Unless I have lost
count, which is entirely possible, Shadow on the Stars was my sixth
novel—which makes it a very early work even among my early work;
because in the far-off days of the 1950’s I was writing a novel every
few months, and I had a couple of dozen of the things on my record
before I sprouted my first gray hair.
Beyond any doubt my first book
was the juvenile novel, Revolt on Alpha C, which I wrote in 1954 when I
was still practically a juvenile myself. Then came another juvenile,
Starman’s Quest, in 1956, and later that year my first ostensibly adult
novel, The Thirteenth Immortal and in early 1957 the quite respectable
novel Master of Life and Death—which probably ought to be given another
turn in print one of these days. A few months later I wrote Invaders
from Earth, another early book that causes me no embarrassment today.
That’s five, and so Shadow on the Stars, written in October of 1957,
would be the sixth. Of course, there were also the two “Robert Randall”
collaborations with Randall Garrett, The Shrouded Planet and The
Dawning of Light, in 1955 and 1956, but those weren’t solo jobs. And
there were a couple of items like the pseudonymous Lest We Forget Thee,
O Earth (1957) and Invisible Barriers (1957) that were patched together
out of previously published magazine pieces, but they weren’t
originally conceived as full-length novels, and I don’t feel like
counting them, and I hope you’ll be willing to ignore them too. So the
book you are now holding is my sixth novel, give or take a few
exceptions and footnotes.
It was written at the behest of
the late Larry T. Shaw, a bespectacled and pipesmoking gentleman who
edited a pair of magazines called Infinity and Science Fiction
Adventures. Shaw, an old-time s-f fan, might have had a splendid career
as an editor if he had ever found a major publisher to back him, for
his taste was superb and he had the useful knack of coaxing writers to
do their best work without seeming actually to be nagging them; but it
was his fate always to work for marginal companies in short-lived
ventures. Infinity was his special pride, a low-budget magazine that
ran high-budget stories by the likes of Arthur C. Clarke, Isaac Asimov,
James Blish, Damon Knight, C.M. Kornbluth, and Algis Budrys; it even
published Harlan Ellison’s first science fiction story. I was a regular
contributor to Infinity and many of my best short stories appeared
there. The companion magazine, Science Fiction Adventures, was less
ambitious, a blood-and-thunder operation done strictly for fun,
featuring novelets of interstellar intrigue and blazing ray-guns. I was
a regular contributor to SFA, too: in fact, I practically wrote the
whole magazine. As I look through my file copies, I see a long story or
two by me (usually under some pseudonym) in virtually every
issue—“Battle for the Thousand Suns,” “Slaves of the Star Giants,”
“Spawn of the Deadly Sea,” and so on. I had fun writing these
melodramas of the spaceways, and the readers evidently enjoyed them
too, for my stories (under whatever pseudonym) were usually the most
popular offerings in each issue.
The original format of SFA
provided Three Complete New Action Novels (actually, novelets 15,000 to
20,000 words in length) in each issue, plus a few short stories and
features. But with the seventh issue, October, 1957, editor Shaw
decided to vary the pattern a bit, running only two “novels,” a long
one and a short one. I was his most reliable contributor, so he asked
me to write the “Book-Length Novel” to lead off that issue. I turned in
a 28,000-word piece called “Thunder Over Starhaven,” which appeared
under a pseudonym and which I eventually expanded into a novel. The
innovation was successful, apparently, for soon Shaw tried another
experiment: filling virtually an entire issue with one novel.
Again he asked me to do the job.
This time it was agreed that the story would appear under my own
byline, since “Robert Silverberg” was by now a better known name than
any of the pseudonyms I had been using in the magazine; and, since the
story would bear my own name, I was a trifle less flamboyant about
making use of the pulp-magazine cliches beloved by the magazine’s
readers. There would be no hissing villains and basilisk-eyed
princesses in this one, no desperate duels with dagger and mace, no
feudal overlords swaggering about the stars. Rather, I would write a
straightforward science-fiction novel, strongly plotted—but not unduly
weighted toward breathless adventure.
“Shadow on the Stars” is what I
called it, and that was the name it appeared under in the April, 1958
issue of Science Fiction Adventures. The cover announced in big yellow
letters, “A COMPLETE NEW BOOK—35¢” and indeed it did take up most
of the issue, spanning 112 of the 130 pages and leaving room only for
two tiny short stories and the feature columns. Mainly it was a
time-paradox novel—a theme that always has fascinated me—but there was
at least one concession to the traditional policy of the magazine, a
vast space battle involving an “unstoppable armada” of “seven hundred
seventy-five dreadnoughts.” I chose to handle the big battle scene,
though, in a very untraditional underplayed manner, as you will see;
and I did a bit of fooling around with the ending, too, providing two
twentieth chapters.
The readers loved it. The
next issue was full of letters of praise, including one that said,
“Silverberg is becoming a really disciplined artist,” and asserted that
“Shadow on the Stars” seemed somehow to synthesize the previously
antithetical traditions of Robert A. Heinlein and E.E. Smith.
(Actually, I thought it owed more to A.E. van Vogt.) And then Science
Fiction Adventures went out of business, for reasons unconnected with
the quantity of material I was contributing to it. A lot of magazines
folded in 1958, including a few that I never wrote for at all.
The next destination for
“Shadow on the Stars” was Ace Books. Editor Donald A. Wollheim bought
it, retitled it Stepsons of Terra, and published it later in 1958 in
his Ace Double Novel series, with a book by a British writer, Lan
Wright, on the other side.
What Lan Wright is doing
these days, I have no idea: But here is Shadow on the Stars, back in
print under its original title for the first time since its historic
original appearance more than forty years ago, for your amusement.
Robert Silverberg
Oakland, California
October, 2000
Ewing woke slowly,
sensing the coldness all about him. It was slowly withdrawing down the
length of his body; his head and shoulders were out of the freeze now,
the rest of his body gradually emerging. He stirred as well as he
could, and the delicately spun web of foam that had cradled him in the
journey across space shivered as he moved.
He extended a hand and heaved
downward on the lever six
inches from his wrist. A burst
of fluid shot forward from the spinnerettes above him, dissolving the
web that bound him. The coldness drained from his legs. Stiffly he
rose, moving as if he were very old, and stretched gingerly.
He had slept eleven months,
fourteen days, and some six hours, according to the panel above his
sleeping area. The panel registered time in Galactic Absolute Units.
And the second, the Galactic Absolute Unit of temporal measure, was an
arbitrary figure, accepted by the galaxy only because it had been
devised by the mother world.
Ewing touched an enameled stud
and a segment of the inner surface of the ship’s wall swung away,
revealing a soft glowing vision-plate. A planet hung centered in the
green depths of the plate—a planet green itself, with vast seas
bordering its continents.
Earth.
Ewing knew what his next task
was. Moving quickly, now that circulation was returning to his thawed
limbs, he strode to the compact bulk of the subetheric generator on the
opposite wall and spun the contact dial. A blue light glowed.
“Baird Ewing speaking,” he said
to the pickup grid. “I wish to report that I’ve taken up a position in
orbit around Earth after a successful flight. All’s well so far. I’ll
be descending to Earth shortly. Further reports will follow.”
He broke contact. This very
moment, he knew, his words were leaping across the galaxy toward his
home world, via subetheric carrier wave. Fifteen days would elapse
before his message arrived on Corwin.
Ewing had wanted to stay awake,
all the long months of his solitary trip. There was reading he wanted
to do, and music disks to play. The idea of spending nearly a year
asleep was appalling to him; all that time wasted!
But they had been adamant.
“You’re crossing sixteen parsecs of space in a one-man ship,” they told
him. “Nobody can stay awake all that time and come out of it sane,
Ewing, And we need you sane.”
He tried to protest. It was no
good. The people of Corwin were sending him to Earth at great expense
to do a job of vital importance; unless they could be absolutely
certain that he would arrive in good condition, they would do better
sending someone else. Reluctantly, Ewing yielded. They lowered him into
the nutrient bath and showed him how to trip the foot levers that
brought about suspension and the hand levers that would release him
when his time was up. They sealed off his ship and shot it into the
dark, a lonely raft on the broad sea, a coffin-sized spaceship built
for one ….
§
At least ten minutes
went by before he was fully restored to normal physiological
functioning. He stared in the mirror at the strange silken stubble that
had sprouted on his face. He looked oddly emaciated; he had never been
a fleshy man, but now, he looked skeletonic, his cheeks shrunken, his
skin tight-drawn over the jutting bones of his face. His hair seemed to
have faded too; it had been a rich auburn on that day in 3805 when he
left Corwin on his emergency mission to Earth, but now it was a dark,
nondescript mud-brown. Ewing was a big man, long-muscled rather than
stocky, with a fierce expression contradicted by mild, questioning
eyes.
His stomach felt hollow. His
shanks were spindly. He felt drained of vigor.
But there was a job to do.
Adjoining the subetheric
generator was an insystem communicator. He switched it on, staring at
the pale ball that was Earth in the screen on the far wall. A crackle
of static rewarded him. He held his breath, waiting, waiting for the
first words he would have heard in pure Terrestrial. He wondered if
they would understand his Anglo-Corwin.
After all, it was nearly a
thousand years since the colony had been planted, and almost five
hundred since the people of Corwin had last had intercourse of any kind
with Earth. Languages diverge, in five hundred years.
A voice said, “Earth
station Double Prime. Who calls, please? Speak up. Speak, please.”
Ewing smiled. It was
intelligible!
He said, “One-man ship out
of the Free World of Corwin calling. I’m in a stabilized orbit fifty
thousand kilometers above Earth ground level. Request permission to
land at coördinates of your designation.”
There was a long silence,
too long to be attributed sheerly to transmission lag. Ewing wondered
if he had spoken too quickly, or if his words had lost their
Terrestrial meanings.
Finally came a response:
“Free World of which, did you say?”
“Corwin. Epsilon Ursae
Majoris XII. It’s a former Terrestrial colony.”
Again there was an
uncomfortable pause. “Corwin… Corwin. Oh. I guess it’s okay for you to
land. You have a warp-drive ship?”
“Yes,” Ewing said. “With
photonic modifiers, of course. And ion-beam for atmospheric passage.”
His Earthside respondent
said, “Are photonic modifiers radioactive?”
Ewing was taken aback for
a moment. Frowning at the speaker grid, he said, “If you mean
radioactive in the normal sense of emitting hard particles, no. The
photonic modifier merely converts—” He stopped. “Do I have to explain
the whole thing to you?”
“Not unless you want to
stay up there all day, Corwin. If your ship’s not hot, come on down.
Coördinates for landing will follow.”
Ewing carefully jotted the
figures down as they came in, read them back for confirmation, thanked
the Earthman, and signed off. He integrated the figures and programmed
them for the ship’s calculators.
His throat felt dry.
Something about the Earthman’s tone of voice troubled him. The man had
been too flip, careless of mind, impatient.
Perhaps I was expecting
too much, Ewing thought. After all, he was just doing a routine job.
It was a jarring
beginning, nonetheless. Ewing realized he, like the Corwinites, had a
highly idealized mental image of an Earthman as a being compassionately
wise, physically superb, a superman in all respects. It would be
disappointing to learn that the fabled inhabitants of the legendary
motherworld were mere human beings themselves, like their remote
descendants on the colony worlds.
Ewing strapped himself in
for the downward jaunt through the atmospheric blanket of Earth and
nudged the lever that controlled the autopilot. The ultimate leg of his
journey had begun. Within an hour, he would actually stand on the soil
of Earth herself.
I hope they’ll be able to
help us, he thought. Bright in his mind was a vivid mental image:
faceless hordes of barbaric Klodni sweeping down on the galaxy out of
Andromeda, devouring world after world in their relentless drive inward
toward civilization’s heart.
Already four worlds had
fallen to the Klodni since the aliens had begun their campaign of
conquest. The timetable said they would reach Corwin within the next
decade.
Cities destroyed, women
and children carried into slavery, the glittering spire of the World
Building a charred ruin, the University destroyed, the fertile fields
blackened by the Klodni scorched-earth tactics—
Ewing shuddered as his
tiny ship spiraled Earthward, bobbing in the thickening layers of
atmosphere. Earth will help us, he told himself comfortingly, Earth
will save her colonies from conquest.
Ewing felt capillaries
bursting under the increasing drag of deceleration. He gripped the
handrests and shouted to relieve the tension on his eardrums, but there
was no way of relieving the tension within. The thunder of his jets
boomed through the framework of the ship, and the green planet grew
frighteningly huge in the clear plastic of the view-screen.
§
Minutes later,
the ship came to rest on a broad ferroconcrete landing apron; it hung
poised a moment on its own jet-wash, then settled gently to earth. With
gravity-heavy fingers Ewing unfastened himself. Through the
vision-screen he saw small beetle-like autotrucks come rumbling over
the field toward his ship. The decontamination squad, no doubt;
robot-manned, of course.
He waited until they had
done their job, then sprung the hatch on his ship and climbed out. The
air smelled good—strange, since his home had a twenty-three percent
oxygen content, two parts in a hundred richer than Earth’s—and the day
was warm.
Ewing spied the vaulting
sweep of a terminal building and headed toward it.
A robot, blocky and
faceless, scanned him with photo-beams as he passed through the
swinging doors. Within, the terminal was a maze of blinking lights,
red-green, on-off, up-down. Momentarily, Ewing was dazed.
Beings of all kinds
thronged the building. Ewing saw four semi-humanoid forms with bulbous
heads engaged in a busy discussion near where he stood. Further in the
distance swarms of more Terrestrial beings moved about. Ewing was
startled by their appearance.
Some were “normal” —oddly
muscular and rugged-looking, but not so much that they would cause any
surprised comment on Corwin. But the others!
Dressed flamboyantly in
shimmering robes of turquoise and black, gray and gold, they presented
a weird sight. One had no ears; his skull was bare, decorated only by
jeweled pendants that seemed to be riveted to the flesh of his scalp.
Another had one leg and supported himself by a luminous crutch. A third
wore gleaming emeralds on a golden nose ring.
No two of them seemed to
look alike. As a trained student of cultural patterns, Ewing was aware
of the cause of the phenomenon; overelaboration of decoration was a
common evolution for highly advanced societies, such as Earth’s. But it
made him feel terribly provincial to see the gaudy display. Corwin was
a new world, even after a thousand years of colonization; such fancies
were yet to take root there.
Hesitantly, he approached
the group of dandified Terrestrials nearest him. They were chattering
in artificial-sounding, high-pitched voices.
“Pardon,” Ewing said.
“I’ve just arrived from the Free World of Corwin. Is there some place
where I can register with the authorities?”
The conversation ceased as
if cut off with an ax. The trio whirled, facing Ewing. “You be from a
colony world?” asked the uniped, in barely intelligible accents.
Ewing nodded. “Corwin.
Sixteen parsecs away. We were settled by Earth a thousand years ago.”
They exchanged words at a
speed that made comprehension impossible; it seemed like a private
language, some made-up doubletalk. Ewing watched the rouged faces,
feeling distaste.
“Where can I register with
the authorities?” he asked again, a little stiffly.
The earless one giggled
shrilly. “What authorities? This is Earth, friend! We come and go as we
please.”
A sense of uneasiness grew
in Ewing. He disliked these Terrestrials almost upon sight, after just
a moment’s contact.
A new voice, strange,
harshly accented, said, “Did I hear you say you were from a colony?”
Ewing turned. One of-the
“normal” Terrestrials was speaking to him—a man about five-feet-eight,
with a thick, squarish face, beetling brows looming over dark
smoldering eyes, and a cropped, bullet-shaped head. His voice was dull
and ugly sounding.
“I’m from Corwin,” Ewing
said.
The other frowned,
screwing up his massive brows. He said, “Where’s that?”
“Sixteen parsecs. Epsilon
Ursae Majoris XII. Earth colony.”
“And what are you doing on
Earth?”
The belligerent tone
annoyed Ewing. The Corwinite said, in a bleak voice, “I’m an officially
accredited ambassador from my world to the government of Earth. I’m
looking for the customs authority.”
“There are none,” the
squat man said. “The Earthers did away with them about a century back.
Couldn’t be bothered with them, they said.” He grinned in cheerful
contempt at the three dandies, who had moved further away and were
murmuring busily to each other in their private language. “The Earthers
can’t hardly be bothered with anything.”
Ewing was puzzled. “Aren’t
you from Earth yourself? I mean—”
“Me?” The deep chest
emitted a rumbling, sardonic chuckle. “You folk really are isolated,
aren’t you? I’m a Sirian. Sirius IV—oldest Terrestrial colony there is.
Suppose we get a drink. I want to talk to you.”
Chapter 2
Somewhat
unwillingly, Ewing followed the burly Sirian through the thronged
terminal toward a refreshment room at the far side of the arcade. As
soon as they were seated at a gleaming translucent table, the Sirian
stared levelly at Ewing and said, “First things come first. What’s your
name?”
“Baird Ewing. You?”
“Rollun Firnik. What brings you
to Earth, Ewing?”
Firnik’s manner was offensively
blunt. Ewing toyed with the golden-amber drink the Sirian had bought
for him, sipped it idly, put it down. “I told you,” he said quietly.
“I’m an ambassador from the government of Corwin to the government of
Earth. It’s as simple as that.”
“It is? When did you people last
have any contact with the rest of the galaxy?”
“Five hundred years ago. But—”
“Five hundred years,” Firnik
repeated speculatively. “And now you decide to reopen contact with
Earth.” He squinted at Ewing, chin resting on balled fist. “Just like
that. Poof! Enter one ambassador. It isn’t just out of sociability, is
it, Ewing? What’s the reason behind your visit?”
“I’m not familiar with the
latest news in this sector of the galaxy,” Ewing said. “Have you heard
any mention of the Klodni?”
“Klodni?” the Sirian repeated.
“No. The name doesn’t mean a thing to me. Should it?”
“News travels slowly through the
galaxy,” Ewing said. “The Klodni are a humanoid race that
evolved—somewhere in the Andromeda star cluster. I’ve seen solidographs
of them. They’re little greasy creatures, about five feet high, with a
sort of ant-like civilization. A war-fleet of Klodni is on the move.”
Firnik rolled an eyebrow upward.
He said nothing.
“A couple thousand Klodni ships
entered our galaxy about four years ago. They landed on Barnholt—that’s
a colony world about a hundred fifty light-years deeper in space than
we are—and wiped the place clean. After about a year they picked up and
moved on. They’ve been to four planets so far, and no one’s been able
to stop them yet. They swarm over a planet and destroy everything they
see, then go on to the next world.”
“What of it?”
“We’ve plotted their probable
course. They’re going to attack Corwin in ten years or so, give or take
one year either way. We know we can’t fight them back, either. We just
aren’t a militarized people. And we can’t militarize in less than ten
years and hope to win.” Ewing paused, sipped at his drink. It was
surprisingly mild, he thought.
He went on: “As soon as the
nature of the Klodni menace became known, we radioed a message to Earth
explaining the situation and asking for help. We got no answer, even
figuring in the subetheric lag. We radioed again. Still no reply from
Earth.”
“So you decided to send an
ambassador,” Firnik said. “Figuring your messages must have gone
astray, no doubt. You wanted to negotiate for help at first hand.”
“Yes.”
The Sirian chuckled. “You know
something? It’s three hundred years since anybody on Earth last fired
anything deadlier than a popgun. They’re total pacifists.”
“That can’t be true!”
Suddenly the sardonic amiability
left Firnik. His voice was almost toneless as he said, “I’ll forgive
you this time, because you’re a stranger and don’t know the customs.
But the next time you call me a liar I’ll kill you.”
Ewing’s jaw stiffened.
Barbarian, he thought. Out loud he said, “In other word, I’ve wasted my
time by coming here, then?”
The Sirian shrugged
unconcernedly. “Better fight your own battles. The Earthers can’t help
you.”
“But they’re in danger too,”
Ewing protested. “Do you think the Klodni are going to stop before
they’ve reached Earth?”
“How long do you think it’ll
take them to get as far as Earth?” Firnik asked.
“A century at least.”
“A century. All right. They have
to pass through Sirius IV on their way to Earth. We’ll take care of
them when the time comes.”
And I came sixteen parsecs
across the galaxy to ask for help, Ewing thought.
He stood up. “It’s been
very interesting talking to you. And thanks for the drink.”
“Good luck to you,” the
Sirian said in parting. It was not meant in a spirit of cheer. It
sounded openly derisive, Ewing thought.
He made his way through
the crowded room to the long shining-walled corridor of the spaceport
arcade. A ship was blasting off outside on the ferroconcrete apron;
Ewing watched it a moment as it thundered out of sight. He realized
that if any truth lay in the Sirian’s words, he might just as well
return to Corwin now and report failure.
But it was hard to accept
the concept of a decadent, spineless Earth. True, they had had no
contact with the mother world for five centuries; but the legend still
gleamed on Corwin and the other colony worlds of its immediate galactic
area—the legend of the mother planet where human life first began,
hundreds of centuries before.
He remembered the stories
of the pioneers of space, the first bold venturers to the other
planets, then the brave colonists who had extended Earth’s sway to half
a thousand worlds. Through a natural process, contact with the homeland
had withered in the span of years; there was little reason for
self-sufficient worlds a sky apart to maintain anything as
fantastically expensive as interstellar communication systems simply
for reasons of sentiment. A colony world has economic problems as it.
is.
There had always been the
legend of Earth, though, to guide the Corwinites. When trouble arose,
Earth would be there to help.
Now there was trouble on
the horizon. And Earth, Ewing thought. Can we count on her help?
He watched the throngs of
bejeweled dandies glumly, and wondered.
He paused by a railing
that looked out over the wide sweep of the spacefield. A plaque,
copperhued, proclaimed the fact that this particular section of the
arcade had been erected A.D. 2716. Ewing, a newcomer in an ancient
world, felt a tingle of awe. The building in which he stood had been
constructed more than a century before the first ships from Earth
blasted down on Corwin, which then had been only a nameless world on
the star charts. And the men who .had built this building, eleven
hundred years ago, were as remote in space-time from the present-day
Terrans as were the people of Corwin at this moment.
It was a bitter thought,
that he had wasted his trip. There was his wife, and his son—for more
than two years Laira would have no husband, Blade no father. And for
what? All for a wasted trip to a planet whose glories lay far in its
past?
Somewhere on Earth, he
thought, there will be someone who can help. This planet produced us
all. A shred of vitality must remain in it somewhere. I won’t leave
without trying to find it.
§
Some
painstaking questioning of one of the stationary robot guards finally
got him the information he wanted: there was a place where incoming
outworlders could register if they chose. He made provisions for the
care and storage of his ship until his departure, and signed himself in
at the Hall of Records as Baird Ewing, Ambassador from the Free World
of Corwin. There was a hotel affiliated with the spaceport terminal;
Ewing requested and was assigned a room in it. He signed a slip
granting the robot spaceport attendants permission to enter his ship
and transfer his personal belongings to his hotel room.
The room was attractive,
if a little cramped. Ewing was accustomed to the spaciousness of his
home on Corwin, a planet on which only eighteen million people lived in
an area greater than the habitable landmass of Earth. He had helped to
build the home himself, twelve years ago when he married Laira. It
sprawled over nearly eleven acres of land. To be confined to a room
only about fifteen feet on a side was a novel experience for him.
The lighting was subdued
and indirect; he searched for the source unsuccessfully. His fingers
probed the walls, but no electroluminescent panels were in evidence.
The Earthers had evidently developed some new technique for diffused
multisource lighting.
An outlet covered with a
speaking grid served as his connection with the office downstairs. He
switched the communicator panel on, after some inward deliberation. A
robot voice said immediately, “How may we serve you, Mr.. Ewing?”
“Is there such a thing as
a library on the premises?”
“Yes, sir.”
“Good. Would you have
someone select a volume of Terran history covering the last thousand
years, and have it sent up to me. Also any recent newspapers,
magazines, or things like that.”
“Of course, sir.”
It seemed that hardly five
minutes passed before the chime on his room door bleeped discreetly:
“Come in,” he said.
The door had been attuned
to the sound of his voice; as he spoke, there was the whispering sound
of relays closing, and the door whistled open. A robot stood just
outside. His flat metal arms were stacked high with microreels.
“You ordered reading
matter, sir.”
“Thanks. Would you leave
them over there, near the viewer?”
When the robot had gone,
he lifted the most massive reel from the stack and scanned its title,
Earth and the Galaxy was the title. In smaller letters it said, A Study
in Colonial Relationships.
Ewing nodded approvingly.
This was the way to begin, he told himself: fill in the background
before embarking on any specific course of action. The mocking Sirian
had perhaps underestimated Earth’s strength deliberately, for obscure
reasons of his own. He did not seem like a trustworthy sort.
He opened the reel and
slid it into the viewer, twisting it until he heard the familiar click!
The viewer was of the same model in use on Corwin, and he had no
difficulties with it. He switched on the screen; the title page
appeared, and a moment’s work with the focusing switches rendered the
image brightly sharp:
Chapter One, he read. The
earliest period of expansion.
The Age of Interstellar
Colonization may rightly be said to have opened in the year 2560, when
the development of the Haley Subwarp Drive made possible—
The door chimed again.
Irritated, Ewing looked up from his book. He was not expecting
visitors, nor had he asked the hotel service staff for anything.
“Who is it?”
“Mr. Ewing?” said a
familiar voice. “Might I come in? I’d like to talk to you again. We met
briefly at the terminal this afternoon.”
Ewing recognized the
voice. It belonged to the earless Earther in turquoise robes who had
been so little help to him earlier. What can he want with me? Ewing
wondered.
