing a hint of pain in the minds of
the pilots or helmsmen every time they began to turn toward his floating city.
For
the time being, he had to be gentle, subtle, although it irked him to treat
these coarse and inferior beings with such finesse. Still, there was no doubt
they had learned much since they had been freed from their old yoke. Until he
had a complete picture of the present situation, he would not take risks.
No doubt that ingenious flying machine
incorporated some automatic device to make it continue straight and level if
the pilot's attention wandered. He knew from his own experience that these dull
minds could not be made to concentrate except by regular lashing; automatic
machinery was the logical compensation for their human shortcomings. At the
mercy of the wind, though, the machine would soon have toppled and drowned its
passengers.
He
dismissed the matter and decided on his next move. It was time now to extend
his retinue further still. He was on the way to his full strength now, and
there was the matter of supplies for the subjects that remained. Though he had
had the intractable ones thrown overboard as an example to the rest, he had not
wanted to cut the numbers significantly. It was good to have many minds to
control, it stimulated him.
They
had exhausted the stores aboard, though, and they were hungry. If he had
realized how few provisions there were aboard, he would have had the recalcitrants merely killed and used to supplement the meat
supply, instead of giving them to the fish. Still, under his compulsion, they
would serve to bring him to shore, and there he could pick and choose among
millions. To shore . . . He sent for a man skilled in navigation as the humans
counted skill, and demanded details of the coasts they could make for.
"Peter, you fool!" said Mary,
throwing her arms round him. "Why oh earth
didn't you tell me what you were going to do? You might have been killed!"
"All
right, all right," he said comfortingly. "I wasn't, was I? I wouldn't
have gone up in that thing if I hadn't been sure it was as safe as a bathynef, at least."
"That's
not saying much, after what's happened," she tried to joke. But the words
turned serious in her mouth.
"Dr. Trant!
Mrs. Trant! Please . . .?" Lampion's voice broke
in on them, and they grew aware that everyone else in the operations room was impatiendy waiting for them to take their places. They
slipped into their chairs with a murmured apology, and Lampion coughed and
looked round.
"Well,
gentlemen," he said, "you have all had a
chance to study the pictures that have been brought back, I believe. I have
some extra copies here, which I will pass around anyway." He spread
glossy enlargements on the table.
Peter
had not needed to look at them. They showed precisely what he remembered; the
crazy horseshoe of passengers and crew on the promenade deck of the liner;
stewards beating trays, one unfortunate being seized and cast overboard . . .
And, ghoulish in the center of it all, the indistinct but horrible shape of the
creature that had come out of the sea.
"According
to our latest information, the Queen Alexandra has
begun to move. She has put about and is following a course which may or may not
change, but which if extended will intersect the coast of the United States
north of the Bahamas. Most probably, in northern Florida or
Georgia. There can be litde doubt that this is
under the orders of the —sea creature."
"Correction,"
said Captain Vassiliev politely. "I think we
have reason to doubt that it is a sea creature, have we not, Dr. Gordon?"
Gordon nodded. "The results aren't all
in yet, but the TV camera we have working at the two-thousand-fathom level has
located an opening in the mud which seems to indicate a point at which
something emerged from below. Around the opening we located various objects,
probably metallic, which resemble oxygen storage canisters. The bathynef Pavel Ostrovsky has just a short while ago started down to
investigate the site. It's far below the levels at which we've dived so far,
but two members of Professor Wong's staff who have taken equivalent pressures
in land-based tests are crewing for this dive, and both Ostrovsky
and Wong think they should be able to stand it."
Lampion
nodded. "Thank you, Dr. Gordon. Well, the situation seems to be this.
What we have discovered is a survivor of an extraterrestrial species which
very probably invaded our planet upwards of a hundred thousand years ago. It
enslaved human beings—this is assumed by analogy with current actions—and was
then overwhelmed by the latest orogenic or
mountain-building era. Their powers are unknown to us. The fact that this
individual could emerge from some probably prearranged refuge after such a
lapse of time and adjust to the changed situation with such speed suggests that
we are facing a very dangerous opponent. Yes, Dr. Trant?"
Peter
leaned forward. "I've experienced this power," he said "I think
we can assume it's nonphysical, at least as we define
physical. It is probably not limited to the mental infliction of pain, as
witness the posthypnotic command we can deduce compelled Luke Wallace to steal
the bathynef and return to set the alien free from
its buried hiding place. In addition, we can presume that either it is equipped
with technical devices of a high order, or that it is physically almost indestructible
and could survive the pressure at two thousand fathoms as easily as at sea
level."
"Can
we presume also that we have only one to deal with?" Vassiliev
inquired softly. Lampion shrugged.
"A question that must be answered. For myself, I think we must assume so. Any
other survivors are probably still under thousands of feet of ooze. Let us not
multiply our problems."
"At
the moment we have one," Vassiliev said.
"What is to be done'about this liner and its
dangerous passenger?"
"Your
opinion, please." Lampion waved his hand vaguely.
Captain
Vassiliev looked around the table, as though trying
to make up his mind. At length he said, "A torpedo. Now.
If necessary, with a nuclear warhead."
Heads
shook automatically. Someone murmured, "No. No."
Vassiliev
bent his head and spread his hands. "Very good.
All I can say is that I am glad it is not the coast of Soviet Russia to which
the ship is coming near."
"We
are all frightened of what might happen," said Peter, thinking of the
possible consequences. "But there are still several hundred people on the
liner, whom' we may be able to save. We've obviously got to kill the creature,
or render it powerless somehow. If it means to come ashore, then it will very
likely expose itself to some means of attack. It's big, heavy, possibly clumsy. I doubt if it could stand, say, a shell
from a forty-millimeter cannon if it were a direct hit."
Officially, the Queen Alexandra was simply "missing." The vast
search operations had used the liner as a cover story. But it was not going to
be long before the truth broke, that was for sure. If it
could only be held back for another day or two, though, that would suffice.
These
thoughts were running through Peter's mind as he and a thousand others waited
on the edge of the ocean. The liner was aiming for the Florida coast a little
south of Jacksonville. It was as though a patch of blankness had progressed
across the ocean, without anyone actually seeing her. There were press releases
ready to state that the liner had been commandeered by mutineers. A thin story. It would hold for long enough to help their
chances of success. Although the population was boiling with startled anger at
the military occupation of an area backed off inland from this stretch of
shore.
It
was at least comforting that the creature had not made directly for a city.
That implied that he felt his power to control human beings was limited, and
that he preferred to come ashore in a relatively isolated spot.
The
liner stood to nearly a mile offshore. It was nearly dark, but its lights
showed brilliandy. Unless the creature had the power
to sense the thoughts and intentions of human beings as well as their mere
presence, he could not know of the ambush that awaited him. There would merely
be individuals scattered, a few in groups, mostly separated, over several
square miles.
It
was hard to make out, even with binoculars, what was happening. Boats were
being lowered, it seemed,, and that was logical. But
was the creature in one of them?
He
was not. The first boats grounded on the beach. Their occupants, wild-eyed,
drawn-faced, looked around superficially and then signaled back to the liner
with the lamp. An advance party. Peter wished achingly
that they could be kidnapped into freedom at once. But the creature had to be
allowed to show himself. . . .
And he did.
Bowing,
gesticulating, beating gongs and wailing, the miserables aboard the liner were carrying him on what
looked like the top of a dining table upholstered with chair cushions, up to
the largest lifeboat on the shoreward side. The range was too great for
accuracy, probably, or the dark blob of the creature was too indistinct a
target, so the gunners held fire. Peter wished he had Mary beside him, and then
was glad that he had not, for he had not wanted her to take the risk this trip
would involve, and she was better employed out at the Atlántica site.
The
boat was lowered. As it descended, a hundred men and women,
stripping off their clothes desperately, prepared to follow it down. They
jumped, in a crazy human fountain, and vanished from sight. Sickly, the
watchers prayed for them to reappear.
Some
did not. But most did, and swam to the bow of the lifeboat to seize lines
dangling in the water and begin towing it to shore. Peter's nails bit deep into
his palms with the fury he had to suppress.
The
boat was still a quarter of a mile from shore, when there was a sudden muted
explosion, and the first shell ripped the bows of the lifeboat above the water
line. In an instant, six more fired together. And that was all.
After
the explosions, there were screams, and Peter had begun to hope they were the creature's. He felt the anger and the pain just as he
realized that they came from the shore around him, and he took two facts with
him into the twilight consciousness which was all his mind could contain beside
the pain.
The
first was that the monster was unharmed. The second, that if his power to
control human beings was truly limited, they had not found the limit.
XIII
It
was not quite
as bad as it had been before, aboard the 'copter. But it lasted longer. And it
did not permit escape into oblivion. That time, Peter reasoned when he was
allowed to think his own thoughts for a few seconds, it had been an
absent-minded stroke designed to incapacitate someone for whom the monster had
no use. This had purpose behind it.
It
was like a migraine in that it was in his head. It was more like the flaying of
skin from a body already raw with burning in its savage intensity. He tried to
fight it, knowing that others were doing the same, but there was only one way
to obtain relief. Act as the monster desired.
Lights
sprang up on the dusky shore. Men and women, both those from
the finer and those who had been in ambush, staggered about as though blind.
And they were screaming, in high, inhuman voices. The weakest stopped screaming
first, and set to work on the tasks that did not displease their master.
It was not easy to find what he wanted them
to do, for no instructions were given; simply a continued torment until by
chance the victim fell on the desired action. Then it was lifted a little, and
as a child racked by stomach pains will lie frozen for hours in the position
that causes least suffering,. so
they went frenziedly to work to avoid a return of the lashing.
Many
died. The gunners who had dared to open fire on the creature sprayed their
weapons at each other until they were ragged and bloody heaps beside their
ruined guns. Some of the watchers, driven into the open, were struck down in
this way. Most of them, though, survived.
Hating
himself, unable to bear the agony, wishing that a shell had ripped through his
guts during the firing, Peter found he was walking towards the water. Another
crack of the mental whip and he was running, with hundreds of others, into the
sea, and swimming towards the damaged lifeboat.
Coldly,
from his improvised palanquin, the creature drove his subjects. That they
should have attempted his life—and come so close to succeeding—both angered and
alarmed him. It was alarming because it implied that his precautions had not
been sufficient. They had found out where he was due to land, and been waiting
for him. It made him angry because it was intolerable for inferior creatures to
treat him thus.
But
they would learn! He would show them their true status; show them that to him,
they were no more than tools, to be used until they broke and then thrown away.
Since
they had damaged his boat, let them repair it! He whipped and goaded and
lashed, and into the ragged hole in the boat's bow a fat woman from the liner
jammed her body, crying with the pain of it that was still less frightful than
the pain of the master's displeasure. The hole was caulked. He urged the
swimmers to drag the boat towards shore.