“All right,” he said.
“Come in.”
The door responded to the
command: It. slid back obediently. The slim Terrestrial smiled
apologetically at Ewing, murmured a soft greeting, and entered.
Chapter 3
He was slim,
delicate, fragile-looking. It seemed to Ewing that a good gust of wind
would smash him to splinters. He was no more than five feet tall, pale,
waxy-skinned, with large serious eyes and thin, indecisive lips. His
domed skull was naked and faintly glossily. At regular intervals on its
skin, jeweled pendants had been surgically attached; they jiggled as he
moved.
With prim fastidiousness he made
his way across the room toward Ewing.
“I hope I’m not intruding on
your privacy,” he said in a hesitant half-whisper.
“‘No. Not at all. Won’t you be
seated?”
“I would prefer to stand,” the
Earther replied. “It is our custom.”
“Very well.”
Ewing felt a curious inner
revulsion as he stared at the grotesque little Earther. On Corwin,
anyone dressed in such clownish garb would meet with derision.
The Earther smiled timidly. “I
am called Scholar Myreck,” he said finally. “And you are Baird Ewing,
of the colony-world Corwin.”
“That’s right.”
“It was my great fortune to meet
you at the spaceport terminal building earlier today. Apparently I
created a bad first impression—one of frivolity, perhaps, or even of
oppressive irresponsibility. For this I wish to beg your pardon,
Colonist Ewing. I would have had the opportunity then, but for that
Sirian ape who seized your attention before I could speak.”
Somewhat to his surprise Ewing
noticed that the little Earther was speaking with barely a trace of
what he had come to regard as the Earther accent. He frowned; what did
the foppish little man want?
“On the contrary, Scholar
Myreck, no apologies should be needed. I don’t judge a man by my first
impression of him—especially on a world where I’m a stranger to the
customs and way of life.”
“An excellent philosophy!”
Sadness crossed Myreck’s mild face for a moment: “But you look tense,
Colonist Ewing. Might I have the privilege of relaxing you?”
“Relaxing me?”
“Minor neural adjustments; a
technique we practice with some skill here. May I?”
Doubtfully Ewing said, “Just
what does it involve, actually?”
“A moment’s physical contact,
nothing more.” Myreck smiled imploringly. “It pains me to see a man so
tense. It causes me actual physical pain.”
“You’ve aroused my curiosity,”
Ewing said. “Go ahead—relax me.”
Myreck glided forward and put
his hands gently round Ewing’s neck. The Corwinite stiffened in
immediate alarm. “Gently,” Myreck sang. “Let the muscles relax. Don’t
fight me. Relax.”
His thin, childlike fingers dug
in without warning, pinching sharply at the base of Ewing’s skull.
Ewing felt a quick, fierce burst of light, a jarring disruption of
sense-perceptions for no more than a fifteenth of a second. Then,
suddenly, he felt the tension drain away from him. His deltoids and
trapezoids eased so abruptly than he thought his back and shoulders had
been removed. His neck, chronically stiff, loosened. The stress
patterns developed during a year in stasis-sleep were shaken off.
“That’s quite a trick,” he said
finally.
“We manipulate the neural nexus
at the point where the medulla and the spinal column become one. In the
hands of an amateur it can be fatal.” Myreck smiled. “In the hands of a
professional such as myself it can also be fatal—but only when the
operator so intends.”
Ewing moistened his lips. He
said, “May I ask a personal question, Scholar Myreck?”
“Of course.”
“The clothes you wear—the
ornamentation—are these things widespread on Earth, or is it just some
fad that you’re following?”
Myreck knotted his waxy fingers
together thoughtfully. “They are, shall we say, cultural
manifestations. I find it hard to explain: People of my personality
type and inclinations dress this way; others dress differently, as the
mood strikes them. My appearance indicates that I am a Collegiate
Fellow.”
“Scholar is your title, then?”
“Yes. And also my given name. I
am a member of the College of Abstract Science of the City of Valloin.”
“I’ll have to plead ignorance,”
Ewing said. “1 don’t know anything about your College.”
“Understandable. We do not
seek publicity.” Myreck’s eyes fastened doggedly on Ewing’s for a
moment. “That Sirian who took you away from us—may I ask his name?”
“Rollun Firnik,” Ewing
said.
“A particularly dangerous
one; I know him by reputation. Well, to the point at last, Colonist
Ewing. Would you care to address a convocation of the College of
Abstract Science some time early next week?”
“I? I’m no academician,
Scholar. I wouldn’t know what to talk about.”
“You come from a colony,
one that none of us knows anything about. You offer an invaluable fund
of experience and information.”
“But I’m a stranger in the
city,” Ewing objected. “I wouldn’t know how to get to you.”
“We will arrange for your
transportation. The meeting is Fournight of next week. Will you come?”
Ewing considered it for a
moment. It was as good an opportunity as any to begin studying the
Terrestrial culture at close range. He would need as broad and as deep
a fund of knowledge as possible in order to apply the leverage that
would ultimately preserve his home world from destruction by the alien
marauders.
He looked up. “All right.
Fournight of next week, then.”
“We will be very grateful,
Colonist Ewing.” Myreck bowed. He backed toward the door, smiling and
nodding, and paused just before pushing the opener stud. “Stay well,”
he said. “You have our extreme gratitude. We will see you on Fournight.”
The door slid closed
behind him.
§
Ewing
shrugged; then, remembering the reels he had requested from the hotel
library, he returned his attention to the viewer.
He read for nearly an
hour, skimming; his reading pace was an accelerated one, thanks to his
mnemonic training at the great University of Corwin. His mind
efficiently organized the material as fast as his eyes scanned it,
marshaling the facts into near, well-drilled columns. By the end of the
hour, he had more than a fair idea of the shape of Terrestrial history
in the thirteen hundred years since the first successful interstellar
flight.
There had been an
immediate explosive outward push to the stars. Sirius had been the
first to be colonized, in 2573: sixty-two brave men and women. The
other colonies had followed fast, frantically. The overcrowded Earth
was shipping her sons and daughters to the stars in wholesale batches.
All through the second
half of the Third Millennium the prevailing historical tone was one of
frenzied excitement. The annals listed colony after colony.
The sky was full of
worlds. The seventeen-planet system of Aldebaran yielded eight
Earth-type planets suitable for Colonization. The double system of
Albireo had four. Ewing passed hastily over the name-weighted pages,
seeing with a little quiver of recognition the name of Blade Corwin,
who had seeded a colony on Epsilon Ursae Majoris XII in the year 2856.
Outward. By the opening of
the thirtieth century, said the book, human life had been planted on
more than a thousand worlds of the universe.
The great outward push was
over. On Earth, the long-overdue establishment of population controls
had ended forever the threat of overexpansion, and with it some of the
impetus for colonization died. Earth’s population stabilized itself at
an unvarying five and a half billion; three centuries before, nearly
eleven billion had jostled for room on the crowded little planet.
With population
stabilization came cultural stabilization, the end of the flamboyant
pioneer personality, the development of a new kind of Earthman who
lacked the drive and intense ambition of his ancestors. The colonies
had skimmed off the men with outward drive; the ones who remained on
Earth gave rise to a culture of esthetes, of debaters and musicians and
mathematicians. A subclass of menials at first sprang up to insure the
continued maintenance of the machinery of civilization, but even these
became unnecessary with the development of ambulatory robots.
The history of the fourth
Millennium was a predictable one; Ewing had already extrapolated it
from the data given him, and it was little surprise to come across
confirmation. There had been retrenchment. The robot-served culture of
Earth became self-sufficient, a closed system. Births and deaths were
carefully equalized.
With stability came
isolation. The wild men on the colony worlds no longer had need for the
mother world, nor Earth for them. Contacts withered.
In the year 3800, said the
text, only Sirius IV of all Earth’s colonies still retained regular
communication with the parent planet. Representatives of the thousand
other colonies were so rare on Earth as to be virtually nonexistent
there.
Only Sirius IV. It was
odd, thought Ewing, that of all the colonies the harsh people of Sirius
IV should alone be solicitous of the mother world. There was little in
common between Rollun Firnik and the Scholar.
The more Ewing read, the
less confident he became that he would find any aid for Corwin here.
Earth had become a planet of gentle scholiasts, it seemed; was there
anything here that could serve in the struggle against the advancing
Klodni?
Possibly not. But Ewing
did not intend to abandon his quest at its very beginning.
He read on, well into the
afternoon, until he felt hunger. Rising, he disconnected the viewer and
rewound the reels, slipping them back into their containers. His eyes
were tired. Some of the physical fatigue Myreck had taken from him had
begun to steal back into his body.
There was a restaurant on
the sixty-third level of the hotel, according to the printed
information sheet enameled on the inside of his door. He showered and
dressed formally, in his second-best doublet and lace. He checked the
chambers of his ceremonial blaster, found them all functioning, and
strapped the weapon to his hip. Satisfied at last, he reached for the
housephone, and when the subservient roboperator answered said, “I’m
going to eat dinner now. Will you notify the hotel dining room to
reserve a table for one for me?”
“Of course, Mr. Ewing.”
He broke the contact and
glanced once again in the mirror above his dresser to make sure his
lace was in order. He felt in his pocket for his wallet; it bulged with
Terrestrial paper money, enough to last him the length of his stay.
He opened the door. Just
outside the door was an opaque plastic receptacle which was used for
depositing messages and to Ewing’s surprise the red light atop it was
glowing, indicating the presence of a message within.
Pressing his thumb to the
identiplate, he lifted the top of the box and drew out the note. It was
neatly typed in blue capital letters. It said:
COLONIST EWING: IF YOU
WANT TO STAY IN GOOD HEALTH, KEEP AWAY FROM MYRECK AND HIS FRIENDS.
It was unsigned. Ewing
smiled coldly; the intrigue was beginning already, the jockeying back
and forth. He had expected it. The arrival of a strange colonial on
Earth was a novel enough event; it was sure to have its consequences
and repercussions as his presence became more widely known.
“Open,” he said shortly to
his door.
The door slid back. He
reentered his room and snatched up the house phone.
The desk robot said, “How
may we serve you, Mr. Ewing?’
“There seems to be a spy
vent in my room some place,” Ewing said. “Send someone up to check the
room over, will you?”
“I assure you, sir that no
such thing could—”
“I tell you there’s a
concealed camera or microphone someplace in my room. Either find it or
I’ll check into some other hotel.”
“Yes, Mr. Ewing. We’ll
send an investigator up immediately.”
“Good. I’m going to the
dining room, now. If anything turns up, contact me there.”
The hotel dining
room was gaudily, even garishly decorated. Glowing spheres of
imprisoned radiant energy drifted at random near the vaulted ceiling,
occasionally bobbing down to eye level. The tables themselves were
banked steeply toward the outside edge, and in the very center of the
room, where the floor level was lowest, a panchromaticon swiveled
slowly, casting multicolored light over the diners.
A burnished, bullet-headed robot
waited at the door.
“I have a reservation,” Ewing
said. “Baird Ewing. Room 4113.”
“Of course, sir. Come this way,
please.”
Ewing followed the robot into
the main concourse of the dining room, up a sort of ramp that led to
the outermost rim of the great hall, where a few empty tables were
visible. The robot came to a halt in front of a table at which someone
was already sitting: a Sirian girl, Ewing guessed, from her brawny
appearance.
The robot pulled out the chair
facing her. Ewing shook his head. “There’s been some mistake made. I
don’t know this lady at all. I requested a table for one.”
“We ask indulgence, sir. There
are no tables for one available at this hour. We consulted with the
person occupying this table and were told that there was no objection
to your sharing it, if you were willing to do so.”
Ewing frowned and glanced at the
girl. She met his glance evenly, and smiled. She seemed to be inviting
him to sit down.
He shrugged. “All right. I’ll
sit here.”
“Very good, sir.”
Ewing slipped into the seat and
let the robot nudge it toward the table for him. He looked at the girl.
She had bright red hair, trimmed in what on Corwin would be considered
an extremely mannish style. She was dressed in a tailored suit of some
clinging purple material; it flared sharply at the shoulders and neck.
Her eyes were dark black. Her face was broad and muscular looking, with
upjutting cheekbones that gave her features an oddly slant-eyed cast.
“I’m sorry if I caused you any
inconvenience,” Ewing said. “I had no idea they’d place me at your
table—or at any occupied table.”
“I requested it,” she said. Her
voice was dark of timbre and resonant. “You’re the Corwinite Ewing, I
understand. I’m Byra Clork. We have something in common. We were both
born on colonies of Earth.”
Ewing found himself liking her
blunt, forthright approach, even though in her countryman Firnik it had
been offensive. He said, “So I understand. You’re a Sirian, aren’t you?”
“That’s right. How did you know?”
“I guessed,” Ewing said
evasively. He directed his attention to the liquor panel set against
the wall. “Drink?” he asked her.
“I’ve had one. But I don’t mind
if you do.”
Ewing inserted a coin and
punched out a cocktail. The drink emerged from a revolving slot in the
wall. The Corwinite picked it up and tasted it. It was sweet, with a
disturbing undertaste of acridity.
“You said you requested my
presence at your table,” Ewing remarked. “And you knew me by name. How
come?”
“It isn’t every day that a
stranger comes to Earth,” she said, in that impossibly deep, husky,
almost-masculine voice. “I was curious.”
“Many people seem to be curious
about me,” Ewing said.
A robowaiter hovered at his
shoulder. Ewing frowned; he said, “I don’t have any idea what the
speciality of the house is. Miss Clork, would you care to recommend
something for my dinner?”
She said to the robot, “Give him
the same thing I ordered. Venison, creamed potatoes, green beans.”
“Certainly,” murmured the robot.
As it scuttled away Ewing said, “Is that the tastiest dish they have?”
“Probably. I know it’s the most
expensive.”
Ewing grinned. “You don’t spare
my pocketbook, do you?”
“You gave me free reign.
Besides, you must have some money in your pocket. I saw you converting
a stack of bills at the desk this morning.”
“You saw me, then?” An idea
struck him. “You didn’t send me a note this afternoon, did you?”
“Note?” Her broad face showed
seemingly genuine confusion. “No, I didn’t send you any note. Why?”
“Someone did,” Ewing said.
“I just wondered who it might have been.”
He sipped his drink
thoughtfully. A few minutes later a robot arrived with their dinners.
The meat smelled pungent and good. Obviously it was no synthetic; that
explained its high cost.
They ate in silence for a
while. When Ewing had made substantial inroads on his plate, he paused,
looking up, and said, “What do you do on Earth, Miss Clork?”
She smiled. “I’m with the
Sirian Consulate. I look out for the interests of any of my people who
happen to visit Earth. It’s a very dull job.”
“There seem to be quite a
few Sirians on Earth,” Ewing remarked casually. “It must be very
popular among your people as a tourist attraction.”
She seemed momentarily
disconcerted by Ewing’s remark. Her voice hesitated slightly as she
said, “Y-yes, it’s very popular. Many Sirians like to vacation on
Earth.”
“How many Sirians would
you say there were on Earth right now?”
This time she stiffened
visibly; Ewing realized he had accidently asked a question which
touched on very delicate grounds. “Just why are you interested,
Colonist Ewing?”’
He smiled disarmingly. “A
matter of curiosity, that’s all. No ulterior motives.”
She pretended the question
had never been asked. Music welled up about them, blending with the
vague general hum of conversation. She finished her dinner quietly, and
while starting on the dessert said, “I suppose you didn’t think much of
Firnik.”
“Of who?”
“You met him this
morning,” she said. “The Sirian. He tends to be rather clumsy at times.
He’s my boss, actually. Sirian Vice-Consul in Valloin.”
“Did he tell you to wangle
dinner with me?” Ewing asked suddenly.
A blaze flamed in the
Sirian girl’s eyes, but it died down quickly enough, though with
reluctance. “You put things crudely.”
“But accurately?”
“Yes.”
Ewing smiled and reached
into his doublet pocket; he drew forth the annonymous note he had
received earlier, unfolded it, and shoved it across the table toward
her. She read it without displaying any apparent reaction, and nudged
it back toward him.
“Is this the note you
suspected me of having sent you?” she asked.
Ewing nodded. “I had a
visit from Scholar Myreck this afternoon. Several hours later I found
this note outside my door. Perhaps Vice-Consul Firnik sent it, eh?”
She stared at him as if
trying to read his mind. Ewing sensed that a chess game of sorts was
going on, that he was rapidly becoming the center of a web of
complications. While they stared silently at each other a robot glided
up to them and said, “Mr. Ewing?”
“That’s right.”
“I bear a message from the
manager of the hotel.”
“Let’s have it,” Ewing
said.
“The message is: a spyvent
outlet has been discovered in your room at the intersection of the wall
and the ceiling. The outlet has been removed and a protective device
planted in the room to prevent any future re-insertion of spying
equipment. The manager extends his deep regrets and requests you to
accept a week’s rent as partial compensation for any inconvenience this
may have caused you.”
Ewing grinned. “Tell him I
accept the offer, and that he’d better be more careful about his rooms
the next time.”
When the robot was gone,
Ewing stared sharply at Byra Clork and said, “Somebody was listening
and watching today when I had my visitor. Was it Firnik?”
“Do you think so?”
“I do.”
“Then so be it,” the girl
said lightly. She rose from the table and said, “Do you mind putting my
meal on your account? I’m a little short of cash just now.”
She started to leave.
Ewing caught a robot’s eye and quickly instructed, “Bill me for both
dinners. Ewing, room 4113.”
He slid past the metal
creature and caught up with the Sirian girl as she approached the exit
to the dining room. The sphincter-door widened; she stepped through,
and he followed her. They emerged in a luxurious salon hung with
abstract paintings of startling texture and hue. Fierce atonal music
came pulsing out of speakers concealed near the paintings.
She was ignoring him,
pointedly. She moved at a rapid pace down the main corridor of the
salon, and stopped just before an inlaid blue-and-gold door. As she
started to enter, Ewing grasped her by the arm. Her biceps were
remarkably sturdy.
She wriggled loose and
said, “Surely you don’t intend to follow me in here, Mr. Ewing!”
He glanced at the
inscription on the door. “I’m a rude, untutored, primitive colonial,”
he said grimly. “If it serves my purpose to go in there after you, I’ll
go in there after you. You might just as well stay here and answer my
questions as try to run away.”
“Is there any reason why I
should?”
“Yes,” he said. “Because I
ask you to. Did you or Firnik spy on me this afternoon?”
“How should I know what
Firnik does in his free time?”
Ewing applied pressure to
her arm, and at the same time silently recited verses designed to keep
his own inward metabolism on a level keel during a time of stress. His
pulse was pounding; methodically, he forced it to return to its normal
rate.
“You’re hurting me,” she
said in a harsh whisper.
“I want to know who
planted that spy ray in my room, and why I should be warned against
dealing with Myreck.”
She twisted suddenly and
broke loose from his grasp. Her face was flushed, and her breathing was
rapid and irregular. In a low voice she said, “Let me give you some
free advice, Mr. Corwinite Ewing. Pack up and go back to Corwin.
There’s only trouble for you on Earth.”
“What sort of trouble?” he
demanded relentlessly.
“I’m not saying anything
else. Listen to me, and get as far from Earth as you can. Tomorrow.
Today, if you can.” She looked wildly around, then turned and ran
lithely down the corridor. Ewing debated following her, but decided
against it. She had seemed genuinely frightened, as if trouble loomed
for her.
He stood for a moment
before a mounted light-sculpture, pretending to be staring at the
intertwining spirals of black and pearl-gray, but actually merely using
the statuary as pretext for a moment’s thought. His mind was racing;
rigidly, he forced his adrenalin count down. When he was calm again, he
tried to evaluate the situation.
Someone had gimmicked his
room. He had been visited by an Earther, and a Sirian girl had
maneuvered him into eating dinner with her. The incidents were
beginning to mount up, and they grew more puzzling as he attempted to
fit them into some coherent pattern. He had been on Earth less than
fifteen hours. Events moved rapidly here.
He had been trained in
theories of synthesis; he was a gifted extrapolator. Sweat beaded his
forehead as he labored to extract connectivity from the isolated and
confusing incidents of the day.
Minutes passed. Earthers
in dazzling costumes drifted past him in twos and sometimes threes,
commenting in subued tones on the displays in the salon. Painstakingly,
Ewing manipulated the facts. Finally a picture took shape; a picture
formed on guesswork, but nonetheless a useful guide to future action.
The Sirians were up to no
good on Earth. Quite possibly they intended to make the mother world a
Sirian dominion. Assuming that, then the unexpected arrival of a
colonist from deep space might represent a potential threat to their
plans.
New shadows darkened the
horizon, Ewing saw. Perhaps Firnik suspected him of intending to
conspire with the Scholars against the Sirians. Doubtless that had been
Myreck’s intention in proffering the invitation.
In that case—
“Mr. Ewing?” a gentle
voice said.
He turned. A robot stood
there, man-high, armless, its face a sleek sheet of viewing plastic.
“That’s right, I’m Ewing.
What is it?”
“I speak for
Governor-General Mellis, director of Earth’s governing body.
Governor-General Mellis requests your presence at the Capital City as
soon as is convenient for you.’
“How do I get there?”
“If you wish I will convey
you there,” the robot purred.
“I so wish,” Ewing said.
“Take me there at once.”
A jetcar waited
outside the hotel for them—sleek, stylishly toned, and yet to Ewing’s
eyes old-fashioned in appearance. The robot opened the rear door and,
Ewing climbed in.
To his surprise the robot did
not join him inside the car; he simply closed the door and glided away
into the gathering dusk. Ewing frowned and peered through the door
window at the retreating robot. He rattled the doorknob experimentally
and discovered that he was locked in.
A bland robot voice said, “Your
destination, please?”
Ewing hesitated. “Ah—take me to
Governor-General Mellis.”
A rumble of turbogenerators was
the only response; the car quivered gently and slid forward, moving as
if it ran on a track of oil. Ewing felt no perceptible sensation of
motion, but the spaceport and the towering bulk of the hotel grew small
behind him, and soon they emerged on a broad twelve-level superhighway
a hundred feet above the ground level.
Ewing stared nervously out the
window. “Exactly where is the Governor-General located?” he asked,
turning to peer at the dashboard. The jetcar did not even have room for
a driver, he noted, nor a set of manual controls. It was operated
totally by remote control.
“Governor-General Mellis’
residence is in Capital City,” came the precise, measured reply. “It is
located one hundred ninety-three miles to the north of the City of
Valloin. We will be there in forty-one minutes.”
The jetcar was strict in its
schedule. Exactly forty-one minutes after it had pulled away from the
plaza facing the Grand Valloin Hotel, it shot off the highway and onto
a smaller trunk road that plunged downward at a steep angle. Ewing saw
a city before him, a city of spacious buildings spaced far apart,
radiating spirally out from one towering, silver-hued palace.
A few minutes later the car came
to a sudden halt, giving Ewing a mild jolt.
The robot voice said, “This is
the palace of the Governor-General. The door at your left is open.
Please leave the car now and you will be taken to the Governor-General.”
Ewing nudged the door-panel and
it swung open. He stepped out. The night air was fresh and cool, and
the street about him gave off a soft gentle glow. Accumulator batteries
beneath the pavement were discharging the illumination the sun had shed
on them during the day.
“You will come this way,
please,” a new robot said. He was ushered speedily and efficiently
through the swinging door of the palace, into a lift, and upward. The
lift opened out onto a velvet-hung corridor that extended through a
series of accordion-like pleats into a large and austerely furnished
room.
A small man stood alone in the
center of the room. He was gray-haired but unwrinkled, and his body
bore no visual sign of the surgical distortions that were so common
among the Earthers. He smiled courteously.
“I am Governor-General Mellis,”
he said. His voice was light and flexible, a good vehicle for public
speaking. “Will you come in?”
“Thanks,” Ewing said. He stepped
inside. The doors immediately closed behind him.
Mellis came forward—he stood no
higher than the middle of Ewing’s chest—and proffered a drink. Ewing
took it. It was a sparkling purplish liquid, with a mildly carbonated
texture. He settled himself comfortably in the chair Mellis drew up for
him, and looked up at the Governor-General, who remained standing.
“You wasted no time in sending
for me,” Ewing remarked.
The Governor-General shrugged
gracefully. “I learned of your arrival this morning. It is not often
that an ambassador from an outworld colony arrives on Earth. In
truth”—he seemed to sigh—“you are the first in more than three hundred
years. You have aroused considerable curiosity, you know.”
“I’m aware of that.” Casually he
sipped at his drink; letting the warmth trickle down his throat. “I
intended to contact you tomorrow, or perhaps the next day. But you’ve
saved me that trouble.”
“My curiosity got the better of
me,” Mellis admitted with a smile. “There is so little for me to do,
you see, in the way of official duties.”
“I’ll make my visit brief by
starting at the beginning,” Ewing said. “I’m here to ask for Earth’s
help, in behalf of my planet, the Free World of Corwin.”
“Help?” The Governor-General
looked alarmed.
“We face invasion by
extra-galactic foes,” Ewing said. Quickly he sketched out an account of
the Klodni depredations thus far, adding, “And we sent several messages
to Earth to let you know what the situation was. We assume those
messages have gone astray en route. And so I’ve come in person to ask
for Earth’s aid.”
Mellis moved about the
room in impatient birdlike strutting motions before replying. He
whirled suddenly, then calmed himself, and said, “The messages did not
go astray, Mr. Ewing.”
“No?”
“They were duly received
and forwarded to my office. I read them!”
“You didn’t answer,” Ewing
interrupted accusingly. “You deliberately ignored them. Why?”
Mellis spread his fingers
on his thighs and seemed to come stiffly to attention. In a quiet,
carefully modulated voice he said, “Because there is no possible way we
can help you or anyone else, Mr. Ewing. Will you believe that?”
“I don’t understand.”
“We have no weapons, no
military forces, no ability or desire to fight. We have no spaceships.”
Ewing’s eyes widened. He
had found it impossible to believe it when the Sirian Firnik had told
him Earth was defenseless; but to hear it from the lips of the
Governor-General himself!
“There must be some
assistance Earth can give. There are only eighteen million of us on
Corwin,” Ewing said. “We have a defense corps, of course, but it’s
hardly adequate. Our stockpile of nuclear weapons is low—”
“Ours is nonexistent,”
Mellis interrupted. “Such fissionable material as we have is allocated
to operation of the municipal atom piles.”
Ewing stared at the tips
of his fingers. Chill crept over him, reminding him of the year spent
locked in the grip of frost as he slept through a crossing of fifty
light-years. For nothing.
Mellis smiled sadly.
“There is one additional aspect to your request for help. You say the
Klodni will not attack your world for a decade, nor ours for a century.
“
Ewing nodded.
“In that case,” Mellis
said, “the situation becomes academic from our viewpoint. Before a
decade’s time has gone by, Earth will be a Sirian protectorate anyway.
We will be in no position to help anybody.”
The Corwinite’looked up at
the melancholy face of Earth’s Governor-General. There were depths to
Mellis’ eyes that told Ewing much; Mellis was deeply conscious of his
position as ruler in the declining days of Terrestrial power.
Ewing said, “How sure can
you be of that?”
“Certain as I am of my
name,” Mellis replied. “The Sirians are infiltrating Earth steadily.
There are more than a million of them here now. Any day I expect to be
notified that I am no longer even to be Earth’s figurehead.”
“Can’t you prevent them
from coming to Earth?”
Mellis shook his head.
“We’re powerless. The events to come are inevitable. And so your Klodni
worry us very little, friend Corwinite. I’ll be long since dead before
they arrive—and with me Earth’s glories.”
“And you don’t care about
the colony worlds?” Ewing snapped angrily. “You’ll just sit back and
let us be gobbled up by the aliens? Earth’s name still means something
among the colony worlds; if you issued a general declaration of war,
all the colonies would send forces to defend us. As it is, the
scattered worlds can’t think of the common good; they only worry about
themselves. They don’t see that if they band together against the
Klodni they can destroy them, while singly they will be overwhelmed. A
declaration from Earth—”
“—would be meaningless,
hollow, invalid, null, void, and empty,” Mellis said. “Believe that,
Mr. Ewing. You face an unfortunate fate. Officially, I weep for you.
But as an old man soon to be pushed from his throne, I can’t help you.”
Ewing felt the muscles of
his jaw tighten. He said nothing. He realized there was nothing at all
for him to say.
He stood up. “I guess
we’ve reached the end of our interview, then. I’m sorry to have taken
up your time, Governor-General Mellis. If I had known the situation as
it stood on Earth, perhaps I might not have made this trip across
space.”
“I had hoped—” Mellis
began. He broke off, then shook his head. “No. It was foolish.”
“Sir?”
The older man smiled
palely. “There had been a silly thought in my mind today, ever since I
learned that an ambassador from Corwin had landed in Valloin. I see
clearly now how wild a thought it was.”
“Might I ask—”
Mellis shrugged. “The
thought I had was that perhaps you had come in the name of Terrestrial
independence—to offer us a pledge of your world’s aid against the
encroachments of the Sirians. But you need aid yourself. It was foolish
of me to expect to find a defender in the stars.”
“I’m sorry,” Ewing said
quietly.
“For what? For being
unable to help? We owe each other apologies, in that case.” Mellis
shook his head. “We have known brightness too long. Now the shadows
start to lengthen. Aliens steal forth out of Andromeda to destroy, and
children of Earth turn on their mother.”
He peered through the
increasing gloom of the room at Ewing. “But I must be boring you with
my ramblings Mr. Ewing. You had better leave, now. Leave Earth, I mean.
Go to defend your homeworld against its enemies. We are beyond help.”
He pulled a wall switch
and a robot servitor appeared, gliding noiselessly through the opening
doors. The Governor-General turned to it.
“Conduct Mr. Ewing back to
the car, and see that he is transported to his residence in Valloin as
comfortably as possible.”
Ewing felt a flood of pity
for the old man whose misfortune it was to hold the supreme office of
Earth at this dark time. He clenched his fists; he said nothing. Corwin
now seemed strangely remote. His wife, his son, living under the menace
of alien hordes, hardly mattered now compared with Earth and the fate,
less violent but more painful, that was befalling it.
In silence he left the old
man and followed the robot through the corridors to the lift. He
descended on a shaft of magnetic radiance to the street level.
The car was waiting for
him. He got in; the turbos thrummed briefly and the homeward journey
began.
He amused himself on the
way home by drafting the text of the message he would send via subradio
to Corwin in the morning. In the afternoon he would leave Earth
forever, setting out on the year-long return trip to Corwin, bring with
him sad confirmation of the fact that there was no help for them
against the Klodni horde.
It was past midnight
when Ewing stepped out of the lift-shaft on the forty-first floor of
the Grand Valloin Hotel. He reached his room and examined the message
box. Empty. He had half expected to find another threatening note in it.
He pressed his thumb to the
identity-attuned plate of the door and said in a low voice, pitched so
it would not awaken any of his neighbors, “Open.”
The door rolled back.
Unexpectedly, the light was on in his room.
“Hello,” said Byra Clork.
Ewing froze in the doorway and
stared bewilderedly at the broad-shouldered Sirian girl. She was
sitting quite calmly in the relaxochair by the window. A bottle of some
kind rested on the night table, and next to it two glasses, one of them
half filled with amber liquid. She had made herself quite comfortable,
it seemed.
He stepped inside.
“How did you get into my room?”
he asked.
“I asked the management to give
me a pass key to your room. They obliged.”
“Just like that?” Ewing snapped.
“I guess I don’t understand the way Terrestrial hotels operate. I was
under the innocent impression that a man’s room was his own so long as
he paid the rent, and that no strangers would be permitted to enter.”
“That’s the usual custom,” she
said lightly. “But I found it necessary to talk to you about urgent
matters. Matters of great importance to the Sirian Consulate in
Valloin, whom I represent.”
Ewing became aware of the fact
that he was holding the door open. He released it, and it closed
automatically. “It’s a little late in the evening for conducting
Consulate business, isn’t it?” he asked.
She smiled. “It’s never too late
for some things. Would you like a drink?”
He ignored the glass she held
out to him. He wanted her to leave his room.
“How did you get in my room?” he
repeated.
She pointed behind him, to the
enameled sheet of regulations behind the door. “It’s up there plainly
enough on your door. I’ll quote, in case you haven’t read the
regulations yet: ‘The management of this Hotel reserves the right to
enter and inspect any of the rooms at any time.’ I’m carrying out an
inspection.”
“You’re not the management!”
“I’m employed by the
management,” she said sweetly. She dug into the reticule suspended from
her left wrist and produced a glossy yellow card which she handed over
to the puzzled Ewing.
He read it.
ROLLUN FIRNIK
Manager, Grand Valloin Hotel
“What does this
mean?”
“It means that the robots at the
desk are directly responsible to Firnik. He runs this hotel. Sirian
investors bought it eight years ago, and delegated him to act as their
on-the-spot representative. And in turn he delegated me to visit you in
your room tonight. Now that everything’s nice and legal, Ewing, sit
down and let’s talk. Relax.”
Uncertainly Ewing slipped off
his coat and sat down on the edge of the bed, facing her.
“We’ve had one conversation
already today, haven’t we? A highly inconclusive and fragmentary one,
which ended when—”
“Forget about that!”
The sudden whiteness of her face
told him one thing he had been anxious to know: they were being
watched. He had nearly revealed something she had not wanted the
watchers to find out.
“I—have different instructions
now,” she said hesitantly. “Won’t you have a drink?”
He shook his head. “I’ve already
had more than my share today, thanks. And I’m tired. Now that you’ve
gotten in here, suppose you tell me what you want.”
“You visited Governor-General
Mellis tonight, didn’t you?” she asked abruptly.
“Did I?”
“You don’t have to be
mysterious about it,” she said sharply. “You were seen leaving and
returning in an official car. Don’t waste your breath by denying you
had an interview with the Governor-General.”
Ewing shrugged. “How would
it concern you, assuming that I did?”
“To be perfectly frank
with you, Mr. Ewing, your presence on Earth worries us. By us I mean
the interests of the Sirian government, whom I represent. We have a
definite financial interest in Earth. We don’t want to see that
investment jeopardized.”
Ewing frowned in
curiosity. “You haven’t made things much clearer,” he said.
“Briefly, we wondered
whether or not you—representing Corwin or possibly a league of the
outworld colonies—have territorial designs on Earth,” she said slowly.
“I’ve been utterly blunt, now. Too blunt, perhaps. We Sirians are poor
at diplomacy; we have a racial characteristic of always coming directly
to the point.”
“Corwinites share that
characteristic,” Ewing said. “Maybe it’s a concomitant of colonial
life. I’ll answer you with equal bluntness: there’s no outworld colony
league, and I’m not on Earth with the remotest intention of
establishing a dominion here.”
“Then why are you here?”
He scowled impatiently. “I
explained all that to our friend Firnik this morning, only a few
minutes after I had entered the spaceport terminal. I told him that
Corwin’s in danger of an alien invasion,and that I had come to Earth
seeking help.”
“Yes, you told him that.
And you expected him to believe that story?”
Exasperated, Ewing howled,
“Dammit, why not? It’s the truth!”
“That any intelligent
person would cross fifty light-years simply to ask military aid from
the weakest and most helpless planet in the universe? You can think up
better lies than that one,” she said mockingly.
He stared at her. “We’re
an isolated planet,” he said in a quiet but intense voice. “We didn’t
know anything at all about the current state of Earth’s culture. We
thought Earth could help us. I came on a fool’s errand, and I’m going
home again tomorrow, a sadder and wiser man. Right now I’m tired and I
want to get some sleep. Will you please leave?”
She rose without warning
and took a seat next to him on the bed. “All right,” she said in a
husky but surprisingly soft voice. “I’ll tell Firnik you’re here for
the reasons you say you are.”
Her words might have
startled him, but he was expecting them. It was a gambit designed to
keep him off guard. The Sirian methods were crude ones.
“Thanks,” he said
sarcastically. “Your faith in me is heart-warming.”
She moved closer to him.
“Why don’t you have a drink with me? I’m not all Sirian Consulate, you
know. I do have an after-hours personality too, much as you may find it
hard to believe.”
He sensed her warmth
against his body. She reached out, poured him a drink, and forced the
glass into his reluctant hand. Ewing wondered whether Firnik were
watching this at the other end of the spy beam.
Her hands caressed his
shoulders, massaging gently. Ewing looked down at her pityingly. Her
eyes were closed, her lips moist, slightly parted. Her breathing was
irregular. Maybe she isn’t faking, he thought. But even so, he wasn’t
interested.
He moved suddenly away
from her, and she nearly lost her balance. Her eyes opened wide; for an
instant naked hatred blazed in them, but she recovered quickly and
assumed a pose of hurt innocence.
“Why did you do that?
Don’t you like me?”
Ewing smiled coldly. “I
find you amusing. But I don’t like to make love in front of a spy beam.”
Her eyes narrowed; her
lips curled downward in a momentary scowl, and then she
laughed-—derisive, silver laughter. “You think that was an act? That I
was doing all that for the greater glory of the Fatherland?”
He nodded. “Yes.”
She slapped him. It was
utterly predictable; he had been waiting for it from the moment the
affirmative word left his lips. The blow had an astonishing amount of
force behind it; Byra Clork packed quite a wallop, Ewing decided
ruefully. He wondered if he had misjudged her intentions; it made no
difference, really.
“Will you leave now?” he
asked.
“I might as well,” she
muttered bitterly. She glowered at him. “If you’re a sample of
Corwinite manhood, I’m glad they don’t come here more often than once
every five hundred years. Machine! Robot!’
“Are you quite through?”
She picked up a light wrap
that had been on the back of the chair, and arranged it around her
shoulders. Ewing made no move to help her. He waited impassively, arms
folded.
“You’re incredible,” she
said, half scornfully, half otherwise. She paused; then a light entered
her eyes. “Will you have a drink with me, at least, before I go?”
She was being crafty, he
thought, but clumsily so. She had offered him the drink so many times
in the past half hour that he would be a fool not to suspect it of
being drugged. He could be crafty too.
“All right,” he said.
“I’ll have a drink.”
He picked up the glass she
had poured for him, and handed her the half-full glass that she had
held—untasted—throughout the time. He looked expectantly at her.
“What are you waiting
for?”she asked.
“Waiting for you to take a
drink first,” he told her.
“Still full of strange
suspicions, eh?” She lifted her glass and plainly took a deep draft.
Then she handed her glass to Ewing, took his, and sipped it also.
“There,” she said,
exhaling briefly. “I’m still alive. No deadly poison lurks in either
glass. Believe me?”
He smiled. “This time, if
no other.”
Still smiling, he lifted
the glass. The liquor was warm and potent; he felt it course down his
throat. A moment later, his legs wobbled.
He struggled to stay up.
The room swirled around him; he saw her triumphant, grinning face above
him, circling madly as if in orbit. He dropped to his knees and clung
to the carpeting for support.
“It was drugged,” he said.
“Of course. It was a drug
that doesn’t happen to react on Sirian metabolisms. We weren’t sure
whether it worked on Corwinites; now we know.”
He gripped the carpet. The
room rocked wildy. He felt sick, and bitterly angry at himself for
having let her trick him into taking the drink. He fought for
consciousness. He was unable to rise.
Still conscious, he heard
the door of his room open. He did not look up. He heard Byra say, “Did
you watch it the whole time?”
“We did.” The voice was
Firnik’s. “You still think he’s holding back?”
“I’m sure of it,” Byra
said. Her tone was vindictive. “He’ll need some interrogation before he
starts talking.”
“We’ll take care of that,”
Firnik said: He barked an order in a language incomprehensible to
Ewing. The Corwinite tried to cry for help, but all that escaped his
quivering lips was a thin, whining moan.
“He’s still fighting the
drug,” he heard Byra say. “It ought to knock him out any minute.”
Shimmering waves of pain
beat at him. He lost his grip on the carpet and went toppling over to
one side. He felt strong hands gripping him under the arms and lifting
him to his feet, but his eyes would not focus any longer. He writhed
feebly and was still. Darkness closed in about him.
Coldness clung to
him. He lay perfectly still, feeling the sharp cold all about him. His
hands were pinned to his sides. His legs were likewise pinioned. And
all about him was the cold, chilling his skin, numbing his brain,
freezing his body.
He made no attempt to move and
scarcely any even to think. He was content to lie back here in the
darkness and wait. He believed he was on the ship heading homeward to
Corwin.
He was wrong. The sound of
voices far. above him penetrated his consciousness, and he stirred
uncertainly, knowing there could be no voices aboard the ship. It was a
one-man ship. There was no room for anyone else.
The voices continued—rumbling
low murmurs that tickled his auditory nerves without resolving
themselves into sequences of intelligible words. Ewing moved about
restlessly. Where could he be? Who could be making these blurred, fuzzy
sounds?
He strained toward consciousness
now; he fought to open his eyes. A cloud of haze obscured his vision.
He sat up, feeling stiff muscles protest as he pushed his way up. His
eyes opened, closed again immediately as a glare of light exploded in
them, and gradually opened again. His head cleared. He adjusted to the
light.
His mouth tasted sour; his
tongue seemed to be covered with a thick fuzz. His eyes stung. His head
hurt, and there was a leaden emptiness in his stomach.
“We’ve been waiting more than
two days for you to wake up, Ewing,” said a familiar voice. “That stuff
Byra gave you must have really been potent.”
He broke through the fog that
hazed his mind and looked around. He was in a large room with
triangular, opaqued windows. Around him, where he lay on some sort of
makeshift cot, were four figures: Rollun Firnik, Byra Clork, and two
swarthy Sirians whom he did not know.
“Where am I?” he demanded.
Firnik said, “You’re in the
lowest level of the Consulate building. We brought you here early
Sixday morning. This is Oneday. You’ve been asleep.”
“Drugged is a better word,”
Ewing said bleakly: He sat up and swung his legs over the side of the
cot. Immediately, one of the unknown Sirians stepped forward, put one
hand on his chest, grabbed his ankles in his other hand, and heaved him
back to the cot. Ewing started to rise again; this time he drew a
stinging backhand slap that split his lower lip and sent a dribble of
blood down his chin.
Ewing rubbed the moist spot
tenderly. Then he came halfway to a sitting position. “What right do
you have to keep me here? I’m a citizen of Corwin. I have my rights.”
Firkin chuckled. “Corwin’s fifty light-years away. Right now you’re on
Earth. The only rights you have are the ones I say you have.”
Angrily, Ewing attempted to
spring to his feet. “I demand that you release me! I—”
“Hit him,” Firnik said
tonelessly.
Again the barrel-bodied Sirian
moved forward silently and slapped him—in the same place. Ewing felt
the cut on his lip widen, and this time one of his lower teeth abraded
the delicate inner surface of his lip as well. He did not make any
further attempts to rise.
“Now, then,” Firnik said in a
conversational voice. “If you’re quite sure you’ll refrain from causing
any more trouble, we can begin. You know Miss Clork, I think.”
Ewing nodded.
“And these gentlemen
here”—Firnik indicated the two silent Sirians—“are Sergeant Drayl and
Lieutenant Thirsk of the City of Valloin Police. I want you to realize
that there’ll be no need for you to try to call the police, since we
have two of their finest men with us today:”
“Police? Aren’t they from Sirius
IV?”
“Naturally.” Firnik’s eyes
narrowed. “Sirians make the best policemen. More than half of the local
police are natives of my planet.”
Ewing considered that silently.
The hotels, the police—what else? The Sirians would not need a bloody
coup to establish their power officially; they had already taken
control of Earth by default, with the full consent, if not approval, of
the Terrestrials. When the time came, all the Sirians needed to do was
to give Governor-General Mellis formal notice that he was relieved of
his duties, and Earth would pass officially into Sirian possession.
The Corwinite let his gaze
roam uneasily around the room. Unfamiliar-looking machines stood in the
corners of the room. The latest in torture devices, he thought. He
looked at Firnik.
“What do you want with me?”
The Sirian folded his
thick arms and said “Information. You’ve been very stubborn, Ewing.”
“I’ve been telling the
truth. What do you want me to do—make something up to please you?”
“You’re aware that the
government of Sirius IV is soon to extend a protectorate to Earth,”
Firnik said. “You fail to realize that this step is being done for the
mother world’s own good, to protect it in its declining days against
possible depredations from hostile worlds in this system. I’m not
talking about hypothetical invaders from other galaxies.”
“Hypothetical? But—”
“Quiet. Let me finish.
You, representing Corwin and possibly some of the other distant
colonies, have come to Earth to verify the rumor that such a
protectorate is about to be created. The worlds you represent have
arrived at the totally false conclusion that there is something
malevolent about our attitude toward Earth—that we have so-called
imperialistic ‘designs’ on Earth. You fail to understand the altruistic
motives behind our decision to relieve the Terrestrials of the tiresome
burden of governing themselves. And so your planet has sent you here as
a sort of spy, to determine in actuality what the relationship between
Sirius IV and Earth is, and to make the necessary arrangements with the
Terrestrials to defend Earth against us. To this end you’ve already
conferred with Governor-General Mellis, and you have an appointment to
visit one Myreck, a dangerous radical and potential revolutionary. Why
do you insist on denying this?”
“Because you’re talking
idiotic gibberish! I’m no spy! I’m—”
The side of Sergeant
Drayl’s stiffened hand descended on Ewing at the point where his neck
joined his shoulder. He gagged but retained control over himself. His
clavicle began to throb.
“You’ve told both Miss
Clork and myself,” Firnik said, “that your purpose in coming to Earth
was to seek Terrestrial aid against an alleged invasion of non-human
beings from beyond the borders of this galaxy. It’s such a
transparently false story that it makes you and your planet look
utterly pitiful.”
“It happens to be true,”
Ewing said doggedly.
Firnik snorted. “True?
There is no such invasion!’
“I’ve seen photos of
Barnholt—”
The barrage of punches
that resulted nearly collapsed him. Ire compelled himself to cling to
consciousness, but he was dizzy with pain. A red haze swirled around
his head, it seemed.
“You pose a grave threat
to joint Sirian-Terrestrial security,” Firnik said sonorously. “We must
have the truth from you, so we can guide our actions accordingly.”
You’ve had the truth,
Ewing said silently. He did not speak it aloud; that would only be
inviting a blow.
“We have means of
interrogation,” Firnik went on. “Most of them, unfortunately, involve
serious demolition of the personality. We are not anxious to damage
you; you would be more useful to us with your mind intact.”
Ewing stared blankly at
him—and at Byra, standing wordlessly at his side.
“What do you want me to
tell you?” he asked.
“Details of the Corwinite
plans. Full information on the essence of your interview with
Governor-General Mellis. Information on possible belligerent intentions
on the part of other colony worlds.”
“I’ve told you all I can
tell you,” Ewing said wearily. “Anything else will be lies.”
Firnik shrugged. “We have
time. The present mode of interrogation will continue until either some
response is forthcoming or we see that your defenses are too strong.
After that”—he indicated the hooded machines in the corners of the
room—“other means will be necessary.”
Ewing smiled faintly
despite the pain and the growing stiffness of his lips. He thought for
a flickering moment of his wife Laira, his son Blade, and all the
others on Corwin, waiting hopefully for him to return with good news.
And instead of a triumphant return bearing tidings of aid, he faced
torture, maiming, possible death at the hands of Sirians who refused to
believe the truth.
Well, they would find out
the truth soon enough, he thought blackly. After the normal means of
interrogation were shown to be useless, when they had put into use the
mind-pick and the brain-burner and the other cheerful devices waiting
in the shadowy corners for him. They would turn his mind inside out and
reveal its inmost depths, and then they would find he had been telling
the truth.
Perhaps then they would
begin to worry about the Klodni. Ewing did not care. Corwin was lost to
the aliens whether he returned or not, and possibly it was better to
die now than to live to see his planet’s doom.
He looked up at the
Sirian’s cold, heavy features with something like pity. “Go ahead,” he
said gently. “Start interrogating. You’re in for a surprise.”
A timeless stretch
of blurred minutes, hours, perhaps even days slipped by. They had taken
away Ewing’s watch, along with his wallet and other personal
belongings, and so he had no way of perceiving the passage of time.
After the first few hours, he hardly cared.
The questioning went on round
the clock. Usually it was Firnik who stood above him and urged him to
confess, while Drayl or Thirsk hovered at one side, punching him from
time to time. Sometimes it was Byra who interrogated him, in a flat
metallic voice that might have issued from the throat of a robot.
He felt his resources
weakening. His answers became mere hazy mumbles, and when they became
too incoherent they dashed cold water in his face to revive him.
His tormentors were showing
signs of weakening too. Firnik looked red-eyed from the strain;
occasionally his voice took on a ragged, rasping quality.
He pleaded with Ewing, cajoled
him to end his stubborness and yield the information.
Once, when Ewing had muttered
for the millionth time, “I told you the truth the first time,” Byra
looked sharply at Firnik and said, “Maybe he’s sincere. Maybe we’re
making a mistake. How long can we keep this up?”
“Shut up!” Firnik blazed. He
wheeled on the girl and sent her spinning to the floor with a solid
slap. A moment later, ignoring Ewing, he picked her up and muttered an
apology. “We’ll have to use the mindpick,” he said. “We are getting
nowhere this way.”
Vaguely, Ewing heard something
being rolled over the stone floor toward his cot. He did not look up.
He heard Byra saying, “There’ll be nothing left of him when the pick’s
through digging through his mind.”
“I can’t help that, Byra. We
have to know. Drayl, have you accounted for the power drain?”
“Yes.”
“Then lower the helmet and
attach the electrodes.”
Ewing opened his eyes and saw a
complex instrument by the side of his cot; its myriad dials and meters
looked like fierce eyes to him. A gleaming copper helmet hung from a
jointed neck. Sergeant Drayl was moving the helmet toward him, lowering
it over his head. Clamps within the helmet gripped his skull gently.
He felt metal things being
attached to his wrists. He remained perfectly still. He felt no fear,
only a dull sensation of relief that the interrogation was at last
approaching its conclusion.
“It’s ready to function, sir,”
came Drayl’s voice.
“Very well.” Firnik sounded a
little tense. “Ewing, can you hear me?”
“Yes,” he said after some
moment’s silence.
“Good. You have your last
chance. Why did the Free World of Corwin decide to send you to Earth?”
“Because of the Klodni,” Ewing
began wearily. “They came out of Andromeda and—”
Firnik cut him off: “Enough!
I’m turning on the pick.”
Under the helmet, Ewing
relaxed, waiting for the numbing thrust. A second passed, and another.
Is this what it’s like? he wondered dully.
He heard Firnik’s voice, in
sudden alarm: “Who are you? How did you get in here?”
“Never mind that.” It was a
strange voice, firm and commanding. “Get away from that machine,
Firnik. I’ve got a stunner here, and I’m itching to use it on you. Over
there, against the wall. You too, Byra. Drayl, unclamp his wrists and
get that helmet off him.”