When
it grounded on the beach, he gave them no respite. They must carry him on their
shoulders, all the tons of him, and if they stumbled they must be taught
better. If one was weak, let another take his place. They were expendable, the
planet was crawling with them, there were millions and millions
of them! He would take them, teach them, grind them
down.
Now
he would appropriate his first land-based city. He forced his new subjects
forward, and as the caravan progressed he summoned others to join it.
By midnight, the train was
thousands strong.
"But
this is insanity!" said the President of the United States.
"Of
course it isl" snapped Dr. Gordon, irritably
shoving his glasses back on his nose. "We're dealing with a creature whose
mind works differendy from ours. It doesn't think as
we do. It treats us like dirt!"
"That's
so, Mr. President," confirmed an army psychologist. The atmosphere of the
White House seemed to impress him less than most of the other hastily summoned
outside delegates. He retained an armored calmness while others fidgeted and
moved in their chairs. "We've picked up some of the poor so-and-so's who
got left behind. They're exhausted, half-starved because they haven't been
given time to feed themselves. Their minds are beaten down to the moron level
and in some cases to total blankness. They're filthy,
they are mostly covered with untreated sores or vermin. Or
both. They've just been used to their maximum endurance and left to
die."
"And you can't find
out what's happened in Jacksonville?"
"Not
a thing," said a four star general called Barghin,
who had already presented the report demonstrating that Jacksonville, Florida,
had been cut off from the world. He sounded weary, but patient, as though he
were a good Republican and didn't expect a Democrat president to have more than
the brains of a louse. "Every highway is blocked with wrecked cars, houses
dynamited with the families still in them, even, on one road, with a pde of a hundred corpses. We tried to put a reconnaissance
tank in across country. It stopped reporting after ten minutes and aerial surveys
showed it ran full speed into a gasoline storage tank and blew up. The crew had
probably been blanked out like the search party that found the Queen Alexandra."
"What happened to the
ship?" the president demanded.
"The
dampers were pulled on the pile before they left her," a Navy spokesman
answered. "When we got a party aboard, they found the engine room was a
puddle of fused uranium and other stuff. It took us a whole night to
decontaminate the search party. We took her in tow and she's being kept at sea
till we get a ruling from the owners what to do with her. Can't bring her to
port, she's radiating like crazy."
"What
about aerial reconnaissance over Jacksonville?" The President was not to
be put off.
"As
usual," General Barghin sighed. "We have high-altitude
TV planes circling the city, but clouds have been bad, and the two times we've
tried to get remote-controlled ships down to below a thousand feet, they've
been shot down. He got a coastal defense missile station along with the city,
of course, and there are about sixty homing missiles of the Thunder-horse class
in store there."
"Vassiliev
was right," muttered Gordon despondently.
"What was that, Dr.
Gordon?" the President rapped.
"The
captain of the Soviet bathynef," Gordon
explained. "He said it would be safest to sink the Queen Alexandra with the monster aboard, using a nuclear
torpedo if necessary."
"Agreed!"
said General Barghin forcefully. "Something of
the sort will become inevitable. Mr. President, there may be no limit to this
creature's powers. He may ultimately enslave the whole United States, the world
in fact!"
"I'm
not going to authorize the construction of a nuclear missile without UN
approval," the president said bluntly. "It took us years of
squabbling to get rid of the damnable things, and I for one hope there'll never
be another made on this planet! How about conventional missiles? Is there any
way of pinpointing the exact location of the monster?"
"He
could be anywhere in four or five hundred square miles," Barghin answered. "The limits of the blanked-out area
have remained constant since early yesterday, when he took over Jacksonville,
but it's unlikely he's remained at the geometrical center of it. He probably just
chose the most convenient limits, geographically and demographically."
"And
we daren't let it spread," the naval spokesman added in a tone of
sepulchral gloom. "With a hydrogen warhead, it would be possible to make
sure we don't miss; once he's extended his domains, we'd have to go on hitting
till we got him, and that might use up several bombs."
"I
think Washington should be evacuated," said Barghin
suddenly. "Here, we're too damn close to the scene."
A
knock came at the door, and the President grunted permission to enter. An aide
placed a stack of photographs before him.
"These
were taken from a scanner rocket flying too fast for countermissiles,
Mr. President," he said. "A courier just delivered them and said
they'd try again by daylight tomorrow. And there's a young woman and a Chinese
from Adantica who were sent to see Dr. Gordon."
The
President glanced at Gordon, who nodded. "I'm expecting details of the
creature's hideout," he said. "We found a kind of burrow in the mud
that he emerged from. I think we should hear this right away."
The President gave a curt command, and the
aide brought in Mary and a young Chinese of wiry build, who was introduced as
Dr. Sun. Mary's face was drawn and expressionless. She clutched a thick
portfolio of papers.
Acknowledging
the President, she sat down next to Gordon. "Is there any news?" she
said in a low voice.
"Of Peter? No, my dear, I'm afraid not. There hasn't been news of anyone who was
within a mile of the beach when the creature came ashore, or of anyone between
there and Jacksonville. The whole area has been cut off."
He
tried not to make it sound hopeless, but he knew it was no good disguising the
truth. Mary nodded, put her papers on the table, and sat with head downcast and
hands folded.
"Could we hear from
Dr. Sun?" Gordon proposed.
The
Chinese spoke very good English, with hardly a trace of accent. He said,
"As you know, your American deep-television camera showed us certain
articles on the ocean floor, which we went to investigate in our comrades' bathy-nef. I was one of the special crew, for it was very very deep.
"We
had time only to take a few things and many pictures, because the mud had again
closed the mouth of the hole and we must spend three hours clearing it before
beginning. But we did find much of interest. Mrs. Mary, please!"
Mary started and handed him
pictures from her portfolio.
"There
was many things like this," Sun said, holding up
a picture of a large cylinder with a huge blunt hollow needle on the end.
"We find traces of oxygen and of dried organic liquid inside. We
hypothesize that the creature would drive the point through his hide into a
vein-equivalent and thereby oxygenate his blood, which is perhaps the dried
liquid we find in the hollow sharp end. There are of these perhaps thousands.
"There
are also"—another picture, this time of ranked shelves full of shadowy
black oblate forms—"what it is perhaps possible to call 'food.' Water is
dissolving these big lumps, but we salvaged some, and their analysis shows they
include many elements common to the skin and skeleton of the dead body which
Dr. Trant discovered in Adantica."
He
was about to go on to another picture, when Gordon snapped his fingers and made
an exclamation. Sun blinked at him, and courteously indicated that he should
speak.
"Excuse
me," he apologized. "But I have an idea. On the basis of what can be
deduced about the creature's metabolism, could we synthesize a poison for him?
A heavy poison gas, for example, which might be harmless or
at worst merely dangerous to human beings?"
"God
knows, Dr. Gordon," said the President. "But if it can be done, that
would certainly be the solution. Barghin, see that
the Department of Chemical Warfare gets all the necessary data, would
you?"
Realizing
he was being addressed, the general looked up with a start. "I'm sorry,
Mr. President," he said. "I was just getting something out of these
TV pictures of Jacksonville. I think I can guess where the monster is."
XIV
He
had been one
of the lucky ones. . . .
Peter
found this out when at long last he had an hour to himself which he did not
need to spend in exhausted sleep. He felt as though he had been whipped
continually night and day for years. His face and hands were coated with grime,
his beard was matted round his chin, and his clothes, still salt-encrusted from
his mad rush into the ocean, were torn and soiled. He had not looked at himself
in a mirror. He did not need to to know that his eyes
were red-rimmed and his cheeks suddenly sunken like an old man's.
What
litde food he had had lately had been snatched from
abandoned stores or delivery trucks. Sometimes he had taken crusts of bread
from garbage cans, when there was no time to go hunting for something better
and he was too hungry to go without.
The
city had stopped when the master took it over. He did not care about the needs
of his subjects. They could eat what there was, so long as it lasted, and when
they died of hunger there were millions more he could whip into his domain. The
only sign of concern he had shown in this direction was to drive a loaded cargo
ship into the roads of the harbor. When it broke up against the sea wall it
proved to be a banana boat, and men were allowed to stagger through the city
with crates of bananas on their backs.
There
were no cars or trucks moving in Jacksonville. The wide streets, laid out anew after the great disaster of '65, when a
missile from the coastal defense base fell during practice firings and wrecked
the heart of the town, were empty except for men, women and children on feet.
Cars, it seemed, were not for human beings. Owners of vehicles had been compelled
to drive them to a great junkyard at the city limits, where other men drenched
them with gasoline and set them alight. That had been one of Peter's first
dudes after staggering into the town.
He
was getting quite clever at realizing what the master wanted done. They all
were. It was necessary for survival. The stupid were useless.
Fresh
in his memory, haunting him like a scar, was the fate of one of the stupid or
defiant ones; a man as thin as a beanpole, whose whole being seemed to consist
in his nervous energy. He had resisted some order, though the pain was making
his tendons stand out like knotted cord on the backs of his hands. Peter had
seen how pain whipped another man, a few paces away, who was wielding a
gasoline hose to feed the great fire of cars. This man
had drenched the defiant one from head to foot, and then, dragging his feet,
fighting to the last, the thin frame had walked
towards the flames. . . .
Yes, Peter had been lucky.
His tasks,
after the wrecking of the cars, had been many. But not
insupportable. There had been the need to collect certain strange
things, from warehouses, abandoned workshops, drugstores especially. He was
one of an army of perhaps a thousand engaged on this work, who converged later
on the square in front of City Hall where the master had taken up residence. He
had had walls blown out of the way when he found the small human doors cramping
for his bulk. Likewise, as Peter later saw, he was having tuose
parts of the city which offended him dynamited without caring about people who
might be crushed by falling ruins.
Working
mechanically, able to think a little as he worked, Peter had decided that the
incongruous mixture of substances he and others had gathered must be intended
to feed the master. Certainly the elements reported in the analysis of the hide
and skeleton of the other monster could all be found in this crazy pile. He
would have liked to witness the master's meal, but instead, he was driven away
to join a gang clearing rubble from a dynamited building.
He
had toiled at that for twenty-four hours without interruption, and was nearly
dead with fatigue and the coughing caused by concrete dust, when a lash fell on
the whole corps of workmen. They dropped their tools and clenched their
blistered hands, wondering.
Then
someone found that if he moved towards City Hall, the pain stopped. They all
moved, like an avalanche. Others came, too, pouring into the square. There they
stopped, waiting. Some of them fell asleep. There was no room to lie down when
the crowds thickened, so they leaned against their neighbors, and their
neighbors had not strength to push them away.
Someone
near where Peter was standing had taken cig-arets
from a store as they passed. Peter took one, expecting to find that this was
forbidden and pain would follow. It did not. Gratefully, he drew in the
relaxing smoke, and then found that his dust-irritated throat could not stand
it. He was forced to trample it underfoot.