Ewing felt the machinery
lifting away from him. He blinked, looked around the room without
comprehending. A tall figure stood near the door, holding a glittering
little gun firmly fixed on the Sirians. He wore a face mask, a golden
sheath that effectively concealed his features.
The newcomer crossed the room,
coming to the side of Ewing’s cot, and lifted him with one hand while
keeping the stunner trained on the baffled Sirians. Ewing was too weak
to stand on his own power; he wobbled uncertainly, but the stranger
held him up.
“Get on the phone, Firnik, and
make sure you keep that vision off. Call the Consulate guard and tell
him that the prisoner is being remanded to custody and will leave the
building. The stunner’s on full intensity now. One phony word and I’ll
freeze your brains for good.”
Ewing felt like a figure in a
dream. Cradled against his rescuer’s side, he watched uncomprehendingly
as a bitterly angry Firnik phoned upstairs and relayed the stranger’s
message.
“All right, now,” the
stranger said. “I’m leaving the building and I’m taking Ewing with me.
But first”— he made an adjustment on the gun he was carrying— “I think
it’s wise to take precautions. This ought to keep you out of
circulation for a couple of hours, at least.”
Firnik made a strangled
sound deep in his throat and leaped forward, arms clawing for the
masked stranger. The stranger fired once; a blue stream of radiance
came noiselessly from the muzzle of the gun, and Firnik froze in his
tracks, his face locked in an expression of rage. Calmly the stranger
directed his fire around the room until Byra, Drayl, and Thirsk were
just three more statues.
Ewing felt the stranger
tighten his hold on him. He tried to share the burden by moving
himself, but his feet refused to support him.
Half-dragged,
half-stumbling, he let himself be carried from the room and into a
lift. He sensed upward motion. The lift stopped; he was moving forward.
Gray waves of pain shuddered through him. He longed to stop where he
was and go to sleep, but the inexorable pressure of the stranger’s arm
carried him along.
Fresh air reached his
nostrils. He coughed. He had become accustomed to the foul staleness of
the room that had been his prison.
Through half-open eyes he
watched the companion hail a cab; he was pushed inside, and heard the
voice say, “Take us to the Grand Valloin Hotel, please.”
“Looks like your friend’s
really been on a binge,” the driver said. “Don’t remember the last time
I saw a man looking so used up.”
Why is he taking me back
to the hotel? Ewing wondered. Firnik has spy beams planted there.
The gentle motion of the
cab was soothing; after a few moments he dropped off to sleep. He woke
later, once again being supported by the stranger. Upward. Into a
corridor. Standing in front of a door.
The door opened. They went
in.
It was his room at the
hotel.
He staggered forward and
fell face-first on the bed. He was aware of the stranger’s motions as
he undressed him, washed his face, applied depilatory to his beard.
“I want to go to sleep,”
he said.
“Soon. Soon.”
He was carried into the
adjoining room and held under the shower until the ion-beam had peeled
away the grime. Then, at last, he was allowed to sleep. The bedsheets
were warm and womblike; he nestled in them gratefully, letting his
tortured body relax, letting sleep sweep up over him and engulf him.
Vaguely he heard the door
close behind him. He slept.
He woke some time later,
his body stiff and sore in a hundred places. He tolled over in the bed,
clamping a hand to his forehead to stop the throbbing back of his eyes.
What happened to me?
Memory came flooding back.
He recalled finding Byra in his room, taking the drugged liquor, being
carried off to the Sirian Consulate. Blurred days of endless torment,
interrogation, a mind-pick machine lowered over his unresisting head.
Sudden rescue from an
unknown source. Sleep. His memories ended there.
Achingly, he crawled from
the bed and switched on the room telestat, dialed the news channel. The
autotyper rattled, and a news report began to unwind from the machine:
Fourday, 13th Fifthmonth,
3806. The office of Governor-General Mellis announced today that plans
are continuing for construction of the Gerd River Dam, despite Sirian
objections that the proposed power plant project would interfere with
the power rights granted them under the Treaty of 3804. The
Governor-General declared—
Ewing did not care what
the Governor-General had declared. His sole purpose in turning on the
telestat had been to find out the date.
Fourday, the thirteenth of
Fifthmonth, He calculated backward. He had had his interview with
Mellis the previous Fiveday evening; that had been the seventh of
Fifthmonth. On Fiveday night—Sixday morning, actually—he had been
kidnapped by Firnik.
Two days later, on Oneday,
he had awakened and the torture began. Oneday, Twoday, Threeday—and
this was Fourday. The torture had lasted no more than two days, then.
The stranger had rescued him either on Twoday or Threeday, and he had
slept through until today.
He remembered something
else: he had made his appointment with Myreck for Fournight. Tonight.
The house phone chimed.
Ewing debated answering it
for a moment; it chimed again more insistently, and he switched it on.
The robotic voice said, “There is a call for you, Mr. Ewing. Shall we
put it through?”
“Who’s it from?” he asked
cautiously.
“The party did not say.”
He considered. “Okay,” he
said finally. “Put whoever it is on.”
Moments later the screen
brightened and Ewing saw the hairless image of Scholar Myreck staring
solicitously at him. “Have I disturbed you?” Myreck asked.
“Not at all,” Ewing said.
“I was just thinking about you. We had an appointment for tonight,
didn’t we?”
“Ah—yes. But I have just
received an anonymous call telling me you have had a rather unfortunate
experience. I was just wondering if I could be of any service to you in
alleviating your pain.”
Ewing remembered the
miraculous massage Myreck had given him earlier. He also considered the
fact that the hotel he was in belonged to Firnik, and no doubt the
Sirian would be fully recuperated from his stunning soon and out
looking for him. It was unwise to remain in the hotel any longer.
He smiled. “I’d be very
grateful if you would be. You said you’d arrange to pick me up, didn’t
you?”
“Yes. We will be there in
a few minutes.”
It took only eleven
minutes from the time Ewing broke contact to the moment when Myreck
rang up from the hotel lobby to announce that he had arrived. Ewing
took the rear liftshaft down, and moved cautiously through the vast
lobby toward the energitron concession, which was where the Scholar had
arranged to meet him.
A group of Earthers waited
there for him. He recognized Myreck, and also the uniped he had seen
the first morning at the terminal. The other two were equally grotesque
in appearance. In a pitiful quest for individuality, they had given
themselves up to the surgeon’s knife. One had a row of emerald-cut
diamonds mounted crest-fashion in a bare swath cut down the center of
his scalp; the inset jewels extended past his forehead, ending with one
small gem at the bridge of his nose. The fourth had no lips, and a
series of blue cicatrices incised in parallel lines on his jaws. For
the first time Ewing felt no distaste at the sight of these altered
Earthmen, partly because he was so exhausted physically and partly
because he was growing accustomed to the sight of them.
Myreck said, “The car is
outside.”
It was a stubby three-color
model which seemed not to have any windows whatever. Ewing wondered
whether it was robocontrolled, or whether the driver drove by
guesswork. He found out quickly enough when he got in, and discovered
that the dome of green plastic that roofed the car was actually a sheet
of some one-way viewing material; far from having no access to the
outside world, the driver and passengers had a totally unobstructed
view in all directions, and unlimited privacy as well.
Myreck drove; or rather, he put
the car in motion, and then guided it by deft occasional wrist-flicks
on the directional control. They turned south, away from the spaceport,
and glided along a broad highway for nearly eight miles, turning
eastward sharply into what seemed like a suburban district. Ewing
slumped tiredly in his corner of the car, now and then peering out at
the neat, even rows of houses, each one surmounted by its own
glittering privacy shield.
At last they pulled up at the
side of the road. Ewing was startled to see nothing before them but an
empty lot. There were some houses further down the street, and plenty
of parking space in front of them; why had Myreck chosen to park here?
Puzzled, he got out. Myreck
stared cautiously in all directions, then took a key made of some
luminous yellow metal from his pocket and advanced toward the empty
lot, saying, “Welcome to the home of the College of Abstract Science.”
“Where?”
Myreck pointed to the lot.
“Here, of course.”
Ewing squinted; something was
wrong about the air above the lot. It had a curious pinkish tinge, and
seemed to be shimmering, as if heat-waves were rising from the neatly
tended grass.
Myreck held his key in front of
him, stepped into the lot, and groped briefly in mid-air, as if
searching for an invisible keyhole. And indeed he seemed to find it;
the key vanished for three-quarters of its length.
A building appeared.
It was a glistening pink dome,
much like the other houses in the neighborhood; but it had a curious
impermanence about it. It seemed to be fashioned of dream-stuff. The
lipless Earther grasped him firmly by the arm and pushed him forward,
into the house. The street outside disappeared.
“That’s a neat trick,” Ewing
said. “How do you work it?”
Myreck smiled. “The house is
three microseconds out of phase with the rest of the street. It always
exists just a fraction of an instant in Absolute Past, not enough to
cause serious temporal disturbance but enough to conceal it from our
many enemies.”
Goggle-eyed, Ewing said, “You
have temporal control?”
The Earther nodded. “The least
abstract of our sciences. A necessary defense.”
Ewing felt stunned. Gazing at
the diminutive Earther with new-found respect, he thought, This is
incredible! Temporal control had long been deemed theoretically
possible, ever since the publication of Blackmuir’s equations more than
a thousand years before. But Corwin had had little opportunity for
temporal research, and such that had been done had seemed to imply that
Blackmuir figures were either incorrect or else technologically
un-implementable. And for these overdecorated Earthers to have
developed them! Unbelievable!
He stared through a window
at the quiet street outside. In Absolute Time, he knew, the scene he
was observing was three microseconds in the future, but the interval
was so minute that for all practical purposes it made no difference to
the occupants of the house. It made a great difference to anyone
outside who wanted to enter illegally, though; there was no way to
enter a house that did not exist in present time.
“This must involve an
enormous power-drain,” Ewing said.
“On the contrary. The
entire operation needs no more than a thousand watts to sustain itself.
Our generator supplies fifteen-amp current. It’s astonishingly
inexpensive, though we never could have met the power demands had we
tried to project the house an equivalent distance into the future. But
there’s time to talk of all this later. You must be exhausted. Come.”
Ewing was led into a
comfortably-furnished salon lined with microreels and music disks.
Plans were pinwheeling in his head, nearly enough to make him forged
the fatigue that overwhelmed his body. If these Earthers have temporal
control, he thought, and if I can induce them to part with their device
or its plans…
It’s pretty far-fetched.
But we need something farfetched to save us now. It might work.
Myreck said, “Will you sit
here?”
Ewing climbed into a
relaxing lounger. The Earther dialed him a drink and slipped a music
disk into the player. Vigorous music filled the room: foursquare
harmonics, simple and yet ruggedly powerful. He liked the sort of sound
it made—a direct emotional appeal.
“What music is that?”
“Beethoven,” Myreck said.
“One of our ancients. Would you like me to relax you?”
“Please.”
Ewing felt Myreck’s hands
at the base of his skull once again. He waited. Myreck’s hands probed
the sides of his neck, lifted, jabbed down sharply. For one brief
moment Ewing felt all sensation leave his body; then physical awareness
returned, but without consciousness of the pain.
“That feels wonderful,” he
said. “It’s as if Firnik never worked me over at all, except for these
bruises I have as souvenirs.”
“They’ll vanish shortly.
Somatic manifestations usually do once the pain-source is removed.”
He leaned back, exulting
in the sensation of feeling no pain as if he had spent all his life,
and not merely the past three or four days, in a state of hellish
physical discomfort. The music was fascinating, and the drink he held
warmed him. It was comforting to know that somewhere in the city of
Valloin was a sanctuary where he was free from Firnik for as long as he
chose.
The Earthers were filing
in now—eleven or twelve of them, shy little men with curious artificial
deformities of diverse sorts. Myreck said, “There are the members of
the College currently in residence. Others are doing research
elsewhere. I don’t know what sort of colleges you have on Corwin, but
ours is the one only in the most ancient sense of the world. We draw no
distinctions between master and pupil here. We all learn equally from
one another.”
“I see. And which of you
developed the temporal control system?”
“Oh, none of us did that.
Powlis was responsible, a hundred years ago. We’ve simply maintained
the apparatus and modified it.”
“A hundred years?” Ewing
was appalled. “It’s a hundred years since the art was discovered and
you’re still lurking in holes and corners, letting the Sirians push you
out of control of your own planet?”
Ewing realized he had
spoken too strongly. The Earthers looked abashed; some of them were
almost at the verge of tears. They’re like children, he thought
wonderingly.
“I’m sorry,” he said.
A slim Earther with
surgically augmented shoulders said, “Is it true that your world is
under attack by alien beings from a far galaxy?”
“Yes. We expect attack in
ten years.”
“And will you be able to
defeat them?”
Ewing shrugged. “We’ll
try. They’ve conquered the first four worlds they’ve attacked,
including two that were considerably stronger than we are. We don’t
have much hope of winning. But we’ll try.”
Sadly Myreck said, “We had
been wondering if it would be possible for us to leave Earth and
emigrate to your world soon. But if you face destruction…” He let his
voice trail off.
“Emigrate to Corwin? Why
would you do that?”
“The Sirians soon will
rule here. They will put us to work for them, or else kill us. We’re
safe as long as we remain in. this building—but we must go out from
time to time.”
“You have temporal
control. You could duck back into yesterday to avoid pursuit.”
Myreck shook his head.
“Paradoxes are caused. Multiplication of personality. We fear these
things, and we would hesitate to bring them about.”
Shrugging, Ewing said,
“You have to take chances. Caution is healthy only when not carried to
excess.”
“We had hoped,” said a
dreamy-eyed Earther sitting in the corner, “that we could arrange with
you for a passage to Corwin. On the ship you came on, possibly.”
“It was a one-man ship.”
Disappointment was
evident. “In that case, perhaps you could send a larger ship for us. We
have none, you see. Earth stopped building ships two centuries ago, and
gradually most of the ones we had were either sold or fell into disuse.
The Sirians now control such industries on Earth, and refuse to let us
have ships. So the galaxy we once roamed is closed to us.”
Ewing wished there were
some way he could help these futile, likable little dreamers. But no
solutions presented themselves. “Corwin has very few ships itself,” he
said. “Less than a dozen capable of making an interstellar journey with
any reasonable number of passengers. And any ships we might have would
certainly be requisitioned by the military for use in the coming war
against the Klodni. I don’t see any way we could manage it. Besides,”
he added, “even if I left Earth tomorrow, I wouldn’t be back on Corwin
for nearly a year. And it would take another year for me to return to
Earth with a ship for you. Do you think you could hold out against the
Sirians that long?”
“Possibly,” Myreck said,
but he sounded doubtful. There was silence a moment. Then the Scholar
said, “Please understand that we would be prepared to pay for our
passage. Not in money, perhaps, but in service. Possibly we are in
command of certain scientific techniques not yet developed on your
world. In that case you might find our emigration quite valuable.”
Ewing considered that.
Certainly the Earthers had plenty to offer—the temporal-control device,
foremost among them. But he could easily picture the scene upon his
return to Corwin, as he tried to get the Council to approve use of a
major interstellar freighter to bring refugee scientists from the Earth
that had failed to help them. It would never work. If they only had
some super-weapon—
But, of course, if they
had a super-weapon they would have no need of fleeing the Sirians.
Round and round, with no solution.
He moistened his lips.
“Perhaps I can think of something,” he said. “The cause isn’t quite
hopeless yet. But meanwhile—”
Myreck’s eyes brightened.
“Yes?”
“I’m quite curious about
your temporal-displacement equipment. Would it be possible for me to
examine it?”
Myreck exchanged what
seemed like a dubious glance with several of his comrades. After a
moment’s hesitation he returned his attention to Ewing and said, in a
slightly shaky voice, “I don’t see why not.”
They don’t fully trust me,
Ewing thought. They’re half afraid of the bold, vigorous man from the
stars. Well, I don’t blame them.
Myreck rose and beckoned
to Ewing. “Come this way. The laboratory is downstairs.”
Ewing followed, and the
other Earthers tagged along behind. They proceeded down a winding
staircase into a room below, brightly lit with radiance streaming from
every molecule of the walls and floor. In the center of the room stood
a massive block of machinery, vaguely helical in structure, with an
enormous pendulum held in suspension in its center. A platform stood at
one side. Elsewhere in the room were metering devices and less
identifiable types of scientific equipment.
“This is not the main
machine,” Myreck said. “In the deepest level of the building we keep
the big generator that holds us out of time-phase with relation to the
outside world. I could show it to you, but this machine is considerably
more interesting.”
“What does this one do?”
“It effects direct
temporal transfer on a small-scale level. The theory behind it is
complex, but the basic notion is extraordinarily simple. You see—”
“Just a moment,” Ewing
said, interrupting. An idea had struck him which was almost physically
staggering in its impact. “Tell me: this machine could send a person
into the immediate Absolute Past, couldn’t it?”
Myreck frowned. “Why, yes.
Yes. But we could never run the risk of—”
Again Ewing did not let
the Earther finish his statement. “This I find very interesting,” he
broke in. He moistened his suddenly dry lips. “Would you say it was
theoretically possible to send—say, me—back in time to—oh, about Twoday
evening of this week?”
“It could be done, yes,”
Myreck admitted.
A pulse pounded
thunderously in Ewing’s skull. His limbs felt cold and his fingers
seemed to be quivering. But he fought down the feeling of fear.
Obviously, the journey had been taken once, and successfully. He would
take it again.
“Very well; then. I
request a demonstration of the machine. Send me back to Twoday evening.”
“But—”
“I insist,” Ewing said
determinedly. He knew now who his strange masked rescuer had been.
A look of blank
horror appeared on Myreck’s pale face. His thin lips moved a moment
without producing sound. Finally he managed to say, in a hoarse rasp.
“You can’t be serious. There would be a continuum doubling if you did
that. Two Baird Ewings existing coterminously, you see. And—”
“Is there any danger in it?”
Ewing asked.
Myreck looked baffled. “We
don’t know. It’s never been done. We’ve never dared to try it. The
consequences might be uncontrollable. A sudden explosion of galactic
scope, for all we know.”
“I’ll risk it,” Ewing said. He
knew there had been no danger that first time. He was certain now that
his rescuer had been an earlier Ewing, one who had preceded him through
the time-track, reached this point in time, and doubled back to become
his rescuer, precisely as he was about to do. His head swam. He refused
to let himself dwell on the confusing, paradoxical aspects of the
situation.
“I don’t see how we could
permit such a dangerous thing to take place,” Myreck said mildly. “You
put us in a most unpleasant position. The risks are too great. We don’t
dare.”
A spanner lay within Ewing’s
reach. He snatched it up, hefting it ominously, and said, “I’m sorry to
have to threaten you, but you’d never be able to follow me if I tried
to explain why I have to do this. Either put me back to Twonight or
I’ll begin smashing things.”
Myreck”s hands moved in a
little dance of fear and frustration. “I’m sure you wouldn’t consider
such a violent act, Mr. Ewing. We know you’re a reasonable man. Surely
you wouldn’t—”
“Surely I would!” His hands
gripped the shaft tightly; sweat rolled down his forehead. He knew that
his bluff would not be called, that ultimately they would yield, since
they had yielded, once—when? When this scene had become played out for
the first time. First? Ewing felt cold uneasiness within.
Limply Myreck shook his head up
and down. “Very well,” the little man said. “We will do as you ask. We
have no choice.” His face expressed an emotion as close to contempt as
was possible for him—a sort of mild, apologetic disdain.. “If you will
mount this platform, please …”
Ewing put the spanner down and
suspiciously stepped forward onto the platform. He sensed the
oppressive bulk of the machine around and above him. Myreck made
painstaking adjustments on a control panel beyond his range of vision,
while the other Earthers gathered in a frightened knot to watch the
proceedings.
“How do I make the return trip
to Fourday?” Ewing asked suddenly.
Myreck shrugged. “By
progressing through forward time at a rate of one second per second. We
have no way of returning you to this time or place at any accelerated
rate.” He looked imploringly at Ewing. “I beg you not to force me to do
this. We have not fully worked out the logic of time travel yet; we
don’t understand—”
“Don’t worry. I’ll be back.
Somehow. Sometime.”
He smiled with a confidence he
did not feel. He was setting foot into the darkest of realms—yesterday.
He was armed with one comforting thought: that by venturing all, he
might possibly save Corwin. By risking nothing, he would lose all.
He waited. He realized he was
expecting a crackle of energy, an upwelling flare of some supernatural
force that would sweep him backward across the matrix of time, but none
of these phenomena materialized. There was merely the gentle murmur of
Myreck’s voice as he called off equations and made compensations on his
control panel; then came a final “Ready,” and the Earther’s hand
reached for the ultimate switch.
“There’ll probably be a certain
amount of spacial dislocation,” Myreck was saying. “I hope for our
sakes that you emerge in the open, and not—”
The sentence was never
finished. Ewing felt no sensation whatever, but the laboratory and the
tense group of Earthers vanished as if blotted out by the hand of the
cosmos, and he found himself hovering a foot in the air in the midst of
a broad greensward, on a warm, bright afternoon.
The hovering lasted only an
instant; he tumbled heavily to the ground, sprawling forward on his
hands and knees. He rose hurriedly to his feet. His knee stung for an
instant as he straightened up; he glanced down and saw that he had
scraped it on a stone in the field, causing a slight abrasion.
From nearby came a childish
giggle. A high voice said, “Look at the funny man doing handsprings!”
“Such a remark is impolite,”
came a stuffy, mechanical-sounding response. “One does not loudly call
attention to eccentric behavior of any kind.”
Ewing turned and saw a boy
of about eight being admonished by a tall robot governess. “But where
did the man come from?” the boy persisted. “He just dropped out of the
sky, didn’t he? Didn’t you see?”
“My attention was
elsewhere. But people do not drop out of the sky. Not in this day and
age in the City of Valloin.”
Chuckling to himself,
Ewing walked away. It was good to know he was still in the City of
Valloin, at any rate; he wondered if the boy was going to continue
asking about the man who had dropped from the sky. That governess
didn’t seem to have any humor circuits. He pitied the boy.
He was in a park; that
much was obvious. In the distance he saw a children’s playground ,and
something that might have been a zoological garden. Concessions sold
refreshments nearby. He walked toward the closest of these booths,
where a brighthaired young man was purchasing a balloon for a boy at
his side from a robot vender.
“Excuse me,” he said. “I’m
a stranger in Valloin, and I’m afraid I’ve got myself lost.”
The Earther—his hair, a
flaming red, had apparently been chemically treated to look even
brighter—handed the robot a coin, took the balloon, gave it to the
child; and smiled courteously at Ewing. “Can I help you?”
Ewing returned the smile.
“I was out for a walk, and I’m afraid I lost my way. I’d like to get
back to the Sirian Consulate. That’s where I’m staying.”
The Earther gaped at him a
moment before recovering control. “You walked all the way from the
Sirian Consulate to Valloin Municipal Park?”
Ewing realized he had made
a major blunder. He reddened and tried to cover up for himself: “No no,
not exactly. I know I took a cab part of the way. But I don’t remember
which way I came, and well—”
“You could take a cab
back, couldn’t you?” the young man suggested. “Of course, it’s pretty
expensive from here. If you want, take the Number Sixty bus as far as
Grand Circle, and transfer there for the downtown undertube line. The
Oval Line tube will get you to the Consulate if you change at the Three
Hundred Seventy-Eighth Street station.”
Ewing waited patiently for
the flow of directions to cease. Finally he said, “I guess I’ll take
the bus, then. Would it be troubling you too much to show me where I
could get it?”
“At the other side of the
park, near the big square entrance.”
Ewing squinted. “I’m
afraid I don’t see it. Could we walk over there a little way? I
wouldn’t want to inconvenience you in any way …”
“Perfectly all right.”
They left the vendor’s
booth and started to cross the park. Halfway toward the big entrance,
the Earther stopped. Pointing, he said, “It’s right over there. See?
You can’t miss it.”
Ewing nodded. “There’s one
final thing—”
“Of course.”
“I seem to have lost all
my money in an unfortunate accident this morning. I lost my wallet, you
see. Could you lend me about a hundred credits?”
“A hundred credits! Now,
see here, fellow. I don’t mind giving travel directions, but a hundred
credits is a little out of line! Why it won’t cost you more than one
credit eighty to get to the Consulate from here.”
“I know,” Ewing said
tightly. “But I need the hundred.” He pointed a finger through the
fabric of his trouser pocket and said, “There’s a stun-gun in this
pocket, and my finger’s on the stud. Suppose you very quietly hand me a
hundred credits in small notes, or I’ll be compelled to use the stunner
on you. I wouldn’t want to do that.”
The Earther seemed on the
verge of tears. He glanced quickly at the boy with the balloon, playing
unconcernedly fifteen feet away, and then jerked his head back to face
Ewing. Without speaking, he drew out his billfold and counted out the
bills. Ewing took them in equal silence and stored them in the pocket
where he had kept his wallet, before Firnik had confiscated it.
“I’m really sorry about
having to do this,” he told the young Earther. “But I can’t stop to
explain, and I need the money. Now I’d like you to take the child by
the hand and walk slowly toward that big lake over there, without
looking back and without calling for help. The stunner is effective at
distances of almost five hundred feet, you know.”
“Help a stranger and this
is what you get,” the Earther muttered. “Robbery in broad daylight, in
Municipal Park!”
“Go on—move!”
The Earther moved. Ewing
watched him long enough to make sure he would keep good faith, then
turned and trotted rapidly toward the park entrance. He reached it just
as the rounded snout of a Number Sixty bus drew up at the corner.
Grinning, Ewing leaped aboard. An immobile robot at the entrance said,
“Destination, please?”
“Grand Circle.”
“Nothing and sixty,
please.”
Ewing drew a one-credit
note from his pocket, placed it in the receiving slot, and waited. A
bell rang; a ticket popped forth, and four copper coins jounced into
the change slot. He scooped them up and entered the bus. From the
window he glanced at the park and caught sight of the little boy’s red
balloon; the flame-haired man was next to him, back to the street,
staring at the lake. Probably scared stiff, Ewing thought. He felt only
momentary regret for what he had done. He needed the money. Firnik had
taken all of his money, and his rescuer had unaccountably neglected to
furnish him with any.
Grand Circle turned out to
be just that: a vast circular wheel of a street, with more than fifteen
street-spokes radiating outward from it. A monument of some sort stood
in a grass plot at the very center of the wheel.
Ewing dismounted from the
bus. Spying a robot directing traffic, he said, “Where can I get the
downtown undertube line?”
The robot directed him to
the undertube station.
He transferred at the
Three Hundred Seventy-Eighth Street station, as his unfortunate
acquaintance had advised, and shortly afterward found himself in the
midst of a busy shopping district.
He stood thoughtfully in
the middle of the arcade for a moment, nudging his memory for the
equipment he would need. A privacy mask and a stun-gun; that seemed to
be about all.
A weapons shop sign
beckoned to him from the distance. He hurried to it, found it open, and
stepped through the curtain of energy that served as its door.
The proprietor was a
wizened little Earther who smiled humbly at him as he entered.
“May I serve you, sir?”
“You may. I’m interested
in buying a stun-gun, if you have one for a good price.”
The shopkeeper frowned. “I
don’t know if we have any stun-guns in stock. Now let me see…ah, yes!”
He reached below the counter and drew forth a dark-blue plastite box.
He touched the seal; the box flew open. “Here you are, sir. A lovely,
model. Only eight credits.”
Ewing took the gun from
the little man and examined it. It felt curiously light; he split it
open and was surprised to find it was hollow and empty within. He
looked up angrily. “Is this a joke? Where’s the force chamber?”
“You mean you want a real
gun, sir? I thought you simply were looking for an ornament to
complement that fine suit you wear. But—”
“Never mind that. Do you
have one of these that actually functions?”
The shopkeeper looked
pale, almost sick. But he vanished into the back room and reappeared a
moment later with a small gun in his hand. “I happen to have one, sir.
A Sirian customer of mine ordered it last month and then unfortunately
died. I was about to return it, but if you’re interested it’s yours for
ninety credits.”
Ninety credits was almost
all the money he had. And he wanted to save some to hand over to the
rescued man.
“Too much. I’ll give you
sixty.”
“Sir! I—”
“Take sixty,” Ewing said.
“I’m a personal friend of Vice-Consul Firnik’s. See him and he’ll make
up the difference.”
The Earther eyed him
meekly and sighed. “Sixty it is,” he said. “Shall I wrap it?”
“Never mind about that,”
Ewing said, pocketing the tiny weapon, case and all, and counting out
sixty credits from his slim roll. One item remained. “Do you have
privacy masks?”
“Yes, sir. A large
assortment.”
“Good. Give me a golden
one.”
With trembling hands the
shopkeeper produced one. It fit the memory he had of the other
reasonably well. “How much?”
“T-ten credits, sir. For
you, eight.”
“Take the ten,” Ewing
said. He folded the mask, smiled grimly at the terrified shopkeeper,
and left. Once he was out on the street, he looked up at a big
building-clock and saw the time: 1552.
Suddenly he clapped his
hand to his forehead in annoyance: he had forgotten to check the most
important fact of all! Hastily he darted back into the weapons shop.
The proprietor came to attention, lips quivering. “Y-yes. “
“All I want is some
information,” Ewing said. “What day is today?”
“What day? Why-why,
Twoday, of course. Twoday, the eleventh.”
Ewing crowed triumphantly.
Twoday on the nose! He burst from the store a second time. Catching the
arm of a passerby, he said, “Pardon. Can you direct me to the Sirian
Consulate?”
“Two blocks north, turn
left. Big building. You can’t miss it.”
“Thanks,” Ewing said.
Two blocks north, turn
left. A current of excitement bubbled in his heart.
He began to walk briskly
toward the Sirian Consulate, hands in his pockets. One clasped the
coolness of the stun-gun, the other rested against the privacy mask.
Ewing had to push
his way through a good-sized crowd at the Consulate—Sirians all, each
of them bound on some private business of his own. Ewing was surprised
that there were so many Sirians in Valloin.
The Consulate was a building of
imposing dimensions; evidently one of the newest of Valloin’s edifices,
its architecture was out of key with that of the surrounding buildings.
Clashing planes and tangential faces made the Consulate a startling
sight.
Ewing passed through the
enormous lobby and turned left to a downramp. He gave only passing
thought to the question of how he was going to reach the subterranean
dungeon., where at this moment another version of himself was
undergoing interrogation. He knew that he had been rescued once, and so
it could be repeated.
He made his way down, until a
sergeant stationed at the foot of the last landing said, “Where are you
going?”
“To the lowest level. I have to
see Vice-Consul Firnik on urgent business.”
“Firnik’s in conference. He
left orders that he wasn’t to be disturbed.”
“Quite all right. I have
special permission. I happen to know he’s interrogating a prisoner down
below, along with Byra Clork, Sergeant Drayl, and Lieutenant Thirsk. I
have vital information for him, and I’ll see to it you roast unless I
get in there to talk to him.”
The sergeant looked doubtful.
“Well …”
Ewing said, “Look—why don’t you
go down the hall and check with your immediate superior, if you don’t
want to take the responsibility yourself? I’ll wait here.”
The sergeant grinned, pleased
to have the burden of decision lifted from his thick shoulders. “Don’t
go away,” he said. “I’ll be right back.”
“Don’t worry,” Ewing said.
He watched as the man turned
and trudged away. After he had gone three paces, Ewing drew the stunner
from his pocket and set it to low intensity. The weapon was palm-size,
fashioned from a bit of translucent blue plastic in whose glittering
depths could dimly be seen the reaction chamber. Ewing aimed and fired.
The sergeant froze.
Quickly, Ewing ran after him,
dragged him back to his original position, and swung him around so he
seemed to be guarding the approach. Then he ducked around him and
headed down toward the lower level.
Another guard, this one in a
lieutenant’s uniform, waited there. Ewing said quickly, “The sergeant
sent me down this way. Said I could find the Vice-Consul down here. I
have an urgent message for him.”
“Straight down the passageway,
second door on your left,” the lieutenant said.
Ewing thanked him and moved on.
He paused for a moment outside the indicated door, while donning the
privacy mask, and heard sounds from within:
“Good. You have your last
chance. Why did the Free World of Corwin decide to send you to Earth?”
“Because of the Klodni,” said a
weary voice. The accent was a familiar one., a Corwinite one, but the
voice was higher in pitch than Ewing would have expected. It was his
own voice. A blur of shock swept through him at the sound. “They came
out of Andromeda and—”
“Enough!” came the harsh crop
of Firnik’s voice. “Byra, get ready to record. I’m turning on the pick.”
Ewing felt a second ripple of
confusion, outside the door. Turning on the pick? Why, then this was
the very moment when he had been rescued, two days earlier in his own
time-track! In that case, he was now his own predecessor along the
time-line, and—he shook his head. Consideration of paradoxes was
irrelevant now. Action was called for, not philosophizing.
He put his hand to the door and
thrust it open. It gave before his push; he stepped inside, stun-gun
gripped tightly in his hand.
The scene was a weird tableau.
Firnik, Byra, Drayl, and Thirsk were clustered around a fifth figure
who sat limp and unresisting beneath a metal cone.
And that fifth figure—
Me!
Firnik looked up in surprise.
“Who are you? How did you get in here?”
“Never mind that,” Ewing
snapped. The scene was unrolling with dreamlike clarity, every phase
utterly familiar to him. I have been here before, he thought, looking
at the limp, tortured body of his earlier self slumped under the
mind-pick helmet. “Get away from that machine, Firnik,” he snapped.
“I’ve got a stunner here, and I’m itching to use it on you. Over there,
against the wall. You, too, Byra. Drayl, unclamp his wrists and get
that helmet off him.”
The machinery was pulled
back, revealing the unshaven, bleary-eyed face of the other Ewing. The
man stared in utter lack of comprehension at the masked figure near the
door. The masked Ewing felt a tingle of awe at the sight of himself of
Twoday, but he forced himself to remain calm. He crossed the room,
keeping the gun trained on the Sirians, and lifted the other Ewing to
his feet.
Crisply he ordered Firnik
to call the Consulate guard upstairs and arrange for his escape. He
listened while the Sirian spoke; then, saying, “This ought to keep you
out of circulation for a couple of hours, at least,” he stunned the
four Sirians and dragged his other self from the room, out into the
corridor, and into a lift.
It was not until Ewing had
reached the street level that he allowed any emotional reaction to
manifest itself. Sudden trembling swept over him for an instant as he
stepped out of the crowded Sirian Consulate lobby, still wearing the
privacy mask, and dragged the semi-conscious other Ewing into the
street. The muscles in his legs felt rubbery; his throat was dry. But
he had succeeded. He had rescued himself from the interrogators, and
the script had followed in every detail that one which seemed “earlier”
to him but which was, in reality, not earlier at all.
The script was due to
diverge from its “earlier” pattern soon, Ewing realized grimly. But he
preferred not to think of the dark necessity that awaited him until the
proper time came.
He spied a cab, one of
those rare ones not robotoperated, and hailed it. Pushing his companion
inside he said, “Take us to the Grand Valloin Hotel, please.”
“Looks like your friend’s
really been on a binge,” the driver said. “Don’t remember the last time
I saw a man looking so used up.”
“He’s had a rough time of
it,” Ewing said, watching his other self lapse off into unconsciousness.
It cost five of his
remaining eighteen credits to make the trip from the Consulate to the
hotel. Quickly, Ewing got his man through the hotel lobby and upstairs
into Room 4113. The other—Ewing-sub-two, Ewing was calling him
now—immediately toppled face-down onto the bed. Ewing stared curiously
at Ewing-sub-two, studying the battered, puffy-eyed face of the man who
was himself two days earlier. He set about the job of undressing him,
depilating him, cleaning him up. He dragged him into the shower and
thrust him under the ion-beam; then, satisfied, he put the exhausted
man to bed. Within seconds, he had lost his consciousness.
Ewing took a deep breath.
So far the script had been followed; but here, it had to change.
He realized he had several
choices. He could walk out of the hotel room and leave Ewing-sub-two to
his own devices, in which case, in the normal flow of events,
Ewing-sub-two would awaken, be taken to Myreck’s, request to see the
time machine, and in due course travel back to this day to become
Ewing-sub-one, rescuing. a new Ewing-sub-two. But that path left too
many unanswered and unanswerable questions. What became of the surplus
Ewing-sub-ones? In every swing of the time-cycle, another would be
created to meet what fate? It was hopelessly paradoxical.
But there was a way
paradox could be avoided. Ewing thought. A way of breaking the chain of
cycles that threatened to keep infinite Ewings moving on a treadmill
forever. But it took a brave man to make that change.
He stared in the mirror.
Do I dare? he wondered.
He thought of his wife and
child, and of all he had struggled for since coming to Earth. I’m
superfluous, he thought. The man on the bed was the man in whose hands
destiny lay. Ewing-sub-one, the rescuer, was merely a supernumerary, an
extra man, a displaced spoke in the wheel of time.
I have no right to remain
alive, Ewing-sub-one admitted to himself. His face, in the mirror, was
unquivering, unafraid. He nodded; then, he smiled.
His way was clear. He
would have to step aside. But he would merely be stepping aside for
himself, and perhaps there would be no sense of discontinuity after
all. He nodded in the firm decision.
There was a voicewrite at
the room desk; Ewing switched it on, waited a moment as he arranged his
thought, and then began to dictate:
“Twoday afternoon. To my
self of an earlier time—to the man I call Ewing-sub-two, from
Ewing-sub-one. Read this with great care, indeed memorize it, and then
destroy it utterly.
“You have just been
snatched from the hands of the interrogators by what seemed to you
miraculous intervention. You must believe that your rescuer was none
other than yourself, doubling back along his time-track from two days
hence. Since I have already lived through the time that will now unfold
for you, let me tell you what is scheduled to take place for you, and
let me implore you to save our mutual existence by following my
instructions exactly.
“It is now Twoday. Your
tired body will sleep around the clock, and you will awaken on Fourday.
Shortly after awakening, you will be contacted by Scholar Myreck, who
will remind you of your appointment with him and will make arrangements
with you to take you to his College in the suburbs. You will go. While
you are there, they will reveal to you the fact that they are capable
of shifting objects in time—indeed, their building itself is displaced
by three microseconds to avoid investigation.
“At this point in my own
time-track, I compelled them to send me back in time from Fourday to
Twoday, and upon arriving here proceeded to carry out your rescue. My
purpose in making this trip was to provide you with this information,
which my rescuer neglected to give me. Under no conditions are you to
make a backward trip in time! The cycle must end with you.
“When Myreck shows you the
machine you are to express interest, but you are not to request a
demonstration. This will automatically create a new past in which
Ewing-sub-three actually did die under Firnik’s interrogation, while
you, Ewing-sub-two, remain in existence, a free agent ready to continue
your current operations. If this phase is not clear to you, read it
very carefully.
“As for me, I am no longer
needed in the plan of events, and so intend to remove myself from the
time-stream upon finishing this note. For your information, I intend to
do this by short-circuiting the energitron booth in the lobby while I
am inside it, a fact which you can verify upon awakening by checking
the telestat records for Twoday, the Eleventh. This action, coupled
with your refusal to use Myreck’s machine, will put an end to the
multiplicity of existing Ewings and leave you as the sole occupant of
the stage. Make the most of your opportunities. I know you are capable
of handling the task well.
“I wish you luck. You’ll
need it.
“Yours in—believe
me—deepest friendship,
“Ewing-sub-one.”
When he had finished the
note, Ewing drew it from the machine and read it through three times,
slowly. There was no rush now. He folded it, drew from his pocket ten
credits—something else his predecessor along the time-track had
neglected—and sealed the message and the money in an envelope which he
placed on the chair next to the sleeping man’s head.
Satisfied, he tiptoed from
the room, locking the door behind him, and rode down to the hotel
lobby. There was no longer any need for the mask, so he discarded it;
he had left the stun-gun upstairs, in case Ewing-sub-two might have
need for it.
He picked up a phone in
the lobby, dialed Central Communications, and said, “I’d like to send a
message to Scholar Myreck, care of College of Abstract Science, General
Delivery, City of Valloin Branch Office 86.” It was the dummy address
Myreck had given him. “The message is, quote: Baird Ewing has been
interrogated and severely beaten by your enemies. At present he is
asleep in his hotel room. Call him this afternoon and arrange to help
him. Unquote. Now, that message is not to be delivered before Fourday,
no later than noon. Is that clear?”
The robot operator read
the message back, including instructions for delivery, and finished
with, “One credit, please.”
Ewing dropped coins into
the slot until the operator signaled acknowledgement. He nodded in
satisfaction; the wheels were fully in motion, now, and he could retire
from the scene.
He crossed the lobby to a
loitering Earther and said, “Excuse me. Could I trouble you for change
of a one-credit bill? I’d like to use the energitron booth and I don’t
have any coins.”
The Earthen changed the
bill for him; they exchanged a few pleasant words, and then Ewing
headed for the booth, satisfied that he had planted his identity. When
the explosion came, there would be a witness to say that a tall man had
just entered the booth.
He slipped a half-credit
coin into the booth’s admission slot; the energy curtain that was its
entrance went light pink long enough for Ewing to step through, and
immediately returned to its glossy black opacity afterward. He found
himself facing a beam of warm red light.
The energitron booth was
simply a commercial adaptation of the ordinary ion-beam shower; it was
a molecular spray that invigorated the body and refreshed the soul,
according to the sign outside. Ewing knew it was also a particularly
efficient suicide device. A bright enamel strip said
CAUTION!
The operator
is warned not to approach the limit-lines inscribed in the booth or to
tamper with the mechanism of the energitron. It is highly delicate and
may be dangerous in unskilled hands.
Ewing smiled coldly. His
time had come to quit the scene—but the body and the personality of
Baird Ewing of Corwin would not be obliterated, merely one superfluous
extension of it. With steady hands he reached for the sealed
control-box; he smashed it open and twisted the rheostat within sharply
upward. The quality of the molecular beam changed; it became fuzzier,
and crackled.
At the limit-lines of the
booth, he knew an area existed where planes of force existed in
delicate imbalance; interposing an arm or a leg in such a place could
result in a violent explosion. He moved toward the limit-lines and
probed with his hands for the danger area.
A sudden thought struck
him: What about my rescuer? He had left him out of the calculations
completely. But yet another Ewing-one had existed, one who had not left
any notes nor stun-guns nor money, and who perhaps had not committed
suicide, either. Ewing wondered briefly about him; but then he had no
further time for wondering, because a blinding light flashed, and a
thunderous wave of force rose from the booth and crushed him in its
mighty grip.
Ewing woke.
He felt groggy, stiff and sore
in a hundred places, his forehead throbbing. He rolled over in bed,
clamped a hand to his forehead and hung on.
What happened to me?
Memories drifted back to him a
thread at a time. He remembered discovering Byra in his room, drinking
the drugged liquor she gave. him, being hustled away to the Sirian
Consulate. Blurred days of endless torment, interrogation, a mind-pick
machine lowered over his unresisting head
Sudden rescue from an unknown
source. Sleep. His memories ended there.
Achingly he crawled from the
bed and stared at himself in the mirror. He looked frighteningly
haggard. Dark circles ringed his eyes like crayon marks, and the skin
of his face hung loose under his chin, stretched tight elsewhere. He
looked worse than he had at the moment of awakening, some days before,
aboard the ship.
An envelope lay on a chair by
the side of the bed. He frowned, picked it up, fingered it. It was
sealed and addressed to him. He opened it. Five two-credit notes came
fluttering out, and along with them a note. He stacked the banknotes
neatly on the bed, unfolded the note, and sat down to read.
Twoday afternoon. To myself of
an earlier time—to the man I call Ewing-sub-two, from Ewing-sub-one…
Bleary-eyed as he was, he came
awake while reading the note. His first reaction was one of anger and
incredulity; then he rubbed his chin thoughtfully as he considered
certain turns of phrase, certain mannerisms of punctuation. He had a
fairly distinctive style of voicewrite dictation. And this was a pretty
good copy, or else the real thing.
In which case …
He switched on the house phone
and said, “What’s today’s date, please?” There was no fear of ridicule
from a robot operator.
“Fourday, the thirteenth of
Fifthmonth,” came the calm answer.
“Thanks. How can I get access
to the telestat reports for Twoday the eleventh?”
“We could connect you with
Records,” the robot suggested.
“Do that,” Ewing said, thinking
to himself, This is foolishness. The note’s a hoax.
He heard the click-click-click
of shifting relays, and then a new robotic voice said, “Records. How
may we serve you?”
“I’m interested in the text of
a news item that covers an event which took place Twoday afternoon. The
short-circuiting of an energitron machine in the lobby of the Grand
Valloin Hotel.”
Almost instantly the robot
said, “We have your item for you. Shall we read it?”
“Go ahead,” Ewing said in a
rasping voice. “Read it.”
“Twoday, 11th Fifthmonth, 3806.
Explosion of an energitron booth in the lobby of the Grand Valloin
Hotel this afternoon took one life, caused an estimated two thousand
credits’ worth of damage, injured three, and disrupted normal hotel
service for nearly two hours. The cause of the explosion is believed to
have been a successful suicide attempt.
“No body was recovered from the
demolished booth, but witnesses recalled having seen a tall man in
street clothes entering the booth moments before the explosion. A check
of the hotel registry revealed that no residents were missing. Valloin
police indicate they will investigate.”
The robot voice paused and
said, “That’s all there is. Do you wish a permanent copy? Should we
search the files for subsequent information pertinent to the matter?”
“No,” Ewing said. “No, no
thanks.” He severed the contact and sat down heavily on the edge of the
bed.
It could still be a prank, of
course. He had been asleep several days, long enough for the prankster
to hear about the explosion and incorporate the incident retroactively
in the note. But Occam’s Razor made hash of the hoax theory; there were
too many inexplicable circumstances and unmotivated actions involved.
Assuming that a prior Ewing had doubled in time to carry out the rescue
and leave the note was a vastly simpler hypothesis, granting. the one
major improbability of time-travel.
There would be one fairly
definite proof, though. Ewing found a small blue stun-gun lying on his
dresser, and studied it thoughtfully.
According to the note, Scholar
Myreck would call him soon after he had awakened.
Very well, Ewing thought,
I’ll wait for Myreck to call.
§
An hour later
he was sitting in a relaxing lounger in a salon in the College of
Abstract Science, feeling the pain of Firnik’s torture leaving him
under the ministrations of Myreck’s expert fingers. Music welled around
him, fascinating ancient music—Beethoven, Myreck had said. He sipped at
his drink.
It was all quite
incredible to him: the call from Myreck, the trip across Valloin in the
domed car, the miraculous building three microseconds out of phase with
the rest of the city, and above all the fact that the note in his room
was indubitably true. These Earthers had the secret of time travel,
and, though none of them were aware of the fact, they had already sent
Baird Ewing back through time at least once from a point along the
time-stream that still lay ahead, this afternoon of Fourday.
He realized his
responsibility, tremendous already, was even greater now. A man had
given up his life for him, and though no actual life had ended, it
seemed to Ewing that a part of him he had never known had died. Once
again he was sole master of his fate.
The conversation moved
smoothly along. The Earthers, alert, curious little men, wanted to know
about the Klodni menace, and whether the people of Corwin would be able
to defeat them when the attack came. Ewing told them the truth: that
they would try, but there was not much hope of success.
And then Myreck introduced
a new theme: the possibility of arranging transportation for the
members of the College to Corwin, where at least they would be safer
than on an Earth dominated by Sirius IV.
It seemed a doubtful
proposition to Ewing. He explained to the visibly disappointed Earthers
what a vast enterprise it would be to transport them, and how few ships
Corwin had available for the purpose. He touched on the necessary
delays the negotiations would involve.
He saw the hurt looks on
their faces; there was no help for it, he thought. Corwin faced
destruction; Earth, mere occupation. Corwin needed help more urgently.
From which direction, he wondered? From whom?
“I’m sorry,” he said. “I
just don’t see how we can offer you asylum. But it seems to me that you
would be in an even worse position on Corwin than you will be here
under Sirian rule. The Klodni onslaught will be fierce and destructive;
the Sirians will probably keep things much as they are, except you’ll
pay your taxes to them instead of to Mellis’ government.”
He felt a depressing cloud
of futility settle around him. He had accomplished nothing on Earth,
found no possible solution for Corwin’s problem, not even succeeded in
helping these Earthers. They were caught under the heel of Sirius IV,
while Corwin now would have to wait for the coming of the Klodni and
the inevitable accompanying murderous conquest.
He had failed. Whatever
bold plan had been in the mind of the dead Ewing who had left him the
note did not hold a corresponding position in his own mind. Clearly,
that Ewing had seen some solution for Corwin, some way in which the
planet could be defended against the Klodni. But he had said nothing
about it in his note.
Perhaps he had had some
experience while traveling back in time, something that might have
given him a clue to the resolution of the dilemma…
Ewing felt a tempting
thought: Perhaps I should make the trip back in time once again, rescue
the Ewing I find there, dictate the note to him once again, and add to
it whatever information was missing—
No. He squelched the idea
firmly and totally. Another trip through time was out of the question.
He had a chance to end the cycle now, and cut himself loose from Earth.
It was the sensible thing to do. Return to Corwin, prepare for the
attack, defend his home and country when the time came to do so—that
was the only intelligent course of action now. It was futile to
continue to search Earth for a nonexistent super-weapon.
Better leave Earth to her
sad fate, he thought, and go back to Corwin.
The conversation straggled
to a dull stop. He and the Earthers had little left to say to each
other. Each had appealed to the other for help, and neither was in a
position to offer aid.
Myreck said, “Let us
change the subject, shall we? This talk of fleeing and destruction
depresses me.”
“I agree,” Ewing said.
The music disk ended.
Myreck rose, removed it from the player and popped it back into the
file. He said, “We have a fine collection of other Earth ancients.
Mozart, Bach, Vurris—”
“I’m afraid I’ve never
heard of any of them,” Ewing said. “We only have a few surviving disks
of the early Terrestrial composers on Corwin. I’ve heard them all in
the museum.” He frowned, trying to remember their names. “Schoenberg
…and Stravinsky, I think. And Bartok. They belonged to one of the
original colonists.”
Myreck played Bach—a piece
called the Goldberg Variations, for a twangy, not unpleasant-sounding
instrument called the harpischord. As he explained it, it operated as a
sort of primitive sonomar, the tones being produced by the mechanical
plucking of strings.
Several of the Scholars
were particularly interested in music old and new, and insisted on
expounding their special theories. Ewing, at another time, might have
been an eager participant in their discussion; now, he listened out of
politeness only, paying little attention to what was said. He was
trying to recall the text of the note he had read and destroyed earlier
in the day. They would show him their time machine. He was to refuse
the demonstration. That would cause the necessary alterations in time
past, to fit the design intended by Ewing-sub-one.
Whatever that had been,
Ewing thought.
The afternoon slipped by.