Then
there was a stir, and out on to a platform in front of City Hall, built of
bronze cladding from a demolished office block and decorated with stained glass
ripped from a nearby church, came people. Ten men; ten women. Clean. Dressed in neat
clothes. Pallid, but calm. They ranged
themselves on either side of the platform, and the dull, dirty crowd looked at
them enviously but not understanding why they were still clean and neat,
Then,
to the beating of a great brass gong, the master appeared. He was borne
shoulder-high by twenty big men, white and black in equal numbers. Behind him,
idiotically, came a group of choirboys in surplices, waving
censers and chanting something too faint for the words to be distinguished.
The
bearers set the master down, and there were shudders that ran through the crowd
as many of the watchers saw what was ruling them for the first time. Peter was
shocked. The thing had grown! Added another segment to its body, he thought. Added a ton or more to its weight. ...
One
of the neatly dressed men who had come out first suddenly staggered, as though
struck by a blow. He recovered himself and came forward to face the square.
"The
master commands me to speak to you!" he shouted, and a hint of pain
tingled in every listening mind. "The master orders me to tell you the
truth! We are arrogant, worthless insects. A hundred thousand years ago we were
the subjects of the masters. They came to us from a world under another star,
and found us naked, grubbing in the dirt, with tools of bone and stone, fit
only to be slaves, without an original idea of our own. All we know we learned
from the masters, and when our master came back from the sea, we attempted to
kill him! We failed, but we must be punished. And we must leam
the respect which is proper to a superior race!"
There
was something tantalizingly familiar about that voice, but it was raised to a
shout that was almost a yell, and depersonalized. Peter's eyes were too
bleared with concrete dust for him to see the speaker's face.
"We
must do him honor in a suitable way. We must speak of his powers, his
intelligence, his length of life, his knowledge. We must sing to his praise,
bow down before htm, serve
him because he is greater than we are."
A
stir of discontent in the crowd; a sting
of cruel pain, and it was stilled.
"Sing!" yelled the man on the
platform, and the choirboys, stumbling forward as though dragging chains on
their feet, began to raise a familiar melody in piping
voices.
Peter
had not had a religious upbringing. Nonetheless, he Was
shocked as he suddenly realized they were singing Old Hundred. . . .
"No!
Never! Blasphemy!" The hysterical cry rang out at
the front of the crowd, and a wild-faced woman was suddenly trying to scramble
on to the platform and reach the master's palanquin. As her head appeared above
the edge, the man who had been speaking drew back his foot and kicked.
Pain
stilled the yells of anger. A few hesitant voices began to fumble with the
words, and the pain eased. Slowly, drag-gingly, the
helpless slaves lined out the ultimate mockery.
"Praise, laud and bless his name always,
For it is seemly so to do."
In
the interval before the next verse a child could be heard crying very
distinctly. Before the end of the next line, it had stopped. Probably
forever.
They
finished with the fourth verse, presumably because the master decided Christian
theology was hardly applicable to him, and stood waiting for further orders
with the last line ringing in their minds: "And shall from age to age
endure!"
It seemed only too
probable.
A
whining passed overhead, and they looked up. Something very swift, leaving a
vapor trail, although it was at low altitude, had rushed across the chilly
autumn sky. They had heard the same sound before. Peter judged that the people
outside were attempting to discover what was going on by using photographic
reconnaissance rockets or scanner missiles. Yes, almost certainly, for the
whining passed a second time, and a third. Straining tired eyes, Peter caught a
glimpse of light gleaming on metal, or perhaps of glowing exhausts.
It
was hard to believe that there were still on Earth men who were masters of
their own minds.
Abrupdy, he saw that the master had been carried
back indoors, and that the crowd was dispersing. The movement he was involved in
was going to carry him close to the platform from which they had been
addressed. He went along with it automatically, for that was the first lesson
one learned under the lash.
Defiandy, tensely, the ten men and ten women in neat
clothing returned the hate-filled stares of their less fortunate fellows. What
had made the master single these out? Peter wondered. Perhaps he could not in
fact control the whole population of the world. Perhaps he intended to train a
corps of collaborators, Quislings, who would make his authority effective.
But
what could lead any man to co-operate willingly with such a vicious tyrant?
Seeking a clue in these impassive faces, Peter scanned them—and recognized
Luke.
Luke
recognized him at the same time, and seemed to be on the point of saying
something. Peter spat conspicuously and went on shuffling past the platform.
Luke
glanced around nervously, and then stooped so as to be able to whisper.
"Peter!" he said. "Peter, there will be a free hour now, I
think. Meet me where they burned all the cars!"
"I know what you must think of me,"
Luke said, not meeting Peter's eyes but staring at the rusting heap of scrap
which recendy had been Detroit's finest. "It's
what I think of myself, too. But until you've sensed that power of his directed
at you as an individual . . . Keep in the mass if you can; it's not so bad when
it's generalized. I've had that too; I know.
"His
powers are limited, Peter. And he's made some errors that could be fatal.
Because he found us primitive when he first came to Earth, he thinks we're
primitive still, so it's up to us to pander to that illusion. The longer we can
keep him contented with just this one city and its environs, the better chance
they'll have outside of getting the better of him."
"Hence the hymn
singing?" asked Peter grimly.
"Exacdyl I picked Old Hundred because
it could be read as drooling with praise for his superior talents—and also because
enough people know the words for it to sound as though the crowd meant what
they were singing. Peter, I daren't be long away from him. If he gets
suspicious of me, I'm done for. I've seen it happen already. Some of the others
he's picked are genuine bastards. There's an old-time prison governor from
Alabama who was here on vacation, and a genuine sadist like I never saw before.
There's a first-class Quisling-type woman. They don't run much risk; they're
convinced, and they're scared. They all hate their fellow men so bad they don't
care what happens to them. They're glad of the chance to help out.
"But
before I have to go, listen carefully. Right now, no one would have a hope in
hell of getting outside. The highways are blocked,
any attempt to get an aircraft in is met with missiles. They shot down two
already, and they're doing a conversion job on the Thunderhorse to enable it to knock down the scanner missiles that have been coming
over, too. That damned monster has got
technical knowledge. He's making the engineers do things I never dreamed of,
even though I give them the orders.
"This
may change. If it does, and you can get away, say
that-"
Something
went overhead, howling. They ducked instinctively. Before they could raise
their heads again, a vast plume of white smoke had gone up from approximately
the area of the city hall. And there was the flat crump of an explosion.
They
looked at each other with sudden wild hope, and Peter was opening his mouth to
speak when the impact of pain and an anger greater
than ever told them that the attempt had been a failure.
XV
"I think
we can take it the result
was negligible," said General Barghin heavily.
"We got City Hall okay. We learned that much before they took out the
scanner rriissile. But the warhead was only a ton,
conventional."
Mud
squelched around his feet as he shifted uncomfortably. The field headquarters
was under canvas and ready for evacuation at fifteen minutes' notice, as was
the entire crescent of the—not defenses; cordon was a better term. A line of
men and weapons intended to contain what seemed quite happy to remain where it
was.
Dr.
Gordon waited to see if anyone else was going to speak. No one did. He coughed
and said, "General, I thought you were using scanner missiles because they
were too fast to shoot down?"
"We
were," agreed Barghin. "Thunderhorses
oughtn't to be able to
catch them. One did. We're flying a series of nuisance raids at the moment,
trying to provoke them into using up their stocks. They had about sixty. So far
we've made them use eleven. But how much that will help, God
knows. The monster's liable to be in a hell of a temper after what we
did to him, and if he knows how to soup up Thunder-horses to hit scanner missiles flying at two
thousand per hour, I wouldn't put it past him to build 'em
out of used car parts."
"Anything
on the chemical line of approach?" asked a listening colonel.
"Someone said—"
"You
can't expect results in a hurry on that side," Gordon interrupted.
"They have some of the biggest computers in the country working on the
job. And so have the Russkis. But they're
handicapped! How'd you like to have to figure out that the quickest way to stop
a human being was potassium cyanide if all you had at hand was a bit of
mummified skin and a skeleton?
"I see your
point," said the colonel dryly.
A
runner threw back the tent flap and ducked to avoid the swinging lamp.
"Signal, general," he said, saluting. "And more to come, looks like."
Barghin took the scribbled note. "Looks like
the cue for Mechanical Shovel," he said cryptically. "Let's hope this
one works. Colonel, get me a breakdown of all the weapons larger than small
arms known to have been in the Jacksonville area prior to the monster's
arrival."
The colonel dodged out in
the runner's wake.
City Hall was a pile of rubble, its roof
caved in and its walls bellied out. But the strength of the signal from within
proved that the master had been able to survive even this.
After
all, Peter realized, he'd taken the pressure of the deep Atlantic. A stack of
loose debris probably wouldn't even dent his hide.
They
were among the last to reach the spot. A gang of at least a thousand men and
women were at work on the rubble, manhandling it away, throwing it into the
square. Peter joined in on the end of a chain, with Luke beside him, catching
lumps of concrete and dumping them.
A
jagged five-pound block hurtled through the air towards Luke. Too late, Peter
realized that Luke had not yet turned back from dropping its predecessor, and
tried to catch it. He missed.
Luke's
head suddenly caved in from behind. For a moment he showed signs of startled
pain. Then he tumbled forward on his face, and blood began to well out under
his hair. Peter made to bend and see if there was any help for him, but a new
jolt of pain reminded him that the master cared nothing about the fate of his
subjects.
At least he could be given a burial. Peter contrived to make a sort of cairn above his friend's body,
and then to move away and heap the debris elsewhere.
Like
slaves toiling to build the pyramids, Peter thought. And at the whim of a far
worse master than a Pharaoh. . . .
There
were probably other bodies under the heaped rubble when they finally extricated
the master, with ropes and brute strength. Some had to wash his hide until it
was glossy and clean; some had to hunt material and build a new palanquin for
him. Then they all had to carry him, chanting Old Hundred, to a large church five blocks away, and
install him there in new splendor.
Twice
during the proceedings there were sharp, crackling explosions from overhead,
and once what looked like the nose cone of a missile ploughed a bloody furrow
through a group of workmen. Nobody was allowed to help the dying. Even the
elemental compassion of breaking in their skulls with a heavy block to end
their suffering was rewarded by another gust of agony.
Either the master was panicking, or he was determined to
make what he regarded as idiots understand he meant what
his spokesmen had said. i
What
were the rest of the enslaved population doing? Peter
tried to get a clue from staring about him while they were carrying the master
to his new abode. Some of them, doubtless, would be at the missile base,
manhandling fifty-ton rockets. Some were probably compelled to scout the
perimeter of the master's domains, so that they could be driven to hunt down
would-be intruders. Some were engaged in clearing the ruins of the buildings
that had earlier been dynamited, and in laying paving. And some were engaged on
a special task.
Down one of the main streets that crossed
next to the old church, men and women were laboriously pushing laden handcarts.
The carts were piled with weapons: carbines, sporting guns, automatics,
together with ammunition for them;
and besides these, axes, butcher knives, even cutlasses
and swords that must have been taken from a museum.