At length Myreck said, “We also have done much work in temporal theory,
you know. Our machines are in the lower levels of the building. If you
are interested—”
“No!” Ewing said, so
suddenly and so harshly it was almost a shout. In a more modulated tone
he went on, “I mean—no, thanks. I’ll have to beg off on that. It’s
getting quite late, and I’m sure I’d find the time machines so
fascinating I’d overstay my visit.”
“But we are anxious to
have you spend as much time with us as you can,” Myreck protested. “If
you want to see the machines—”
“No,” Ewing repeated
forcefully. “I’m afraid I must leave.”
“In that case, we will
drive you to your hotel.”
This must be the point of
divergence, Ewing thought as the Earthers showed him to the door and
performed the operations that made it possible to pass back into phase
with the world of Fournight the Thirteenth outside. My predecessor
never got back out of this building. He doubled into Twonight instead.
The cycle is broken.
He entered the car, and it
pulled away from the street. He looked back, at the empty lot that was
not empty.
“Some day you must examine
our machines,” Myreck said.
“Yes … yes, of course,”
Ewing replied vaguely. “As soon as I’ve taken care of a few pressing
matters.”
But tomorrow I’ll be on my
way back to Corwin, he thought. I guess I never will see your machines.
He realized that by his
actions this afternoon he had brought a new chain of events into
existence; he had reached back into Twoday and, by not rescuing
Firnik’s prisoner, had created a Ewing-sub-three who had been
mind-picked by the Sirian and who presumably had died two days before.
Thus Firnik believed Ewing was dead, no doubt. He would be surprised
tomorrow when a ghost requistioned the ship in storage at Valloin
Spaceport and blasted off for Corwin.
Ewing frowned, trying to
work out the intricacies of the problem. Well, it didn’t matter, he
thought. The step had been taken.
For better or for worse,
the time-track had been altered.
Ewing checked out
of the Grand Valloin Hotel that next afternoon. It was a lucky thing,
he thought, that the management had awarded him that week’s free rent;
otherwise, thanks to the kidnapping, he would never have been able to
settle up. He had only ten credits, and those were gifts from his
phantom rescuer, now dead. The bill came to more than a hundred.
The desk-robot was distantly
polite as Ewing signed the forms severing him from relationship with
the hotel, waiving right to sue for neglected property, and announcing
notification of departure from Valloin. “I hope you have enjoyed your
stay in this hotel,” the robot said in blurred mechanical tones as
Ewing finished.
Ewing eyed the metal creature
jaundicedly and said, “Oh, yes. Very much. Very much indeed.” He shoved
the stack of papers across the marbled desktop and accepted his
receipted bill. “You’ll have my baggage delivered to the spaceport?” he
asked.
“Of course, sir. The voucher
guarantees it.”
“Thanks,” Ewing said.
He strolled through the
sumptuous lobby, past the light-fountain, past the relaxing-chairs,
past the somewhat battered area of the energitron booth, where robots
were busily replastering and repainting the damage. It was nearly as
good as new. By the end of the day, there would scarcely be an
indication that a man had died violently there only three days before.
He passed several Sirians on
his way through the lobby to the front street, but he felt oddly calm
all the same. So far as Rollun Firnik and the others were concerned,
the Corwinite Baird Ewing had died under torture last Twoday. Anyone
resembling him resembled him strictly by coincidence. He walked boldly
through the cluster of Sirians and out onto the street level.
It was late afternoon. The
street-glow was beginning to come up. A bulletin transmitted via
telestat had informed the hotel patrons that eighteen minutes of light
rain was scheduled for 1400 that Fiveday, and Ewing had delayed his
departure accordingly. Now the streets were fresh and sweet-smelling.
Ewing boarded the limousine
that the hotel used for transporting its patrons to and from the nearby
spaceport, and looked around for his final glance at the Grand Valloin
Hotel. He felt tired and a little sad at leaving Earth; there were so
many reminders of past glories here, so many signs of present decay. It
had been an eventful stay for him, but yet curiously eventless; he was
returning to Corwin with nothing concrete gained, nothing learned but
the fact that there was no help to be had.
He pondered the time-travel
question for a moment. Obviously the Earther machine—along with other
paradoxical qualities—was able to create matter where none had existed
before. It had drawn from somewhere the various Ewing bodies, of which
at least two and possibly more had existed simultaneously. And it
seemed that once a new body was drawn from the fabric of time, it
remained in existence, coterminous with his fellows. Otherwise, Ewing
thought, my refusal to go back and carry out the rescue would have
snuffed me out. It didn’t. It merely ended the life of that “Ewing” in
the torture chamber on Twoday.
“Spaceport,” a robot voice
announced.
Ewing followed the line into
the Departures shed. He noticed there were few Earthers in Departures;
only some Sirians and a few non-humanoid aliens were leaving Earth. He
joined a line that inched up slowly to a robot clerk.
When it was Ewing’s turn, he
presented his papers. The robot scanned them quickly.
“You are Baird Ewing of the
Free World of Corwin?”
“That’s right.”
“You arrived on Earth on
Fiveday, seventh of Fifthmonth of this year?”
Ewing nodded.
“Your papers are in order. Your
ship has been stored in Hangar 107-B. Sign this, please.”
It was a permission-grant
allowing the spaceport attendants to get his ship from dry-dock,
service it for departure, store his belongings on board, and place the
vessel on the blasting field. Ewing read the form through quickly,
signed it, and handed it back.
“Please go to Waiting Room Y
and remain there until your name is called. Your ship should be ready
for you in less than an hour.”
Ewing moistened his lips.
“Does that mean you’ll page me over the public address system?”
“Yes.”
The idea of having his
name called out, with so many Sirians in the spaceport, did not appeal
to him. He said, “I’d prefer not to be paged by name. Can some sort of
code word be used?”
The robot hesitated. “Is
there some reason—”
“Yes.” Ewing’s tone was
flat. “Suppose you have me paged under the name of … ah … Blade. That’s
it. Mr. Blade. All right?”
Doubtfully the robot said,
“It’s irregular.”
“Is there anything in the
regulations specifically prohibiting such a pseudonym?”
“No, but—”
“If regulations say
nothing about it, how can it be irregular? Blade it is, then.”
It was easy to baffle
robots. The sleek metal face would probably be contorted in
bewilderment, if that were possible. At length the robot assented;
Ewing grinned cheerfully at it and made his way to Waiting Room Y.
Waiting Room Y was a
majestic vault of a room, with a glittering spangled ceiling a hundred
feet above his head, veined with glowing rafters of structural
beryllium. Freeform blobs of light, hovering suspended at about the
eight-foot level, provided most of the illumination. At one end of the
room a vast loud-speaker had been erected; at the other, a screen
thirty feet square provided changing kaleidoscopic patterns of light
for bored waiters.
A bubble-headed creature
with scaly purple skin passed by, each of its claw-like arms clutching
a smaller version of itself. Mr. XXX from Xfiz V, Ewing thought
bitterly. Returning from a family outing. He’s taken the kiddies to
Earth to give them an instructive view of dying civilization.
The three aliens paused
not far from where Ewing sat and exchanged foamy, sibilant sentences.
Now he’s telling them to take a good look round, Ewing thought. None of
this may be here the next time they come.
For a moment despair
overwhelmed him, as he realized once again, that both Earth and Corwin
were doomed, and there seemed no way of holding back the inexorable
jaws of the pincer. His head drooped forward; he cradled it tiredly
with his fingertips.
“Mr. Blade to the
departure desk; please. Mr. Blade, please report to the departure desk.
Mr. Blade … ”
Dimly, Ewing remembered
that they were paging him. He elbowed himself from the seat.
“Mr. Blade to the
departure desk please … ”
“All right,” he murmured.
“I’m coming.”
He followed a stream of
bright violet lights down the center of the waiting room, turned left,
and headed for the departure desk. Just as he reached it, the
loud-speaker barked once more, “Mr. Blade to the departure desk … “
“I’m Blade,” he said to
the robot he had spoken with an hour before. He presented his identity
card. The robot scanned it.
“According to this your
name is Baird Ewing,” the robot announced after some study.
Ewing sighed in
exasperation. “Check your memory banks! Sure, my name is Ewing—but I
arranged to have you page me under the name of Blade. Remember?”
The robot’s optic lenses
swiveled agitatedly as the mechanical filtered back through its memory
bank. Ewing waited impatiently, fidgeting and shifting his weight from
foot to foot. After what seemed to be a fifteen-minute wait the robot
brightened again and declared, “The statement is correct. You are Baird
Ewing, pseudonym Blade. Your ship is waiting in Blast Area Eleven.”
Gratefully, Ewing accepted
the glowing identity planchet and made his way through the areaway into
the departure track. There he surrendered the planchet to a waiting
robot attendant who ferried him across the broad field to his ship.
It stood alone, isolated
by the required hundred-meter clearance, a slim, graceful needle,
golden-green, still bright in the late-afternoon sunlight. He climbed
up the catwalk, sprang the hatch, and entered.
The ship smelled faintly
musty after its week in storage. Ewing looked around. Everything seemed
in order: the somnotank in which he would sleep during the eleven-month
journey back to Corwin, the radio equipment along the opposite wall,
the visionplate. He spun the dial on the storage compartment and opened
it. His few belongings were aboard. He was ready to leave.
But first, a message.
He set up the contacts on
the subetheric generator, preparatory to beaming a message via subspace
toward Corwin. He knew that his earlier message, announcing arrival,
had not yet arrived; it would ride the subetheric carrier wave for
another week yet, before reaching the receptors on his home world.
And, he thought unhappily,
the second message, announcing departure, would follow it by only a few
days. He twisted the contact dial. The go-ahead light came on.
He faced the pickup grid.
“Baird Ewing speaking, and I’ll be brief. This is my second and final
message. I’m returning to Corwin. The mission was an absolute
failure—repeat, absolute failure. Earth is unable to help us. It faces
immediate domination by Terrestrial-descended inhabitants of Sirius IV,
and culturally they’re in worse shape than we are. Sorry to be
delivering bad news. I hope you’re all still there when I get back. No
reports will follow. I’m signing off right now.”
He stared reflectively at
the dying lights of the generator a moment, then shook his head and
rose. Activating the in-system communicator, he requested and got the
central cöordination tower of the spaceport.
“This is Baird Ewing, in
the one-man ship on Blasting Area Eleven. I plan to depart under
automatic control in fifteen minutes. Can I have a time check?”
The inevitable robotic
voice replied, “The time now is sixteen fifty-eight and thirteen
seconds.”
“Good. Can I have
clearance for departure at seventeen thirteen and thirteen?”
“Clearance granted,” the
robot said, after a brief pause.
Grunting acknowledgement,
Ewing fed the data to his autopilot and threw the master switch. In
fourteen-plus minutes, the ship would blast off from Earth, whether or
not he happened to be in the protective tank at the time. But there was
no rush; it would take only a moment or two to enter the freeze.
He stripped off his
clothes, stored them away; and activated the tap that drew the nutrient
bath. The autopilot ticked away; eleven minutes to departure.
So long, Earth.
He climbed into the tank.
Now his subliminal instructions took over; he knew the procedure
thoroughly. All he had to do was nudge those levers with his feet to
enter the state of suspension; needles would jab upward into him and
the thermostat would begin to function. At the end of the journey, with
the ship in orbit around Corwin, he would automatically be awakened to
make the landing manually.
The communicator chimed
just as he was about to trip the footlevers. Irritated, Ewing glanced
up. What could be the trouble?
“Calling Baird Ewing …
Calling Baird Ewing …”
It was central control.
Ewing glanced at the clock. Eight minutes to blast off. And there’d be
nothing left of him but a pool of jelly if blasting time caught him
still wandering around the ship.
Sourly he climbed from the
tank and acknowledged the call. “Ewing here. What is it?”
“An urgent call from the
terminal, Mr. Ewing. The party says he must reach you before you blast
off.”
Ewing considered that.
Firnik, pursuing him? Or Byra Clork? No. They had seen him die on
Twoday. Myreck? Maybe. Who else could it be? He said, “Very well.
Switch over the call.”
A new voice said, “Ewing?”
“That’s right. Who are
you?”
“It doesn’t matter just
now. Listen—can you come to the spaceport terminal right away?”
The voice sounded
tantalizing familiar. Ewing scowled angrily. “No. I can’t! My
autopilot’s on and I’m due for blasting in seven minutes. If you can’t
tell me who you are, I’m afraid I can’t bother to alter flight plans.”
Ewing heard a sigh. “I
could tell you who I am. You wouldn’t believe me, that’s all. But you
mustn’t depart yet. Come to the terminal.”
“No.”
“I warn you,” the voice
said. “I can take steps to prevent you from blasting off —but it’ll be
damaging to both of us if I do so. Can’t you trust me?”
“I’m not leaving this ship
on account of any anonymous warnings,” Ewing said hotly. “Tell me who
you are. Otherwise I’m going to break contact and enter suspension.”
Six minutes to blast.
“All right,” came the
reluctant reply. “I’ll tell you. My name is Baird Ewing, of Corwin. I’m
you. Now will you get out of that ship?”
With tense fingers
Ewing disconnected the autopilot and reversed the suspension unit. He
called the control tower and in an unsteady voice told them he was
temporarily canceling his blasting plans and was returning to the
terminal. He dressed again, and was ready when the robocar came
shuttling out across the field to pick him up.
He had arranged to meet the
other Ewing in the refreshment room where he had had his first meeting
with Rollun Firnik after landing on Earth. A soft conversational hum
droned in the background as Ewing entered. His eyes, as if magnetically
drawn, fastened on the tall, conservatively- dressed figure at the
table near the rear.
He walked over and sat down,
without being asked. The man at the table favored him with a
smile—cold, precise, the very sort of smile Ewing himself would have
used in this situation. Ewing moistened his lips. He felt dizzy.
He said, “I don’t know quite
where to begin. Who are you?”
“I told you. Yourself. I’m
Baird Ewing.”
The accent, the tone, the
sardonic smile—they all fitted. Ewing felt the room swirl crazily
around him. He stared levelly at the mirror image on the other side of
the table.
“I thought you were dead,”
Ewing said. “The note you left me—”
“I didn’t leave any notes,” the
other interrupted immediately.
“Hold on there.” It was a
conversation taking place in a world of nightmare. Ewing felt as if he
were stifling. “You rescued me from Firnik, didn’t you?”
The other nodded.
“And you took me to the hotel,
put me to bed, and wrote me a note explaining things; you finished off
by saying you were going downstairs to blow yourself up in an
energitron booth—”
Eyes wide in surprise, the
other said, “No, not at all! I took you to the hotel and left. I didn’t
write any notes, or threaten to commit suicide.”
“You didn’t leave me money? Or
a blaster?”
The man across the table shook
his head vehemently. Ewing closed his eyes for a moment. “If you didn’t
leave me that note, who did?”
“Tell me about this note,” the
other said.
Briefly Ewing summarized the
contents of the note as well as he could from memory. The other
listened, tapping his finger against the table as each point was made.
When Ewing was through, the other remained deep in thought, brow
furrowed. Finally he said:
“I see it. There were four of
us.”
“What?”
“I’ll put it slowly: I’m the
first one of us to go through all this. It begins with a closed-circle
paradox, the way any time distortion would have to: me, in the torture
chamber, and a future me coming back to rescue me. There were four
separate splits in the continuum—creating a Ewing who died in Firnik’s
torture chamber, a Ewing who rescued the tortured Ewing and left a note
and committed suicide, a Ewing who rescued the tortured Ewing and did
not commit suicide, and a Ewing who was rescued and did not himself go
back to become the rescuer, thereby breaking the chain. Two of these
are still alive—the third and the fourth. You and me.”
Very quietly Ewing said, “I
guess that makes sense, in an impossible sort of way. But that leaves
an extra Baird Ewing, doesn’t it? After you carried out the rescue, why
did you decide to stay alive?”
The other shrugged. “I couldn’t
risk killing myself. I didn’t know what would happen.”
“You did,” Ewing said
accusingly. “You knew that the next man in sequence would stay alive.
You could have left him a note, but you didn’t. So he went through the
chain, left me a note, and removed himself. “
The other scowled unhappily.
“Perhaps he represented a braver facet of us than I do.”
“How could that be? We’re all
the same?”
“True.” The other smiled sadly.
“But a human being is made of complex stuff. Life isn’t a procession of
clear-cut events; it’s a progression from one tough decision to the
next. The seeds of my decision were in the proto-Ewing; so were the
bases for the suicide. I picked things one way; he picked them the
other. And I’m here.”
Ewing realized it was
impossible to be angry. The man he faced was himself, and he knew only
too well the bundle of inner contradictions, of strengths and
weaknesses, that was Baird Ewing—or any human being. This was no time
to condemn. But he foresaw grave problems arising.
He said, “What do we do
now—both of us?”
“There was a reason why I
called you off the ship. And it wasn’t simply that I didn’t want to be
left behind on Earth.”
“What was it, then?”
“The time machine Myreck
has can save Corwin from the Klodni,” the other Ewing said flatly.
Ewing sat back and let
that soak in. “How?”
“I went to see Myreck this
morning and he greeted me with open arms. Said he was so glad I had
come back for a look at the time machine. That was when I realized
you’d been there yesterday and hadn’t gone back on the merry-go-round.”
He shook his head. “I was counting on that, you see—on being the only
Ewing that actually went forward on the time-track, while all the
others went round and round between Fourday and Twoday, chasing
themselves. But you broke the sequence and fouled things up.”
“You fouled things up,”
Ewing snapped. “You aren’t supposed to be alive.”
“And you aren’t supposed
to be existing in Fiveday.”
“This isn’t helping
things,” Ewing said more calmly. “You say the Earther time machine can
save Corwin. How?”
“I was getting to that.
This morning Myreck showed me all the applications of the machine. It
can be converted into an exterior-operating scanner—a beam that can be
used to hurl objects of any size backward into time.”
“The Klodni fleet,” Ewing
said instantly.
“Exactly! we set up the
projector on Corwin and wait for the Klodni to arrive—and shoot them
back five billion years or so, with no return-trip ticket!”
Ewing smiled. “And I was
running away. I was on my way home, while you were finding all this
out.”
The other shrugged. “You
had no reason to suspect it. You never had a first-hand demonstration
of the way the time machine functioned. I did—and I guessed this might
be possible. You guessed so, too.”
“Me?”
“Right after Myreck told
you he had temporal control, the thought came to you that something
like this might be worked out. But you forgot about it. I didn’t.”
It was eerie, Ewing
thought, to sit across a table from a man who knew every thought of
his, every secret deed, from childhood up to a point three days ago in
Absolute Time. After that, of, course, their lives diverged as if they
were different people.
“What do you suggest we do
now?” Ewing asked.
“Go back to Myreck. Team
up to get the plans for the device away from him. Then high-tail it
back here, get aboard …”
His voice trailed off.
Ewing stared blankly at his alter ego and said, “Yes? What then? I’m
waiting.”
“It’s—it’s a one-man ship
isn’t it?” the other asked in a thin voice.
“Yes,” Ewing said. “Damned
right it is. After we’ve taken the plans, how do we decide who goes
back to Corwin and who stays here?”
He knew the other’s
anguished frown was mirrored by his own. He felt sick, and knew the
other sensed the same unease. He felt the frustration of a man staring
into a mirror, trying desperately to make some maneuver that would not
be imitated by the imprisoned image.
“We’ll worry about that
later,” said the other Ewing uncertainly. “First let’s get the plans
from Myreck. Time to settle other problems later.”
They took a robot-operated
cab to the suburban district where the College of Abstract Science was
located. On the way, Ewing turned to the other and said, “How did you
know I was on my way home?”
“I didn’t. As soon as I
found out from Myreck both that you existed and that his machine could
help Corwin, I got back to the Grand Valloin. I went straight up to
your room, but the identity plate didn’t work—and that door was geared
to my identity just as much as yours. So I went downstairs, phoned the
desk from the lobby, and asked for you. They told me you had checked
out and were on your way to the spaceport. So I followed—and got there
just in time.”
“And suppose I had refused
to come out of the ship and meet you?” Ewing. asked.
“There would have been a
mess. I would have insisted I was Ewing and you were stealing my
ship—which would be true, in a way—and would have demanded they check
me against their records of Ewing.
They would have found out
I was Ewing, of course, and they would have wondered who the deuce you
were. There would have been an investigation, and you would have been
grounded. But either way it would have been risky—either if they had
discovered there actually was an extra Ewing, or if you had ignored the
grounding orders and blasted off. They’d have sent an interceptor after
you and we’d really be in trouble.”
The cab pulled up near the
empty lot that was the College of Abstract Science. Ewing let his
alternate pay the bill. They got out.
“You wait here,” the other
said. “I’ll put myself within their receptor field and wait for them to
let me in. You wait ten minutes and follow me through.”
“I don’t have a watch,”
Ewing said. “Firnik took it.”
“Here—take mine,” said the
other impatiently. He unstrapped it and handed it over. It looked
costly.
“Where’d you get this?”
Ewing said.
“I borrowed it from some
Earther, along with about five hundred credits, early Threeday morning.
You—no, not you, but the Ewing who became your rescuer later—was asleep
in our hotel room, so I had to find another place to stay. And all I
had was about ten credits left over after buying the mask and the gun.”
The ten credits someone
left for me, Ewing thought. The paradoxes multiplied. The best he could
do was ignore them.
He donned the watch—the
time was 1850, Fivenight—and watched his companion stroll down the
street toward the empty lot, wander with seeming aimlessness over the
vacant area, and suddenly vanish. The College of Abstract Sciences had
swallowed him up.
Ewing waited for the
minutes to pass. They crept by. Five … six … seven.
At eight, he began to
stroll with what he hoped looked like complete casualness toward the
empty lot. At nine he was only a few yards away from the borders of the
lot. He forced himself to remain quite still, letting the final minute
pass. The stun-gun was at his hip. He had noticed that the other Ewing
also wore a stun-gun—the twin of his own.
At nine minutes and
forty-five seconds he resumed his stroll toward the lot, reaching it
exactly at the ten-minute mark. He looked around the way the other
Ewing had—and felt the transition from now minus-three-microseconds
sweep over him once again. He was inside the College of Abstract
Science, having vanished abruptly from the tardy world outside.
He was facing an odd
tableau. The other Ewing stood with his back to one wall, the stun-gun
drawn and in activated position. Facing him were seven or eight members
of the College, their faces pale, their eyes reflecting fright. They
stood as if at bay.
Ewing found himself
looking down at the accusing eyes of Scholar Myreck, who had admitted
him.
“Thank you for letting
my—ah—brother in,” the other Ewing said. For a moment the two Ewings
stared at each other. Ewing saw in his alter ego’s eyes deep guilt, and
knew that the other man was more than a twin to him than any brother
could have been. The kinship was soul-deep.
“We’re sorry for this,” he
said to Myreck. “Believe us, it pains us to do this to you.”
“I’ve already explained
what we came for,” the other Ewing said. “There’s a scale model and a
full set of schematics downstairs, plus a few notebooks of theoretical
work. It’s more than one man can carry.”
“The notebooks are
irreplaceable,” Myreck said in a softly bitter voice.
“We’ll take good care of
them,” Ewing promised. “But we need them more than you. Believe us.”
The other Ewing said, “You
stay here, and keep your gun on them. I’m going below with Myreck to
fetch the things we’re taking.”
Ewing nodded. Drawing his
gun, he replaced the other against the wall, holding the unfortunate
Earthers at bay. It was nearly five minutes before Ewing’s alternate
and Myreck returned, bearing papers, notebooks, and a model that looked
to weigh about fifty pounds.
“It’s all here,” the other
said. “Myreck, you’re going to let me through your time-phase field and
out of the building. My brother here will keep his gun on you all the
time. Please don’t try to trick us.”
Ten minutes later, both
Ewings stood outside the College of Abstract Science, with a nearly
man-high stack of plunder between them.
“I hated to do that,”
Ewing said.
The other nodded. “It hurt
me, too. They’re so gentle—and it’s a miserable way to repay
hospitality. But we need that generator, if we want to save everything
we hold dear.”
“Yes,” Ewing said in a
strained voice. “Everything we hold dear.” He shook his head. Trouble
was approaching. “Come on,” he said, looking back at the vacant lot.
“Let’s get out of here. We have to load all this stuff on the ship.”
They made the trip
back to the spaceport in tight silence. Each man had kept a hand atop
the teetering stack on the floor of the cab; occasionally, Ewing’s eyes
met those of his double, and glanced guiltily away.
Which one of us goes back? he
wondered.
Which one is really Baird
Ewing? And what becomes of the other?
At the spaceport, Ewing
requisitioned a porter robot and turned the stolen schematics, notes,
and model over to it, to be placed aboard the ship. That done, the two
men looked strangely at each other. The time had come for departure.
Who left?
Ewing scratched his chin
uneasily and said, “One of us has to go up to the departure desk and
reconfirm his blastoff plans. The other—”
“Yes. I know.”
“How do we decide? Do we flip a
coin?” Ewing wanted to know.
“One of us goes back to Laira
and Blade. And it looks as if the other—”
There was no need to say it.
The dilemma was insoluble. Each Ewing had firmly believed he was the
only one still in the time-track, and each still partially believed
that it was the other’s duty to yield.
The spaceport lights flickered
dizzily. Ewing felt dryness grow in his throat. The time for decision
was now. But how to decide?
“Let’s go get a drink,” he
suggested.
The entrance to the refreshment
booth was congested with a mob of evening travelers hoping to get a
last drink down before blasting off. Ewing ordered drinks for both of
them and they toasted grimly: “To Baird Ewing—whichever he may be.”