"Can
you handle firearms?" they were saying wearily as they passed among the
crowd. Those who answered affirmatively received guns. Those who did not,
mostly women, were given knives or axes or hatchets.
He's
forming an army, Peter told himself silently. So he does know his powers are
limited!
He
was so elated by the realization that the master could no longer intend to
handle his opponents out of his personal resources that he was taken by
surprise when the weapons-bearers came to him and asked him the monotonous
question. "Can you handle firearms?"
He
couldn't lie, he knew. And in any case to say no would mean receiving a cutting
weapon that could not run out of ammunition. What was the least deadly of
firearms? He said cautiously, "I can handle a .22 pistol."
It
was the truth. He could also handle machine guns, carbines, repeating rifles
and many more deadly weapons. But the weapons-bearer did not stop to ask
questions. He thrust a little target pistol and a box of shells into Peter's
hands and pushed past.
There
was a lull now, while the rest of the weapons were given out. Peter wondered if
he dared drop his gun down an open sewer somewhere, and so avert the risk of
behaving as the gunners on the beach had done with their cannons. But someone
else was trying it, refusing to keep the axe he had been allotted and shouting
that he was a pacifist and had never used violence and never would.
Some
spirits were still burning bright. But the poor devil was being tormented and
lashed. It could be seen in his eyes. In the end, he accepted the axe and sprawled
fainting, the axe held tightly in his hands.
Peter
walked blankly down the street looking for food. One of the many cases of
bananas which had been brought ashore from the wrecked cargo ship caught his
attention, and he found that it still held two or three hands of blackened
fruit. He ate frantically. A woman with one eye turned to a red pit came and
mutely held out bleeding hands to him, and he gave her half of what he had
found, less out of pure fellow-feeling than because he was suddenly overwhelmed
with joy that Mary was not in the same pitiable condition. Unless another of
the monsters turned up, she was safe out at the Atlántica site. Probably safer than
anywhere else on Earth.
If
she was still there, and hadn't done something crazy like
insisting on joining a rescue operation.
But
he didn't like to think of possibilities like that. For that reason, he had
thought as little as he could about Mary these last few days. He always ended
up picturing her either crushed to death like poor Luke, or in a state like the
one-eyed woman. It was better not to think, just to sit passively and endure.
Until at last the order
came for the army to advance.
"Missiles over New York, Philadelphia,
Baltimore, Richmond and Savannah," was the report. Barghin's
face grew suddenly grave.
"Thank
God there's no uranium or other fissile material down there," he said.
"We'll just have to pray that this monster doesn't know how to make
H-bombs out of old tin cans. What damage did the missiles do?"
"Co-ordinating the reports now, sir," the radioman
replied. "No serious damage in New York. It exploded before it hit. The
worst seems to be in Richmond. It hit a supermarket, and they're still digging
out corpses.
"Washington
reports panic along most of the eastern seaboard. People have fled to the
woods in New England, and all major highways are choked with cars. Crowds have
been beseiging seaports and fighting their way aboard
ship. One freighter has had to put out from Boston at gunpoint."
"What's the President doing?"
"He's in Minnesota somewhere at an
emergency hideout left over from the Cold War. Reports are he will broadcast to
the nation this evening." "Get me evacuation reports."
The
radioman switched to another circuit and fired crisp questions. "Complete
for a depth of thirty miles," he said. "They're opening refugee
centers in Adanta, Birmingham and Montgomery. Only, a
hell of a lot of people are lighting out from there now they know about the
evacuation."
"Go
west, you fooll" said Barghin
humorlessly. "Any further contact with those poor
bastards from Jacksonville?"
"Light
small arms engagements all along the western quadrant of the front. Detachment
commanders report they've almost completed their withdrawal."
"Okay.
I only hope we get some of them back with their minds intact. Mechanical Shovel
had better begin now. And have someone move in a couple of countermissile
groups. I don't want any more of those souped-up Thunderhorses to get more than a mile from their basel"
Chanting in obedience to the mental whip,
marching in rhythm with gongs and drums, the army started out in gathering
darkness. Some limped. Some tried to lag and were driven remorselessly back to
their place in the line.
A few keeled over, and the columns parted
when they
came to the place where the bodies lay. *
Men
had done this to each other, too. Feeling the habit of marching taking over
from his conscious volition, Peter had visions of other armies of history. They
had thought men were finished with such cruel stupidity. Perhaps this last time
was going to set the seal of guarantee on the hope.
They
came to the roadblocks marking the limit of the master's dominion, and
scrambled over or went around. The vanguard reformed. They plodded ahead.
Peter was toward the rear of his column. In
the night he could see only a few paces ahead. It took him completely by
surprise when shots rang out and he was suddenly goaded to raise his pistol and
shoot it.
If
they were going to waste ammunition like this, he would escape the hell of
having to shoot his fellow men.
Lights
sprang up, concealed in bushes and isolated houses. The army scattered. Some
were compelled to charge forward, firing wildly. But there was no counterfire, and they advanced again to find that the men
who had turned on the lights had left their posts and retreated.
The
pattern was the same for more than an hour: lights; an attack; discovery of a
deserted post. An air of uncertainty which Peter was sure was communicated from
the master hung over the army. And then—
Half-tracked
trucks, troop carriers, ambulances; a fantastic menagerie of vehicles covered
in armor lumbered out of the night. There were sharp rifle-cracks, and mingled
with them dull plopping noises like mortar fire. With every plop a net sprang from a device attached to one of the vehicles, trapped men
and women like birds in a snare, and closed itself automatically. Derricks
unfolded, grabbed the filled nets, loaded them with their human cargo into the
vehicles. Screams rang out, and shots flew wild over the countryside.
But
before more than half the "army" had been thus igno-miniously
captured, Peter and the rest who were still at large were compelled to turn and
run.
Of
course! Marvelling at
the ingenuity that had sent robot-controlled machines to save them, he obediendy fled.
XVI
"There's
no doubt that the tide is
beginning to turn, Mr. President," Barghin told
the telephone. "We've brought down all the four missiles that have been
launched from Jacksonville since that salvo yesterday, and Operation
Mechanical Shovel was a pretty fair success." He listened. "Yes, I
still want UN permission to build that nuclear missile. The risk is that so far
the monster may merely have been underestimating us, and has tricks he hasn't
used yet. I don't know about the biological warfare proposal. I'm expecting a
report in a short while and a summary of the progress to date will come to you
anyway."
He
said goodbye and hung up. Then he sat back in his chair. They'd taken the command
headquarters out from under canvas and put it in one of the vehicles that had
come back from Mechanical Shovel. The trick wouldn't work twice. It was a
decided improvement not to be squelching in wet earth.
"Dr.
Gordon and Mrs. Trant, sir," said an orderly,
poking his head around the door. The general nodded and got up to receive his
visitors.
Mary
was looking curiously pale but almost luminous. She was more beautiful than
ever, but her beauty seemed to have retreated inside and to be lighting the skin
drawn over her facial bones as a lightbulb
illuminates a globe surrounding it. Gordon was puffy with tiredness, but he at
least managed a smile.
"You've
been round?" Barghin ventured, after offering
cig-arets.
"Yes,"
said Mary despondently. "After we went through the live casualties, we
inspected the dead ones. No sign of Peter."
"I'm sorry," said
Barghin inadequately.
"I'm
getting used to the idea of not seeing him again," Mary said. "Making myself get used to it. In a way I'm not sorry
he wasn't one of those people picked up by your operation. I don't think if
he'd lived through that horror he would ever again be the same man I used to
know."
"They're in a pretty
bad state," confirmed Gordon.
"I know," sighed Barghin. "It looks as
if the monster made them go mad when the nets closed over them. They lashed out
at each other with their knives, fired their guns . . . But we have amazingly
good medical facilities here, you know." ■-. "It's not their physical
injuries," said Mary. "It's the damage to their minds. The apathy! The delirious ravings!"
"They
can't all be like that," Barghin said.
"They'd be useless to the monster if they were."
It
was a crumb of hope, all he could in honesty offer. Mary acknowledged it with a
miserable nod, and Gordon coughed and shuffled papers
out of his pockets.
"We
have some progress to report," he said. "I've been commuting between Atlántica, where they're digging out what's left of the
monster's refuge, and John Hopkins.
"Assuming
that the dried substance they found in the hollow needles attached to the
oxygen bottles—you remember Dr. Sun reporting that at the White House?" Barghin nodded.
"Well,
it was contaminated with sea water, of course, but they got rid of that, and
they've identified the substance which acts as a hemoglobin equivalent. It
behaves in the same manner—gives up oxygen in exchange for C02—which
is very unfortunate."
"Why?"
"Because this means that human poisons
which act like, say, potassium cyanide, by interfering with the supply of
oxygen to the tissues, will also be fatal to the monster. By extension,
anything which kills the monster will probably kill human beings."
"Bad. Go on."
Gordon shrugged. "Well, this opens a
whole possible range of poisons, and then shuts it up again if we still intend
to try and spare the lives of as many people as possible. I don't see what else
we can do. What we must do, they suggest, is prepare missiles loaded with
poisons of various sorts, including potassium cyanide although that's so
volatile we'd have to score a direct hit, and attempt to establish where the
monster moved his headquarters to after we wrecked City Hall."
"And how do they propose we do
that?" Barghin's tone was heavy with irony.
"We haven't had a picture of Jacksonville since the monster figured out
how to bring down our fastest scanner missiles. We have faster ones, of course,
but they won't give us pictures we can use."
"That's
up to you, general, I'm afraid. Or rather, to the technical
experts. By the way, I told Vassiliev about
this, out at the Adantica site, and from what he said
I think we can expect something rather special in the way of Soviet
electron-amplifiers shortly. That might be the answer to getting usable
pictures from a super-fast missile."
"Could
be."
"It
had better bel
Everything we've come up with depends on knowing the
monster's whereabouts. For example, we deduce that the monster's oxygen
requirements are higher than those of human beings, because of his far greater
bulk. Con-sequentiy he probably suffocates more
quickly, so if he could be trapped in a sea of liquid fire that would finish
him. Unfortunately, we know he can exist at a hibernation level for a hundred
thousand years. He might just possibly be able to retreat into hibernation
before the lack of oxygen actually killed him." Gordon spread his hands.
"And
in any case," said Barghin, "he's
intelligent enough to realize that if he hadn't shown himself at City Hall in
front of that crowd of admirers we wouldn't have brought it down about his ears
so rapidly. He's probably not taking any more risks of that kind."
"We
should have put twenty missiles into that city hall instead of just one,"
Gordon mourned. "Or followed it up with napalm, to seal
him from his oxygen supply."
"I
was speaking to the President just now," Barghin
said, after a pause. "He's applying to an emergency session of the UN
today for permission to assemble a one-kiloton warhead."
"I
heard. At least, I heard rumors. The lunatic fringe is saying it should have
been done long ago, and I suppose in a way they're right. Vassiliev
said so, when the monster was still only in control of the Queen Axexandra. And I think you said so when it first moved
into Jacksonville."
"I
had hopes. So I didn't press the point." Barghin
fit a cigaret and leaned back in his chair.
"What's
it like outside?" he said. "I'm concentrating so damned much on
Jacksonville I don't know what's happened."
Mary broke her long
silence. "It's terrible,"
she said.
"It
could be a lot worse," Gordon objected. "The refugee movements have
slowed to a trickle; as you probably know. The Navy got back the freighter that
was kidnapped. Aside from that, there's just a sort of general insanity in the
air. Old women seeing alien monsters in every street corner shadow; people
playing the game of "What I'd do if I were running this thing'; news
commentators clamoring for use of a nuclear missile and others pleading for the
lives of the poor trapped citizens."
"News
commentators," said Barghin. "I had to have
one brought down by the Air Force yesterday. He was determined to parachute
into Jacksonville and radio back an on-the-spot story. But in general I must
say the press has been wonderfully co-operative. If they'd lost their heads the
country would have been in an insane panic by now."
"Maybe not. Since that program about Martian invaders they broadcast back before
World War II, people have been very skeptical about alien monsters. I wish this
one was a script writer's nightmare and not ours."
"General,
I've been wondering," said Mary suddenly. "If this monster is so
powerful, why does he make people act out these phony ceremonies?"
"These bowing and scraping and praising affairs? The psychologists have been at that one,
and given me a workable theory for once. They assume that because this race is
very long-hved, the reproductive urge is negligible.
But any theory of an intelligent life-form demands some central pivot on which
the personality turns. They propose that this power to inflict pain on other
creatures and the urge to dominate them corresponds to our sex-urge in the
place it occupies in the monster's mind. That's roughly it. They gave it to me
loaded with technical jargon. So the monster probably gratifies itself with
this hp-service.
"Alternatively,
it may be even simpler. It may just be that it's hard work for him to keep
watch on thousands of people continually, and he finds it—or used to find
it—worth conditioning his slaves into accepting that he was a superior being
by the laws of nature, and so to lessen the chance of their rebelling against
him."
"The
Second one sounds more probable," Mary said judiciously. "After all,
if it wasn't hard work for him to control large numbers of people, he'd have
conquered the country and perhaps the world by now." Her lower lip
trembled, and suddenly her self-possession fell in fragments. Startled, her
companions tried to comfort her, but she began to sob, deep painful surges of
frightened misery.
"I
hope Peter's dead!" she choked out at last. "It would be better to
die than live the way he wants us to!"
It was beginning to appear
that he had made a mistake.
Accustomed
to instant service from a race of primitives, and under the continued illusion
that the catastrophe which had overwhelmed the world he knew had taken place
barely a few days ago, he had assumed that he could tackle the teeming
millions of human beings without help. But the human beings he had to contend
with now were a very long way from being primitive. They were even able to
outwit him sometimes.
For instance, the way they had located his headquarters and brought it
down with an accurately aimed missile. He had retaliated, of course, but he lacked
the resources to wreak significant damage. And they had found an answer to all
the improvements he had ordered effected in the stock of missiles he had captured.
Again, he lacked the resources to do more. They had brilliantly thwarted his
attempt to use his subjects as an army, by sending robot devices out instead of
living creatures that he could control. And the effort of hammering the fact
of his superiority into the thick heads of his subjects was steadily draining
his own strength again.
Their
strength was diminishing, too. Their food was running short, and although he
had sent out scavenging parties to collect bodies from the streets and the
surrounding country, he had to compel them to eat the proceeds of these expeditions,
which hardly seemed worth the trouble.
He
would have to resign himself to the fact that these people were intractable and
unteachable. He could not find sufficient suitable
deputies to replace those who had been killed in the wreck of the city hall,
and thus lighten the task of driving the mob. He would simply have to use brute
force, discarding the exhausted ones and replacing them. If only he had not
decided to proceed alone)
But almost
certainly he was alone in any case. Most others of his fellows had been so
corrupted by the ease and comfort of Earth that they would have waited till it
was too late to prepare themselves secure retreats. Like that stupid one, Ruagh, who had come begging for aid.
To
tackle the problem of resources he needed more strength. Therefore he must be
fed. It was hard to make do with what he could find in the city, but it would
be long before he could train biochemists to synthesize his preferred nutriment
in the quantities he would require. He must take what he could get.
Some
days passed in the provision of his wants. Certain essential elements had to be
hunted down carefully. And the human material he had to work with was
diminishing rapidly.
He
was still completing his extended meal when the new missile cut the sky over
the city. It went so fast he could barely sense it; no human eye could have
noticed it. He gave pain to the humans at the nearby missile station, but
despite all the improvements to them the Thunderhorses missed the new intruder by thousands of feet.
Still, he was not visible, he consoled
himself. The only risk of revealing his whereabouts lay in the stocks of
nutriment heaped up before the door of the church where he hid.
That
was one reason why the missile that crashed through the roof an hour later came
as such a tremendous shock. Another followed it, and then a third. The other
reason was that these were not loaded with explosive, but with a poison that
would infallibly have killed him if he had not been alert and watchful.
He
saved himself by retreating into temporary catatonia, to let the potassium
cyanide vapor dilute and disperse. When he resumed full metabolic activity, his
mind was made up.
The reconquest
of Earth must be a long-term project.
XVII
The
cordon was, on the landward
side, a crescent about fifty miles in total length and disposed irregularly in
depth. Its forward outposts were all remote-controlled. Most of them were fixed
scanner stations. Some few were robot vehicles, light tanks and scout cars., but these were not much more useful than the fixed
ones. Any attempt to drive them into the monster's territory resulted in their
path being blocked by groups of desperate slaves, and it was more than they
could bring themselves to do to plough ahead through a wall of human bodies.
On
the seaward side, some twenty naval vessels patrolled, including submarines.
Since the episode of the banana boat that had unaccountably sailed into the sea
wall at Jacksonville, it had been imperative to keep all ships well clear of
the area.
Overhead, occasionally and for short periods
only because of its immense fuel requirements, raced their one "eye."
It was a war rocket equipped with a crude scanner and capable of five thousand
miles an hour in low-level flight. From the indistinct signals it picked up
they could construct, using an adaptation of an electron-amplifier in use at Pulkovo Observatory for studying the spectra of faint
stars, large still pictures of the city. It was a secondhand kind of process.
They could never have an idea of the situation until it was already changed.
By
now, though, they were cautiously assuming that the outline would not alter
significantly; that the monster already had as many people as he could
conveniently control, and would not attempt to extend his dominion in the
immediate future. The information they had received from the people retrieved
by Operation Mechanical Shovel had enabled them to zero in the cyanide-laden
rockets they had dumped into the church. But at any one time their missile
resources were restricted. The disarmament agreements that had so painfully
been put into force had had the result of replacing die bludgeon with the
surgeon's knife, and all the missiles they could call on from existing stocks
were designed either for the purely defensive purpose of hitting incoming
missiles at high altitude or for police work, excising carefully delineated
local targets.
The
psychologists, digesting their data, were becoming more confident, and their
confidence was contagious. Everything pointed to the monster having
overreached himself; misjudged the power of human
beings to oppose him without panicking. If this were true, then by striking
with precision and at irregular intervals directly at the monster, they could
compel him to lose himself in a neverending series of
precautions for his own safety each of which would be frustrated by an attack
from a different quarter.
It looked as if it were
beginning to work.
Therefore,
although the authority had been obtained to construct a one-kiloton nuclear
warhead and a suitable missile to carry it, they remained determined to keep
that as a last resort. Ideas for new local attacks kept pouring in as the information
obtained from study of the monster's undersea refuge and from the hide and
skeleton of his dead companion was converted into principles of procedure.
A
picture received from the scanner rocket showed them that the monster had set
eight hundred people to work on excavating an underground refuge for him. Apparendy he had been sufficiently shaken by the near-miss
with the cyanide to stop trusting himself to surface buildings. They allowed
the work to progress almost to completion. Then they sent in a volley of four
earth-movers; missiles designed to penetrate anything softer than concrete and
explode at predetermined depths. The carefully burrowed-out refuge collapsed
obediently, and the work had to begin again.
And
as often as they could they located his new hiding place and put ordinary
flare-rockets into the locality, not with the intention of doing serious harm,
merely to indicate that they knew where he was, and were holding their fire
because of the human beings within range of anything big enough to do him permanent
damage. They had discovered from the returned slaves that the monster was no
longer quite so wasteful with his subjects. It seemed that he must have given
up hope of bringing any significantiy larger number
of people under his orders, and was therefore conserving what he had.
Sooner
or later, they would wear him down, and whereas it was a certainty that the use
of a nuclear missile to finish the job would kill ninety per cent of the
survivors, it was only a risk that in the throes of ultimate despair the
monster would drag them down with him. They resigned themselves accordingly to
a war of attrition.
And
then...
"What? All of them?" Barghin bellowed. "The
reports say so, sir," the radioman confirmed. "The
entire population of Brunswick which hasn't been evacuated, the whole of
Savannah, and just about everywhere in between."
"Get
me a 'copter and alert every detachment we've got in the area," Barghin ordered.
"Won't
be a lot of help, sir," the radioman ventured. "It says that there
haven't been any reports for nearly an hour from any of the troops we had on
the fringe of the evacuated area between Jacksonville and Brunswick, and
they're afraid they were the first to get on the move."
"Close
the gap by remote-controlled vehicles, everything we have. And get me the
'copter, fasti"
In
the whole history of the United States there had never been anything like this.
But there had been in Europe, in wartime. A whole population
on the move, by the thousands and then by tens of thousands. Some in cars, some on cars, some
on-foot. When they choked the roads, they overflowed across the country;
puzzled, attempting to turn back sometimes, and learning very quickly that that
was useless.
Blackening
the highway as far as the eye could reach. In the field of his binoculars, Barghin could pick out sudden individual tragedies. There
was a mother whose young child could walk no longer, trying to stop and let it
rest, being forbidden to by the awful pain and having to stumble on blindly
weeping, while the- child was left to sob alone. A cripple, one of whose
crutches had splintered, trying vainly to get someone to stop and help him get
to his feet, and in the end being compelled to crawl because so long as he kept
moving the pain abated. And a thousand more.
Barghin located the level at which the pain began to
effect him and his pilot. Gasping, they let the automatic controls take them up
until they were out of range again, and then Barghin
began to marshal his forces.
There
was no question of halting this movement by conventional methods of roadblocks
or by troops. Roadblocks were by passed, or desperately broken down with
bleeding hands. Troops could bear the pain no better than anyone else and were
among the first to turn aside and continue the trudge towards Jacksonville.