Ewing drank, but the drink did
not soothe him. It seemed at that moment that the impasse might last
forever, that they would remain on Earth eternally while determining
which one of them was to return with Corwin’s salvation and which to
remain behind. But an instant later, all that was changed.
The public address system
blared: “Attention, please! Your attention! Will everyone kindly remain
precisely where he is right at this moment!”
Ewing exchanged a troubled
glance with his counterpart. The loud-speaker voice continued, “There
is no cause for alarm. It is believed that a dangerous criminal is at
large somewhere in the spaceport area. He may be armed. He is six feet
two inches in height, with reddish-brown hair, dark eyes, and
out-of-fashion clothing. Please remain precisely where you are at this
moment while peace officers circulate among you. Have your
identification papers ready to be examined on request. That is all.”
A burst of conversation greeted
the announcement. The two Ewings huddled each into the corner of the
room and stared in anguish at each other.
“Someone turned us in,” Ewing
said. “Myreck, perhaps. Or the man you burgled. Probably Myreck.”
“It doesn’t matter who turned
us in,” the other snapped. “All that matters is the fact that they’ll
be coming around to investigate soon. And when they find two men
answering to the description—”
“Myreck must have warned them
there were two of us.”
“No. He’d never do that. He
doesn’t want to give away the method that brought both of us into
existence, does he?”
Ewing nodded. “I guess you’re
right. But if they find two of us with the same identity papers—with
the same identity—they’ll pull us both in. And neither of us will ever
get back to Corwin.”
“Suppose they only found one of
us?” the other, asked.
“How? We can’t circulate around
the spaceport. And there’s no place to hide in here.”
“I don’t mean that. Suppose one
of us voluntarily gave himself up—destroyed his identity papers first,
of course, and then made an attempt to escape? In the confusion, the
other of us could safely blast off for Corwin.”
Ewing’s eyes narrowed. He had
been formulating just such a plan, too. “But which one of us gives
himself up? We’re back to the same old problem.”
“No, we’re not,” the other
said. “I’ll volunteer!”
“No,” Ewing said instantly.
“You can’t just volunteer! How could I agree? It’s suicide.” He shook
his head. “We don’t have time to argue about it now. There’s only one
way to decide.”
He fumbled in his pocket
and pulled forth a shining half-credit piece. He studied it. On one
side was engraved a representation of Earth’s sun, with the nine
planets orbiting it; on the other, an ornamental 50.
“I’m going to flip it,” he
said. “Solar system; you go; denomination, I go. Agreed?”
“Agreed,” said the other
tensely.
Ewing mounted the coin on
his thumbnail and flicked it upward. He snapped it out of the air with
a rapid gesture and slapped it down against the back of his left hand.
He lifted the covering hand.
It was denomination. The
stylized 50 stared up at him.
He smiled humorlessly. “I
guess it’s me,” he said. He pulled his identity papers from his pocket
and ripped them into shreds. Then he stared across the table at the
white, drawn face of the man who was to become Baird Ewing. “So long.
Good luck. And kiss Laira for me when you get back ….”
Four Sirian policemen
entered the bar and began to filter through the group. One remained
stationed near the door; the other three circulated. Ewing rose from
his seat; he felt calm now. It was not as if he were really going to
die. Which is the real me, anyway? The man who died in the torture
chamber, or the one who blew himself up in the energitron booth, or the
man sitting back there in the corner of the bar? They’re all Baird
Ewing. There’s a continuity of personality. Baird Ewing won’t die—just
one of his superfluous Doppelgängers. And it has to be this way.
Icily, Ewing made his way
through the startled group sitting at the tables. He was the only
figure moving in the bar except for the three circulating police
officers. who did not appear to have noticed him yet. He did not look
back.
The stun-gun at his hip
was only inches from his hand. He jerked it up suddenly and fired at
the policeman mounted by the door; the man froze and toppled. The other
three policemen whirled.
Ewing heard one of them,
“Who are you? What are you doing there? Stand still!”
“I’m the man you’re
looking for!” Ewing shouted, in a voice that could have been heard for
hundreds of yards. “If you want me, come get me!”
He turned and sprinted out
of the refreshment room into the long arcade.
He heard the sound of
pursuers almost immediately. He clutched the stun-gun tightly, but did
not fire. An energy flare splashed above his head, crumbling a section
of the wall. He heard a yell from behind him: “Stop him! There’s the
man! Stop him!” As if summoned magically, five policemen appeared at
the upper end of the corridor. Ewing thumbed his stunner and froze two
of them; then he cut briskly to the left, passing through an automatic
door and entering onto the restricted area of the spacefield itself.
A robot came gliding up to
him. “May I see your pass, sir? Humans are not allowed on this portion
of the field without a pass.”
In answer, Ewing tilted
the stun-gun up and calcified the robot’s neural channels. It crashed
heavily as its gyrocontrol destabilized. He turned. The police were
converging on him; there were dozens of them.
“You there! Give yourself
up! You can’t hope to escape!”
I know that, Ewing said
silently. But I don’t want to be taken alive, either.
He wedged himself flat
against a parked fueler and peppered the advancing police with stun-gun
beams. They fired cautiously; there was expensive equipment on the
field, and they preferred to take their man alive in any event. Ewing
waited until the nearest of them was within fifty yards.
“Come get me,” he called.
Turning, he began to run across the broad spacefield.
The landing apron extended
for two or three miles; he ran easily, lightly, sweeping in broad
circles and pausing to fire at his pursuers. He wanted to keep them at
reasonable distance until—
Yes. Now.
Darkness covered the
field. Ewing glanced up to see the cause of this sudden eclipse.
A vast ship hung high
overhead, descending as if operated by a pulley and string. Its jets
were thundering, pouring forth flaming gas as it came down for a
landing. Ewing smiled at the sight.
It’ll be quick, he thought.
He heard the yells of
astonishment from the police. They were backing off as the great ship
dropped toward the landing area. Ewing ran in a wider circle, trying to
compute the orbit of the descending liner.
Like falling into the sun.
Hot. Quick.
He saw the place where the
ship would land. He felt the sudden warmth; he was in the danger zone
now. He ran inward, where the air was frying. For Corwin, he thought.
For Laira. And Blade.
“The idiot! He’ll get
killed!” someone screamed as if from a great distance. Eddies of
flaming gas seemed to wash down over him; he heard the booming roar of
the ship. Then brightness exploded all about him, and consciousness and
pain departed in a microsecond.
The ship touched down.
§
In the
terminal, the public address system blared:
“Attention, please. We
thank you very much for your coöperation. The criminal has been
discovered and is no longer menacing society. You may resume normal
activity. We thank you again for your cooperation during this
investigation, and hope you have undergone no inconvenience.”
In the terminal
refreshment room, Ewing stared bleakly at the two half-finished drinks
on the table—his, and the dead man’s. With a sudden, brusque gesture he
poured the other drink into his glass, stirred the two together, and
drank the glassful down in eager gulps. He felt the stinging liquor
jolt into his stomach.
What are you supposed to
say and think and do, he wondered, when a man gives up his life so you
can get away? Nothing. You can’t even say “Thanks.” It wouldn’t be in
good taste, would it?
He had watched the whole
thing from the observation window of the bar. The desperate pursuit,
the fox-and-hounds chase, the exchange of shots. He had become sickly
aware that a liner was overhead, fixed in its landing orbit, unable to
check its fall whether there was one man or a regiment drilling on the
field.
Even though the window’s
protective glass, the sudden glare had stung his retinas. And
throughout his life he would carry with him the image of a tiny
man-shaped dot standing unafraid in the bright path of the liner,
vanishing suddenly in a torrent of flame.
He rose. He felt very
tired, very weary, not at all like a man free at last to return to his
home, his wife, his child. His mission was approaching a successful
conclusion, but he felt no sense of satisfaction. Too many had given up
life or dreams to make his success possible.
He found the departure
desk somehow, and pulled forth the papers that the dead man who was
himself had filled out earlier in the day. “My ship’s on Blasting Area
Eleven,” he told the robot. “I was originally scheduled to leave about
1700 this evening, but I requested cancellation and rescheduling.”
He waited numbly while the
robot went through the proper procedures, gave him new papers to fill
out, and finally sent him on through the areaway to the departure
track. Another robot met him there and conducted him to the ship.
His ship. Which might have
left for Corwin five hours before, with a different pilot.
Ewing shrugged and tried
to brush away the cloud of gloom. Had the ship left earlier, with the
other Ewing aboard, it would have been to conclude an unsuccessful
mission; the delay of five hours made an infinite difference in the
general effect.
And it was foolishness to
talk of a man dead. Who had died? Baird Ewing? I’m still alive, he
thought. So who died?
He entered the ship and
glanced around. Everything was ready for departure. He frowned; the
other Ewing had said something about having sent a message back to
Corwin, presumably telling them he was on his way back empty-handed. He
activated the subetheric communicator and beamed a new message,
advising them to disregard the one immediately preceding it, saying
that a new development had come up and he was on his way back to Corwin
with possible salvation.
He called the central
control tower and requested blast-off permission twelve minutes hence.
That gave him ample time. He switched on the autopilot, stripped, and
lowered himself into the nutrient bath.
With quick foot-motions he
set in motion the suspension mechanism. Needles jabbed at his flesh;
the temperature began its downward climb. A thin stream of web came
from the spinnerettes above him, wrapping him in unbreakable foam that
would protect him from the hazards of high-acceleration blast-off.
The drugs dulled his mind.
He felt a faint chill as the temperature about him dropped below sixty.
It would drop much lower than that, later, when he was asleep. He
waited drowsily for sleep to overtake him.
He was only fractionally
conscious when blast-off came. He barely realized that the ship had
left Earth. Before acceleration ended, he was totally asleep.
Hours ticked by,
and Ewing slept. Hours lengthened into days, into weeks, into months.
Eleven months, twelve days, seven and one half hours, and Ewing slept
while the tiny ship speared along on its return journey.
The time came. The ship
pirouetted out of warp when the pre-set detectors indicated the journey
had ended. Automatic computer units hurled the ship into fixed orbit
round the planet below. The suspension unit deactivated itself;
temperature gradually returned to normal, and a needle plunged into
Ewing’s side, awakening him.
He was home.
After the immediate effects of
the long sleep had worn off, Ewing made contact with the authorities
below. He waited, hunched over the in-system communicator, staring
through the vision-plate at the blue loveliness of his home planet.
After a moment, a response
came: “World Building, Corwin. We have your call. Please. identify.”
Ewing replied with the series
of code symbols that had been selected as identification. He repeated
them three times, reeling them off from memory.
The acknowledging symbols came
back instantly, after which the same voice said, “Ewing? At last!”
“It’s only been a couple of
years, hasn’t it?” Ewing said. “Nothing’s changed too much.”
“No. Not too much.”
There was a curious, strained
tone in the voice that made Ewing feel uneasy, but he did not prolong
the conversation. He jotted down the landing coördinates as they
came in, integrated and fed them to his computer, and proceeded to
carry out the landing.
He came down at Broughton
Spacefield, fifteen miles outside Corwin’s capital city, Broughton. The
air was bright and fresh, with the extra tang that he had missed during
his stay on Earth. After descending from his ship he waited for the
pickup truck. He stared at the blue arch of the sky, dotted with
clouds, and at the magnificent row of 800-foot-high Imperator trees
that bordered the spacefield. Earth had no trees to compare with those,
he thought.
The truck picked him up; a
grinning field hand said, “Welcome back, Mr. Ewing!”
“Thanks,” Ewing said, climbing
aboard. “It’s good to be back.”
A hastily-assembled delegation
was on hand at the terminal building when the truck arrived. Ewing
recognized Premier Davidson, three or four members of the Council, a
few people from the University. He looked around, wondering just why it
was that Laira and his son had not come to welcome him home.
Then he saw them, standing with
some of his friends in the back of the group. They came forward, Laira
with an odd little smile on her face, young Blade with a blank stare
for a man he had probably almost forgotten.
“Hello, Baird,” Laira said. Her
voice was higher than he had remembered it as being, and she looked
older than the mental image he carried. Her eyes had deepened, her face
grown thin. “It’s so good to have you back. Blade, say hello to your
father.”
Ewing looked at the boy. He had
grown tall and gangling; the chubby eight-year-old he had left behind
had turned into a coltish boy of nearly eleven. He eyed his father
uncertainly. “Hello—Dad.”
“Hello there, Blade!”
He scooped the boy off the
ground, tossed him easily into the air, caught him, set him down. He
turned to Laira, then, and kissed her. But there was no warmth in his
greeting. A strange thought interposed:
Am I really Baird Ewing?
Am I the man who was born on
Corwin, married this woman, built my home, fathered this child? Or did
he die back on Earth, and am I just a replica indistinguishable from
the original?
It was a soul-numbing thought.
He realized it was foolish of him to worry over the point; he wore
Baird Ewing’s body, he carried Baird Ewing’s memory and personality.
What else was there to a man, besides his physical. existence and the
tenuous Gestalt of memories and thoughts that might be called his soul?
I am Baird Ewing, he insisted
inwardly, trying to quell the doubt rising within him.
They were all looking earnestly
at him. He hoped none of his inner distress was visible. Turning to
Premier Davidson, he said, “Did you get my messages?”
“All three of them—there were
only three, weren’t there?”
“Yes,” Ewing said. “I’m
sorry about those last two—”
“It really stirred us up,
when we got that message saying you were coming home without anything
gained. We were really counting on you, Baird. And then, about four
hours later, came the second message —”
Ewing chuckled with a
warmth he did not feel. “Something came up at the very last minute.
Something that can save us from the Klodni.” He glanced around
uncertainly. “What’s the news there? How about the Klodni?”
“They’ve conquered
Borgman,” Davidson said. “We’re next. Within a year, they say. They
changed their direction after Lundquist—”
“They got Lundquist too?”
Ewing interrupted.
“Lundquist and Borgman
both. Six planets, now. And we’re next on the list.”
Ewing shook his head
slowly. “No, we’re not. They’re on our list. I’ve brought something
back from Earth with me, and the Klodni won’t like it.”
§
He went before
the Council that evening, after having been allowed to spend the
afternoon at home, renewing his acquaintance with his family, repairing
the breach two years of absence had created.
He took with him the plans
and drawings and model he had wrung from Myreck and the College. He
explained precisely how he planned to defeat the Klodni. The storm
burst the moment he had finished.
Jospers, the delegate from
Northwest Corwin, immediately broke out with; “Time travel? Impossible!”
Four of the other
delegates echoed the thought. Premier Davidson pounded for order. Ewing
shouted them down and said, “Gentlemen, I’m not asking you to believe
what I tell you. You sent me to Earth to bring back help, and I’ve
brought it.”
“But it’s fantastic to
tell us—”
“Please, Mr. Jospers. This
thing works.”
“How do you know?”
Ewing took a deep breath.
He had not wanted to reveal this. “I’ve tried it,” he said. “I’ve gone
back in time. I’ve talked face-to-face with myself. You don’t have to
believe that, either. You can squat here like a bunch of sitting ducks
and let the Klodni blast us the way they’ve blasted Barnholt and
Borgman and Lundquist, and all the other colony worlds in this segment
of space. But I tell you I have a workable defense here.”
Quietly Davidson said,
“Tell us this, Baird: how much will it cost us to build this—ah—weapon
of yours, and how long will it take?”
Ewing considered the
questions a moment. He said, “I would estimate at least six to eight
months of full-time work by a skilled group of engineers to make the
thing work in the scale I intend. As for the cost: I don’t see how it
could be done for less than three million stellors.”
Jospers was on his feet in
an instant. “Three million stellors! I ask you, gentlemen—”
His question never was
asked. In a voice that tolerated no interruptions, Ewing said, “I ask
you, gentlemen—how much is life worth to you? I have a weapon here. It
sounds like nonsense to you, and expensive nonsense as well. But what
of the cost? In a year the Klodni will be here, and your economies
won’t matter a damn. Unless you plan to beat them your own way, of
course.”
“Three million stellors
represents twenty percent of our annual budget,” Davidson remarked.
“Should your device prove to be of no help—”
“Don’t you see?” Ewing
shouted. “It doesn’t matter! If my device doesn’t work, there won’t be
any more budgets for you to worry about!”
It was an unanswerable
point. Grudgingly, Jospers conceded, and with his concession the
opposition collapsed. It was agreed that the weapon brought back from
Earth by Ewing would be built. There was no choice. The shadow of the
advancing Klodni grew longer and longer on the stars, and no other
weapon existed. Nothing known to man could stop the advancing hordes.
Possibly, something
unknown could.
§
Ewing had been
a man who enjoyed privacy, but now there was no privacy for him. His
home became a perpetual open house; the ministers of state were forever
conferring with him, discussing the new project: People from the
University wanted to know about Earth. Publishers prodded Ewing to
write books for them; magazines and telestat firms begged for copy.
He refused them all.
He was not interested in capitalizing on his trip to Earth.
He spent most of his
time at the laboratory that had been given him in North Broughton,
supervising the development of the time projector. He had no formal
scientific training himself; the actual work was under the control of a
staff of engineers from the University. But he aided them with
suggestions and theoretical contributions, based on his conversations
with Myreck and his own experiences with the phenomenon of time
transfer.
The weeks passed. At
home, Ewing found family life strained and tense. Laira was almost a
stranger to him; he told her what he could of his brief stay on Earth,
but he had earlier determined to keep the account of his time-shift to
himself forever, and his story was sketchy and inconsistent.
As for Blade, he grew
used to his father again. But Ewing did not feel comfortable with
either of them. They were, perhaps, not really his; and, preposterous
though the thought was, he could not fully accept the reality of his
existence.
There had been other
Ewings. He was firmly convinced he had been the first of the four, that
the others had merely been duplicates of him, but there was no
certainty in that. And two of those duplicates had given up their lives
so that he might be home on Corwin.
He brooded over that,
and also about Myreck and about Earth. Earth, which by now was merely a
Sirian protectorate. Earth, which had sent her boldest sons forth to
the stars, and had withered her own substance at home.
He saw pictures of the
devastation on Lundquist and Borgman. Lundquist had been a pleasure
world, attracting visitors from a dozen worlds to its games parlors and
lovely gardens, luminous and radiant. The pictures showed the lacy
towers of Lundquist’s dreamlike cities crumbling under the merciless
Klodni guns. Senselessly, brutally, the Klodni were moving forward.
Scouts checked their
approach. The fleet was massed on Borgman, now. If they held to their
regular pattern, it would be nearly a year before they rumbled out of
the Borgman system to make their attack on nearby Corwin. And a year
would be enough time.
Ewing counted the
passing days. The conical structure of the time-projector took shape
slowly, as the technicians, working from Myreck’s model, carried out
their painstaking tasks. No one asked exactly how the weapon would be
put in use. Ewing had specified that it be installed in a spaceship,
and it had been designed accordingly.
At night he was
haunted by the recurring image of the Ewing who had willingly thrown
himself under the jets of a descending spaceliner. It could have been
me, he thought. I volunteered. But he wanted to toss for it.
And there had been
another Ewing, equally brave, whom he had never known. The man who had
taken the steps that would render him superfluous, and then had calmly
and simply removed himself from existence.
I didn’t do that. I
figured the others would be caught in the wheel forever, and that 1’d
be the only one who would get loose. But it didn’t happen that way.
He was haunted too, by
the accusing stare in Myreck’s eyes as the twin Corwinites plundered
the College of its secrets and abandoned Earth to its fate. Here,
again, Ewing had his rationalizations: there was nothing he could have
done to help. Earth was the prisoner of its own woes.
Laira told him finally
that he had changed, that he had become bitter, almost irascible, since
making the journey to Earth.
“I don’t understand
it, Baird. You used to be so warm, so—so human. And you’re different
now. Cold, turned inward, brooding all the time.” She touched his arm
lightly. “Can’t you talk things out with me? Something’s troubling you.
Something that happened on Earth, maybe?”
He whirled away. “No!
Nothing.” He realized his tone was harsh; he saw the pain on her face.
In a softer voice he said, “I can’t help myself, Laira. There’s nothing
I can say. I’ve been under a strain, that’s all.”
The strain of seeing
myself die, and of seeing a culture die. Of journeying through time and
across space. I’ve been through a lot. Too much, maybe.
He felt very tired. He
looked up at the night sky as it glittered over the viewing-porch of
their home. The stars were gems mounted on black velvet. There were the
familiar constellations, the Turtle and the Dove, the Great Wheel, the
Spear. He had missed those configurations of stars while he was on
Earth. They had seemed to him friendly aspects of home.
But there was nothing
friendly about the cold stars tonight. Ewing held his wife close and
stared up at them, and it seemed to him that they held a savage menace.
As if the Klodni hordes hovered there like moisture particles in a rain
cloud, waiting for their moment to descend.
The alarm came
early on a spring morning, a year after Ewing had returned to Corwin.
It was a warm, muggy morning. A soft rain was falling, automatically
energizing the deflectors on the roof of Ewing’s home; their polarizing
cells kept the rain from tattooing on the flat roof. Ewing lay in
uneasy sleep.
The phone rang. He stirred,
turned over, buried his face in the pillow. He was dreaming of a figure
limned briefly in a white flare of jet exhaust on Valloin Spacefield.
The phone continued to ring.
Groggily, Ewing felt a hand
shaking him. A voice—Laira’s voice—was saying, “Wake up, Baird! There’s
a call for you! Wake up!”
Reluctantly, he came awake.
The wall clock said 0430. He rubbed his eyes, crawled out of the bed,
groped his way across the room to the phone extension. He choked back a
yawn.
“Ewing here. What is it?”
The sharp, high pitched
tones of Premier Davidson cut into his sleep-drugged mind. “Baird, the
Klodni are on their way!”
He was fully awake now.
“What?”
“We just got word from the
scout network,” Davidson said. “The main Klodni attacking fleet left
Borgman about four hours ago, and there are at least five hundred ships
in the first wave.”
“When are they expected to
reach this area?”
“We have conflicting
estimates on that. It isn’t easy to compute super-light velocities. But
on the basis of what we know, I’d say they’ll be within firing range of
Corwin in not less than ten nor more than eighteen hours, Baird.”
Ewing nodded. “All right.
Have the special ship serviced for immediate blast-off. I’ll drive
right out to the spaceport and pick it up there.”
“Baird—”
“What is it?” Ewing asked
impatiently.
“Don’t you think—well, that
some younger man should handle this job? I don’t mean that you’re old,
but you have a wife, a son—and it’s risky. One man against five hundred
ships? It’s suicide, Baird.”
The word triggered dormant
associations in Ewing, and he winced. Doggedly he said, “The Council
has approved what I’m doing. This is no time to train someone else.
We’ve been over this ground before.”
He dressed rapidly,
wearing, for sentiment’s sake, the blue-and-gold uniform of the Corwin
Space Force, in which he had served the mandatory two-year term a dozen
years before. The uniform was tight, but still fitted.
While Laira fixed a meal he
stood by a window, looking outward at the gray, swirling, pre-dawn
mists. He had lived so long in the shadow of the Klodni advance that he
found it hard to believe the day had actually come.
He ate moodily, scarcely
tasting the food as he swallowed it, saying nothing.
Laira said, “I’m
frightened, Baird.”
“Frightened?” He chuckled.
“Of what?”
She did not seem amused.
“Of the Klodni. Of this crazy thing you’re going to do.” After a moment
she added, “But you don’t seem afraid, Baird. And I guess that’s all
that matters.”
“I’m not,” he said
truthfully. “There’s nothing to be afraid of. The Klodni won’t even be
able to see me. There isn’t a mass-detector in the universe sensitive
enough to spot a one-man ship a couple of light-years away. The mass is
insignificant; and there’ll be too much background noise coming out of
the fleet itself.”
Besides, he added silently,
how can I be afraid of these Klodni?
They were not even human.
They were faceless, mindless brutes, a murdering ant-horde marching in
through the worlds out of some fierce inner compulsion to slay. They
were dangerous, but not frightening.
Fright had to be reserved
for the real enemies—the human beings who turned against other humans,
who played a double game of trust and betrayal. There was cause to
respect the strength of the Klodni, but not to dread them for it. Dread
was more appropriate applied to Rollun Firnik and his kind, Ewing
thought.
When he had eaten, he
stopped off briefly in Blade’s bedroom to take a last look at the
sleeping boy. He did not wake him. He merely looked in, smiled, and
closed the door.
“Maybe you should wake him
up and say goodbye,” Laira suggested hesitantly.
Ewing shook his head.
“It’s too early. He needs his sleep at his age. Anyway, when I get back
I guess I’ll be a hero. He’ll like that.”
He caught the
expression on her face, and added, “I am coming back. You could gamble
our savings on it.”
Dawn streaked the sky
by the time he reached Broughton Spacefield. He left his car with an
attendant and went to the main administration building, where a
grim-faced group of Corwin officials waited for him.
This is it, Ewing
thought. If I don’t make it, Corwin’s finished.
A world’s destiny rode
on the wild scheme of one man. It was a burden he did not relish
carrying.
He greeted Davidson
and the others a littler stiffly; the tension was beginning to grip him
now. Davidson handed him a portfolio.
“This is the flight
chart of the Klodni armada,” the Premier explained. “We had the big
computer extrapolate it. They’ll be overhead in nine hours and fifty
minutes.”
Ewing shook his head.
“You’re wrong. They won’t be overhead at all. I’m going to meet them at
least a light-year from here, maybe further out if I can manage it.
They won’t get any closer.”
He scanned the charts.
Graphs of the Klodni force had been inked in.