The
robot vehicles which had served in Operation Mechanical Shovel just reached
the fringe of the evacuated area before the vanguard of the column. Slammed
together, tires punctured and radiators ripped open, they expired in the path
of the herded victims, forming a wall of metal. At first the oncomers were slowed. Then the inexorable pressure from
behind crushed them forwards again, and some began to climb on the bodies of
the weak. Those in cars had to abandon their vehicles and join the marchers.
Like ants, the river of people flowed up and over the obstacle, and went on.
Harshly,
Barghin ordered the blowing-up of overpasses and
bridges, but this hardly hindered at all. A man can go, if he is driven to it,
where a mountain goat would lose its footing. Some fell by the way, but not
enough to thin the ranks noticeably. Was there no stopping them?
No,
there was not. Even the last chance, the sowing of a curtain of blazing napalm
across their path, brought such hideous results—when the head of the column was
compelled to blanket the. flames with their own bodies
so that those behind could pass over—that they could not continue with it.
All
that day and night they went on, unstoppable, unheeding of anything but a
respite from the awful pain that goaded them. And then, when just under a
million survivors had vanished into the blank area around Jacksonville, they
stopped.
White-faced,
the authorities realized that this new influx rendered it inconceivable that
they should use their nuclear missile against the town. And white-faced, the
population at large clamored for it to be used at once. ...
It had long ago become difficult for Peter to
believe that the outside world still existed. His last link with it was gone.
He no longer saw, as he trudged about the city, faces that he remembered as
having been among the first of the master's subjects.
He
had been very ill for a time. An epidemic of fever had run through the city,
perhaps because of the rotting corpses which had never been buried. Dogs had
kept the carrion under control for a short while, but one day the master had
sent out a group with axes to hunt down and kill the animals that still ran
through the streets, arid that had become their last supply of fresh meat.
While
he was feverish, but still working, still slaving, he had seen Mary's face in
every woman's features, and the effect of this had been far-reaching. When he
looked the second time, of course, he saw the reality. Filth,
running sores, bleared eyes and rotting teeth. And his delirious mind
had equated the two. Mary was dead. That was a thing he had discovered at the
peak of the fever, when he had gone around tugging at people's arms and telling
them, "My wife is dead!"
Sometimes
they answered, "I hope to God mine is!" Sometimes they said,
"Go to hell!" And most often, they did not even hear what he said to
them.
His
arm had been broken some time during this period. The same blow had embedded
dirt in his bruised skin, and by the time he began to think coherently again,
and to remember that that had been when the earth-mover missiles brought down
the roof of the underground refuge they had made for the master, it was vastly
swollen with blue-green-yellow pus. It ached continually.
Because of that, and because of the dullness
of his mind, he did not realize for some time that the master was no longer
whipping him on.
It
was like a blinding vision when he localized the pain into his arm. It seemed
to trigger him out of his half-world of gray and into the real world again. He
found he was sitting on a broken sidewalk. A gang was working in a building
across the road, doing something with fire and hand tools. Making
things. Why had he not been driven to work with them? Because
of his helpless arm?
He
got up and began to hobble round the city, not yet daring to hope that he had
been permanendy dismissed from the monster's plans.
But the hope blossomed. These people were new here! They were still healthy
looking and had been well fed until quite recently. Their clothes had been
laundered within the past few days, and their shoes were shiny on their feet.
The master must have recruited fresh forces, and left the sick, sorry wretches
that had served him before to fend for themselves.
He
trudged on through the city, hoping to find someone else in the same situation
as himself, released from bondage because they had become helpless. There was no
one. There were many who were no longer strong enough to move, and he left
those in peace. Once he discovered a loaf of fresh bread that must have been
brought to the city by the new arrivals, and crammed it hungrily into his mouth
before moving on.
But
the newcomers could not stop and speak to him. They were working frantically,
wildly, at tasks whose complexity baffled his dull mind. They were making
things, making individual objects, and he recognized that that was new. Once
he found men and women picking metal parts out of the giant scrapheap where all
the cars had been destroyed. Once he saw men salvaging plates from the banana
boat in the harbor and hauling them ashore.
He
got as far as the missile station a mile beyond the town, with no one questioning
him or stopping him, and there he saw that a structure was taking shape.
Electricians were at work on it, and welders, and children laboring under heavy
loads. He stared at it dully, making no sense out of its huge struts and
plates. There were portable forges standing around. Men were hammering, sawing,
shaping.
Beyond,
there were racks and racks of bulbous cylinders that struck a chord of memory.
But he did not know what they were. He gave up trying to solve the relationship
between all the things that were being done in the city, and moaned over his
injured arm.
Then
an idea came to him. He had walked this far without being turned back or lashed
by the master. Could he walk away?
XVIII
It
was like the endless
arguments about euthanasia. Suppose a cure is found for a supposedly incurable
disease one day after you have put a patient out of his misery? Suppose it is notl
Directly
and indirectly, perhaps three million people must by now be involved in the
affair; from hospital staffs and police, directing the renewed streams of
fugitives, to the scientists, psychologists, soldiers and airmen carrying on
the battle. But what they did was directed by state governments, the federal
government, Congress and the UN. And so in the ultimate resort, these few men
in this room were doing the work.
That
was the way you had to look at it, Barghin reflected.
It wasn't a case of matching one alien against millions and millions of people.
It was more like one against twenty. For once you decide to subdivide your
effort, specialize, and depute, each individual counts for less than one as
well as more than one.
He
said, "Mr. President] Let's cut this knot right
now. I don't see we're any of us going to give up our preconceived ideas on
whether we should or should not use that nuclear missile now. I'll make a
suggestion which will save arguing any further, I think. We ready
it for firing. We use it only if we see another ~1>ig
population movement starting, or this sudden rash of building in Jacksonville
turns out to be the manufacture of missiles to hit us where it hurts."
The
President ran his finger around the inside of his collar as though to. loosen it. "A reasonable proposal, general," he
said with relief. "I agree. Gendemen?"
The
conference delegates—cabinet members, armed forces staffs, two UN observers
including Lampion from Atlántica, and
those who had been on the inside from the beginning like Dr. Gordon and Mary Trant—nodded reluctantly or vigorously. The President
managed a smile.
"Good.
General, what exacdy is this building we hear so much
about?"
"Up
until lately, we've seen nothing going on in Jacksonville except work we could
identify as redesigning streets, making this abortive underground shelter for
the monster, and so on. Since the new influx, the pattern has completely
changed. We've identified manufactures. The industrial plants within the area,
from the shops on the missile station to the harbor facilities, have suddenly
been put back-into use. When the monster first took over, he stopped everything
of that kind. Factories went dead, power stations quit, phone exchanges and
broadcasting stations went out. Now the factories have woken up again, and we
found they were drawing on outside power supplies, so we cut the cables and
they restarted the local power generators.
"What's
more, they've been gutting the places they aren't using. Banks of phone
equipment have been carted to the missile station. I'm told you can use it for
other kinds of information besides speech, and this looks suspicious. The
wrecks in the harbor have been stripped of useful material. And it's all going
out to the missile base. It looks dangerous."
"There's
no chance of the monster making atomic missiles, is there?" the President
queried.
"Theoretically,
I'm told, one might adapt the works of a fusion power station to use as a bomb.
But there's only one such in the Jacksonville area. And there are no ships in
port with nuclear engines. They're all merchant vessels. It seems highly improbable."
"That's a relief to
know, anyway."
"And
in any case, we have every countermissile station on
the eastern and southern seaboards on a clock-round alert." Barghin shrugged. "That's it."
A
light was blinking on the phone before the President. He answered the call
irritably. He listened, and a light seemed to come into his mind. "Yesl Wonderful! I'll get Barghin over. Yes." He covered the microphone with his
hand and said, "Barghin, a man has walked out of
Jacksonville without being stopped. He's hurt and delirious, but he's got
out!"
"Who?" Two voices put the question at once. Barghin
glanced around the table and realized that the other one had been Mary's. She
was leaning forward with sudden bright hope dawning in her face.
The
President listened a little longer and cradled the phone. He said, "The
name is Peter Trant."
A
fast 'copter brought Barghin with Mary and Dr. Gordon
to the field hospital behind the cordon where Peter had been brought. They were
met by the local medical corps commander, a Major Lewicz,
who heard their questions stony-faced.
"He
said his wife was dead," he declared. "He was in a bad way, and it's
possible he was delirious from blood poisoning. If it is this lady's husband,
I'm afraid she'd better prepare herself for a shock."
"I'm already
prepared," Mary said softly.
"No
. . . There's another shock, I'm afraid. When he came out of the evacuated
area, his left arm was ruined. It had been broken, covered with infected dirt,
and not dressed. It was gangrened past the elbow, and the fingers had already
begun to slough off. I'm afraid we had to amputate, Mrs. Trant."
"Has he talked at all since you
operated?" Mary asked.
"Not yet. And he won't he back in his right mind for at least a day or two. That's
assuming it's only septicaemic poisons that are
making him delirious, and not something more fundamental."
"Can I see him,
anyway? I'd like to know."
"Of
course."
It
was Peter, behind that ragged beard and the paste ot antibiotic ointments around his inflamed eyes. It was. Mary reached out to touch the remaining hand where it lay on the red
blanket, and hesitated in horror to see the caluses
and ragged nails.
"Peter!
Peterl" she whispered. But the unconscious man
did not reply.
"I'll
have intelligence personnel down here to tape everything he says when he wakes
up," Barghin stated to Lewicz.
"I don't know, but I think it might help if the first person he saw on
waking was the wife he believed dead."
"It's
possible," nodded Lewicz. "But from what he
was saying earlier, I doubt if you'll make a lot of sense from him."
Barghin shrugged. "Maybe not.
But so long as there's a hope in hell of digging the monster's weak spot out of
what the poor bastard saw while he was in Jacksonville, we shall have to hold
off the nuclear missile we have waiting."
"I
see what you mean," said Lewicz soberly.
"It's going to be bad enough treating the survivors of Jacksonville
anyway. If they've been exposed to radiation and heat flash as well, I wouldn't
care to have to try and save them."
"Did you get any clear
idea of how he managed to escape?"
"Yes,
I think so. From what we could figure—it's on tape if you want to hear it—he
suddenly realized that the only pain he could feel was his injured arm. He said
all the others had died and they had become new people. I think that means that
he is one of the last survivors of the original captives, and they've been
left to themselves because they're too weak and ill to be useful to the
monster's new plans."
"Did he know what the plans were?"
"He
hadn't been made to work on any of them, and he said he couldn't make out what
was going on. He's so starved and apathetic I don't think he cared any more."
"Peter! Peter!" Mary whispered, and
no hint of movement showed in the tortured face. It had been an illusion. She
sat back and went on holding his hand.
Two
quiet young officers in uniform had moved in and sat on chairs just inside the
door of the mobile hospital. One of them carried a portable tape recorder. They
did not trouble her, and she ignored them. They talked quietly, or read. At
intervals one or other of them changed places with a new arrival. Nurses came
and changed empty bottles of plasma and nutriment for new ones. Hours that
seemed like weeks crept by.
Once,
she found she had been asleep, and her heart pounded for fear she had missed a
flicker of consciousness. But there had been no change. Or had there?
"Peter!"
she said again. And the eyes opened. Looked at her. Puzzled.
"But—" he said
faintly. And then smiled.
"Yes," said Peter, pushing aside a
heap of photographs and keeping one back. "I saw things like that. A sort
of hugh rack of them, standing on the field at the
missile station."
"Good,"
said the intelligence lieutenant. He made a note. "We think they're oxygen
bottles. A lot of them were dug out of the place where the monster came from. How about this?"
Peter
studied it, frowning. "No. I don't think so. Big or
small?" The lieutenant indicated with his hands. "No."
"How about this, then?" The new picture showed an oblique overall view
of the missile station. It had been taken from the racing scanner missile and
its details were blurred. "Can you fill us in on some of these indistinct
objects?"
Peter hunted his memory, trying to gather
correspondences between the foreshortened aerial view and what he had seen
on the ground. i
"This
thing has changed since I saw it," he said at length. "I think. When
I was there it was all skeleton; struts and a few plates. Now it's grown. It's
been closed in."
"That
was our impression. That seems to be the thing about which everything's
revolving. Have you any idea what it is?"
"No."
Peter turned the photograph round and round. "Is it just possibly a sort
of armor-plated protection for the master? I know he was very angry when the
missiles fell on his headquarters. Maybe this is meant to serve instead of this
crazy kind of sedan chair we had to carry him around in."
"It's
possible, I suppose," the lieutenant said dubiously. "But my Godl It must weigh a hundred tons or morel"
"Do
you think that would bother him?" said Peter grimly, and shuddered as he
recalled things he had seen in Jacksonville. "He'd cheerfully make people
he down in the road and lubricate it with their blood to make it slide easily
if they couldn't carry it."
Mary
put a comforting hand on his shoulder, and he leant
his head sideways to touch it with his cheek. He had learned not to move the
hand that was no longer there.
"Okay,
and thank you," said the lieutenant as he shuffled the pictures into a
file. "Ill leave you
alone for a bit and let you rest. We really appreciate your help."
"The
poor bastards still there will appreciate it more," said Peter.
"They're letting me get up tomorrow. I'm coming out to the front and do
some work on the spot."
Something was definitely coming to a crux in
Jacksonville. The frantic tempo of work had slackened. Now the only remaining
pocket of haste was at the missile base, around the cryptic metal structure
that had been made of used car parts. Barghin smiled
dourly as he remembered how he had said he suspected the monster could make
rockets out of just that and other incredible scrap.
But it was growing dark, and after sunset
Jacksonville was like a dead city, without electric lights, moving vehicles or
even campfires. It was cold. Barghin pitied the
victims huddling together in half-wrecked buildings for warmth. If this
waiting had to continue into winter . . . Even though the climate here was
southerly and mild, exposure would surely claim many of the weakened slaves. It
wouldn't matter if they were well fed and clothed, but after rain, for
instance, they would succumb to pneumonia like com before the harvester.
He called in the scanner missile. It was too
dark to get usable pictures now. Tomorrow, they would know for sure what was
ahead.
XIX
The
first hint of the climax
came an hour before dawn.
The
watchers on the cordon were told by their mechanical ears and eyes of movement
ahead. Another army, like the one that had broken before
Mechanical Shovel? They triggered the floodlights and stared across the
suddenly brilliant countryside.
Yes.
Something of the kind. Only this was not the same
armed desperation as before. It was a steamroller advance, akin to the
unstoppable march of the recruits from Savannah and Brunswick. Doubtless these
were part of the same horde.
They
stopped momentarily as they passed the advance Watchposts; broke the searchlights, smashed the TV eyes and the microphones, and
went on. Their faces were dull, their steps slow. They came ahead like corpses.
Nervously,
wondering if they too were to be subjected to the lashing mental pain that must
be driving these strangers, the troops at the front of the cordon prepared to
meet them.
For
them, the lash of pain did not come. But the hordes from the monster's city
moved in among them, ignored calls to stop, ignored threats, shook off physical
restraint—and kept walking.
In
the confusion of night, it was hard to make out how many of them there were,
but it seemed that a quarter of a million at least of the monster's slaves had
been driven out on this crazy march. Sometimes they eddied around a military
vehicle and overturned it by brute force. Mostly, they continued ahead
steadily.
Barghin was dragged from sleep by a frantic orderly,
and rushed in his pajamas to the radio wagon, to consolidate and digest the
startled reports. His first thought was for the mobile field hospital unit in
the evacuated belt behind the cordon. The only man to have come back alive from
the monster's domain was there. He must be gotten out of the way of the
advance, and quickly.
A
dozen similar petty details occupied his mind for the first half hour after the
alarm, but then he began to notice something peculiar about the pattern he was
receiving. No serious damage was being done. The slaves were unarmed. The lash
of pain could follow them even here, but the troops among whom they were
advancing were not themselves suffering. It looked as though it ought to add
up to something. But what?
Report from a detachment of the medical corps. They had evolved a method of dealing with
the slaves. Three soldiers held them down while a medical orderly jabbed them
full of anaesthetic. They had nearly a hundred
unconscious now, and were running low on supplies. ^
Ingenious,
Barghin thought, and ordered all the stocks of anaesthetic that could be found to be commandeered and
brought to the area.
Another
group reported. They were using cruder methods of cracking the slaves over the
head. They said they were doing it only to men of good physique. Women and
children they were letting through into the evacuated area.
That
was a point. The evacuated area was thirty miles deep most of the way on the
western side. He gave amending orders so that the anaesthetics
and the medics would be waiting on the other side of the evacuated zone. By
then, the wave of slaves would be tired out and easier to deal with, as well as
there being longer to prepare for them. They wouldn't make it across the zone
till evening, at their present .rate of progress. He ordered all units not
actually engaged with the slaves to go to ground and let them pass without
opposition, and countermanded all attempts to halt their progress.
So
whatever the original aim of this outflow of human robots, its energy was
going to be dispersed uselessly, and the sum total of
its effect would be to incapacitate a number of advance observation posts. Barghin frowned. Why had so large a number of slaves
suddenly become redundant in the monster's opinion? There must be a key
somewhere. He wished it were dawn, so that the scanner missile could get some
pictures of what was happening in the city itself.
Maybe—maybe
it was intended only as a diversion. Maybe the monster was consolidating,
having completed the task he had planned. Maybe he was ready to launch nuclear
attacks in revenge for the missiles that had so narrowly missed him.
Maybe
he had something up his sleeve which human beings had never dreamed of.
The
drone of a 'copter coming in nearby interrupted his musing. "Go see if
that's the Trants, and if it is get me someone from
Intelligence and bring them here right away," he commanded an orderly. The
man saluted and doubled away.
It
was the Trants. Peter, his stump swathed in bandages,
was walking with his arm around Mary, and his feet seemed uncertain. As soon as
he came into the command vehicle, Barghin made him
sit down.
"I'm
sorry to haul you out of bed like that," he said. "I heard from Lewicz that you were fit to get up today, though, and with
this crazy bunch of zombies going straight for the field hospital I figured you
were safer here than there. How do you feel?"
Peter
managed a wry grin. "Tottering," he said. "But I'm fine
otherwise."
The
intelligence lieutenant who had interviewed Peter the previous evening came in,
saluted, and went to one side with his files of data. "Right," Barghin grunted. "Trant,
you're in a better position to guess at the monster's way of handling his
slaves than we are. I'm inclined to think that this outburst of two hundred
thousand people is a feint. Do you think he rates us high enough to think it
worth confusing us?"
Peter
shook his head. "Not unless he's learnt some lessons in the past few days.
When I left, he was still treating us like vermin, beneath his notice. I think
that fits with the way I was able to walk out of the town. He regarded me as expended."
-
"On
the other hand," ventured the lieutenant, "the first reports we've
had of the composition of the victims who've left the city shows that they're
mostly business types. We find very few practical men among them, engineering
hands, or factory operatives. It's hard to tell, naturally. But perhaps the
technicians and technologists have been kept back because their skills are
useful."
"If
that is the case," Peter agreed, "I'm wrong. Maybe it's my impression
because while I was there there was little more
complex going on than shifting rubble and wrecking cars, jobs anyone could do.
This work at the missile base, though. It might have been worth his while to
find engineers and so on."
"In
which case, that can be counted as a signal victory,"
said Barghin. "To have made him recognize that
we do have intelligence is worth taking notice of. As I see it, in the
beginning he'd cheerfully have employed university professors to dig ditches.
Now he's catching on that it's simpler to use people who already know what he
wants done."
"But what does he want?" said Mary heavily.
"I
have a hunch we're going to find out," said Barghin.
He checked his watch. Thirty-five minutes to full dawn. He turned to the
radioman, who was yawning enormously. "Get me a volunteer pilot to take a
'copter out over the city," he said. "If the troops out here aren't
getting the monster's treatment, there's a chance we may at long last be able
to go and look at the city for ourselves."
A
quarter of an hour later the report came back that the pilot had been low over
the city, down to five hundred feet, without either being able to make put
details of what if anything was happening or being struck by the monster's
mental lash. Barghin digested the news in complete
silence, and then stood up straight.
"Well,
I think I'd like to see what's been happening. I'm tired of this fighting in
the dark. This may be only a momentary lapse on the monster's part, but we
must take full advantage of it. Maybe he's decided he can do without human aid
altogether, in which case we can fire our nuclear missile and dispose of him.
Maybe the whole surviving population has come out of the city, and they've been
building him robot slaves."
"But what if he let that 'copter alone
to lure us into doing just this?" Mary said.
Barghin shrugged. "I've got the same automatic
pilot on all these 'copters as the one that brought your husband here back from
discovering the'Queen
Alexandra. And
our counter-missile batteries are set to hit anything that goes up from the
Jacksonville base. It's not much of a risk."
"In
that case, I'd like to come along," said Peter steadily. He looked at his
wife with eyes that pleaded for understanding. "I'll probably be able to
see the pattern of the changes that have been taking place lately. Maybe the experts
will be able to deduce new information from them."
The big 'copter went cautiously at first, in
case the success of the earlier trip had been due to a loophole in the defenses
that had now been closed. But no missile whined skywards into the gray dawn,
and their minds remained free of the monster's pain.
This
was a twenty-passenger machine. Barghin had had it crammed with a TV transmitter, film cameras, recording
devices, and their operators. The intelligence lieutenant made
scribbled notes and kept the microphone of his tape recorder close to Peter's
face for his comments.
They
stared down across the city, which seemed almost as scarred and dead as the
surface of the moon. It was virtually lifeless. A- few
birds could be seen. Their binoculars revealed victims huddled in sheltered
corners who might or might not be alive. That was all.
"Nothing,"
said Peter in a despondent tone. "Or almost nothing.