“The computer says
there are seven hundred seventy-five ships in the fleet,” Davidson said.
Ewing pointed to the
formation. “It’s a pure wedge, isn’t it? A single flagship, followed by
two ships, followed by a file of four, followed by eight. And right on
out to here. That’s very interesting.”
“It’s a standard
Klodni fighting formation,” said gravel-voiced Dr. Harmess of the
Department of Military Science. “The flagship always leads and none of
the others dares to break formation without order. Complete
totalitarian discipline.”
Ewing smiled. “I’m
glad to hear it.”
He checked his watch.
Approximately ten hours from now, Klodni guns would be thundering down
on a virtually defenseless Corwin. A fleet of seven hundred
seventy-five dreadnoughts was an unstoppable armada. Corwin had perhaps
a dozen ships, and not all of them in fighting trim despite vigorous
last-minute work. No planet in the civilized galaxy could stand the
burden of supporting a military force of nearly eight hundred
first-line ships.
“All right,” he said
after a moment’s silence. “I’m ready to leave.”
They led him across
the damp, rain-soaked field to the well-guarded special hangar where
Project X had been installed. Security guards smiled obligingly and
stood to one side when they recognized Ewing and the Premier. Field
attendants swung open the doors of the hangar, revealing the ship.
It was a thin black
spear, hardly bigger than the vessel that had taken him to Earth and
back. Inside, though, there was no complex equipment for suspending
animation. In its place, there now rested a tubular helical coil, whose
tip projected micro-millimeters from the skin of the ship. At the base
of the coil was a complex control panel.
Ewing nodded in
approval. The field attendants wheeled the ship out; gantry cranes
tilted it to blasting angle and carried it to the blast-field.
A black ship against
the blackness of space. The Klodni would never notice it, Ewing
thought. He sensed the joy of battle springing up in him.
“I’ll leave
immediately,” he said.
The actual blast-off
was to be handled automatically. Ewing clambered aboard, settled
himself in the cradle area, and let the spinnerettes weave him an
unshatterable cradle of spidery foamweb. He switched on the
vision-plate and saw the little group waiting tensely at the edge of
the clear part of the field.
He did not envy them.
Of necessity, he would have to maintain total radio silence until after
the encounter. For half a day or more, they would wait, not knowing
whether death would come to their world or not. It would be an
uncomfortable day for them.
With an almost
impulsive gesture Ewing tripped the blasting lever, and lay back as the
ship raced upward. For the second time in his life he was leaving
Corwin’s soil.
The ship arced upward
in a wide hyperbolic orbit, while Ewing shuddered in his cradle and
waited. Seconds later, the jets cut out. The rest of the journey would
be carried out on warp-drive. That was less strenuous, at least.
The pre-plotted course
carried him far from Corwin during the first two hours. A quick
triangulation showed that he was almost one and a half light-years from
the home world—a safe enough distance, he thought. He ceased forward
thrust and put the ship in a closed million-mile orbit perpendicular to
the expected line of attack of the Klodni. He waited.
Three hours slipped by
before the first quiver of green appeared on his ship’s mass-detector.
The line wavered uncertainly. Ewing resolved the fine focus and waited.
The line broadened.
And broadened. And broadened again.
The Klodni wedge was
drawing near.
Ewing felt utterly
calm, now that the waiting was over. Moving smoothly and unhurriedly,
he proceeded to activate the time-transfer equipment. He yanked down on
the main lever, and the control panel came to life; the snout of the
helical core advanced nearly an inch from the skin of the ship, enough
to insure a clear trajectory.
Working with one eye
on the mass-detector and one on the transfer device’s control panel,
Ewing computed the necessary strength of the field. The Klodni
formation opened out geometrically: one ship leading, followed by two,
with four in the third rank, eight in the fourth, sixteen in the fifth.
Two massive ranks of about two hundred fifty ships each served as
rearguard for the wedge, providing a double finishing-thrust for any
attack. It was the width of these last two files that mattered most.
No doubt they were
traveling in a three-dimensional array, but Ewing took no chances, and
assumed that all two hundred and fifty were moving in a single parallel
bar. He computed the maximum width of such a formation. He added twenty
percent at each side. If only a dozen Klodni ships slipped through,
Corwin still would face a siege of havoc.
Compiling his data, he
fed it to the transfer machine and established the necessary
coordinates. He punched out the activator signals. He studied the
mass-detector; the Klodni fleet was less than an hour away, now.
He nodded in
satisfaction as the last of his computations checked and canceled out.
Here goes, he thought.
He tripped the
actuator.
There was no apparent
effect, no response except for a phase-shift on one of the meters
aboard the ship. But Ewing knew there had been an effect. A gulf had
opened in the heavens, an invisible gulf that radiated outward from his
ship and sprawled across space.
A gulf he could
control as a fisherman might, a net—a net wide enough to hold seven
hundred seventy-five alien vessels of war.
Ewing waited.
His tiny ship swung in
its rigid orbit, round and round, carrying the deadly nothingness round
with it. The Klodni fleet drew near. Ewing scratched out further
computations. At no time, he thought, would he be closer to a Klodni
ship than forty light-minutes. They would never pick him up at such a
distance.
A minnow huddled in
the dark, waiting to trap the whales.
The green line on the
mass-detector broadened and became intense. Ewing shifted out of his
locked orbit, placing the vessel on manual response. He readied his
trap as the Klodni flagship moved serenely on through the void.
Now! he thought.
He cast his net.
The Klodni flagship
moved on—and vanished! From Ewing’s vantage point it seemed as if the
great vessel had simply been blotted out; the green wedge on the scope
of his mass-detector was blunt-snouted now that the flagship was gone.
But to the ships
behind it, nothing seemed amiss. Without breaking formation they
followed on, and Ewing waited. The second rank vanished through the
gulf, and the third, and the fourth.
Eighteen ships gone.
Thirty-two. Sixty-four.
He held his breath as
the hundred-twenty-eight-ship rank entered the cul-de-sac. Now for the
test. He stared at the mass-detector intently as the two biggest Klodni
formations moved toward him. Two hundred fifty ships each, the hammers
of the Klodni forces—
Gone.
The mass-detector was
utterly blank. There was not a Klodni ship anywhere within detectable
range. Ewing felt limp with relief. He disconnected the transfer
mechanism, clamping down knife-switches with frenzied zeal. The gulf
was sealed, now. There was no possible way back for the trapped Klodni
ships.
He could break radio
silence now. He sent a brief, laconic message: “Klodni fleet destroyed.
Am returning to home base.”
One man had wiped out
an armada. He chuckled in relief of the crushing tension.
He wondered briefly
how the puzzled Klodni would react when they found themselves in the
midst of a trackless void, without stars, without planets. No doubt
they would proceed on across space in search of some place to land,
until their provisions became exhausted, their fuel disappeared, and
death finally claimed them. Eventually, even their ships would crumble
and disappear.
According to the best
scientific theory, the stars of the galaxy were between five and six
billion years old. The range of the Earther time-projector was nearly
infinite.
Ewing had hurled the
Klodni fleet five billion years into the past. He shuddered at the
thought, and turned his tiny ship homeward, to Corwin.
The return
voyage seemed to take days. Ewing lay awake in the protecting cradle,
staring through the open vision-plate at the blurred splendor of the
heavens as the ship shot through notspace at superlight velocities. At
these speeds, the stars appeared as blotchy pastel things; the
constellations did not exist.
Curiously, he felt no sense
of triumph. He had saved Corwin, true—and in that sense, he had
achieved the goal in whose name he had set out on his journey across
space to Earth. But he felt as if his work were incomplete.
He thought, not of Corwin
now, but of Earth, Two years had gone by on the mother world since his
departure; certainly, time enough for the Sirians to make their move.
Firnik, no doubt, was high in the command of the Sirian
Governor-General instead of holding a mere vice-consul’s job. Byra
Clork was probably a noblewoman of the new aristocracy.
And Myreck and the
others—well, perhaps they had survived, hidden three microseconds out
of phase. But more likely they had been caught and put to death, like
the potential dangers they were.
Dangers. There were no true
dangers to the Sirians. Earth was self-weakened; it had no capacity to
resist tyranny.
Guiltily, Ewing told
himself that there was nothing he could have done. Earth’s doom was
foreordained, self-inflicted. He had saved his own world; there was no
helping Earth.
There was a way, something
in his mind said reproachfully. There still is a way.
Leave Corwin. Cross space
once again, return to Earth, lead the hapless little Earthers in a
struggle for freedom. All they needed was a man with the bold vigor of
the outworld colonies. Leadership was what they lacked. They
outnumbered the Sirians a thousand to one. In any kind of determined
rising, they could win their freedom easily. But they needed a focal
point; they needed a leader.
You could be that leader,
something within him insisted. Go back to Earth.
Savagely, he forced the
idea to die. His place was on Corwin, where he was a hero, where his
wife and child awaited him. Earth had to work out its own pitiful
destiny.
He tried to relax. The ship
plummeted onward through the night, toward Corwin.
§
It seemed that
the whole populace turned out to welcome him. He could see them from
above, as he maneuvered the ship through the last of its series of
inward spirals and let it come gently to rest on the ferroconcrete
landing surface of Broughton Spacefield.
He let the decontaminating
squad do its work, while he watched the massed crowd assembled beyond
the barriers. Finally, when the ship and the area around it were both
safely cool, he stepped out.
The roar was deafening.
There were thousands of
them. In the front he saw Laira and Blade, and the Premier, and the
Council. University people. Newsmen. People, people, people. Ewing’s
first impulse was to shrink back into the lonely comfort of his ship.
Instead, he compelled himself to walk forward toward the crowd. He
wished they would stop shouting; he held up a hand, hoping to get
silence, but the gesture was interpreted as a greeting and called forth
an even noisier demonstration.
Somehow, he reached Laira
and got his arms around her. He smiled; she said something, but her
voice was crushed by the uproar. He read her lips instead. She was
saying, “I was counting the seconds till you got back, darling.”
He kissed her. He hugged
Blade to him. He smiled to Davidson and to all of them, and wondered
quietly why he had been born with the particular conglomeration of
personality traits that had brought him to this destiny, on this world,
on this day.
He was a hero. He had ended
a threat that had destroyed six worlds.
Corwin was safe.
He was swept inside,
carried off to the World Building, smuggled into Premier Davidson’s
private chambers. There, while officers of the peace kept the curiosity
seekers away, Ewing dictated for the airwaves a full account of what he
had done, while smiling friends looked on.
There were parades outside.
He could hear the noise where he sat, seventy-one floors above the
street level. It was hardly surprising; a world that had lived under
sentence of death for five years found itself miraculously reprieved..
It was small wonder the emotional top was blowing off.
Sometime toward
evening, they let him go home. He had not slept for more than thirty
hours, and it was beginning to show.
A cavalcade of
official cars convoyed him out of the capital city and toward the
surburban area where he lived. They told him a guard would be placed
round his house, to assure him continued privacy. He thanked them all,
and wished them good night, and entered his house. The door shut behind
him, shutting out the noise, the celebration, the acclaim. He was just
Baird Ewing of Corwin again, in his own home. He felt very tired. He
felt hollow within, as if he were a villain rather than a hero. And it
showed.
Laira said, “That trip
didn’t change you, did it?”
He blinked at her.
“What do you mean?”
“I thought that the
cloud would lift from you. That you were worried about the invasion and
everything. But I guess I was wrong. We’re safe, now—and something’s
still eating you.”
He tried to laugh it
off. “Laira, you’re overtired. You’ve been worrying too much yourself.
Why don’t you get some sleep?”
She shook her head.
“No, Baird. I’m serious. I know you too well; I see something in your
eyes. Trouble, of some kind.” She put her hands round his wrists and
stared up into his eyes. “Baird, something happened to you on Earth
that you haven’t told me about. I’m your wife. I ought to know about
it, if there’s anything—”
“There’s nothing!
Nothing.” He looked away. “Let’s go to sleep, Laira. I’m exhausted.”
But he lay in bed
turning restlessly, and despite his exhaustion sleep did not come.
How can I go back to
Earth? he asked himself bitterly. My loyalties lie here. Earth will
have to take care of itself—and if it can’t, more’s the pity.
It was a hollow
rationalization, and he knew it. He lay awake half the night, brooding,
twisting, drowning in his own agonized perspiration.
He thought:
Three men died so I
could return to Corwin safely. Two of them were deliberate, voluntary
suicides. I owe them a debt. I owe Earth a debt, for making possible
Corwin’s salvation.
Three men died for me.
Do I have any right to be selfish ?
Then he thought:
When Laira married me,
she thought she was getting Citizen Baird Ewing , period. She wasn’t
marrying any hero, any world saver. She didn’t ask the Council to pick
me for its trip to Earth. But she went through two years of widowhood
because they did pick me.
How could I tell her I
was leaving, going to Earth for good? Leaving her without a husband,
and Blade without a father? It simply isn’t fair to them. I can’t do it.
And then he thought:
There must be a
compromise. A way I can serve the memory of the dead Baird Ewings and
be fair to my family as well. There has to be some kind of compromise.
There was. The answer
came to him shortly before morning, crystal sharp, bearing with it no
doubts, no further anxiety. He saw what his path must be. With the
answer came a welling tide of peace, and he drifted into sound sleep,
confident he had found the right way at last.
§
Premier
Davidson, on behalf of the grateful people of the world of Corwin,
called on him the next morning. Davidson told him he might pick
anything, anything at all as his reward.
Ewing chuckled. “I’ve
got everything I want already,” he said. “Fame, fortune, family—what
else is there in life?”
Shrugging, the rotund
little Premier said, “But surely there must be some fitting—”
“There is,” Ewing
said. “Suppose you grant me the freedom of poking around with those
notebooks I brought back with me from Earth. All right?”
“Certainly, if that’s
what you want. But can that be all that—”
“There’s just one
other thing I want. No, two. The first one may be tough. I want to be
left alone. I want to get out of the limelight and stay there. No
medals, no public receptions, no more parades. I did the job the
Council sent me to do, and now I want to return to private life.
“As for the second
thing—well, I won’t mention it yet. Let’s just put it this way: when
the time comes, I’m going to want a favor from the Government. It’ll be
an expensive favor, but not terribly so. I’ll let you know what it is I
want, when and if I want it.”
Slowly, the notoriety
ebbed away, and Ewing returned to private life as he had wished. His
life would never be the same again, but there was no help for that. The
Council voted him a pension of 10,000 stellors a year, transferable to
his heirs in perpetuity, and he was so stunned by their magnanimity
that he had no choice but to accept.
A month passed. The
tenseness seemed to have left him. He discovered that his son was
turning into a miniature replica of his father, tall, taciturn, with
the same inner traits of courage, dependability, conscience. It was a
startling thing to watch the boy unfolding, becoming a personality.
It was too bad, Ewing
thought, as he wrestled with his son or touched his wife’s arm, that he
would have to be leaving them soon. He would regret parting with them.
But at least they would be spared any grief.
A second month passed.
The apparatus he was building in his basement, in the sacrosanct den
that neither Blade nor Laira ever dared to enter, was nearing
completion. The time was drawing near.
He ran the final tests
on a warm midsummer day. The machine responded perfectly. The time had
come.
He called upstairs via
the intercom. Laira was reading in the study; Blade was watching the
video. “Blade? Laira?”
“We’re here, Baird.
What do you want?” Laira asked.
Ewing said, “I’ll be
running some very delicate experiments during the next twenty minutes
or so. Any shift in the room balance might foul things up. Would you
both be kind enough to stay put, in whatever room you’re in now, until
I give the signal from downstairs?”
“Of course, darling.”
Ewing smiled and hung
up. Quite carefully he took a massive crowbar from his tool-chest and
propped it up at the side of the wall, near the outer door of the den.
He glanced at his watch. The time was 1403:30.
He recrossed the room
and made some final adjustments on the apparatus. He stared at his
watch, letting the minutes go by. Six … seven … eight …
At 1411:30 he reached
up and snapped a switch. The machinery hummed briefly and threw him
back ten minutes in time.
He was hovering
inches in the air above his own front lawn. He dropped, landing gently,
and looked at his watch. The dial said: 1401:30.
At this very moment, he
knew, his earlier self was on the house phone, calling upstairs to
Laira. Ewing moistened his lips. This would take careful
coördination. Very careful.
On tiptoe he ran round the
house, entering at the side door that led to his basement workshop. He
moved stealthily down the inner corridor until he was only a few feet
from the workshop door. There, he waited.
There was an intercom
outlet mounted in the hall. Gently he lifted the receiver from the hook
and put it to his ear.
He heard himself say, “Any
shift in the room balance might foul things up. Would you both be kind
enough to stay put, in whatever room you’re in now, until I give the
signal from downstairs?”
“Of course, darling,”
Laira’s voice responded.
Outside, in the hall, Ewing
looked at his watch. It read 1403:10. He waited a moment. At 1403:30 he
heard the faint clink as the crowbar was propped up against the wall
near the door.
So far, everything was
right on schedule. But here was where he intended to cause a split in
the timetrack once again.
He edged forward and peered
through the partly open door into the workshop. A familiar-looking
figure sat with his back to the door, hunched over the time-projector
on the table, making fine adjustments preparatory to jumping back in
time ten minutes.
His watch said 1405:15.
He stepped quickly into the
room and snatched up the crowbar he had so carefully provided for
himself. He crossed the room in four quick bounds; his double, absorbed
in his work, did not notice until Ewing put his hand on the shoulder of
the other and lifted him away from the work bench. In the same motion
he swung the crowbar; it smashed into the main section of the
time-projector, sending it tumbling to the floor in a tingling crash of
breaking tubes and crumbling circuits.
“I hated to do that,” he
remarked casually. “It represented a lot of work. But you know why I
did it.”
“Y-yes,” the other said
uncertainly. The two men faced each other over the wreckage of the
projector, Baird Ewing facing Baird Ewing, the only difference between
them being that one held a crowbar ready for further use. Ewing prayed
Laira had not heard the crash. Everything would be ruined if she chose
this moment to violate the sanctity of his workroom.
Slowly, he said to his
double, “You know who I am and why I’m here, don’t you? And where I
came from?”
The other ruefully stared
down at the wreckage. “I guess so. You got there ahead of me, didn’t
you? You’re one notch up on me in the Absolute timetrack.”
Ewing nodded. “Exactly. And
keep your voice down. I don’t want any trouble from you.”
“You’re determined to do
it?”
Ewing nodded again. “Listen
to me very carefully, now. I’m going to take my—our—car and drive into
Broughton. I’m going to make a call to Premier Davidson. Then I’m going
to drive out to the spaceport, get into a ship, and leave. That’s the
last you’ll ever hear from me.
“In the meantime, you’re to
stay down here until at least 1420 or so. Then call upstairs to Laira
and tell her you’ve finished the experiment. Sweep up the wreckage, and
if you’re a wise man you won’t build any more of these gadgets in the
future. From now on, no extra Baird Ewings. You’ll be the only one. And
take good care of Laira and Blade. I love them, too.”
“Wait a minute,” the other
Ewing said. “You’re not being fair.”
“To whom?”
“To yourself. Look, I’m as
much Baird Ewing as you are. And it’s as much my responsibility to—to
leave Corwin as it is yours. You don’t have any right to take it upon
yourself to give up everything you love. Let’s at least flip a coin to
see who goes.”
Ewing shook his head. In a
quiet, flat voice he said, “No. I go. I’ve watched too many of my alter
egos sacrifice themselves to keep me safe and sound.”
“So have I, remember?”
Ewing shrugged. “That’s
tough for you, then. But this is my ride through the time-track, and
I’m going. You stay here and nurse your guilty conscience, if you like.
But you shouldn’t moan too much. You’ll have Laira and Blade. And Baird
Ewing will be doing what he ought to be doing, as well.”
“But—”
Ewing lifted the
crowbar menacingly. “I don’t want to skull you, brother. Accept defeat
gracefully.”
He looked at his
watch. It was 1410. He walked to the door and said, “The car will be
parked at the spaceport. You figure out some explanation for how it got
there.”
He turned and walked
out.
The car was waiting in
its garage; he touched his finger to the burglar-proof identiplate that
controlled the garage door, and the car came out. He got in, switched
on the directional guide, and left via the back route, so no one in the
house could see him.
As soon as he was
comfortably distant from the house, he snapped on the phone circuit and
gave the operator Premier Davidson’s number.
After a short pause,
Davidson acknowledged.
“Hello, Baird. What’s
on your mind?”
“A favor. You owe me
one, remember? I asked for carte blanche the day after the Klodni
thing.”
Davidson chuckled. “I
haven’t forgotten about it, Baird. Well?”
“I want to borrow a
spaceship,” Ewing said quietly. “A one-man ship. The same sort of ship
I used to get to Earth in, a few years ago.”
“A spaceship?” The
Premier sounded incredulous. “What would you be wanting a spaceship
for?”
“That doesn’t matter.
An experiment of mine, let’s say. I asked for a favor, and you said
you’d grant it. Are you backing down, now?”
“No, no, of course
not. But—”
“Yes. I want a
spaceship. I’m on my way to Broughton Spacefield now. Will you phone
ahead and tell them to release a military-owned one-man job for me, or
won’t you?”
§
It was
nearly 1500 when he reached the spacefield. He left his car in the
special parking lot and made it on foot across to the trim little
building used by the military wing of Corwin’s government.
He asked for and was
taken to the commanding officer on duty: The officer turned out to be a
wry-faced colonel who looked up questioningly as Ewing entered his
office.
“You’re Ewing, of
course.”
“That’s right. Did
Premier Davidson phone?”
The colonel nodded.
“He authorized me to give you one of our one-man ships. I guess I don’t
have to ask if you can operate it, do I?”
Ewing grinned and
said, “I guess not.”
“The ship’s on Field B
right now, being serviced for you. It’ll be fully fueled, of course.
How long are you planning to stay aloft?”
Shrugging, Ewing said,
“I really haven’t decided that yet, colonel. But I’ll advise for
clearance before I come down.”
“Good.”
“Oh—one more thing. Is
the ship I’m getting equipped for suspension?”
The colonel frowned.
“All our ships are. Why do you ask? Not planning that long a trip, are
you?”
“Hardly,” Ewing lied.
“I just wanted to examine the suspension equipment once again.
Sentimental reasons, you know.”
The colonel signaled
and one of the cadets led him across the field to the waiting ship. It
was a twin of the one that had borne him across to Earth; for all he
knew, it might have been the very same one. He clambered aboard,
switched on the controls; and advised he would be leaving Corwin in
eleven minutes.
From memory, he
punched out the coordinates for his journey on the autopilot. He
activated the unit, stripped, and lowered himself once again into the
suspension tank.
He thought:
Firnik thinks I’m
dead. He’ll be surprised when a ghost turns up on Earth, leading the
underground revolt against the Sirians. And I’ll have to explain
everything very carefully to Myreck as soon as I get back—if I can find
Myreck.
And he thought:
My double back home is
going to have some fancy explaining to do, too. About what happened to
the ship he took up with him, and how his car got to the spaceport
while he was in the workshop. He’ll have plenty of fast talking to do.
But he’ll manage. He’s a pretty shrewd sort. He’ll get along.
He paused for a moment
to wish a silent good-bye to the wife and son who would never know he
had left them. Then he stretched out his feet and switched on the
suspension unit. The temperature began to drop.
Darkness swirled up
around him.
The time was
1421, of a warm midsummer afternoon on Corwin. Baird Ewing finished
sweeping the shat-tered fragments of his painstakingly constructed
projector into the disposal unit, looked around, put the crowbar back
in the tool shelf.
Then he snapped on the
housephone and said, “Okay, Laira. The experiment’s over. Thanks for
helping out.”
He hung up and trotted up
the stairs to the study. Laira was bent over her book; Blade stared
entranced at the video screen. He crept up behind the boy, caught him
suddenly with one big hand at the back of his neck, and squeezed
affectionately. Then, leaving him, he lifted Laira’s head from her
viewing screen, smiled warmly at her, and turned away without speaking.
Later in the afternoon he
was on his way to Broughton Spacefield via public transport to reclaim
his car. He was still some miles distant when the sudden overhead roar
of a departing spaceship sounded.
“One of those little
military jobs taking off,” someone in the bus said.
Ewing looked up through the
translucent roof of the bus at the clear sky. No ship was visible, of
course. It was well on its way Earthward now.
Good luck, he thought. And
Godspeed.
The car was in the special
parking field. He smiled to the attendant, unlocked it, climbed in.
He drove home.
Home—to Laira and Blade.
Baird Ewing
woke slowly, sensing the coldness all about him. It was slowly
withdrawing down the length of his body; his head and shoulders had
come out of the freeze, and the rest of his was gradually emerging.
He looked at the
time-panel. Eleven months, fourteen days, six hours had elapsed since
he had left Corwin. He hoped they hadn’t held their breaths while
waiting for him to return their ship.
He performed the
de-suspending routine and emerged the tank. He touched the stud and the
vision-plate lit up. A planet hung centered in the green depths of the
plate—a green planet, with vast seas borderings its continents.
Earth.
Ewing smiled. They would be
surprised to see him, all right. But he could help them, and so he had
come back. He could serve as coordinator for the resistance movement.
He could spearhead the drive that would end the domination of the
Sirians.
Here I come, he thought.
His fingers moved rapidly
over the manual-control bank of the ship’s instrument panel. He began
setting up the orbit for landing. Already, plans and counterplans were
forming in his active mind.
The ship descended to Earth
in a wide-sweeping arc. Ewing waited, impatient for the landing, as his
ship swung closer and closer to the lovely green world below.