I don't know where the master has taken refuge—the monster, as you say.
Curious, isn't it? When one has to work under his power for a while, he gets
the feeling that he really is a superior kind of being. The torture proves it,
eventually. It's like brainwashing."
"Did
you help move him from the church where he went to after City Hall?"
"Yes.
But after that I got fever, and I don't remember if we took him anywhere
special afterwards. How about what's going on at the missile station?"
Barghin took a deep breath. "It's the chanciest
place," he said. "Well have to stand off far enough for a
counter-missile to get at anything they throw at us. But all right. If we must,
we must. Pilotl"
And here there was
movement.
Around
the now apparently completed shell of the mysterious object'they
had thrown together out of scrap, many slaves lay exhausted on the open ground.
Remembering how often he too had fallen where he stood, Peter felt a surge of
bitter pity.
But
among them still moved staggering figures, mostly men in engineer's overalls,
some of them carrying instruments that the watchers could not identify because
they were standing off instead of flying over-the site. The sky brightened.
And
then Peter tried to clutch Bargnin's shoulder with
his left hand. Only his stump moved, of course, and the pain of striking the
raw end blinded him for a moment and made him cry out.
"Get
us away!" snapped Barghin, fearing that the
monster's lash had descended.
"No!
No, it's only my stump!" said Peter. "But didn't you see? Didn't you
notice? A flash of green under that—that thing standing bn the field. A flash of green
light that went clear underneath!"
Puzzled,
Barghin shook his head. "I saw it," offered
the man operating the movie cameras.
"And
didn't you notice?" pressed Peter. "There's nothing under that thing! It must weigh a good hundred tons. And there's nothing
holding it up! It's just floating!"
"You
must be mistaken," said Barghin shortly. He
adjusted focus on his binoculars and looked again. "No, there's not enough
light to see yet, but—Now I think we really had better get out of here. I think the monster's coming."
They
stared anxiously. Sure enough, out of one of the vast hangars where the
missiles were serviced, a line of chanting slaves was trudging. And, just
before the 'copter whirred away, they glimpsed the
monster coming into the light of day.
XX
Barghin shouldered his way past the technician
operating the recording machines, and bent to the microphone of the radio. The
air was already full of countermessages about the
situation around the cordon. Barghin got hold of the
command vehicle at base and ordered a direct circuit to the main transmitter.
"All
units, attention!" he snapped. "Prepare for counter-missile action,
casualty action, aerial action at all levels, possible nuclear attacks on
cities. The monster's at the Jacksonville missile base, and he has something
new!"
Staring
with aching eyes through his binoculars, Peter felt his heart sink. The monster
was being taken out to the strange object. He was sure he had seen it floating! And the green light was back again, bright now,
seeming almost solid between the thing and
the ground.
And then—
"Oh God!"
whispered Peter sofdy. "Look at that!"
Startled
exclamations revealed that the other passengers had seen it too. Barghin ordered the pilot to interrupt their panicky flight
and circle at constant distance, because whatever the risk was now, they
couldn't afford to miss this most incredible sight.
Steadily,
on a column of luminescent green which violated every law of optics Peter could
think of, the metal shell was rising from the ground. Majestically; as lightly
and yet as placidly as a balloon in dead calm air . . .
"What's
he going to do?" ^wondered Barghin aloud.
"Is he armed? Is he going to use that as a permanent mobile headquarters?
Or is he just going to go straight on up? Because if he gets higher than a few
thousand feet, do you realize what this means? He's put himself at our
mercy!"
"Yes,
of course," Peter breathed. There was a nuclear missile waiting, back
behind the evacuated area. If the monster was going to rise far enough for the
explosion to avoid injuring the people below, they could at long last use it.
"General!"
crackled a voice from the radio. "We have a bogey in our sights, rising on
some kind of green rockets from the missile base. Do we fire?" The speaker
seemed to be in a state of tension-controlled terror. His voice shook.
"No!"
snapped Barghin. "On no account provoke him till
we see whether he's going up or along!"
The
thing was still rising, gathering speed now. Barghin
hesitated, narrow-eyed, and bent to the microphone again.
"Get
me in circuit with Last Resort," he ordered. When he was connected, he
said, "He's still going up. Are you ready to blow?"
"We're
counted down to six, general," was the reply. "I'm holding it
there."
"Let's
see, you're about forty-eight miles off, aren't you? When his .azimuth angle
hits twenty degrees, you can blow."
"Right,
general!" said the voice excitedly. "And believe me, the pleasure
will be all ours."
Does
he know? Peter
wondered, watching the drifting, puzzling ascent of the monster's craft. Was he
perhaps aware that he was laying himself open to the horrible vengeance he had
only escaped because these human beings he had considered primitive were not
primitive enough to condemn their own species to a nuclear hell until there was
no other path open?
Perhaps
he was. Perhaps it was shaming to him that the creatures he regarded as
expendable vermin should have proved his match, and his code of honor as an
allegedly superior being demanded that he suffer death for his failure. They
might never know unless one day, out there among the stars where men were also
going, their species' paths crossed again.
The craft was moving sideways a little, as
though surveying the city below, or jockeying for a course which demanded
absolute precision of planning. Peter's mouth was dry,
and he could hear Barghin muttering to himself.
And
then it went.
It was as though the column
of green, whose brilliance had become nearly blinding, stretched and vanished,
leaving no trace but a reddish after-image. They felt the 'copter rock in the
wind of the going of it, while they threw their heads back in a vain effort to
see where it had gone.
"We
beat him, anyway," said Barghin. "He's
heading back to space, looks like. I'm only sorry he got off so lighdy. But we've never built anything that could climb
like that."
He spoke to the microphone.
"Last Resort, did you blow?"
"He
took us by surprise, general," the answer came, apologetically. "We
must have undershot by literally a mile. My God, general, what's he using for
power?"
"How
should I know? Maybe when we can question the technicians who worked for him,
we'll be able to piece it together for ourselves—"
"Holy God, no!" The radio voice interrupted in tones of horror. "General, we've
lost the missile! They were trying to get it back on course, but it's gone."
"What?
How? Where was it last on track?" Visions of a kiloton warhead flaring at
random filled Barghin's mind. Maybe it had even been
seized by the monster! "Quickly!"
"It
intersected the green column," said the radio voice. "It was dead on
course. Only the monster wasn't there any longer. And since then—"
"General,"
said Peter quietly, staring upwards through the window of the 'copter.
"There's your missile, or I'm much mistaken. And what's more, it seems to
have done its job."
Barghin followed his stare incredulously. Against
the lightening sky of dawn, a slowly expanding ball of fire was shining like
an enormous morning star.
Very faintly, distant thunder came to them.
"Yes, we got confirmation from both the
space stations and the lunar base," said Barghin.
"As we figure it, Mr. President, that column of green on which the
monster's ship went up was a sort of visible by-product of a raging controlled
energy. Not nuclear. Electro-gravitic, they tell me.
And inside the column, space was twisted. Changed. It
doesn't make sense to anyone but a physicist or a mathematician. We guess that the laws of gravity didn't apply inside that
column, and that was why the monster's ship could go up so fast.
"Only
the speed with which the missile arrived enabled it to penetrate -the outside
of the column. Inside, gravity was polarized, or something. What it amounts to
is that the missile flew straight up, along the column, instead of continuing
horizontally. And about a hundred and ten miles up, it caught up with the
monster, and ..."
The
President ran bis finger around the neck of his
shirt. He said, "Well, I suppose it doesn't matter exacdy
how it happened, so long as it did happen. Things
will be back to normal in a litüe while, I guess, though reports I've seen on the state of the casualties
they're bringing out of Jacksonville means that a hell of a lot of people are
going to be in mental homes for a while . . . Dr. Gordon, do your people think
there are any more monsters like that hiding under the sea?"
Gordon
shook his head. "Lord knows," he said. "I hope not. And in fact
I doubt it. It was probably a mfUion-to-one
chance that we alerted this one, so even if others are hiding down there, they
won't be awakened till we really begin to explore the great depths."
He
buried his face in his hands. "I was so sure," he murmured.
"When we found Atlántica,
I thought we'd found AÜantis, and maybe the secrets of a lost civilization."
"Well,"
said Peter, "in a way we did. Only the secrets were not very pleasant
ones. How far might we not have come by now if our ancestors in those days
hadn't had the weight of him and
his kind on their necks!"
"I
must say it's going to give a lot of people qualms when the next batch of
appropriations for space research comes up," said the President bluntiy. "Myself
included, I think. If that thing was a sample of the life that grows on other
worlds, then—"
"On
the contrary, Mr. President," said Peter. "That thing had experience
before it came to Earth, I think. This implies that it had met races similar to
ours, and when we go out to the stars we're going to find other species similar to man, as well as
monsters like the one we unearthed. We dealt with him. I'd almost be inclined
to give up oceanography and go into space research just for the privilege of
being among the first to meet another race like ourselves."
"Only
we're going to have to be hellishly careful," said Barghin.
'Well have to go out with H-bombs in one hand and the pipe of peace in the
other, and I'm afraid we shall probably guess wrong when it comes to choosing
between them. But it's the only way."
The
President smiled suddenly. "I'm glad that thing was found when it
was," he said. "From the purely personal point of view, I'm pretty
sure the public at large will regard it as something that happened during my
term of office, and it will count heavily against me. But if it had come up,
say, fifteen or twenty years ago, when there were nuclear weapons poking out
from under every stone, the use of an H-bomb on Jacksonville would have
triggered a war even if we warned the public why it was being used. They'd have
assumed the monster was a Russian secret weaponl"
"Or
a century ago," supplied Barghin. "When we'd only have had guns to oppose it, instead of
missiles, and no television to give us information from robot watchposts. We would be slaving for him still."
The whole appalling horror, Peter reflected,
had directly afflicted perhaps one in a thousand of the people in the world.
That included those who suffered under the monster's lash, those who manned the
cordon, those who struggled to extract information about him from his behaviour and to locate his psychological and physical
weaknesses, those who treated the sick after he had hurt them, and those who
fled their homes and were now straggling back.
And they had got the better
of him in a few short months.
It
was a good augury. When they met his kind again, it would not be the effort of
a mere one-tenth of one per cent of man that opposed their strength to the monsters. It would be—it
would have to be—one hundred per cent.
He
would not be among them. He moved his stump tentatively. Not in person. But at
least, if he was no longer whole in body, he was whole and free in his mind.
Which was more than the monster's subjects had been the first time he
appeared on Earth.
He
looked across at Mary, and the memory of Luke came into his mind. Poor devil!
What was the secret that he had been about to reveal and never was allowed to
utter? Peter could not be sure, but he was fairly certain it was connected with
the fact that Luke had managed to secure a position of trust in the monster's
retinue while all the time scheming to oppose him. It was something only a free
man could know.
Men
change their gods, and when they have changed them often enough they cease to
fear their power.
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